ABOUT CUT AUDIO: I could not upload the full version of the song due to copyright, so if you'll read the description, I'd appreciate it. There is a link to the full version there. Thank you.
The logarithm popped this up in my feed. The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll has always been my favorite Dylan song. I will be going through your collection, thanks!
6:45 "If i'd talk about it i would talk about it for a very long time, i sang about it would only take as long as the song lasts" I just like that somehow. it's so simple and clear.
I first heard him in '64 and then got invited to his hotel room in '74 for the "after party."". I was 25 but I understood the moment. Janis Ian was in the room as was Maria Muldaur. Just one of those magic moments. He sang 2:10 Train.
Seeing Bob shift in his seat and giggle and knowing how he’d not only reject everything being said about him but he’d throw it back in their face makes his shifts and giggles burst with irony.
Steve Allen was a good jazz pianist; there’s a famous TV performance where he plays behind Jack Kerouac while Jack reads live from ‘On The Road’. He and Kerouac made a great album called ‘Poetry For The Beat Generation.’ He’s introducing Bob to a wider, possibly older ‘hip’ audience here, and I think his long-windedness is due to his desire to do Bob justice during a period where a lot of people new to his music dismissed him with comments like ‘he can’t really sing’, and put-downs like that. Steve is saying, “This guy’s a poet, a genius, and you should really listen to him.” Bob will have been embarrassed, but I’ll bet he knew about Steve’s work with Kerouac and I’m sure he appreciated the way Steve clearly took him seriously.
It's extraordinary that every interview and performance and recording about and by Dylan remains interesting and educational. What a phenomenal human being. The one great poet before him that was truly incandescent was Arthur Rimbaud and there are but a couple of thin books of his poems and some biographic info but a hundred fifty years people who admired him searched for any new scrap of info about him. but with Dylan we have endless films and interviews and performances and albums and none of it ever gets old. Incredible.
According to the comments left here a lot of people wondered why the video went silent and, without reading the video description, wrote a complaining remark. When I was in high school a teacher of mine gave us an assignment which he wanted completed right away. The paper he gave us clearly said at the top to read the entire page before beginning to work. The page consisted of about twenty questions. Most every person in that class started answering the questions right away. A few of us actually read it through and the last question said to complete only that last question on the paper and we were done while everyone else was still laboring away answering every question. Moral of each -- always read the descriptions/instructions.
Good to see this! When people first heard Bob Dylan back then they were hearing something unlike anything they'd heard before in their lives, and it either blew their minds...or they just couldn't relate to it. Joan Baez recognized the great value of what Bob had to offer immediately on hearing him play, and she did everything she could to get him a larger audience. I love seeing footage of both of them from those early days. They were each absolutely extraordinary in their own particular way, and it led to a lot of wonderful stuff in the years that followed. I've always wondered if "Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands" was partly about Sara...and partly about Joan? Seems like it's about both of them to me, depending on which line and which part of what verse, but only Bob knows for sure. Joan certainly thought it was about her, as evidenced by her artwork inside the double album cover of "Any Day Now". It's not surprising that she would have. And yes...I know that he *said* later in the song "Sara" that he was "staying up all night in the Chelsea Hotel writing Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands for you" (meaning Sara)............but how often does Bob reveal....everything? :-) He keeps his cards pretty close to his chest, generally speaking, and I can understand why. It's better that way.
Dylan was such a badass. When I came up, there were a lot of templates for what I wanted to do musically. Dylan has his influences, but there really was no template. He was a pioneer.
Yes but his idol was Buddy Holly blew my mind Who knew? He really inspired Bob n I would think he just got fed information that we needed n he d never want to look dress or sing like someone else There's only one Dylan like only One Elvis ... No. Twin could've lived ..too weird
well, he got A LOT of his melodies and cadences from folk songs. He also learned that he could write songs in a quite literal sense to portray information from Woody Guthrie very early in his career.
Oh my. Absolutely wonderful. Thank you for the LINK to Dailymotion for the full Audio version. He chose THIS SONG to perform on TV. You're something else Bobby~ 💖
@@lkronquist You are on the internet. Look up the facts of the actual case. he did not kill her with his cane and the cane did not even leave a mark. It was a toy cane that could not physically hurt anyone. He upset her and she died because of her bad health. He was a drunk idiot acting like a fool ( he was hitting all kind of people with the toy cane ) but it was not at all like Dylan tried to say. The time he served was pretty normal for what he did.
@@lkronquist . Actually I was concerned with the actual facts. But I guess in your world if someone was a racist than it is okay to call them a cold blooded killer. Interesting reaction by the way and it says alot about you.. You obviously read that I am correct so instead of just admitting it you found a way to basically say he deserved being called a cold blooded killer ( because you feel that he was a racist, thought police ) anyway and also found a way to take a shot at me. You must like a great human being and it will be clear to anyone reading your comment.
My father died in '68 but until then he exposed me to all sorts of interesting people. Steve Allen was one of them. I remember watching as a little girl and first seeing Bob Dylan. Seemed so shy. I had no clue this guy would become such a part of history! ❤️❤️❤️ Amazing.
I was thirteen. It was 1963 or 64. I fell asleep every night listening to the radio, a transistor radio. I listened to KSJO out of San Jose near to where my family lived. They played "folk music" (a genre which was already in transition); stuff like Judy Collins "Thirsty Boots", Judy Henske, Phil Ochs and this song, " The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll". Seems like they played Hattie Carroll every night. I fell in love with the melancholy of the tale of cruel and tragic injustice. The plaintive chord progression and Dylan's singing gripped me and started me backtracking on him and his music. My interest in him has continued to this day, some 55 years later. There are millions like me.
more a yogi than a poet...the stuff, the story, of the song happened, already--the delivery of the stuff--the song--is all breath control. Oh--and the voice--there's the voice. Thanks, Steve.
Thank you for uploading to the Daily Motion. I had never seen this. Dylan's first appearance on TV in the USA. He was still rather open to Steve Allen's dialogue and didn't go sullen like he would have just a few years later when he'd had enough. Bob Dylan was only twenty-two years old when this was filmed on February 25, 1964, he would turn 23 in June of 1964. JFK was murdered a few months earlier in Dallas on November 22, 1963, and the Beatles debuted on the Ed Sullivan show a few weeks earlier on February 9, 1964.
@@thehal The BBC in London filmed Dylan singing in the Madhouse on Castle Street. The BBC later wiped the tape to save money..... The CBC in Toronto filmed Dylan singing a month before this appearance on the Steve Allen Show. This tape survived.
Steve Allen was one of the few people to ask Dylan intelligent questions and get honest answers before he got so protective and treated all questions with protective cynicism. Possibly a one off
It's amazing how intelligent and intellectual Steve Allen sounds compared to anyone on television today. You were right Bob. The times sure did change😩
It's hard to mock and insult someone when they've just quoted "authorities" - Ralph Gleason) calling you a genius. No really, Allen's demeanor communicated resect towards Dylan and Dylan consequently behaved himself. And how about the roll of Dylan's eyes when he heard that word genius. Dylan and Allen here - class acts.
I never have shared this but I hope his Parents are doing well and his adult children and who ever he carry within ❤I hope he feels how we appreciate and truly love and me I send Blessings, thank you for sharing, I enjoy you Bob so very much ,Have fun on your tour 😊
I really like he was able to do the whole song.Especially this long a song. Lots of time I would watch a show to see somebody I liked and they would do a song but a verse always seemed to be missing.
Thanks. I give great respect to Dylan but without the excessive ou wow wow kind of response that most others give. I count him and many others as my musical mentors.
Nicolas Garcia Gonzalez! I can understand a young man like you thinking this is a Steve Allen Trauma. It's not. You'd have to wait a few years until Steve started saying the words to rock songs he didn't like. I can still hear him in the back of my mind, baby, oh baby, baby oh baby, baby, oh oh baby.....
@John Watt ... Only in the case you are as old as Methuselah can you think that you are older than me . I think nobody we introduce us before . Anyway the wisdom of the stupid is to think that how much older , he is wiser . But in reality he is more stupid .
6:00 Right about this time I was hoping Dylan would take his guitar and beat Steve Allen senseless. But Bob had more discipline as a 20 year old as I do as a 60 year old.
I remember when this first surfaced. It was shown at the Bob Dylan 50th Birthday Convention in Hells Kitchen on a big screen. Everyone went nuts. Kudos to the organisers of that great Party!
Steve Allen was a very important cultural figure of the time and all times. He had Jack Kerouac on his show and improvised piano to Kerouac reading from On The Road. Also a very funny and spontaneous comedian and talented songwriter.
I love Steve Allen. We need a Steve Allen these days. A bridge, so to speak. Maybe the world is too small now. Maybe one only need barely stretch to cross the expanse where once was a chasm. I don't know.
Stephen Stone Yes. It’s true. I know of Allen but he was a little bit before my time. At least on the Tonight Show. Johnny was the guy I loved. Nobody like him either.
true the oldies didn't understand, Steve Allen tried like he didn't with Elvis and others, but could Dylan also have tried a little harder to be less affected, or was his point to create a divide between old and young...career moves
When Bob said,, (the lonesome death of Hattie Carroll ) my thoughts where how could he do that gripping story of racial injustice,, in 63/64 and I didn't hear audio for most of it. Was the broadcast sensored?
"i took the story from the newspaper and only change the words" Me: oh that's a nice way to say it the guy: What? i don't understand? what? you are confusing my little brain
@@itomba Steve Allen wrote the following songs: Theme from Picnic" "This Could Be the Start of Something Big" "Pretend You Don't See Her, My Heart" "The Gravy Waltz" "The Saturday Evening Post" "Impossible" "Cool Yule"
Gwyllem Yes, I guess if you are young you would not know how accomplished the man was. His intellectual curiosity is something sorely missed in today’s media.
That is truly the most square dude and the square introduction in the history of mankind. And I don't even use vernacular like that! No wonder Dylan started to drift from these people
bob dylan has an amazing talent to stay true to himself and his art. These two guys seem like they cant be from any two further world apart. Dylan looks pretty uncomfortable but keeps his focus and composer, he remains in his own world even though he is under great assault from another world, he's on tv! and he is in the hot seat being interviewed, he doesnt like that particularly except if it can help get his "message" out there...there is no message! It amazes me, pleasures me that bob while in a whole other universe from this guy manages to be gracious to him, kind, which is what his parents taught him, and answer his questions as he understands them, this shows a man of character, grace, self control, intelligence and strength. Am i blowing it out of proportion and writing nonsense? i dont think so. He at such a young age had so many questions but even at this point he had figured out how to do what he was going to do and wasnt going to placate to anyone or anything at this juncture. Why? cause he already paid his dues in silence, in isolation, when no one cared and no one was talking or watching him, he needs no applause, though he likes it and will take it , he measures himself by himself and thats what marks his career as a artist who is unecumbered by almost ANYTHING. Bob dylan, hes pretty ok! "if you dont like me, you can leave me alone" bob dylan.
True to himself? I dunno. I could have done without his shilling for Victoria Secrets, Apple, Google.... I am a Dylanophile but those were not proud moments.
@@sfkjeld Your not much of a dylanophile if you dont bob dylan is not so stupid to make a buck if he can. When did he ever say he was mother teresa? you didnt know that?
@@sfkjeld Your not much of a dylanophile if you dont know bob dylan is not so stupid to make a buck if he can or turn down a buck? why is apple or secret evil? who told you that? When did he ever say he was mother teresa? you didnt know that? and you call yourself a dylanophile?
I read that it was his girlfriend of the time, Susie , who was a civil rights movement activist that sparked Dylan's songs like blowing in the wind etc,, without her influence he wouldn't have wrote them, as soon as they split up those sort of songs dried up and he went another route ( electric) . Fascinating!
Just enjoy the interview and listen to the record. It was actually nice of them to allow the interview to remain as long as they edited out the copywritten material.
To think at this point in his early career he was already a seasoned veteran... Like Baez quoted.. You burst on the scene like the unwashed phenomena...
Love the clap for Duluth, MN. Allen gives a “wtf” glance and silences the only person besides Dylan from Duluth, MN who was ever heard from or seen on national television.
Thanks Swingin',. I have seen this online, U DEFINITELY improved the resolution. Would it go against copyright if U inserted a different musical version of Hattie Carrol ? Thank U for sharing this piece of Dylan history. Much Respect to U ♡♡♡ Edit: would be nice if fans would read description box before asking questions...I sometimes forget, no one is perfect... except Bobby of course lol. And Jesus ♡ Will check it out on alternate channel. OH, I LOVE your BEST of ELSTON GUNN '66 on Vimeo. I savor every second once a week, at least. Brilliant editing !! ♡♡♡
The context of the incident gives the incident a less horrendous character though still horrendous. Alas the song deservedly haunted Zanzenger the rest of his miserable life. Of note Hattie Carroll had and underlying heart condition which did her in versus dying from the beating by the “cane” which was not a real cane but a novelty party-favour cane fashioned out of plastic film that would be incapable of causing physical pain or harm…. but capable of causing psychological discomfort resulting in a fatal accelerated heart-rate.
ABOUT CUT AUDIO: I could not upload the full version of the song due to copyright, so if you'll read the description, I'd appreciate it. There is a link to the full version there. Thank you.
The logarithm popped this up in my feed. The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll has always been my favorite Dylan song. I will be going through your collection, thanks!
I enjoy this because it shows Bobs harmonica playing.
a c i d
Well.Why do it at all? Humph.
6:45
"If i'd talk about it i would talk about it for a very long time, i sang about it would only take as long as the song lasts"
I just like that somehow. it's so simple and clear.
Only a year later he’d be playing Like a Rolling Stone looking like a completely different person... mind blowing
I still cant believe it
Same guy different sound
@@vamosbarca8206 Have no problem at all believing it.
@@madmakingmindproductions9655 He moved with the times...that's what he is. (fan since 1964, age 16)
Bob is an artist
Just imagine, hearing Dylan for the first time in the 60s. Just imagine watching his rise to fame as it was happening. Incredible.
We did lol
@Raúl DylanI am! Lol
I was there witnessing this era and it was a spectacular one.
I first heard him in '64 and then got invited to his hotel room in '74 for the "after party."". I was 25 but I understood the moment. Janis Ian was in the room as was Maria Muldaur. Just one of those magic moments. He sang 2:10 Train.
@@Kinkle_Z Did you do any drugs in the after party? Can't remember if Dylan was on any hard drugs in 74. Probably.
I listen to Bob Dylan when I cannot take anymore of today's mindless and simplistic music which is all of the time. Please keep posting.
THEY think this music today is WOKE LMAO
THEY think this music today is WOKE LMAO
I find it very remarkable that this legendary material was actually on television.
Used to have a lot of legendary material on regular tv, now it's all garbage .
No one is interested in saving society anymore..it;s all about being socially personable to the powers that create madness.
Seeing Bob shift in his seat and giggle and knowing how he’d not only reject everything being said about him but he’d throw it back in their face makes his shifts and giggles burst with irony.
Steve Allen was a good jazz pianist; there’s a famous TV performance where he plays behind Jack Kerouac while Jack reads live from ‘On The Road’. He and Kerouac made a great album called ‘Poetry For The Beat Generation.’ He’s introducing Bob to a wider, possibly older ‘hip’ audience here, and I think his long-windedness is due to his desire to do Bob justice during a period where a lot of people new to his music dismissed him with comments like ‘he can’t really sing’, and put-downs like that. Steve is saying, “This guy’s a poet, a genius, and you should really listen to him.” Bob will have been embarrassed, but I’ll bet he knew about Steve’s work with Kerouac and I’m sure he appreciated the way Steve clearly took him seriously.
You said it all ruclips.net/video/3LLpNKo09Xk/видео.html
Steve Allen was always long-winded. He even said the words to songs a lot, even if no-one asked him.
Having Steve read some of Bob's lyrics with the piano in the background was beautiful.
@@christophercasey6775 I don't think I'll ever forget Steve reading the words to "I Can't Get No (Satisfaction)"... no... I can't.
It's likely that by Feb. 25,1964, Steve Allen had been to Leary's Millbrook estate for LSD excursions.
Thank you for uploading this. I'm a history teacher, I will use this in class
It's extraordinary that every interview and performance and recording about and by Dylan remains interesting and educational. What a phenomenal human being. The one great poet before him that was truly incandescent was Arthur Rimbaud and there are but a couple of thin books of his poems and some biographic info but a hundred fifty years people who admired him searched for any new scrap of info about him. but with Dylan we have endless films and interviews and performances and albums and none of it ever gets old. Incredible.
@Zach Higgins he's only ever wanted us to listen indeed a teacher
After 50 years of listening to it I always get the same visceral reaction to this song. Poet laureate indeed....
According to the comments left here a lot of people wondered why the video went silent and, without reading the video description, wrote a complaining remark.
When I was in high school a teacher of mine gave us an assignment which he wanted completed right away. The paper he gave us clearly said at the top to read the entire page before beginning to work. The page consisted of about twenty questions. Most every person in that class started answering the questions right away. A few of us actually read it through and the last question said to complete only that last question on the paper and we were done while everyone else was still laboring away answering every question.
Moral of each -- always read the descriptions/instructions.
That was a great teacher of astounding awareness
Thank you very much for this. It's been a labor just to keep up with the complaints...
My teacher did the same test with my class, and I still turn a deep scarlet confessing: I answered all twenty... - BUT: I'll never forget that lesson.
Good to see this! When people first heard Bob Dylan back then they were hearing something unlike anything they'd heard before in their lives, and it either blew their minds...or they just couldn't relate to it. Joan Baez recognized the great value of what Bob had to offer immediately on hearing him play, and she did everything she could to get him a larger audience. I love seeing footage of both of them from those early days. They were each absolutely extraordinary in their own particular way, and it led to a lot of wonderful stuff in the years that followed. I've always wondered if "Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands" was partly about Sara...and partly about Joan? Seems like it's about both of them to me, depending on which line and which part of what verse, but only Bob knows for sure. Joan certainly thought it was about her, as evidenced by her artwork inside the double album cover of "Any Day Now". It's not surprising that she would have.
And yes...I know that he *said* later in the song "Sara" that he was "staying up all night in the Chelsea Hotel writing Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands for you" (meaning Sara)............but how often does Bob reveal....everything? :-) He keeps his cards pretty close to his chest, generally speaking, and I can understand why. It's better that way.
He’d released freewheeling by then, one of the best albums ever
Well at least we got to hear the interview, but my goodness, what a rare treat to see a young artist so at one with his music and at his peak.
Please read the description. Link to full version there.
Dylan was such a badass. When I came up, there were a lot of templates for what I wanted to do musically. Dylan has his influences, but there really was no template. He was a pioneer.
That’s why 60+yrs later we are still listening. There[s absolutely nothing like him
@@MrPernell27 indeed
Yes but his idol was Buddy Holly blew my mind Who knew? He really inspired Bob n I would think he just got fed information that we needed n he d never want to look dress or sing like someone else There's only one Dylan like only One Elvis ... No. Twin could've lived ..too weird
well, he got A LOT of his melodies and cadences from folk songs. He also learned that he could write songs in a quite literal sense to portray information from Woody Guthrie very early in his career.
@@dianepriore9576 Yeah, he saw Buddy Holly live just before he died. But he was one of Dylan's many influences.
Bob has not changed since this interview, he is still very gracious and humble today. 🎼🎶🎵. Thank you 🌟
Oh my. Absolutely wonderful. Thank you for the LINK to Dailymotion for the full Audio version.
He chose THIS SONG to perform on TV. You're something else Bobby~ 💖
He should have been sued for this song. It is BS
@@jerrypeters2095 Your evidence is what?
@@lkronquist You are on the internet. Look up the facts of the actual case. he did not kill her with his cane and the cane did not even leave a mark. It was a toy cane that could not physically hurt anyone. He upset her and she died because of her bad health.
He was a drunk idiot acting like a fool ( he was hitting all kind of people with the toy cane ) but it was not at all like Dylan tried to say. The time he served was pretty normal for what he did.
@@jerrypeters2095 Your concern for the "injustice" done to a lifelong racist is truly touching.
@@lkronquist . Actually I was concerned with the actual facts. But I guess in your world if someone was a racist than it is okay to call them a cold blooded killer.
Interesting reaction by the way and it says alot about you.. You obviously read that I am correct so instead of just admitting it you found a way to basically say he deserved being called a cold blooded killer ( because you feel that he was a racist, thought police ) anyway and also found a way to take a shot at me. You must like a great human being and it will be clear to anyone reading your comment.
Edits or not, thanks for putting this up. It's a peice of cultural and musical history.
This is so wonderful Swingin' Thank you!
Thanks also for the link for the full video
in your description! I will share from there!🤍
My father died in '68 but until then he exposed me to all sorts of interesting people. Steve Allen was one of them. I remember watching as a little girl and first seeing Bob Dylan. Seemed so shy. I had no clue this guy would become such a part of history! ❤️❤️❤️ Amazing.
many thanks - fascinating to hear young Bob explaining his use of view points other than his own, to mention 'copy'..we are lucky to have him.
Good for you, Steve always intelligent. Great clip. Thank you very much.
I was thirteen. It was 1963 or 64. I fell asleep every night listening to the radio, a transistor radio. I listened to KSJO out of San Jose near to where my family lived. They played "folk music" (a genre which was already in transition); stuff like Judy Collins "Thirsty Boots", Judy Henske, Phil Ochs and this song, " The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll". Seems like they played Hattie Carroll every night. I fell in love with the melancholy of the tale of cruel and tragic injustice. The plaintive chord progression and Dylan's singing gripped me and started me backtracking on him and his music. My interest in him has continued to this day, some 55 years later. There are millions like me.
So amazing!. Great clarity and terrific sound. Thanks so much.
more a yogi than a poet...the stuff, the story, of the song happened, already--the delivery of the stuff--the song--is all breath control. Oh--and the voice--there's the voice. Thanks, Steve.
RUclips sucks! This is a historic fucking song that should be able to be heard by anybody, anywhere anytime
tanks for sharing this with us all...
I would like to have heard Allen quote more poetry but unfortunately the guy with the guitar cut him off. Shame really.
Gosh, you're a funny guy!
@@shanekennedy9204 Thank you!
I was thinking something just like that but I didn't think about saying it.
Then the copyright cut off the musician.
You're nuts.....
Why does he laugh like that at 4:21? He realizes he was just talking nonsense? He sings what he had wirtten down from other songs. Too good!
What a gift, thank you!
Incredible moment. Did not know this existed
Thank you for uploading to the Daily Motion. I had never seen this. Dylan's first appearance on TV in the USA. He was still rather open to Steve Allen's dialogue and didn't go sullen like he would have just a few years later when he'd had enough.
Bob Dylan was only twenty-two years old when this was filmed on February 25, 1964, he would turn 23 in June of 1964. JFK was murdered a few months earlier in Dallas on November 22, 1963, and the Beatles debuted on the Ed Sullivan show a few weeks earlier on February 9, 1964.
TheBluewaterBlonde Madhouse on Castle St in the UK was the first.
@@thehal The BBC in London filmed Dylan singing in the Madhouse on Castle Street. The BBC later wiped the tape to save money..... The CBC in Toronto filmed Dylan singing a month before this appearance on the Steve Allen Show. This tape survived.
it's always hard to keep the rag away from my face every time I listen to this song
Please never stop uploading these
Here is one genius introducing and interviewing another. Awesome and classic.
Enjoying this video❣️ Powerful Dylan from the start❤️🌹👌🌞 Thanks Swingin’
Steve Allen was one of the few people to ask Dylan intelligent questions and get honest answers before he got so protective and treated all questions with protective cynicism. Possibly a one off
It's amazing how intelligent and intellectual Steve Allen sounds compared to anyone on television today. You were right Bob. The times sure did change😩
It's hard to mock and insult someone when they've just quoted "authorities" - Ralph Gleason) calling you a genius. No really, Allen's demeanor communicated resect towards Dylan and Dylan consequently behaved himself. And how about the roll of Dylan's eyes when he heard that word genius. Dylan and Allen here - class acts.
The interviews are just as interesting as the music! Great Bob Dylan clip!
I never have shared this but I hope his Parents are doing well and his adult children and who ever he carry within ❤I hope he feels how we appreciate and truly love and me I send Blessings, thank you for sharing, I enjoy you Bob so very much ,Have fun on your tour 😊
Bob thank you what a powerful song the words have so much heart felt words, always God Bless and protect you love,tayme morgan taylor hilton
I used to sing & play this sone. Brought back many memories.
Somebody from Duluth was there.
I really like he was able to do the whole song.Especially this long a song. Lots of time I would watch a show to see somebody I liked and they would do a song but a verse always seemed to be missing.
Thank God for Dylan
Thanks. I give great respect to Dylan but without the excessive ou wow wow kind of response that most others give. I count him and many others as my musical mentors.
The more largest Dylan's introduction on planet Earth ... i understand why Dylan hates press interviews , he has a Steven Allen Trauma .
Nicolas Garcia Gonzalez! I can understand a young man like you thinking this is a Steve Allen Trauma.
It's not. You'd have to wait a few years until Steve started saying the words to rock songs he didn't like.
I can still hear him in the back of my mind, baby, oh baby, baby oh baby, baby, oh oh baby.....
@John Watt ... Only in the case you are as old as Methuselah can you think that you are older than me . I think nobody we introduce us before . Anyway the wisdom of the stupid is to think that how much older , he is wiser . But in reality he is more stupid .
6:00 Right about this time I was hoping Dylan would take his guitar and beat Steve Allen senseless. But Bob had more discipline as a 20 year old as I do as a 60 year old.
Bob was, and still is, a voice for the people who were not, and are still not, allowed a voice of their own.
Soft-spoken genius 🤠
I remember when this first surfaced. It was shown at the Bob Dylan 50th Birthday Convention in Hells Kitchen on a big screen. Everyone went nuts. Kudos to the organisers of that great Party!
Steve Allen was the bridge between straight and cool.
Steve Allen was a very important cultural figure of the time and all times. He had Jack Kerouac on his show and improvised piano to Kerouac reading from On The Road. Also a very funny and spontaneous comedian and talented songwriter.
What can I say Bob,
I love you!🎶❤️
Mr.Stai
I was a bit dubious about this as I began watching, but it was actually quite a nice format. Great viewing.
That is some very good writing Bob fantastic amazing I speak of the whole show even Dillon's poems great writing
Wonderful! A precis date? Early 1964, i guess... i love your channel, Swingin' Pig!
"We love to hear Bob tell a story"
D.Miller. W.P.B.
I really like this intro......Bob’s feeling his own words ......
I love how he can't sit still. Doesnt like people talking about him lol
I find it remarkable someone voted thumbs down
Am so cold and anxious and exhausted but can’t seem to sleep for more than a few minutes.
Thank you Bob Dylan .....thank you .
You have to give Steve Allen credit for his support of musicians. He also brought Frank Zappa on his show.
Can you imagine him on America’s got talent today. I don’t think he would get Buzzed. BUT ???
I love Steve Allen. We need a Steve Allen these days. A bridge, so to speak. Maybe the world is too small now. Maybe one only need barely stretch to cross the expanse where once was a chasm.
I don't know.
Stephen Stone Yes. It’s true. I know of Allen but he was a little bit before my time. At least on the Tonight Show.
Johnny was the guy I loved. Nobody like him either.
@@davidloman932 and Cavett.
true the oldies didn't understand, Steve Allen tried like he didn't with Elvis and others, but could Dylan also have tried a little harder to be less affected, or was his point to create a divide between old and young...career moves
When Bob said,, (the lonesome death of Hattie Carroll ) my thoughts where how could he do that gripping story of racial injustice,, in 63/64 and I didn't hear audio for most of it. Was the broadcast sensored?
Arlo Zipper Check our the description! Had to take the audio out for copyright, sadly, but there’s a link to the full video in the description.
Swingin’ Pig time
Not my remark
It seems to me as if the whole thing was censored I don't have any sound!
Steven Allen was less serious and funnier in later years.
I have been writing to Carol recently.
Only ONE Impt song from his early days I dont have video of--MASTER OF WAR.. The earliest one I have is from 1980s..anything earlier on video?
Piggy-218 There’s no known footage of him playing that song in the 60s. Maybe in the 70s, but I doubt it.
@@SwinginPig that is a real shame
Oh wow!
Did Bob get censored when singing this song on the show? Most of the song had no audio, I'm suspicious of the networks, too bad.
How painfully unprepared Steve Allen is. Amazing.
Great video. Did anyone else have the audio cut out?
Yes. Frustrating.
Read the poster's notes
@@kingcormack8004 Thank you. Always glance at the description.
Please read the description.
"i took the story from the newspaper and only change the words"
Me: oh that's a nice way to say it
the guy: What? i don't understand? what? you are confusing my little brain
You are quite the genius. I guess you have to be over 15 years of age to have heard of Steve Allen. You may want to use google and read up on him.
As you show your complete ignorance of Mr. Allen.
@@itomba Steve Allen wrote the following songs: Theme from Picnic"
"This Could Be the Start of Something Big"
"Pretend You Don't See Her, My Heart"
"The Gravy Waltz"
"The Saturday Evening Post"
"Impossible"
"Cool Yule"
Gwyllem Yes, I guess if you are young you would not know how accomplished the man was. His intellectual curiosity is something sorely missed in today’s media.
LITTLE BRAIN, not the right words to describe Steve Allen, the disrespect
Man, any list online of all Dylan's Tv appearances?
The Beatles took note of freewheel'en lp
That is truly the most square dude and the square introduction in the history of mankind. And I don't even use vernacular like that! No wonder Dylan started to drift from these people
intro feels like Mr. Rodgers... Awesome
Speechless
bob dylan has an amazing talent to stay true to himself and his art. These two guys seem like they cant be from any two further world apart. Dylan looks pretty uncomfortable but keeps his focus and composer, he remains in his own world even though he is under great assault from another world, he's on tv! and he is in the hot seat being interviewed, he doesnt like that particularly except if it can help get his "message" out there...there is no message! It amazes me, pleasures me that bob while in a whole other universe from this guy manages to be gracious to him, kind, which is what his parents taught him, and answer his questions as he understands them, this shows a man of character, grace, self control, intelligence and strength. Am i blowing it out of proportion and writing nonsense? i dont think so. He at such a young age had so many questions but even at this point he had figured out how to do what he was going to do and wasnt going to placate to anyone or anything at this juncture. Why? cause he already paid his dues in silence, in isolation, when no one cared and no one was talking or watching him, he needs no applause, though he likes it and will take it , he measures himself by himself and thats what marks his career as a artist who is unecumbered by almost ANYTHING. Bob dylan, hes pretty ok! "if you dont like me, you can leave me alone" bob dylan.
composure not composer
@@davidparris7167
composer
True to himself? I dunno. I could have done without his shilling for Victoria Secrets, Apple, Google.... I am a Dylanophile but those were not proud moments.
@@sfkjeld
Your not much of a dylanophile if you dont bob dylan is not so stupid to make a buck if he can. When did he ever say he was mother teresa? you didnt know that?
@@sfkjeld
Your not much of a dylanophile if you dont know bob dylan is not so stupid to make a buck if he can or turn down a buck? why is apple or secret evil? who told you that? When did he ever say he was mother teresa? you didnt know that? and you call yourself a dylanophile?
I read that it was his girlfriend of the time, Susie , who was a civil rights movement activist that sparked Dylan's songs like blowing in the wind etc,, without her influence he wouldn't have wrote them, as soon as they split up those sort of songs dried up and he went another route ( electric) . Fascinating!
Gr8 Stuff Bob and Steve.
This is another jem
He doesn’t stop a minute 🤣
Sound disappears at 8:32
Just enjoy the interview and listen to the record. It was actually nice of them to allow the interview to remain as long as they edited out the copywritten material.
Please read the description. You can hear the full version on that Vimeo link. It had to be cut out due to copyright.
@@SwinginPig I always forget how thorough you are, Swingin! thank you, and keep up the great work :-)
I have always considered Bob Dylan a poet first. And last.
gee, we almost get to see what he does on the guitar. notice how the guitar work is always blocked out...
Dan Bartz look at my description! Link to the full, unabridged version there!
To think at this point in his early career he was already a seasoned veteran... Like Baez quoted.. You burst on the scene like the unwashed phenomena...
Love the clap for Duluth, MN.
Allen gives a “wtf” glance and silences the only person besides Dylan from Duluth, MN who was ever heard from or seen on national television.
Dylan was born in Hibbing, Minnesota, not Duluth.
@@emiltrees [please confirm]
@@emiltrees , no....he was from Duluth, and his parents moved to Hibbing, where he graduated from high school.
Bob Dylan, age 22. Thank you, Swingin' Pig
Steve Allen wrote and published over 25,000 songs
Airdate was 10 March 1964.
Very stressful. No wonder he stopped doing this.
Thanks Swingin',. I have seen this online, U DEFINITELY improved the resolution.
Would it go against copyright if U inserted a different musical version of Hattie Carrol ?
Thank U for sharing this piece of Dylan history. Much Respect to U ♡♡♡
Edit: would be nice if fans would read description box before asking questions...I sometimes forget, no one is perfect... except Bobby of course lol. And Jesus ♡
Will check it out on alternate channel. OH, I LOVE your BEST of ELSTON GUNN '66 on Vimeo.
I savor every second once a week, at least. Brilliant editing !! ♡♡♡
So glad you enjoyed it, Michele! I put a lot of love into the 1966 compilation. Have a fantastic weekend
Would be more enjoyable with sound: not much to look at.
I enjoyed the little bit immensely, to me there was plenty to look at!
Check the description
Please read the description!! Link to full version there.
@@SwinginPig Thanks SP. Hope it's not from a hook!
There is no sound in the second half of the video
Audio cut out in the middle of the song. Wtf?
The context of the incident gives the incident a less horrendous character though still horrendous. Alas the song deservedly haunted Zanzenger the rest of his miserable life. Of note Hattie Carroll had and underlying heart condition which did her in versus dying from the beating by the “cane” which was not a real cane but a novelty party-favour cane fashioned out of plastic film that would be incapable of causing physical pain or harm…. but capable of causing psychological discomfort resulting in a fatal accelerated heart-rate.
26 people have no tears.
This was the same month The Bealtes did Sullivan. Shit was changing fast.