Can You Learn to Love Bob Dylan? | Discovering Bob Dylan, Ep. 1

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  • Опубликовано: 26 дек 2024

Комментарии • 219

  • @dyl-annfan6
    @dyl-annfan6 Год назад +8

    Bob Dylan is unique, a one off, irreplaceable, the likes of whom we will never see again. Those who are not "blessed" to "get him" I think misses out so much. No one comes close to his lyrics, delivery, story telling. His albums are for the "clarity of the lyrics" he comes to life on the live stage. Hope you finally "get him " ...

  • @lgpsan
    @lgpsan Год назад +4

    I never get tired of listening to Bob Dylan’s singing. While some other singers with “perfect voices” I can’t stand listening to them very long because they are empty of feeling or truth. Bob Dylan makes you feel his emotions and see colorful images.

  • @michaelb.9548
    @michaelb.9548 Год назад +8

    He’s the greatest writer in the history of rock. It’s both about the lyrics AND the music, but also about phrasing. Wether you like his voice or not is a question of hearing HOW he sings. I love his voices. He has always sung different.

  • @GlenKellawayfromthebasement
    @GlenKellawayfromthebasement Год назад +3

    I worship Bob Dylan..He is the G O A T…with no equals…I have been a fan since 1965…I am looking forward to watching these videos..very cool👍❤glen

  • @darthseamus8833
    @darthseamus8833 Год назад +17

    Bob Dylan in the 60’s was the coolest dude ever. He influenced so many people, wrote great songs, made three perfect albums in a row and looked cool doing it. Get with it Joe. Buy a mono copy of Blonde On Blonde and soak up over 70 minutes of perfection.

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +3

      Couldn't agree more!! I have Highway 61 on vinyl a mono copy it's perfect.

  • @Turtle152
    @Turtle152 Год назад +8

    One thing that set Dylan apart from other folksingers is that he spent a few years singing rock & roll before discovering folk. Also, he later said he had a "violent, angry emotion" running through him at the time he recorded his debut.

  • @wesleyorser4451
    @wesleyorser4451 Год назад +2

    Stones listography on October 20th?! C'mon boys! This is the moment we've been waiting YEARS for. It could be the vid that blows this channel up!!

  • @sl8605
    @sl8605 Год назад +3

    I could listen to Positively 4th Street all day.

  • @Lexwell_Lavers
    @Lexwell_Lavers Год назад +22

    Some people say Bob doesn't have a good voice. Try to sing like him, you'll finding it more difficult than you think. I've never heard any vocalist change their vocals from song to song more than Bob. There's a lot to understand about Bob's vocals in relation to the lyrics. I love Bob Dylan and all of his band change ups, Bob is a great composer. Blood On The Tracks I love as much as Blonde on Blonde.

    • @gforce4063
      @gforce4063 Год назад

      After Blonde On Blonde genius ends

  • @3bwana
    @3bwana Год назад +3

    Nashville Skyline is my all time favorite Bob Dylan album with with Blood On The Tracks coming in a close second

  • @billkeon880
    @billkeon880 Год назад +6

    One review once said ‘Dylan demonstrates the difference between a good voice and a good rock’n’roll voice’. Blonde on Blonde to me shows his vocal control, self confidence, rocknroll arrogance, and he sings drawn out words like someone on an acid trip would hear them going though the same experience

  • @al1976-v7m
    @al1976-v7m Год назад +2

    I think Dylan's Unplugged turned the switch for me. I liked some of his songs before, but the MTV Unplugged album was just the epitome of cool.

  • @MrUnclesean
    @MrUnclesean Год назад +4

    loved this ... keep rolling like stones with this format!

  • @spencerdobkin9479
    @spencerdobkin9479 10 месяцев назад +1

    Dylan changed my life and was one of the main reasons I got into music and started playing guitar. I've seen him live twice when I was 14 and 20. I used to listen to his 60s albums over and over in my teens especially Highway 61 Revisted, Freewheelin' and Blonde on Blonde. I first heard Blood on the Tracks when I was 13 and it floored me.

  • @Svein-Frode
    @Svein-Frode Год назад +4

    There's hope Joe! I didn't start enjoying Beatles, Stones or Dylan until I was in my 40s. Now I love all of them too bits!

  • @angelrising8589
    @angelrising8589 Год назад +4

    It took me a while to get him. I think it was bringing it all back home when I got it.

  • @stevehoran5595
    @stevehoran5595 Год назад +2

    I don't think there will be a revelation here. I'm 67 and have been listening to Bob Dylan's music since I was 6 years old when one of my big brothers brought his debut album home. As a 6 year old I was amused by Dylan's down home affectations on Talkin' New York and the part in Freight Train Blues where he holds a note for a long time. Baby, Let Me Follow You Down is fun and catchy and Song To Woody is sweet. But I'm having a hard time imagining Joe enjoying the rest of the album, based on his comments about Maggie's Farm.
    How Dylan differentiated himself in those days was through his grittiness. The Kingston Trio and Peter Paul & Mary had these beautiful harmonies but Dylan sounded rough-hewn, more burlap than silk. And his fans took this, I assume, as more real, more honest. But man, that was his act. He pretended to be a hobo, riding the rails like his role model, Woody Guthrie. The sound of his early albums is intimate, person to person. And this seems real. But his songwriting is full of obfuscation, except for rare protest songs like the Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll and Hurricane.
    Anyway, if you love him, god bless. But I have never developed a deep appreciation for his music, however much I've tried because of how hyped he is, and I don't think that that makes me a lesser person. His music has no charm for me, simple as that. I could explain more but this post is too long already.

  • @mitchellbenefiel4490
    @mitchellbenefiel4490 Год назад +3

    REALLY excited for this

  • @edgustafson
    @edgustafson Год назад +3

    Awesome new series. Looking forward to this.

  • @shane.b.
    @shane.b. Год назад +20

    already love this & haven’t even watched it yet. can’t wait for this whole series to unfold. Bob is my favorite artist of all time. super excited for Joe to get to albums like Oh Mercy + Love & Theft.

    • @danielpattison3422
      @danielpattison3422 Год назад +1

      Had trouble enjoying these as a kid growing up in the 80's and 2000's. But finally was able to truly enjoy these until my early 40's

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +1

      Do you like Highway 61 revisited? I have a mono version on vinyl I can't stop listening to it.

    • @shane.b.
      @shane.b. Год назад +1

      @@PatricksPlaybook yes! I love it, probably my favorite from the 60s after Blonde on Blonde

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +1

      @@shane.b. Amazing album as well!! I lean Highway 61 perhaps just because of the opening track but it's close!!

    • @charlotex1
      @charlotex1 Год назад +1

      @@PatricksPlaybook Highway 61 Revisited is me favorite album of all time, by any artist. If I were going to start bringing a non-believer into the Dylan Appreciation Society, I would start w/ 61. Why start with the "Bob Dylan" album. Nothing wrong with it but it's not going to blow your skirt up sufficiently to hook you. Highway 61 can grab you and pull you all the way through the door to stay. From there, I would go back one album, then forward one album, then back another, then forward, and so on. Additionally, I might point to the highlights on some of the weaker albums and not require a complete wall-to-wall listen.

  • @rhwinner
    @rhwinner Год назад +2

    The Live 1966 album was the one that clinched it for me with Dylan. I admit being slow to fully appreciate him, but that album was a revelation to me.

    • @spencerdobkin9479
      @spencerdobkin9479 6 месяцев назад

      I used to play that album over and over in college just soaking it up. No one has ever been cooler than mid 60s Dylan or probably just Dylan overall.

  • @warrenhughes911
    @warrenhughes911 Год назад +2

    Great reaction guys..
    Bob is the G.O.A.T..not those sports guys!!
    Shakespeare with a guitar!!

  • @ykmgeedee
    @ykmgeedee Год назад +3

    Already a fan but appreciation level increased while watching live broadcast of The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration. Clancy Brothers etc with When the Ship Comes In, Lou Reed with Foot of Pride, June Carter Cash & Johnny Cash doing It Ain't Me Babe ... lots more. Knew was witnessing something special. Goosebumps!

  • @jamesegan2742
    @jamesegan2742 Год назад +13

    Wow, this is fantastic! Big props to Joe for being open to explore in such depth my very favourite artist, Bob Dylan….and to be joined by the ever articulate Dylan namesake! So excited to watch this series and to chime in. I have been pushing in my modest way for Joe to better appreciate the Bob, so I am very respectful of his willingness to tackle this Everest. Such a great surprise and treat! And co-host Dylan has already expressed very well why Dylan is so important and valued…and absolutely the seeds of a unique interpretation and appreciation of traditional working man folk is clear on the very strong first album. To really explore this (and other) periods, you should also listen to adjoining Bootleg Series releases…in this case Volume One, the first disc…to hear many Dylan authored songs that weren’t included for whatever reason on Bob Dylan the album. Revelatory and essential. This is going to be great! Thank you Joe! Cheers, JPE

  • @hazydavo
    @hazydavo Год назад +3

    Great idea Joe 👍 Love it. Eagerly awaiting the next ep! Also agree that context is a factor that should be a consideration 👌

  • @michaeltatum9750
    @michaeltatum9750 Год назад +1

    Joe is the most fascinating person on this channel. I don’t agree with him about Sonic Youth and such, but of the three TLM hosts, he’s the one most willing to get out of his comfort zone, to stretch himself, to challenge his preconceived notions. He’s also the only one of the three who seems like to appreciate soul and R&B, but we’ll save that complaint for another day (how about a P-funk catalog dive?). Looking forward to “Bringing it all Back Home” (currently going backwards…).

  • @monster900900
    @monster900900 Год назад +2

    my dylan journey started in the seventies ,, with desire then blood on the tracks which sealed my love for bob ,, didnt take to his sixties stuff to begin with,, but it didnt take long , just had to have every record good or bad ,, awesome artist .

  • @Vanessa.P
    @Vanessa.P Год назад +8

    This is going to be fun to watch this journey unfold AND with a superstar guest to boot! Look forward to seeing your discussions and seeing how Joe reacts to the entire discography, especially since I am on my own journey through it myself (I've made it the late 00s so far). Dylan is the perfect guide and if he can't help Joe love Bob, no one can.

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +1

      Vanessa you have wonderful musical takes!! Highway 61 Revisted is my favorite Dylan the lyrics are literally perfect

    • @Vanessa.P
      @Vanessa.P Год назад

      @@PatricksPlaybook thanks Patrick, I really appreciate that! Highway 61 is a great choice, amazing album.

  • @tomklenskjr.2491
    @tomklenskjr.2491 Год назад +3

    I also never quite managed to swallow the full magnificence of what constitutes classic Dylan. When I was growing up as a teenager The Traveling Wilburys was very much a thing that I gravitated towards. ELO’s Afterglow while not a great box set was the first set of music that I can recall buying with my own money. And still to this day the loss of Tom Petty as an artist has had a profound effect on me beyond no other. Back in those days I also loved George and was delighted by my discovery of the Beatles catalog, but I never really ever did the same with Dylan.
    I too love his “Like a Rolling Stone” his best song, IMO) while my favorite Dylan album to this day and I in fact consider it to be my favorite album of all time is “Blood on the Tracks”. Released in 1975 the year of my birth, I’ve never heard it’s equal as an overall listening experience. I also too quite enjoy “Nashville Skyline” that album is a total hoot and not without its own pathos … being a long time Nickel Creek fan, I love Sara’s take on the Dylan penned tune “Tomorrow is a Long Time” and at almost 50 now I’m still discovering great tunes like just earlier this year and Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” I now find that to be a brilliant song. So bottom line is have fun on the journey Joe. And same goes to us all, on this continually blissful acquaintance and discovery of perfect and ebullient music.

  • @johnpyle1022
    @johnpyle1022 Год назад +1

    Hey, as a big Dylan fan, this is a good new idea! Enjoyed the first, looking 4ward to more, cheers!

  • @PatricksPlaybook
    @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +4

    Joe this is an incredible idea. Being from Minnesota Dylan and Prince are revered and introducing the topic you wear a Purple Rain shirt!!
    But you dont have to love him. Your ears hear what they hear. His voice is obviously a hindrance to some. I find his voice so unique that its refreshing. Just the lyrics to Like A Rolling Stone alone make him a legend!! Proud of you for trying!! Best music channel on You tube in my opinion!!

  • @bengalgangster
    @bengalgangster Год назад +4

    i was not a dylan fan growing up as my bro adorded him!!! But he has for sure grown on me!! Im still not totally there yet , but i seem to appreciate him more and more!!🐯🐯

    • @weirddebbiem1619
      @weirddebbiem1619 Год назад +1

      I like a few songs, but wouldn't consider myself a fan. However, I do appreciate him.

    • @bengalgangster
      @bengalgangster Год назад +1

      @@weirddebbiem1619 thats how i was

    • @weirddebbiem1619
      @weirddebbiem1619 Год назад +1

      ​@@bengalgangsterGreat minds. 🎶💜💜

  • @painless465
    @painless465 Год назад +4

    I didn’t get Dylan til I was 32, when I heard BOTT and New morning. Now he’s my favorite artist. Warning, deep rabbit hole ahead’

  • @stefanredelsteinerexperien5957
    @stefanredelsteinerexperien5957 Год назад +3

    Great Idea for a Podcast, and I hope Joe finally gets Bob in the end... I think the right albums to convince him, will be albums like "Desire" and "Slow Train Coming", where the arrangments and productions aren't as stripped down as usual (but not as overproduced and soulless as his 80s lowpoints)

  • @fdunlop
    @fdunlop Год назад +2

    I've just started another run-through of Dylan's discography myself (listened up to Street Legal before but will go further this time) so this is perfect timing.
    Joe's also doing an amazing job as a host and is the perfect subject for this concept (possibly the most open-minded, or open-earred, of the boys)

  • @TZ61
    @TZ61 Год назад +2

    Dylan mentioning the almost folk/punk feel of this first album got me to thinking about when I was in my 20s and beginning to dip into the blues. I would hear guys from Sabbath, Metallica, Megadeth, and, of course, Clapton and Page etc. talk about how heavily influenced they were by '20s, '30s blues players. I would kind of roll my eyes, and then go back and listen to Charley Patton, Blind Willie Johnson, Robert Johnson, of course, and I'll be damned if I don't hear it. Looking forward to upcoming episodes. Thanks guys.

  • @michaelfendrich1864
    @michaelfendrich1864 Год назад +3

    Joe, this is great! As a Dylan fan, I sure understand those who don't appreciate him. Voice, production, frequent changes in direction. But there are those of us who appreciate him being who he is and not cranking out the same thing for the past 40 years. And lyrically, there is no one who comes close. Joni Mitchell is the best complete package but she can't compare lyrically and as a cultural icon. But I love this interview and can't wait for future episodes.

  • @chrisdelisle3954
    @chrisdelisle3954 Год назад +4

    Joe, I think this is a great idea! But I'm not entirely sure that starting from the beginning and moving forward listening to one studio album after another is the easiest way to go. I don't know if you're going to be turned on to the "Times They Are A Changin'" and "Another Side Of Bob Dylan" albums until you're already "getting" him. And that might feel frustrating for you.
    I was one of those listeners who originally thought the Byrds' versions of his songs were more pleasing to the ear. Then I took one listen to his "Mr. Tambourine Man" and it was over. His versions just blew theirs out of the water.
    I think one of the main obstacles in discovering Bob is that there is SO MUCH of it. Perhaps, instead of listening to albums, you should try listening to individual songs first.
    There's "romantic" Bob:
    Tomorrow Is A Long Time
    Boots Of Spanish Leather
    Mama, You've Been On My Mind
    I'll Keep It With Mine
    If Not For You
    There's "heart-breaking" Bob:
    Don't Think Twice (It's Alright)
    Let Me Die In My Footsteps
    Moonshiner
    Simple Twist Of Fate
    There's "not sure what the best adjective to use here" Bob:
    He Was A Friend Of Mine
    Bob Dylan's Dream
    Mr. Tambourine Man
    There's "odd" or "amusing" Bob:
    Yea! Heavy And A Bottle of Bread
    Talkin' Bear Mountain Picnic Massacre Blues
    I Shall Be Free
    Highway 61 Revisited
    Isis
    There's "F-you" Bob:
    Positively 4th Street
    Idiot Wind
    There's "where in the hell did this come from?" Bob:
    It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
    Desolation Row
    Visions Of Johanna
    Last Thoughts On Woody Guthrie
    Tangled Up In Blue
    There's "dropping pearls of wisdom" Bob:
    Blowin' In The Wind
    The Times They Are A-Changin'
    Subterranean Homesick Blues
    There are many other Bobs, as well. Just watch the movie "I'm Not There," one of the most inspirational movies I've ever seen.
    I also wonder if it would be a better idea to listen to some of his "Bootleg Series" albums prior to his studio albums: Volume 4 (Live 1966), Volume 5 (Live 1975) and Volume 6 (Live 1964) are excellent entries into the music of those eras.

  • @ruben7350
    @ruben7350 Год назад +2

    Dylan clicked finally for me just yesterday. I just think his songwriting is outstanding and that it has plenty of beautiful and fun music to get into. Highway 61 Revisited did it for me, but Desire is also a good start.

  • @stevemalek2970
    @stevemalek2970 Год назад +3

    I am kind of in the same boat as Joe, although I've come to appreciate Bob's music a lot more. My revelation was hearing Sign on the Window on Spotify and instantly falling in love with it. I went and immediately purchased New Morning to listen to that song and the other songs on it. I then decided to listen to 2 records that were considered some of his best, that being Blood on the Tracks and Desire. While, they both had some great songs on them, these albums didn't captivate me enough. I will still have to revisit them and give them another listen. I tried Nashville Skyline, which I enjoyed very much and purchased. Tried John Wesley Harding but did not really enjoy it because I am not a fan of songs that start with a loud harmonica sound. I have recently tried Planet Waves and I think this may be my current favorite album of his. I guess my point, you have to try his different albums and some you may like and some you won't.

  • @bengalgangster
    @bengalgangster Год назад +2

    dylan with a head east shoutout ,what a great band!🐯

  • @MikeVernonProd
    @MikeVernonProd Год назад +4

    Great idea for a show! Really liked Dylan’s praise for the first album. I totally agree that the energetic performances make it stand out. I always enjoy listening to it. Looking forward to Joe’s reactions!

  • @TroubadourAtHeart
    @TroubadourAtHeart 11 месяцев назад +1

    Dylan is also a painter and for me his songs are like paintings - they strike you in a visceral way - or they don't. Trying to break down his music verbally to say why someone "should" love like it is a fool's mission. Dylan's music has been with me through the arc of my whole life. Hard to imagine a world without it. It doesn't make someone a bad persosn if they don't appreciate his music. Art is subjective after all. But I do feel sorry for those who don't - has the world of his creativity is a deep wonderful cavern to explore.

  • @curtisragan6272
    @curtisragan6272 Год назад +2

    Watching "Don't Look Back" and "No Direction Home" is what made it click for me. Seeing him as the flawed and sometimes petulant man of the moment rather than rock star emeritus was what did it. The end of "Don't Look Back" (I think, it may be NDH) has the damnedest version of "Like a Rolling Stone". One of the most badass rock n roll things I've ever seen. Thank god it made it on videotape.

    • @karlmehltretter2677
      @karlmehltretter2677 3 месяца назад

      Yeah I remember beeing so much at awe looking at "Don't look back".. There was this amazing song about "William Zanzinger" that I thought was 200 years old.

  • @asmundgjystdal4204
    @asmundgjystdal4204 Год назад +6

    Cool series! I fully agree with Dylan that "The way Dylan sings really connect with me on an emotional level". Bob Dylan is my favourite artist of all time, and like Dylan says in this episode, I think his debut is too often overlooked and brushed away as something unimportant, but I think Dylan is as good at interpreting songs, as he is writing them. By the way, I like Empire Burlesque, not necessarily the arrangements, but I think the songwriting is strong, apart from Clean Cut Kid (which is in my bottom 5 Dylan songs).

  • @davidpalmer9014
    @davidpalmer9014 Год назад +5

    This is a great idea for a series. I definitely have great artists I just don't get.

  • @edward8597
    @edward8597 Год назад +11

    Absolutely agree on Dylan as a great vocalist. Words are just syllables for so many singers; Bob Dylan sings every line, self-penned or cover, like he *means* it. It's never just empty sounds.
    Also: "Moonshiner" from BS1-3 is to me absolute proof that he is a technically good singer as well.

  • @frodofraggins
    @frodofraggins Год назад +3

    I'll never LOVE him but I respect his songwriting talents and the massive influence he's had on music. I did score Highway 61 Revisited at 4.5 stars, which is fairly rare for me honestly.

  • @nicolepisa26
    @nicolepisa26 Год назад +2

    My favorite thing about Bob is the variety of his sound. I love most of his different sounds but I’m excited for you to (hopefully) find at least one album you fall in love with. What made me go from liking him to loving him was probably the first time I heard the Nashville Skyline album.

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +1

      Cool choice Nicole. Highway 61 Revisted for me!! I'm from Minnesota he is revered here

    • @nicolepisa26
      @nicolepisa26 Год назад

      @@PatricksPlaybook That’s my second favorite that made me love him :). “It takes a lot to laugh…” is in my top 5 songs from him.

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +1

      @@nicolepisa26 I have it on vinyl I can't believe how good it is. It was 1965!! Like A Rolling Stone is such a bitter anthem yet somehow its fun!! I'll try Nashville Skyline I know it's important to his catalog!!

  • @davidellis5141
    @davidellis5141 Год назад +5

    My favorite Dylan moment was on his radio show when he played " You Can't Put Your Arms Around A Memory " by Johnny Thunders & commented .. " I wish I wrote something that good " .. Humility is a virtue. Seeing him live in 1979 made me a fan.

  • @burmajones803
    @burmajones803 Год назад +1

    This is an intriguing idea! Might have to give it a try. Kudos to you, Joe, for giving this topic a go!

  • @UlyssesJonah
    @UlyssesJonah Год назад +1

    i have been waiting for this moment my whole life, i can see my life changing already
    no seriously excited for this series!

  • @paulmanina7522
    @paulmanina7522 Год назад +3

    Glad you are doing this, Dylan is a great addition to your musical appreciation and who better to highlight all those nooks and crannies than a guy called Dylan. Ace stuff, I’m hooked. 👍

  • @canadianstudmuffin
    @canadianstudmuffin Год назад +19

    I'm not a huge fan but I respect his career and actually like his vocals. He is one of the greatest songwriters for sure. My favorite album of his is "Slow Train Coming".

    • @davidellis5141
      @davidellis5141 Год назад +2

      That was the first tour I saw Bob & it was great & so is the album ✅️

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +2

      Your channel is incredible I just discovered it today!! Being from Minnesota it's like a law that we have to love Dylan!!

    • @canadianstudmuffin
      @canadianstudmuffin Год назад +1

      @@PatricksPlaybook Thank you, and yes to Dylan
      🙂

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +1

      @@canadianstudmuffin It's probably that way in Canada with Rush!! Whom I love as well.

    • @fourseasons4105
      @fourseasons4105 Год назад +2

      I'd label him one of the greatest lyricists of all time, but his song arranging and melody writing skills tend to be very overrated IMO, I usually prefer listening to other more talented people covering his songs so that the amazing lyricism of his is still there but the musical part is altered and made much better.

  • @skmc4940
    @skmc4940 Год назад +1

    Very cool theme with a different twist to your show. I am looking forward to your journey. :)

  • @slaydesaid8741
    @slaydesaid8741 Год назад +1

    Interesting idea - my feelings are probably similar to Joe's here. I don't love his voice but I do not have a problem with it either (I used to really not like it, but I've grown to appreciate it to some extent). Just listened to The Minks' album on bandcamp, can definitely recommend it to anyone into americana or alternative rock. Good stuff indeed.

  • @robforzese5496
    @robforzese5496 Год назад +5

    First album I heard from Dylan was bringing it all back home….being a new listener at the time, I remember liking subterranean homesick blues and mr tambourine man but the song I think that made me realize what Bob was all about was its alright Ma, I’m only bleeding. I now love Bob Dylan there’s a certain suspense I get every time I hear a new album because I want to know what he has to say. It took me awhile Joe but I think you can get there

    • @spencerdobkin9479
      @spencerdobkin9479 10 месяцев назад +1

      That was my favorite Dylan album forever until the last few years when Blonde on Blonde took that spot for me. I love both so much.

  • @strahljd
    @strahljd Год назад +2

    lol the White album was my first deep dive into the Beatles as well when I was a kid, I agree that it shapes your life in a very unique way

  • @aidanphr1446
    @aidanphr1446 Год назад +2

    When I was 10, 11, 12 years old, Bob Dylan was probably my all time favorite artist, even over The Beach Boys and The Who (the madness of youth). Today, I can't dispute that many of his albums are 5 star experiences "objectively speaking", but with some exceptions, I don't find myself wanting to listen to them as often as most other artists I loved at that age.
    At this point, I very much enjoy a classical music type experience from pop. Of course albums like Sgt. Pepper, Pet Sounds, and Quadrophenia records deliver that in spades with all the baroque instrumentation, rhapsody-ish song structures, and in the case of Quadrophenia literally having leitmotifs like a 19th century opera. With Dylan it's obviously a lot more derived from folk and blues, which I don't think appeals to me as much anymore. But who knows, my taste could easily shift again back to that sound.

    • @AbbeyRoadkill1
      @AbbeyRoadkill1 Год назад

      The arc of my Dylan experience was pretty much the opposite. I wasn't into him when I was young. I knew about many of his most famous songs when I was a teenager, but I didn't consider myself a big fan. It's only after I started doing Dylan deep dives in college (and the years after) that he started climbing up my all-time list.

  • @maggiebryan2355
    @maggiebryan2355 Год назад +3

    I am a big bob fan love his voice and all his changes

  • @peterhansen1358
    @peterhansen1358 Год назад +1

    Looking forward to this. I absolutely don’t like Bob Dylan, but we will see….

  • @davidgagen9856
    @davidgagen9856 Год назад +1

    Wow...this is a great idea. Song To Woody is wonderful on this album. Also Talkin Blues style song taps into great tradition of this style Woody Guthrie made famous.

  • @greigmartin4339
    @greigmartin4339 Год назад +1

    Best of all time in my book. My wife and kids can’t suffer him 😂. Great idea for a series of vids. The first album is definitely underrated in his discography. I think it’s better than a lot of his other 60s output. I’d put it ahead of Nashville Skyline and maybe even Another Side and John Wesley Harding.

  • @alosadav
    @alosadav Год назад +1

    I'm just a minute in and I know it's gonna be the best video ever. Suerte Joe! Te va a encantar!

  • @michelewiese48
    @michelewiese48 Год назад +1

    Really looking forward to this!
    Joe appears open to dispelling his own prejudices, perceptions and myths surrounding music. I see this in the diverse styles of the artists and bands he respects and discusses. Ever-changing open-mindedness is the key to growth. He’s putting in the work. Happy you’re giving Bob Dylan a real chance to wow you (or make you laugh, cry, or contemplate.)

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +1

      Well stated Michele!! Highway 61 Revisted is my favorite album of his it's literally perfect

    • @michelewiese48
      @michelewiese48 Год назад

      @@PatricksPlaybook Hi Patrick! Thank you. I probably love his mid to late 70s run of albums the best: Blood On The Tracks, Desire, and Street-Legal. Shelter From The Storm, Oh, Sister and New Pony are among my absolute fave Bob songs. He sounded and looked so freakin’ cool during this time period. 😎 I’ve yet to hear everything though! Hope you have a wonderful weekend.

    • @PatricksPlaybook
      @PatricksPlaybook Год назад +1

      @@michelewiese48 60s Dylan for me but like most of it!! In Minnesota he is everything along with Prince!! Have great weekend!!

  • @kevtruth
    @kevtruth Год назад +2

    I love this idea for a series

  • @wesleyorser4451
    @wesleyorser4451 Год назад +1

    I've recommended it to you before, Joe, but I'm predicting you are really going to like Planet Waves compared to some of Dylan's denser albums. It is a really fun listen, and The Band's playing is fantastic.

  • @179rich
    @179rich Год назад +3

    When I first heard "Like a Rolling Stone" I thought it sounded weak. My exposure to music was just too limited at the time. I was more oriented towards things like Van Halen and The Cars. Love it now though.

    • @AbbeyRoadkill1
      @AbbeyRoadkill1 Год назад +1

      Same here. Dylan didn't rock enough for my 16 year old brain. I didn't really start to 'get' him until I was in college.

  • @jupitermadcat
    @jupitermadcat Год назад +2

    Wow, what a undertaking. I’m 60 For the life of me I’ve been trying to get into Bob Dylan. as a teenager. I tried to get into him when blood on the tracks came out and desire at that time. I even remember watching the hard rain special back in 1976. It was on TV. I had a poster of him on my wall. I just thought it was something I’m supposed to do like this guy because the Beatles liked him and I was a big Beatles fan, but I just couldn’t continue. I understand his importance in music history and I respect it but I just don’t get it. The only album I can tolerate all the way through is Nashville skyline.

  • @donaldwesterhazy9333
    @donaldwesterhazy9333 Год назад +3

    If "The Lonesome Ballad Of Hattie Carroll" was the only song Dylan wrote he would deserve to be remembered.

  • @stephenbellotti2036
    @stephenbellotti2036 Год назад +1

    Totally agree with fellow RI native here that Dylan is more than a songwriter. I think people who know a lot about popular music/rock and also aren't big Dylan fans, tend to appreciate the lyrics and the influence of Dylan. But I think they might put him in that box and that's what closes them off? Like Dylan Sevey, I also think his voice has so much emotion in it and people underestimate the music. Lot of people look at say All Along the Watchtower. They understand it's a great song, with great lyrics, and he's a great songwriter and oh by the way isn't the Hendrix's version so much better. And the Hendrix version is great no doubt, but that stripped down version on Harding is a different aesthetic choice that conveys the apocalyptic vibe just as well. I'd say better for not being as obvious. Anyway I'm clearly rooting for your breakthrough! Just that I see a lot people who are very very knowledgeable about music create lots of different conceptual boxes to understand it all and then put Dylan into one in a way that cuts off the way they hear it. Dylan actually wrote a poem about he always thought Joan Baez's music was too pretty to be good until one night when he got drunk and his defenses were down. That poem is kind of like the reverse of how most people do it. All right. I'm on the edge my seat.

  • @chrismcgovern1647
    @chrismcgovern1647 Год назад +1

    BTW, Joe I think you will enjoy the deep cuts more than the 'hits'. I was floored when I heard the 1st eight albums when they came out on CD, and I played them almost into the ground. I have a feeling you will be a big fan of Freewheelin and Bringing It All Back Home when you get to those.

  • @chrismcgovern1647
    @chrismcgovern1647 Год назад +1

    LUV that you guys are talking Dylan on this video, I just covered Eat The Document on Gen-X Muse and I am preparing to discuss the "Judas" concert from '66 to follow that up, I love this period of Dylan, but I have always loved and appreciated Dylan's acoustic stuff, maybe more than the electric stuff at times, but I wasn't one of these idiots from back in the day that acted like my childhood was robbed when he went electric.

  • @beachchiken3009
    @beachchiken3009 Год назад +1

    Bob Dylan changed everything. I've seen him 26 times from 1989 to present. Anyone who claims to like music should get it. Fuckig rock star that made me think and feel.

  • @JackCerro
    @JackCerro Год назад +2

    Good on you. I would suggest listening to covers of his songs. His songwriting speaks for itself, but sometimes I need to hear the song sung by another artist before it really hits me.

  • @Skroskznik
    @Skroskznik Год назад +3

    Jesus Christ this is going to be insane I love it ❤

  • @martinlarsson5254
    @martinlarsson5254 Год назад +3

    Wow! Interesting to follow this series of the Dylan discography. Artist in the folk scene that were bigger in 1962: Woody Guthrie, Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Peter, Paul & Mary, Dave van Ronk to mention a few. But Bob was unique in writing his own sharp lyrics in a very fast way - almost like AI today. 😅 You must listen to the bootleg to hear more of hisnsongs from these years. ❤

  • @classyminx2161
    @classyminx2161 Год назад +4

    Yes you can cause he’s the goat 🐐

  • @57md81
    @57md81 Год назад +13

    Does not liking Dylan make you a bad person? No. But, it calls your musical taste into question. At least, you're working toward self-improvement. 😅😄😂

  • @ronreynolds1610
    @ronreynolds1610 Год назад

    As a Rock and Roll fan appreciating the evolution of Rock , you will find a large influence from BD in your journey .. EX: when Bob came on the scene it was popular to be a handsome clean cut man with a great voice ...ha ... Bob was a scraggley kid with a yodel like hillbilly voice , but he knew how to courageously ''deliver'' the words and this got the attention of that early crowd .... The folk scene (early 60's) then is worth researching as a historical reference due to how it will be changed ...... IMO

  • @esteeb67
    @esteeb67 Год назад +1

    I like Bob as much as the average Joe, which I guess is more than you (even though that is your name). I have a couple of hit packages and a few stray CDs. My favorite is Love & Theft. Oh Mercy has some pretty good stuff too. Looking forward to this series.

  • @adamhasideas6813
    @adamhasideas6813 Год назад +1

    Oh no, now Joe becomes ANOTHER Dylan fan! Crap, now we'll have to hear even more about Bob! Used to love having one person that didn't worship at his shrine.

  • @imas2pid80it
    @imas2pid80it 10 месяцев назад +1

    The first album is worth a listen especially for his version of House of the Rising Sun which will make you hear all other versions in a different way.

    • @TastesLikeMusic
      @TastesLikeMusic  10 месяцев назад

      His version is okay. It’s about 1/100000th as good as the Animals though. - Joe

  • @adamcortright494
    @adamcortright494 Год назад +2

    "I saw guns and sharp swords in the hands of young children"; "And I'll stand over your grave until I'm sure that you're dead"; "And there ain't no use in turnin' on your light, babe, I'm on the dark side of the road;" "Two men died 'neath the Mississippi moon, somebody better investigate soon"; etc., for starters.

  • @independenceltd.
    @independenceltd. Год назад +1

    i don't think you can learn to love dylan, but i think you can learn to like him. i bought "blood on the tracks" because i thought i needed a dylan disc in my collection, and i do love "tangled up in blue". and it's a really, really good album. it probably wouldn't even crack my top 100...200...but it's got great songs on it (nobody can deny dylan's wordplay) and every once in a while, i might pull it out. and it's good enough that if I ever came across another one of his landmark albums, like "blonde on blonde," that if the price was right i'd buy it.

  • @palacerevolution2000
    @palacerevolution2000 Год назад +1

    Excellent concept. IMO this is about as good as this kind of channel can get. Full of doubt, but with courage.
    IMO the episode really starts once DS starts talking in depth about 'Freewheelin"; very good.

  • @viscountpalmerston
    @viscountpalmerston Год назад +1

    Will you chaps be reviewing the new Stones single? Just heard it and, putting the slightly lame sounding backing vocals to one side, I really like it!

  • @stefano.b65stef77
    @stefano.b65stef77 Год назад +2

    Hi Joe, In my opinion if you love Gene Clark "no other" to bits as you said, it's impossible you might not like some of Bob Dylan albums, namely Nashville Skyline, Blood on the tracks and Desire, unless you don't like the person itself

  • @dtchinacat3973
    @dtchinacat3973 Год назад

    Bob of course is one of the greatest lyricist ever, he is definitely very special kind of musician " King of Folk Rock"! I actually love his voice , his flat, nasally, off key thing works perfectly for certain songs! For me, it's all about Bring it on Home, Highway 61 Revisited and most definitely Blood on the Tracks (one of my all time favorite albums ever)!

  • @rvegas81
    @rvegas81 Год назад +1

    He’s an acquired taste. It’s so odd because I’ve been listening to Neil young and Joan baez. Can’t wait to listen to this podcast! Ray Carter.

  • @bengalgangster
    @bengalgangster Год назад +1

    joe you got BENGAL cred!!🐯

  • @paulok2153
    @paulok2153 Год назад +1

    Love his 70s stuff, the rest, odd exceptio,n, not keen. So much music, so little time to struggle.

  • @curly_wyn
    @curly_wyn Год назад +1

    Yeah, I’m not an all-time Dylan fan, mostly actually because it’s hard for me to be able to completely separate him and his work from the questionable (to say the least) stuff that he’s done in his life. As an artist, he’s absolutely important and legendary am for all of his influence and impact, and for that I do respect him a great bit. That being said, I can’t really say that I like most of his material except for the classic period and Blood on the Tracks.

  • @H.RLarson
    @H.RLarson Год назад +2

    most people embrace the sophomoric or benign like ' IMAGINE' or 'BOHEMIAN RHAPOSDY' for others DYLAN sang his words his way, real and raw, but if you fail to realize he was the greatest artist of the 20th century, it doesn't mean you can't have good taste in other things

  • @djtforever1414
    @djtforever1414 Год назад +2

    Loving Dylan is as natural as mothers milk.

  • @ustheserfs
    @ustheserfs Год назад +2

    the dylan indoctrination experiment, good luck joe

  • @aidanphr1446
    @aidanphr1446 Год назад +1

    Next time Joe will have to get Dylan to learn to love Pet Sounds and fix that 3/5 score

  • @mytsi50
    @mytsi50 Год назад +1

    In the 60s and 70s we named our dogs Dylan.

  • @danielpattison3422
    @danielpattison3422 Год назад +1

    Bob Dylan to me is really much a mixed bag.
    So many different styles from the young idealistic folk troubadour, to the expanded musical mind of the rock psychedelic era, to the retreat and reunification with country and roots music, the mid 30's romantic confessional period, the "saved by religion phase".... each chapter and journey/discovery matches our own trials and tribulations.
    It's also incredibly difficult to share his mind set and feel if you yourself is out of time with the material.
    it's hard to be youthful and rebellious in your mid 30's while it's incredibly difficult to feel the pain, heartbreak confessional times of divorce in your early 20's.
    hope this second or third go around for you Joe, you and bobs music melds at the correct time and place

  • @billkeon880
    @billkeon880 Год назад +2

    Kram could do this for Billy Joel. Strap him down like Alex in A Clockwork Orange

    • @TastesLikeMusic
      @TastesLikeMusic  Год назад +2

      The difference between Kram and I is I have the ability to change. - Joe