Buy vinyl records, used cds and out-of-print music albums from hundreds of record stores
25 Million Vinyl Records and CDs 
2.6 Million Orders Since 1997

             Advanced Search

Bob Dylan

-

Dylan Speaks



On first inspection, this looks more like The Zim & the Grim – a mere seven songs, including the warhorses "All Along the Watchtower" and "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," with a garish cover by the famed poster artist Rick Griffin that would look better on a concert T-shirt. For this we waited eighteen months? It's a pretty safe bet that this souvenir from the 1987 Dylan-Dead summer stadium tour will handily outsell Knocked Out Loaded and Down in the Groove combined. But that has a lot more to do with the Dead's recent commercial... Read More

resurrection (not to mention getting two legends for the price of one) than it does with the public's hunger for a live version of "Joey," the dirgelike ode to gangster Joey Gallo that no one seemed to like when it appeared on Desire.

In fact, despite the presence of the Dead, the album is an all-too-typical late-Eighties Dylan album, fascinating for the expectations it raises and frustrating in the ways it keeps missing the mark. Yet there's evidence that Dylan and the Dead had a good thing going, intermittently anyway. The Dead's elastic rhythms are well suited to the shuffle beat of Dylan's '79 sermonettes "Slow Train" and "Gotta Serve Somebody." Dylan's spit 'n' snarl vocals notwithstanding, both songs have an unexpected warmth that recalls "Truckin'" more than fire and brimstone. The subtle propulsion of drummers Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart, combined with the agitated guitar chatter between Jerry Garcia and Bob Weir, gives a good boot in the rear to "All Along the Watchtower" – and to Dylan, who sings with surprising animation.

Two other tour highlights were the electric transformation of "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" and the rejuvenation of "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again." Unfortunately, they aren't included on the album; instead we get an awkward "Queen Jane Approximately" and a sour reading of "I Want You," from Blonde on Blonde.

The timing of this release doesn't help. On subsequent tours, the Dead have retooled such Dylan songs as "Desolation Row," "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" and "When I Paint My Masterpiece" with a blend of psychedelic idiosyncrasy and American Beauty gentility that eclipses almost everything on this record. Now there's an idea for an album: The Dead Do Dylan.

For that matter, Dylan did Dylan better on his fall-1988 tour with the punked-up trio led by guitarist G.E. Smith; he sang the old songs with an improvisatory relish wholly missing on this album. The Dylan-Dead tour was a historic collaboration certainly worth recording for posterity. Dylan & the Dead, though, makes you wonder what the fuss was about. You really had to be there. (RS 546)


DAVID FRICKE



      
Search within Bob Dylan:

Bob Dylan Records and CDs
Another Side Of Bob Dylan
At Budokan
Baby Stop Crying
Blonde On Blonde
Blood On The Tracks
    Bob Dylan
Bringing It All Back Home
Desire
Empire Burlesque
Greatest Hits

   

       No Special Order Items    No Vinyl+CDR       Price USD       

Zine
  Artist   Title   Format   Condition  
Price 
   Seller Location
  Bob Dylan Mojo Feb 1998   Dylan Speaks
Complete Magazine With Exclusive Dylan Interview Plus Elvis Costello And Greil Marcus On Dylans R...
  Zine   M $6.00      Rogers
UK   

Search for more BOB DYLAN records and CDs on MusicStack

Subscribe to Bob Dylan - Dylan Speaks Alerts - Receive an email every time new items are listed (unsubscribe anytime).

Search for Bob Dylan at:

 





Follow MusicStack on Pinterest

     Artists | Genres | Labels
Sell on MusicStack
Link To Us | Affiliates | Terms | Privacy | About Us | Help | Contact