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areuonsomething.com Track listing: No Direction Home Soundtrack Disc 1 1. When I Got Troubles 2. Rambler, Gambler 3. This Land Is Your Land 4. Song To Woody 5. Dink's Song 6. I Was Young When I Left Home 7. Sally Gal 8. Don't Think Twice, It's All Right 9. Man of Constant Sorrow 10. Blowin' In The Wind 11. Masters Of War 12. A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall 13. When The Ship Comes In 14. Mr. Tambourine Man 15. Chimes Of Freedom 16. It's All Over Now, Baby Blue Disc 2 1. She Belongs To Me 2. Maggie's Farm 3. It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry 4. Tombstone Blues 5. Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues 6. Desolation Row 7. Highway 61 Revisited 8. Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat 9. Stuck Inside of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again 10. Visions Of Johanna 11. Ballad Of A Thin Man 12. Like A Rolling Stone Label: Columbia/Legacy / Release Date: August 30, 2005 Live At The Gaslight 1962 1. A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall 2. Rocks And Gravel 3. Don't Think Twice, It's All Right 4. The Cuckoo 5. Moonshiner 6. Handsome Molly 7. Cocaine 8. John Brown 9. Barbara Allen 10. West Texas Available at Starbucks Coffee Shops and starbucks.com First thing's first, let's clear up any confusion. On August 30th 2005, Columbia Records released a 2 CD set of unreleased Bob Dylan material to serve as a soundtrack to the Martin Scorsese documentary about the singer which will be released in late September. This set doubles as the seventh installment of Columbia's acclaimed collection of Dylan rarities, The Bootleg Series. Now on the same day they also released a single disc of previously unreleased Dylan called Live at the Gaslight 1962. This second release is only available at Starbucks. So what's what? Well, Live at the Gaslight is just what it sounds like. It's a live performance by Bob at the Gaslight Café in Greenwich Village recorded in 1962. It's one of three known tapes of Bob playing at the small, literally underground, café. I've owned this performance and one of the other two in the form of a bootleg for a few years now, and have always considered it one of the best discs of live Dylan in my collection. It's about time it's been spruced up and officially released. Eight of the ten songs are tunes you've never heard Bob sing before on an official release, and they are essential. And by the way, don't you just love the sly wink and nod of selling a recording of Bob playing a coffee house, only at coffee houses? For those keeping track, Live at the Gaslight 1962, is now the oldest performance Columbia has officially released as a Bob Dylan live album. The other new, old release, The Bootleg Series 7, actually contains a few things older than the Gaslight Tapes, but it's more of a hodgepodge of tracks covering Dylan's music through 1966. The set features 28 songs, and boasts that 26 of them are previously unreleased. It's not true, but it's close enough that I don't need to spend time pointing out all the non-bootleg, officially released, here and there CDs where you can find some of this stuff like the special 2 disc edition of Bob's last studio album Love and Theft.
Bigger question
why 26 unreleased (for argument's sake) tracks and
2 that people already have? I don't get that one. I know they didn't run
out of stuff; I'll get to that in a minute. Why throw obvious filler on
the discs? Two discs with 26 unreleased tracks (again, argument's sake)
and nothing else would've been just fine. We're not stupid. I found this frustrating before I listened to the album, and find it even more so after the fact. After the first seven songs, one of which is the aforementioned "Song To Woody" there isn't a single song in this collection that isn't simply an alternate or live version of something Bob has already released. Yes, there is appeal to hearing things they way they could have been, but lets call a spade a spade. This is not a collection of unreleased songs. It's more accurately a collection of unfinished songs, which eventually went on to become classics. This is the stuff that Bob didn't think was quite good enough and for the most part, he was right. What I'm saying is yeah, it's interesting to hear "Highway 61 Revisited" without the siren whistle, but it's more of a novelty, than a revelation.
While I do personally enjoy the collection, I can say with certainty that
this is the weakest installment of the bootleg series to date. The reason
being it's the first volume where the informed listener can honestly say,
"Yeah, I understand why they didn't release that." |