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Tempest, The New Dylan Album
18 July 2012
Columbia Records is proud to announce that Bob Dylan's new studio album, Tempest, will be released on September 11th.
Featuring ten new and original Bob Dylan songs, the release of Tempest coincides with the 50th Anniversary of the artist's eponymous debut album, which was released by Columbia in 1962. Dylan, 71, has been on a winning streak with his recording career since the career-rejuvenating release of the platinum-selling Time Out of Mind in 1997. Since then, two of his albums have topped the Billboard 200, Modern Times, in 2006, and Together Through Life, in 2009, and he has earned six Grammy Awards in that span.
Tempest, produced by Dylan under the pseudonym Jack Frost, is available for pre-order.
Tempest track listing:
2. ''Soon After Midnight'' 3. ''Narrow Way'' 4. ''Long and Wasted Years'' 5. ''Pay In Blood'' 6. ''Scarlet Town'' 7. ''Early Roman Kings'' 8. ''Tin Angel'' 9. ''Tempest'' 10. ''Roll On John''
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[Edited 8/27/12 9:35am] | |
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Dylan for the absolute WIN!
Can't wait for this! I've loved Bob's output ever since Time Out of Mind and he hasn't shown signs of slowing down yet! (Well... except for that horrible Christmas album, the less said about the better, lol)
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Another great piece of news! Nicely added to the depressingly low list of albums i am excited for this year. This Post is produced, arranged, composed and performed by WetDream | |
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Great news! I'll be buying this cd. I can always count on Bob for some great music. | |
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ElectricSugar said: Dylan for the absolute WIN!
Can't wait for this! I've loved Bob's output ever since Time Out of Mind and he hasn't shown signs of slowing down yet! (Well... except for that horrible Christmas album, the less said about the better, lol)
Agreed, 100%. The guy reinvested in making interesting new music. Each album had its own persinality, great lyrics, production, and a fun energy. Meanwhile he handles all his legacy work, the out takes, the concert recordings, with great care and sound quality. And he writes a great book in the middle of it all. If only all the genius bonkers crazy Minnesotan icons could be so generous. | |
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Can't wait for this!! Really looking forward to it. So glad we're getting another studio album from Dylan.
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Here are all of Dylan's scheduled tour dates with Mark Knopfler, according to BobDylan.com:
10/5 -- Winnipeg, Canada, MTS Centre
11/1 -- Grand Prairie, TX, Verizon Theatre | |
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never got into together through life.
small circles, big wheels!
I've got a pretty firm grip on the obvious! | |
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Zzzzzzzzzzz. Honestly, just about the most overated artist ever. And so miserable looking; cheer up mate! | |
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The last 2 albums weren't much cop small circles, big wheels!
I've got a pretty firm grip on the obvious! | |
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Bob Dylan Discusses His Dark New Album, Tempest August 2, 2012
Bob Dylan describes Tempest, his 35th studio album (out September 11th), as a record where "anything goes and you just gotta believe it will make sense." But it isn't the record he set out to make. "I wanted to make something more religious," he says. "I just didn't have enough [religious songs]. Intentionally, specifically religious songs is what I wanted to do. That takes a lot more concentration to pull that off 10 times with the same thread – than it does with a record like I ended up with."
The "anything goes" album he ended up with is full of big stories, big endings and transfixing effect. The disc was recorded in Jackson Browne's studio in L.A. with Dylan's touring band – bassist Tony Garnier, drummer George G. Receli, steel guitarist Donnie Herron, and guitarists Charlie Sexton and Stu Kimball – as well as David Hidalgo on guitar, violin and accordion. "Tin Angel" is a devastating tale of a man in search of his lost love; the doleful "Soon After Midnight" seems to be about love (but maybe it's revenge); the vengeful "Pay in Blood" has Dylan darkly repeating, "I pay in blood, but not my own." Tenderness finally seals Tempest, in "Roll On, John," Dylan's heartfelt tribute to his friend John Lennon.
The title track is a nearly 14-minute depiction of the Titanic disaster. Numerous folk and gospel songs gave accounts of the event, including the Carter Family's "The Titanic," which Dylan drew from. "I was just fooling with that one night," he says. "I liked that melody – I liked it a lot. 'Maybe I'm gonna appropriate this melody.' But where would I go with it?" Elements of Dylan's vision of the Titanic are familiar – historical figures, the inescapable finality. But it's not all grounded in fact: The ship's decks are places of madness ("Brother rose up against brother. They fought and slaughtered each other"), and even Leonardo DiCaprio appears. ("Yeah, Leo," says Dylan. "I don't think the song would be the same without him. Or the movie.") "People are going to say, 'Well, it's not very truthful,' " says Dylan. "But a songwriter doesn't care about what's truthful. What he cares about is what should've happened, what could've happened. That's its own kind of truth. It's like people who read Shakespeare plays, but they never see a Shakespeare play. I think they just use his name."
Dylan's mention of Shakespeare raises a question. The playwright's final work was called The Tempest, and some have already asked: Is Dylan's Tempest intended as a last work by the now 71-year-old artist? Dylan is dismissive of the suggestion. "Shakespeare's last play was called The Tempest. It wasn't called just plain Tempest. The name of my record is just plain Tempest. It's two different titles."
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can't wait!!!
I wasn't overly enthralled by "Together Through Life" (although there are a couple absolutely classic tracks: 'Forgetful Heart' and 'Beyond Here Lies Nothin'), but his last 3 prior to that were insanely good.
Actually he's been on a mostly good streak since "Oh Mercy".
Gonna be awesome, and not that far off! * * *
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''Early Roman Kings," a 12-bar blues. Here it's featured in a music video for the Cinemax series Strike Back. | |
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First Listen August 2012
From the opening moments of Bob Dylan's new self-produced album Tempest - of which I had my first and single listen to yesterday - the spine shivers. All the questions Dylan fans might have - What will we hear? Can he still sing? Will he deliver? - are immediately rendered irrelevant as one becomes transfixed by these initial tracks.
Yes, he can still carry a melody. Yes, his road band, plus Los Lobos' David Hidalgo, can rock, can lilt, can augment a lyric like few others. Yes, Dylan delivers. Set for release in the UK on September 10 (September 11 in the US), here's what we heard.
Duquesne Whistle It starts like some Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys' 1930s Western Swing thing, like an old song emanating from ancient radio ether, reminding us of Dylan's love for the roots of American music. But after a verse, it hits ramming speed, kicking into a ferocious romping rocker propelled by Tony Garnier's walking bass. The conceit belongs to that grand tradition of long gone train line songs (think City Of New Orleans), representing older, more soulful values that get lost when progress mows down everything in its path. "Listen to that Duquesne whistle blow/Sounds like it's on a final run." A helluva an opener.
Soon After Midnight At first one thinks this slow strut is a simple nocturne, a night owl's paean. But as the narrator moves through the moonlight, his multiple women become "harlots" and meet horrific ends. Bob The Ripper? As usual, nothing is revealed, only inferred. Wicked - even evil - delight.
Narrow Way A jump blues 'bout wimmin troubles. The put-down artist who sang "You're an idiot, babe/It's a wonder that you still know how to breathe," now scorns his lady with a withering "Even death has washed its hands of you." Best couplet: "I'm still hurting from an arrow that pierced my chest/I'm gonna have to take my head and bury it between your breasts."
Long and Wasted Years A gorgeous ballad in which the protagonist apologises to his love for hurting her feelings. He admits he wears shades to hide his eyes because "There are secrets in them that I can't disguise" and in one line explains decades of Dylan photos.
Pay In Blood A swaggering, threatening, don't-fuck-with-me and the second Tempest song where Bob plays the fiend. "Legs and arms and body and bone/I pay in blood but not my own."
Scarlet Town We're in Masked and Anonymous territory here, Twenty-Worst Century amorality, where "the end is near," with "the evil and the good living side-by-side" and where "all human forms seem glorified." Perhaps he's referring to the Internet. A loping finger-pointer with a nice slow banjo plucked by Donnie Herron.
Early Roman Kings The only Tempest tune that's been officially YouTubed. As he's done in disparate songs from Bob Dylan's 115th Dream to Isis, the author erases boundaries between historical and mythical epochs and collapses time into Bobworld. Is this about Romulus? If so, he's wearing a sharkskin suit and there's talk of "ding dong daddies" and "Sicilian courts," all set to a Mannish Boy musical template.
Tin Angel Full of betrayal and more pierced hearts, this is where Tempest sets up the first of the 1-2-3 punch of epic songs that close out the album. Ultra-violent, Shakespearean imagery in a description of a doomed love triangle that literally goes up in flames. To quote another rock poet, no one here gets out alive.
Tempest The almost-14 minute title track about the sinking of the Titanic. The lords and ladies within initially dance before ending up as floating corpses. There's a character named Leo with a sketchbook, echoing the Hollywood version as well as history's. Some folks "slaughter" each other over lifeboat space, others perform great acts of heroism - a microcosm of humanity. And a mysterious character called "The Watchman" repeatedly dreams of the disaster and tries to save the victims. Is he on or off the ship? Is he contemporaneous or does he exist now? We're not told, adding to the surreal nightmare.
Roll On John And in the end, pretty much a blow-by-blow account of the murder of Dylan's friend John Lennon. Bob imagines the physical experience of dying that John endured in his final moments, down to "breathing his last." Terribly sad, terribly moving, and appropriate for all of us who consider Dylan and Lennon the titans of rock 'n' roll artistry - once two very stoned young pals in the back of a limo having too much fun. "You burned so bright/Roll on John."
Tempest is astonishing. It's obviously no coincidence that its eternal themes of loss, catastrophe, and murder and the saving graces of love, courage and friendship are strikingly familiar in this Little Century Of Horrors. Dylan's command of language is unequaled, while the recurring musical motifs are part of our DNA - simultaneously timeless and fresh. But his crowning achievement as an artist is his unparalleled empathy, his ability to inhabit his characters, understand their motivations and make them flesh and blood through song. No one gets inside the human heart like Bob does.
50 years after the release of his first album, Dylan remains our foremost storyteller. Thanks Bob.
http://ca.music.yahoo.com...33120.html
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The entire album is streaming on iTunes * * *
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Love me some Bob, but it doesn't look like the subject matter here interests me (with maybe the exception of the song about Lennon). | |
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Where i couldn't find it? Only saw the regular heading.. | |
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You can stream the album in full here. | |
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Very much looking forward to the record. Together Through Life was a bit of a non-event, but the three albums before that were all great and rank among the best records he's ever released, which means IMO that they rank among the best records that anyone's ever released, and the advance buzz does raise the hope that this is up to that standard. I'm passing on the streaming/youtube stuff as I like to preserve the first complete listen. Music is pretty much dead to me now, but there is a handful of performers whose albums I will always buy and Dylan is at the top of that list.
I'm likely passing on the tour (his opening date is here). I've seen him a solid handful of times over the years, and oddly enough I've actually quite enjoyed the shows I've seen, but I just don't think he offers much as a live performer anymore. However the presence of Mark Knopfler does make me a little interested...not that I'm a fan, but it could make the show perhaps more of distinct event. | |
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Time Out of Mind, in particular, has some great pieces of writing (Highlands; Not Dark Yet; Trying to Get to Heaven; Standing in the Doorway; Love Sick).
The lyrics on "Love And Theft" are more scattershot, but there are things on there I really like (Sugar Baby; Floater; Mississippi; Bye And Bye; Summer Days; Cry A While).
Don't own Modern Times, but I like Ain't Talkin' and Thunder on the Mountain.
Things Have Changed is one of my favourite songs ever. | |
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I agree w/ everything you said. I'm passing on the tour, as well.
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Ace said:
Time Out of Mind, in particular, has some great pieces of writing (Highlands; Not Dark Yet; Trying to Get to Heaven; Standing in the Doorway; Love Sick).
The lyrics on "Love And Theft" are more scattershot, but there are things on there I really like (Sugar Baby; Floater; Mississippi; Bye And Bye; Summer Days; Cry A While).
Don't own Modern Times, but I like Ain't Talkin' and Thunder on the Mountain.
Things Have Changed is one of my favourite songs ever. I recommend you get modern times. Working mans blues is my favorite there. I'm happy with the new album. It's inspiring. small circles, big wheels!
I've got a pretty firm grip on the obvious! | |
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I like this review - it pretty much captures my thoughts on the album as well:
http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/music/turnitup/chi-bob-dylan-album-review-tempest-reviewed-20120907,0,1847984.column
It’s official. On his latest album, “Tempest” (Columbia), Bob Dylan has become Tommy Lee Jones in “No Country for Old Men.”
Like Jones in the Coen brothers’ 2007 film adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s novel, the 71-year-old Dylan of “Tempest” is surrounded by violence and sudden death. This is no place for tears or sentimentality. He is resigned to how the world is, lawless and degrading. But he does what must be done.
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The Greatest Dylan Tracks, in your humble estimation? | |
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My faves, in alphabetical order (thanks, bobdylan.com!):
A Satisfied Mind Ain't Talkin' Dignity Disease of Conceit Don't Think Twice, It's All Right Everything is Broken Heart of Mine Highlands It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry Jokerman Knockin' on Heaven's Door Lenny Bruce License to Kill Love Sick Mama, You Been on My Mind Mississippi Neighborhood Bully Not Dark Yet Positively 4th Street She's Your Lover Now Standing in the Doorway Sugar Baby Summer Days Sweetheart Like You TV Talkin' Song The Times They Are A-Changin' Things Have Changed Thunder on the Mountain Tight Connection to My Heart Trust Yourself Trying to Get to Heaven Watching the River Flow What Good Am I? What Was It You Wanted You Ain't Goin' Nowhere | |
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Limiting myself to ten.
Ballad of a Thin Man Mr. Tambourine Man A Hard Rain’s a-gonna Fall It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry Not Dark Yet Desolation Row Mississippi Blind Willie McTell Highlands One More Cup of Coffee
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I find it really hard to compare Dylan's stuff throughout the eras. I am a big fan of his later stuff in general.
some of my favorites:
Every Grain of Sand (demo) Blind Willie McTell Series of Dreams Mississippi Things Have Changed 'Cross the Green Mountain Most of the Time Man in the Long Black Coat Beyond Here Lies Nothin' Forgetful Heart Ain't Talkin
I actually did an 8-disc Dylan collection - 2 discs a piece of the 60s, 70s, 80s, and 90s/00s. Was fun compiling it and I still listen to it all the time.
Bob Dylan 60s – Disc 1
1. Song To Woody. From “Bob Dylan,” March 1962 2. Mixed-Up Confusion. Single, December 1962 3. Blowin’ In The Wind. 4. Masters Of War. 5. A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall. 6. Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright. 3-6 from “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan”, May 1963 7. Tomorrow Is A Long Time. April 1963 recording, released on “Greatest Hits Volume II”, 1971 8. The Times They Are A-Changin’. 9. When The Ship Comes In. 10. One Too Many Mornings. 8-10 from “The Times They Are A-Changin’”, January 1964 11. Moonshiner. August 1963 recording, released on “The Bootleg Series 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased)”, 1991 12. My Back Pages. 13. It Ain’t Me Babe. 14. Chimes Of Freedom. 12-14 from “Another Side of Bob Dylan”, August 1964 15. Maggie’s Farm. 16. Subterranean Homesick Blues. 17. Mr. Tambourine Man. 18. It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue. 19. It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding). 15-19 from “Bringing It All Back Home”, March 1965 20. If You Gotta Go, Go Now. January 1965 recording, released as single in 1967.
Bob Dylan 60s – Disc 2
1. Like A Rolling Stone. 2. Highway 61 Revisited. 3. Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues. 1-3 from “Highway 61 Revisited”, August 1965 4. Positively 4th Street. Single, September 1965 5. Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window? Single, December 1965 6. I’ll Keep It With Mine. January 1965 recording, released on “Biograph”, 1985 7. One Of Us Must Know (Sooner Or Later). 8. Rainy Day Women #12 & 35. 9. I Want You. 10. Just Like A Woman. 11. Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat. 12. Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again. 13. Most Likely You Go Your Way (And I’ll Go Mine). 7-13 from “Blonde on Blonde”, May 1966 14. Tell Me, Momma. May 1966 live recording, released on “The Bootleg Series 4: Bob Dylan Live 1966”, 1998 15. All Along The Watchtower. 16. John Wesley Harding. 17. I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight. 15-17 from “John Wesley Harding,” December 1967 18. I Threw It All Away. 19. Lay, Lady, Lay. 20. Tonight I’ll Be Staying Here With You. 18-20 from “Nashville Skyline,” April 1969
Bob Dylan 70s – Disc 1
1. This Wheel’s On Fire. 2. Tears of Rage. 1-2 1967 recordings with The Band, Released on “The Basement Tapes”, June 1975 3. Wigwam. From “Self Portrait”, June 1970 4. The Mighty Quinn (Quinn The Eskimo). 1967 recording with The Band, Released on “Biograph”, 1985 5. A Fool Such As I. April 1969 recording, Released on “Dylan”, November 1973 6. If Not For You. 7. One More Weekend. 8. Went To See The Gypsy. 6-8 from “New Morning”, October 1970 9. Watching The River Flow. March 1971 recording, Released on “Greatest Hits Vol. II, November 1971 10. When I Paint My Masterpiece. May 1971 recording, Released on “Greatest Hits Vol. II”, November 1971 11. You Ain’t Goin’ Nowhere. 12. I Shall Be Released. 13. Down In The Flood. 11-13 September 1971 recordings, Released on “Greatest Hits Vol. II”, November 1971 14. George Jackson (Big Band version). Single, November 1971 15. On a Night Like This. 16. Something There Is About You. 17. Forever Young. 18. Going, Going, Gone. 15-18 from “Planet Waves”, January 1974. 19. Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door. 1974 live recording with The Band, Released on “Before the Flood”, June 1974 20. Tangled Up In Blue. 21. Simple Twist Of Fate. 22. You’re A Big Girl Now. 20-22 from “Blood on the Tracks”, January 1975
Bob Dylan 70s – Disc 2
1. Shelter From The Storm. 2. If You See Her, Say Hello. 1-2 from “Blood on the Tracks”, January 1975 3. Up To Me. 1975 recording released on “Biograph”, 1985. 4. Hurricane. 5. One More Cup Of Coffee. 4-5 from “Desire”, January 1976 6. Isis. 1975 live recording, released on “The Bootleg Series 5: The Rolling Thunder Review”, 2002 7. Rita May. 1975 recording, released as single B-side November 1976 8. Oh, Sister. 1976 live recording, released on “Hard Rain”, September 1976 9. Is Your Love In Vain? 10. Changing Of The Guard. 11. Baby, Stop Crying. 9-11 from “Street Legal”, June 1978 12. Gotta Serve Somebody. 13. When You Gonna Wake Up. 14. Precious Angel. 12-14 from “Slow Train Coming”, August 1979 15. Trouble In Mind. 1979 single b-side.
Bob Dylan 80s – Disc 1
1. Solid Rock. 2. Saved. 3. Covenant Woman. 1-3 from “Saved”, June 1980 4. Shot Of Love. 5. Heart Of Mine. 4-5 from “Shot of Love”, August 1981 6. The Groom’s Still Waiting At The Alter. 1981 single b-side. 7. Every Grain Of Sand. September 1980 demo recording, released on “The Bootleg Series 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased)”, 1991 8. Union Sundown. 9. Jokerman. 10. License To Kill. 11. Sweetheart Like You. 8-11 from “Infidels”, October 1983 12. Foot of Pride. 13. Blind Willie McTell. 12- 13 1983 recordings, released on “The Bootleg Series 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased)”, 1991 14. Angel Flying Too Close to The Ground. 1983 single b-side 15. Tight Connection To My Heart. 16. Emotionally Yours. 17. Dark Eyes. 15-17 from “Empire Burlesque”, June 1985
Bob Dylan 80s – Disc 2
1. Got My Mind Made Up. 2. Brownsville Girl. 3. You Wanna Ramble. 1-3 from “Knocked Out Loaded”, July 1986. 4. Band Of The Hand. 1986 single, from “Band of the Hand” movie soundtrack 5. The Usual. 6. Had A Dream About You, Baby. 5-6 from movie soundtrack “Hearts of Fire”, October 1987 7. Silvio. 8. Let’s Stick Together. 7-8 from “Down In The Groove”, May 1988 9. Slow Train. 1987 live recording with the Grateful Dead, Released on “Dylan & The Dead” , January 1989 10. Dirty World. 11. Tweeter & The Monkey Man. 12. Congratulations. 10-12 from “Traveling Wilburys Vol. 1”, October 1988 13. Everything Is Broken. 14. Political World. 15. Man In The Long Black Coat. 16. Ring Them Bells. 17. Most Of The Time (single mix). 13-17 from “Oh Mercy”, September 1989. 18. Dignity. 1989 recording, released on soundtrack to “Touched By An Angel” 19. Series of Dreams. 1989 recording, released on “The Bootleg Series 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased)”, 1991
Bob Dylan 90s/00s – Disc 1
1. Unbelievable. 2.Under The Red Sky. 3. Cat’s In The Well. 1-3 from “Under The Red Sky”, September 1990 4. If You Belonged To Me. From “Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3”, October 1990 5. Duncan and Brady. 1992 recording, released on “The Bootleg Series Vol. 8: Tell Tale Signs”, October 2008 6. You’re Gonna Quit Me. 7. Hard Times. 6-7 from “Good As I Been To You”, November 1992 8. Blood In My Eyes. 9. Two Soldiers. 8-9 from “World Gone Wrong”, October 1993 10. John Brown. 1994 live recording, released on “MTV Unplugged”, May 1995 11. Not Dark Yet. 12. Cold Irons Bound. 13. Make You Feel My Love. 11-13 from “Time Out of Mind”, September 1997 14. Love Sick. 1998 live recording, released on “Love Sick” EP June 1998 15. Marchin’ To The City. 1997 recording, released on “The Bootleg Series Vol. 8: Tell Tale Signs”, October 2008 16. Things Have Changed. From the soundtrack to “Wonder Boys”, May 2000 17. Return To Me. From the soundtrack to “The Sopranos: Music from the HBO Original Series”, May 2001 18. Diamond Joe. From the soundtrack to “Masked and Anonymous”, 2003 90s/00s – Disc 2
1. Mississippi. 2. Summer Days. 3. High Water (For Charlie Patton). 4. Po’ Boy 1-4 from “Love and Theft”, September 2001 5. ‘Cross The Green Mountain. From the soundtrack to “Gods and Generals”, February 2003 6. Tell Ol’ Bill. From the soundtrack to “North Country”, October 2005 7. Can’t Escape From You. December 2005 recording, released on “The Bootleg Series Vol. 8: Tell Tale Signs”, October 2008 8. Someday Baby. 9. Thunder On The Mountain. 10. Rollin’ And Tumblin’. 8-10 from “Modern Times”, August 2006 11. Ain’t Talkin’. Alternate version, released on “The Bootleg Series Vol. 8: Tell Tale Signs”, October 2008 12. Huck’s Tune. From the soundtrack to “Lucky You”, May 2007 13. Beyond Here Lies Nothin’. 14. Forgetful Heart. 15. I Feel A Change Comin’ On. 13-15 from “Together Through Life”, April 2009 16. Do Re Mi. From the soundtrack to “The People Speak”, December 2009
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Tempest Best Buy exclusive includes a t-shirt and a 60-page bound notebook with vintage,rare international magazine covers featuring Dylan. | |
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