Bob Dylan - Essential Works : 1961 - 1962

Tracklist

1
Side A
1.
You’re No Good (J. Fuller)
Bob Dylan
01:41
2.
Talkin New York
Bob Dylan
03:21
3.
In My Time Of Dyin
Bob Dylan
02:41
4.
Man Of Constant Sorrow
Bob Dylan
03:11
5.
Fixin' To Die
Bob Dylan
02:23
6.
Pretty Peggy
Bob Dylan
03:24
Side B
1.
Highway 51 Blues
Bob Dylan
02:53
2.
Gospel Plow
Bob Dylan
01:47
3.
Baby, Let Me Follow You Down
Bob Dylan
02:37
4.
House Of The Risin Sun
Bob Dylan
05:20
5.
Freight Train Blues
Bob Dylan
02:19
6.
Song To Woody
Bob Dylan
02:42
7.
See That My Grave Is Kept Clean
Bob Dylan
02:46
2
Side C
1.
Mixed-Up Confusion
Bob Dylan
02:30
2.
Introduction
Bob Dylan
00:47
3.
Poor Lazarus
Bob Dylan
05:13
4.
Mean Old Southern Railroad
Bob Dylan
03:18
5.
Fixin’ To Die
Bob Dylan
05:50
Side D
1.
Smokestack Lightnin’
Bob Dylan
04:29
2.
Hard Travellin’
Bob Dylan
05:03
3.
The Death of Emmett Till
Bob Dylan
06:33
4.
Standing on the Highway
Bob Dylan
04:38
5.
Baby Please Don’t Go
Bob Dylan
02:16

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Information


  • Artist : Bob Dylan
  • Label : Diggers Factory
  • Format : 2 x 12" (140g)
  • CountryUnited States
  • GenresRock
  • Estimated shipping dateDelivery within 2 to 7 days

Description

Robert Zimmerman, aka the rock-folk singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, was born in Duluth, Minnesota in 1941. His first three albums – Bob Dylan, The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, The Times They Are A-Changing – reoriented both folk music and rock. His early songs were largely inspired by Woody Guthrie, and in turn provided inspiration (and soon a religion) to many music fans around the globe. There is no doubt that the baby-boomers of 1968 – a whole generation – were seeking an ideal, and the promise of change in Dylan’s first songs transformed a merely average nasal-toned folk singer into a figurehead of the protest movement, and later one of its high priests. But there are also those who will remember how Dylan invented his own life-story as an orphan with Indian blood who spent his childhood in a circus/ Or how he happily explained to 'Time' why their magazine was pointless (and to CBS News why opinions expressed by media were useless and harmful.) Of course they were, and so Bob was there to change the world. Times, indeed, they were changing, and Bob began wearing silk shirts way before he was handed the Nobel Prize for Literature. We need more Jesus Christs and Bob Dylans as world-changers.

Bob Dylan
United States