Music : The Basement Tapes |
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Rating: - * Necessary ... "The Basement Tapes" are a necessary piece of music if you desire to have a knowledge of both Dylan's and The Band's careers. Great music and indispensable. Rating: - * Is not an essential recording ... It is good but it is nowhere near as good as his breakthrough albums like Highway 61 Revisited, Bringing it all back home, Blonde on Blonde. I've tried to like this but first of all I don't like The Band that much so that spoils it for me right away because they are very prominent in this album. I just can't get past that. It might be great for some people but not for me. Rating: - * It Can Be Very Easily Done ... Okay, a lot of this material has seen official release, and it's not likely to get re-packaged or augmented any time soon, so here's whatcha gotta do: download this from someplace legal (like here) so Bob will get his money (give him a string bean -- he's a hungry man!). Actually, just download these: Odds And Ends, Million Dollar Bash, Goin' To Acapulco, Lo And Behold!, Clothes Line Saga, Apple Suckling Tree, Please Mrs. Henry, Tears Of Rage, Too Much Of Nothing, Yea! Heavy And A Bottle Of Bread, Crash on The Levee, Tiny Montgomery, You Ain't Goin' Nowhere, Nothing Was Delivered, Open the Door Homer and This Wheel's On Fire. Then get Quinn the Eskimo from Biograph. The Bootleg Series 1-3 has Santa Fe and I Shall Be Released. I'm Not There is on the soundtrack album of the same name. You now have twenty tracks with a running time of about 62 minutes. Burn it. The result gets five stars. This is the album that goes between Blonde On Blonde and John Wesley Harding on your Dylan shelf and in the artistic chronology. Yeah, it's rough (it's a home recording), but it's real. In lieu of a new package, cut out a picture of Bob and slide it into the jewel case. Tell him I said it was alright. Rating: - * Dylan and robertson messed with this one ... some of the bootlegs are better and some of the material is ' deformed by the ego of j r robertson'...see 'bob dylan the recording sessions ' book Rating: - * Eavesdropping on the creative process ... Fascinating double-album of the legendary basement sessions with Dylan and The Band. One has the distinct feeling of eavesdropping on the creative process rather than listening to a fully realised album. Like a master sculptor's workshop - there are plenty of off-cuts "Please, Mrs Henry", "Apple Suckling Tree", works in progress "Katie's Been Gone", "Goin' to Acapulco" and the odd fully realised masterpiece "Tears of Rage", "This Wheel's on Fire". An absolute must have for all fans of Dylan and/or The Band. |


On the DVD
Listen to our interview with Frank Darabont. |
