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If'n you don't know by now.
And it ain't no use to sit and wonder why, babe.
It'll never do somehow.
When your rooster crows at the break of dawn,
Look out your window, and, I'll be gone.
You're the reason I'm a-travellin' on.
But don't think twice, it's all right.
And it ain't no use in a-turnin' on your light, babe,
The light I never knowed.
And it ain't no use in turnin' on your light, babe.
I'm on the dark side of the road.
But I wish there was something you would do or say
To try and make me change my mind and stay;
But we never did too much talkin' anyway.
But don't think twice, it's all right.
So it ain't no use in callin' out my name, gal,
Like you never done before.
And it ain't no use in callin' out my name, gal.
I can't hear you anymore.
I'm a-thinkin' and a-wonderin', walkin' down the road,
I once loved a woman, a child I am told.
I give her my heart, but she wanted my soul.
But don't think twice, it's all right.
So long, honey babe. Where I'm bound, I can't tell.
And goodbye's too good a word, babe,
So I'll just say, "Fare thee well."
I ain't a-sayin' you treated me unkind.
You could've done better, but, I don't mind.
You just kind of wasted my precious time.
But don't think twice, it's all right.
Yes, he is genius, but I just can't stand to hear the word "knowed" in this song.
You're right: he could have correctly sung "knew" instead. And then found himself on the "dark side of the rue" to maintain the rhyme.
He never did too much francais anyway....
His current tour (Fall 2023) is fabulous. Saw him twice in KC and STL.
The STL show crowd was spellbound, hypnotized.
But the cocktails were way too expense.
Go see him.
Indeed Lizard King-----Just how many Nobel Prizes have you won?
You might need to sort comments in 'newest' order instead of 'likes' to get the context of my comment. And of course, the answer is ZERO Nobel Prizes for me and ONE for maybe my favorite singer/songwriter of all time, Robert Allen Zimmerman aka Bob Dylan.
LLRP
There might not be a 'zero' but your comment has garnered a -6 to far....good job!
Or...I have your 1 and your 0, it's in the form of a 10, which this track SURELY rates for me and a lot of others...LLRP!!
Indeed Lizard King-----Just how many Nobel Prizes have you won?
Yeah baby! Lets hope for hot and sweaty summer road tripping.
Undeserved 1.
There might not be a 'zero' but your comment has garnered a -6 so far....good job!
Or...I have your 1 and your 0, it's in the form of a 10, which this track SURELY rates for me and a lot of others...LLRP!!
Undeserved 1.
Fantastic but I sure would love to hear some Peter, Paul and Mary who brought a lot of his very early songs to popularity.
youtube it.
Super Man
From the early pic of Bob after arriving in NYC, it looks like he got off the boat at Ellis Island in 1908 instead of getting off the bus in Greenwich Village in 1961.
It's a very good album...everything from Earl Scruggs to Kitty Wells.
Waylon Jennings does a really nice cover of this song. Imagine an electric guitar replacing Dylan's acoustic. Very nice.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1a3G2_IReTw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jcwT_3ctPQU
Regarding Dylan's voice: i consider it unique. It gives the song just the right air.
Bob Dylan Arrives by skipgoforth
Skip Goforth
https://www.flickr.com/photos/shaman683/
It was 50 years ago this week that Bob Dylan first arrived in New York City.
The voice of my generation.
All rights reserved
Super Man
Waylon Jennings does a nice cover of this. And Kitty Wells does a beautiful cover of "Forever Young".
The Risky Biscuit Hayseed Hoot. It streams, and it gleams!
Just not for me though.
Old Bob...does what he wants...and damn the torpedos!
Bob: 5.5 plus 3.5 for composing the piece.
Susan: 8.0
Susan Tedeschi - Don't Think Twice, Live
"i have become somewhat of a fan of Susan since i stumbled upon her performance on the Crossroads. She did "little by little" there and it it instantly hit me. Never heard of her before...Thanks for the music.....Jan from Holland." prismajan
"she's great and the violinist/ fiddle player is Unreal! " breckandy
"ja älskar henne" / "She rocks! "Me Right".
"A friend of mine introduced me to Susan years ago with the song "Rock Me Right". I assumed it was something Bonnie Raitt had done but he said, "no, her name is Susan Te Desk-ie". He died shortly after that and I bought everything she ever produced. I've seen her live numerous times and she is truly a modern marvel. Hardly anyone knows her outside the blues or live venue realms but she deserves far more attention than she gets. So it goes. . . . " univcopy
"She so versatile...just saw her last night with Allman Brothers at the Beacon in NYC do Derek and the Dominos' Anyday...She.defines beauty in the purist form! " DsveysNavy
Mrs. Dreck Trucks.........I still love her tho...... together they are increadable.......
The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan
Cute hat... The dream guitar,....,thanks for the pcs
There's also:
Knock, Knock, Knockin’ on Nobel’s Door
https://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/29/opinion/sunday/knock-knock-knockin-on-nobels-door.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
(Wyman makes the case for recognising Dylan while we have the chance)
No offense, my friend, but screw Rolling Stone and its bought and sold ratings. However, I've listened to Tempest all the way through a couple of times so far. It's genius. No, his voice hasn't improved—and those of you who hate Dylan because of the sound of his voice will have a field day with Tempest—but the songwriting, arranging, indeed the absorption and rendition of multiple American musical idioms, are all stellar. Yes, even the 14 minute saga-cum-tedium title track (about the RMS Titanic) is a wonder to behold. I liken his output of the last fifteen years to Johnny Cash's American series. Time Out of Mind, Modern Times, Love and Theft, Together Through Life, and now Tempest are statements of an artist who has nothing left to prove and then goes out an reaffirms why he is perhaps the foremost American voice of the last half-century.
Yes. Well said.
The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan
LOL - I should have said how remarkable it is that so many notes can be flubbed without diminishing the greatness of the tune. If he'd hired a studio guitarist to do the work I doubt the tune would have been as good. Maybe they were intentionally flubbed, who can question Dylan?
BTW Must be time for Diamonds and Rust now.
Everybody in my church loves this old classic song and the classic album it's from, as well as Dylan's latest album, which is also truly brilliant...
Bob Dylan Arrives by skipgoforth
Skip Goforth
https://www.flickr.com/photos/shaman683/
It was 50 years ago this week that Bob Dylan first arrived in New York City.
The voice of my generation.
All rights reserved
Well said, W-L!
Everybody in my hotel room loves this song...
Bob Dylan has a brand new album out called Tempest... it got a five-star review by RollingStone... if you want to see some more data about his new album, just look here...
No offense, my friend, but screw Rolling Stone and its bought and sold ratings. However, I've listened to Tempest all the way through a couple of times so far. It's genius. No, his voice hasn't improved—and those of you who hate Dylan because of the sound of his voice will have a field day with Tempest—but the songwriting, arranging, indeed the absorption and rendition of multiple American musical idioms, are all stellar. Yes, even the 14 minute saga-cum-tedium title track (about the RMS Titanic) is a wonder to behold. I liken his output of the last fifteen years to Johnny Cash's American series. Time Out of Mind, Modern Times, Love and Theft, Together Through Life, and now Tempest are statements of an artist who has nothing left to prove and then goes out an reaffirms why he is perhaps the foremost American voice of the last half-century.
I knew a cat once who went to Woodstock. All he could talk about was how muddy it was and the fact he couldn't fid the kind of food he wanted. Not one damned good memory about the music. Not one.
LOL - I should have said how remarkable it is that so many notes can be flubbed without diminishing the greatness of the tune. If he'd hired a studio guitarist to do the work I doubt the tune would have been as good. Maybe they were intentionally flubbed, who can question Dylan?
I knew a cat once who went to Woodstock. All he could talk about was how muddy it was and the fact he couldn't fid the kind of food he wanted. Not one damned good memory about the music. Not one.
I grew up thinking this was a Jerry Reed song!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gUFmceGugaA
As of October 30, there are now 7 Billion people... and I agree... any one of them can sing better than Bob Dylan.
Then you haven't met Mildred Schermer. Man, is she dreadful—like a rusty gate echoing through a drainpipe.
Errrr. . . nearly 7 billion. . .
The world population is the total number of living humans on the planet Earth, currently estimated to be 6.94 billion by the United States Census Bureau as of July 1, 2011.<1>
/pedant
As of October 30, there are now 7 Billion people... and I agree... any one of them can sing better than Bob Dylan.
Errrr. . . nearly 7 billion. . .
The world population is the total number of living humans on the planet Earth, currently estimated to be 6.94 billion by the United States Census Bureau as of July 1, 2011.<1>
/pedant
My worst nightmare (apart from actually confronting Pennywise the killer clown) would be seeing Springsteen, Young, and Dylan up onstage, side by side, playing harmonicas to "Jokerman." (I'm not sure where Pennywise would fit, but I'm betting he'd eat them all.)
Live at Festival des Vieilles Charrues, Carhaix, Bretagne, FRANCE, 2000. This a cover of a Bob Dylan's song (1963). Joan often covers it as many other Dylan's songs. Here she does a funny imitation of him (she does pretty good imitations, just check her Marlon Brando in my Muppet Show vid!)
"Merci pour cette vidéo ! Il n'y a pas à dire les textes de Dylan chantés par Joan Baez à chaque fois ça donne des frissons, puis même quand elle imite Bob elle chante mieux que lui lol. Faudrait poser la question à Dylan ce qu'il ressent de savoir que Joan Baez continu à chanter ses chansons et qu'elle les chante mieux que lui. Quel regret qu'ils n'aient plus chanté ensemble depuis des décennies alors que les 2 continuent leur propre never ending tour. " matchou75
"Ce qui est drôle, c'est qu'on a beau savoir que Bob a traité Joan comme une vieille chaussette, on ne peut pas s'empêcher de l'admirer. C'est ça le talent ! A mon avis, Bob est bien content que Joan continue de reprendre ses chansons depuis toutes ses années... Ca doit flatter son ego... Personnellement, j'ai beau aimer Dylan, je préfère Joan et de loin. Je pense que le pauvre Bobby massacrerait les duos. Tous les échos que j'ai eus de ses récents concerts sont plutôt déçus." nemito79
It ain't no use to sit and wonder why, babe
It don't matter, anyhow
An' it ain't no use to sit and wonder why, babe
If you don't know by now
When your rooster crows at the break of dawn
Look out your window and I'll be gone
You're the reason I'm trav'lin' on
Don't think twice, it's all right
It ain't no use in turnin' on your light, babe
That light I never knowed
An' it ain't no use in turnin' on your light, babe
I'm on the dark side of the road
Still I wish there was somethin' you would do or say
To try and make me change my mind and stay
We never did too much talkin' anyway
So don't think twice, it's all right
It ain't no use in callin' out my name, gal
Like you never did before
It ain't no use in callin' out my name, gal
I can't hear you any more
I'm a-thinkin' and a-wond'rin' all the way down the road
I once loved a woman, a child I'm told
I give her my heart but she wanted my soul
But don't think twice, it's all right
I'm walkin' down that long, lonesome road, babe
Where I'm bound, I can't tell
But goodbye's too good a word, gal
So I'll just say fare thee well
I ain't sayin' you treated me unkind
You could have done better but I don't mind
You just kinda wasted my precious time
But don't think twice, it's all right
Eeyup, Dylan is at his amazing best when he's putting someone down.
Eeyup, Dylan is at his amazing best when he's putting someone down.
Bob's Freewheelin' muse passes away.
Suze Rotolo, Bob Dylan's lyrical muse and girlfriend as he came to fame in 1960s, dies at 67
By FRANK ELTMAN , Associated Press
Last update: March 1, 2011 - 2:37 PM
Suze Rotolo was just 17 when one of the 20th century's greatest poets and musicians became smitten.
"Right from the start I couldn't take my eyes off her," Bob Dylan wrote in his memoir. "She was the most erotic thing I'd ever seen. She was fair skinned and golden haired, full-blood Italian. The air was suddenly filled with banana leaves. We started talking and my head started to spin.
"Cupid's arrow had whistled past my ears before, but this time it hit me in the heart and the weight of it dragged me overboard."
Rotolo, a Greenwich Village artist and Dylan's girlfriend and lyrical muse when he came to prominence in the early 1960s, died Friday. She was 67.
Rotolo, whose relationship with the singer lasted only a few years, died of lung cancer in New York City, said her agent, Sarah Lazin.
"The fact is that from early on, Suze's left-wing politics had an impact on Dylan's early writing," said Rolling Stone contributing editor Anthony DeCurtis. "There's no question that she became both an abstract muse and a very practical one. He has said that he would run songs past her."
Rotolo, who remained an activist throughout her life, can be seen walking arm in arm with the singer on the cover of the '60s classic, "The Freewheelin Bob Dylan," but DeCurtis thinks their relationship waned when she became overwhelmed by the worldwide fame that cascaded down on him as an icon of his era.
"While she always maintained great respect for Dylan, I think she felt a little bit entrapped by that," he said. He noted that in later years, she used her husband's surname and seemed to revel in her non-Dylan anonymity.
"I think there was a certain kind of element of obsession with Dylan that she found frightening and off-putting," he said. "It got to be a drag."
Rotolo is also believed to be the subject of a number of legendary Dylan songs, including "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right," "Boots of Spanish Leather" and "Tomorrow Is a Long Time."
A Dylan spokesman said Tuesday he was unavailable for comment.
Rotolo, who was born in the New York City borough of Queens, was raised in a left-wing household. She was working for the Congress of Racial Equality when she met Dylan and is credited with teaching him about the civil rights movement.
Rotolo later married film editor Enso Bartoccioli; they had a son, Luca Bartoccioli.
In recent years she worked in a medium called book art, which she said was a "reinterpretation of the book as an art object." She also taught a book arts workshop at the Parsons School of Design in New York City.
In 2004, she participated in a street-theater group called "Billionaires for Bush" and attended demonstrations at the Republican National Convention outside Madison Square Garden.
A private memorial service will be scheduled at a later date, her agent said.
"i have become somewhat of a fan of Susan since i stumbled upon her performance on the Crossroads. She did "little by little" there and it it instantly hit me. Never heard of her before...Thanks for the music.....Jan from Holland." prismajan
"she's great and the violinist/ fiddle player is Unreal! " breckandy
"ja älskar henne" / "She rocks! "Me Right".
"A friend of mine introduced me to Susan years ago with the song "Rock Me Right". I assumed it was something Bonnie Raitt had done but he said, "no, her name is Susan Te Desk-ie". He died shortly after that and I bought everything she ever produced. I've seen her live numerous times and she is truly a modern marvel. Hardly anyone knows her outside the blues or live venue realms but she deserves far more attention than she gets. So it goes. . . . " univcopy
"She so versatile...just saw her last night with Allman Brothers at the Beacon in NYC do Derek and the Dominos' Anyday...She.defines beauty in the purist form! " DsveysNavy
I wish all of you "MERRY CHRISTMAS",
wherever you are - whoever you wanna be!
Christmas is a sweet-naive tradition -
not a religious event!
I like it anyway!
Still - I hope Bill takes the chance
to rock the christmas-tree to pieces tonight!
"Happy Christmas
your "BAD SANTA",
aka STINGRAY
-from Cologne/Germany-
PS
Sermon of the day (promise: I'm serious):
The "Three Wise Men" - Melchior, Balthasar + Caspar
are buried in a golden sarcophage in"our" dome, the famous
"Cologne dome" - the third highest church-building
in the world - right in the very centre of town, next to the Rhine.
A gothic building of extra-class!
Have a look:
https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Datei:Koelner_Dom_bei_Nacht_1_RB.JPG&filetimestamp=20060517174554
The "grave" for the non-believers:
https://www.koelner-dom.de/17450.html?&L=1
+
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrine_of_the_Three_Kings
Brilliance.
This changes everything...
Yup and just about everything else Susan Tedeschi does with or without The Derek Trucks Band.
What about this one:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LepWePZpJGo
Simple brilliance.
1999
pablobarrea88
"The guitar duet is perfect. "
Chet Atkins and Terry McMillan from Soundstage.
"Smooth as silk. Chet is the picker's picker and Terry makes his harmonica talk. "
This changes everything...
You're right. He's no Nickelback.
Bob Dylan new scan by ~Kevin329
©2007-2010 ~Kevin329
The scanners at Kinko's are much better than at the library so I thought I'd repost a couple of my drawings. The reference photo is of Dylan in the early to mid 60's. It took about 10 hours to draw, maybe longer.
'Idiot Wind' has got to be pretty high on any list of great break up songs. ...
idiot wind blowing every time you move your teeth
you're an idiot babe
it's a wonder that you still know how to breathe
You just wasted my precious time
Don't think twice it's all right.
He doesn't really mean that it's all right. He really means the first part. I think Ms Rotolo was one of his young loves who really broke his heart.
Johnny-smooth wrote:
Recently, the Harvard radio station had a music orgy of Dylan (non stop Dylan 24/day, going through whole repertoire, both live, some bootleg and studio). Lasted about 5 days, quite amazing to hear all that he has brought us - a National Treasure if there ever was one.
"listen and reflect." I'll second that. This is like a window into the memory...
Absolutely! No need to think twice => 10!
It's the woman on the cover of the album, although apparently she actually left him.
From Wikipedia: Susan Elizabeth Rotolo (born November 20, 1943), nicknamed Suze Rotolo (pronounced Soo-zee), is an American artist, perhaps best known as the woman walking with Bob Dylan on the cover of his album The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan. The pair dated on-and-off during the early 1960s.
Johnny-smooth wrote:
Recently, the Harvard radio station had a music orgy of Dylan (non stop Dylan 24/day, going through whole repertoire, both live, some bootleg and studio). Lasted about 5 days, quite amazing to hear all that he has brought us - a National Treasure if there ever was one.
Recently, the Harvard radio station had a music orgy of Dylan (non stop Dylan 24/day, going through whole repertoire, both live, some bootleg and studio). Lasted about 5 days, quite amazing to hear all that he has brought us - a National Treasure if there ever was one.
I don't know, but if you catch him, Willie, and John Mellancamp on tour this summer you could ask him. He'd probably tell you what I believe is the true answer: it's written for the one he's singing it to/about at the given moment in time.
Music just doesn't get any better than this, to me.