Yet one caveat of The 1974 Live Recordings is the fact that Dylan and The Band played a lot of the same songs each night.
Bootlegs are more or less obsolete now, but these four releases were some of the best rock bootlegs of all time.
Lighters at the ready, because here comes the flood. Drawn from 16-track tape, 1/4in reels and lo-fi sound board cassettes ...
In David Browne’s new book Talkin’ Greenwich Village, the writer details the transformative history of Bob Dylan’s ’60s anthem “Blowin’ in the Wind.” Browne, a senior writer for Rolling Stone, ...
When Bob Dylan connected with The Band for his first tour in eight years, he was understandably edgy. That’s what the audio from the Chicago Stadium, January 3, 1974 suggests. T ...
Together, these men faced a daunting — if not impossible — task: Live up to the most mythologized rock tour of the sixties, the most mythologized decade in all of rock music. The miracle of The 1974 ...
During his Tuesday night show in Buffalo, New York, Dylan decided to finally play “Desolation Row” and accompanied it ...
Pop music used to worship youth. Now octogenarians like the Rolling Stones fill stadiums. A new book explains why ...
Ringo Starr has always had a breezy, comedic charm, so it makes sense that he decided to star in a comedy. It makes less ...
Daoud Tyler-Ameen and Lars Gotrich from NPR Music round up the best new releases out Friday, from artists like Jamie xx, ...
The Heady Rise and Slow Fall of America's Bohemian Music Capital ©2024 David Browne and reprinted by permission from Grand ...
The historic theater has given life to music by Neil Young, Iggy Pop and others. Willie Nelson loved it so much he named an ...