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.
In retrospect, Bob Dylan likened his 1974 reunion tour with The Band to Elvis Presley’s “Fat Elvis” period. It was powerful, ...
A massive new box set documents Dylan's take-no-prisoners 1974 tour with The Band, when the already-mythic singer-songwriter ...
During his Tuesday night show in Buffalo, New York, Dylan decided to finally play “Desolation Row” and accompanied it ...
Toward the end of his set in Darien Center, New York, on Tuesday, Dylan broke out 1965’s “Desolation Row” for the first time ...
“Jesse Ed Davis: Natural Anthem,” an exhibit chronicling the life and career of the legendary Oklahoma music artist Jesse Ed ...
It was 1966 and folk fans didn’t want what ‘Bad Boy Bob’ was offering. This time around, they know what to expect from one of ...
The biggest misconception of Bob Dylan among the general public is that he can't sing, says Michael Gray ahead of a talk - ...
After a motorcycle crash and eight years without touring, the legendary singer’s live comeback was the most galvanising music ...
PLAYBACK: Bob Dylan was teetering on Insignificance when he finally returned to the road in 1974 with The Band, who were in ...
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 ...
The new book 'Talkin' Greenwich Village' reveals the origins of Bob Dylan's 'Blowin' in the Wind' and its impact on the New ...