• The Wreckers: Stand Still, Look Pretty
  • Ray LaMontagne: Till the Sun Turns Black
  • Christina Aguilera: Back to Basics
  • Baker: Happy Birthday
  • Kelly Clarkson: Breakaway
  • Spoon: A Series of Sneaks
  • Joe Strummer & The Mescaleros: Streetcore
  • PJ Harvey: Stories from the City, Stories from the...
  • Jem: Finally Woken
  • Nick Drake: Bryter Lyter
  • Friday, September 15, 2006

    Bob Dylan: Modern Times

    Something happened in 2001 to Bob Dylan. It's called Love and Theft.

    Bobby's fans all cried, and many, like myself, thought "Hmmm, this could be it for Mr. Dylan," and then went back to looping Blonde on Blonde and Highway 61 Revisited so we could remember Bob in a good way.

    This year, however, we were surprised. A blog post somewhere had audio from this disc (specifically, Thunder on the Mountain) and I took a listen. Bob has died. Bob has risen. Bob is come again.

    Rising from the ashes of Love and Theft, Modern Times is the Dylan-Phoenix. 10 tracks, coming in just over an hour, Times has already cracked into my unorganized Top 10 of the year.

    The moment you hear Thunder on the Mountain, the lead off track, you know Bob "Visions of Johanna" Dylan is back; Spirit on the Water is musically and lyrically beautiful; Rollin' and Tumblin' just screams half of the tracks of Highway 61 Revisited, which may make it his least original track on Times, but it's so damn good; the last track, Ain't Talkin' ends the album on a down note, but it's still an amazing track.

    In the end: Dylan's back, folks. He may have lost his touch live, but hot damn, he's proven a) why you show respect to Dylan and b) why you can't keep good musician down. Do yourself a favour and get this album.

    On the Web: The Hype Machine has so much Dylan, it hurts.

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    1 Comments:

    Anonymous Anonymous said...

    Have you seen the article Who’s This Guy Dylan Who’s Borrowing Lines From Henry Timrod?

    1:09 PM  

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