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Highway 61 Revisited | 
| Artist: Bob Dylan Label: Columbia Category: Music
List Price: £9.99 Buy New: £4.98 You Save: £5.01 (50%)
New (50) Used (8) from £3.34
Rating: 34 reviews Sales Rank: 1410
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
EAN: 5099751235125 ASIN: B0001M0KEI
Release Date: March 29, 2004 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
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| Tracks:
| • | Like A Rolling Stone | | • | Tombstone Blues | | • | It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry | | • | From A Buick 6 | | • | Ballad Of A Thin Man | | • | Queen Jane Approximately | | • | Highway 61 Revisited | | • | Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues | | • | Desolation Row |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Dylan was virtually gushing great songs when this masterpiece arrived in the summer of 1965. For the epochal opening of "Like a Rolling Stone" through the absurdly apocalyptic closer, "Desolation Row", his command of surrealistic language was daring and amazing. As a vocalist, he was rewriting the rules of the game. Jimi Hendrix made note of Mr Z's technically suspect pitch and decided that he, too was a singer. And the backing, though ragged, is precisely right. Is this the essential Dylan album? It's certainly one of them. --Steven Stolder
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| Customer Reviews: Read 29 more reviews...
without this album I'd have never got into Dylan November 17, 2008 I remember this album when it came out in 1965. I wasn't interested in the controversy - the music just sounded great. I had never heard anything like it...... I still don't know exactly how you would describe this style. Anyway , when it came out it became iconic for some people, which includes me. Although it's of it's time it's still unquestionably listenable today - interpret the lyrics if that is your whim - you don't have to, in my opinion, to merely enjoy the album at first listening.
insert your own clever word-play joke here June 5, 2008 I know this is supposed to be one of Dylan's best albums... but I don't think it is. Since I was born in 1978, I can't really comment on how revolutionary this record was, and I can't comment on Dylan's abandonment of folk for the new rock n' roll sound. Unlike Dylan's audience in 1965, I am unhampered by any anti rock n' roll prejudices, but I'm afraid that for me it's just a fact that Dylan's early folk albums are better than his mid 60s rock n' roll albums. I say it's a fact, but of course you know that I mean it's just my opinion. It's not a case of whether he betrayed his fans, folk music or the civil rights movement. It's just that I don't respond emotionally to the tunes on Highway 61 Revisited. I've always thought that Like A Rolling Stone was bland, and the rest of the album strikes me that way too. Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues is the one bright spot - I like the bass line. Elsewhere these tunes are plodding and overlong, with seldom more than one musical idea, the "free association" lyrics are inventive but lack much of a discernable meaning and as a result fail to engage the attention and even tracks I used to like, such as Ballad of a Thin Man sink into anonymity amongst such repetitively turgid fare.
So... I think I've pretty much summed up my feelings about the record in one paragraph there! Just a couple of other things: the cover is dreadful and so is the out of tune guitar on Queen Jane Approximately.
IM GOING BACK TO NEW YORK CITY..... April 15, 2008 This is truly Dylans greatest album bar none, their is not a duff track on this album!!!!! In fact its probably the greatest rock album ever made in the history of music. Dylan is at the top of his game here, spouting super hip New York poetry with a tip of the hat to the Beat Generation poets. Sure, it contains one of Dylans most loved songs...Like a Rolling stone but it contains sooooo much more! It climaxes with the astonishing Desolation row, and where Dylan has been known to occasionally pick the wrong take for release anyone who has heard the outtake of this song will know he got it dead right here. The interraction between the two acoustic/Flamenco style guitars has to be heard to be believed, I cant throw at it enough superlatives. If you are doubtful about buying this album dont be, it will change your life forever. This album I would take to a Desert Island if I only had one choice of anything on Earth. Truly Awesome. Steve Vallely...Middlesbrough
Bob Dylan validates Rock before The Beatles November 2, 2007 Arguably the single most important record released in the 60s, even moreso than that other cultural icon SGT PEPPER - although my personal opinion is divided on the matter (I lean more toward The Beatles on these two albums, though overall The Beatles and Dylan are equal for their body of work in the 1960s.). You cannot discuss Bob Dylan without his only artistic contemporaries, The Beatles. Both started in relatively the same time, but Dylan sung fold and The Beatles bubble-gum pop. In this manner, Dylan has a much more satisfying early start than does The Beatles. You don't have to wade thru a pop phase like with The Beatles. But The Beatles, of course, are the single most important band in rock'n'roll, and Bob Dylan the single most important artist other than The Beatles.
That being said, Dylan began rocking in a much more satisfying manner than when The Beatles began. Their influence over each other is amazing, and because of this both owe a great debt to one another. Dylan got The Beatles doing much more interesting things than the bubble-gum pop of "I Want to Hold Your Hand," and their first four albums. On Help! they had three or four songs more introverted. Then, the full-fledged effect of Dylan over them became apparent when they released RUBBER SOUL in December 3 (they also released the single Day Tripper/We Can Work It Out the same day). Yet the effects of The Beatles, who encouraged Dylan to move beyond folk into rock'n'roll on this album, which is his first full-fledged rock album. (Some will say that title belongs to BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME, but that is only half - it straddles his folk and rock, whilst this falls into the rock). This album Bob Dylan released August 30, 1965 - and without The Beatles this might not have happened. Both of them show their influences on the other within a mere four months (although both HELP! and BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME points to the direction both are moving, though Dylan's moreso. Dylan's record beats HELP! in quality by a long shot, although the two or three best songs on HELP! give the Dylan songs a run for their money - and that is primarily because they are like Dylan.)
As for his voice, it is one of those things that it actually is a part of his quality that Bob Dylan can't sing at all. That is one of the things that adds to his charm and importance, because it proved that a singer with an unconventional voice can make it. Dylan obviously gave no import to music theory, and with this further defiance he helped pave the way for other singers who have good voices, though not in a technical sense. (Really, who could sing "Like a Rolling Stone" or his smash single "Positively Fourth Strength"?) Its like a Faulkner novel - it just wouldn't be what it was without Faulkner's style - in this case, Dylan's voice.
The songs are absolutely fantastic. The ride starts on the epic "Like a Rolling Stone", the first six minute single to hit number one, breaking the code of three minute songs. In length, this would be the necessary forerunner to Don McClean's number one hit "American Pie", which have numerous references to Dylan (most notable when the jester takes the crown, and he sings with a voice that comes from me and you - Dylan's voice is notorious). Then it travels onto "Tombstone Blues", flat-out garage rock, "It Takes A Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry" bluesy material. "Like Tomb Thumb's Blues" and "Queen Jane Approximately" absolutely brilliant songs. "Ballad of a Thin Man" is one of my favorite Dylan songs (it earning an honourable mention in "Yer Blues" off THE WHITE ALBUM). The two weakest songs, in my opinion, are the title track and "From a Buick Six". They seem forgetable to me, at least Buick does. "Highway 61 Revisted" is, like "Tombstone Blues", flat-out garage rock, but is not as good. But it does contribute to the overall feel to the album.
The one song I have left out would be the last - Desolation Row. HIGHWAY 61 REVISTED begins with an epic and ends likewise. An eleven minute closer that is folk rock, a surrealistic poem with nonsense imagery, and an incredibly addicting tune.
"Einstein, disguised as Robin Hood -- With his memories in a trunk -- Passed this way an hour ago -- With his friend, a jealous monk -- He looked so immaculately frightful -- As he bummed a cigarette -- Then he went off sniffing drainpipes -- And reciting the alphabet -- Now you would not think to look at him -- But he was famous long ago -- For playing the electric violin -- On Desolation Row"
This song will be with me for a very long time. It blows anything that Morrison wrote away. The sense of rhythm Bob Dylan carries with this song is incredible, allowing his outstanding song-writing abilities to shine.
If you want to discover the history of our culture during the sixties, this is one record you need to buy, along with SGT PEPPER and several others. Excellent music.
Originally issued on Amazon.com August 1, 2000
Literate, complex, and totally unprecedented; one of rock's first great albums October 2, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
In 1965, Bob Dylan released HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED, arguably the single most important record in 1960s rock. A total break with anything occurring in popular music before (save Dylan's own albums), HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED merged biting, sharp lyricism and great garage-rock and blues. When most other bands were singing about boy-girl topics and writing insubstantial lyrics (in 1965 The Beatles were singing "You're gonna lose that girl"), Dylan combined edgy, hip lyrics with garage rock, blues, and epic folk. His voice, rough hewn and very off-kilter technically, rewrites the rules for rock vocals. As Mark Prindle says, Dylan's voice turned off a lot of people, but influenced a whole lot more.
"Like a Rolling Stone," Dylan's most famous song, kickstarts HIGHWAY 61 with a sledge hammer. Significant as the single that broke the three minute barrier Dylan berates a woman, very much trying to be with the `in' movement. Filled with images never before conceived with in pop music, this song sets the tone of the rest of the album, and indeed this period of Dylan's life. "Ballad of a Thin Man," however, proves itself to be the really brutal put-down to all those to unwilling to open their minds and see where the counter-culture was headed. "Mr Jones," the acrimonious protagonist, finds himself thrown into a world of freaks, and he simply doesn't know what is happening. He is wealthy, well-read, and in all likelihood corporate - the very materialism and hypocrisy the youth of the 1960s were so ardent to overthrow. (Many 1960s' youth turned into 1980s' yuppies; that is neither here nor there.)
The very confrontational break with the folk community informs this entire work. The folk community were still idolizing Dylan, and Dylan, being Dylan, abandoned the role, much to their anger. Dylan was following his own muse, transforming himself from a protest singer into a cynical, avant-guard musician, very much a counter-cultural icon, exerting enormous influence over the rest of the fellow musicians as well as the growingly despondent youth culture. Ironically, Dylan would likewise abandon this role for a more mellow, country direction, and anger the counterculture just as much as he angered the folk fans, which is why I believe SELF PORTRAIT is the perfect capstone to Dylan's 1960s work. Because it's Dylan being contrary and inscrutable. That album's infamous for a reason folks.
This transformation, while occurring over the past two albums, comes to full fruition here, and with such offerings as the lead off track, "Tombstone Blues," "Ballad of a Thin Man," and "Desolation Row," this is nothing short of essential listening. "Desolation Row," arriving a full year and a half ahead of the other great epic in classic rock, The Doors' "The End," feels like a journey down a twisted, malignant, decaying road through America, with surrealism abounding and one of the best (and most accessible) answers to T. S. Eliot's modernist masterpiece `The Waste Land." "Tombstone Blues," combining (like the rest of the album) complex, surrealistic imagery and characters given an almost mythological import with seemingly random juxtapositions, rewrote the rules of rock lyrics. It has quite the absurdist touch.
The remaining tracks are just as remarkable. "It Takes a Lot to Laugh, a Train to Cry" musically turns to the blues for its inspiration, but the lyrics are a far cry from the classic blues motifs. "From a Buick Six," based partially on the 1930 Sleeping John Estes "Milk Calf Blues," shows Dylan reinventing the blues with a visceral fist. "Queen Jane Approximately," a dire warning directed to an obviously important woman in the narrator's life, chugs along at a loose, warm, garage frenzy. The narrator warns Queen Jane that she's about to fall apart. Wrapping the message in symbolism, the listener is left wondering if she's a real person in Dylan's life or not. "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues," one of my personal favorites (I wrote a story about New York City using these lyrics as inspiration), details a character's descent into a continually more startling and depressing lifestyle, filled with corrupt authorities, shady women, and a haze of drugs and alcohol. Rich with literary allusions, writing like this sets Dylan head and shoulders above any other lyricist. "Highway 61 Revisited," the very song that game the album its name, gives another example of Dylan's surrealistic, stream-of-conscious type of writing, part beat, part symbolist, and undeniably all Dylan. The opening stanza, with its 1960s' reinvention of God telling Abraham to kill his son Isaac, stands as a stroke of genius. Some commentators have pointed out there's Highway 61 in Minnesota, and that Dylan's father's name was Abe. Dylan populates the rest of the song with royalty, roving gamblers, and other colourful characters. One of Dylan's best songs, with a rollicking bit of music to go with the mind-bending lyrics.
Two tracks, recorded during the same sessions and cut very much of the same cloth, would have found a welcome home on this album. "Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window?" a bizaare narrative about a guy trying to win back his love, broke the top 100 but wasn't very successful. Somewhat akin to "I Want You" in the bizaare pop department. "Positively Fourth Street," one of Dylan's biggest hits and one of the nastiest put downs ever committed to tape, shows Dylan totally demolishing a so-called friend. It's one of Dylan's best mid 1960s offerings (and that's saying something, let me tell you) and appears on the first GREATEST HITS album.
HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED's most radical facet is it brought rock and popular music to a totally unprecedented level of sophisticated, artistic mastery. Dylan made music both deeply poetic and complex, redefining rock as we know it. Is it Dylan's best? Maybe. It is certainly one of his most important, not only for his career but for rock in generall. While many people point to The Beatles' SGT PEPPER as the seminal record of the 1960s, HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED is where my money is at.
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