Yeah I think people were upset because electric "can't be folk" and the folk movement was more than music.
It was like Dylan somehow turned his back on the movement. I don't know, I wans't there. |
yeah well it was bs. they'd sing along to rolling stone and then when he finished they would boo him. like they didnt hate the music, just hated what he was doing.
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Which I'd say still happens today. If I hear another kid complain about metallica cutting their hair, or not playing as heavy I think I'll just sever their laryinx whilst they sleep.
I guess back then, playing electric was like voting for Nixon. |
electric or no electric, the lyrics dont change.
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I love all Dylan. His acoustic stuff is better but his electric is still plain awesome.
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i like it all.....
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Bob Dylan "Modern Times
Bob Dylan’s new record, “Modern Times,” is his first #1 record since 1976! This means 30 years has passed between #1s – setting a music industry RECORD. There’s all kinds of footage – from the fans as well as archival footage – that you can check out at http://video.google.com/dylan.html to get a feeling for the new music from Bobby D. I have listened to the record and love it. Has anyone heard it?
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I got it yesterday, I've only listened to the first five songs, but the first two are really good.
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Still can't get past the vocals.
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bob dylans voice is annoying
but i heard his is the top album so far so yay him |
bob dylans voice is not annoying..
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..Woh, people can't think somethings annoying now. Greatt.
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I like his voice. If it's acoustic I'm not listening. Maybe that makes me a prentenious prick but I don't care.
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very much so |
Great arguement there. "Yeah it is." You convinced me.
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Being annoying is a personal thing, its like disliking a band.
It may be annoying to HYA but it isn't to tdoc. Theres no arguement here. |
For the sake of no confusion, because that's no fun, I agree with you. I think her post was pointless. It is pure opinion and if someone's differs from yours you shouldn't like nu-uh you're so wrong.
Anyways I listened to the clips. And what I heard was way overproduced. Which is funny because not too long ago I read this interview of him saying that all new music is crap. He made it sound like he was talking about production more substance. But seriously what the hell is this? I hate this. |
hxxp://www.sendspace.com/file/xn3o5c
There it is for anyone who wants it. |
His first four albums are completely stellar. His other stuff is good too but his electric work is pretty much hit or miss with me.
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from what ive heard...modern times is def. better than anything else from modern dylan. im not a big fan of stuff after the early or mid 70's except for travelling wilbury's maybe?
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Dylan sold out a good while back, he even did some Victorias Secret commercials, and he criticizes other musicians for doing the same thing, goddamn hypocrite.
I personally do find his voice pretty annoying, his lyrics may be amazing and all, but thats not what I listen for in a song and overall I'm looking for something he just can't offer, I find his music stiff and sometimes even obnoxious (how many "I hate you bitch" songs has he done so far?... A million?), I think Wayne Coyne said it best. "What can an 18-year-old possibly care about a wrinkled-up old man with a pencil-thin moustache hunched over a keyboard. "I mean, have you seen Dylan lately? You can't recognise a single song he plays anymore. "It's like you order a pizza and Dylan brings you a pile of dog food, and you're like, 'What's this? I ordered pizza.' And Dylan says, 'This is my version of pizza." |
I think Bob Dylan has made some sort of impact on many artists enjoyed today..I was raised on him..my aunt lived with is and she was HUGE Dylan fan so much so that she named my cousin after him..I have a couple of Vinyls by him and I play them every once awhile..I say he is one my favs cause I dont think he has been copied.
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I think he's amazing, but his voice is always changing. 'Tangled Up In Blue' has gotta be one of my fave songs and 'Blood on the Tracks' is an amazing album. But the 'Modern Times' album, even though I think it's o.k seems to lack an 'edge' to it.
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When I read all these arguments about Dylan and whether he is amazing or not people seem to forget that he was only a "kid", 22 years old, when The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan was first released. He has said that he wrote many of the songs before even his self titled came out in '62, making him around the age of 20 or 21. Now how many people can say that they or their favorite band/lyricist have written such profound lyrics, as Bob Dylan, at that age?
And when I say profound, I don't mean lyrics that are good and touch you in some special way, I mean lyrics that can call the attention of great poets such as Allen Ginsberg (one of the most important poets of the latter half of the 20th century), who has said Dylan to be the perfect lyric poet and the greatest poet of this half of this century. |
Bob Dylan is an okay lyricist and not nearly as good as people hype him up to be. I really hate to compare Conor Oberst and Bob Dylan since that happens enough, but the lyrics on Letting Off the Happiness were better then any Dylan i've heard and he released that when he was 18 and the album he put out when he was twenty Fevers and Mirrors is also better lyrically then anything i've heard by Dylan, and i've heard alot. Plus Bright Eyes was way more original and dynamic when he came out then Dylan, who just ripped off older folk artists.
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Dylan didn't rip off older folk artist, he just followed the folk tradition of taking traditional folk songs and reworking them as his own; all folk artist did that, from Woody Guthrie down to Pete Seeger. Also, while I am not a fan of Bright Eyes, I can admit Conor Oberst does write some pretty strong lyrics but they still really can't compare to Dylan's lyrics. Just look at A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall, Masters Of War, Don't Think Twice It's All Right. And if you really want to get into it, look at his stuff later on like Chimes of Freedom, Gates Of Eden, It's Alright Ma I'm Only Bleeding, Ballad of a Thin Man, Desolation Row, Visions of Johanna... the list can go on and on. Don't get me wrong, Conor Oberst is a very good lyricist (especially with the lack of strong lyricist) but he still can't compare to Dylan. I mean give me a song of his that is as poetic as Desolation Row or Visions of Johanna and I will admit he is better:) .
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I think Dylan can write good lyrics but alot of times people interrupt his nonsensical rhymes for some super deep meanings, and alot of fans overhype certain songs lyrics like tambourine man or when I paint my masterpiece and talk about the lyrical brilliance of those while you have songs like Idiot Wind that are way better, or songs like Blind Willie McTell that are just way more hard hitting.
I think Conors lyrics are more poetic but Dylans are more powerful, and I think Conor was a better lyricist at a younger age (and lyrically I think hes already passed his prime, but thats another debate). While Dylan was writing stuff like this Quote:
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The hype Dylan gets as a songwriter is often placed in the wrong songs and typically given way too much when theres plenty of other lyricists who are just as good if not better. You have like Nick Drake, and Vashti Bunyan and stuff who were earlier and way more innovative folk musicians but they don't get anywhere near the amount of attention dylan gets. I don't think Dylan brought as much to the table as alot of folk musicians have, I think he brought lyrics. This was probably way repetitive and a headache to read since it was alot of rambling, its late ha. Hes a good songwriter and all, but I think you have fantastic songwriters like Conor who get alot of crap for being too "whiny" when no one really looks at the lyrics and they could easily stand their own against Dylan. But no one will dare believe tolerate that because Dylan is a "classic." I like him alot in case this comes across as negative..Also you should stick around you're one of the best new posters i've seen in awhile. |
my turn to repeativly ramble on 420, started at 4:20 am.
Well thank you.
I understand what you are saying about Dylan and how people can over-hype him; but when it comes to folk music there isn't really much you can do to innovate it. Folk music is just a person with an instrument (usually guitar) who sing topical songs; there is nothing really innovative a folk artist can do, musically, that would gain them much attention unless you change the picking/strumming style like the Carter Family did way back in the 20's and 30's or go electric like Dylan did. Also Nick Drake and Vashti Bunyan came after Dylan and have said he was a big influence on them. You need to remember as well that the songs Dylan was writing in the beginning of his career were on very heated subjects, as Joan Baez says in No Direction Home: "The times back then were very cut and dry you were either for Dr. King or you hated ******s, you were for the war or against it" people found in Dylan a prophet, someone to speak there mind for the troubled times. I mean after only one original album he was awarded the Tom Paine Award by the National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee and was being called the "Spokesman" of the Generation; he was under a lot of pressure to be something he felt he wasn't, a prophet. I mean sure you can say Conors lyrics can stand on their own against Dylan's, especially since he was younger than Dylan; but do you think Conors could stand on his own if people expected the same thing that they expected from Dylan? corliss-lamont.org/dylan.htm check out this site it is the transcript of the Tom Paine Award that Dylan received in 1963. It contains the infamous speech he made along with his very poetic response to the speech he made. Also I hope we can have more discussions like this. |
I think folk can be innovated, you can approach it differently. I probably sound narrow minded bring up bright eyes over and over but its late and I can't think. You have screamy and loud folk like that and daniel johnston and then you have chill and lax stuff like Drake, or Iron and Wine. Then you have people like Elliott Smith who expand on it, he didn't at first and I guess the stuff on Figure 8 and From A Basement On the Hill and sort of XO wasn't really folk but he expanded on his sound which was folk, I don't know I can't really explain it properly. A better one just hit me, you have Patrick Wolf who takes folk music and broadens it and incorporates alot of different instruments as well as a huge amount of electronic music into it, it may not be that folk anymore but the sound is still apparent in the more folkish songs.
Also on the influence subject they were influenced not just taking his sound, they expanded on it which I basically covered in the above post. I don't really know much about the era and reading that was kind of a surprise because I read the Bob Dylan chronicles and I could tell he was being humble but I didn't realize how humble until following it up a bit more. I was aware he was a prophet but he really played it down in those books, he talked about them breaking into his houses and how he wanted to alienate them, which is why he did all the image stuff at one point. To answer your question I don't think Conor could have. |
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It can of course and growth is good but originality just isn't one of the check points to a good folk artists. My problem with Dylan is people before him did it better but everyone knows Dylan's name. |
I think he's incredible personally. He opened up the volcabulary of songwriting and influenced just about everybody who came after.
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i love bob dylan expecially blood on the tracks
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*bump*
Ive been really getting into Bob Dylan lately, I love his voice and his lyrics are just something else. My fav album that Ive heard so far is probably Blonde on Blonde or Bringing it All Back Home, Blood on the Tracks is amazing as well. Some of my fav songs: Stuck Inside of Mobile With the Memphis Blues Again It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding) It's All Over Now, Baby Blue Tangled Up In Blue Subterranean Homesick Blues One of Us Must Know (Sooner or Later) Simple Twist of Fate Queen Jane Approximately Talkin' World War III Blues oh and this happened Bob Dylan's 'Hattie Carroll' killer dies | News | NME.COM |
i went to a concert of his in my hometown and it was the best thing of my life it was a little incomprihensible but he is one of my all time favorite artists and to be honest i actually like his voice
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Bob Dylan is definitely awesome live. I saw him, and he's a mumbling mess, but still great.
At the end of the show he asked the audience if we thought he was unintelligible. I could hardly understand him. But seriously, it was awesome, especially the Modern Times stuff, and his "rocked up" version of It's Allright Ma. |
Damn I missed him here he played 3 shows in Dallas. :( I dont have Modern Times i'll probably check it out though.
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It's pretty much a blues/jazz/rock 'n' roll record, but definitely worth checking out. The lyrics rule, as always.
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Anyone else excited about the new album coming out this month?
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I am excited about the new album coming out this month. I read there's accordion on every track. I'm not sure if I'm glad to know that ahead of time. But I am still excited.
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According to Dylan it will be the complete opposite of Modern Times, which will be interesting.
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