Xbox Music streams and sells more than 200 Bob Dylan Bootlegs
By Stephen Pate – I wasn’t a big fan of Xbox Music which admittedly has been improving. Imagine my surprise when I did a “Bob Dylan” search of Xbox Music and found 295 albums, including a 1966 soundboard recording of Dylan in Australia.
Dylan officially has released something around 63 albums/CDs. Intrigued I started sifting through 295 titles, then streaming the bootleg titles I didn’t recognize.
At first, all I found on Xbox were bootlegs of the first album Bob Dylan under a variety of titles like “Fire Within” and “Bob Dylan Stereo and Mono“. I assume the album has passed into public domain. There were a few interesting variants on Bob Dylan which contain all the outtakes from Dylan’s first recording session with Columbia Records.
Update – Now available in official bootleg The 1966 Live Recordings Box set
Live in Australia
Then I hit gold – the soundboard recordings of Bob Dylan Live in Australia from his 1966 world tour.
The sound is almost perfect and Dylan is in fine form with the appreciate audience, a big contrast with the boorish Brit folk fans who protested his tour in their country later in 1966.
“This this used to be called Visions of Johanna but now it’s called Mother Revisited,” said an obviously stoned Dylan who was enjoying himself.
Dylan spends an inordinate amount of time tuning and re-tuning. He jokes with the Australian audience and they appreciatively lap it up.
I think this is the Melbourne April 20th, 1966 concert at Festival Hall. The first CD is mainly the acoustic set, except for the last three songs with The Hawks.
There is a second “Bob Dylan Live in Australia” which has “Live in Ireland” on the cover, and 6 songs. The sound on the 2nd CD has 60 Hz hum and it’s less interesting.
With a quick search I found a downloadable version of the concert CD from Sydney.
The Sydney bootleg has both the electric and acoustic sets. It’s like the performances, separated by a few days, were recorded in two different decades. In Sydney, Dylan moves through his material with professionalism.
It always amazes me that Dylan can manage to perform the same songs with so much different effect. In Melbourne Dylan feels the songs, gets inside them and sings them with more emotional impact.
The Melbourne recording is also clearer and stronger, with fewer artifacts, probably from new mastering at louder levels. The Melbourne CD Live In Australia was an easy choice as a purchase decision.
A fan wrote “For this show he uses a borrowed guitar, as his had been broken. When compared to the Sydney show, this performance is more laid back. ~bobsboots.com
Bob Dylan Live in Australia set list
- She Belongs To Me
- Fourth Time Around
- Visions Of Johanna
- It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue
- Desolation Row
- Just Like A Woman
- Tell Me, Momma (w/ Hawks)
- Baby Let Me Follow You Down (w/ Hawks)
- Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues (w/ Hawks)
“I saw them in Melbourne in 1966.” wrote Peter Tibbles. “Bob, in that black and brown hounds tooth checked suit, was so stoned he kept hitting the microphone with his guitar and he nearly fell off the stage a couple of times.”
With Xbox Music, you can stream the music without buying it so you can see if it suits you or not.
If you don’t have an Xbox pass, which I don’t, Microsoft plays a 15 second ad every 30 minutes or so.
The MP3 album “Bob Dylan Live in Australia” costs $9.99. I am enjoying it immensely for the past three days.
You can also find this as a bootleg under several titles like “The Children’s Crusade” and “Bob Dylan Melbourne Australia.”
Bob Dylan 1966 World Tour
Dylan’s 1966 World Tour would find Dylan straddling his old folk/acoustic songs and his new rock and roll persona. It was a point of transition that ended with Dylan exhausted returning from jeering audiences in Britain to his August motorcycle accident that took him off the road for years.
From January to March 1966, Dylan performed his newer material crisscrossing the United States and Canada with the musicians, then known as The Hawks who would later form The Band. Right after that Dylan went to Australia then over to Europe and England.
The 1966 British tour was documented by D.A. Pennebaker and used in Martin Scorsese’s documentary Bob Dylan – No Direction Home. At the end of the tour with jeering audiences, Dylan was at his most pugnacious, one Dylan persona.
When a fan called out “Judas” for playing electric, Dylan turned to the band and told them to “Play fucking loud.”
Grant Maxwell likened the 1966 World Tour as a passing through different identities for Dylan.
“Another instance that compounds the evidence for Dylan’s consciousness of passing through different identities comes from Eat the Document, a fragmented documentary of Dylan’s 1966 tour of England filmed by D.A. Pennebaker (who shot and edited Don’t Look Back), but edited by Dylan. In the footage, which appears to be near the end of the tour, Dylan, extremely thin, androgynous, and weary looking, quips in a jittery voice: “I think I’m gonna get me a new Bob Dylan next week, get me a new Bob Dylan and use him. Use the new Bob Dylan; see how long he lasts.”
“Beyond expressing his exhaustion after months of heavy drug use and playing to partially hostile crowds, this statement seems to exhibit an awareness in Dylan that each successive incarnation he inhabits is a role that he plays intensely until there is nothing left for that transient being to give, then it passes away and a new Dylan emerges to take its place.”
“By creating roles that he can inhabit almost completely, but which are not perfectly coextensive with his internal sense of self, Dylan built into his “philosophical identity’ an escape hatch so that he would not “burn out,” that is, literally die with the death of each persona as did Hank Williams, Robert Johnson, Elvis Presley, Jim Morrison, Janis Joplin, Jimmie Hendrix, Gram Parsons, and any number of other young stars.”
“As Benjamin Hedin aptly expresses it: “Dylan was the rarest of pop culture survivors—he had managed to both burn out and fade away. ”
Excerpt from From How Does It Feel?: Elvis Presley, The Beatles, Bob Dylan, and the Philosophy of Rock and Roll by Grant Maxwell.
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