Bob Dylan - Live In Canada 1962
Having just released his thirty third solo album 'Together Through Life', which has received some very positive reviews, I thought it would be interesting to wind the clock back some 47 years!
This is Bob Dylan back on the 2nd July 1962, live at the Finjan Club in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, a venue that I have no further details of, however judging from the audience, I would imagine it was quite an intimate affair.
This is taken from the Yellow Dog, CD version (Cat No YD010), probably the best bootleg version of this show.
Source: Soundboard recording
Sound Quality: Very good, this version 192kbps (MP3).
Genre: Bob Dylan (early, acoustic, folk period).
Set: Full set (cannot confirm).
Set List:
Death Of Emmett Till
Stealin' (Trad - Memphis Jug Band arr)
Hiram Hubbard (Trad)
Blowin' In The Wind
Rocks and Gravel (Brownie McGhee)
Quit Your Lowdown Ways
He Was A Friend of Mine (Trad )*
Let Me Die In My Footsteps
Two Trains Runnin' (McKinley Morganfield)
Ramblin' On My Mind (Robert Johnson)
Muleskinner Blues (Jimmie Rodgers)
* Traditional song that was registered to Bob Dylan in the US copyright office
Links: Official site HERE. Highly informative 'Bobs Boots' site HERE.
Comments: Bobs Boots summary of this recording is spot on, they say:
The incredible Finjan tape belongs in every collection. Period. This particular CD release is the one to own. Few if any other releases of Finjan can compare to this gem. Some of the other releases have edited out the in between song talking, mistakes, and false starts (which sometimes seem as long as the songs themselves). Nothing is edited here.
The CD captures the moment the recorder was turned on and left to run. This has always been a nice quality soundboard recording, but Yellow Dog has brought it to pure perfection. The audience is pin drop quiet. So much so that this could be a studio recording. The tape is so clean that several times you can hear the guitar case snaps etc. when the stage hand opens it to retrieve harmonicas and a capo. Turn up the stereo, and suddenly Dylan is in the room with you.
This really is a great historical time capsule of Bob Dylan, enjoy.
Reloaded 23/02/2016 link in comments.
This is Bob Dylan back on the 2nd July 1962, live at the Finjan Club in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, a venue that I have no further details of, however judging from the audience, I would imagine it was quite an intimate affair.
This is taken from the Yellow Dog, CD version (Cat No YD010), probably the best bootleg version of this show.
Source: Soundboard recording
Sound Quality: Very good, this version 192kbps (MP3).
Genre: Bob Dylan (early, acoustic, folk period).
Set: Full set (cannot confirm).
Set List:
Death Of Emmett Till
Stealin' (Trad - Memphis Jug Band arr)
Hiram Hubbard (Trad)
Blowin' In The Wind
Rocks and Gravel (Brownie McGhee)
Quit Your Lowdown Ways
He Was A Friend of Mine (Trad )*
Let Me Die In My Footsteps
Two Trains Runnin' (McKinley Morganfield)
Ramblin' On My Mind (Robert Johnson)
Muleskinner Blues (Jimmie Rodgers)
* Traditional song that was registered to Bob Dylan in the US copyright office
Links: Official site HERE. Highly informative 'Bobs Boots' site HERE.
Comments: Bobs Boots summary of this recording is spot on, they say:
The incredible Finjan tape belongs in every collection. Period. This particular CD release is the one to own. Few if any other releases of Finjan can compare to this gem. Some of the other releases have edited out the in between song talking, mistakes, and false starts (which sometimes seem as long as the songs themselves). Nothing is edited here.
The CD captures the moment the recorder was turned on and left to run. This has always been a nice quality soundboard recording, but Yellow Dog has brought it to pure perfection. The audience is pin drop quiet. So much so that this could be a studio recording. The tape is so clean that several times you can hear the guitar case snaps etc. when the stage hand opens it to retrieve harmonicas and a capo. Turn up the stereo, and suddenly Dylan is in the room with you.
This really is a great historical time capsule of Bob Dylan, enjoy.
Comments
Martin from Canada.
Derek
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