124
0000
Fourth Time Around-GBS 4
1978-09-30 Madison Square Garden
1980-11-17 San Francisco LK_FixedLB7436
1981-10-19 Where the Corn Grows Tall
1981-10-25 Bethleham
© 2008 CD
Pinkerton / bobsboots.com
Fourth Time Around
source: various see below
Tracks:
Disc one
Rangers Command (1)
Baby Let Me Follow You Down (2)
Midnight Special (3)
It Makes A Long Time Man Feel Bad (4)
Baby Please DonÕt Go (5)
Ballad Of The Gliding Swan (6)
James Alley Blues (7)
Lone Time Gone (8)
Only A Hobo (9)
Not The Cough Song (10)
Hard Rain (11)
Troubled And I DonÕt Know Why (12)
Ballad Of Hollis Brown (13)
Boots Of Spanish Leather (13)
North Country Blues (13)
Seven Curses (14)
Eternal Circle (15)
Mr. Tambourine Man (15)
Outlaw Blues (16)
Please Crawl Out Your Window (17)
Keep It With Mine (18)
Disc two
Tell Me Mama (19)
AinÕt Got No Home (20)
See That My Grave Is Kept Clean (21)
One Too Many Mornings (22)
Song To Woody (23)
If Not For You (24)
Put My Money Down (25)
For You Oh Babe For You (25)
Going Going Gone (26)
What Will You Do When Jesus Comes (27)
No Man Righteous (28)
I Will Love Him (29)
LetÕs Keep It Between Us (30)
Shot Of Love (31)
In The Summertime (31)
Let It Be Me (32)
Groom's Still Waiting At The Altar (33)
I And I (34)
Side Walks Fences And Walls (35)
Disc
three
Soon (36)
Ring Them Bells (37)
Dignity (38)
2 X 2 (39)
Born In Time (39)
Wiggle Wiggle (39)
TV TalkinÕ Song (39)
Unbelievable (39)
Under The Red Sky (39)
Polly Vaughn (40)
Catskill Serenade (40)
Miss The Mississippi (40)
Sloppy Drunk (40)
You Belong To Me (41)
Anyway You Want Me (42)
Lawdy Miss Clawdy (42)
Money Honey (42)
Money Honey II (42)
I CanÕt Get You Off My Mind (43)
Return To Me (44)
Red Cadillac And A Black Moustache
(45)
Tell Old Bill (46)
A Change Is Gonna Come (47)
Take Me Out To The Ballgame (48)
DISC ONE
(1) 5½ stars. Cynthia
GoodingÕs recording from Gerdes Folk City (not her apartment) on September 29,
1961. The entire recording is muffled (as if the mic
were hidden under a sweater. However this is as good a quality as I've heard.
(2) 8½ stars. The Bonnie Beecher
tape from Minneapolis, Minnesota 12/ 22/61. Very nice quality.
(3) 10 stars. The first time I've ever heard this Harry Belafonte outtake. The quality is
great, but the performance is flawed. Dylan plays harp, and in this version it's extra loud and
continuous.
(4) 7 stars. Cynthia GoodingÕs 1961 radio
show. The harp is too loud, and the vocals are not loud
enough.
(5) 10 stars. FreewheelinÕ outtake from April 25, 1962. Same
version as iTunes' Bob Dylan - The Collection.
(6) 6½ stars. This was recorded in
late December of 1962 for the BBC television program ÓMadhouse on Castle
StreetÓ. As Bob was then an unknown artist, there was no
thought of keeping the taped performance, and it was discarded. Dylan's earlier chance bookstore meeting of Hans Fried, prompted
Fried to record Dylan on the show. He used a mid
1950's model Baird reel-to-reel tape recorder, and held the mic to the TV
speaker. This result is a very good though slightly
muffled one minute mono version of a macabre song co-written by Dylan and the
play writer Evan Jones.
(7) 9 stars for the guitar, as the mic was
positioned directly in front of it. The vocals range from inaudible at songs
beginning to an eventual 7-8 stars. This Richard Brown song was recorded
September 1962 at the New York home of friends Eve and
'Mac' McKenzie.
(8) 7½ - 8 stars Another outing from
one of the several McKenzie tapes. This one has good mic
placement to capture guitar and vocal fairly evenly. One ring of the
telephone is heard halfway through.
(9) 8½ - 9 stars for another great
McKenzie recording. Bob plays and sings the first verse and
course beautifully, but then forgets the next verse. He
pauses and fumbles with the guitar before coming back strong with the second
and third verses and courses. Eve McKenzie is heard making a couple of
positive comments.
(10)
9 stars This McKenzie recording is instrumental. It's
unclear as to whether this two minute recording is the beginning of a song, or
simply Dylan showing off some of his impressive guitar work. The first 45 seconds is a slow 4/4 delta blues that rolls around the
tempo to create other time signatures. Bob then slips into a Chet Atkins style
of slow finger picking for 15 seconds. He speeds the
tempo up until he looses it. The final minute morphs
into a slow version of what would later become Suze until the tape runs out.
(11) 9 stars Bob performs a seven minute
version of the song that he had played a few days earlier at the Carnegie Hall
Hootenanny on September, 22 1962. It's still months before the official
recording. Bob makes an early misstep, but the song comes off
quite well.08 CD Pinkerton / bobsboots.com
(12) 9 stars This pirate recording duet with
Joan Baez is live from the Forest Hills show of August 17, 1963. It was
released on the CDs Songs From Sing Out! and the Joan
Baez set Rare, Live & Classic.
(13)
10 stars. These recordings, from Carnegie Hall October 26, 1963, are simply
perfection. Forget about the primitive equipment of
the day argument. These gems could have been digitally recorded in the studio last year as far as the quality goes. The
performances are laid bare emotion. The best of the
best. The reason they are so good is that they were released by Sony, so these
are pirate recordings. prior to 2005, the tracks did
not circulate among collectors. "Bob Dylan Live At
Carnegie Hall 1963" was released that year as a promo disc to the public,
and there were various ways to obtain it in different parts of the world
by buying certain combinations of released Dylan items.
(14)
8 stars. This is from the same 1963 Carnegie Hall
show, though not near the quality. Originally taken
from an unreleased CBS acetate, it is slightly muffled and spotted with white
noise (acetate pops). This same version has circulated for years in this
same quality.
(15)
9 stars. Newly surfaced line recordings from England's Royal Festival
Hall on May 17, 1964. Both quality and performance is
incredible. As these were taken from acetate, there is a
little white noise, especially in the beginning of Eternal Circle.
(16)
10 stars. Perfect quality on this acoustic version from the first Bringing It
All Back Home recording session recorded at Columbia's Studio A in New York
City. This was also available in the iTunes Collection.
(17)
9½ stars. Package states October 25, 1965, but this couldn't be correct. Nov. 30, 1965 was the second Blonde on
Blonde session in which this was recorded at least ten
times. This is most likely the date. Song is near perfect
quality, although it is from acetate and includes noise. That's easy to
overlook. What's harder to forgive is that at the very
end of the three and a half minute song, Dylan sneaks in "You gotta lotta
nerve to say you are...". As he says "lot"
there is a digital transfer skip in the word. The track indicator reads
3:22. A few seconds later and the song has ended.
(18)
9½-10 stars. The Blonde On Blonde sessions were extensive. Recordings were made over a five month period that spanned 1965 and
1966, and were split between two cities. The earlier
sessions that yielded the previous song were in New York City. This
recording is from Feb. 15, 1966 at Columbia Music Row
Studio in Nashville, Tennessee.
This three minute instrumental contains harp, but no vocal. It was
recorded from an acetate, so a few white noise pops can be
heard.
DISC TWO
(19)
8-8½ stars. This May 14, 1966 show from
Liverpool has circulated for many years, and was taken from the 1991 Supersound
bootleg CD release. It was long rumored to be part of a
planned official CBS release, but it never happened. The mix is not
perfect. The organ is a bit loud to start with. Later the vocals become a bit
loud and the mic delivers a few 'P' pops. The song
ends rather sloppily. All things considered might be reason for it never
appearing officially.
(20)
7½-8 stars. This song is from the Woody Guthrie Memorial Concert held in New York on January 20, 1968. Therefore,
it's a pirate
recording as it was released on
the 1970 Columbia album A Tribute
to Woody Guthrie Part One. It's now available on the Warner
Brothers CD release from which this track was taken. Interesting
to note that during the first keyboard solo the tempo jumps quite a bit.
This is a thing that happens to musicians at times,
especially during solo when adrenalin pumps a little harder. The tempo never
falls back. During the second guitar solo, the same thing
happens. The tempo is now quite a bit faster than the
songs beginning, and it stays there.
(21)
10 stars. A song from the basement tapes. A year
before the sessions for Nashville Skyline, this could easily be mistaken for
being from those sessions both in terms of quality and performance. The
three and one half minute song cuts in cold at
"Kind favor I'd ask of you" The instruments slowly stumble in. The
vocals are clear and way up front with a definite Nashville Skyline feel.
Instruments include bass guitar, harmonica, brush played snare drum, and
autoharp. The autoharp is the lead instrument and is well
mixed from the beginning. Others are a bit buried. All
instrument volumes come up slowly and eventually all are properly in the mix
except for the autoharp which is now too loud.
(22)
7-8 stars. A song from the Johnny Cash / Bob Dylan
session on February 18, 1969. It was officially released in two videos.
1979's JOHNNY CASH, THE MAN AND HIS MUSIC, and 1984's THE OTHER SIDE OF
NASHVILLE, as well as being broadcast in a Johnny Cash
Documentary. It starts in very nice quality, but falls away
somewhat in the middle. Most notable for the engineer introducing it as
take one of ÒA
Thousand Miles BehindÓ, and for Bob and Johnny stumbling almost comically in an
attempt to end the song.
(23)
9 stars. This four and one half minute song from the
May 1, 1970 New Morning session at NYC's CBS studio is given new life
with Bob's matured voice and a happy feeling 3/4 time production with a
bouncing bass line. Later the brush on snare is blended in to give a definite
waltz feel to the song. A package highlight.
(24)
9-10 stars. Another package highlight is this
beautiful three minute Dylan and George Harrison duet. A 1971 studio
rehearsal for the Madison Square Garden Bangladesh
concert on August 1, 1971. It was officially released in 1972 in the movie THE CONCERT FOR BANGLADESH, and came out on commercial
video in 1983 and DVD in 2005.
(25)
10 stars. I've never before heard these bizarre outtakes that were
recorded at NYC's Record Plant in November 1971 during
the Allen Ginsberg & Friends sessions. The sound quality is incredible, but
one listen through of the performance should be enough
to satisfy even the most hardcore fan. Hard to believe, but
in this surreal world, Bob is the only one who sings on key.
(26)
10 stars. An incredible find that helps to give this release validity.
It's a perfect quality (minus a few reel to reel tape squeaks) alternate vocal
/ acoustic guitar track from the 24 track master reel
used during the November 1973 sessions for Planet Waves. The
Band can be barely heard at certain times due to track bleed through. A portion of the three and one half minute performance is an
incredibly rare listen of Dylan a'capella.
(27)
7 stars. Taken directly from the Renaldo & Clara soundtrack,
this is not notably good quality, not a notably good performance, and not
notably entertaining. Thankfully, it is notably short.
(28)
8 stars. This is one of only a couple performances of
this rare song. Bob ends it by saying "I'm sure
that's going to be on our next album"... but it was not to be. Most
circulating copies of this song have been taken from the CD Contract With The
Lord 1, that at 5:15, was mastered too slow. This
version has been corrected to the proper speed and time of 4:35.
(29)
8½-9 stars. The only known performance / recording of this song
is from the final encore of April 19, 1980 at Massey
Hall, Toronto. This is a line recording feed from the board
LYRICS
(30)
7½ stars. This newly
surfaced recording from the Rundown Studios in October 1980 is the only known
studio recording. It starts out nearly inaudible, but quickly
comes up. It seems more like a through the air (open
mic) recording than a direct line. It's quite muffled,
though Dylan's vocals get crisper as the recording goes on. It's easily
dismissible after the first listen as being a lower quality, lesser
performance. You owe it a few more listens. The official lyrics are available at bobdylan.com, but some are quite different than are
recorded here. Most notably there are extra verses here in this five and one
half minute recording, and the turnaround has been
completely changed to:
I know we're not
perfect, but then again so what
That ain't no
reason to treat me like a slave and to treat you like
a slut
And it's just
makin' me angry
Dylan has an
incredible sense of timing to fit the words in. Some
are spoken in tune, and some are passionately spit out. The phraseology, the
lyrics, the spoken delivery, the bluesy feel, the
playful organ.. all told, one is put in mind of a a 1970's performance of
Russell Smith and The Amazing Rhythm Aces. Another fascinating observation that I can now make only in
retrospect, one can easily see this song being written for his then back up
singer of two years, Carolyn Dennis. It is presumably her
that can be heard buried a few times in this recording affirming a few of
Dylan's words. With the hindsight knowledge that she
would be his girlfriend and later his secret wife and mother of his daughter,
this song moves from an uninteresting ditty to one of the most personal
slices of Dylan's private life of this time that he has ever uttered. When held up in this light, this song can soon become an obsession
that you can't walk away from.
(31)
10 stars. Perfect quality rough mix takes that have been line recorded.
Recorded during the Spring of 1981, these both seem to be the released versions
prior to post mastering. before Shot Of Love, The
engineer can barely be herd introducing it as "take 20"
(32)
10 stars. This is an official rarity, as it was
released as a B-side. This version is crystal clear
and seems to be from a tape source.
(33)
10 stars. This is a rough mix from the May 1981
Clover Studio sessions that is mainly notable for the cold ending.
(34)
10 stars. Fantastic reggae dub remix from Is it Rolling Bob?: A Reggae
Tribute to Bob Dylan
(35)
8½ stars. A newly surfaced outtake from the Down In The Groove
sessions.
DISC THREE
(36)
6½ stars. Bob performs this Ira / George Gershwin tune live at the Brooklyn Academy Of Music, NYC on March 11, 1987, for
the Gershwin Celebration (50th anniversary of Gershwin's death). It was
recorded through the air from TV broadcast. This
results in a muffled sound. It has appeared in the
same quality on several bootlegs including Hard To Find Vol 5 and You Don't Know Me .
(37)
10 stars. This piano and vocal demo is an Oh Mercy outtake. Even though
it clocks in at just a minute and a half, it's perfect
quality. It cuts off cold after the line "... God
is one."
(38)
10 stars. This is another two minute piano demo that
was made available on a promotional CD with Chronicles. The vocals are far out front and much easier to hear than on the
released version.
(39)
9-10 stars. In March of 1990, Dylan was recording at
The Record Plant Studio in Los Angeles, California with the Was Not Was band /
producers David and Don at the
Under The Red Sky sessions. The bass player for half
of the takes was Randy Jackson of TV's American Idol fame, and he can be heard
on the first four tracks. Red Sky has always been an
undeservedly panned album by fans and critics alike. There
are some true gems on the album as well as in this collection. Born In
Time, for example, is simply an overlooked masterpiece. Not
only is it poetic genius, but Bob uses perhaps the sexiest voice that he has
ever recorded with. This outake is a continuation of that same voice. Under The Red Sky is another song that people don't get for some
reason. It's as darkly and masterfully a woven
fairy-tale as any of those of the Grimm Brothers. Not
a lot of lyric changes here, but Bob was unsure if the tape was rolling.
At forty seconds in he asks "Are you taking
(taping) this?" At 3:30 of the four minute song Dylan simply says
"That's it" to signify the end of the vocals. Wiggle
Wiggle has never been one of my favorites, but there are a few alternate lines
here. There are several different lyrics, lines, and
verses on TV TalkinÕ Song, another song with some powerful words. 2 X 2 contains different lines as well, to rhyme with each number,
and Unbelievable contains several different lines including an entirely different
final verse. These recordings were also notable for the rare
celebrity cameo appearances including David Crosby on background Vocals,
Elton John - piano on 2 X 2 / Bruce Hornsby on piano and Robben Ford - guitar
on Born In Time and TV TalkinÕ Song / Slash playing guitar for Wiggle Wiggle /
Al Kooper at the keyboards on Unbelievable and Don Was on bass with George
Harrison playing slide guitar for Under The Red Sky. Overall, these are some
very nice finds, and represent yet another package highlight.
(40)
7½ stars. In June of 1992 Dylan rented Acme Recording Studio in
Chicago, Illinois to record a contractual album for Sony, and hired David
Bromberg to produce, and Bromberg's band to play. There was an album worth of material recorded before Bob left for
tour in Europe. When Bob returned home to California he began recording
acoustic songs in his home studio with intent of adding a few to the album. The acoustic cover songs kept flowing, and eventually overtook the
project. The acoustic songs were released as Good as I
Been to You, and the Bromberg sessions, for some mysterious reason, have never
seen the light of day save for these previously circulating four tracks.
Polly Vaughan is an old Irish folksong that was brought to
the US by The Dillards in the early 1960's, but it was more of a bluegrass song.
Dylan's arrangement and lyrics seems to be his own.
Catskill Serenade was written by David Bromberg. Miss The
Mississippi And You was written and recorded by Bill Halley in 1932.
Many artists (mostly country) have recorded it since. The
1954 Jimmy Rogers recording of Sloppy Drunk was the inspiration for this track,
but Dylan has slowed it down, and changed the beat & lyrics.
(41)
10+ stars. This song is incorrectly identified on the package as If You
Belonged To Me, which is a Traveling Wilburys tune. Actually,
this is the 1940's song written by Chilton Price and copyrighted in 1952 by her
and Pee Wee King. It was recorded by Sue Thompson, and
a few weeks later covered by Patti Page. This version was recorded at Dylan's Malibu home studio in August of 1992 during the
Good As I Been To You sessions. It was released on the soundtrack
to Oliver Stone's Natural Born Killers, and this track was lifted directly from
that CD, making it a pirate track. There is movie
dialog from Juliette Lewis and Woody Harrelson at songs end that soundtrack
producer Trent Reznor blends into the next track, The Trembler by Duane Eddy.
On this track, the editors do a sloppy job of editing. You
hear the final guitar note, but Harrelson's words are chopped in two.
(42)
8 stars (averaged). These previously unheard tracks were recorded at Sony Music Studios, NYC on September 30, 1994. Evidently,
Anyway You Want Me (Schroeder/Owens), Lawdy, Miss Clawdy (Lloyd Price), and Money Honey (Jesse Stone) were to be used for some type of Elvis tribute that never
happened. Twenty seconds into Anyway You Want Me we
get to hear the famous Dylan cough. Lawdy Miss Clawdy is a
very rough mix that starts and ends roughly as well, but the vocals are crisp
and way out front. Money Honey is yet another
rough mix, but in this one the vocals are buried to far in the mix. Money Honey II is a completely different take that has been
sped up a few beats per minute. The musicians are attempting to polish the song, and the mix is proper, making it seem that this is
the one that would be more likely to be considered for release.
(43)
10+ stars. Another pirate track taken from the
currently available 2001 Hank Williams tribute release entitled Timeless.
(44)
10+ stars. Bob performs an incredibly tender version
of this classic Dean Martin tune, and even pulls off the Italian verses without
a hitch. This pirate track is from season two of The Sopranos.
(45)
10+ stars. This is a pirate track that was released on
a 2001 various artists tribute to Sam Phillips' history changing Memphis based
label called Good Rockin' Tonight: The Legacy of Sun Records. Bob pulls out a passionate rock-a-billy performance that's a
highlight to the package.
(46)
10+ stars. This is one of the versions that was recorded for the North
Country soundtrack. Bob's dark and breathy performance
lends an air of doom and gloom and bares little resemblance to the old
traditional song that Dave Van Ronk sang. There is a
bad edit at 5:22 that adds an ending tag.
(47)
6½ stars. This classic Sam Cooke song was performed in 2004 at the Apollo Theater and was broadcast on TV. This is a
through the air mic recording from TV.
(48) 10+ stars. The twenty
fourth track on disc three is not listed on the package. It's Bob in a fifteen second poem about Nelly Kelly before singing
this thirty second ditty a'capela. It's taken from Bob's Theme Time Radio show
about baseball.
© 2008 CD
Pinkerton / bobsboots.com
Madison Square Garden
New York City, New York
30 September 1978
1.My Back Pages
2.I’m Ready (Willie Dixon)
3.Is Your Love In Vain?
4.Shelter From The Storm
5.Love Minus Zero/No Limit
6.Tangled Up In Blue
7.Ballad Of A Thin Man
8.Maggie's Farm
9.I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We
Never Have Met)
10.Like A Rolling Stone
11.I Shall Be Released
12.Going, Going, Gone
13.One Of Us Must Know (Sooner Or Later)
14.It Ain't Me, Babe
15.Am I Your Stepchild?
16.One More Cup Of Coffee (Valley Below)
17.Blowin' In The Wind
18.I Want You
19.Señor (Tales Of Yankee Power)
20.Masters Of War
21.Just Like A Woman
22.Baby Stop Crying
23.All Along The Watchtower
24.All I Really Want To Do
25.It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
26.Forever Young
27.Changing Of The Guards
Concert # 12 of the 1978 US Fall Tour. 1978 concert # 61.
Concert # 38 with the 1978 World Tour Band: Bob
Dylan (vocal & guitar), Billy Cross (lead guitar), Alan Pasqua (keyboards),
Steven Soles (rhythm guitar, backup vocals), David Mansfield (violin &
mandolin), Steve Douglas (horns), Jerry Scheff (bass), Bobbye Hall
(percussion), Ian Wallace (drums), Helena Springs, Jo Ann Harris, Carolyn
Dennis (background vocals).
1 instrumental
without Bob Dylan.
5, 15, 22 Bob Dylan (harmonica).
14
Bob Dylan solo
(vocal, harmonica & guitar).
BobTalk
Thank you. This
is a song I wrote called Am I Your Stepchild ?
Thank you. You've been a wonderful crowd. I wanna introduce the band to
you. On the drums tonight, give him a warm hand, Ian Wallace.
On the bass guitar. Jerry Scheff. On the keyboards tonight,
from Elizabeth, New Jersey, Mr. Alan Pasqua. On the lead electric
guitar, dangerous Billy Cross. On the rhythm guitar, from Tombstone,
Arizona, Mr. Steve Soles. On the violin and the
mandolin and sometimes electric guitar, the youngest member of the group.
He doesn't smoke dope or go out with women or drink whiskey.
That's why he's so good. Mr. David Mansfield! We'll keep him that way. On the tenor saxophone, Steve
Douglas. On the backup vocals, three ladies, on the right, Jo
Ann Harris. On the middle, Helena Springs. And on the end, Carolyn
Dennis. On the conga drums Miss Bobbye Hall from
Detroit. All right, I'm Bob Dylan and this song is called
It's Alright Ma, I'm Only Bleeding.
All right. We've reached that point in time when we gotta go. Hope we
played something right tonight. All right, so, see you
next time. This is a song I recorded with The Band once on an
album called Planet Waves. We'll leave you with
this one. Goodnight and be safe. (before Forever
Young)
1 new song (3%)
compared to previous concert.
Stereo audience
recording, 140 minutes.
Session info
updated 31 March 2003.
Bob Dylan
Fox Warfield Theatre
San Francisco
California
17 November 1980
This version =
LK - Fixed LB-7436
LB notes for
LB-7436 =
(45min+65min),
from lk fall 80 set; bittorrent download 04/09; this
is a close eac match on d1t1 to LB-190 with same flaws; (did not listen to all
of this)
LB Notes for for
LB-190 =
version "a"; aud, very good to
excellent sound, abrupt start d1t1; the left channel has a non-symetrical wav
form which limits itself on the top at about -12db; different recording than
LB-508 based on different crowd at end of d1t7; in comparison this is harsher
and that has a little more hiss and is more muffled but a fuller sound with
bass (a close eac match circulated as part of the lk fall 80 set) has some
scattered very light ticks such as near the beginning of d1t2; has 2sec gaps
between tracks as If burned TAO previously; brief light background talking d2t2
indicates not a sbd (not withstanding the flaws, sound quality seems slightly
better than jf aud with less hiss which does not fluctuate)
Notes for Fixed
LB-7436 =
FLACs
> EAC to remove clean TAO's (2 second pause between tracks and leading
silence). Removal of
various minor clicks.(Ref orig DigiFlawFinder log with
the right channel riddled with minor ticks) These are largley barley audible.
Please note Girl From North Country seems to patched with alternate, inferior
source LK LB-7437 (Taper JF) at 4:23. No ASM applied
> Flac frontend lvl8, verify sector align.
Thanks to the
taper for this **ASTOUNDING** recording, LK and traders.
CD1
1. Gotta
Serve Somebody
2. Simple
Twist Of Fate
3. All
Along The Watchtower
4. Like
A Rolling Stone
5. Clydie
King: You Are So Beautiful (To Me) (?)
6. Man
Gave Names To All The Animals
7. To
Ramona
8. We
Just Disagree (Jim Krueger)
9. Ain't Gonna Go To Hell For Anybody
10. Girl From The
North Country
CD2
1. Slow
Train
Missing: Carolyn Dennis: Walk Around Heaven All Day (Rev.
James Cleveland/Cassietta George)
2. Abraham
Martin And John (Dick Holler)
3. Let's
Keep It Between Us
4. Just
Like Tom Thumb's Blues
5. Covenant
Woman
6. A
Couple More Years (Shel Silverstein/Dennis Locorriere)
7. Solid
Rock
8. Just
Like A Woman
9. Senor
(Tales Of Yankee Power)
10. When You
Gonna Wake Up
11. In The
Garden
12. Blowin' In
The Wind
13. City Of Gold
14. Don't Think Twice It's All Right
Bob Dylan, 10/19/81, Merrillville,
Indiana, Holiday Star Theater, 2CDR
LB-3029,
(73min+52min), where the corn grows tall; excellent sound [A], has hiss bands
probably from mic movement or tape sticking:
sound fluctuation d1t4 0:45, 2:02, d1t5 2:22 and more like this; muffling d1t4
3:20; static noise but probably a stray clap as occasionally there are more
like this but in sequence d1t9 1:36
CD1
1 Gotta Serve
Somebody, 2 I Believe In You, 3 Like A Rolling Stone,
4 I Want You,5 Man Gave Names To
All The Animals, 6 Maggie's Farm, 7 Girl From The North Country, 8 Ballad Of A
Thin Man,97 We Just Disagree, 10 All Along The Watchtower, 11 Forever Young, 12
Gamblin' Man [band], 13 Times They Are A-Changin', 14 Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall,
15 It's All In The Game, 16 Slow Train,
CD2
1 1 Mr.
Tambourine Man, 2 Solid Rock, 3 Masters Of War, 4
short 5 Heart Of Mine, 6 Senor, 7 When You Gonna Wake Up, 8 In The Garden, 9
Blowin' In The Wind, 10 It Ain't Me Babe, No Money Down (bob on sax)
Please
retain this info file and its LB number as a marker for this lossless set
and if you spread it please list it in the
description to avoid others getting duplicates
BOB
DYLAN - Bethlehem, Pennsylvania October 25th 1981 (Transfer from Low Generation
Tapes, JTT "New")
BOB DYLAN
Stabler Arena
Lehigh University
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
October 25th 1981
Mono Audience
Recording
SOURCE: 2 x Hitachi UD-C90 (GS) > Akai GXC-570D (Left Channel Out
Used) > Soundforge 9 >
FLAC Level 6
Align on Sector Boundaries
Transfer &
Artwork: JTT, October 2009
Disc One
1 Gotta Serve
Somebody
2 I Believe In
You
3 Like A Rolling
Stone
4 I Want You
5 Man Gave Names
To All The Animals
6 Maggie's Farm
7 Girl Of The
North Country
8 Ballad Of A
Thin Man
9 Simple Twist
Of Fate
10 I'll Be Your Baby Tonight
11 All Along The
Watchtower
12 Gamblin' Man
13 The Times
They Are A-Changin'
14 A Hard Rain's
A-Gonna Fall
Disc Two
1 Watered-Down Love
2 Masters Of War
3 Mr. Tambourine
Man
4 Solid Rock
5 Just Like A
Woman
6 When You Gonna
Wake Up
7 In The Garden
8 Blowin' In The
Wind
9 It's Alright,
Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
10
Happy Birthday
11 Knockin' On
Heaven's Door