“‘Tangled Up In Blue’ … is a real story, and Dylan leans into it, gets into the telling and the vocalizing,” Dylan scholar Paul Williams wrote of the ’78 renditions.
But don’t be fooled by the smooth setting: it’s an intense, magnetic performance. This is the “torch-song” version, with Dylan setting aside his guitar to croon dramatically over a lush bed of keyboards and sax. Hec Edmundson Pavilion, Seattle, Washington, November 10, 1978Ī few years later, “Tangled” had mellowed considerably. To borrow a phrase from a song Dylan later covered, this one goes 90 miles an hour down a dead-end street.
TANGLED UP IN YOU FULL
By the following spring, however, he’d introduced a rollercoaster electric arrangement of the tune, full of hair-raising starts and stops, fueled by the devil-may-care rhythm section of Rob Stoner and Howie Wyeth (not to mention Mick Ronson’s stinging lead guitar work). Hughes Stadium, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, May 23, 1976ĭylan debuted “Tangled Up In Blue” in a fairly straightforward solo acoustic format during the first leg of the Rolling Thunder Revue in late 1975. In other words, you can see the song from many different points of view. “You’ve got yesterday, today and tomorrow all in the same room, and there’s very little you can’t imagine not happening,” he once said of the song. In some ways, though, the songwriter has never stopped creating Blood’s opening track, “Tangled Up In Blue.” Onstage, the song has been an ever-changing landscape, a canvas for Dylan that’s never quite complete, lyrically, musically or otherwise. The six-disc collection features the complete New York City recording sessions for Blood On The Tracks, giving listeners a fly-on-the-wall look at the creation of one of Dylan’s bona fide masterpieces. 14, the latest slab of previously unreleased Bob Dylan recordings, lands in early November.
TANGLED UP IN YOU SERIES
The jury is still out on this author for me.More Blood, More Tracks – The Bootleg Series Vol. Some are better and had more humor, the hockey team, and the Truly connection seem to have a different message, but since I have only gotten through 1 not sure if Truly stories are for me. I purchased about 6 to 8 RG books all at once as I did not know which one to start and all the stories had good "fun" reviews. Many listeners buy for the story, I buy for the reader as many good ones can read the phone book and it is entertaining.ĭid you have an extreme reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry? I just am unsure if I even like her reading voice so my 2nd RG book will given me another op to see if I even want to continue buying her recordings. Other reviews had mixed views, but I did not agree with the pause issue. I am on the fence with her recording voice. Ms Poole read 2 of RG books, I own but did not realize she had an AKA name and I had listened to her before. Audible is great in their programs so as long as they partner up in a great listen, then I can venture out on new readers. I have requested a list of AKA for readers because some I love and some, I just will not re listen. So if you like erotica and Ms Poole, try Olivia Cunning Sinners series.
Ms Poole reads as Justine O'Keef in the Erotic genre. What aspect of Nicole Poole’s performance would you have changed? Mick, just a good all around guy who is going forward and had a great attitude. This was a mix of Linda Howard's After the Night, my all time fave book and a mix of RG own imagination. What made the experience of listening to Tangled Up in You the most enjoyable?