I was living in San Francisco when "Blood on the Tracks" was released in January 1975, I don't remember being all that enthralled with it. I think I still felt burned over "Self Portrait" from five years earlier,… (1)
and not much after that had left me craving for more new Dylan. Also, the Pete Hamill liner notes didn't jibe with the vinyl contents, quoted lyrics not at all matching the actual tracks. All quite confusing and dismissive at the time. (2)
-
-
It was three years later when KPFA in Berkeley aired their (annual?) Dylan marathon. All unreleased recordings and concerts. The 12-hour broadcast began at 8 PM on May 28, 1978, and I made sure to have enough reel-to-reel tapes to record it all. (3)
Show this thread -
It was an all-nighter, and by 7 am I was pretty much fried. (4)
Show this thread -
At around 7:30 am, for its last half-hour, the station played five "Blood" tracks from the New York sessions. I don't know if it was the lack of sleep or the tracks themselves, but hearing them at that moment, in that state, left me spellbound. (5)
Show this thread -
I, like countless others, then spent the next few decades searching for any and all further recordings from those memorable four days at New York's A&R Studios in September 1974, each new acquisition a treasure. (6)
Show this thread -
And now Bootleg Series Vol. 14 is out, and it's all here. Forty-four years later. It pays to stay alive. (7/)pic.twitter.com/OOKtmScxKB
Show this thread
End of conversation
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.