The Bootleg Series, Vol. 9: The Witmark Demos: 1962-1964 - Bob Dylan

The Bootleg Series, Vol. 9: The Witmark Demos: 1962-1964

Bob Dylan

  • Genre: Rock
  • Release Date: 2010-10-18
  • Explicitness: notExplicit
  • Country: USA
  • Track Count: 47

  • ℗ 2010 Sony Music Entertainment

Tracks

Title Artist Time
1
Man On the Street Bob Dylan 1:05
2
Hard Times In New York Town Bob Dylan 1:55
3
Poor Boy Blues Bob Dylan 2:59
4
Ballad for a Friend Bob Dylan 2:21
5
Rambling, Gambling Willie Bob Dylan 3:36
6
Talkin' Bear Mountain Picnic M Bob Dylan 3:40
7
Standing On the Highway Bob Dylan 2:30
8
Man On the Street Bob Dylan 1:28
9
Blowin' In the Wind Bob Dylan 2:36
10
Long Ago, Far Away Bob Dylan 2:27
11
A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall Bob Dylan 6:48
12
Tomorrow Is a Long Time Bob Dylan 3:44
13
The Death of Emmett Till Bob Dylan 4:30
14
Let Me Die In My Footsteps Bob Dylan 1:35
15
Ballad of Hollis Brown Bob Dylan 4:06
16
Quit Your Low Down Ways Bob Dylan 2:48
17
Baby, I'm In the Mood for You Bob Dylan 1:34
18
Bound to Lose, Bound to Win Bob Dylan 1:17
19
All Over You Bob Dylan 3:50
20
I'd Hate to Be You On That Dre Bob Dylan 1:59
21
Long Time Gone Bob Dylan 3:44
22
Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Bl Bob Dylan 3:15
23
Masters of War Bob Dylan 4:21
24
Oxford Town Bob Dylan 2:31
25
Farewell Bob Dylan 3:58
26
Don't Think Twice, It's All Ri Bob Dylan 3:36
27
Walkin' Down the Line Bob Dylan 3:21
28
I Shall Be Free Bob Dylan 4:28
29
Bob Dylan's Blues Bob Dylan 1:56
30
Bob Dylan's Dream Bob Dylan 3:49
31
Boots of Spanish Leather Bob Dylan 5:47
32
Girl from the North Country Bob Dylan 3:07
33
Seven Curses Bob Dylan 3:11
34
Hero Blues Bob Dylan 1:34
35
Whatcha Gonna Do? Bob Dylan 3:34
36
Gypsy Lou Bob Dylan 3:43
37
Ain't Gonna Grieve Bob Dylan 1:27
38
John Brown Bob Dylan 4:18
39
Only a Hobo Bob Dylan 2:23
40
When the Ship Comes In Bob Dylan 2:54
41
The Times They Are A-Changin' Bob Dylan 3:01
42
Paths of Victory Bob Dylan 4:09
43
Guess I'm Doing Fine Bob Dylan 4:06
44
Baby, Let Me Follow You Down Bob Dylan 1:54
45
Mama, You Been On My Mind Bob Dylan 2:12
46
Mr. Tambourine Man Bob Dylan 5:53
47
I'll Keep It With Mine Bob Dylan 3:34

Reviews

  • Shadow

    5
    By pointofgrille
    Every time I hear a new one these bootleg series, I realize Bob Dylan has been following me all my life. It brings it all back-just like it was yesterday; right now!
  • I Was So Much Younger Then

    5
    By JJodice
    I put off getting this, assuming it would be, well, different. Instead, it has be completely re-thinking his earliest work (which has until now been my least favorite part of his catalog, as I wrote it all up to "folk music" until at least the second side of Bringing It All Back Home, when things started getting interesting. But listening to these demos he made for his music publisher between 1962-64 has been revelatory. First, it's now clear that with just his voice and guitar (and occasionally piano), these versions as in some ways stronger than the released ones, because they were cut in a literal office, with no thought of production values or radio play, but rather as demos for potentially selling his songs to other people. As such, the performances are stunning: he's not playing for a crowd, he's playing for his peers, a much more demanding audience. He's also playing for posterity, as these would become the officially transcribed, definitive version of these songs, no matter how much he himself may have changed them in the ensuing years. So he's got a real incentive to get it right. And he does, starting with a stunning version of "Boots Of Spanish Leather," a song as naked and autobiographical — not to mention poetic — as he would ever sing (and to think he was 22 at the time of the recording). There are some of what would become his canon, including "Blowin' In The Wind," "Hard Rain," 'Masters Of War," "Don't Think Twice," "Mr. Tambourine Man," etc. But it's the other songs that really impress, from the talking blues of "Hard Time In New York Town" and "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues" to the country blues of "Mama You've Been On My Mind' and "Poor Boy Blues" to the Child Balladesque "Seven Curses." I keep coming back to "Gypsy Lou" and "Rambling Gambling Willie," both of which could have been lost Woody Guthrie classics — but aren't. In the year-plus he'd been in New York, Dylan went from being a Guthrie clone to not just an individual but and innovator. It's easy to see Dylan's most creative and fertile period as 1965-66, when he transcended folk to rock, or even the summer and fall of 1967 when he wrote and recorded more songs than in any comparable period during his Basement Tapes recordings and return to the studio with John Wesley Harding. But listening to these, his earliest songs, makes a strong argument for the first two years of his career as being his most revolutionary, showing just how powerful a man with voice and guitar and a vision can be. I thought there would be a monotony of sound here, but it's just the opposite. It's stunning to hear how much musical ground could be covered so sparely.
  • Great!!!

    5
    By Megan Stafford
    It really does justice to Bob. Any Bob Dylan listener should buy this, it is truly awesome!
  • GREAT

    5
    By LeviMcDuffie
    It really shows bob's roots
  • Amazing!

    5
    By Fretboarder
    This is the perfect CD for any huge Dylan fan...amazing...I dream of being able to see him in concert one day. The quality is great!
  • ,.,.,.,

    5
    By Bailey 817
    It's always great to have some new old school Dylan.
  • long live bob dylan

    5
    By georgeluis
    long live bob dylan
  • and he says that guy who wrote this I don't know him

    5
    By shosh001
    listen to I'll keep it with mine terrible quality but, it's played on piano and the arrangements are so simple...that you really appreciate his artistry
  • Awesome as always!

    5
    By CaptainJack8875
    What can I say? It's old school Dylan! What's not to like? Great companion to the Mono Albums release too
  • New?

    5
    By Dan123132165
    I thought all Dylan Fans already owned the Witmark Demos? I've had these recordings since Long ago, and Far away...

Comments