Poll: I've NEVER ASKED THIS...In your opinion... What is the GREATEST SONG OF ALL TIME?
@TerrickTerranАй бұрын
Ode to Joy.
@peterd.9978Ай бұрын
Blowing In The Wind
@christineml1476Ай бұрын
Kansas "Dust in the Wind"
@BillGraperАй бұрын
Dream Weaver- Gary Wright
@georgeesau3943Ай бұрын
Like a Rolling Stone.
@jeff4310Ай бұрын
I love how, almost 60 years later, we're still listening to, talking about, and analyzing the amazing music created during that era.
@mikehenson819Ай бұрын
I love how everywhere I go for the past 10 years, these classics from the 60s and 70 are heard in any place music is being played because it’s still better than anything ever recorded in any era. My late best friend and I always agreed that our generation had the best music and I still believe it.
@philipmay6003Ай бұрын
I have been apologizing to kids and grandkids for years for the Boomers using up all of the good music.
@Waterfalls2016Ай бұрын
@@mikehenson819 In 2016 my son took me on an 8 day trip to Scotland and to my surprise this is what their radio stations play. My son said mom you even have your music. It was great. Always smiling 😊
@hellskitchen10036Ай бұрын
I'm glad I was there.
@marciaborst8026Ай бұрын
@@jeff4310 I think the Baby Boomers were the greatest generation because we had the best music.
@billw5189Ай бұрын
I can go months without listening to Dylan, but each time I find my way back, it hits me hard. It’s not just the lyrics. It’s the phrasing, and the music is so diverse. No words
@timmoore8773Ай бұрын
I can go forever without listening, and will 😅
@Waterfalls2016Ай бұрын
It takes me back to better days.
@timrobertson1571Ай бұрын
@@timmoore8773 Maybe you can go forever without listening to Dylan himself, but there is no way you don't listen to his songs. I cannot think of any songwriter whose songs have been covered by more artists and bands than Bob Dylan. According to Alexa, 2,000 artists have covered his songs. Wikipedia says 1500. Whichever, it's still a lot!
@KentonJosephАй бұрын
@@timmoore8773 Some people dig Taylor Swift, nothing wrong with that.
@georgecourtney587823 күн бұрын
I can barely go a week without Dylan's music in my opinion he is a far superior lyricist than anyone else in any kind of music
@kennethhowejones7145Ай бұрын
In the summer of 1966 I bought Highway Sixty-One Revisited without even knowing much about Dylan's move over to electric. I was a 22 year old architecture student and the rock scene was very peripheral to my world. I was living in an old house apartment in Terre Haute. Thewell ito evening temperatures were in the 90s for weeks. The humidity hung at near 99 % the whole time. And I'd gone to Kmat to buy a fan. But I just got the record.. I lay in that bed and started up the record on my tiny battery driven Singer portable. My record collection was mostly Bach, Beethoven and other classics, But the cover made me buy it. Now hearing these sounds something sounded like I was listening to music for the first time. Then it happened. Lying there in a hot pool of my own sweat more less miserable. But something thrilling was going on. I sensed a change in the air. For me anyway.. He began You Know There's Something Happening. And then he got to "Do you Mr. Jones.". And it was other worldly. This guy is speaking to me.?! That's my name. Ken Jones. Bob Dylan hooked me in that moment. He sure as hell got my attention anyway. And he's had it more than anybody else ever since. Thanks for your show. tatkhj
@Waterfalls2016Ай бұрын
Nice story. Thanks for sharing. Dig in there’s more to come.
@mxplk24 күн бұрын
Beethoven, Bach, and Dylan on that battery operated player back in Terre Haute. What a story!
@EmmyBullock-sc3cw15 күн бұрын
Terrific comment !
@gumbi777715 күн бұрын
Got that vinyl a few years back in Tuscon at the El Presidio 😎
@sideofcautionАй бұрын
You nailed it. His voice is ABSOLUTELY perfect for what he sings, and I love your uncontained frustration with all those critics picking such petty nits!! LONG LIVE LYRICS 👊🏼
@rumi900521 күн бұрын
I remember being 16 years old and in my last year at an English boarding school. One of the boys in our 8-boy dormitory came back from the summer holidays with Bob Dylan's Freewheelin album. The rest of us had never even heard of Bob Dylan. We did, in fact know some of his songs, but performed by others. And at that age, at that time, few young people like us took any notice of the song writer. As soon as I heard the album I was captivated. I'd never heard anything like it. It was incredible. It quickly became my favorite album. And today, 59 years later, it still is.
@jakeoncallАй бұрын
I still remember where I was the first time this came on the radio. I was driving in my mom's '61 Bel-Air and almost ran off the road. I knew all of his prior work, especially Times They Are a Changing, but Bob Dylan singing rock and roll was like a paradigm shift. Hearing him blowing that harmonica to a rock beat instead of a strumming acoustic guitar blew the lid off my brain. There was nothing like the 60's. Thanks for the great tribute to this groundbreaking song!
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
And it sounds so carefree and wonderful.
@michaelmcneil4168Ай бұрын
It was like communism suddenly got a voice when the electric guitar hit dylan and the rest is his story.
@tombrock03Ай бұрын
I'm 75 and a child at that time but it's the greatest time 3 or 4 classic songs every week I couldn't stop listening 24 7
@guydeco1Ай бұрын
You're 75? LOL...NO! I'M 75!!! (b. 07-04-'49) ;-) ...And I've been a musician/singer since before I was tall enuff to reach the "On" knob on my Mother's Sylvania 4 speed mono phonograph. (now THAT was a sentence!).... g.l. Peace. ☮
@kevinmcconnell3641Ай бұрын
I’m 68, at least 3-4, it kinda felt like daily I had a favorite new song, or band, kinda sorta;)
@caroleast963627 күн бұрын
75 - arrival in this world August 49 - a teenager in the sixties, THE time for pop music. We were spoilt for choice.
@hagishag15 күн бұрын
75 what a time to have lived and still be here but where is the optimism now?
@ronpickens23969 күн бұрын
I’m 74 I understand. GBY
@babybro70Ай бұрын
I LOVE Dylan's voice! It had sooo much Character & Distinction.
@Benny2SteakzАй бұрын
I have never heard a better folk-rock song ever and I am 70 years old.
@barryregan2241Ай бұрын
I grew up in the 60s and to me this was the anthem of the 60s! Thanks Bob great song!
@Waterfalls2016Ай бұрын
For me also along with Joan Baez, Maryanne Faithful and so me more.
@alberttalbot953426 күн бұрын
Me too! We were so lucky
@hagishag15 күн бұрын
Me too
@cherylstein2585Ай бұрын
To me the sixties were a time of great surprises in music. I'm 75 so I was the perfect age to be surprised and inspired by pop music. However in the last few years pop music is not very surprising at all. That's what the sixties was so good to me.
@kebhMI27 күн бұрын
I'm 76 and we had really fun music covering many genres. Cast Your Fate to the Wind would never be played today. Would the Motown music be hits? ?
@michaelbeckner4989Ай бұрын
For me, as a kid, Dylan was all about attitude. Expressed in a way I'd never heard. His words rang out with a truth, a sincerity and a soulful penetration. I began to question everything. Thanks Bob Dylan.
@bakstabbathАй бұрын
I'd have to say "Tangled Up In Blue" is my fav Dylan song. It's hard to pick a favorite.
@wilburrrrr742Ай бұрын
I confess that I thought it was going to be the focus song of this vid
@johnradovich8809Ай бұрын
Wow! Thought I was the only one. Kudos.
@glennhall8665Ай бұрын
‘Never Say Goodbye’ (off Planet Waves) always, always gets me so emotional &.. elated ! Don’t know why - the beautiful heartbreaking lyrics, the soaring music, the rough sketchy throwaway quality of it.. (it always sounds kind’ve unfinished. & I don’t know if he’s ever played it live?). When I mention it, even many Dylan fans say they’ve never heard of it..
@Alphasix622 күн бұрын
I used to care but things have changed
@johnradovich880921 күн бұрын
@ or in the words of Mose Allison, “I found that things are gettin’ better, just people that are gettin’ worse.”
@dannyguillory8941Ай бұрын
I have to add this thought, considering that back in the day, yes most songs were 2 or 3 minutes long on radio. But, all of you know that when you hear a great song: you just want it to go on forever! That's why we hit replay! We just want it to go on and on and never stop! This is one of those songs! Thank you, Bob for being that 'lightning rod' that captures the human soul.
@johngfishing8814Ай бұрын
Dylan is my all time favorite performer and lyricist. I’ve been listening to him for over 45 years and never get tired of his music.
@mastandstarsАй бұрын
Nice 😎
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
He may not be the best singer, but he is one of the best lyricists.
@stevenw7623Ай бұрын
When I was 19, I was living in a run down, dirty apartment with no heat in the winter, and a roommate who I was assigned to work with who was a super-sized jerk. Every day was an exercise in misery. I was on my own, with no way home, a complete unknown, like a rolling stone. This song captures the lowest point in my life perfectly.
@Krunch2020Ай бұрын
Wow, I feel better about myself after reading that.
@peterermish3017Ай бұрын
So, how did everything work out for you?
@wayneparker461Ай бұрын
Dylan had an insight no others had.
@stevenw7623Ай бұрын
@@peterermish3017 I got really determined not to fail. I went to school and graduated in accounting and worked really hard as a CPA and later corporate controller. I live in a nice house next to a golf course and my wife spends all of my money. I’m still just as broke, but have heat in the winter and my wife lives in luxury!
@stevenw7623Ай бұрын
Just a crazy thought…if I crash and lose it all, the song will be about my wife!! To be fair, she is a great mom, keeps the house clean and orderly, cooks top notch food, and is in A+ shape. She will land on her feet.
@scottinman7507Ай бұрын
The Jimi Hendrix version of All Along the Watchtower. This what happens when the greatest song writers work meets the greatest guitar playing. Thank you both, Bob and Jimi
@brendashelonko214920 күн бұрын
This Hendrix album was one of the very first LPs I bought at age 14 in the mid 60’s, solely based on the album cover. I soon bought a Dylan album based on Watchtower.
@shazamshazamshazam696Ай бұрын
For any who don't know, Bob Dylan was awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize for literature for his lyrics.
@Waterfalls2016Ай бұрын
Sadly he didn’t go to the ceremony to accept it.
@KentonJosephАй бұрын
@@Waterfalls2016 "Bob Dylan did attend the Nobel Prize ceremony to receive his award. Initially, he was not sure if he would attend the event, but in the end, he did travel to Stockholm to accept the Nobel Prize in Literature in 2016."
@philsphan4414Ай бұрын
In 50 years Springsteen’s lyrics will be studied and Dylan forgotten.
@Waterfalls2016Ай бұрын
@@KentonJoseph Well darn I followed the story for awhile. They were having a hard time getting Dylan to accept. After the award ceremony I saw 3-4 articles talking about him not going. I was really bummed also. I knew Dylan before The Beatles I think. Hey, thanks for letting me know.
@Waterfalls2016Ай бұрын
@@philsphan4414 Dylan will never be forgotten and Springsteen won’t even be a close 2nd.
@stormymunday9836Ай бұрын
The word I always use to describe Dylan's voice is 'conviction' He sings with such conviction.
@stavrosteveАй бұрын
And a mouth full of dog turds
@kenkaplan3654Ай бұрын
Yes.Especially on his Rolling Thunder Revue.
@stormymunday9836Ай бұрын
@kenkaplan3654 Exactly!!! I was originally going to mention the 'Hard Rain' LP specifically but decided to keep my comment short.
@kenkaplan3654Ай бұрын
@@stormymunday9836 Did you check out the live 75 "bootleg" record. They have the entire thing on KZbin. A rock version of "Hard Rain", (also on a different video on KZbin) that will knock your socks off and the best version of Tambourine Man I have ever heard.
@deltabluesdavidrayeАй бұрын
He is always way out of pitch
@powellhall9794Ай бұрын
😎👍 I remember hearing this on the car radio when I was a kid. My mom hated “that guys voice”, but she wouldn’t change the channel because of the hypnotic lyrics. This is such a good song.
@nellies-taekook-journalsАй бұрын
Free Wheelin' Bob Dylan was one of the first albums I ever bought. His body of work is timeless. Thank you for highlighting this song.
@thetitleisours1Ай бұрын
Having him with Traveling Wilbury's was so perfect!
@Whisper_292Ай бұрын
I love Tweeter & the Monkey Man.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
It's was truly masterful!
@thetitleisours1Ай бұрын
@@Whisper_292 For sure! :) btw, did the video jump from a story about the Stones to this one? I got a video not available and then this one showed up
@Whisper_292Ай бұрын
Yes. I think they pulled it, maybe because they posted the wrong video. They've done that before. @thetitleisours1
@bobdavis4848Ай бұрын
@@thetitleisours1 By POR replacing it, I imagine.
@lauriebakАй бұрын
I’m 60. Dylan was a huge part of my youth, and helped me get through a lot of painful things in my early years. He is a master of poetry and interpretation.
@rodneygriffin7666Ай бұрын
I'm 59 and I agree. He is a part of my life. Uncle Bob.
@marktait2371Ай бұрын
yeh same pretty much the same age dylan records we pretty much grew up with love em or hate em kinda like the smiths 80s was driving what difference does it make came on local radio i watched some of the american series doc. a few months ago was pretty good overall
@ReverendDr.ThomasАй бұрын
59 at the end of this month, and a Dylan aficionado.
@treich9072Ай бұрын
I'm 60 as well as you, and I've always appreciated Bob Dylan's work. I listened to his music for countless hours on end. I still do. His lyrics are as a voice, which talk to you. The tunes that sticks out most to me are: "Positively 4th Street", "Stuck Inside of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again", Sad Eyed Lady of The Lowlands", "Lay, Lady Lay", "Knocking On Heavens Door", "Love Minus Zero, No Limit". However, I do love other songs of his, but those still resonate with me....
@shadrach6299Ай бұрын
Dylan and the Stones.
@poetsdreamsatcАй бұрын
For years I thought Jimi Hendrix wrote “All Along the Watchtower” but it was written by Bob Dylan. Dylan may not have a velvet voice but he’s a hell of a songwriter.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Amen!
@brucewayne3602Ай бұрын
perhaps well beyond definition !!!
@purplelove392Ай бұрын
I like the uniqueness of his voice.
@Michel-r6mАй бұрын
Jimi also covered St. Pepper a day or so after release...live 🤘
@kevinramsey417Ай бұрын
Hendrix's cover inspired a term I like to call "Watchtowering" where a cover song is not only so good that it becomes the cover artist's song, but is so superior that it completely overshadows the original. For example when anybody thinks about All Along the Watchtower, it's Hendrix's version people think of, not Dylan's and this was BOB DYLAN we're talking about, Jimi accomplished something extraordinary.
@rockportmareАй бұрын
I’m a huge Dylan fan. Since I was 10. I preferred him over the Beatles. I’m 70 now. Saw him 3 times. He’s an awesome artist! ❤ Thank you. I got ridiculed for my preference over the Beatles but as a kid I just knew there was more substance in Dylan songs. Yes the feeling is genuine in his voice and so honest.
@EdwinaCross-p7sАй бұрын
I bought this as a 45 single with all the money I had at the age of 13, I was so blown away. The music, yes, but the lyrics and the voice caught my early teenage angst and screamed. I am 71 now, and by the way, a university teacher and a multi-published poet. At 13, I knew perfection of emotion when I experienced it.
@mtothethree5412Ай бұрын
So many words to remember in most Dylan songs but "when you ain't got nothin' you got nothin' to lose" is so powerful. My love and respect for Bob Dylan can never be equalled.
@dragonmummy1Ай бұрын
A friend and I always told each other for years “they should give him a Nobel Prize” for his lyrics. You should have seen our faces when they did!
@shazamshazamshazam696Ай бұрын
Bob Dylan was awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize for literature, for his lyrics.
@lesliegmn39277 күн бұрын
You were SPOT ON! Pat yourselves on the backs!
@PaulDozierZZoMBiE13Ай бұрын
You know, Adam, half the fun of this show is seeing which vinyls are going to make it into the rack behind you each day. Always a nice selection for sure, but my favorite is when there's one I don't recognize and I have to try and figure it out. My fun little Prof of Rock mini-game, lol. Keep up the great work!
@Polyphemus47Ай бұрын
Same here! And I love it where he displays an obscure favorite LP that I love.
@justJeleneАй бұрын
Like an onion - or a parfait 🤔 He's got layers of entertainment & information!
@rickyjoeshippyfulАй бұрын
Prof will flip them around and open up gatefolds on us too, so you gotta know the albums inside and out to stay with that little game. Good clean fun.
@Allie-oopАй бұрын
I still have that Elvin Bishop album….top right…I always look to see which ones i have.
@cowboyupdrummerАй бұрын
Funny, I do the thing. I recognize all but one (middle right)
@wildmountainthyme412318 күн бұрын
During the summer of 1965, when I was 13, I would sit at the kitchen table listening to this song. To this day, it's my favorite Dylan song. At the time, I remember thinking that in the future whenever I heard the song, I would remember my 13 year old self, wondering at the glory of this song, as I sat at my kitchen table.
@merkazoidduff7651Ай бұрын
Finally some Dylan! Used to think he was on the level of The Beatles then I discovered his music from the 80’s to today, and he’s unquestionably the greatest of all time.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Thanks!
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
Yup.
@meninagreen5704Ай бұрын
I heard him live in March and even tho he sat behind the piano the whole time, at 83, he sounds better than the greatest of all time! Just mesmerizing .
@davidcoleman757Ай бұрын
Had a bout of pleurisy aged nine. Off school for weeks with nothing to do I worked my way through my mother's record collection until I got to Dylan's Greatest Hits. 60 years on I still think he's the GOAT.
@jsavre1Ай бұрын
I came at Dylan backwards, first loving Blood on the Tracks, then Greatest Hits I and II, and not listening to the folky stuff until college. Always loved LARS, but was a bit too young to get the true weight of its impact. Most of what you said I’d heard before, but you summed it up precisely and with passion-a great addition to your personal catalogue, Professor! As for people hating on his voice, Nashville Skyline and Live at Budokan exist to show you that he could sing sweet and schmaltzy, but that’s not his goal. His raw bleeding vocals expose the truth in the lyrics, and you can hear that resonate in Petty, Springsteen, Knopfler, Joplin, Fogerty…even McCartney.
@erikajames4592Ай бұрын
My husband and I didn't have a " song" we had an ARTIST. Thank you for the best episode ❤️. Dylan is a Nobel Laureate. He is a master craftsman. In my opinion, no one sings his songs better.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Amen!
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
Yes he is.
@kaninma7237Ай бұрын
I love his lyrics. They tend to be exceptionally well written. I strongly disagree, however, with making him a Nobel Laureate in literature.
@meninagreen5704Ай бұрын
You're right. I heard Alison Krause cover one of his songs. Now this woman has the voice of an angel but after listening, I thought, dang, Dylan's version is SO much better. It's his conviction, not his vocal tone.
@robertnewell5057Ай бұрын
Well put
@MikeB-1965Ай бұрын
Bob is a brilliant songwriter and poet. His lyrics are so impressively thought-provoking. In later interviews, even he says he doesn't know how he was able to write lyrics like he did. It was definitely magical.
@hooble66Ай бұрын
HI PROFESSOR, i WAS 15 WHEN THIS ICONIC SONG BROKE, IT CHANGED MY LIFE. IT WAS UNLIKE ANYTHING I HAD EVER HEARD. IT WAS MYSTERIOUS, HAUNTING AND ALL KOOPER ON THE HAMMOND B3 JUST CEMENTED THE WHOLE THING. I FIRST HEARD IT ON A HAND HELD 7 TRANSISTOR RADIO ON AN AM STATION SITTING ON A HILSIDE OVERLOOKING THE P&LE RAILROAD IN MCKEES ROCKS, PA. AND YES IN MY OPINION THE GREATEST SONG EVER WRITTEN AND PROBABLY FOLLOWED BY ALL ALONG THE WATCHTOWER WHICH IS SO POWERFUL FROM AN IMAGING STAND POINT. PROBABLY THE BEST TWELVE LINES EVER WRITTEN. BOTH GREAT SONGS (ALONG WITH MANY OTHERS BY DYLAN). THANK YOU FOR THE BACK STORY OF LIKE A ROLLING STONE (OF WHICH I WAS ALREADY AWARE) BUT THERE ARE MANY THAT WERE NOT. KEEP ON ROCKING THIS CHANNEL, IT IS AWESOME
@jamespcrown128Ай бұрын
I too was in McKees Rocks when I heard this song for the first time.🇺🇦💙
@chariotdrvr14Ай бұрын
I always loved that story of how Al Kooper wound up in that session. Tom Wilson inviting him as a guitarist. But when he saw Mike Bloomfield walk in ...and he knew Bloomfield was way above him. I mean even Jimi Hendrix had enormous respect for Bloomfield. So Kooper goes slinks back to the control room. Then Paul Griffin their keyboard player suddenly decides he'd rather play piano on it. Kooper, who was a novice on the keys, decides to take a shot and basically bluffed his way into the session chiming in "oh I can play the organ part!" (which was a mild exaggeration.) But he winged his way beautifully through it. Once again, you've put together a brilliant piece on rock history and touched on one of the cornerstone songs of my youth and in this case a song that got me through a tough time in my youth. It's a pity I can only hit the like button once.
@Uh_ClemАй бұрын
Great story. I heard it slightly differently: Kooper arrived as Mike was playing a little warmup. Hearing Mike play, as you say, "he knew Bloomfield was way above him". He had started to unpack his guitar, but quietly closed the case and billed himself as a keyboard player. The way you tell it is more likely true. But this other way is a great R&R story.
@chariotdrvr14Ай бұрын
@@Uh_Clem combination of the two I suspect. But I love how this session kickstarted a great professional and personal friendship between Kooper and Bloomfield.
@suburban60sKidАй бұрын
This is how I heard the story, except while the frustrated group was taking a break Al Kooper started playing the organ and producer Tom Wilson knew he had a winner. Had Dylan continued to use Tom Wilson on future sessions, he'd possibly had other iconic hits in his catalog by now.
@surfwriter8461Ай бұрын
I've heard a similar version of that story, but you provide some interesting details. My understanding is that Kooper was not really a "novice," but had virtually no experience playing a keyboard and basically conned the producer into letting him play the organ on this song. So he faked his way into playing the instrument and figured it out as quickly as he could. Remarkably, Kooper came up with a simple but iconic riff, repeated it throughout with little embellishment or expansion on those few notes and managed to make the organ a prominent and essential part of the instrumentation.
@surfwriter8461Ай бұрын
@@suburban60sKid Is that last comment facetious? Obviously, Dylan managed to create many iconic songs over the years, regardless of the producer. Mark Knopfler was one of them, both producing and playing guitar for Dylan after a member of Dylan's crew played "Sultans of Swing" for him and Dylan exclaimed "I want that guy playing guitar on my record". And in recent years, Dylan could have used a more honest and forceful producer, because the stuff he's been turning out is mostly trash, undermining his canon. Much like Neil Young in that respect.
@ernesteison7979Ай бұрын
"Like a Rolling Stone" is such an incredible song. The way it just rambles from one verse to the next, like he's talking to somebody, let'em know that he sees them for how they really are.
@paganphil10020 күн бұрын
@ernesteison7979: That's how I would describe "Positively 4th Street".....one of my favourites.
@gbpaggi21 күн бұрын
Positively 4th street and Like a Rolling Stone favorites. Had his earlier albums but those two songs hit me after graduating college. Still do.
@robertcandelaria5486Ай бұрын
One of your greatest episodes ever highlighting one of the greatest songs of an era ever ‼️🧐😲😃😁
@pilotblue6535Ай бұрын
Professor, You were all in on this episode. Really enjoyed unpacking the impact this song had on a generation of musicians and listeners. Excellent
@kellywillis8091Ай бұрын
After listening to your stories about your father, you are blessed to have him as your dad.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
I totally agree. miss him every second.
@purplelove392Ай бұрын
Anytime he mentions his dad, I tear up immediately.
@DanieVargasАй бұрын
@@purplelove392 When he brings up his dad, it brings MY DAD back to me (my dad passed in 1999 and he was MY music “teacher”). So when he does bring up dad, I start to remember all the music convos I HAD with my dad. He may be 6 years YOUNGER than me, but I still think we’ve had almost the same life experiences.
@purplelove392Ай бұрын
@@DanieVargas I hear ya. My dad wasn't really into music as much as classic movies, but he honored my love of music. He gave me albums for every occasion and sometimes just because and he let me control the radio as we traversed the country on our family road trips.
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
I wish my dad was like that. What a role model.
@kaetheeltawely4072Ай бұрын
It brings me to tears every time I hear it. It takes me back to a time I was homeless and alone.
@dolinaj119 күн бұрын
I hope you are sheltered, safe, and loved. Godspeed,
@c.e.anderson558Ай бұрын
Al Kooper said he was invited to attend the recording and watch. Lots of people in and out. He noticed nobody ever played organ so he just acted like he was somebody and went to set behind it. He played the next take. Later listening to the playback Dylan asked where was the organ part so the engineer pushd up the fader to bring it onto the mix. Dylan loved it. History. The song wouldnt be the same without it.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Thanks!
@jeffreywilcox3823Ай бұрын
As a boy from Minnesota, living two blocks from Highway 61 and a '65 HS graduate, what could be a better theme song to launch you into the "real" world!! The ultimate "one of us!"
@thomaswhalen5451Ай бұрын
Al Kooper made the song with that incredible riff! And it was a such a spontaneous move. Just magic!
@usarik43Ай бұрын
Bob Dylan is one of my go to songs when I sing karaoke. This song always gets the crowd singing along.
@mitchellbatchelor1594Ай бұрын
Hank Williams was the first Rock & Roller. The recording industry in the 40’s couldn’t produce Hank Williams brilliance. Thanks for mentioning him.
@robertclifton2211Ай бұрын
Hank Williams was country down home performer not rock n roll.
@waynepederick4412Ай бұрын
Thanks Adam, another great video. Your comment that you were a “lyrics guy” made me realise that after listening to rock music for over 55 years I am a “melody guy” but will now start to pay more attention to the lyrics. I am pushing 70 but never too old to learn something new I guess.
@DSmicklasАй бұрын
My parents loved Bob so much that they named me Dylan. One might assume that I'd get sick of hearing Bob Dylan, but it never happened. Now at 36, I'm just waiting for my kids to be old enough to start to appreciate Bob's work.
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
Nice to meet you Dylan.
@knobby7342Ай бұрын
Smart parents. 😊
@petermaurer2426Ай бұрын
I went nuts over this song when I first heard it in the summer of 1965. Most radio stations only played the first two verses. It was a real treat when we got to hear all four.
@dorettecarlson880419 күн бұрын
Those were the days my friend. Thank God the music lives on. Thank you Professor.
@williambenner701Ай бұрын
Way to go Adam! You did a fantastic job on this one. Dylan is the absolute BEST lyric writer of the rock area, which is saying a lot!❤
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
THanks William! I love doing it.
@patrickking2550Ай бұрын
Bob Dylan was raw and honest, he didn’t hide anything in his music or poetry. I have always enjoyed his music.
@victorpavone2588Ай бұрын
It is my favorite Dylan song and one of my favorite rock songs. When someone tells me they can’t stand Dylan, I sing it just to annoy them.
@adotintheshark4848Ай бұрын
Sing them anything from Blood On The Tracks
@LennyP777Ай бұрын
I had the pleasure of seeing The Rolling Stones perform "Like a Rolling Stone" in concert at Madison Square Garden in 1998. This is one of your best videos Professor, and I enjoy and watch all your videos.
@ceciliajones7816Ай бұрын
My best friend, soul sister of 44 yrs introduced me to Bob Dylan’s repertoire. I’d heard the radio songs but she took me through all! We listened to his albums over and over, discussing the lyrics, the music. We bonded over music. She passed away 6 yrs ago. I’m still broken but music is always there for me.
@johnjessey695522 күн бұрын
Great upload my friend! I’m 70 now, yikes! Bob Dylan‘s greatest hits was the third album I ever bought. I was in seventh grade. I was hooked! I lived on the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan. Creedence Clearwater revival definitely crept in there quite a bit. Thanks again. Keep up the good work.
@deirdre108Ай бұрын
Desolation Row is my favorite Dylan song-it never seems to stop giving even after all these decades.
@robertmagasАй бұрын
Only Dylan could top Dylan - I always have trouble choosing between "Like a Rolling Stone" and "Tangled up in Blue". 72 and both still still get the 'turn it up treatment' in the car. Ponce De Leon missed it - rock and roll is the fountain of youth - especially playing it. You can't get old doing either. And to answer the question of the day - it feels great! Best channel out there - keep doing what you do.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Thanks!
@jacquelineenglish2997Ай бұрын
1st heard it summer of 65. I was 13 and when I heard it on the radio I thought so, this is Bob Dylan ? Loved it. Still love it.
@jml238Ай бұрын
Ahhh, some music is like the Wayback Machine. It just takes you right back every time!
@AndreaBowlsАй бұрын
Well said !😊❤
@bigfork8509Ай бұрын
...authenticity and emotion were what truly mattered in the truth of rock and roll... You, my friend, have a way with words yourself!
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Thanks!
@Polyphemus47Ай бұрын
The Prof is the Dylan of pop music review! 😛
@0448mickeyАй бұрын
Your dad had good taste. I really enjoyed this video; a great presentation, thank you. I bought "Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits" in 1968 when I was 16 years old. It never gets old, unlike me.
@ponzo1967Ай бұрын
An amazing song from an amazing talent. Like a Rolling Stone is a personal favorite.
@philfranco7598Ай бұрын
Bob Dylan has been with me thru my entire life. He is the Greatest of all time. Brought me through my best times and the worst. A True Nobel Laureate …. Long live Bob Dylan
@INneRDa3mOn10 күн бұрын
AMEN to that, brother! 🍀✝️🙏✝️🍀
@JohnJPDX-wr3zm27 күн бұрын
"When you got nothin', you've gotten nothin' to lose" is a phrase that has resonated with me my entire life. When I see the homeless living in squalor, when I hear or read about senseless violence, when I see people seemingly bent on self-destruction it all goes back to those words.
@JohnJPDX-wr3zm27 күн бұрын
"got" :(
@EsyuDach19 күн бұрын
you've got your honor and duty to be a human being, always. I've been homeless 3x, with the additional handicap of being a felon on parole. t'he longest it ever took me to get into a car to live in was 2 months.
@babygerald4645Ай бұрын
What's not to love about Bob Dylan? Few artists could equal the sequence of albums from Bringing It All Back Home through Blood On The Tracks. Mindblowing lyrical compositions that just knocked me over the first time I spent the time to listen. I'm thankful to have had the chance to see him on tour a few years ago when he toured with Willie Nelson. What a legend.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
I agree 100% Great stuff!
@Chapps1941Ай бұрын
@@babygerald4645 ty6e greatest sequence. Daylight 2nd, 3rd and 4th
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
All masterworks.
@petermaurer2426Ай бұрын
I went to a Bob Dylan concert just recently. He’s still got it. All new music. Great music. No break. No encore. That raw voice all through it. Exquisite! By the way, if you actually think Dylan has a bad voice, listen to “lay lady lay” again. Dylan’s versions of his own songs are virtually always better than any of the covers. The only exception I can think of is Joan Baez’s version of “Don’t think twice.”
@Chapps1941Ай бұрын
Bryan Ferry and Emma Swift do reasonable covers but most covers have the life force leeched out of them.
@darrellgarrett72Ай бұрын
Dylan is a Master! I’ve always loved Desolation Row!!
@DC8091Ай бұрын
hell ya!!! that’s one of my favorite songs ever!
@jeffreywebb7932Ай бұрын
Yes sir
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
Amazing song.
@CavyWheekАй бұрын
I agree with you, professor, that his voice is perfect for what he sings. That's true for so many artists who aren't technically great singers. Imagine a pristine voice singing Dylan songs. It's been done of course and it sounds good, but it's not the same as having Dylan's particular voice in his songs. And man, your dad sounds great. ❤️
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
It would not work as well. Probably the only instance where that would be the case.
@markoshunАй бұрын
He actually tried this. Listen to original recording of Lay Lady Lay. And this is a bit of speculation, but Bob rewrote Forever Young purposefully using notes from the very bottom of the scale range to the top, maybe in response to critics who were saying he ‘couldn’t sing’. I know about the range because I used to sing it and it was a challenge.
@GregoryWhite-g8xАй бұрын
Try Lewis Sings Dylan!! Yeah Gerry Lewis just nails it!!
@Cherrysmith280914 күн бұрын
Love your enthusiasm and backstories! The first time I heard Dylan, Blowin in the Wind was playing inside an airstream trailer, the sound drifting outside where a few motorcycle club guys were sitting around out in the country in Texas. Never has a song grabbed me like that. I immediately bought the album, which had just come out, and all the ones after that. I loved Like a Rolling Stone. I think the chrome horse is a motorcycle.
@BBBarbarian-u5qАй бұрын
Even tho he didn't write it one of my favorites is Dylan singing Early Morning Rain, takes me back to the North Shore, and the parting of a friend going back to the mainland he sang that song best!
@monyx2926Ай бұрын
Oh my! I went down an odd rabbit hole. When you said Al Kooper, I thought of Al Stewart. One of my favorite teenage songs "Year of the Cat." I just rewatched it, and it still stands up for me. Thanks for the memory. :)
@peterflynn2111Ай бұрын
One of Dylans biggest hits here in Australia peaking at 7 in October 1965
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Thanks Peter! How many hits did Dylan have down under?
@curtiscolwell157228 күн бұрын
Hey Adam i appreciate your channel and this episode is really awesome .... I'm 63 and i have always loved Dylan's lyrics above all else and his instrumentation 2nd ....i was a big fan of his vocals .....i used to joke about his scratchy voice ....but in the last 10 - 15 years I've really grown to appreciate all his musical abilities ( imcluding his voice ) thank you for letting me share in this journey.
@ZeraphineDollАй бұрын
Professor nailed it…authenticity and emotion, best description of Dylan’s voice. I always loved his voice, can’t imagine anyone else singing Desolation Row…Highway 61 one of my favorite albums of all time ❤❤
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Amen!
@pimacanyon6208Ай бұрын
Well told story about a classic song, THE classic song of the 1960's. Thank you!
@HaldursonАй бұрын
This is the song that first kindled my obsession with Dylan. My mom was a performer, who loved folk music, so we had albums in the house from Joan Baez, Judy Collins, Buffy Saint Marie, and, of course, Dylan. It wasn't until I hit my 20s, though, before I discovered him for myself. And then I was hooked. I've had to explain to friends that Dylan is emulating the sound of some old-time blues artists. And I would play for them songs like Lay Lady Lay to demonstrate.
@AndrewDarlowАй бұрын
What a wonderful episode! You truly know how to tell a story, Adam, whether about a song lyric, an instrument, or how a song touched you or someone like your Dad, which was especially moving to me when you mentioned that. 🙏🏼🎶
@rogertemple7193Ай бұрын
Another awesome Rock n Roll History lesson thanks Professor. 🎶🎤🎸🎸🎹🥁🎶
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Thanks Roger!
@debrarittenhouse813716 күн бұрын
Greatful you showed today! Really like Bob Dylan. Loved this song "Like a Rolling Stone" how does it feel! Was 10, fell asleep with radio to my ear, listening till I fell asleep! Traveling Wilbury's best ever!
@jeffreywebb7932Ай бұрын
When I was 19 I was really into poetry.Getting beyond Dylans voice was a tough obstacle,but I forced myself because I knew he was great.Now I love it.Its like an acquired taste like corn liquor or gasoline 😂. If he ever "clicks"youre in for the greatest catalog of songs ever produced.Most of my friends still dont understand🤣But its ok hes not for everyone.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Great comment. I agree!
@Code.Name.VАй бұрын
...Like Roquefort Cheese
@derekcollins4801Ай бұрын
Same here, I forced myself to listen to his, let's say unconventional vocals and now I find it hard to listen to anybody else singing Dylan songs because his voice and phrasing are so unique
@bou58manАй бұрын
@@derekcollins4801 Bryan Ferry made an album named Dylanesque with only covers from Bob Dylan and I just love it. For me there is no best song or artist only great ones and there are a lot of them depending on my mood because it is music that touches your soul in my humble opinion.
@susansecrestshields1126Ай бұрын
Hey Adam! Your episode's are always great, but you've reached a new level! Always loved Dylan! This is one of my favorites. These lyrics are so imaginative, but slap you with the question, "HOW DOES IT FEEL?" Amazing. The fact that we're still talking about this song 60 years after its release, says it all! Thank you Bob. Thank you Professor. Congrats on a new zenith of shows! Dylan is groovy, and so are you! * I feel "groovy" should have been in our world much longer than it was.*
@cyndikennedy1017Ай бұрын
Highway 61 Revisited. Definitely in my top 5 most listened to albums of all time, but what I love about your channel is that I never knew of the connection between Dylan and Al Cooper and Mike Bloomfield. I was still in high school, so 1970 or earlier, I did an anti-war skit for the talent show using a Mike Bloomfield/AL Cooper instrumental record. I think called East/West. So profoundly lucky to have this music so deep in my life. Thanks so much for keeping these sacred stories alive, and helping even old folks like me to find new secrets in old music.
@Ihfmpw8Ай бұрын
I’m 78….I’ll love Bob Dylan till I die xx
@joannfalcon642317 күн бұрын
It is on the top of my favorite list! I love the mix of folk and rock. AND MUSIC IS ALLLL ABOUT FEELINGS! Music is meant to move our hearts, minds, and souls! Thanks for the insight and passion you have for music. ❤
@tommccafferty5591Ай бұрын
In my opinion, this is the greatest song of all time. It came out in the summer between my sophomore and junior years in high school. I listened to it on my transistor radio on the beach on the shores of Lake Erie. It changed how. music could be made and played on the radio.
@kevinramsey417Ай бұрын
Professor, that story about your dad made me smile. Only music has that kind of power.
@lauriebakАй бұрын
Some of my favorite lyrics are from Mr. Tambourine man. Such incredible imagery of freedom and joy: Yes, to dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free Silhouetted by the sea, circled by the circus sands With all memory and fate driven deep beneath the waves Let me forget about today until tomorrow
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
So much imagery in that song.
@paganphil10020 күн бұрын
@lauriebak: "to dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free" was even quoted by Carl Sagan in his book "The dragons of Eden".
@stuartwilliams3164Ай бұрын
15 again , close my eyes , and my kids agree. All Dylan tracks downloaded , my time machine!!!
@derekhammond8772Ай бұрын
At Seniors School in the mid sixties I had never heard of Bob Dylan. A class mate of mine started up a Dylan appreciation group at lunch time and I went along out of curiosity. He put on Like a Rolling Stone and I was blown away. This started a long life love affair with his music. If you are out there Kevin Ryan I an eternally grateful.👍
@ObiPleasantАй бұрын
I've always loved it that he could sing out his nose. If Bob can sing, anybody can.
@ponzo1967Ай бұрын
Dylan makes you feel it !
@justalittlebitmoАй бұрын
I love the organ on this. Thanks for giving the background on the organ playing... and everything else, of course :)
@johnhoslett6732Ай бұрын
Al Cooper’s extended interview about Like a Rolling Stone is amazing. There were so many aspects that were a complete fluke. He was invited to observe the session by the producer with the understanding he would NOT play. He was really a guitar player, not a keyboard player. He snuck into the studio and sat down with his guitar, hoping to be included until Bloomfield showed up. Went back into the booth. During a break between takes, he went back out and sat at the keyboard, hoping someone had left it on because he didn’t even know how to turn it on. The monitor was back in the corner so he couldn’t hear himself very well. He wasn’t sure of the cord changes, that’s why there were delays that ended up being classic to the sound. Dylan liked that version in the playback and the rest is history.
@mrbniedererАй бұрын
I saw Dylan in Detroit while he was part of Willie Nelson’s Outlaws tour. Every other artist - Lucas Nelson’s band, Sheryl Crow, and someone else I’ve forgotten - all used the house spot lights etc and did the “how ya doin Detroit?” banter with the audience. Not Dylan. His stage was setup light a 1950’s Hollywood movie set with Klegg lighting. He and his band all wore gold lamme dinner jackets. Dylan only played the piano and never spoke to the audience or even really looked at the audience. So cool! When I was young and learning to play guitar I wanted to grow up to be Dylan. I’m 71 now so…kinda still do!😎
@JeffreyGoddinАй бұрын
18:37 On the subject of Dylan's voice, sometimes I'll play Lay Lady Lay or something else off Nashville City Skyline and ask people to guess who's singing and nobody EVER can. He's an artist, like Picasso, he can do realism, too, he just doesn't want to, usually.
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
So true!
@xxlilly_playsxxkiz9980Ай бұрын
Yup. I personally do recognize his voice but that sure does ring true.
@moddie6783Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this. I'm a recent subscriber to your channel. I've been on a recent Bob Dylan obsession filled with music, clips, interviews, lyrics, pictures and other research. I was knocked off my feet to learn of a connection Dylan and My late father have-- Soul Legend Mavis Staples. My father briefly worked in the industry in the 70's in Chicago. Unfortunately for mother, my parents were still very much married at the time. I was so pleasantly surprised to see Bob Dylan and this particular masterpiece featured today. I'm off to go listen to more awesome Bob Dylan lyrical work. Thank you again!
@bfgardinАй бұрын
One of your best break-downs yet. Thanks for this!
@ProfessorofRockАй бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@mis-tur-tay-burАй бұрын
I was only a seven year-old Aussie kid, but music on the radio was a refuge for me. I KNEW the Beatles were a revolution as soon as I heard them, and I KNEW 'Like a Rolling Stone' was an absolute game-changer. I had two ineffable childish impressions. One was a sense of the epic that I'd never felt before about music. The other was an intuition that the words meant something really important, and that one day I'd understand what they meant. I guess it just gave me a glimpse into an entirely new way of thinking. Even as a kid, I found that song incredibly compelling, and when I was a little older, maybe early teens, I deemed it the best single ever released. I reckon I still think so, but I must say there are a lot of songs that vie for that title, many of which never get much credit.
@Chapps1941Ай бұрын
The first time l really heard Dylan was a 16 year old being kicked out of home in 1975 and getting into my mate's HD Holden (Australia's GM car) and hearing that drum snare as l closed the door. My whole appreciation for music changed in an instant. It set me on a path to appreciate Led Zeppelin to Supertramp, from Billy Joel to Tom Waits and the triangle between Stevie Nicks, Cher & Kate Bush. And all the great clones he inspired; Springsteen, Mellencamp, Waits, Morrison, Donovan, Hendrix, Joan Osborne, Kim Carnes.Australians Paul Kelly, Richard Clapton and Mark Seymour among others