List_of_Basement_Tapes_songs

List of <i>Basement Tapes</i> songs

List of Basement Tapes songs

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The Basement Tapes is a collection of over 100 songs recorded by Bob Dylan and his then-backing group, the Band, in the summer of 1967 in West Saugerties, New York, just outside Woodstock. Recording sessions began in a den known as "The Red Room" in Dylan's home, before moving to an improvised recording studio in the basement of a house known as Big Pink, where Rick Danko, Richard Manuel and Garth Hudson lived.[1] Roughly half the songs recorded on The Basement Tapes were covers of traditional folk and blues ballads, rock songs, and country music, and half were original compositions by Dylan.

Fourteen basement tape songs appeared in 1968 on a demo privately circulated by Dylan's publishing company, Dwarf Music.[2] Public awareness of the basement recordings increased with the release of the first bootleg, Great White Wonder, in 1969.[3] In 1975 CBS officially released The Basement Tapes, but only sixteen of the twenty-four songs were recorded by Dylan and the Band in Woodstock in 1967. The other eight tracks were recordings by the Band from different times.[4] Subsequently, more and more basement recordings have been unearthed and illicitly released, culminating in the release of a five-CD bootleg set in 1990, The Genuine Basement Tapes, containing 108 tracks.[5] Two songs, "I Shall Be Released" and "Santa-Fe" were officially released on The Bootleg Series Volumes 1–3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961–1991 in 1991. "I'm Not There" was released on the soundtrack album accompanying the biographical film about Dylan, directed by Todd Haynes, named after the song. "Minstrel Boy" was released in 2013 on The Bootleg Series Vol. 10: Another Self Portrait (1969–1971). The songs of the Basement Tapes have been catalogued by Greil Marcus in his book Invisible Republic,[6] and by Sid Griffin in his critical study Million Dollar Bash: Bob Dylan, the Band, and the Basement Tapes.[7]

On November 4, 2014, Columbia/Legacy issued The Bootleg Series Vol. 11: The Basement Tapes Complete, an official 6-CD box set containing 138 tracks which comprise all of Dylan's basement recordings, including 30 never-bootlegged tracks.[8][9]

Below is an alphabetical list of songs from these recording sessions. This list does not include songs that feature only the members of the Band.

Songs

More information Song title, Writer(s) ...

Footnotes

  1. Rollins, Ben (November 1, 2014). "The Basement Tapes Track-by-Track". bobdylan.com. Archived from the original on December 5, 2014. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  2. Sounes, Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan, pp. 209-210
  3. Sounes, Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan, p. 240
  4. Heylin, The Recording Sessions [1960–1994], St. Martin's Press, 1995, pp. 67-68
  5. Marcus, Invisible Republic, 1997, p. 236
  6. Marcus, Invisible Republic, 1997, pp. 235-265
  7. Griffin, Sid (2007). Million Dollar Bash: Bob Dylan, the Band, and the Basement Tapes. Jawbone. ISBN 978-1-906002-05-3.
  8. Greene, Andy (August 26, 2014). "Bob Dylan's Complete, Legendary 'Basement Tapes' Will Be Released". rollingstone.com. Archived from the original on October 13, 2017. Retrieved September 3, 2017.
  9. "The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11". metacritic.com. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
  10. Griffin, Million Dollar Bash, p. 182.
  11. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 237.
  12. Griffin, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 225–226.
  13. Griffin, Million Dollar Bash, p. 240.
  14. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 238.
  15. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 220–221.
  16. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, p. 166.
  17. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 256.
  18. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, p. 131.
  19. Griffin, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 130-131.
  20. Barker, 2008, Bob Dylan: The Songs He Didn't Write: Bob Dylan Under the Influence , p. 34.
  21. Griffin, Million Dollar Bash, p. 218.
  22. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 143.
  23. Griffin, Million Dollar Bash, p. 216.
  24. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 242.
  25. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 244.
  26. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 253.
  27. Barker, 2008, Bob Dylan: The Songs He Didn't Write: Bob Dylan Under the Influence , pp. 360–362.
  28. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, p. 134.
  29. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, p. 125.
  30. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 203–204.
  31. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 248.
  32. Greil Marcus wrote: "There is nothing like 'I'm Not There' in the rest of the basement recordings, or anywhere else in Bob Dylan’s career. Very quickly the listener is drawn into the sickly embrace of the music, its wash of half-heard, half-formed words and the increasing bitterness and despair behind them. Words are floated together in a dyslexia that is music itself – a dyslexia that seems to prove the claims of music over words, to see just how little words can achieve."; see Marcus, The Old, Weird America, pp. 198–204.
  33. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 175–176.
  34. Barker, 2008, Bob Dylan: The Songs He Didn't Write: Bob Dylan Under the Influence , p. 126.
  35. Marcus, 2013, The Bootleg Series Vol. 10 – Another Self Portrait (1969–1971) liner notes, p. 51.
  36. "CashBox Singles Reviews" (PDF). Cash Box. September 27, 1975. p. 20. Retrieved 2021-12-11.
  37. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 161–162.
  38. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 126–127.
  39. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 254.
  40. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 211–212.
  41. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 255.
  42. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, p. 324.
  43. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, p. 187.
  44. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 239-240.
  45. Heylin, Clinton. The Recording Sessions [1960–1994], p. 62.
  46. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 259.
  47. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, p. 133.
  48. Barker, 2008, Bob Dylan: The Songs He Didn't Write: Bob Dylan Under the Influence , pp. 330–332.
  49. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 178–179.
  50. Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 260.
  51. Wyman, Bill (November 5, 2014). "Bob Dylan's The Basement Tapes Complete Has One Great Song That Nobody Knew Existed". vulture.com. Retrieved November 27, 2014.
  52. Griffin, 2007, Million Dollar Bash, pp. 199–200.
  53. "Dylan's approach never changed. Alone, as in 1961, or surrounded by Danko's deep bass, Manuel's lap Hawaiian guitar with his own guitar barely leading the music—it's so slow, it barely can be led; the melody pulls back against the singer—he gives himself up to the song, disappears into it, becoming all of its actors, with as much sympathy for the father as for the daughter as for the husband as for the son." Marcus, The Old, Weird America, p. 264.

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