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All rights reserved.| Track Listing 1. Blowin in the Wind 2. Don't Think Twice It's All Right 3. Times They Are a Changin (Orignal Source) 4. It Ain't Me, Babe 5. Maggie's Farm 6. It's All Over Now Baby Blue 7. Mr Tambourine Man (Album Version) 8. Subterranean Homesick Blues 9. Like a Rolling Stone 10. Positively 4th Street 11. Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window? 12. I Want You 13. Just Like a Woman 14. Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 15. All Along the Watchtower 16. Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn) 17. I'll Be Your Baby Tonight 18. Lay Lady Lay 19. If Not For You 20. I Shall Be Released 21. You Ain't Going Nowhere 22. Knockin on Heaven's Door 23. Forever Young 24. Tangled up in Blue 25. Shelter From the Storm 26. Hurricane 27. Changing of the Guards 28. Gotta Serve Somebody 29. Blind Willie McTell 30. Jokerman 31. Tight Connection to My Heart 32. Silvio 33. Everything Is Broken 34. Dignity (Alternate Version) 35. Not Dark Yet 36. Things Have Changed
Album Notes Australian edition includes six different tracks from the U.S. version. This two-disc 2000 release looks back on Bob Dylan's 38 years of recording and pulls out most of the signature tunes from the songwriting giant's prolific career. For an artist of such stature, it's no easy task to assemble an "essential" compilation in just 30 cuts, but it's hard to argue with the choices made here. Most of the high points in the Minnesotan troubadour's catalog are touched on, and the chronological sequencing provides a kind of tour through Dylan's various phases. We're taken through the pioneering protest-folk period ("Blowin' in the Wind," "The Times They are A-Changin'"), the Rimbaud-inspired songpoet mode ("It's All Over Now, Baby Blue," "Mr. Tambourine Man"), the amphetamine-fueled rocker phase ("Like A Rolling Stone"), and all the rest of Dylan's many twists and turns. From the poignant introspection of "Shelter From the Storm" to the born-again R&B of "You Gotta Serve Somebody" and the searing narrative of "Hurricane," we get the broad view of an awe-inspiring body of work. Diehards will doubtlessly complain about various disincluded tracks, but on the evidence presented, it's easy to see why the genius tag is so often applied to this artist. | Find errors in the product description? Submit a catalog update request now. | ||||||||||
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