Earliest-Known Recording of Bob Dylan - The Bucklen Tapes - (Spring, 1958)

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Swingin’ Pig

Swingin’ Pig

Күн бұрын

PLEASE READ INFO & TRACKLIST BELOW:
The first five minutes of this video is the earliest-known tape of Bob Dylan, recorded when Bob was around sixteen. Not the greatest sound quality, lyrics, or singing, but everyone has to start somewhere and this is still a fantastic look into Dylan's early roots. The tape was recorded in the garage of Bobby Zimmerman's home (his original surname) by his friend and peer, John Bucklen, who can be heard singing with Bob. The Zimmerman residence was 2425 7th Ave. E., Hibbing, MN., now a pilgrimage destination for some fans. The tape, referred to by enthusiasts as the Bucklen Tape, is the earliest circulating recording of Bob. The only original piece on the tape is "Hey, Little Richard," making that Bob's first recorded original song.
The rest of this video is a recording is a tape of Bucklen recollecting on his high school years when he and Dylan spent much of their time together. This recording was taken from the documentary film Highway 61 Revisited.
TRACKLIST:
0:00 - "Hey Little Richard" (B. Dylan)
0:34 - Conversation between Dylan and Bucklen on Little Richard and Johnny Cash (refer to the transcript below)
1:31 - "Buzz, Buzz, Buzz" (Gray/Byrd)
2:06 - "Jenny Take A Ride" (sometimes referred to as "Jenny, Jenny") (Johnson/Penniman/Crewe)
2:53 - "We Belong Together" (Carr/Mitchell/Weiss)
3:16 - Conversation about how mainstream white artists like Elvis copy black artists
4:15 - "Lilly Lou" (J. Cook)
4:36 - Start of John Bucklen interview, c. 1992
TRANSCRIPT:
After "Hey Little Richard":
Zimmerman: This is Little Richard...(fakes wild crowd noises into microphone) ...Little Richard's got a lot of expression.
Bucklen: You think singing is just jumping around and screaming?
Zimmerman: You gotta have some kind of expression.
Bucklen: Johnny Cash has got expression.
Zimmerman: There's no expression. (sings in boring, slow and monotone voice): "I met her at a dance St. Paul Minnesota... I walk the line, because you're mine, because you're mine..."
Bucklen: You're doing it wrong, you're just -
Bucklen: What's the best kind of music?
Zimmerman: Rhythm and Blues.
Bucklen: State your reason in no less that twenty-five minutes.
Zimmerman: Ah, Rhythm and Blues you see is something that you really can't quite explain see. When you hear a song Rhythm and Blues - when you hear it's a good Rhythm and Blues song, chills go up your spine...
Bucklen: Whoa-o-o!
Zimmerman: When you hear a song like that. But when you hear a song like Johnny Cash, whadaya wanna do? You wanna leave, you wanna, you - when you hear a song like some good Rhythm and Blues song you wanna cry when you hear one of those songs.
After "Jenny Take A Ride":
Bucklen: Listen, man you gotta to do it a little bit faster than that. I mean I'm trying to cut a fast record here, that's right ...
Zimmerman: I can't help it.
Bucklen: I know it ain't slow but it's not fast enough too.
Zimmerman: Whadaya talking about, man, that's plenty fast!
Bucklen: No, it isn't.
Zimmerman: That'll sell - that'll sell (clicks fingers) just like that - ten million in a week! Weeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeelllll! (plays first note on piano)
Bucklen: What are you trying to do man, coming in with 'weeelll' like that? I mean....
Zimmerman: Well that's for the new song and I'm starting another one.
After "Blue Moon":
Zimmerman: Yeah, ah, Ricky Nelson. Now Ricky Nelson's another one of these guys. See Ricky Nelson, Ricky Nelson -
Bucklen: Ricky Nelson is out of the question.
Zimmerman: Well he copies Elvis Presley! Yeaah, it's perfectly...
Bucklen: He can't do like Elvis Presley.
Zimmerman: Well he can't sing at all, Ricky Nelson. So we may as well forget him. See I mean - I mean, ya know when you hear music like The Diamonds. For instance The Diamonds are really cool, they're out on the street really popular, really record [?], you know. So they're popular big stars but where, where do they get all the songs? You know they get all their songs, they get all their songs from little groups. They copy all the little groups. Same thing with Elvis Presley. Elvis Presley, who did he copy? He copied Clyde McPhatter, he copied Little Richard, ...
Bucklen: Wait a minute, wait a minute!
Zimmerman: ...he copied the Drifters
Bucklen: Wait a minute, name, name, name four songs that Elvis Presley's copied from those, from those little groups.
Zimmerman: He copied all the Richard songs -
Bucklen: Like what? -
Zimmerman: "Rip It Up", "Long Tall Sally", "Ready Teddy", err ... what's the other one...
Bucklen: "Money Honey"?
Zimmerman: No, "Money Honey" he copied from Clyde McPhatter. He copied "I Was The One " - he copied that from the Coasters. He copied, ahhh, "I Got A Woman" from Ray Charles.
Bucklen: Er, listen that song was written for him.
END
Information and transcript taken from entry #3 on the following page of Olaf's Files: www.bjorner.com/DSN00003%2019...
Love & Peace,
~SP

Пікірлер: 147
@MacJaxonManOfAction
@MacJaxonManOfAction 3 жыл бұрын
This isn't just a treasure, it's priceless. The mere fact that this recording exists is nothing short of miraculous.
@curtisTea
@curtisTea 3 жыл бұрын
“We drove down on Highway 61”. So THAT’S what he revisited:-)
@jeffbayne15
@jeffbayne15 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, it starts up in Minnesota on the Canadian border and goes all the way down to New Orleans Louisiana...
@weaverdreams
@weaverdreams Жыл бұрын
He made up a lot of tales about being a vagabond but he really was a storyteller/singer and not actually a vagabond at all
@comradebroosk9396
@comradebroosk9396 Жыл бұрын
@@weaverdreams he was a vagabond in New York. but yeah, as part of the folk song tradition, embellished most of his life
@saphirejinn2337
@saphirejinn2337 3 жыл бұрын
dunno about you, but i heard the same bob dylan as i hear today, total connection..so much i was shocked. Thank you
@saphirejinn2337
@saphirejinn2337 3 жыл бұрын
the songs he did sounded like bob dylan....
@TheCaptainZodo
@TheCaptainZodo 3 жыл бұрын
Just when I thought I'd heard the youngest Fetus Bob track, this comes along. So good. Interesting that his 16 year old voice is basically the exact same as his voice in his 20s, both in cadence and pitch.
@geckorider
@geckorider 3 ай бұрын
Really wild hearing him miming cash when he’d be singing a duet with him 11 years later! Crazy fast times
@mary-annannan5216
@mary-annannan5216 3 жыл бұрын
aaaaaaah this is gonna be something
@MrJcosta97
@MrJcosta97 3 жыл бұрын
"...and he went - and I didn't." And the rest is history!
@jacobjinglehymer8789
@jacobjinglehymer8789 3 жыл бұрын
He seems to be implying that if HE were the one to go and Dylan stayed home, that HE would have been the big star.😂
@jamesthomson9525
@jamesthomson9525 3 жыл бұрын
He sounded old when he was young
@jacklambert6643
@jacklambert6643 3 жыл бұрын
The older he gets, younger he gets mentally.
@jamesthomson9525
@jamesthomson9525 3 жыл бұрын
@@jacklambert6643 That...seems to be true
@johnnylebay2059
@johnnylebay2059 3 жыл бұрын
He was so much older then, he's younger than that now
@1DaTJo
@1DaTJo Жыл бұрын
All alone, in the freezing snow of the coldest winter, Bob hitchhiked 1000 miles to New York. What a courageous young kid. Amazing! I love Bob so much.
@weaverdreams
@weaverdreams Жыл бұрын
Not. “Dylan, age 19, drove with two friends to New York City from Wisconsin in mid-January 1961, arriving Jan. 24, according to Howard Sounes in “Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan” (2001, Grove Press). He had two immediate goals: to meet Woody Guthrie and to perform in Greenwich Village's thriving folk coffeehouses.Jul 5, 2015”
@1DaTJo
@1DaTJo Жыл бұрын
@@weaverdreams thanks for the correction. It was still a courageous thing to do, I feel. Leave home for New York in midwinter!
@letsif
@letsif 3 жыл бұрын
Many of the traits we see in Bob today were present then, in both his need for "expression" and the illusive borrowings lol of others songs mixed in with his own. Also in the independence of mind, dismissive of criticism. He is a force of nature that keeps on giving....
@loveminuszero4390
@loveminuszero4390 3 жыл бұрын
Man, I love young Bobby.
@thenneedd
@thenneedd 3 жыл бұрын
Bob was the Tom Sawyer of music.
@DudeRevolution
@DudeRevolution 3 жыл бұрын
What a great metaphor!
@ferociousgumby
@ferociousgumby 3 жыл бұрын
No. The Huckleberry Finn.
@thenneedd
@thenneedd 3 жыл бұрын
@@ferociousgumby huck from a broken home, dealt w realities. tom, from all he saw heard & read, spun adventure. opinionated, was imaginative.
@jacobjinglehymer8789
@jacobjinglehymer8789 3 жыл бұрын
Bucklen has a great speaking voice. He could have been a DJ.
@DavidCooper-dt4vl
@DavidCooper-dt4vl 3 жыл бұрын
I was thinking exactly the same!
@madalyngilgenbach1483
@madalyngilgenbach1483 2 жыл бұрын
Hey those are my grandpa Bucklen’s tapes! :)
@comontoshi
@comontoshi 3 жыл бұрын
Bob’s delivery when talking was the same when I saw him at the Hollywood Bowl back in the 60’s.
@domagojsilo9825
@domagojsilo9825 3 жыл бұрын
Robert Zimmerman on Johnny Cash (The Bucklen Tapes) Zimmerman: There's no expression. (sings in boring, slow and monotone voice): "I met her at a dance St. Paul Minnesota... I walk the line, because you're mine, because you're mine..." Bob Dylan on Johnny Cash (No direction home outtake) Dylan: "[Johnny Cash] was the living ultimate end and, and also you know I loved all of his gospel songs too, and um meeting him was at that point you know a high thrill of a lifetime." (...) "his songs meant a lot to me, even that line "I met her accidentally in St. Paul, Minnesota..." I mean that would just give me the chills every time I heard it." / no one pulls off being consistently inconsistent like the man himself
@jamesdean9183
@jamesdean9183 6 ай бұрын
My opinion on artists changes too. For example, Bob Dylan himself I used to dismiss as overrated and bland. Yet then as I matured I grew to appreciate him and just dropped about $400 on tickets to see him in a couple months and it will be my dream come true. Bob Dylan is now my favorite artist, something I never would have believed just a few years ago.
@geekay1349
@geekay1349 2 жыл бұрын
This was a school auditorium concert where the principal closed the curtains on Dylan's act because he didn't think his music was suitable for the audience. (according to a documentary by Martin Scorcese)
@oinkooink
@oinkooink 4 ай бұрын
And then a few years later Bob and all the rest helped usher in the drug culture, the narcissist selfish culture, communism, degeneracy, anti tradition etc and here we are. A deracinated, soulless mess. The principal was right. Still, good songs. But rat poison has to taste good right?
@ericwharton213
@ericwharton213 3 жыл бұрын
I think this kid might have a future in music...
@johnbland714
@johnbland714 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic & also felt like an audio Peeping Tom.What an absolute gem !!!It's like when you put your ear to a seashell...& you hear Bob & his mate fooling around in a back bedroom 60 yrs ago.
@femmedeplume1
@femmedeplume1 3 жыл бұрын
Listening young Bob's voice, what a pleasure ! Thank's a lot.
@FlaschDJ
@FlaschDJ 3 жыл бұрын
First: As a long-time Dylan-gawker, this, SP, is magnificence. Thank you!! The record producer , Don Was, said about Bob Dylan: “You can mention the most obscure song or record and Dylan will know it” - Bob has an vast knowledge of the recordings that preceded him. You can hear, around 4:10, Bob’s already sprouted that bank of knowledge. Most excellent novelists, poets, songwriters know the works that preceded them, I suspect. Who’da thunk it!
@goodtimefolkrock
@goodtimefolkrock 3 жыл бұрын
Bob talked smack about johnny cash and ten years later realized the error of judgement
@othmarzimmermann5924
@othmarzimmermann5924 Жыл бұрын
What an experience! Thank you for unearthing this gem!
@ritahall2378
@ritahall2378 3 жыл бұрын
OMG when he sang Ritchie Valens - I love to listen to his conversations about music/ musicians - Thanks SP. !
@bobdylanjapan
@bobdylanjapan 3 жыл бұрын
He basically had it in the bag before he even started. And he never let anyone get in his way after that.
@0otee
@0otee 5 ай бұрын
Grandioso… 🎉💥🎶🌹🌺💃🕺🎶❣️🌹🌺💃🕺🎶🌹🌺 Guitar chummin’ can I use that word.. FUN there Bucklen and Bob Wow!!!!!!🌹❣️💥👌 Rhythmic guys very young Musicmen💥
@floepiejane
@floepiejane 3 жыл бұрын
I can't wait to hear this whole thing. Cheers, y'all!!
@tomdale1313
@tomdale1313 Жыл бұрын
I hear that Dylan coming from up and around the bend, it won't be long now...tanks for sharing
@ST-xg3gy
@ST-xg3gy 3 жыл бұрын
This is great stuff! Bob was a character, is a character. Great stories.
@NJ-gb2iv
@NJ-gb2iv 3 жыл бұрын
Ayyy yeah, love me some little Richard Bigtime💕he use to be my big brother, him& ginger use to babysit me😊love you Dylan too💕💖
@RocketKirchner
@RocketKirchner 3 жыл бұрын
i have been listening to the Quarrymen lately who became the Beatles and i love the early Quarrymen . this Early Dylan stuff is like that . homespun .
@mumbles215
@mumbles215 2 жыл бұрын
62 era Beatles is the best. Tight as hell.
@Kurtis-Schubert
@Kurtis-Schubert 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the warning! Gonna fetch one more cup of coffee for the show.
@michaelpartridge1381
@michaelpartridge1381 3 жыл бұрын
Watching it all the way through right now a almost six o'clock. Takes me ages to get around to things mostly. This is great, just over half way through. Really wish there was KZfaq 30 years ago. I really struggled to find Bob Dylan stuff back then. I would have the video ready to record anything that would come on the TV and the cassette ready to catch anything Bob Dylan related. Arr seems like only yesterday but I know it's not, now.
@marieholland8868
@marieholland8868 Жыл бұрын
It must've been the most fun time of John Bucklan's life kicking round with young Zimmy! Be awesome to hear they've had a reunion or two since these days. I hope Bob has heard all this, it'd surely make him smile. It's a great recording, absolutely compelling listening, THANKYOU!
@yamapenny5960
@yamapenny5960 2 жыл бұрын
.... and a really big STAR ✨ was born ⭐🌟🌠☀️👍🎶
@sylvemason6509
@sylvemason6509 2 жыл бұрын
OH G Yer Really Just Love Hearing This Kind Of Thing 🌸🌸🧡🧡🧡🧡🌸🌸
@olgabasoski9417
@olgabasoski9417 6 ай бұрын
Grand tape!!!❣️🎶❣️🌹🌺 Bob Dylan talks… Big smile here..
@robertwoodward829
@robertwoodward829 3 жыл бұрын
Bob was an audiofile even then!
@guymichel101
@guymichel101 Жыл бұрын
Swingin' Pig, you are incredible. You come up with the most amazing, fun, informally revealing Dylan stuff ever. Thank you again & again for all you've put forth!
@elstongunn9123
@elstongunn9123 3 жыл бұрын
I’m so excited!!!
@jeffschick1669
@jeffschick1669 3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, that's him.
@nelsonx5326
@nelsonx5326 3 жыл бұрын
Love Bob.
@Smokey4462
@Smokey4462 3 жыл бұрын
Apparently, Little Richard was real upset each time Pat Boone would cover one of his songs and steal the sales that Little Richard would likely have made. Upset, that is, until he saw all of the royalties that Pat Boone's recordings earned for Little Richard. It's the song writers who make the money. But back to Bucklen, it would really be interesting if people like him would write a book or article about his recollections with Zimmerman/Dylan and the times that they had in Hibbing.
@nissi.k
@nissi.k 3 жыл бұрын
Sorry I missed most of the premiere! This is fascinating! Love it! 😍 Thanks Swingin’ 𓃟
@nevcartledge
@nevcartledge 3 жыл бұрын
Brilliant and thank you.
@Anthony-hu3rj
@Anthony-hu3rj 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for including the 1992 Bucklin interview. I'd only heard it before on the radio somewhere!
@danielseliger1123
@danielseliger1123 3 жыл бұрын
THIS IS AMAZING
@AB-mf8le
@AB-mf8le 3 жыл бұрын
This is class. Thanks Swingin'
@lauraeliot7199
@lauraeliot7199 6 ай бұрын
This so beautiful 💕💕💕💕💕thank you so much❤❤
@alwaysfourfun1671
@alwaysfourfun1671 4 ай бұрын
100% into it. Nothing has changed.
@Michael_1986
@Michael_1986 3 жыл бұрын
What's interesting to me and apropos of nothing, is in the conversation starting at :34 and then later when he talks about Ricky Nelson, he literally sounds exactly like he did during the 66 tour. I felt that was how he sounded because of the uppers he was on, but apparently he's always sounded like that
@batDOG.RECORDS
@batDOG.RECORDS 5 ай бұрын
This makes since as to why he doesn’t seem stoaked or interested to do anything with Johnny Cash, he was a true Rock N Roller, that’s why he burnt the folk scene, he was a rock n roller. Fuck this just solidified my feelings for Blind Boy Grunt. Love love love. Cool story, Bobby writes in his year book when asked where he wants to be in the future, “On tour with Little Richard.” Jimi Hendrix was on tour with Little Richard, Jimi loved Bob. I wanna live in the reality where Bobby and Jimi played and recorded a song together. Long Live Elston Gunnn.
@StephenS-2024
@StephenS-2024 3 жыл бұрын
IT. The kid's got it.
@lawrencetaylor4101
@lawrencetaylor4101 6 ай бұрын
Merci
@TyroneEpps
@TyroneEpps 6 ай бұрын
This album tape is hot ! 😊
@armarq8091
@armarq8091 3 жыл бұрын
❤❤❤
@michaelpartridge1381
@michaelpartridge1381 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Swining' Pig⚡❤️
@roygavin8219
@roygavin8219 Жыл бұрын
The first, and only, occasion when Bob's singing was more in tune than the rest of the band :)
@duarte2140
@duarte2140 10 ай бұрын
Shame this Zimmerman guy never became famous, he was very promising and should have put out an album or two.
@joshua.tyrone
@joshua.tyrone 3 жыл бұрын
Poor Little Richard!!
@heinrichvon
@heinrichvon Жыл бұрын
It's very funny that Bob puts down Johnny Cash as boring ("you wanna leave") as the two men would later become close friends and even record duets together. Seems his musical tastes evolved.
@jacksonantonic9242
@jacksonantonic9242 3 жыл бұрын
I see this more as Bob wanting individualism in music regarding his comments to other artists “copying other artists”. I think he really strived for originality, even if the quality of the music was ok. He wanted to hear something new.
@bunkyzirkus
@bunkyzirkus 2 жыл бұрын
Apparently, Bob stole lots of melodies, and rewrote the words to claim authorship of both. When he mentions Elvis “stealing” songs- Elvis “covered” songs written by others- that’s what he always did, his whole career. No shame in that. But, I think Bob was wily, by nature, and not bound by “the rules”. He decided, early on, that winning meant cheating, and he REALLY wanted to win. Hence, his deal with “the Supreme Commander”, that he eventually confessed to on television.
@somebody2love
@somebody2love Жыл бұрын
Well.. You can't say he was putting on an act in his later years. He's been this way since the start
@kviz1111
@kviz1111 Жыл бұрын
Wow that's on borderline of punk didn't expect that
@shuddupeyaface
@shuddupeyaface 2 жыл бұрын
He met up with John Buckland in England 1966. Wasn't very nice to him. Probably wired on something, but there is a great BBC documentary - I think called Highway 61. Well worth a watch.
@jakedulln
@jakedulln Жыл бұрын
Righteous SP
@jaredf921
@jaredf921 3 жыл бұрын
‘No expression...’ -haha
@ChriTur
@ChriTur 3 жыл бұрын
That's not Blue Moon. It's We Belong Together by Robert & Johnny, covered by Richie Valens.
@SwinginPig
@SwinginPig 3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the info. Don’t know how I missed that
@jeremyhoran5472
@jeremyhoran5472 3 жыл бұрын
Do you have the Halloween show, with all his dialogue ? I’ve been searching for it everywhere but just can’t find it !
@suzannelawson9215
@suzannelawson9215 2 жыл бұрын
I have to ask you where did you ever manage to find this early recording? Do you know by chance, how many copies were made? Also, do you know how long the Zimmerman family kept the Hibbing, Minnesota house until they sold it? Was it sold or rented out after they moved out to another family member? Just curious how long they kept it in their family, even if sold to a family member?
@regmunday8354
@regmunday8354 2 ай бұрын
Wearing a tie!
@karmenjazbec7743
@karmenjazbec7743 3 жыл бұрын
YEAH YOUNG BOB YOU ARE THE BEST I AM JUST SMOKING AND LISTENING TO YOU BOB HONEY
@sharonlee4773
@sharonlee4773 3 жыл бұрын
sounds later than '58
@briandonovan8792
@briandonovan8792 3 жыл бұрын
Rithum and blues Yes spinal
@Blaugenballin
@Blaugenballin 2 жыл бұрын
I think Bob must be sorry for what he said about Johnny Cash.
@EdKazO-Vision
@EdKazO-Vision Жыл бұрын
Dylan don’t look back.😉
@NateHernandez
@NateHernandez 3 жыл бұрын
Do you know where to find a track of The Two Sisters? I believe it’s a traditional song that Dylan recorded. I heard it on KZfaq once and went back to find it and it was gone
@jimmy128100
@jimmy128100 2 жыл бұрын
Here it is. kzfaq.info/get/bejne/l5-PiZqdnNuVoJs.html
@masonkanterbury3007
@masonkanterbury3007 2 жыл бұрын
Buddy holly groupie. Got sucked into the folk scene. But always wanted to be a rocker.
@janepiepes2243
@janepiepes2243 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting comment below...bob dylan the Tom Sawyer of music. Brings it right there !
@seanpages__
@seanpages__ 3 жыл бұрын
Wow swanginpig where o' where is thy treasure trove?
@natalies1624
@natalies1624 3 жыл бұрын
voice cracks: 2:35
@oldchris3398
@oldchris3398 Жыл бұрын
As long as it's R.A.Zimmerman.Old Chris a retired fiddler and greeter of Albuquerque NM PLAY DYLAN SONGS.
@livinlifetothefullest2750
@livinlifetothefullest2750 3 жыл бұрын
I heard a rumor the interviews are genuine but the music might be a fake and is not related to Bobs comments about faking his Little Richard impression
@scmorson
@scmorson 3 жыл бұрын
I have $2.00
@anotherjoshua
@anotherjoshua 3 жыл бұрын
where's john bucklen today?
@SwinginPig
@SwinginPig 3 жыл бұрын
Not sure. As far as I know, he’s still around but not sure his whereabouts.
@coopersgilgenbach1831
@coopersgilgenbach1831 2 жыл бұрын
wisconsin, he’s my grandpa! i love looking back at these tapes, it’s so fascinating to me!
@scmorson
@scmorson 3 жыл бұрын
I poor
@shiitakestick
@shiitakestick 3 жыл бұрын
👂🏼
@paulgalligan1916
@paulgalligan1916 3 жыл бұрын
Now we know why Bobby never really met the gypsy..
@skorecki7
@skorecki7 3 жыл бұрын
BOB DYLAN was 17 years old. Listen to how he tries to get funky for LITTLE RICHARD (HEY LITTLE RICHARD, DYLAN's first song). His first university group sang mainly LITTLE RICHARD songs. Here, he's comparing him to RICKY NELSON, JOHNNY CASH, NEIL DIAMOND and even ELVIS PRESLEY, all singers he despised at the time. DYLAN is making expressively fun of JOHNNY CASH ("when you hear a song by JOHNNY CASH, you wanna LEAVE, when you hear LITTLE RICHARD you WANNA CRY) ... and insisting on all the songs ELVIS PRESLEY copied,
@stonedtommy403
@stonedtommy403 3 жыл бұрын
Dylan asked him if he wanted to go see Woody Guthrie, and he passed on that one, with it being the dead of winter an all . I'd be livid. In fact suicide would of been committed along time ago 😂
@ralphdavis9670
@ralphdavis9670 3 жыл бұрын
Bob was combative as hell from way back.
@crrghommey8150
@crrghommey8150 3 жыл бұрын
Thank You Swinging pig!! Now This Is Quite The?💎🕎☮️💯🎸🌹 We Are? 🎧 Too L💙VE Young Bobby☮️🕎✡️🔯💯💚💜♥️🌈🌚😎
@knockedoutloaded279
@knockedoutloaded279 3 жыл бұрын
Elvis improved a lot of the songs...
@crrghommey8150
@crrghommey8150 3 жыл бұрын
This Is Creg😀
@marcbuehre7660
@marcbuehre7660 3 жыл бұрын
Phillip Krull , go Get Lost !
@UnremarkableMarx
@UnremarkableMarx 3 жыл бұрын
Emo
@samdill36
@samdill36 3 жыл бұрын
and then bob copied his way to stardom, starting with woody guthrie
@philipkrull6371
@philipkrull6371 3 жыл бұрын
Bob Dylan is meaningless and unpleasant.
@mikoajtyszkiewicz894
@mikoajtyszkiewicz894 3 жыл бұрын
No, your comment is.
@Tasutpen
@Tasutpen 3 жыл бұрын
In his earliest years of fame, and for some time thereafter, he could be a pretty mean, nasty guy. But meaningless? That's a bridge too far.
@Vishangro
@Vishangro 3 жыл бұрын
Yep that's why they gave him Nobel prize.😎
@michaelpartridge1381
@michaelpartridge1381 3 жыл бұрын
Outstanding!
@johnnorton1948
@johnnorton1948 3 жыл бұрын
It ain’t no use talking to him, It's just the same as talking to you.😆
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