Ivica S. - 29.08.2020  Ok, this is bootleg series - There always seems to be one or two things in the mixes that bother me, but those annoyances are minimized in this edition. And again, the detail is staggering. From me: 5 STARS
|
 |
Sean McCarthy - 10.01.2011  The Bootleg Series continues to yield some great rewards in Bob Dylan's catalog. In 1998, Dylan's famous Royal Albert Hall concert was released as a t...
|
 |
JIM CALIGIURI - 30.12.2010 At the time of these recordings, the term singer-songwriter didn't exist. Even Dylan's first album, released before the making of these demos, contain...
|
 |
AMOROSI - 28.12.2010  The highlights amongst themore familiar tunes are numerous and unforgettable: a fuzzy piano-only versionof "Mr. Tambourine Man," the spare but playful...
|
 |
Ron Hart - 24.12.2010 Bob Dylan: The Bootleg Series Volume 9: The Witmark Demos 1962-1964...
|
 |
Doug Collette - 15.12.2010  Of all the extraordinary aspects of Bob Dylan’s flair for composing early in his career, the prolific nature of his writing may be the most awe-inspir...
|
 |
Eric Dennis - 07.11.2010  It's practically a tradition that each new Bob Dylan Bootleg Series release will be accompanied by complaints from Dylan freaks (sorry, "aficionados")...
|
 |
Joshua Love - 05.11.2010  In his 2004 memoir, Chronicles, Volume One, Bob Dylan writes of encountering Mike Seeger in the early 1960s in Greenwich Village, and being left spell...
|
 |
Gary Graff - 29.10.2010 Precious few popular music vaults have been more prolific and consistently rewarding than Bob Dylan's deep trove. Since the groundbreaking 1985 "Biogr...
|
 |
Sean Egan - 25.10.2010 In July 1962, Bob Dylan – four months after releasing his unremarkable first album – was signed by prestigious music publishing company M. Witmark & S...
|
 |
|
|
 |