
First, the tracks we'll be deleting:
"Orange Juice Blues (Blues for Breakfast),” "Yazoo Street Scandal,” “Tears of Rage” (It’s great, but the Music from Big Pink version, sung by Manuel, is better), "Yea! Heavy and a Bottle of Bread,” "Ain't No More Cane,” "Crash on the Levee (Down in the Flood),” and "Ruben Remus.” See? That wasn't difficult at all, was it? Now, the worthy additions...
Showing 1-16 of 16
You are going to delete Ain't No More Cane and Ruben Remus??
Step away from the keyboard, you are out of your mind.
I'll second yo yo pa on those and raise him the non-Dylan band songs (as good as anything on their first two albums) plus "Crash on the Levee" and "Tears of Rage" (my favorite-ever Dylan vocal). Otherwise, ace suggestions for the next "Bootleg Series" volume.
i always liked yeah heavy and a bottle of bread. and i don't care for see you later alan ginsburg or all american boy.
what i'm dying for is a remastered version of some of the cover songs– joshua gone barbados, big river, banks of the royal canal, four strong winds... so many more...
Triangle is one of the best Bob performances of all time, as is Santa Fe!!!
If you want light shed onto why Dylan really has never associated himself with this album then I'd invite you to read our article on The Basement Tapes at http://www.paullyrics.com/articles/The_Basement_Tapes.pdf - Cheers:)!
I think "One Man's Loss" from the unreleased stuff is another gem - very poorly recorded but has a great vibe, with Dylan's voice off in the distance.
my comment is, this record is over rated. what you need to hear and what needs to come out are all the Dylan and Johnny Cash sessions on which Dylan even yodels. that should be a biograph issue. amazing stuff. I'm surprised it's not spoken of very often, or at all. I'm lucky to have alot of it on tape. sure a couple of songs of Bob and Johnny are released but there is so much more. Self Portrait was way ahead of its time. But no one got it, including the pompous Greil Marcus, because they didn't know where Bob's roots really were.
What?!! You're not including what is possibly the best version of " Banks of the Royal Canal"....?
The Dylan/Cash sessions are boring and sluggish. They may sound exciting in concept, but not in reality. Self Portrait, which is deservedly underrated, is hardly where Dylan's roots really lie, unless one believes that includes Paul Simon's "The Boxer," covered by Dylan in lackadaisical fashion for that album. There is more life, passion, and sense of roots in a Basement Tapes reject like "Young, But Daily Growin'" than in all of Self Portrait.
Your inclusions are no better than the deletions. What about Royal Canal, Four Strong Winds, and Sign On The Cross...I'm Not There is over-rated mostly because it is just an idea for a song...and was never completed...
No need for me to argue with your deletions or additions. Not the ones I would have chosen, but close enough. I've listened to the tapes in every iteration and don't want another version. There's only so much one can do with old cassettes.
There wasn't a good enough recording of "I'm Not There" available until the version from Neil Young's collection made it onto the I'm Not There soundtrack and we could at last hear most of the words. Many words were not understandable before then, so judgment had to be suspended or projected.
You're leaving "Bessie Smith" on there and getting rid of Dylan's version of "Tears of Rage"? "Bessie Smith" is an outtake from "Cahoots" that Robertson actually engineered to sound WORSE so he could incude it on the Basement Tapes and therefore collect extra cash.
Don't forget I Shall Be Released was not, ah, released on the original album. The obvious solution is to have a four or five disc complete basement tapes session. Sony has covered the pre-1967 period very well in the Bootleg Series, so this would be a good choice for a future release.
The entire basement tapes should be released. However the original recordings were crude 2 track and 4 track and I don't think remastering will make much difference, especially to the level of instruments. The songs by The Band are great, although they should be released separately.
Glenn