Saturday, September 04, 2010
Bob Dylan “Blood On The Tracks” (1975)
Quite simply, Blood On The Tracks is my favourite Dylan album. In one of those too few illuminating moments, I knew the first time I heard it that this was something special and through the years it has sustained me through some really bad times: divorce, depression and my Dad's death. When written, Dylan himself was experiencing the traumas of a marriage break-up and all the muddled feelings that engenders are in evidence - sadness, bitterness, anger, relief and regret. But, even with this background, Blood On The Tracks is not a depressing album. "You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go", "If You See Her, Say Hello", "You're A Big Girl Now" and "Tangled Up In Blue" expose a man unsure of his feelings but striving to make a good fist of it. I could, and still can, identify with that. Even though his turbulent emotions must have been a dominating factor, Dylan also managed to pen a couple of wonderful morality tales: "Simple Twist Of Fate" and "Shelter From The Storm", and a brilliantly inventive novella: "Lily, Rosemary And The Jack Of Hearts." Blood On The Tracks will remain an album I will return to again and again. –Ian
Labels:
Album Reviews,
Rock
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This is one of the albums you give people when they want to know what the big deal is about Dylan. "You're a Big Girl Now" tears your heart out. "Idiot Wind" just bleeds with emotion and anger. And thankfully "Buckets of Rain" lets us walks away a little wiser. It's one of the best albums by anybody, ever.
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