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Lazarus
(Bethany)
Posted: Apr 30, 2013 - 22:34
 

 Cynaera wrote:
I agree that the pauses between phrases are difficult - but I think it's an effective way of making the listener actually stop and LISTEN to the words (as usual, very vivid imagery, and I bet Stephen King could write a hell of a story around this song.) When a song flows along effortlessly, sometimes one has a tendency to forget to absorb other aspects of the song, such as the instruments, the lyrics, the cadence...

This song uses an unorthodox method to pull focus back to the song. Whether you love it or hate it, I feel one must at least respect the approach and the intention.

Me?  I kinda like it. It reminds me of when I was learning to ice-skate.  Three steps, a little coast, and a hard landing. Get up, take three more shaky steps, coast a little further, land again... By the end, I truly appreciated ice-skating to the point where I never wanted to do it again.
 

Miss you so much, Cynaera...

love this song...
 

kcar
Posted: Apr 30, 2013 - 22:33
 

 hippiechick wrote:
I am so used to the Joan Osborne version, I think I like hers better, but it's a great song.

 
thanks for mentioning this--I wanted to buy her version but couldn't remember her name. 

Bob is doing a Tom Waits imitation here. Hard to understand him with the growl and choppy bitten-off delivery.  

ritingon
Posted: Oct 24, 2012 - 23:53
 

 ZiegZeon wrote:
This is one of the few Dylan songs that I actually enjoy. The atmosphere set up by the back ground make sound great. Like out in a swamp with the crickets. 
 
This.  Dylan drives me crazy most of the time but this is actually rather nice.

tlew
(Anywhere but here)
Posted: Sep 23, 2012 - 11:10
 

 hippiechick wrote:
I am so used to the Joan Osborne version, I think I like hers better, but it's a great song.
 

Amen sister!

hippiechick
(topsy turvy land)
Posted: Apr 18, 2012 - 13:05
 

I am so used to the Joan Osborne version, I think I like hers better, but it's a great song.

Xstar
(Florence, Kentucky)
Posted: Feb 15, 2012 - 02:14
 

Not today!  WTH?  7 {#Arrow}  6  Way too staccato!


ZiegZeon
(Tulsa, OK)
Posted: Dec 13, 2011 - 13:36
 

This is one of the few Dylan songs that I actually enjoy. The atmosphere set up by the back ground make sound great. Like out in a swamp with the crickets. 

mrgus
Posted: Oct 11, 2011 - 07:11
 

I prefer Rolf Harris's "The Big Black Hat".

hippiechick
(topsy turvy land)
Posted: Oct 11, 2011 - 07:10
 

 Maggle_Bish wrote:

And another one to add to the list - I know it's wrong but I just like her cover better.
 
Ha! I was just thinking the same thing myselg

Maggle_Bish
(Chicago, IL)
Posted: Oct 11, 2011 - 07:09
 

 alanthecowboy wrote:

Here's a fellow heretic, agreeing wholeheartedly with you.  Joan's was the first version I heard, but even if that wasn't the case, it works way better for me.

 
And another one to add to the list - I know it's wrong but I just like her cover better.


Cynaera
(Kenneth's Frequency)
Posted: Aug 09, 2011 - 11:52
 

I agree that the pauses between phrases are difficult - but I think it's an effective way of making the listener actually stop and LISTEN to the words (as usual, very vivid imagery, and I bet Stephen King could write a hell of a story around this song.) When a song flows along effortlessly, sometimes one has a tendency to forget to absorb other aspects of the song, such as the instruments, the lyrics, the cadence...

This song uses an unorthodox method to pull focus back to the song. Whether you love it or hate it, I feel one must at least respect the approach and the intention.

Me?  I kinda like it. It reminds me of when I was learning to ice-skate.  Three steps, a little coast, and a hard landing. Get up, take three more shaky steps, coast a little further, land again... By the end, I truly appreciated ice-skating to the point where I never wanted to do it again.

imklammer
Posted: Aug 09, 2011 - 11:49
 

With ya...

 
rabbi_phil wrote:
Oh Mercy is right!    I'm one of Dylans' biggest fans but this just brutal.  
 



alanthecowboy
(Lakefield)
Posted: Aug 09, 2011 - 11:46
 

 SlinkyJ wrote:
I know this is heresy, but I like Joan Osborne's cover better.
 
Here's a fellow heretic, agreeing wholeheartedly with you.  Joan's was the first version I heard, but even if that wasn't the case, it works way better for me.


a_genuine_find
(not me, Radio P) (3rd stone, sol, orion belt, milkyway)
Posted: Aug 09, 2011 - 11:42
 

 Baby_M wrote:
What's up . . . with the abrupt . . . pauses in the middle . . . of each line.  Is this Bob . . . Dylan or . . . Paul Harvey, . . . the "Prince . . . of Pause"?

Good day!
 

{#Roflol}

DD rabbi_phil
(beach)
Posted: May 06, 2011 - 21:32
 

Oh Mercy is right!    I'm one of Dylans' biggest fans but this just brutal.  

drews
(London, Blighty)
Posted: Apr 05, 2011 - 05:58
 

Solitary men in long black coats, some are bad guys and some are good guys



nmcvaugh
(Austin, Texas)
Posted: Apr 05, 2011 - 05:54
 

Bob Dylan channels Cake.

unclelonghair
Posted: Feb 01, 2011 - 10:49
 

Dear god this is awful.

2Hawks
(Living in Theory -- where everything works)
Posted: Feb 01, 2011 - 10:46
 

This is as boring as a poem in Iambic Pentameter.

Baby_M
(a 100+-year old building in downtown Akron, Ohio)
Posted: Feb 01, 2011 - 10:44
 

What's up . . . with the abrupt . . . pauses in the middle . . . of each line.  Is this Bob . . . Dylan or . . . Paul Harvey, . . . the "Prince . . . of Pause"?

Good day!

teadye
(St. Petersburg, FL)
Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 12:22
 

Amazing how Dylan conveys the ominous undercurrent of this waltz so well. Other versions may be prettier to the ear but this is a treat for the mind's eye.

johnjconn
(chicago land)
Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 12:12
 



WonderLizard
(2,755.46 mi. due east of Paradise)
Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 12:11
 

 Marcuse wrote:
The wonderful Daniel Lanois touch.
 
Agreed. On one level, all the albums he produces are about him.


SlinkyJ
Posted: Nov 30, 2010 - 12:09
 

I know this is heresy, but I like Joan Osborne's cover better.

helgigermany
(Germany)
Posted: Sep 28, 2010 - 04:30
 

 Huey wrote:
Amazing. 8.
 
Yes, this is very nice!


Huey
(Netherlands)
Posted: Sep 28, 2010 - 04:29
 

Amazing. 8.

Marcuse
(Ouilmette)
Posted: Jun 24, 2010 - 07:18
 

The wonderful Daniel Lanois touch.

calypsus_1
Posted: May 22, 2010 - 12:22
 


The man in me by ~alusbaykan
Alus Baykan  ©2007-2010 ~alusbaykan

Bob Dylan@Milano '07

The man in me will do nearly any task,
And as for compensation, there's little he would ask.
Take a woman like you
To get through to the man in me.

Storm clouds are raging all around my door,
I think to myself I might not take it any more.
Take a woman like your kind
To find the man in me.

But, oh, what a wonderful feeling
Just to know that you are near,
Sets my a heart a-reeling
From my toes up to my ears.

The man in me will hide sometimes to keep from bein' seen,
But that's just because he doesn't want to turn into some machine.
Took a woman like you
To get through to the man in me.

Bob Dylan-1970



Delawhere
Posted: Apr 21, 2010 - 18:01
 

you can't rate dylan on his vocal quality. I really dig the harmonica that slices through everything on this one.

Pharlap
(Bahama, NC)
Posted: Feb 17, 2010 - 13:40
 

 ScottN wrote:

And, don't forget Leonard Cohen.  Who, btw, can still fill a room w/his voice. An arena even. 02 arena in London in 2008. See and/or hear his DVD&CD Live in London performed when LC was 73 for a taste. Amazing & wonderful.  Dylan has earned his props for sure, but why oh why, did he do that awful Christmas album?

 

I saw Leonard in November and it was transcendent. The best concert I've ever seen and his voice (for those of us who like it) was superb. Of course, he has always used his female back up singers to perfection, and they were also superb.

But now, Bob's voice is sadly a shadow of what it once was. He simply doesn't have any range left at all.

sirdroseph
(Outer Mongolia)
Posted: Feb 17, 2010 - 13:35
 

Huge Dylan fan here, but not even I can defend him on this one!{#Lol}

unclelonghair
Posted: Feb 17, 2010 - 13:35
 

I seriously thought that this song was a cover of Bob Dylan by someone doing a parody of his singing.

It's like someone has their hand on Bob's volume control and twisting it back and forth while he's singing...

ScottN
(Vacationing in Gaza)
Posted: Dec 16, 2009 - 18:42
 

 keller1 wrote:


Dylan is arguably the best songwriter of the last four or five decades, ......
 
And, don't forget Leonard Cohen.  Who, btw, can still fill a room w/his voice. An arena even. 02 arena in London in 2008. See and/or hear his DVD&CD Live in London performed when LC was 73 for a taste. Amazing & wonderful.  Dylan has earned his props for sure, but why oh why, did he do that awful Christmas album?


keller1
(In A Gadda Da Vida, Baby)
Posted: Dec 16, 2009 - 18:08
 

 popmat wrote:
LOL - it never fails to amaze me that here we are nearly 50 years after Bob made his first recordings <1962> that there is still discussion over whether he can carry a tune or not or he 'can't sing'...blah...blah...blah!!   Like someone else noted earlier you either get it or you don't.  The first time I heard Dylan in 1965 I 'got it' and I've been listening to him ever since.   Yup, some people have prettier voices but rarely has anyone one-upped Bob on his own stuff.  Hendrix comes to mind......Oh well, it's good to know after all these years he still evokes this kind of passion  .... and laughing all the way to the bank!  LOL
 

Dylan is arguably the best songwriter of the last four or five decades, but almost invariably I prefer other peoples' versions of his songs to his own.

And if anybody offers to spin you some tracks from his new Christmas album, turn and run ... I heard his version of Do You Hear What I Hear about a week ago and I'm still trying to get over it.


alanthecowboy
(Lakefield)
Posted: Dec 16, 2009 - 18:01
 

 popmat wrote:
LOL - it never fails to amaze me that here we are nearly 50 years after Bob made his first recordings <1962> that there is still discussion over whether he can carry a tune or not or he 'can't sing'...blah...blah...blah!!   Like someone else noted earlier you either get it or you don't.  The first time I heard Dylan in 1965 I 'got it' and I've been listening to him ever since.   Yup, some people have prettier voices but rarely has anyone one-upped Bob on his own stuff.  Hendrix comes to mind......Oh well, it's good to know after all these years he still evokes this kind of passion  .... and laughing all the way to the bank!  LOL
 
I like to think I 'get' Bob, but Joan Osborne 'one-upped' him on this tune, big time.  Just my opinion, of course, but that's a great version.


Xeric
(Montana)
Posted: Nov 15, 2009 - 08:23
 

 FlatCat wrote:

I USED (pause) to like DYLAN (pause) and ALL (pause) that he WROTE  (p—a—-u—-s—-e).
Now I WINCE (pause) at the SOUND (pause) of EV'RY (pause) black NOTE.

 
{#Lol}


DaveInVA
(In a crumbling Queen Anne mansion in Damnville, VA)
Posted: Nov 15, 2009 - 08:21
 

For a minute there I thought he was singing about a "Strong Black Goat".

FlatCat
(Chicago)
Posted: Oct 14, 2009 - 21:22
 

 newwavegurly wrote:
The cadence/rhythm in which he "sings" this song is extremely annoying.
 
I USED (pause) to like DYLAN (pause) and ALL (pause) that he WROTE  (p—a—-u—-s—-e).
Now I WINCE (pause) at the SOUND (pause) of EV'RY (pause) black NOTE.


rez
Posted: Oct 14, 2009 - 21:17
 

popmat wrote:
LOL - it never fails to amaze me that here we are nearly 50 years after Bob made his first recordings <1962> that there is still discussion over whether he can carry a tune or not or he 'can't sing'...blah...blah...blah!! Like someone else noted earlier you either get it or you don't. The first time I heard Dylan in 1965 I 'got it' and I've been listening to him ever since. Yup, some people have prettier voices but rarely has anyone one-upped Bob on his own stuff. Hendrix comes to mind......Oh well, it's good to know after all these years he still evokes this kind of passion .... and laughing all the way to the bank! LOL

I think that's probably because a lot of people find it better to discuss Bob than actually listen to him.



denbear
(Denver, Colorado)
Posted: Oct 14, 2009 - 21:11
 

 popmat wrote:
LOL - it never fails to amaze me that here we are nearly 50 years after Bob made his first recordings <1962> that there is still discussion over whether he can carry a tune or not or he 'can't sing'...blah...blah...blah!!   Like someone else noted earlier you either get it or you don't.  The first time I heard Dylan in 1965 I 'got it' and I've been listening to him ever since.   Yup, some people have prettier voices but rarely has anyone one-upped Bob on his own stuff.  Hendrix comes to mind......Oh well, it's good to know after all these years he still evokes this kind of passion  .... and laughing all the way to the bank!  LOL
 
Thinking Grateful Dead's version of Knocking on Heaven's Door. Jerry Garcia, also of debatable voice talent, did an exceptional job on that and other tunes from Bob.


denbear
(Denver, Colorado)
Posted: Oct 14, 2009 - 21:08
 

Steve Hackett - Wild Orchids

countyman
(09 Stanley Cup Champs and Sixburgh)
Posted: Aug 12, 2009 - 19:58
 

 keller1 wrote:


And Steve Hackett's.
 
Which Hackett album is this on???


popmat
Posted: Jun 10, 2009 - 09:18
 

LOL - it never fails to amaze me that here we are nearly 50 years after Bob made his first recordings <1962> that there is still discussion over whether he can carry a tune or not or he 'can't sing'...blah...blah...blah!!   Like someone else noted earlier you either get it or you don't.  The first time I heard Dylan in 1965 I 'got it' and I've been listening to him ever since.   Yup, some people have prettier voices but rarely has anyone one-upped Bob on his own stuff.  Hendrix comes to mind......Oh well, it's good to know after all these years he still evokes this kind of passion  .... and laughing all the way to the bank!  LOL

segueman
(Spring, TX)
Posted: Jun 10, 2009 - 09:16
 

Good catch.  You're right.

 
birdland wrote:
I LOVE this. Funny, it's not likely that there was influence either way, but I can hear a bit of Waits in this. "Nighthawks" and this released the same year.

Interesting.

 



a_genuine_find
(not me, Radio Paradise)
Posted: Jun 10, 2009 - 09:06
 

help

newwavegurly
Posted: Jun 10, 2009 - 09:06
 

The cadence/rhythm in which he "sings" this song is extremely annoying.

jwb
Posted: Mar 07, 2009 - 12:38
 

Give me Joan Osborne over this any day.

Rotterdam
Posted: Feb 03, 2009 - 23:42
 

 stalfnzo wrote:
Of all of Dylan's horrible songs (and ALL of them ARE horrible), this is by far his most horrible.
 

Sorry, stalfnzo, I have to disagree with you.
The worst song by far, is "Lay Lady Lay (lay across my big brass bed...)," which makes me gag. I don't know what ever possessed him to write that one, or to think that it could be sexy. Or was that even his intention? Because it is repulsive. OK. I'm done.

HarrO
(Just Down the Hill from Paradise)
Posted: Feb 03, 2009 - 23:40
 

Great Album. Great Tune. If you don't get Bob, you don't get it.

stalfnzo
(Somewhere... out there)
Posted: Jan 03, 2009 - 08:04
 

Of all of Dylan's horrible songs (and ALL of them ARE horrible), this is by far his most horrible.