Writer: Dylan Producer: John Hammond Released: May 63, - TopicsExpress



          

Writer: Dylan Producer: John Hammond Released: May 63, Columbia Did not chart In April 1962, at Gerdes Folk City in New Yorks Greenwich Village, 20-year-old Bob Dylan gave a quick speech before playing one of his new songs: This here aint no protest song or anything like that, cause I dont write no protest songs, he said. Then he sang the first and third verses of the still-unfinished Blowin in the Wind. Published in full a month later in the folk journal Broadside and recorded on July 9th, 1962, for his second album, The Freewheelin Bob Dylan, Blowin in the Wind was Dylans first important composition. It is also the most famous protest song ever written. The Chad Mitchell Trio were the first to release a recording of it, and Peter, Paul and Mary turned it into an enormous hit in the summer of 1963. Still, everyone knew the song belonged to the burning-eyed young man who ruled New Yorks folk scene, and whose recording of it — just his brambly voice and fleet-fingered acoustic-guitar playing — was definitive. It probably remains Dylans most covered song, an all-purpose progressive anthem suggesting that things must and will change. The songs melody borrows from the slavery-era folk song No More Auction Block for Me, and its language is rooted as much in Woody Guthries earthy vernacular as in biblical rhetoric. But in a decisive break with the current-events conventions of topical folk songs, Dylan framed the crises around him in a series of fierce, poetic questions that addressed what he believed was mans greatest inhumanity to man: indifference. Some of the biggest criminals are those that turn their heads away when they see wrong, he declared in the Freewheelin liner notes. https://youtube/watch?v=vWwgrjjIMXA
Posted on: Tue, 28 Oct 2014 18:12:34 +0000

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