The music that Bob Dylan and members of The Band so famously recorded in a nondescript house in upstate New York in 1967 has intrigued fans for decades.
Columbia Records will release Bob Dylan’s The Bootleg Series, Vol. 10 – Another Self Portrait (1969-1971) on Aug. 27. The label says the set will bring a “fresh perspective to one of the artist’s most controversial periods and revealing it to be one of his most wonderfully creative and prolific.”
A previously unreleased Bob Dylan demo recording will be released next month on Record Store Day, and the song is set to appear on a future collection of unreleased Dylan recordings.
During the roughly 90 minute concert, the poet laureate of American music showed once again that he has a unique knack for re-inventing even his most famous compositions.
Columbia Records will release Bob Dylan’s The Bootleg Series Volume 9 – The Witmark Demos on Tuesday, Oct. 19, in conjunction with Columbia/Legacy’s release of the artist’s first eight long-playing albums in a box set titled Bob Dylan – The Original Mono Recordings.
Bob Dylan’s new album, Together Through Life, has entered both the U.S. and UK album charts at #1, marking the artist’s second consecutive U.S. No. 1 debut and his first chart-topping release in the UK since New Morning in 1970.
Bob Dylan’s new studio album, released on April 28, “Together Through Life,” was recorded late last year, prompted by the composition of a new song, “Life Is Hard.” The song was written for a forthcoming film by French director Oliver Dahan (La Vie En Rose).