35 Burst results for "Bob Dylan"

A highlight from IP#499 Gil Bailie  The Apocalypse of the Sovereign Self on Inside the Pages with Kris McGregor  Discerning Hearts podcasts

Discerning Hearts - Catholic Podcasts

21:30 min | 3 weeks ago

A highlight from IP#499 Gil Bailie The Apocalypse of the Sovereign Self on Inside the Pages with Kris McGregor Discerning Hearts podcasts

"Discerninghearts .com presents Inside the Pages, insights from today's most compelling authors. I'm your host, Chris McGregor, and I'm delighted to be joined by Gil Bailey, who is the founder of the Cornerstone Forum and a member of the Fellowship of Catholic Scholars and the College of Fellows of the Dominican School of Philosophy and Theology. He is the author of God's Gamble, The Gravitational Power of Crucified Love. With Gil Bailey, we go inside the pages of The Apocalypse of the Sovereign Self, Recovering the Christian Mystery of Personhood, published by Angelico Press. Gil, thank you so much for joining me. Thank you so much for having me. Pleasure to be here. It was just wonderful being able to dive into the pages of The Apocalypse of the Sovereign Self. I found it to be so provocative and also very compelling. It's one of those kind of books that causes you to look at things through different, maybe clear lenses. Does that make sense? Well, I hope so. That flatters me, but that was my intent. It's a complex problem we face, but I tried to lay it out in a way that would be at least interesting to the reader. Now, I should bring out the full name, including the subtitle, The Apocalypse of the Sovereign Self, Recovering the Christian Mystery of Personhood. Could you break that open for folks and help them understand why this is such an important subject right now? Well, first of all, before you get to the two, really two halves of the book, the first part, The Apocalypse of the Sovereign Self, and the second part, Recovering the Christian Mystery of Personhood. We're in a civilizational crisis, and it's a political and a political crisis, a deep relative to moral and spiritual crisis. And my friend and mentor, Rene Girard, summed up in one of their books when he wrote, No one takes the trouble to reflect uncompromisingly on the enigma of a historical situation here that is without precedent the death of all cultures. Now, that's a sweeping statement, but it's like statements made by Benedict XVI on Balthasar and others. It recognizes the unique depth of the crisis that we've been entering into for a long time. I think one of the key features of this crisis is that we have failed to recognize and do justice to the very thing that sets us apart, sets our human beings apart from the whole created order, namely our religious longing. It's a longing which cannot be extinguished. It's the only question of orienting it towards its fulfillment or squandering it on idols. And in our time as faith has receded, many are eager to reflect before any ideological fraction that promises to relieve the boredom of not having a real collision. So that's the situation we face. And in the first part of the book, I try to draw it out in that chapters are, you know, I'm not an academic. I have a law degree and I never practiced law, but I began reading Western China many, many years ago. So the way to make this crisis intelligible and easy to recognize is I lay it out in chapters where I talk about people like Bob Dylan and Theresa Mitzvah and Flannery O 'Connor and Virginia Woolf and Descartes and Rousseau and Nietzsche and T .F. Eliot and Freud and all these. But in each of these chapters, I try to tease out one of the facets of spiritual crisis. And in the second half of the book, there's an edition on something. I mean, the way to summarize it is from Romano Lardini wrote in the 20th century, a book strikingly entitled The End of the Modern World. And in it, there's something that summarizes the second half of the book. Well, it actually connects the first half and the second half. And I'm going to quote it to you. The knowledge of what it means to be a person is inextricably bound up with the faith of Christianity. An affirmation and cultivation of the personal can endure for a time perhaps after faith has been extinguished. But gradually, they too will be lost. So the knowledge of what it means to be a person inextricably bound up with Christianity came into our vocabulary, our intellectual vocabulary. When Tertullian defined the Trinity as three persons and one God. So the word self and the word person are not only not synonymous, they are antonyms in a way. A person called in sin. The self is an antonymic creature who regards the will and the essential component of this being. And that whole triumph of will to coin a threat, not to coin a threat, but to pick up on Christ, so to say, with Nietzsche and Hitler. We think everything depends on our will. And I don't have a quote in front of me, but in the Casey decision, I think it was 1990, the Supreme Court said in the majority opinion that everyone has a right to use their own reality, to define reality. That's Nietzsche. That's that, of course. Right. But now it's become part of our it's what it's what a lot of people believe. And that's why we have friends, gender nonsense and who knows what else. But you can just make it up as you go along. If it's your reality is entirely up to you to determine by an act of will. And it's unbelievable what comes of that. And what we have to understand is that we are not the world does not conform to our will. We conform to our own. We are called in them. So anyway, the crisis we're living in is a crisis that became cultural with Nancy and Piddler and so on. But now it's become conventional in the sense that triumph of the will is everywhere. It's at one time, of course, and it's degradation of our real person to be a person is to be called in sin. And I think it's imperative we understand the predicament that we're in. And I think that's really important. I think for most in the culture today, for several generations, at the very least, if not many more in that we've never had the types of conversations in our formation, our educational venues about this particular subject. I mean, you spoke of a great friendship you had with Rene Girard, an important figure, philosopher, teacher, Stanford, and some would say a theologian. I know that Bishop Baron referred to him as one day. He may be considered, as he said, a father of modern theology because of what he described as that mimic theory that we as individuals and not necessarily as persons, because there's that distinction between the individual and what it is to be a person. And you knew him very well. That whole understanding of, as some would say, the mimic theory. What are your thoughts about that? Well, it was a great privilege to know him and he dispensed with him for decades. And I think his work will take a while, like all great thinkers. It takes a while to sort itself out. The first take on Girard is that it's all about violence and imitation. And of course, in some way it is. And my first book was all about that. But there's so much more to it. And one of the things I tried in this book is to expand the understanding of Girard's his favorite theologians are the same as mine. It was John Culver II, Benedict, Van Valken, even though Van Valken had some complaints about Rene's early work. And that's before the real theological implications came out in its later book. But he had great affection for John Culver II and especially for Cardinal Ratzinger, Benedict XVI, but also do it again, and so on. So I try to integrate Rene's work with these theologians. And I think it helped fill out a deep Catholic understanding of our crisis. And so I think we're in a difficult situation. But we have been given intellectual and spiritual giant whose work now we can make available to ourselves that would reckon with the predicament we're in. Well, I think that's how Rene Girard and how someone even like a G .K. Chesterton, for example, they were able to challenge them in their early lives when they looked at literature, when they looked at art and those popular cultural icons, those types of works that had deeper meanings to them. And they were able to see certain truths and certain movements and things. And then they came out and then they expressed it, why it touches the human heart in certain ways, either for good or for ill. And they were able to distinguish that. And I think that's the importance of looking at those figures who have a gift for that. And you do that, like you said, whether it's Bob Dylan or it's Flannery O 'Connor or even someone who captures the heart and imagination of the world like a tres. What is it that they're trying to communicate to us in? What is the potential, the beauty, the good, the true, but also the warning that are contained in their expressions of their works? And I think that's what you're trying to do in the book, in each of the many, many chapters that you have on those different type of whether it's literature or it's prose or, again, even in music. And so I think that is a wonderful way to go about it, don't you? You know, I'm so happy you mentioned it because it reminds me of something that I think your listeners might be interested in. It's a way of approaching the situation we're in. von Balfour Jarre, in one of his writings, says to human history after the Christian revelation, consist of a mutual intensification of the yes and no to Christ. Now pause and think about that. History after Christ consists of the mutual intensification of the yes and no to Christ. If that seems to require too much theological sophistication. Bob Dylan said something exactly like that in this 1979 song, God Accured Somebody, in which he said, it may be the devil or it may be the Lord, but you're going to have to bury somebody. So both the theologian and the popular poet listed only two choices. The theologian said it's the yes or no to Christ, and the poet musician said we're going to end up serving either the devil or the Lord. Now where Testament comes in is the Testament said once that if everyone, I'm going to paraphrase him because I think it's a little punchier to say this, like if everyone lived a thousand years they would all die Catholic, which is the paraphrase of what he once said. And the reason is, I would say, he didn't spell it out, I'm going to, if we had a thousand years of experience to look back on, we would realize that all the little choices were made along the way were in some small way the yes or the no to Christ, or the choice between the devil and the Lord. And then we would understand, if we had a thousand years of experience, that the drama of history is the mutual intensification of yes and no to Christ. And the implication that for our time and thought is that as the world becomes more emphatic in its projection of Christianity, we have to become more compelling in our sense of Christ in its church. over spiritual 3000 formation programs and prayers, all available to you with no hidden fees or subscriptions. Did you also know that you can listen to Discerning Hearts programming wherever you download your favorite podcasts, like Apple podcasts, Google Play, iHeartRadio, Spotify, even on Audible, as well as numerous other worldwide podcast streaming platforms? And did you know that Discerning Hearts also has a YouTube channel? Be sure to check out all these different places where you can find Discerning Hearts Catholic podcasts dedicated to those on the spiritual journey. Discerning Hearts is your gateway to a deeper understanding of discerning life's mysteries and growing deeper in your relationship with Christ. Your likes and reviews not only affirm the value these podcasts bring to your spiritual journey, but also help others discover the guidance and inspiration they seek. Share your thoughts, spread the word, and be part of a community that's committed to elevating hearts and minds through meaningful conversations. Your feedback fuels our mission to help others climb higher and go deeper in their spiritual growth. Like, review, and let your voice be a beacon of light for fellow seekers on this spiritual journey. We now return to Inside the Pages. We're talking with Gail Bailey, the author of The Apocalypse of the Sovereign Self, recovering the Christian mystery of personhood. To understand the importance of what it is to be a person, the Church Fathers didn't use until it was really brought into the context of the Trinity, the three persons, as you pointed out. But what is the Trinity? It's relational. It's a relationship. There's an identity, but it's also in relation. So when Dylan talks about whether you are to serve, you got to serve somebody, it's either going to be the devil or it's going to be Christ. And that entails when you serve, it's going to be relational. You can't get out of it. And to say that I have this individual autonomy all to myself to do and think the way I want to, it's to negate the relationship. And you can't get around that. But yet that's what the culture is implying, isn't it? It is. And one of the things that's lost in that emphasis on self and self -will is the idea and this is involved with our great contribution, the idea of the field drama that we are in, we live dramatically, we're part of a drama that's unfolding and our task is to live and our task is to fulfill the obligation that are incumbent upon us as members of the cast. We have to live in such a way that we ourselves and our loved ones and spreading out for those we know or maybe those of you catch a glimpse of us coming out of the church on Wednesday morning and wonder what the heck are people doing in church on Wednesday morning. Whatever it is, we have an obligation to live in the drama on behalf of Christ in this church in whatever way we can. Whatever our role in life, our vocation in life, our situation, there's always an opportunity to be an icon of Christ and to contribute to the historical field drama that way. And for years I've quoted the 13th century Islamic poet Rumi who said, and I'm gonna quote, he said, be like one who when he walks into the room, luck shifts to the one who needs you. And there's a Christian analog to that which is of course St. Peter who said always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks here to give a reason for the hope you have. So we have to be beacons of a hope that may be totally puzzling to others but if we live in such a way that it's compelling, they will at some point want to find out how we tend to have that hope and a conversation can be had that could be very fruitful. So we live dramatically, not in some self -conscious way or in a physical way, but our lives should be evangelical in the sense that we should be willing and eager to allow anyone who cares to know why it is we had hope even when the situation is, it's never hopeless, but is dire as there is today and may very well be more so in the future.

Gail Bailey Chris Mcgregor Dylan Rene Girard Rumi Girard Gil Bailey Romano Lardini 1990 Angelico Press Benedict Xvi Second Half Benedict TWO Hitler First Half 20Th Century Wednesday Morning 1979 Van Valken
A highlight from The Hunter Biden Plea Deal Stinks

The Hugh Hewitt Show: Highly Concentrated

03:01 min | 2 months ago

A highlight from The Hunter Biden Plea Deal Stinks

"Welcome to today's podcast sponsored by Hillsdale College all things Hillsdale Hillsdale dot edu I encourage you to take advantage of the many free online courses there And of course a listen to the Hillsdale dialogues all of them at Q for Hillsdale comm or just Google Apple iTunes and Hillsdale Morning glory America bones were high candidate fully recovered I want you to know that I Switched up my intro music today because I got a question yesterday about the grand old pod The grand old pod is only available to subscribers to the universe And it's five days a week special content only online and I always end every grand old pod that I host with my back pages Performed at the 30th anniversary Concert of Bob Dylan, which was I think in 1997 I think But maybe 1974 1994 excuse me, but it included an Amazing group of musicians Dylan of course George Harris and Tom Petty Eric Clapton Neil Young and Roger McGuinn now, I didn't play bass for all of them I just want to be clear about that And so I can't speak to each of the idiosyncrasies of these but these six guys got together and they played my back pages It's always been one of my very favorite tunes and so I conclude every Grand old pod With this this is Eric Clapton singing right now And I always put it at the end of the thing to signify that we're signing off a grand old pod So if you want to hear it every time that I'm on the air you can go there and find it now Let's get to the news because I'm going to spend Most of ours two and three on the hunter -biden plea deal I wrote about it yesterday for the Washington Post more than 3 ,500 comments in under 24 hours and 3 ,499 are negative or close and that's because I didn't talk about Donald Trump There is nothing to do between Donald Trump and hunter -biden hunter -biden is pleading guilty To two tax charges when he ought to have been charged with three tax felonies He's proposing to plead guilty to two tax misdemeanors He ought to have been charged hunter -biden not Joe Biden Joe Biden's pictures on your screen Hunter Biden not to have been charged with three tax felonies of evasion for 19 For 2014 2018 and 2019 and there's some evidence in the record that he obscured $17 ,000 ,000 in income and He's going to pay a fine of $25 ,000 he also illegally obtained a handgun by lying on the handgun form and that's going to be a diverted sentence So the reason it drew so much attention is it's so nasty of a plea deal.

Joe Biden Roger Mcguinn George Harris 1997 $25 ,000 $17 ,000 ,000 Tom Petty Hillsdale College Six Guys 2019 Donald Trump Two Tax Misdemeanors 1974 Dylan Three Tax Felonies 2014 More Than 3 ,500 Comments Two Tax Charges Yesterday Hunter Biden
"bob dylan" Discussed on Hit Parade | Music History and Music Trivia

Hit Parade | Music History and Music Trivia

06:13 min | 7 months ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Hit Parade | Music History and Music Trivia

"When catch C corps attempted to publish his version of the song and Bob Dylan learned of its existence, Dylan agreed to a 50 50 publishing split, making catch C corps one of a handful of songwriters to receive co writing credit with Bob Dylan.

Bob Dylan Dylan
"bob dylan" Discussed on The Dork Forest

The Dork Forest

03:25 min | 1 year ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on The Dork Forest

"What are you singing? Just because of is annunciation. But I love the covers when somebody else does a Bob Dylan song. I'm like, listen to those lyrics. So that's interesting. Yeah, so some people have a thing about his voice, but what I was trying to argue earlier is he clearly can sing anything he wants. He's shown it. Like he said, a different voice. With albums, they often put the lyrics in their liner notes. Yeah, they do. And you can see them all every single song he's ever written is on Bob Dylan dot com. You can read them all if you want, and they come across well on the page. For me, as a singer, his approach to phrasing is like nobody else really. It comes from listening to people like Sinatra and the great crooners. I sing a line to my daughter in standing in the doorway all the time, and I'm going to biff it right now, but it's because I think it's one of those things where if I know the whole verse, I can do it. Yeah, but he basically says something like yesterday, everything was moving too fast. Today, it's moving too slow. And he sings the fast part, super fast. And it's just a slow part. Really labored. And so he gives this character to these lines. It's almost meta. He's a very clever singer. Right. When he dials down on a line or two, he really gives him everything he can in the moment. It gives them this rich character, which I appreciate as well. So all this to say, I think, I hope I put sort of the bug in your ear to go. You really did. This has been a fascinating hour of about an artist that I have always enjoyed in passing. And so this sort of deep dive into it is I love it. I love it where it's not and yeah, I got information, but I also got some fun stories and a sort of a new glimpse of the guy himself. So rangers were listening here to kind of. Let's get it right. Beach. And the name of your podcast is creative control. There are two K's because of some lyric because of some song. What is it? That is a song by a band called hot snakes that I coughed the title from the show from and was using their theme music with quasi permission. Okay. But I don't use it very much anymore. I happen to I often just use a little bed track from the artist I'm talking to you, but I don't know if you know that you wouldn't have noticed this. Jackie, but that song by hot snakes creative control was featured on your episode because you didn't have any music I could use. There's no one. And so there's just Mike Rick Berg singing the dark forest theme song that you are. So but it's at vishka, but it's about VI, SH. It gotta spell KH, a edit a, it'll be in the notes. I just did vicious podcasts. You could do a little crossover if you like. Thanks so much for doing the show. Absolutely pleasure, Jackie. Thank you so much for asking me. It really is an honor. Thank you. You're welcome and rangers..

Bob Dylan Sinatra Mike Rick Berg Jackie
"bob dylan" Discussed on The Dork Forest

The Dork Forest

05:35 min | 1 year ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on The Dork Forest

"I want to say, the song something by the time the George route, he did the Warren Zevon thing. I saw him, play two shows. Right. In Detroit and I want to say it was like 2006, let's say, could be wrong about nose. Maybe O four. I saw him do two shows. He was doing three shows at a venue in Detroit. And I went the first night and that day, the governor declared it in Michigan. Bob Seger day. So Dylan did a bob chief in the encore and everyone went nuts. Right. Again, I don't think he'd done him and his band had done it before since they just did it that night. And then the next night, my wife happened to be her sales job, roderick to Detroit, so we agreed we would go, we got to meet up and see the second show. And I says to my wife, I says, you know what's going to happen here tonight? I bet that either Jack White of the white stripes or M and M will join Bob Dylan tonight. And I was sort of joking that we were those guys. Yeah, those guys lived there. I'd seen the white stripes due Dillon songs live, I knew a new Jack White loved him. So the second night's rolling along great show on core who steps out onto the stage Jack White. What song do they do of Dylan's none? They do a white stripe song. Oh my gosh, Dylan is singing the song ball and biscuit by the white stripes with Jack White playing guitar. I don't even know if Jack's saying, I don't think he did. So what you're Jack White, you know, you're probably 20 odd years old. Right. Not only are you singing with Bob Dylan, he has chosen to say one of your songs. Yeah. Come on. So they have this like close relationship. Is there bootlegs of some of this stuff? I've looked for some of it and I feel like I encountered some shoddy YouTube recording of sure, a ball and biscuit. I think there is that on the Bob Dylan site that Warren Zevon and George Harrison stuff, I was alluding to, it might still be up. But at the time, the Bob Dylan dot com site would post live cool alive MP3s. Okay. Of such things. So I heard them do something and I heard that. I had that somewhere, probably saved. Yeah, that's super fun. Yeah, so he has done covers. In fact, prior to this album rough and rowdy ways, he did.

Jack White Detroit Dylan Warren Zevon Bob Dylan Bob Seger roderick Michigan Dillon Jack George Harrison YouTube
"bob dylan" Discussed on The Dork Forest

The Dork Forest

05:31 min | 1 year ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on The Dork Forest

"Still is. It hasn't gone anywhere. You said was. Yeah, yeah, presidents. We're not doing it. And you're like, I wish I took a shower. And I was like, you look like your dork. You look like that rugged Bob Dylan. Yeah. That's fine. You got that vibe going. It's nice. You have that. That's true. You're right. Thank you. Thank you for the compliment. I was feeling self conscious now I feel good. Now you feel good because you're it's a good-looking Bob Dylan, because that dude absolutely always kind of a goonie looking dude. But I don't know why do you think about Bob Dylan, by the way? Except for that he was was he a Rolling Stone? He was not in the room. He had a song called like a Rolling Stone. That was it. That was it? No, nothing about bob. You know nothing. I know that my brother Phil really likes him. Now, I know some of your brothers seem cool and at least one of them based on our conversation. One of them I might not jive with is Phil a cool brother. Oh, Phil's a cool brother. He's been on the dark forest twice. He has talked about hitchhiking. Which he and Eddie also talked about. Lord of the Rings. Oh. So those were his two organs. One of the rings is basically an epic hitchhiking tail, isn't it? It's really doing. Truly, truly an epic hitch I can tell that he is. He couldn't be more interested. He wants to come back on and talk about fly fishing. My brother Russ has been on talking about the hallmark channel. My sister Darla has been on talking about sort of preparing a quick meals. She enjoys she joins fancy meals done quickly. That's who doesn't. I mean, isn't that what fast food is? I mean, when you think about it, one of the sandwiches is pretty elaborate. It's got three buns, two patties. Properly. Yeah, it would take it would probably take you know 45 minutes and here we live in a society where you get it in three minutes. It's true. It's just out and it's been nuked into a gray color that who doesn't want any part of that. Absolutely. Yes. What do you know about Bob Dylan? Well, you can't see them, but to my to my left. We're on a video chat thing here. I have every single Bob Dylan record and box set. All of them are here. Is there redundancy? No, not no, not in the Bob Dylan realm. Okay. For instance, I have four Beatles box sets of that are ostensibly the same. The mono box set, and then I have the stereo box set. I have them in both CD and vinyl formats. So you're not wrong to ask this is a valid question. It's what you're telling me. But there's duplication in the sense that they'll put out a bootleg series. Bob Dylan will and it'll be kind of an alternate version of an album we've all come to know and love. But I mean, it's really alternate. It's like outtakes and the original album might be 12 songs. The bootleg series will be like 80 songs. So it's not really, it's like a whole other universe. Right, right. So yeah, I have everything. And then again, everything on CD with Dylan. I became I found out about Bob Dylan. When I was a little boy because I would read a lot about The Beatles. Okay..

Bob Dylan Phil hallmark channel Darla Eddie bob Russ Dylan
Tour Manager Mick Brigden Dead at 73

Ace and TJ

00:35 sec | 2 years ago

Tour Manager Mick Brigden Dead at 73

"And then. The longtime manager for the rolling stones and bob bob dylan died in a freak accident. He was digging a hole for the family. Dog got inside the grave and it collapsed in on him. Ou and talk about a guy who's got stories about the record. The rock and roll world rolling stones. And bob dylan through their height. He was their manager but yeah he's digging a grave for the family dog and it collapsed on him and they said he dies instantly. But how do they know that that i mean. That's a truly dish was he doing. I wanted to know you got down in. It and the dog hadn't even died yet. I think right. I think it was just thick. Yeah

Bob Bob Dylan OU Bob Dylan
"bob dylan" Discussed on Caffeinated Humor: Sarcastic Comedy For The Masses

Caffeinated Humor: Sarcastic Comedy For The Masses

03:05 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Caffeinated Humor: Sarcastic Comedy For The Masses

"Break. Go look at. The girl was just sex on a stick now. The two of them should own at up to solid movie. So why does the movie suck after much. Thought i keep coming back to dillon. The mumbling poet himself dylan is synonymous with the sixties the whole misguided decade and the thoughts behind it. It's always interesting to talk to a true seventies hippie. I mean they'll tell you about how they change the world but if you press them for details they tend to get a little sullen and then they slip out to go get high and of drugs. Expand your mind. What are the people that take them. Always talk about the same exact shit now as part of my extensive research on folk music at about fifteen twenty minutes on youtube. I am currently listening to dylan's times. They are a changeon on youtube. It's a solid song. You can even make out. Most of dylan's words. But that is old. Dylan or rather young dylan. Old dillon. also known as now dylan. Sounds like he's got about a half dozen marbles in his mouth and a sense of timing is just gone. One mumbled line runs into the next without pause and even the piano players having trouble keeping up all right enough with dylan rant. It's almost too easy. Here's a poem. I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness starved hysterical naked dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn looking for an angry fix angel headed hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly khan connection to the starry dynamo in the machinery of night. Yeah that's kind of shit the sixties offered. That's how by allen ginsberg widely reputed to be the finest poet of the sixties. Suddenly the sixties. Make sense if that's your finest poet. I'm stunned by how badly ginsburg needed a beating. For this self-indulgent crap that's a quote by the way and i was incidentally thrown out of my college comparative literature class for stating that exact quote. Some hippies specially college professors have no sense of humor. I think my biggest issue with gulf music is the folks that make the music whereas the music itself. There's more than a couple that are bad. Don't tell anyone. I said that though. It's kind of embarrassing. It's like saying like ballroom dancing time for some coffee. Thanks again for listening. Do me a favor. Follow and subscribe to the podcast. Listen the more episodes. Click on the episode name. Look at the show. Notes can have a little quote for me. But also the affiliates you'll be able to get the caffeinated humor book from amazon. Got the new one coming out soon. That'll be book number seven. I appreciate it. Thank you much have a great day..

amazon Dylan youtube allen ginsberg two sixties dylan dillon seventies One mumbled line about a half dozen marbles book number seven about fifteen twenty minutes more than a couple times negro ginsburg
"bob dylan" Discussed on Caffeinated Humor: Sarcastic Comedy For The Masses

Caffeinated Humor: Sarcastic Comedy For The Masses

03:23 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Caffeinated Humor: Sarcastic Comedy For The Masses

"That because to erase it is to almost try to act like it never happened and that's exactly how it happens again..

"bob dylan" Discussed on Rolling Stone Music Now

Rolling Stone Music Now

06:23 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Rolling Stone Music Now

"Good thing you be. Where have you been my dog. That was considered pretty blasphemous at the time because it was almost irreverent version. It was not a you know Kind of folk version. You know rendition. you so you have to remember in the early in the early seventies when that came out it was considered pretty pretty out there and it was pretty controversial. People hated it. But i listening back to this list. I i really liked it a lot. I think again. It's an example of someone just like really recasting a song in their own million as it were. I think it is aged. Really well of which i i get a kick at. I love my chemical romance. And i get a kick of what they did but i don't know it's desolation road. I can't tell if it's good or just sort of fun to me. I mean look to me. There's no topping the original desolation row. Which is just like this. All time classic dylan song but i will say i appreciate that cover in the sense that it introduced that song to a whole new generation of people who now listen to love that song. Even if they're not listening to bob's version it helps the song live on. And i appreciate that much of a comment but but yeah fair enough. Yes it did help. The it did translate to a new generation and it was. It was interesting to hear them. Take it on davidson. Sure jeff buckley expert him doing just like a woman. What was he actually inspired by the nina simone version. A little bit. That's a good question. i'm not really sure. No he grew up. Jeff grew up. Hearing bob dylan records from like his mom and stuff so she had all those I don't know if she had nina. Simone records and he wasn't being fan but he moved york nineties and in columbia. Who just like worship dylan and leonard cohen haley jackson and always people and just gave jeff all those. When the columbia you know Back catalogue closet. Just gave him all these records and and that's just really covering a lot of the songs i think he is. Version is it adds a whole new kind of tender aspect to it that necessarily in bob's which is obligated mendocino's verbally. Let's just a minute of david. Brown talking rambling. Jack elliott about bob dunne is a story about hearing a song for the first time i think at a party with bob playing it. I i remember Whether it was at first time ever or just another time in cambridge we were at a party at taj mahals house and bob was seeing a song that he'd just written about emmett till and he was standing in the living room surrounded by about thirty people. And if you were standing six feet away you couldn't hear what he was saying. But because of the thick pro around him but i was standing one layer back from the center and i could i could hear what he was saying and one of the people there but i didn't know it then was a young girl named bonnie raitt and i later met bonnie raitt at a folk festival and she was performing and she said you remember being dazs thousand bible saying is that And we were all there. And i said oh. I didn't know who she was at the time in the crowd. You know but she was soap reminisce about that great party that because i think that was the first time she'd ever met bob. Well that was in Probably nineteen sixty three. What was it like hearing him sing that song like a protests political song there was no microphone. Novak bunch of people you know and trying to sing it allowed the good to project you know through the crowd so everybody room but it wasn't loud enough to hear more than four people away but it was good. He had a tremendous amount of force of energy and emotion is singing but Most people didn't like it sounded his voice at all because it sounded like a kind of a teenager screaming at his parents or so it was kind of a annoying raspy tone people were all complaining so worry about the singing by listen to the words. I always don't shut up into. Yeah he was seeing song about that murder and emmett till and the whole thing and and how powerful and was very powerful hearing him. I thought that was very powerful. Yes because you could feel his anger it. He translated that very well through the words and kind of deliberately stupid strom that he invented on guitar. He's very good guitar player. I love that played even back then but he had invented a sort of a dramatized. Dumb strom I just made that word up now to decide that and then i mean I never could find words to tell you what what that strum. I just found a words down. Thank you she That's what it was. It was kind of a deliberately monotonous and the rhythm and speed would kind of speed of it slowdown and speed up and slow down with the emotional content of the words so it was. The guitar was directly wired to Is emotional state as he was seeing. I and i thought that was even a very clever way of having guitar. Be part of the vocal. Yeah that.

bonnie raitt Jeff Jack elliott jeff buckley columbia six feet cambridge jeff bob davidson leonard cohen haley jackson first time bob dunne Novak nina simone york more than four people david early seventies Brown
"bob dylan" Discussed on Rolling Stone Music Now

Rolling Stone Music Now

03:52 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Rolling Stone Music Now

"Ideas You know and i can understand bob side because what did you get a sense of what lenoir wanted from those from those sessions. Those kind of odd. Did you know. I mean he. He directs some of this stuff. That bob would come in and say you know i wanted more this way. I here at this way. You know. And so i can understand bob and he wrote a song. You wanted a certain way right. It's much more as an earthier record. I mean then. Then maybe then landlo- number he has that sort of those sort of sonic soundscape things that he does really well but and he did he really well on oh mercy but maybe maybe bob didn't want it on this phone or you know he did you. He did a lot of stupid youtube. Yeah yeah so. I think if you have a hit record of big hit record one group you're going to try to use that influence on somebody else right you know. Yeah yeah totally different. Black and white and i right. What would they debate in front of you guys or was that something. They talked about on the corner. You know around for a couple of minutes. I remember sometime. We'd be in the studio recording and baba. Just get up from the guitar walkout. We're just sitting there waiting. What's going on but half our leaders bob. I'd rather buy well. He you know he come back in. I'd say hey what's going on. And he's all. I wanna do it my way. I'm gonna do it this way. You know and i mean he he'd have to be by self to figure out. What are you really wanted. And he did it. Though biking motorcycle we had an actual regular boxer angle bicycles so that was the legendary texas musician. Og myers with david brown. And we're back to talking about bob dylan on his eightieth birthday. Now number two on our list of the greatest don't covers of all time is nina simone. Doing just like tom thumb's blues. Lost is the time and man. Is that great. Like everyone of her. She does just like a woman in another everyone of her doing coverage are just extraordinary and kind of just take them into a new a whole other universe. There's so many people from so many different genres who sang doing songs. And so many people of color sam cooke blown in the wind is a number seven. I think one of the things that people get a little bit confused about with bob dylan is especially now is like i was just some like boring white male boomer and the thing is i think any fair assessment of his impact and his greatness kind of transcends assignment would that be fair. You want kind of dig into that for a second absolutely. I think you can see dylan's influence across so many different genres and it's incredibly reductive view. Someone who just part of one scene or one moment or one genre. Bob dylan was famously. Incredibly influenced by great black artists. Who went before him. Data inspired him to pick up an acoustic guitar and sing and he paid that influence forward on generation after generation of songwriters of all kinds all genres. And that's one of the things that makes his discography last the way that it has. I mean it's obviously very interesting. To see the influence from say data to bob dylan and then sam cooke hearing bullying the wind. And then then. Sam cooke turning around and writing a change is gonna come in part inspired by dylan so he. He is one of those people who helped make american music like a series of tributaries a series of buys of that flow into each other. You know and that's a big part of what he did. going to. number three is The birds mr tambourine man. It's.

bob dylan youtube dylan nina simone david brown one moment one scene one genre Bob dylan eightieth birthday lenoir bob texas one Og myers Sam cooke american sam cooke tom thumb one of the things
"bob dylan" Discussed on Rolling Stone Music Now

Rolling Stone Music Now

01:41 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Rolling Stone Music Now

"It is an opportunity to reflect upon all that bob dole has given us and he's he's given us a lot. Maybe we start by taking a look at this list that we at rolling stone released this week to celebrate the birthday and it was the eighty greatest covers of bob dylan songs and let's start with argument ranked very high on. That list is knocking on heaven's door by guns and roses. And certainly when i was in high school i thought that absolutely ruled. I don't know. I don't know if it's great horrible. Bob apparently hated it when he was asked about it. He said something very interesting about guns and roses basically suggested that they were fake. Which i don't agree with him on but he was not a fan of it. which isn't unsurprising. I just don't know if it's good or ridiculous. I i can't decide what we're we're obviously. We institutionally landed on great. Since it's like number seven and list but what do we think beyond. I sort of scratch my head a little bit at that one to being so high up on the list you know. I think it's also a case. Where in bob's original of that. Most of his originals are hard to top. That one secure. Bob's original is so it's so kind of ghostly powerful in high always found two guns and roses Screeching and so yeah. I wish they'd been a little lower on the list myself. I say yeah. If you look at the guns and roses songs where they covered nineteen seventy-three soundtrack classics. It's the worst live on. That dies much much. Better for nineteen seventy-three psych soundtrack. Song by guns and

Bob bob david first neil young last couple of years two guns nineteen seventy-three soundtr helpless three one dylan nineteen seventy brian
Best Covers of Bob Dylan Songs

Rolling Stone Music Now

01:41 min | 2 years ago

Best Covers of Bob Dylan Songs

"It is an opportunity to reflect upon all that bob dole has given us and he's he's given us a lot. Maybe we start by taking a look at this list that we at rolling stone released this week to celebrate the birthday and it was the eighty greatest covers of bob dylan songs and let's start with argument ranked very high on. That list is knocking on heaven's door by guns and roses. And certainly when i was in high school i thought that absolutely ruled. I don't know. I don't know if it's great horrible. Bob apparently hated it when he was asked about it. He said something very interesting about guns and roses basically suggested that they were fake. Which i don't agree with him on but he was not a fan of it. which isn't unsurprising. I just don't know if it's good or ridiculous. I i can't decide what we're we're obviously. We institutionally landed on great. Since it's like number seven and list but what do we think beyond. I sort of scratch my head a little bit at that one to being so high up on the list you know. I think it's also a case. Where in bob's original of that. Most of his originals are hard to top. That one secure. Bob's original is so it's so kind of ghostly powerful in high always found two guns and roses Screeching and so yeah. I wish they'd been a little lower on the list myself. I say yeah. If you look at the guns and roses songs where they covered nineteen seventy-three soundtrack classics. It's the worst live on. That dies much much. Better for nineteen seventy-three psych soundtrack. Song by guns and

Bob Dole BOB Bob Dylan
"bob dylan" Discussed on Rolling Stone Music Now

Rolling Stone Music Now

03:40 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Rolling Stone Music Now

"More or less. Bob dylan's eightieth. Birthday was his eightieth birthday. The other day. Happy birthday bob dylan. Someone told a story about when when it was bob's birthday. One day on the rolling thunder tour in the whole crowd sang. Happy birthday to him and he hid facing the amps. While they sing. So i can only imagine his reaction to the world's celebration of his eightieth birthday. I'm sure you clicked on every logistical And just really based in just really felt the world's love and it was great for him any. How do you think anything of spent his eightieth birthday. I think it's worth noting that his only social media post that mentioned we're selling a new edition of heaven's gate whisky brand. That was the only formal that was the only marking that you know. He was photographed by the paparazzi. Recently which is pretty rare and so he's still upright but he hasn't. I imagine birthday was quiet dinner at his house in malibu or something i just had no idea. We know the the things that bob does for fun. What he paints he He scopes those wrought iron gates that he likes to do the whisky brand is named after he probably did some nice wrought iron sculpting and painting if i had to guess and then maybe a nice dinner. That sounds about right. Bob tour finally came to a halt for a year. He spent the last year at home and that is a year. I'm very curious about will. Never probably find out but this is a man who is been on tour consistently since since when andy well he started the never ending tour back in one thousand nine hundred eighty eight but his last year where he didn't make one live appearance that entire year with one thousand nine hundred seventy seven before twenty twenty so this is probably a bit of a stir crazy dona. I imagine unless you know unless he realized he liked it. And maybe he'll cut down on touring here in his ninth decade. There's been no announcement of more dates yet. When plenty of acts are announcing shows at this point he could be on the road as soon as next month if he wanted to be. And there's no word yet. I would like to thank him for not saying anything. Weird about the virus. Unlike some of his classic rock contemporaries. He said not one weird or disturbing thing about covid nineteen. There's still time. But he said nothing. The only thing he propagated conspiracy theories about was the jfk assassination and he did so so artfully in that tremendous song that i'm actually inclined to forgive him. I think that that that song was a magnificent and he did give us a new album. Pretty good album. We'll sleepy but great stuff on it. Simon does not think it was sleepy. Not sleepy at all that. That is a wide awake fully alert doing them. But it is an opportunity to reflect upon all that bob dole has given us and he's he's given us a lot. Maybe we start by taking a look at this list that we at rolling stone released this week to celebrate the birthday and it was the eighty greatest covers of bob dylan songs and let's start with argument ranked very high on. That list is knocking on heaven's door by guns and roses. And certainly when i was in high school i thought that absolutely ruled. I don't know. I don't know if it's great horrible. Bob apparently hated it when he was asked about it. He said something very interesting about guns and roses basically suggested that they were fake. Which i don't agree with him on but he was not a fan of it. which isn't unsurprising. I just don't know if it's good or ridiculous. I i can't decide what we're we're obviously. We institutionally landed on great. Since it's like number seven and list but what do we think beyond. I.

bob dylan Simon bob dole eightieth last year next month this week ninth decade malibu Bob eighty greatest covers twenty twenty One day nineteen bob number seven Bob dylan eightieth birthday one thousand nine hundred eigh nine hundred seventy seven
Sarah Harding on Dharma Journeys of Practice and Translation

The Wisdom Podcast

01:58 min | 2 years ago

Sarah Harding on Dharma Journeys of Practice and Translation

"Sarah i wanted to welcome and thank you for joining us on the wisdom dot chat but i wanted to start with how you first encountered bosom. How did you go down this past Was it through a book or you meet a teacher. How'd you first encounter the buddha dhamma. How far back should i go. Nats let's keep it to these lives. Okay that's fortunate since i don't remember the other ones Yeah i will. I got interested in meditation in eastern phosphine. Everything while i was still in high school actually and then i read some books like autobiography yogi and things like that and i read the life of miller that was one of my first folks which has stuck with me all this time till now even and then i What happened. I met some tibetans in arizona prescott arizona. Actually in dan. I dropped out of college in went traveling and ended up in the east and Kind of tried to forget about the buddha steph for a while but eventually came to nepal yan You know got tired of all the fun stuff in there was colpon happening with lava yes shea of coupon in dan That was it. I kind of you know was stock. In like bob dylan which have gone last taken that last detour in so then i went and met cholera in pay went from the. Someone showed me a picture in that coupon retreat in i headed to find him

Sarah Arizona Yogi Prescott Miller DAN Nepal Bob Dylan Cholera
"bob dylan" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

Podcast RadioViajera

02:04 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

"And when it all came crashing down with now the only thing i knew how do i keep keep it on learned. Upper fam- son. now Going back again that to get some of the people we used to know that. I lose some mathematician. Some doctors don't know how got started. Don't know wadad doing with their lives mud Still on the road akhmed for another john. We always did feel the same. We just from other fine Those recipes does lab the inner city in western analysts. They have been put cassette defy ibooks. Google podcasts that you do is director. Settlers ingles last three million laboratory..

"bob dylan" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

Podcast RadioViajera

07:18 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

"Off Speak rolling stone.

"bob dylan" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

Podcast RadioViajera

05:46 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

"Leland macabre pasta de the rules again to and if things things he will man is mandate is us. V was an lama. Just sit there girl still just say who gonna take away his last substance they take and they learn and it said all the pathway found then anne him with is bad. It acted you basin. Just say you want to take away. His he's been stuck vein and then all take away license to kill primer poor so.

"bob dylan" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

Podcast RadioViajera

05:18 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Podcast RadioViajera

"Everything and she needs an audience. She don't ban she's got everything she needs. She's an artist ship. Don't lou but you can take the dog out of the night time man. Hey the d. time glad you start standing proud steve. Anything see you will start standing out the st the anything in lewanda digging hooky ho down upon. You need wondering.

Minnesota Celebrates Bob Dylan's 80th Birthday

Morning Edition

02:08 min | 2 years ago

Minnesota Celebrates Bob Dylan's 80th Birthday

Bob Dylan Celebrates 80th Birthday

The World and Everything In It

01:32 min | 2 years ago

Bob Dylan Celebrates 80th Birthday

"Robert allen zimmerman was born may twenty fourth. Nineteen one who you might ask in college. Zimmerman adopted a stage. Name bob dylan. He celebrates his eightieth birthday. Today brand is blowing in the way. In addition to musical chops the minnesota dylan became an artist writer producer and nobel prize laureate. He dropped out of college and moved to the big apple where his lyrical skill began to shine. He wrote blowing in the wind in just ten minutes and his song showed a deep complexity that caused the new york folks team to turn its gaze to the up and coming songwriter he told. Cbs is sixty minutes in two thousand and four that his creativity came from a wellspring surprised. Even him tro this there's a magic to that and it's not Siegfried and roy magic. You know it's a different kind of penetrating magic near fatal motorcycle. Accident in nineteen sixty six led to a long recovery the night shift in his music from folk to rock dylan reinvented himself over the years musically and religiously he grew up jewish then profess to conversion to evangelical christianity and nineteen seventy-nine. Then back to judaism again over the course of his sixty year career. He's been named many halls of fame and received many awards including a presidential medal of freedom. Tin grammys a golden globe and an academy award

Robert Allen Zimmerman Dylan Zimmerman Roy Magic Minnesota Siegfried CBS Apple New York Golden Globe Academy Award
Paul Simon Sells Catalog to Sony Music Publishing

Wintrust Business Lunch with Steve Bertrand

00:59 sec | 2 years ago

Paul Simon Sells Catalog to Sony Music Publishing

"Simon was selling his song catalog. Yeah, he's joined the ranks of some other music greats. I think you and I talked about Bob Dylan. Not that long ago, but Paul Simon has has done the same. He sold his entire song catalog to Sony Music. And the deal that the terms of that were not disclosed, But you know the same with Bob Dylan when Bob Dylan's sold his. It was estimated to be about three worth about $300 million, so you can kind of guess Paul Simon's probably in that same neighborhood, But Neil Young did this recently. Stevie Nicks has done this, and it's kind of joining these music greats that are selling off their their song catalog. So we'll see what happens there. You know, when Neil Young did it, he was very specific about these cannot be in jingles. Thieves cannot be. He had some rules about what couldn't could not happen to his songs. So we'll see. I think more will emerge about about Paul Simon here. But when you think about, you know the late fifties, when he started with Art Garfunkel, just the body of work since then, that's a lot of music.

Bob Dylan Paul Simon Neil Young Sony Music Simon Stevie Nicks Art Garfunkel
"bob dylan" Discussed on Pantheon

Pantheon

04:16 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Pantheon

"All grounded in the raw material that bob dylan released in the first stage of his journey and the material. That's too angle like to be on your own direction home how does it feel my whole long. Where the d. below play was held. Them is this good None this guy are not close the deal well the do all held them discouraging nine. This guy oh.

"bob dylan" Discussed on Pantheon

Pantheon

03:28 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on Pantheon

"Maybe this is not the original. Thought you need right now but this is the setup. This is the core narrative of the bob. Dylan's story put a good how to stop the two thousand. I don't even know what if the thin round now let's begin journey and it's back to the iron range we go one by one. No crowding is money room for everyone. And everything.

"bob dylan" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

KNBR The Sports Leader

03:32 min | 2 years ago

"bob dylan" Discussed on KNBR The Sports Leader

"Baseball. I just wanna make sure what he's up to date because, you know, we just talked to Larry. We're starting to ramp it up a man's two weeks from Monday they report on the Jack Peterson dream is over. Just a day after it started. According to the athletic this morning, Jack Peterson has agreed to a deal with the Chicago Cubs. So, man, I'm just gonna file that under easy come easy. Go, Polly. I mean, I only love with the idea of jock for about a day Now he's gone. I was gonna have to bid farewell treating you. It's too Make a name for Farhaan, though you know what I mean? Like he would never get involved with a high profile. They're cops. My baseball ace in the hole here. Why would the Cubs just willingly let Kyle Schwarber go? And then they signed Jack Peterson, aren't they the same dude, What's going? I mean, why wouldn't you keep Schwarber Jock? Probably better. A defense, right? You can play all three outfield positions. Will Schwarber came up as a catcher. So is he brutal in the media butcher out there? I don't know that he's a butcher. But I think you really, really played left. I'd have to check, but I think, Jack and play all three. So maybe the question you got a chance that you got a chance. Your GM, you've got a chance for Schwarber Peterson. He's going Jack Peters. Okay, There you go. There's your answer. Finally our number one sports story The Warriors played basketball last night in the Valley of the Sun didn't work out. Phoenix Suns 1 14 Warriors 93 Now Steph was very good 27 points, but he was all alone. Polly. All alone as Gilbert O'Sullivan once saying alone again Naturally Nice. Yeah. Good. Try early seventies tender ballads of encouragement there, Right. The team's naturally by the way, Speaking of Irishmen, we get a little bit more on the Dylan. No direction home. Shut up! My God! Liam Clancy, showing up in that thing. I am a huge Clancy Brothers fan now. Folk music Irish. Yeah. No, he influenced the great Bob Dylan. This Irish guys told me that when I was over there once they were when we get the points, they was probably like your mind. Bob Dylan. He's the greatest musician ever, huh? He was heavily influenced by Liam Clancy. Yeah, They're kind of taking credit for Dylan. Of course. Of course. Hey, By the way, What is Rory? Think of all this? I mean that, Declan. What is Declan? Think of all this? Think he's right now? Very neutral and baffled. You don't know what's going on. He's like, Who is this guy? Why am I watching this guy? Bob Dylan. He's not about to talk back. He knows I'll snap on him. You know what? The thing about this this film is, though it doesn't. It's not like a look at his entire career. I think it goes up to like a certain point it takes, you know, like the late sixties or something like that. That's good enough. But what I'm surprised that is Dylan's interview isn't discourse as you do the interview. He's extremely forthcoming in a place I've never seen him completely telling all his life story. You're making me wanna watch this again. I mean, I saw this when it's first to me. He's the most taciturn dude. He never says a word ever and everything, he says. You never know if he's serious or not, That's it. In this interview. He's as sober as a heart attack. He's a seriously. He's like, Yeah, I grew up in this town. Here's what it was like. I give you my influences were and then I went to university, Minnesota, and then I got into the folk music scene, and I don't know how Marty got him to agree to be legit for a minute because he's talked about his obsession with Woody Guthrie like Yeah, that's for sure. Yes, yes, yes, he definitely sickly If you watched the basic, he's just a cut rate. Woody Guthrie is what he said He would He. He's like a dime store. What he got. We know what it is like Woody was was Dylan's guy. And Dylan was Bruce's guy like that's the lineage. It goes Guthrie, Dylan, but I think I think Bruce, thanks wants to be what he to. He didn't want to be Woody. They do they all. He's like this for us over the other concerned, Woody Guthrie's A triple O G triple O g Triple o Anyway. All right, sorry. Back to the Warriors. They shot 38% from the field. Ain't gonna do that. By the third race home coming to Phoenix did not go well. One of 11 come on four point something. Here's.

Bob Dylan Woody Guthrie Schwarber Peterson Jack Peterson Liam Clancy Chicago Cubs Warriors Polly Kyle Schwarber Declan Farhaan Clancy Brothers Jack baseball Gilbert O'Sullivan Phoenix Phoenix Suns Jack Peters Baseball. Larry
Bob Dylan Sells His Entire Catalog of Songs to Universal Music

Business Wars Daily

01:53 min | 3 years ago

Bob Dylan Sells His Entire Catalog of Songs to Universal Music

"Dylan sold his entire back catalogue of music to universal music group earlier. This month price wasn't made public but estimates range from three to four hundred million dollars. The catalog contains about six hundred songs composed over sixty years over the years. Dillon has sold more than one hundred. Twenty five million records and at seventy nine years old. He's still performing globally for the last several decades until the pandemic he performed more than one hundred concerts per year. Not surprisingly the ceo made su nami sized waves the new york times called it a blockbuster deal and said it may be the largest sale. In history of a single songwriters music dylan status is unlike that of any other musician in the twenty first century in two thousand eight. He won a pulitzer prize for quote his profound impact on popular music in american culture marked by lyrical compositions of extraordinary poetic power in two thousand sixteen. He won the nobel prize in literature for quote having created new poetic expressions within the great american song tradition at the time. The nobels permanent secretary. The late sarah donahue's compared dylan to greek poets. Homer and sappho dylan is also the recipient of numerous grammy awards and the presidential medal of freedom. Moreover dylan is seen not just as a cultural icon but also as one who has kept the copyrights to his songs even while allowing many other musicians to cover them. He's also allowed his music to be used for some surprising commercial undertakings like twenty nineteen super bowl budweiser ad in two thousand four. Victoria's secret out. According to the wall street journal copyrights to the compositions themselves are distinct from recording and performing rights among the songs in the catalog at universal acquired or some that have gone down in history indeed changed history like blowing in the wind like a rolling stone and yes the times they are a and

Dylan Su Nami Universal Music Group Sarah Donahue Dillon Sappho Dylan Pulitzer Prize The New York Times Grammy Awards Homer The Wall Street Journal Victoria
The Dylan catalog, a 60-year rock 'n' roll odyssey, is sold

The Gerry Callahan Podcast

08:23 min | 3 years ago

The Dylan catalog, a 60-year rock 'n' roll odyssey, is sold

"I got a question for you. Are you doing fan. Bob dylan fan. I'm okay with them. But i'm not a hardcore you bet. If you're if you don't like dylan you better get ready. Because you're going to hear a lot more dylan. I'm telling you why. After i tell you about shed concrete this homeowners and builders out there you know what i'm gonna tell you. My brother-in-law greg at the folks that shake crete they have a huge selection of pre cast concrete steps. You got to check this out. There's a tv commercial. Would meet in it and you get to see all the great steps that they have to offer but you can do that on the website you can stop by and see whether you're building a new home where you need to replace an old staircase. Shay has great vibes with designs for any home. They're veiling concrete. You can customize your steps with beautiful stone granite or brick. New staircase can dramatically upgrade the front entrance of your home. Maybe that's tom brady. Inches el ni. They can't seem to unload. There's little bungalow thirty three million dollar home. Maybe they have to upgrade the steps. That's how you do it. Most cases can remove your old stairs and heavy walking a new set of front steps within hours. And just like that. Your host looks better houses worth more and maybe trying to sell it. Maybe it helps you sell it. It's new steps they can. They can really help you move that old home and make it look better and so quicker you can learn more about chase pre cast concrete steps steps at a concrete dot com to stop by one of their four state of the ad for scillies. All over new england. I bob dylan. And i love these stories because this this is what the taylor swift it. Which means that they will wake up and actually have some interest in this topic. Talking about my girl taylor. Swift sold her music catalog to what's his name scooter braun. Oh yeah and then complains. After bob dylan sold his music library for three hundred million dollars. That's right And by the way He sold is popularly. Seventy eight which is another one of those amazing miracles. The bob dylan still around still kicking. Well did you hear what he said about this jerry region. But here's what's going to happen you me. We'll be watching You know football game. We're watching wednesday night football thursday night football tuesday night. Football game mini mini games That around these days and there's gonna be a commercial for flow or he'll be commercial for you name it Gimme gimme some tv for apple apple. Lot of apple commercials. That's a good one apple amazon target. And it'll be Some of my friend is blowing in the wind blowing in the wind or something blue. What's blue some blue jet blue. And they'll be tangled up in blue. You'll go what bob dylan. His stuff is going to be of vera readily available companies to put in tv commercials. Because bob dylan sold out. It's bob dylan's if you don't like it if you think you know that he's Not that kind of guy that he wouldn't ever seventy-nine by the way he sold out. He took the money. God bless him his family's gonna why he needs the money but his family is going to be fabulously wealthy for generations but companies like target nap bullen and whatever flow what is flow sell insurance. Press gress yes i defense. They're going to be able to play. Dylan's pay whatever the going rate is and they could play it and you'll hear it all over the place just like you here. You know the rolling stones in some cases or taylor swift and other artists who was amazing. When i read the story it was about some of the other artists of fleetwood. Mac sold theirs for like. I get the number here here. It is eighty million dollars they sold. It wasn't even the whole catalog eighty million dollars. Fleetwood mac and dillon skate. Like columbine could probably name more wallflower songs and he can bog way. Bob dole i. It's right over my head. I have no idea i look. I'm surprised he got three hundred million. Based on the fact that that ship has sailed a long time ago dylan receives a lump sum between two hundred and four hundred I'm not sure what the what. The stevie nicks sold their publishing catalog for eighty million dollars. The dylan portfolio six hundred songs while other bands who have sold their catalogs sold. You know taking the money. Blondie barry manilow and the estates of john lennon and kurt cobaine. I believe john lennon the beatles. Paul mccartney bought them for like a ridiculous amount of money Like eight hundred million. Paul mccartney owns well. Didn't jackson by michael jackson and then mccray jackson and a falling out story there. But there's only one to look up jerry. Three hundred million eighty million two hundred to four hundred million. What did what did brian. Wilson's father sell the beach boys catalogue for another against the wishes without the kids. Even knowing and i think he sold it for like seventy dollars and a coke or something new never spoke to his father again obviously but if the beach boys is the one you would want because of the catchy jingles. Yeah that's true point and that the father sold it for nothing. He had no idea what he had. And what the value of wasn't a guy goes. Hey i'm gonna dig deep here. I'll give you five hundred dollars. Whereas i sold and brian wilson was never the same after it happened. It's a good point. But i think dylan's got a lot of those you know catch even though they you know might be whatever. The revolutionary songs at times they are a change in blowing in the wind and songs like that which will which will fit nicely in commercials. And we'll be sick of them all with and i'm sure he had control over it and limited the exposure but i guarantee you. He sold the rights to some two songs to some commercials. I assume right Yeah i guess. So i mean i don't blame me if you're gonna die soon and you wanna take care of you. Offspring kids grandkids. You say. What the hell. What do i care if not be capitalizing on all the different changes that are going on in the music industry. I bet it's like a five person team that he has controlling the catalog right. Like it's a he. He owns time. Bob no one said a need the money for anything the the couple couple of years ago. Long before covid were dylan on went on tour and performed at three hundred nights in a year three hundred nights in one year deal and he was like seventy five and i don't know anyone that went to see him. He wasn't playing the big rooms anymore but he's just addicted to performing and singing his songs and i must have just an insane amount of money already. I mean just. But it's like what bob cousy sold all his Collectibles always memorabilia. He said what do i need it for. This is going to pay for my grandkids education. And can you blame him for that. I wouldn't. I'm a big lira. Guy when it comes to rock and roll. If you consider dylan rock and roll and dylan for what i again. He's not my bag particularly. I don't have any bob dylan on my phone. But his his lyrics. If back on my i always think that you know if you get ten best lyrics of all time. You don't need a whether they know which way the wind blows is one of the great lines right and i'm with you. I'm a lear. Emma word man to and i love you know singing along to whatever tangled up in blue and he. He won the nobel prize for whatever writing. Poetry didn't show up for the award. You know. I believe. I believe greta thune. Berg was second so she'd go toward for him but no he won the nobel prize. I think he blew the market and show up to get the thing and these the only singer or songwriter to win to win it

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Bob Dylan sells entire music catalog spanning more than 600 songs over 60 years

NPR News Now

00:20 sec | 3 years ago

Bob Dylan sells entire music catalog spanning more than 600 songs over 60 years

"Music publishing group is buying bob. Dylan's entire music catalog. The deal covers six hundred song. Copyrights dylan isolde. More than one hundred. Twenty five million records around the world over a career spanning six decades in two thousand sixteen. He became the first song writer to receive the nobel prize for

Dylan Isolde Dylan BOB
Bob Dylan sells entire song catalog to Universal Music

AP 24 Hour News

00:40 sec | 3 years ago

Bob Dylan sells entire song catalog to Universal Music

"Bob Dylan sells his tunes to Universal music publishing. But no one is saying for how much AP Music Correspondent margins are Aleta has more. How much did universal music pay for Bob Dylan's entire 60 year collection of songs? Financial terms were not disclosed, but it was a lot. Dylan's catalog includes classic songs like The Times They are a Changin Blowing in the Wind, tangled up in Blue and like a Rolling Stone. For comparison. Michael Jackson's estate sold the last half share of his catalog four years ago for $750 million Dylan has sold more than 125 million records.

Ap Music Bob Dylan Aleta Dylan The Times Michael Jackson
Bob Dylan Sells Entire Catalog of Songs to Universal Music Publishing

Mark Simone

00:36 sec | 3 years ago

Bob Dylan Sells Entire Catalog of Songs to Universal Music Publishing

"Dylan has sold his music correspondent Erin Could. Turkey has that story. For a moment The sun was Bob Dylan Song writing won him the Nobel Prize for literature. He is selling his entire catalog now to Universal, the world's largest music label. Universal called it the most significant music publishing agreement this century, but declined to disclose the price. It is likely a record $300 million for one artist catalog, but consider the catalog. Hey, Mr Tambor, Een Man he loved Evan Stone, Aaron Carter. Ski. ABC NEWS New York

Dylan Universal Erin Bob Dylan Turkey Mr Tambor Evan Stone EEN Aaron Carter ABC New York
Tangled Up in Green: Bob Dylan Sells Entire Song Catalog for Estimated $300 Million

Charlie Parker

00:27 sec | 3 years ago

Tangled Up in Green: Bob Dylan Sells Entire Song Catalog for Estimated $300 Million

"All the Universal Music publishing group is buying Bob Dylan's entire song catalog that includes more than 600 songs like Blowing in the Wind and like a Rolling Stone. It's unknown Exactly how much the catalog is worth, but it's estimated to be around 300 million. It is the biggest acquisition ever of a single acts. Publishing rights on major Chicken sandwich chain

Universal Music Publishing Gro Bob Dylan Rolling Stone
Bob Dylan lyrics, letters sell for nearly half a million dollars

San Diego's Morning News with Ted and LaDona

00:31 sec | 3 years ago

Bob Dylan lyrics, letters sell for nearly half a million dollars

"Wind. Yeah. Syriza Booth window. Collection of Bob Dylan memorabilia is selling for nearly half a million dollars. They belong to the estate of Dylan's friend, late musician Tony Glover. They were put up for sale by R R Auction company. Included were letters, unpublished lyrics and hand written lyrics to blowing in the wind. The lyrics, which were dated 2011 fetched the highest price more than 108. $1000

Syriza Booth Tony Glover Bob Dylan Dylan
Dylan papers, including unpublished lyrics, sell in Boston for $495K

Heartland Newsfeed Radio Network

00:44 sec | 3 years ago

Dylan papers, including unpublished lyrics, sell in Boston for $495K

"A collection of bob dylan songs and other writings have sold at auction and american music. Legend once told a friend in nineteen seventy one that quote. A lot of people are under the impression that jews or just money lenders and merchants end of quote. And that is what prompted robert zimmerman to change his name to bob dylan musings like that. Along with a treasure trove of dylan documents including unpublished song lyrics sold at auction. This past thursday for nearly half a million dollars. Boston-based are auctions handle the sale and says the collection once belonged to the late american blues. Artists robert glover a close friend. And confidante of mr dylan. Most of the key pieces of the collection went to an unidentified bidder in addition to being a member of the rock and roll hall of fame. Bob dylan was awarded the nobel prize for literature in two thousand sixteen

Bob Dylan Robert Zimmerman Robert Glover Mr Dylan Dylan Boston
Lost Bob Dylan Interviews Surface at Boston Auction House

San Diego's Morning News with Ted and LaDona

00:41 sec | 3 years ago

Lost Bob Dylan Interviews Surface at Boston Auction House

"Long lost interviews with Bob Dylan of surface at a Boston auction house, and they contain some surprising new insights about the singer songwriter Taylor. Transcripts of the 1971 interviews with the late American Blues artist Tony Glover reveal that Dylan had anti Semitism on his mind when he changed his name. They also show he wrote. Lay Lady Lay for singer and actress Barbara Streisand. Really Would have thought it would have been about something like Rita Coolidge. He also discussed how he famously went electric at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, saying it was a strange night. Yeah, Wass, Okay. Yeah, it

Bob Dylan Semitism Rita Coolidge Tony Glover Barbara Streisand Newport Folk Festival Wass Taylor Boston
Louise Glück Is Awarded the 2020 Nobel Prize in Literature

Financial Issues with Dan Celia

00:26 sec | 3 years ago

Louise Glück Is Awarded the 2020 Nobel Prize in Literature

"Poet Louise Gluck has won the Nobel Prize for literature. She's the fourth woman to win the prize for literature since 2010 and the first American to win since Bob Dylan in 2016. In announcing her win, the Nobel Prize committee decided glutes quote, unmistakable poetic voice with austere beauty that makes individual existence universal. Look, is also a Pulitzer Prize winner for a collection of her poems back in 1993 and is a former poet laureate holding the title in 2003.

Nobel Prize Pulitzer Prize Louise Gluck Bob Dylan