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Bringing It All Back Home


 

Bringing It All Back Home is an album of original songs by American musician Bob Dylan, released on March 22, 1965. It has often been described as the first "folk rock" album. The first side of the LP features Dylan backed by an electified band, while side two features four solo acoustic songs.

Writing and recording Bringing It All Back Home

Dylan spent much of the summer of 1964 in Woodstock, a small town in upstate New York. Dylan was already familiar with the area, but his visits were becoming longer and more frequent. Dylan's manager, Albert Grossman, also had a place in Woodstock, and when Joan Baez went to see Dylan that August, they stayed at Grossman's house.

Related Topics:
Woodstock - Joan Baez

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Baez recalls that "most of the month or so we were there, Bob stood at the typewriter in the corner of his room, drinking red wine and smoking and tapping away relentlessly for hours. And in the dead of night, he would wake up, grunt, grab a cigarette, and stumble over to the typewriter again." Dylan already had one song ready for his next album: "Mr. Tambourine Man" was written in February of 1964 but omitted from Another Side of Bob Dylan. Another song, "Gates of Eden," was also written earlier that year, appearing in the original manuscripts to Another Side of Bob Dylan; a few lyrical changes were eventually made, but it's unclear if these were made that August in Woodstock. At least two songs were written that month: "If You Gotta Go, Go Now" and "It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)."

Related Topics:
Another Side of Bob Dylan - Woodstock

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During this time, Dylan's writing became increasingly surreal. Even his prose grew more stylistic, often resembling stream of conscious writing with published letters dating from 1964 becoming increasingly intense and dreamlike as the year wore on.

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Dylan eventually returned to the city, and on August 28th, he met with The Beatles for the very first time in their New York hotel. Dylan would remain on good terms with The Beatles, and as biographer Clinton Heylin writes, "the evening established a personal dimension to the very real rivalry that would endure for the remainder of a momentous decade."

Related Topics:
The Beatles

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Though some critics have romanticized The Beatles' influence on Dylan, as well as Dylan's influence on The Beatles, skeptics such as Heylin admit that "the Beatles' success provided...an environment for experimentation occurs only rarely in any popular medium." The Beatles are widely credited for opening America's doors to other British rock bands, and it was in August of 1964 that one of their contemporaries, The Animals, began their journey to the top of the charts with their hit single, "House of the Rising Sun." One of the most celebrated and influential songs in rock history, "House of the Rising Sun" was the same traditional folk song covered by Dylan on his debut album; as recorded by The Animals, the song was given a dramatic, electrified arrangement, accenting the A-minor arpeggiated chord and surrounding it with a swirling, electric keyboard and a celebrated, blues vocal courtesy of Eric Burdon. (Reportedly, The Animals first heard the song through Nina Simone's own version.) Widely considered to be the first, successful manifestation of folk-rock, when Dylan first heard The Animals' recording, he was ecstatic. "'House of the Rising Sun' in rock. Rock! It's wild! Blew my mind," Dylan recalled to biographer Anthony Scaduto.

Related Topics:
The Beatles - The Animals - Nina Simone

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Dylan and producer Tom Wilson were soon experimenting with their own fusion of rock and folk music. The first unsuccessful test involved overdubbing a "Fats Domino early rock & roll thing" over Dylan's earlier, acoustic recording of "House of the Rising Sun," according to Wilson. It was quickly discarded, but in the meantime, Dylan turned his attention to another folk-rock experiment conducted by John Hammond, Jr., an old friend and musician who's father, John Hammond, originally signed Dylan to Columbia. Hammond was planning an electric album around the blues songs that framed his acoustic live performances of the time. To do this, he recruited three members of a Canadian bar band he met sometime in 1963: guitarist Robbie Robertson, drummer Levon Helm, and organist Garth Hudson. Dylan was very aware of the resulting album, So Many Roads; according to his friend, Danny Kalb, "Bob was really excited about what John Hammond was doing with electric blues. I talked to him in the Figaro in 1964 and he was telling me about John and his going to Chicago and playing with a band and so on..."

Related Topics:
Tom Wilson - Fats Domino - John Hammond, Jr. - John Hammond - Robbie Robertson - Levon Helm - Garth Hudson - Chicago

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However, when Dylan and Wilson began work on the next album, they temporarily refrained from their own electric experimentation. The first session, held on January 13th, 1965 in Columbia's Studio A in New York, was recorded solo, with Dylan playing piano or acoustic guitar. Ten complete songs and several song sketches were produced, nearly all of which were discarded. None of these recordings would be used for the album, but three would eventually be released: "I'll Keep It With Mine" on 1985's Biograph, and "Farewell Angelina" and an acoustic version of "Subterranean Homesick Blues" on 1991's The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961-1991.

Related Topics:
Biograph - The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961-1991

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Other songs and sketches recorded at this session: "Love Minus Zero/No Limit," "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue," "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream," "She Belongs To Me," "Sitting On A Barbed-Wire Fence," "On The Road Again," "If You Gotta Go, Go Now," "You Don't Have To Do That," and "Outlaw Blues," all of which were original compositions.

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Dylan and Wilson held another session at Studio A the following day, this time with a full, electric band. Guitarists Al Gorgoni, Kenneth Rankin, and Bruce Langhorne were recruited, as were pianist Paul Griffin, bassists Joseph Macho, Jr. and William E. Lee, and drummer Bobby Gregg. The day's work focused on eight songs, all of which had been attempted the previous day. According to Langhorne, there was no rehearsal, "we just did first takes and I remember that, for what it was, it was amazingly intuitive and successful." Few takes were required of each song, and after three-and-a-half hours of recording (lasting from 2:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m.), master takes of "Love Minus Zero/No Limit," "Subterranean Homesick Blues," "Outlaw Blues," "She Belongs To Me," and "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream" were all recorded and selected for the final album.

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Sometime after dinner, Dylan reportedly continued recording with a different set of musicians, including John Hammond, Jr. and John Sebastian (only Langhorne returned from earlier that day). They recorded six songs, but the results were deemed unsatisfactory and ultimately rejected.

Related Topics:
John Hammond, Jr. - John Sebastian

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Another session was held at Studio A the next day, and it would be the last one needed. Once again, Dylan kept at his disposal the musicians from the previous day (that is, those that participated in the 2:30 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. session); the one exception was pianist Paul Griffin, who was unable to attend and replaced by Frank Owens. Daniel Kramer recalls "the musicians were enthusiastic. They conferred with one another to work out the problems as they arose. Dylan bounced around from one man to another, explaining what he wanted, often showing them on the piano what was needed until, like a giant puzzle, the pieces would fit and the picture emerged whole...Most of the songs went down easily and needed only three or four takes...In some cases, the first take sounded completely different from the final one because the material was played at a different tempo, perhaps, or a different chord was chosen, or solos may have been rearranged...His method of working, the certainty of what he wanted, kept things moving."

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The session began with "Maggie's Farm": only one take was recorded, and it was the only one they'd ever need. From there, Dylan successfully recorded master takes of "Maggie's Farm," "On The Road Again," "It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)," "Gates Of Eden," "Mr. Tambourine Man," and "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue," all of which were set aside for the album. A master take of "If You Gotta Go, Go Now" was also selected, but it would not be included on the album; instead, it was issued as a single-only release in Europe, but not in the U.S.

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Though Dylan was able to record electric versions of virtually every song included on the final album, he apparently never intended Bringing It All Back Home to be completely electric. As a result, roughly half of the finished album would feature full electric band arrangements while the other half consisted of solo acoustic performances, sometimes accompanied by Langhorne, who would embellish Dylan's acoustic performance with a countermelody on his electric guitar.

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