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Seeing as it is/ was his eightieth birthday thought I’d put my favourite track of his up. He is well in to his seventies when he did this. Can’t say I’m a fan of his and, although, the track is pretty unremarkable heard on its own, coupled with the performance it shows him off as a pretty cool talent. (Maybe it’s that hat).
Anyone else got any obscure tracks of his to share?
The worm of time turns not for the cuckoo of circumstance.
Huge Dylan fan, was lucky enough to see him at the Apollo a few years ago and even aged 75 he still blew me away. His latest album is one of his better recent ones, but one of my favourites from more recent years is Duquesne Whistle.
I thought it was a socio-economic comment on the struggle and dilapidated state of agrarian communities as the industrial revolution was nurtured, a journey similarly followed by Dylan when he left his folkified audience mortified and aghast when he plugged his guitar into an amp?
I thought it was a socio-economic comment on the struggle and dilapidated state of agrarian communities as the industrial revolution was nurtured, a journey similarly followed by Dylan when he left his folkified audience mortified and aghast when he plugged his guitar into an amp?
It's about a wheel falling off a wheelbarrow,it can be accompanied either by acoustic or electric guitar (Judas!) but usually by the drummer at the back of the stand
It's about a wheel falling off a wheelbarrow,it can be accompanied either by acoustic or electric guitar (Judas!) but usually by the drummer at the back of the stand
[Post edited 21 May 2021 13:41]
It's cryptically metaphorical and genius, as well as quite shit.
It's cryptically metaphorical and genius, as well as quite shit.
It was started by taking the piss out of Shrewsbury fans at first,we was losing 2-0 and they started singing some chant or other but with their accent it sounded like I had a wheelbarrow and the wheel fell off and we started to sing it back,suddenly Notts came back and it ended 2-2 and has been sung ever since, imagine how good it could have been if we had won
It was started by taking the piss out of Shrewsbury fans at first,we was losing 2-0 and they started singing some chant or other but with their accent it sounded like I had a wheelbarrow and the wheel fell off and we started to sing it back,suddenly Notts came back and it ended 2-2 and has been sung ever since, imagine how good it could have been if we had won
It was started by taking the piss out of Shrewsbury fans at first,we was losing 2-0 and they started singing some chant or other but with their accent it sounded like I had a wheelbarrow and the wheel fell off and we started to sing it back,suddenly Notts came back and it ended 2-2 and has been sung ever since, imagine how good it could have been if we had won
Well spotted Chalky...it was his quote when asked how he would describe himself...I think the irony was lost on some of the assembled press!!!
Thanks for that,it's just occurred to me where I heard it and it was said by Bob (well the bloke that played him) in a program called Urban Myths when he went to Dave Stewart's house but got the wrong Dave,did this ever happen or is it erm...well just an urban myth?
It's about a wheel falling off a wheelbarrow,it can be accompanied either by acoustic or electric guitar (Judas!) but usually by the drummer at the back of the stand
[Post edited 21 May 2021 13:41]
Anybody on here go to the "Judas" concert in Manchester in May 1965 (or was it `66) ? I went with a mate, the bloke who yelled it out was sat just behind us and little did we know how famous that remark was going to be. I notice he`s just sold the rights to all his music for millions, so I suppose seeing as his genre was really singing about the down trodden or the irony of modern day America (as he saw it), you could use the same headline. Like Dylan or not, the bloke is/was a genius, one of a kind, who, with the Beatles and Tamla Motown, made the sixties into the iconic musical decade us older blokes will always remember with nostalgia.
Anybody on here go to the "Judas" concert in Manchester in May 1965 (or was it `66) ? I went with a mate, the bloke who yelled it out was sat just behind us and little did we know how famous that remark was going to be. I notice he`s just sold the rights to all his music for millions, so I suppose seeing as his genre was really singing about the down trodden or the irony of modern day America (as he saw it), you could use the same headline. Like Dylan or not, the bloke is/was a genius, one of a kind, who, with the Beatles and Tamla Motown, made the sixties into the iconic musical decade us older blokes will always remember with nostalgia.
Don't forget the Bonzo Dog Doodah Band and the Barron Knights