A musician has pointed out a major flaw in Timothée Chalamet's performance as Bob Dylan in the adaptation of his early years, A Complete Unknown, and despite liking the film, it stuck out
When Bob Dylan's 1963 album, The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, came out, he was suddenly the artist that people were talking about. Who wrote his songs? Where did he come from? What's he doing next? Dylan combined poetry with prose,
Barry Goldberg, a Paul Butterfield Blues Band member who backed Bog Dylan at Newport '65, and later recorded an album produced by Dylan, died at 83.
Bob Dylan arrived in New York City at 19 in 1961. In A Complete Unknown, Timothée Chalamet plays Dylan during his emergence from obscurity.
Annie and Nick review A Complete Unknown and celebrate Bob Dylan’s defiance.
During a radio interview in 1975, Dylan seemed to confirm that songs from Blood On The Tracks were written about his relationship with Lownds. When the interviewer said she had enjoyed the record, Dylan replied: “A lot of people tell me they enjoyed that album. It’s hard for me to relate to people enjoying that kind of pain.”
The musician, who released 10 studio albums with The Band and toured with Dylan, died on Tuesday, Jan. 21 Garth Hudson, the last surviving member of The Band who toured with Bob Dylan, has died. He was 87.
The first sounds you hear when you drop the needle — or click the digital file — on Bob Dylan’s Blood on the Tracks are guitars ringing and chiming, almost like bells. They serve as a kind of preface or overture or opening statement or call to prayer for what the listener is about to hear: 56 minutes of a journey through dark heat into the heart and soul of an artist at the depths of sadness driving him to the heights of creative achievement.
Revisit the very first season of The Opus podcast as we explore the legacy of Dylan's 15th album. Bob Dylan’s Blood on the Tracks 50th Anniversary: The Opus Podcast Re-Release Ben Kaye
Barry Goldberg, the acclaimed keyboardist and producer who played with Bob Dylan at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965, has died at 83.
Timothée Chalamet stars as the revered troubadour in a rollicking biopic that charts his rise to stardom, set against the discord and division of 1960s America.