The Night We Called It a Day 05/19/15 David Letterman
& Joan Baez 1963 March on Washington
Blowin' In The Wind (w/ Keith Richards & Ron Wood)
Blowing In The Wind (March, 1963)
Knockin' on Heaven's Door (Official Video)
Duquesne Whistle (Official Video)
You're A Big Girl Now / Gonna Put My Order In With The Cook (Birmingham, 10/05/2002)
I Threw It All Away (on "The Johnny Cash Show")
Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues (Official Video)
Tell Me It Isn't True (Newcastle, 09/09/2000)
Subterranean Homesick Blues (Official Video)
Jokerman (Official Video)
Political World (Official Video)
Thunder On The Mountain (Official Video)
When The Deal Goes Down (Official Video)
Gonna Change My Way Of Thinking (Feis, London 18.06.2011)
I And I (Hammersmith, London, 09/02/1993)
Cold Irons Bound (Live)
Mr. Tambourine Man (The Newport Folk Festival, 1964)
Slow Train Coming (1980)
Most Of The Time (Official Video)
Mr Tambourine Man (1966)
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 (Farm Aid, 1986)
Beyond Here Lies Nothin' (Official Video)
If Not For You (Lyon,5Th July, 1994)
If Dogs Run Free (Newcastle, 09.05.2002)
I Want You (Budokan)
Across The Borderline (Farm Aid, 1986)
With God On Our Side (Oakland Coliseum Arena, 1988)
Unbelievable
Sylvio (1996)
Summer Days (2002)
Quinn The Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn) (London, 2003)
‘Cross the Green Mountain
Forever Young (w/ The Band)
Knockin' On Heaven's Door (w/ Tom Petty)
("Late Night With David Letterman 10Th Anniversary Special" 1992)
Changing of the Guards (Live, 1978)
She Belongs To Me (Birmingham, 1965)
In Performance At The White House
Jokerman (on "Letterman", 1984)
One Too Many Mornings (w/ Johnny Cash)
Visions Of Johanna (Live, 1966)
Visions Of Johanna
Just Like A Woman (Dublin, 1966)
Forever Young & Baby, Let Me Follow You Down (w/ The Band)
Ballad Of A Thin Man (Live, May, 1966)
Like A Rolling Stone (Newport, 1965)
Hurricane
Not Dark Yet
Baby Let Me Follow You Down (w/ The Band)
Bob Dylan
1 Search Results Found
Bob Dylan trades protest for punchlines as his songs haunt unlikely film scenes
Bob Dylan’s music sidesteps nostalgia and punctuates cinema with laconic gravity. “Hurricane” enters ‘Dazed and Confused’ not to stir sentiment, but to mirror chaotic adolescence with defiant storytelling and staccato violin.
“The Times They Are A-Changin’” surfaces in ‘Watchmen’, drained of protest fervor and repurposed into a montage of doomed idealism. “Things Have Changed,” in 'Wonder Boys', underscores manic resignation, Dylan crooning like someone who saw hope exit the room two decades ago.
From Guthrie echo to lyrical alchemy, Dylan stops copying and starts rewriting
Sean Wilentz, author and Princeton historian, traces Bob Dylan’s early shift from mimicry to interpretation in Volume 18: Through the Open Window. Landing in New York in 1961, Dylan arrives with a guitar and a head full of Woody Guthrie, still parroting familiar cadences.
But within months, he begins to transform, reshaping others’ work into something distinctly his. Tracks like his rendition of Guthrie’s “Ramblin’ Round” signal that Dylan is done copying; he’s rewriting the grammar of American song.
Dylan Rejoins Farm Aid, 39 Years After Half a Sentence Sparked the Whole Thing
Bob Dylan returns to Farm Aid for its 40th edition, joining Willie Nelson, Neil Young, and other regulars on stage in Minneapolis. His appearance nods to a 1985 off-hand remark at Live Aid that inspired Nelson to create the event for family farmers.
Dylan last played Farm Aid in 2023 as a surprise guest and has spent the summer touring alongside Nelson. Their collaboration dates back to that original Farm Aid, where Dylan performed backed by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, sparking future tours and the Traveling Wilburys project.
Source: Billboard – Published on September 17, 2025
Bob Dylan dusts off “Masters of War” in Tokyo, lets the lyrics do the talking
Bob Dylan resurrects “Masters of War” for the first time since 2016, sliding it into a Tokyo setlist without prelude or explanation. The anti-war anthem, absent since the Desert Trip spectacle, re-emerges in the current geopolitical fog with a wry sense of timing.
Dylan’s motives remain securely locked behind his famously impenetrable persona, yet the choice bristles with implications. Whether cryptic nod or mere coincidence, the song’s reappearance turns heads without uttering a single onstage opinion.
Bob Dylan Hits Albany Studio—Talks? None. Tracks? Maybe. Secrets? Plenty.
Bob Dylan clocks in two veiled days at White Lake Studios in Albany, flanked by bandmates and wrapped in the enigma of non-disclosure. No titles, no leaks—just the familiar smoke of artistic movement with none of the mirrors.
Currently zigzagging the States with Willie Nelson’s Outlaw Music Festival Tour, Dylan keeps the machinery humming. Meanwhile, his Rough And Rowdy Ways tour ticks toward the UK and Ireland, headphones and phone screens left checked at the door.
Bob Dylan chills with Johnny Cash, finds kindred grit in country’s “ultimate end”
Bob Dylan once called Johnny Cash “the living ultimate end” of country music, a phrase laced with reverence and a hint of finality. Their connection bridges folk and country with a shared affinity for storytelling that doesn’t flinch from discomfort.
While Cash’s grounded baritone carved through heartland America, Dylan found in him a mirror—one that “gives me the chills.” Their duet work surfaces like a stitched confession, circling the universal nerve of song as unpretentious but unyielding truth.
Bob Dylan swaps protest for pedal steel on “Nashville Skyline”—folk goes twang
Bob Dylan redirects his trajectory toward country music with the release of “Nashville Skyline,” swapping biting social critique for mellow, steel-stringed introspection. His fascination with this Americana-influenced sound isn’t merely aesthetic—it signals a pivot away from the volatile promises of protest folk into a smoother twang-laden groove.
This moment marks not so much a reinvention as a strategic repositioning, embracing the genre's lyrical economy and grounded emotional timbre. Dylan doesn’t dabble—he immerses.
Bob Dylan swaps harmonica for a sketchpad in scribbled art book Point Blank
Bob Dylan bends pens instead of strings in his upcoming art book Point Blank (Quick Studies), courtesy of Simon & Schuster. Comprising around one hundred drawings, the collection leans as much on gesture as on line, favoring immediacy over polish.
The visual studies are accompanied not by Dylan’s prose but by vignettes from Eddie Gorodetsky, Jackie Hamilton, and Lucy Sante—each scribbling their own idiosyncratic footnotes to Dylan’s rapid-fire illustrations.
Watching Dylan rally with three Beatles—how Isle of Wight festival came together
In 1968, at 22, I’ve just pulled off a modest concert for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament when my older brother Ronnie lands a gig fundraising for a swimming pool on the Isle of Wight. The chat soon turns to staging a festival — one that might, with some luck and decent weather, pay for chlorinated dreams.
My younger brother Bill insists it has to be pop. A London agency passes us a lineup: Pretty Things, The Move, Fairport Convention, Tyrannosaurus Rex, Jefferson Airplane. We bluff it with £750 from a local pool committee and a friend’s £1,000 army pay-off.
The pool association quickly recoils, spooked by headlines about hippies, drugs and sex. Yet they let us keep the money. We sell 10,000 tickets, break even, and return the funds — scandal intact, conscience clear.
Bob Dylan deadpans his way through Machine Gun Kelly’s Lost Americana trailer
In a twist equal parts improbable and deadpan, Bob Dylan lends his unmistakable drawl to the trailer for Machine Gun Kelly’s upcoming album, Lost Americana. The short clip finds Dylan intoning, “This is music that celebrates the beauty found in the in-between spaces,” as if narrating a dusty road trip through emotional detours MGK didn't plan but couldn’t help taking.
Slated for release in August, Lost Americana now arrives under the spectral guidance of a man whose own discography once defined ambiguity. MGK, no stranger to genre left turns, now appears packaged with a nod from Dylan—part benediction, part poker-faced riddle.
Chet Baker, Cliff Richard, Bob Dylan , Ray Charles, Tom Jones, Jeff Beck, Mark Knopfler, The Chieftains, Candy Dulfer, John Lee Hooker, Them, The Band, Michael Bublé
How well do you know the music of Ibrahim Ferrer & Omara Portuondo, Billy Joel & Boyz Ii Men, Bob Dylan, Keith Richards & Ron Wood, George Harrison, Eric Clapton...
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Marvin Gaye, Desmond Dekker, Levon Helm, Lenny Kravitz, Noel Gallagher, Paul Weller , Morrissey, Bob Dylan, Gil Scott Heron, Thom Yorke, David Crosby, James Blake, Ronald Isley
Europe, Queen, Gianna Nannini, Huey Lewis and the News, Joe Cocker, John Fogerty, Bob Dylan, Lenny Kravitz, Tin Machine, Siouxsie And The Banshees, The Cure, Roxy Music
Paul McCartney, Pearl Jam, k.d. lang, The Neville Brothers, Eric Clapton, Bob Dylan, Bob Seger, The Black Crowes, Lou Reed, Tina Turner, Basia, PJ Harvey
Portishead, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Iron & Wine, Sonic Youth, Fall Out Boy, Bruce Springsteen, Pink Martini, Gnarls Barkley, Arctic Monkeys, Sum 41, Franz Ferdinand, Bob Dylan
Marvin Gaye, Willie Nelson, Elvis Presley, The Temptations, Andy Williams, Doris Day, Frank Sinatra, Nina Simone, Tony Bennett, Bob Dylan, Barbra Streisand, Judy Garland, Simon & Garfunkel
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David Bowie, John Mayer, John Kay, Michael Stipe, Lowell George, Bob Dylan, David Bromberg, Andy Williams, Garland Jeffreys, Jason Mraz, Elton John, Kendrick Lamar
Norah Jones, Keith Richards, John Mayer, Tony Bennett , Willie Nelson, Kris Kristofferson, Bob Dylan, Danger Mouse, Daniele Luppi, Wynton Marsalis, Dave Grohl, Jamie Cullum, Neil Young, Billie Joe Armstrong
Waylon Jennings, Ian Dury, The Blockheads, Johnny Cash, Marvin Gaye, Bill Withers, Lou Reed, Glen Hansard, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Elliott Smith, Thom Yorke, Steven Tyler
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