Love and Theft [Hybrid SACD] [Original recording remastered] [SACD]
Track Listings
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1. Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
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2. Mississippi
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3. Summer Days
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4. Bye and Bye
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5. Lonesome Day Blues
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6. Floater (Too Much to Ask)
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7. High Water (For Charley Patton)
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8. Moonlight
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9. Honest With Me
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10. Po' Boy
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11. Cry a While
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12. Sugar Baby
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Love and Theft, Music, Bob Dylan, Album Rock, Folk-Rock, Pop, Pop/Rock, Rock, Rock & Roll, Rock/Pop, Singer/Songwriter
Average customer rating:
- Difficult but rewarding
- For people looking for more than just "sugar"
- Love is strong word; I LOVE this album
- one question that i must ask
- My Favorite!
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"Love and Theft"
Manufacturer: Sony
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Similar Items:
- Time Out of Mind
- Modern Times
- Modern Times (Deluxe Edition With Bonus DVD)
- Bringing It All Back Home
- The Bootleg Series, Vol. 4: Bob Dylan Live, 1966: The "Royal Albert Hall Concert"
ASIN: B00005NI5Y
Release Date: 2001-09-11 |
Tracks:
- Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
- Mississippi
- Summer Days
- Bye And Bye
- Lonesome Day Blues
- Floater (Too Much To Ask)
- High Water (for Charlie Patton)
- Moonlight
- Honest With Me
- Po' Boy
- Cry A While
- Sugar Baby
Amazon.com's Best of 2001
When we last left the ever-confounding saga that is Bob Dylan's now-superhuman recording career, he'd reunited with producer Daniel Lanois, with whom he cut 1997's Time Out of Mind, his most coherent and appealing collection in nearly a decade. Now the still-reigning prince of musical contrariety and potent wordplay is back with his most focused, well-played collection since 1989's Oh Mercy, another Lanois production. One listen to the fade-in of the opener "Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum" and it's clear that all Dylan's roadwork has shaped him and his band (including guitarist Charlie Sexton) into a mighty musical weapon. And while his craggy howl continues to resonate, it's the songs here that astonish. A sturdy midtempo melody makes "Mississippi" the equal of the best numbers on Time, which it was actually written for. He convincingly puts over the R&B swing (yes, swing) number "Summer Days." "Honest with Me" ("I'm not sorry for nuthin' I've done / I'm glad I fight, I only wished we'd won") is a driving rocker that packs a genuine punch. And the light, lounge-like "Bye and Bye" and the southland ramble "Floater (Too Much to Ask)" show extraordinary confidence. He's labeled these songs "blues-based," but in typical Dylan fashion what would promise to be the most overtly blues number here--"High Water (for Charlie Patton)"--sounds like a banjo-based gunfighter ballad. But then that's this artist's gift: confounding expectations. --Robert Baird
Customer Reviews:
Difficult but rewarding.......2007-03-08
It's a testament to Dylan's sheer talent and to his sidemen that this album manages to succeed despite the near-total destruction of his voice (which wasn't strong to begin with). At times, it's grating and painful to listen to; occasionally, it's world-weary and oddly endearing.
While I like the majority of tracks on Love and Theft, I can't say any stand out in my mind as being particularly remarkable, especially in light of Dylan's long and storied career. This one might sit closer to 2 1/2 stars.
For people looking for more than just "sugar".......2006-12-06
Here's the Truth: Bob Dylan is a man. Bob Dylan (born Zimmerman) is a musician. He plays music.
You want to hear someone play from the heart? Listen to this. And connect with him - i.e. hear him.
You want spiritual guidance? Read your Bible fools. That's what this guy says sometimes, along with the many other realities of where we all are.
The last track, Sugar Baby... good, from the heart good.
Love is strong word; I LOVE this album.......2006-11-08
I've been listening to this again... and again... and again. I believe this to be (unless the scriptures are to be believed)the comeback of all comebacks. This isn't Time Out of Mind 2. It's a leap away. And I wouldn't say it's better than anything else this man has done because I don't feel like comparing it with anything else he's done. Listen to it. Dylan's got a heapin' pile of albums to contend with, but I don't think they're what's on his mind. He's a performer in the here-and-now sense. And "Love and Theft" comes the closest to "being there" - in my opinion. It speaks of a century of song (blues, country and old cornball pop standards), not to mention a couple millenia of true love and bitter angst.
one question that i must ask.......2006-10-10
...............HOW IN THE HECK DID THIS HIPPY MAKE IT OUT OF THE 60's ?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!? THERE IS NOT A WORSE MALE SINGER IN THE HISTORY OF MANKIND !!!!!!!!!!!!! but then hippies and those wanting to be will always gush over his ''poetry''.stringing nonsensical sentences to boring folk music im sure HAS to be accompanied by a huge spliff !!!!!! ill give the guy credit for being the anti handsome,anti talented rock(???????) star.he is the extreme opposite of mtv.my god,if dylan was able to get paid for 1 song,everyone should run out and start singing.theres no way you will sound any where near as badly as bob.
female equivilents;MACY GREY,STEVIE NICKS,JANIS JOPLIN,ASHLEE SIMPLESON
male honorable mentions;MICK JAGGER,LOU REED,TOM PETTY,BOB THOMAS
My Favorite!.......2006-09-05
I have listened to this CD for several years now, and I have never tired of it. I think the best song is Mississippi. There is something so mellow and soothing about this song, but I can't really put my finger on why. I think it could be the bluesy base that has such a rhythmic, continuous sound.
Anyway, our entire family (me, my kids, and husband) love Bob Dylan. My son with special needs has always calmed himself by listening to Dylan albums and used to asked for them by name "I want Diwwan." There is something magical about this CD that never fails to calm me down, pep me up and feel that the world is a pretty darn great place as long as I can get my hands on this album.
Average customer rating:
- Without qualification
- I Think this is Bob Dylan's Best
- Not Dark Anymore, that's for Sure
- It Takes a Thief to Catch a Thief
- Worth the Wait
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Love and Theft
Bob Dylan
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Time Out of Mind
- Modern Times
- Blood on the Tracks
- Oh Mercy
- Infidels
ASIN: B0000C8AW7
Release Date: 2003-09-16 |
Tracks:
- Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
- Mississippi
- Summer Days
- Bye and Bye
- Lonesome Day Blues
- Floater (Too Much to Ask)
- High Water (For Charley Patton)
- Moonlight
- Honest With Me
- Po' Boy
- Cry a While
- Sugar Baby
Customer Reviews:
Without qualification.......2006-07-19
This is my favorite Bob Dylan albulm period. Thank you Bob Dylan. Only you could capture the value beauty of human experience the way you did on this albulm and deliver it in such a sweet and gritty way.
I Think this is Bob Dylan's Best.......2006-05-20
My friends have talked about how Dylan sings somewhat like a honky tonker on this great album, but he also comes across as a crooner as well, especially on "Bye and Bye" and also on "Moonlight." He's a Jazz singing, up-beating performer too, just listen to "Summer Days" and "Lonesome Day Blues." He's a honky tonking gambler on "Poor Boy," a dirge singer, delivering lyrics stark and true on "Sugar Baby." Like always, Bob Dylan is so many things, on this album, just about his best record ever. I loved "Highway 61." Wept over "Blood on the Tracks." Rocked with "Infidels." But this, this is all those and more. I think maybe this is Bob Dylan's best.
Not Dark Anymore, that's for Sure.......2006-05-20
Unlike the very dark, Grammy winning "Time Out of Mind" Dylan's last album of original material, this is a record full of fun songs that takes you back to the Fifties, maybe the Forties even. Listen to "Summer Days." If that doesn't make you want to get up and swing, you've got lead in your feet. This whole record has sort of a honky tonk feel to it. It's just simply fabulous. Dylan is older, but he's better. He still has that frog in his throat we've all come to know and love. He's sporting a Boston Blackie Mustache, has a twinkle in his eye and kind of looks like that guy you've seen playing the piano in so many saloons in so many black and white westerns and he just plain sounds like a song and dance man and gosh, I love this record. I guess I already said that.
It Takes a Thief to Catch a Thief.......2006-05-20
"Moonlight" is my favorite song on this record that is full of my favorite Bob Dylan songs. Just imagine a honky tonking riverboat gambler with a guitar and a touch of irony in his voice and you have the master who comes up with such words, like "Doctor, lawyer indian chief, it takes a thief to catch a thief, and who does the bell toll for, love, it tolls for you and me." Old words mingled with new words which captures the essence of this album, old style infused with a touch of today. Still, I imagine someone fifty or sixty years ago, hearing this record for the first time, from the whimsical" Tweedle Dee" to the dirge like "Sugar Baby" that is so reminiscent of "Dark Eyes" the song that closes "Empire Burlesque, would recognize Bob Dylan as a contemporary. "Love is pleasing, love is teasing, love's not an evil thing." What great lyrics there are on this record you'll never be able to get out of your mind. "It takes a thief to catch a thief," and Bob Dylan must be a thief, because he sure caught me.
Worth the Wait.......2006-05-20
I guess Bob Dylan is approaching half a century in the music making business, forty years or so when this record came out. That's a long time from that first album of just him and his guitar singing those protest songs. A long time from protest ballads, rock songs, gospel songs, uplifting and dark songs to this, a rollicking, frolicking record of songs that will make you laugh and dance and cry for joy. Maybe it took forty years to get to here, but it was worth it. The music on this record is tight and good, but then Dylan had been playing with this band during a zillion and one concerts on his Never Ending Tour, so it's not surprising. The songs are just plain fun and harken back to an age much more innocent. This is a wonderful record. I've played my CD hundreds of times, have the record on my iPod. It puts a smile on my face and that is just about as grand a compliment one can give a piece of music.
Average customer rating:
- Excellent Combo for an Aging Ageless Wonder
- The Collection: Oh, Mercy/Time Out of Mind/Love and Theft
- The New Dylan...
- Three Stellar Records in One Collection
- He's Older Now, but as Good, Maybe Better than Ever
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The Collection: Oh, Mercy/Time Out of Mind/Love and Theft
Bob Dylan
Manufacturer: Sony
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Similar Items:
- The Collection, Vol. 3: Blonde on Blonde/Blood on the Tracks/Infidels
- The Collection, Vol. 4: Nashville Skyline/New Morning/John Wesley Harding
- Modern Times
- The Collection, Vol. 2: Freewheelin' Bob Dylan/Times They Are A-Changin'/Another Side
- Modern Times (Deluxe Edition With Bonus DVD)
ASIN: B000AAIXT0
Release Date: 2005-08-30 |
Tracks:
- Political World
- Where Teardrops Fall
- Everything Is Broken
- Ring Them Bells
- Man in the Long Black Coat
- Most of the Time
- What Good Am I?
- Disease of Conceit
- What Was It You Wanted
- Shooting Star
Tracks:
- Love Sick
- Dirt Road Blues
- Standing in the Doorway
- Million Miles
- Tryin' to Get to Heaven
- 'Til I Fell in Love with You
- Not Dark Yet
- Cold Irons Bound
- Make You Feel My Love
- Can't Wait
- Highlands
Tracks:
- Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
- Mississippi
- Summer Days
- Bye and Bye
- Lonesome Day Blues
- Floater (Too Much to Ask)
- High Water (For Charley Patton)
- Moonlight
- Honest With Me
- Po' Boy
- Cry a While
- Sugar Baby
Customer Reviews:
Excellent Combo for an Aging Ageless Wonder.......2006-09-02
Because of the long section in Chronicles on Dylan's perspective on Oh, Mercy, I wanted to check it out. I had Time Out of Mind on cassette from when it first came out, and I had Love and Theft on CD--but the under $20 price for all three made me get this set, with the idea that I would give my second wrapped copy of Love and Theft to someone as a present. (Each of the 3 CD's is wrapped as new--in the light cardboard box which has no additional extras at all.)
Anyway, Oh, Mercy is really excellent. Each song entices your involvement and interest. I am glad to finally catch up with it.
Time Out of Mind is a genius work. From my cassette version of 10 years ago, I knew it was an older guy singing about aging, the perspective from the mature end of relationships,and sounding like a person who had seen and experienced much. Personally, I think it is his best overall work since Blood on the Tracks.
Love and Theft is another story. The first two CD's would easily get 5 stars, but this one seems too simple minded. It is not lighthearted sounding with purity (as I think of Nashville Skyline) but rather just somewhat superficial. I have played it a number of times, and I keep hoping that I missed something-because when it came out, the critics were saying how wonderful and special it was, but I think it is just ok. It is way above something like Selfportrait or Dylan, but it would not make the upper echelon of Bob Dylan albums.
Overall, the package of the 3 is a great deal, and well worth the price.
The Collection: Oh, Mercy/Time Out of Mind/Love and Theft.......2006-08-31
more super stuff from Dylan. prompt service from amazon
The New Dylan..........2006-01-05
That would've been a good name for this set.
This is a coupling of albums that really makes sense. If you're a Dylan fan from days of yore, this would be a good way to bring yourself up to speed. None of these albums ever really qualified as a comeback in the literal sense; Dylan wrote plenty of good songs in the 80's, he just scattered them across a few too many albums. I guess 1997's _Time Out of Mind_ comes closest; it had been been six years since his last all-new record (the unfortunate post-Wilbury hangover known as _Under the Red Sky_, thankfully omitted from this set). But even then, he'd been burning it up onstage for two years prior, and had made two offbeat but charming albums of accoustic folk/blues interpretations. Really what sets the three records here apart is that they forced even the sometimes inattentive general public to sit up and take notice. That tells you something about how good they are.
The one thing that would have improved this set would be if they'd found a way to include the three essential non-album tracks that came out during this time period ("Series of Dreams", a spare part from _Oh Mercy_, "Dignity", from _Greatest Hits Vol. 3_, and "Things Have Changed" from the _Wonder Boys_ soundtrack).
The remastered version of _Oh Mercy_, included here, is a nice sonic upgrade from the old version.
Three Stellar Records in One Collection.......2005-10-30
Here are three records from late in Dylan's body of work, the three best ones of his latter period, if Dylan can be said to have periods. Many break his career up into bits and pieces. You know the folk and protest period, the folk rock period and so on and so on, while others, myself included, just appreciate his albums each and every one.
Oh Mercy - Eerie Haunting Sound You Can't Get Out of Your Mind
Many people thought this album was a comeback for Dylan, many others, myself included, never thought he went away. However, I must admit Daniel Lanois' production sort of brings one back to the Dylan of old, you know, before he signed on the girl backup singers. Their is an artistic sound to this record reminiscent of a smoothed out Blonde on Blonde sound. So I can see how one would think they were getting the Dylan of the Sixties back again.
I've heard it said that this record has not stood the test of time as say, Highway 61 has, but I'd have to disagree. I play this record often, actually more than Highway 61, so I guess by my lights, the record still has pretty strong legs. The imagery in "Man With a Long Black Coat" is as powerful as anything Dylan has done. "Shooting Star" is every bit as good a song as "She Belongs to Me" for example and "Political World" is just as meaningful now as when Ronald Reagan was President, some, myself included, would say more so. And who hasn't suffered from the "Disease of Conceit" a song that could be about us all.
It is hard, out of such a body of work to pick out an album you like best, actually impossible, but for me this one is right up there near the top.
Time Out of Mind - Eerie, Haunting, Dark and Searing
When TOOM (Time Out Of Mind) came out it had been seven years since Dylan had done an album of original songs. Was TOOM worth the wait? I'd say so. For me this record harkens all the way back to "Blood on the Tracks" with Dylan delivering searing songs full of hurt, heartbreak and emotion. This album is bittersweat and dark. This album is great. This album stands near the top of a superb body of work.
And yet again, when this record came out it was hearlded as a comeback for Dylan. I swear this man has had more comebacks than Carter's got pills. Mr. Dylan never left. He has always been here, always making music, just sometimes some of his records don't etch their way into your soul the way others do. Some of his records are merely outstanding, some others, like this one, blaze like a firey comet streaking across the desert sky, burning their way into your conscious.
I suppose every five years or so Dylan has to put out a record like this just to remind us all what a real poet is all about.
Love and Theft - Kind of a Playful, Jazzy, Crooning and Rocking Bob Dylan
Still again, after a long hiatus of no albums with original tunes, many people hailed "Time Out of Mind" as still another comeback for Dylan with this record, delivered four years later in 2001, building upon said comeback. Only this time he isn't as eerie, haunting and dark as he was on "Time". In fact at times it seems Mr. Dylan has turned downright playful with his music. We have Dylan kind of crooning on some of the songs in this set of very good rock and roll songs, many of which have kind of a jazzy inflection to them.
In my opinion Dylan's gravely voice works well with this set and the songs blend into each other making a whole that is much better than the sum of its parts. I play this record quite a bit, but then I play most of his good records quite a bit. Some have said, my Gal Sara, for instance that perhaps I play Mr. Dylan's music a bit too much. Thank goodness I've got an iPod, so that when I'm up alone at night working on the computer or trying to hammer out words on paper with pen or pencil, I can listen to this record as loud as I want. My hearing may be going though, but so what, it's worth it.
Jack Priest, Writer from the Darkside
He's Older Now, but as Good, Maybe Better than Ever.......2005-10-30
He was good when he was a kid, he was good when he was in his fourties and his fifties. He's old now, but he's better than ever. Read on:
"Oh Mercy" is easily one of my favorite Dylan albums, and if it's not in the top five, it's certainly in the top ten. A lot of people, who had written off Mr. D's relevance, were taken aback when this record came out. There was a lot of, "Dylan's back." or "I knew he had it in him." kind of comments going around after folks gave this record a listen too. Folks in the biz, those in the know, started calling "Oh Mercy" Dylan's comeback record. But then there were those who had been faithful fans, listening and appreciating his music all along. For them, Dylan had never really gone anywhere to come back from. That said, this record does harkens back to those Dylan albums of yesteryear, with those story songs that are so wonderful. This is most certainly a five star album and one you absolutely must own.
"Time Out of Mind" is considered a comeback album by many. These people think that just because Bob Dylan put out a couple Christian Records, or A couple records with a gang of Gospel singers, or a couple records of old blues and public domain songs, that he'd lost it, forgotten how to do rock and roll, forgotten how to write. So when these so called comeback albums come out, they raise their hands, look to the heavens and shout out "Praise the Lord, Dylan's back." How silly, Mr. D's always been around and God willing will still be giving us these comeback records every three years or so thirty years from now. That said, "Time Out of Mind," has a dark feel to it. It pulls you in with a combination of Dylan's mournful voice and mournful lyrics. It's different than anything he's done before.
I've heard it said that Bob Dylan said of "Love & Theft" that it's like "a greatest hits without the hits." Well, when you listen to this masterpiece, that's exactly the kind of feel you get for this album. It's like each of the songs is an old friend, like we've heard them all before. How did Dylan do that? Maybe it's because he recorded "Love and Theft" with his touring band and they were all so used to playing with each other. It shows. In a way this album reminds me of "Blood on the Tracks" the album that I consider Mr. Ds best. Every song on "The Tracks" belongs there, an integral part of the whole. Sure every song stands alone, but together they make a masterpiece. That's the way it is with "Love and Theft." I don't know if this is the best album Mr. D has ever done, cuz I still listen "The Tracks," all the time, but if it's not the best, it's certainly number two. And who knows, after listening to it for another year or so, I may reevaluate that, but for now all I have to say is this CD is so good it'll make you cry.
Reviewed by Stephanie Sane
Average customer rating:
- Love and Theft will steal your heart
- The Extra Tracks are Worth the Price, Just Extraordinary
- not as good as Time Out Of Mind
- One of Dylan's Best, Plus Great Extra Songs
- True Folk
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"Love and Theft" (Limited Edition)
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- Time Out of Mind
- Modern Times (Deluxe Edition With Bonus DVD)
- Modern Times
- World Gone Wrong
- Shot of Love
ASIN: B00005NZBN
Release Date: 2001-09-11 |
Tracks:
- Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
- Mississippi
- Summer Days
- Bye And Bye
- Lonesome Day Blues
- Floater (Too Much To Ask)
- High Water (for Charlie Patton)
- Moonlight
- Honest With Me
- Po' Boy
- Cry A While
- Sugar Baby
Tracks:
- The Times They Are A-Changin' (Alternate version from 1963)
- I Was Young When I Left Home (Previously unreleased from 1961)
Amazon.com
When we last left the ever-confounding saga that is Bob Dylan's now-superhuman recording career, he'd reunited with producer Daniel Lanois, with whom he cut 1997's Time Out of Mind, his most coherent and appealing collection in nearly a decade. Now the still-reigning prince of musical contrariety and potent wordplay is back with his most focused, well-played collection since 1989's Oh Mercy, another Lanois production. One listen to the fade-in of the opener "Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum" and it's clear that all Dylan's roadwork has shaped him and his band (including guitarist Charlie Sexton) into a mighty musical weapon. And while his craggy howl continues to resonate, it's the songs here that astonish. A sturdy midtempo melody makes "Mississippi" the equal of the best numbers on Time, which it was actually written for. He convincingly puts over the R&B swing (yes, swing) number "Summer Days." "Honest with Me" ("I'm not sorry for nuthin' I've done / I'm glad I fight, I only wished we'd won") is a driving rocker that packs a genuine punch. And the light, lounge-like "Bye and Bye" and the southland ramble "Floater (Too Much to Ask)" show extraordinary confidence. He's labeled these songs "blues-based," but in typical Dylan fashion what would promise to be the most overtly blues number here--"High Water (for Charlie Patton)"--sounds like a banjo-based gunfighter ballad. But then that's this artist's gift: confounding expectations. --Robert Baird
Customer Reviews:
Love and Theft will steal your heart.......2005-09-21
Being a recent Dylan fan, I was drooling to know his latest studio album. So I got my hands on Love and Theft, a double disc set.
Overall this album is excellent. The musicians are wonderful, the sound is crisp, the instruments are varied. The different styles used by Bob make this record very appealing to fans of rock, ballads, rockabilly, blues, etc. The lyrics are very hilarious too, and some of them really make you think, as we have come to expect from Mr Dylan.
Now, we all know that Bob has been singing and playing harmonica for 40 years now, so his voice sounds nothing like it used to in the sixties and seventies. If you have listened to "Time out of Mind", you can make yourself a good idea of how he sounds. A person that does not know him, though, may not be impressed. He has an excellent crooning, though, and this is why "Moonlight" is one of the best songs of the album.
And there are many gems in here: "Mississippi", "Floater" and "High Water" are my favorites. The latter is dedicated to Charlie Patton, the Delta Blues singer and composer. The banjo sounds excellent in this one!
The final track is a beautiful and sad ballad, the longest running song of the package ( the same that he made in Time out of Mind and Blonde on Blonde )It closes the disc just the right way, leaving you with the desire of playing it again soon. And like all Dylan's records, you hear and discover more and more things with each playing. That's why it will steal your heart.
About the two extra songs, the best one here is the alternate version of "The Times". Bob plays his guitar only, so the track is shorter, a bit darker, and very simple. The other one is a traditional song, very sad, and not that good.
If you like Bob Dylan ( and who doesn't? ) , you can buy this record with the knowledge that you get a bang for your buck, and that you are in for hours of pure listening enjoyment.
Now, if you are new to Dylan, I don't think you are gonna like or appreciate this disc. I would recommend getting an anthology first ( the Essential Bob Dylan is an excellent choice ), and when you get to like Bob's music, then don't hesitate to pick this Sugar Baby up.
The Extra Tracks are Worth the Price, Just Extraordinary.......2005-05-05
Still again, after a long hiatus of no albums with original tunes, many people hailed "Time Out of Mind" as still another comeback for Dylan with this record, delivered four years later in 2001, building upon said comeback. Only this time he isn't as eerie, haunting and dark as he was on "Time". In fact at times it seems Mr. Dylan has turned downright playful with his music. We have Dylan kind of crooning on some of the songs in this set of very good rock and roll songs, many of which have kind of a jazzy inflection to them.
And then there are the two extra songs on that extra CD in this set, the alternate version of "The Times The Are A-Changin' is interesting, but in my opinion there was a reason the went with the other version back in 1963. However the price of this set is worth it and more just to get your hands on "I Was Young When I Left Home" which till now had only been available on the "John Birch Society Blues" Bootleg that came out back in the early Seventies. This long, acoustic ballad is just simply extraordinary.
In my opinion Dylan's gravely voice works well with this set and the songs blend into each other making a whole that is much better than the sum of its parts. I play this record quite a bit, but then I play most of his good records quite a bit. Some have said, my Gal Sara, for instance that perhaps I play Mr. Dylan's music a bit too much. Thank goodness I've got an iPod, so that when I'm up alone at night working on the computer or trying to hammer out words on paper with pen or pencil, I can listen to this record as loud as I want. My hearing may be going though, but so what, it's worth it.
Jack Priest, Writer from the Darkside
not as good as Time Out Of Mind.......2005-02-16
BUT, the song, 'I Was Young When I Left Home,' and although it was recorded in 1961, is one of the most heart wrenching, achingly, beautiful recordings I believe Dylan has ever done. Whoever chose to put it on as a bonus track, thanks.
One of Dylan's Best, Plus Great Extra Songs.......2003-10-02
I've heard it said that Bob Dylan said of this record that it's like "a greatest hits without the hits." Well, when you listen to this masterpiece, that's exactly the kind of feel you get for this album. It's like each of the songs is an old friend, like we've heard them all before. How did Dylan do that? Maybe it's because he recorded "Love and Theft" with his touring band and they were all so used to playing with each other. It shows. In a way this album reminds me of "Blood on the Tracks" the album that I consider Mr. Ds best. Every song on "The Tracks" belongs there, an integral part of the whole. Sure every song stands alone, but together they make a masterpiece. That's the way it is with "Love and Theft." I don't know if this is the best album Mr. D has ever done, cuz I still listen "The Tracks," all the time, but if it's not the best, it's certainly number two. And who knows, after listening to it for another year or so, I may reevaluate that, but for now I'll give "Love and Theft" five stars. This CD is so good it'll make you cry.
As for the extra songs, the version of "The Times They are A-Changin'" doesn't come close to being as good as the original, but it's interesting. However "I was Young when I Left Home," which Sony claims is unreleased, but those of use in the know, know that it originally came out in 1970 on the illegal bootleg, "GWW John Birch Society Blues," is an outstanding piece of work.
Reviewed by Stephanie Sane
True Folk.......2003-07-12
I give this album 13 stars.
I thought for awhile that this was Dylan's best album since Blonde on Blonde. Then for awhile I thought NO, it's his best album since Highway 61.
Then, like Wittgenstein, I changed my mind again, undergoing a paradigm shift, and realized that it is actually his best album since Freewheelin'...
As far as the Theft charges; Malcolm Lowry once said - "If you steal from one person, it's plagiarism; if you steal from everybody, you're a genius." Case closed, the Judge done hammered down his hammer, and we can all leave the courthouse and amble on down into the sunny square outside, where Bob is playing, his guitar case lying open on the bench. The sound of bees fills the air in the background.
Bob has mined the hills of folklore again, and shown us once again what varied and colorful Mother Lodes there are to be found in the Folk. If you haven't joined his jingle jangle travelling band by now, this album will initiate you.
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- Oh Mercy, This is a Mighty Fine Collection
- Some of Bob Dylan's Best Work
- Three Very Personal Records
- Dylan Just Keeps Getting Better
- Expanding on the packaging...
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The Collection: Oh, Mercy/Time Out of Mind/Love and Theft
Bob Dylan
Manufacturer: Sony
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
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Similar Items:
- The Collection, Vol. 4: Nashville Skyline/New Morning/John Wesley Harding
- Collection 3: Blonde on Blonde / Blood Tracks / Infidels
- Collection 2: Freewheelin / Times Changin / Another Side of Bob Dylan
- MTV Unplugged [Live, 1994]
- Modern Times (Deluxe Edition With Bonus DVD)
ASIN: B0002IQEY6
Release Date: 2004-07-13 |
Tracks:
- Love Sick
- Dirt Road Blues
- Standing in the Doorway
- Million Miles
- Tryin' to Get to Heaven
- 'Til I Fell in Love With You
- Not Dark Yet
- Cold Irons Bound
- Make You Feel My Love
- Can't Wait
- Highlands
Tracks:
- Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
- Mississippi
- Summer Days
- Bye and Bye
- Lonesome Day Blues
- Floater (Too Much to Ask)
- High Water (For Charley Patton)
- Moonlight
- Honest With Me
- Po' Boy
- Cry a While
- Sugar Baby
Tracks:
- Political World
- Where Teardrops Fall
- Everything Is Broken
- Ring Them Bells
- Man in the Long Black Coat
- Most of the Time
- What Good Am I?
- Disease of Conceit
- What Was It You Wanted
- Shooting Star
Customer Reviews:
Oh Mercy, This is a Mighty Fine Collection.......2006-04-03
"Oh Mercy" is again a new direction for Bob Dylan, or maybe it's another comeback record for him. He's taken so many directions, had so many comebacks on his journey, made so many fine records and this is one of the best, every song one to listen to over and over, to reflect on. How does he do that, keep making records like this? Topical songs like "Political World" and "Man in a Long Black Coat" merged with the dirge like song "Ring Them Bells" mingled in with the words in "Disease of Conceit" and "Most of the Time" lessons for us all. Nobody else could put a group of songs like this and make it work. This is certainly on of Bob Dylan's best records and one everybody who own any Dylan record should own and everybody should own a Dylan record.
Many dylan fans believe "Blood on the Tracks" to be Dylan's most personal album, his most painful. But, in my opinion, "Time Out of Mind" tops that. I don't know what he was going through in his personal life when he wrote these songs, but it must have been bad. At least that's the way it seems to me. Darkly personal from a man who is hurting, that's the sense I get from this record, from "Love Sick" all the way through to "Highlands," which I consider to be just about one of the best story songs every written or performed by anyone, bar none. Dylan sings like he's taken a down turn since "Oh Mercy," the last record produced by Daniel Lanois. In between there were a couple albums of standards, blues and ballads, plus the Bootleg Series and Unplugged show, also Red Sky, which was pretty good, but not nearly the record this is. It's almost like Dylan went straight from "Oh Mercy" to "Time Out of Mind" and the transition is seemless. This is a beautiful record, darkly done, but beautiful nevertheless.
My friends have talked about how Dylan sings somewhat like a honky tonker on "Love and Theft", but he also comes across as a crooner as well, especially on "Bye and Bye" and also on "Moonlight." He's a Jazz singing, upbeating performer too, just listen to "Summer Days" and "Lonesome Day Blues." He's a honky tonking gambler on "Poor Boy," a dirge singer, delivering lyrics stark and true on "Sugar Baby." Like always, Bob Dylan is so many things, on this album, just about his best record ever. I loved "Highway 61." Wept over "Blood on the Tracks." Rocked with "Infidels." But this, this is all those and more. I think maybe this is Bob Dylan's best.
Some of Bob Dylan's Best Work.......2006-04-03
It seems to me that Bob Dylan is always stretching forward, while reaching toward the past. Like a man in a hurricane, he swirls toward an uncertain future like a the shooting star he sings about and Jack London wrote about, but he tries, sometimes in vain, to hold on to his past, his roots, like he does so well here with songs on "Oh Mercy" like "Political World" and "Man in a Long Black Coat." These are songs fans of Bob Dylan's early work might well like. Songs like "Shooting Star", "Where Teardrops Fall" and "What Good Am I?" seem to come right from the heart. The quiet and understated effect of Daniel Lanois' production, which will be even more understated in "Time Out of Mind", are simply haunting to say the least. Something like thirty years into his career at this point and this is one of his best records yet. But what is simply amazing is that there are more to come.
Sometimes one has to wonder if Bob Dylan has a frog caught in his throat. The big kind you find in the tropics, those frogs that croak all night long, singing their songs of sadness and despair. Their dark songs, songs about a place you don't want to go, but can't help going. That's what you'll find on "Time Out of Mind." You can almost feel Dylan's pain as he croaks out the word to "It's Not Dark Yet." This is almost as revealing about Dylan's personal trials and travails as "Blood on the Tracks," a deeply personal look at the man through his music. That is one thing about Bob Dylan, he puts it all out there for you to either accept or reject, but like it or not, his music is real and this record is one of his best.
Unlike the very dark, Grammy winning "Time Out of Mind" Dylan's last album of original material, "Love and Theft" is a record full of fun songs that takes you back to the Fifties, maybe the Forties even. Listen to "Summer Days." If that doesn't make you want to get up and swing, you've got lead in your feet. This whole record has sort of a honky tonk feel to it. It's just simply fabulous. Dylan is older, but he's better. He still has that frog in his throat we've all come to know and love. He's sporting a Boston Blackie Mustache, has a twinkle in his eye and kind of looks like that guy you've seen playing the piano in so many saloons in so many black and white westerns and he just plain sounds like a song and dance man and gosh, I love this record. I guess I already said that.
Three Very Personal Records.......2006-04-03
Bob Dylan and Daniel Lanois work better together, it seems to me, then many of the other people Dylan has worked with. I certainly like the sound of "Oh Mercy" better than the stuff Dylan did with Tom Petty, though I like that stuff too. I actually like this record as much as I like "Blood on the Tracks" and often have both of them in my CD changer at the same time (which by the way I never set at random play with a Bob Dylan record, because Dylan records were meant to be played in their entirety, the way Dylan presented them). For me, this record fits nicely between "Tracks" and "Time out of Mind." Sure he did some great stuff in between, but it's these personal songs like "What Good Am I?" that I like so much and, of course, the way Bob Dylan tells a story. There is nobody better.
It seems like Dylan's voice has changed when you listen to "Time Out of Mind, but that's not unusual. His voice changes a lot from record to record, but it's always recognizably, thoroughly Dylan. The album is a bit dark and you can especially see that in the excellent "Love Sick" and "Not Dark Yet," but you can see some optimism, some hope in the song too. There is sort of a bluesy feel to this record that carries over to "Love and Theft," you know, kind of a sadness in these songs that are oh so honest they make your heart ache. This is both a very depressing and very inspiring record and only Bob Dylan could get away with something like that. Highly recommended, very highly recommended.
"Moonlight" is my favorite song on "Love and Theft record that is full of my favorite Bob Dylan songs. Just imagine a honky tonking riverboat gambler with a guitar and a touch of irony in his voice and you have the master who comes up with such words, like "Doctor, lawyer indian chief, it takes a thief to catch a thief, and who does the bell toll for, love, it tolls for you and me." Old words mingled with new words which captures the essence of this album, old style infused with a touch of today. Still, I imagine someone fifty or sixty years ago, hearing this record for the first time, from the whimsical" Tweedle Dee" to the dirgle like "Sugar Baby" that is so reminiscent of "Dark Eyes" the song that closes "Empire Burlesque, would recognize Bob Dylan as a contemporary. "Love is pleasing, love is teasing, love's not an evil thing." What great lyrics there are on this record you'll never be able to get out of your mind. "It takes a thief to catch a thief," and Bob Dylan must be a thief, because he sure caught me.
Dylan Just Keeps Getting Better.......2006-04-03
"Oh Mercy" goes Straight to the Soul. It had been a long time since Dylan released an album of original material. A lot of his fans probably thought he was washed up, consigned to singing gospel flavored songs with girl backup singers (which he does quite well by the way) and re-singing his old material, but Dylan proved them wrong with this record. In fact most of the time he surprises, like with this record. There is no denying "Oh Mercy" is a masterpiece. It's quiet and subtle, not at all like the rocker "Infidels" was. For me this record reminds me a lot of "Blood on the Tracks" with it's personal songs. However, there are also songs about the social conditions of the day, delivered in only the way Bob Dylan can deliver them, understated, but straight to the soul.
Riddles and Enigmas Abound in "Time Out of Mind." Eight years since "Oh Mercy," and once again Bob Dylan calls on Daniel Lanois to produce a record. This one wins a Grammy and shows the world Bob Dylan is still a force to be reckoned with. This is an eerie, kind of psychedelic and very dark record. Dylan's voice even sounds dark, as dark and bare as the lyrics. Songs of no hope and a lot of hope, dreary, dank, dark, but seemingly always with a ray of hope shining through. "It's not dark yet, but it's getting there." Yeah, it's getting there. Riddles and enigmas abound in this record that won a Grammy and if you give it a listen, you'll find Bob Dylan's riddles both easy and impossible to decipher, but such is the nature of the man.
"Love and Theft" was Worth the Wait. I guess Bob Dylan is approaching half a century in the music making business, forty years or so when this record came out. That's a long time from that first album of just him and his guitar singing those protest songs. A long time from protest ballads, rock songs, gospel songs, uplifting and dark songs to this, a rollicking, frolicking record of songs that will make you laugh and dance and cry for joy. Maybe it took forty years to get to here, but it was worth it. The music on this record is tight and good, but then Dylan had been playing with this band during a zillion and one concerts on his Never Ending Tour, so it's not surprising. The songs are just plain fun and harken back to an age much more innocent. This is a wonderful record. I've played my CD hundreds of times, have the record on my iPod. It puts a smile on my face and that is just about as grand a compliment one can give a piece of music.
Expanding on the packaging..........2005-08-23
I guess to make this a review I've gotta tell you the CDs are worth owning. Oh Mercy has an excellent mood and feel, but I guess I'm the only one who thinks some of the songs are mediocre-ish or a little forced, but the feel enhances them all. Time Out Of Mind keeps a lot of that mood but just isn't influenced as much by it musically, but still leaves you with that same sweet melancholy feeling. "Love And Theft" is called Bob's best by a lot of people and definately has great music and is certainly his most diverse stylistically since New Morning and is even moreso. And Bob thinks he's lost it...
But on the packaging: as Magnus Eisengrim said it is a book styled box made of cardboard and molded plastic. Upon opening the three CDs are placed in trays and in the fourth space fits the booklets for the three albums. All are the standard CDs, Oh Mercy is the reissued version the label leads me to believe, but not the SACD. I owned Time Out Of Mind and "Love And Theft"'s standard issues, so I can very securely say that all is missing from them in this package is the back insert of the CD case, both have transparent trays that you can see through for a picture underneath and it is to be assumed the Oh Mercy package had the same thing. As I said this set doesn't have these, but most people probably won't care a lot seeing as all there are is a couple pictures and the track list and general fans probably won't feel incomplete without them.
So this set is probably more for collectability than the jewel case edition, but most who will be buying this edition will be collectors. But what really matters anyway is the music, so any way you'll have these albums. If you've got an SACD player, don't buy this though, because, as I said, these aren't SACDs and Oh Mercy and "Love and Theft" are both available on SACD. Let's hope Time Out Of Mind will become available on it, because that is an album that deserves a 5.1 mix.
By the way, at Best Buy I saw sets of this style of Willie Nelson, and some other people I don't recall right now, and I guess as Magnus said, Black Sabbath.
Average customer rating:
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Love & Theft
Bob Dylan
ProductGroup: Music
Binding: Audio CD
General
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Singer-Songwriters
| Contemporary Folk
| Folk
| Styles
| Music
Folk Rock
| Rock
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Pop Rock
| Pop
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ASIN: B00005O4UL |
Tracks:
- Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
- Mississippi
- Summer Days
- Bye And Bye
- Lonesome Day Blues
- Floater (Too Much To Ask)
- High Water (For Charley Patton)
- Moonlight
- Honest With Me
- Po' Boy
- Cry A While
- Sugar Baby
Tracks:
- I Was Young When I Left Home
- The Times They Are A-Changin'
Album Description
Australian import pressing of his is all new 2001 studio album includes a bonus 2 track CD, 'I Was Young When I Left Home' & 'The Times They Are A Changing (Alternate Version)'. Includes 12 tracks on the first CD. Limited edition to 8,000. *This release i
Music Review:
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- Martin Scorsese Presents The Blues: Jimi Hendrix
- Mescalero
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- Mr. Fantasy [Extra tracks] [Original recording remastered]
- MTV Unplugged [Live]
- Music From the Elder [Original recording remastered]
- Odds & Sods [Original recording remastered] [Extra tracks]
- On Time [Original recording remastered]
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