Bob Dylan Bootlegs Are Still The Most Popular

Filed under:  Bob Dylan Bootlegs  by:  admin

Ever since the very first Bob Dylan bootleg, The Great White Wonder, was released in 1969, Bob’s bootleg recordings have been in high demand by his fans. You can find material from his earliest known recording in 1958 right up to the latest concert shared online the night of the show and appearing soon afterwards on a bootleg CD coming from Europe or Japan.

In concert Rolling Stones Bootlegs and Beatles unreleased studio material are also very sought after by collectors. Live Bruce Springsteen, Pink Floyd, U2 and Led Zeppelin vinyl and CD bootlegs are ‘must haves’ for serious fans too. As a matter of fact, I think it’s safe to say any popular touring band has been bootlegged.

However, the fact remains, Bob Dylan is the most bootlegged artist of all time. I base this statement on my experience as editor and publisher of the Hot Wacks bootleg recording discographies.

This blog will present articles and videos about Dylan as well as discuss bootlegs old and new.

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The First Bob Dylan Bootleg

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The following article is published with permission of the Hot Wacks Press.

From “Rolling Stone” September 20 1969.
‘New’ Dylan Album Bootlegged in LA.
By Jerry Hopkins.

LOS ANGELES - More then 2,300 copies of “bootleg” Bob Dylan album are now being sold in Los Angeles in what may be the entertainment industry’s first truly hip situation comedy.

The simply-produced package - 26 cuts on two plain unmarked discs, called “Great White Wonder” - was made from tapes never before released by Dylan or by his now rather miffed record label, Columbia.

Rather, it was collected, pressed and currently is being marketed by two young Los Angeles residents both of whom have long hair, a moderate case of the shakes (prompted by paranoia) and an amusing story to tell.

Before getting into the trials and tribulations of the city’s only visible “Bootleggers,” some statistics:

Nine of the songs are apparently from the “basement tape” made in the cellar of Dylan’s upstate New York home more than 18 months ago, shortly before he went to Nashville to record “John Wesley Harding”. On these, Dylan performs with what later became known as the Band from Big Pink.

Another 16 cuts - 12 of them songs, four of them brief rap sessions - are allegedly from a tape made December 22nd, 1961, in a Minneapolis hotel room. All these feature Dylan alone, with an acoustic guitar and harmonica, and if
the date is correct, the tape was made before Dylan signed with Columbia.

The final cut, “Living the Blues,” was taken direct from the television set when Dylan appeared on the Johnny Cash Show earlier this summer.

Effect of the album’s “release” on the local record scene has been phenominal. Five radio stations - KCBS in Santa Barbara, KNAC in Long Beach, KRLA in Pasadena and KMET-FM and KPPC-FM in Los Angeles - immediately began
playing the LP, thereby creating a demand that often far exceeded a shop’s limited supply.

The supply line was ragged at best, largely because the two men behind the scheme (a third put up the initial money, the say) are the “exclusive distributors.”

Not only that, “We don’t have a car of our own,” they say. “We have to borrow cars to take the records around.”

Distribution has been further hamperered by the fact that they will not give their names, addresses or a telephone where they might be reached. This, for what they term “all the obvious reasons.”

As a result, shops are charging whatever they think the traffic will bear. The two producers say they are wholesaling the package at $4.50 each ($4.25 apiece after the first 50), and shops are asking from $6.50 up. One store, The Psychedilic Supermarket in Hollywood - its name tells where it’s owner is at - is even asking, and getting, $12.50 for the two-record set.

Amused and displeased spokesmen at Colombia [sic] (it depended who you spoke to), were aware copies of the basement tape were in circulation, had even been played on the air, but they did not have any warning that an LP like
this would be marketed.

Columbia Records, contacted by phone, made this statement: “We consider the release of this record as an abuse of the integrity of a great artist. By releasing material without the knowledge or approval of Bob Dylan or Columbia Records, the sellers of this record are crassly depriving a great artist of the opportunity to perfect his performance to the point where he
believes in their integrity and validity. They are at one time defaming the artist and defrauding his admirers. For these reasons, Columbia Records in cooperation with Bob Dylan’s attorneys intends to take all legal steps to stop the distribution and sale of this album.”

The two youthful bootlegger/entrepreneurs, meanwhile, continue to troop from shop to shop, wondering what will happen next. Several stores, described by one of the bootleggers as “stone chicken,” have refused to carry the LP.

Some objected to the simple packaging - a white double sleeve with “Great White Wonder” rubber stamped in the upper righthand corner - they said, while others indicated they were afraid of how Columbia might react.

Those shops carrying the LP seem happy, though, with many reporting the album’s arrival has had the same effect on business as a new Beatles or Stones LP might have: Business generally has picked up.

Of all the songs offered in the package, only three had previously been released by Dylan, and all were then in a different form. They are “See That My Grave is Swept Clean” and “Man of Constant Sorrow,” both from his first
album for Columbia, “Bob Dylan”, and “Only a Hobo Talkin’ Devil,” from a broadside album, “Broadside Ballads, Volume 1, A Handful of Songs About Our Time,” when Dylan was recording as Blind Boy Grunt.

Several other of the songs had been recorded by others, notably the Band, while still others are folk classics, but until this recorded collection appeared in all its unmarked splendor, Dylan versions of the material existed only on “secret” tapes.

Unfortunately, much of the recording quality is poor. (Although it is questionable whether comparisons of this sort can be made fairly when talking about “bootleg” material.) The tracks made with the Band, for example, sound as if run through a paper cup and string.

On other songs, however, the sound reproduction is quite good, and in most of the early material, Dylan even seems to be playing a freer, more imaginative acoustic guitar than he’s been heard to pick any time recently.

Getting into specifics, and using the producers’ numbering choise (which seems to be arbitrary at best), Side No. 1 contains six songs and two raps, all from the “hotel” or “Minneapolis” tape.

Songs are “Candy Man,” Ramblin’ Around,” “Hezekiah,” “No Home In This World Any More,” “Abner Till” and “Lazarus.” Some of the titles are, like the numbering of the sides, arbitrary; Dylan was in Europe and not available for assistance in identification.

In the first of the talking cuts on this side, Dylan offers some comment about photographs that had been taken recently - said they made him look like James Dean. They’re both informal, but not very informative.

Side No. 2, the second made from the Minneapolis tape, begins with “Baby, Please Don’t Go,” then goes into a rap during which Pete Seeger asks Dylan how he writes his songs (the response is representative Dylan put-on), then
into “Dink’s Blues” and “See That My Grave Is Swept Clean.” Next is a longer rap, titled “East Orange, New Jersey,” all about how Dylan once didn’t get paid in money, but chess men; it’s a variation of a story told by Lee Hays of the Weavers (in which Lee said he got paid in furs) and probably several others as well. The final song on the side is “Man of Constant Sorrow.”

Side No. 3 begins with an unfinished solo blues which might be called just that - “Unfinished Blues” - because it ends as abruptly as a San Francisco freeway, in mid-air. Next is “I Think I’ll Stay All Night,” recorded rather shabbily with the Band and “Only a Hobo Talkin’ Devil,” recorded alone. The last three cuts on the side also were recorded with the Band - “Kill Me
Alive,” “The Mighty Quinn” and “Wheels on Fire.”

The first five songs on Side No. 4 are from the basement tape made with the Band - “I Shall Be Released,” “Open the Door, Richard,” “Too Much of Nothin’,” “Take Care of Yourself” and “Tears of Rage.” Again, the fidelity is weak. And the final cut is “Livin’ the Blues,” the song lifted from the Cash show and the song which, ironically, it is reported Columbia will release as Dylan’s next “official” single.

The bootleggers, of course, plan no single releases. They do hint at producing more albums, though - however indefinite their plans may be, “due to existing circumstances.” Since issuing this one, they say, they’ve been approached by a number of people with other “secret” tapes.

In the meantime, they’re still struggling with their little “company’s” first release and protecting their anonymity.

“What’re your names?” I asked.

“Call me Patrick,” said the one with the longest hair.

“Call me Vladimir,” said the one with the bushiest sideburns.

“How do you spell Vladimir?”

“I don’t konw, man. Make it Merlin.”

Why did they do it?

“Bob Dylan is a heavy talent,” Patrick said, “and he’s got all those songs nobody’s ever heard. We thought we’d take it upon ourselves to make this music available.”

“Do you know what will happen if you get away with it?” I said. “Why, if John Mayall or anybody opens at the Whisky tonight, there’ll be a live recording of it on the stands by the middle of next week.”

Patrick and Vladimir/Merlin just grinned.

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What Is A Bootleg?

Filed under:  Bob Dylan Bootlegs  by:  admin

A distinction had best be made at this point between bootleg, pirate and counterfeit records. A bootleg consists of unreleased material recorded at concerts, studio outtakes, and radio or TV broadcasts. A pirate album consists of released material without attempting to make the LP look like an original. A counterfeit album is an exact copy of an officially released album.

Record industry spokespeople often include bootlegs with counterfeit and pirate recordings when making statements about the loss of revenue from record piracy. Bootlegs, with their small pressings, should not be included in this figure as the record labels do not lose revenue from a recording which is not in their catalog.

These same spokespeople completely overlook the historical significance of bootlegs as well. While this is obvious when speaking in terms of Opera, Jazz and Blues boots, Rock has not been around for the same amount of time. With Rock’s seemingly unending loss of performers due to untimely deaths, this will soon become evident. Albert Goldman, in his bestseller “Elvis”, is one of the first biographers to appreciate the historical significance bootlegs have.

“Not just the man but the performer continued to emerge after his death. Though RCA had nothing better to offer than gleanings from its soon-exhausted archives, the record bootleggers, those great friends of the fans, cut the legal knots that had long restrained the release of Elvis’s most significant live sessions. The legendary Elvis of the Louisiana Hayride, the Dorsey Brothers shows and the Hawaiian benefits appeared. All the jams from the Singer Special were offered in two beautifully-packaged albums from California that far surpassed both in interest and in appearance any legitimate offerings of RCA Victor. In yet another illicit release came at last the most sought-after tape in the history of rock ‘n’ roll: the fabled ‘Million Dollar Quartet’, an impromptu sing in the Sun Studio around Christmas 1956, by the three greatest heroes of rockabilly: Elvis, Jerry Lee Lewis and Carl Perkins (minus the anticipated fourth voice, Johnny Cash). Though in this instance the reality of the recording hardly matched the glamour of its legend, the value of the disc as a document was enormous. At last you were inside the Sun Studio listening attentively as Sam Phillips’ greatest singers did what they most enjoyed doing: pickin’ and singin’ their favorite rock songs and hymns”.

Reprinted with permission of The Hot Wacks Press.

 

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Bob Dylan News

Filed under:  Dylan Bootlegs  by:  admin
  • “Guitar Hero 5 ” Adds Bob Dylan, Kings of Leon To Eclectic Set … - Activision has revealed two dozen songs from Guitar Hero 5’s massive 85-song on-disc set list, including tracks by Bob Dylan, David Bowie, Coldplay and John Mellencamp. The game will also feature a bunch of newer tracks, like Kings of …

  • 10 Great Bob Dylan Live Performances - Listverse - Bob Dylan- poet, one of the best song-writers ever, amazing live performer. Bob has been well known to kick ass live. This list is pretty biased towards the few videos on YouTube with good sound quality. Normally, when thinking of Dylan …

  • Bob Dylan on Facebook - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars We are huge Bob Dylan music fans so this facebook application was very fun for us. With the Bob Dylan Facebook application you can have a personalized video greeting from Bob on your profile page. …

  • Bob Dylan: Happy 66th Birthday! - Bob Dylan: Photography by Annie Leibovitz. Greenwich Village: The Early Years. Bob Dylan: Andy Warhol’s Factory. Bob Dylan: Just Be What You Want to Be. Slideshow: Bob Dylan Unseen. (Click Image for Slideshow) …

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