| | Bob Dylan Desire CD Bob Dylan Discography of CDs
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Personnel: Bob Dylan (vocals, guitar, harmonica, piano); Vincent Bell (bouzouki); Scarlet Rivera (violin); Dom Cortese (accordion); Rob Stoner (bass, background vocals); Howard Wyeth (drums); Luther (congas); Emmylou Harris, Ronee Blakley, Steve Soles (background vocals). Personnel: Bob Dylan (vocals, guitar, harmonica, piano); Scarlet Rivera (violin); Dominic Cortese (accordion); Howie Wyeth (drums); Emmylou Harris, Ronee Blakley, Steven Soles, Rob Stoner (background vocals). Liner Note Author: Allen Ginsberg. Recording information: Quadrophonic Sound. Photographer: Ruth Bernal. If Blood on the Tracks was an unapologetically intimate affair, Desire is unwieldy and messy, the deliberate work of a collective. And while Bob Dylan directly addresses his crumbling relationship with his wife, Sara, on the final track, Desire is hardly as personal as its predecessor, finding Dylan returning to topical songwriting and folk tales for the core of the record. It's all over the map, as far as songwriting goes, and so is it musically, capturing Dylan at the beginning of the Rolling Thunder Revue era, which was more notable for its chaos than its music. And, so it's only fitting that Desire fits that description as well, as it careens between surging folk-rock, Mideastern dirges, skipping pop, and epic narratives. It's little surprise that Desire doesn't quite gel, yet it retains its own character -- really, there's no other place where Dylan tried as many different styles, as many weird detours, as he does here. And, there's something to be said for its rambling, sprawling character, which has a charm of its own. Even so, the record would have been assisted by a more consistent set of songs; there are some masterpieces here, though: "Hurricane" is the best-known, but the effervescent "Mozambique" is Dylan at his breeziest, "Sara" at his most nakedly emotional, and "Isis" is one of his very best songs of the '70s, a hypnotic, contemporized spin on a classic fable. This may not add up to a masterpiece, but it does result in one of his most fascinating records of the '70s and '80s -- more intriguing, lyrically and musically, than most of his latter-day affairs. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine DESIRE was the studio realization of the Rolling Thunder revue's sound. The musicians involved in this mid-'70s Dylan project were more than a backup band; they forged a distinctive musical vision, loose and swirling, the perfect aural equivalent of the traveling gypsy/carnival image they affected onstage. Drummer Howie Wyeth, who possessed an uncannily sympathetic ear for accompanying singer-songwriters, and violinist Scarlet Rivera, built their careers on the foundation of the Rolling Thunder band. Many critics balked at Dylan's lyrical collaborations with Jacques Levy on this album, but their reservations were just glorified xenophobia. Levy's flowing, colloquial style suited Dylan's music and delivery perfectly, and the two produced several gems. "Isis" is an exotic tale of intrigue that turns out to be a unique love story. "Hurricane" breathlessly tells the true story of Ruben Carter, a boxer framed for murder and acquitted years after DESIRE's release. It still stands as one of Dylan's most exciting, emotional tunes. If Blood on the Tracks was an unapologetically intimate affair, Desire is unwieldy and messy, the deliberate work of a collective. And while Bob Dylan directly addresses his crumbling relationship with his wife, Sara, on the final track, Desire is hardly as personal as its predecessor, finding Dylan returning to topical songwriting and folk tales for the core of the record. It's all over the map, as far as songwriting goes, and so is it musically, capturing Dylan at the beginning of the Rolling Thunder Revue era, which was more notable for its chaos than its music. And, so it's only fitting that Desire fits that description as well, as it careens between surging folk-rock, Mideastern dirges, skipping pop, and epic naRolling Stone (12/11/03, p.136) - Ranked #174 in Rolling Stone's "The 500 Greatest Albums Of All Time" Q (Magazine) (p.111) - "[I]t's probably best known for 'Hurricane,' a rousing account of boxer Rubin Carter's wrongful conviction for murder." Desire Music Review Average Rating: (5 out of 5 stars)   One of the best from Mr. D. Dylan must have had quite a fistful of
new material when he went into the studio
to cut this LP. Left behind (on the cutting room floor were the songs "Blind
Willie McTell" and "Abandoned Love" the
former of which some will tell you would
have been the best cut on this). Here's
Dylan at age 37, his voice as strong as
his first recording, his pitch perfect;
the sounds of real old folk mixed with
Hebraic music backed by superb arrangements in an electrifying R&R idiom.
Scarlet Rivera is soaring and uplifting
on violin, Emmy Lou Harris is superb on backups. Yet, as always, it is the prose from Dylan's pen that carries the day. All I can say is listen. He is clear as a bell; each word carefully
enunciated with each song/poem thought
provoking in the extreme.
Submitted by Richard (Madison, Wi, USA)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Never thought I would find it on cd I bought this album in the mid 70's and lost it somewhere.Its enteresting to hear the other side of the story on Hurricane+all the other songs bring back allot of good memories.Thanks cd universe,I searched and I found it! Submitted by bstone58 (South Bend,IN.)  Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Let me give 6 stars or more Fantastic job, mr. Zimmermann; I've enjoyed this album for years and years and I'm tired of it.
Hurricane, One more cup of coffee, Oh sister and all the others are really superior music, impressive sound and arrengements, simple and powerful.
Thanks Bob. Submitted by Daniele (Venice, Italy) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Stands the test of time. This was an excellent recording when it came out on vinyl back in 1976 and it plays well overy 30 years later as a the 2004 CD release of the orginal remastered recording. The lyrics of Isis (on this recording), Land of the Navajo (best known on Old & In The Way orgigionally released in 1973), and Me & My Uncle (performed approximately 613 times by the Grateful Dead and on mutiple commercially available and underground recordings); also found on a 1964 Judy Collins "concert" recording)when compared provide food for thought and discussion as to subject matter. Submitted by Randy Riteannoter (Earth) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Desire CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Bob Dylan Blonde On Blonde CD (1966) Reissue; Remastered
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$9.09 Personnel: Bob Dylan (vocals, guitar, harmonica, piano, keyboards); Bob Dylan; Rick Danko (vocals, violin); Richard Manuel (vocals, keyboards, drums); Garth Hudson (saxophone, keyboards); Wayne Butler (trombone); Paul Griffin (piano); Bill Atkins (keyboards); Sanford Konikoff (drums); Robbie Robertson, ...
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| | Peter Gabriel Hit CDs (2003) Remastered
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Personnel includes: Peter Gabriel (vocals, flute, recorder, Bosendorfer piano, keyboards); Kate Bush, Sinead O'Connor (vocals); Richard Evans (acoustic guitar); Robert Fripp (electric & classical guitar, banjo); David Rhodes (guitar, 12-string guitar); Peter Green (electric guitar); Steve Hunter (pedal steel guitar); Daniel Lanois (guitar); Tim Green (tenor saxophone); Dick Morrisey (saxophone); Wayne Jackson (trumpet); Jozef Chirowski, Brian Eno (keyboards); Larry Fast (synthesizer, programming); Tony Levin (bass); Dominic Greesmith, Jerry Marotta (drums); Ged Lynch, Will White, Stephen Hague, Phil Collins (percussion); Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan (background vocals). Producers include: Bob Ezrin, David Lord, Peter Gabriel, Daniel Lanois, Steve Lillywhite. Recorded between 1977 & 2003. Peter Gabriel's work doesn't lend itself easily to compilations -- not because he didn't cut singles, since he made many terrific stand-alone singles, but because his body of work is so idiosyncratic, even contradictory, that it's possible to have perfectly valid differing perspectives on his catalog. This results in differing opinions among fans, so it's perfectly logical that Gabriel and his associates would have a unique view of his own work, as captured on Hit. Billed on its slipcase as "The Definitive Two CD Collection," Hit spans 29 tracks culled from his entire solo career, from 1977's Peter Gabriel to 2002's Up, plus the previously unreleased "Burn You Up, Burn You Down." It certainly is a generous compilation, and it does contain the basics: "Solsbury Hill," "Shock the Monkey," "Sledgehammer," "Don't Give Up," "Games Without Frontiers," "Biko," "Red Rain," "Big Time," and "In Your Eyes." But the devil is in the details, and in this particular case, the details push Hit away from the broad-based appeal of So and closer to the dense, subtle territory of Us and Up. This is achieved, of course, through the track selection, which is heavy on recent material (note: none of the edit details are present on the back cover, hence their presence here): from Up, there's "Growing Up [Tom Lord-Alge Mix]," "More Than This [Radio Edit]," "The Drop," "I Grieve," and "Signal to Noise," which amounts to half the entire album; the previously unreleased 2003 live track "Downside Up"; "Cloudless" ...
| | Roy Orbison At The Rock House CD (1961)
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$9.89 Although Roy Orbison is best remembered these days for the dramatic angst-ridden ballads such as 'It's Over', 'Crying' and 'In Dreams' which he recorded for the Monument label in the sixties, he first hit the spotlight in 1956 at Sun Records with his hit 'Ooby Dooby'.
Liner Note Author: Clive Anderson. Although it was technically Roy Orbison's first album, At the Rock House wasn't really an LP effort on his part so much as a cash-in effort by Sun Records in the wake of Orbison's later success on Monument Records with "Uptown," "Only the Lonely," etc. And understandably, the sound is very retro for 1960-1961, comprised as ...
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