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John
Wesley
Harding
Vital
Stats
And
A
Historical
Perspective
The
Three
Kings
Liner
Notes
from
JWH
by
Bob
Dylan
Before
The
Flood
A Pictorial Gallery
Bob Dylan in
Greenwich,
1961
Dylan
at
Carnegie
Hall
First
Public
Appearance
After
Motorcycle
Accident
Dylan
Dateline
Moments
From
A
Life
From
Duluth
To
Rolling
Thunder
Dylan
Discography
The
First
20
Years
The
Fish
File
Anagrams
from
Hell
Play
along...
if
you
can!
By
David
Fisher
Ever
Heard
Of...
Rhinoceros
By
Nicholas
Warburton
This Month in
Rock and Roll History
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"These are myths and legends perhaps, and maybe even parables
on the edge of time. Whatever they are, Dylan has returned,
cleansed, as a whole man with a new kind of serenity to illuminate
his visions and a deeper artistic impulse from within himself."
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Ralph Gleason, Rolling Stone Magazine - January, 1968
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While
other
musical
trailblazers
were
releasing
albums
that
employed
over-the-top
production,
exotic
instruments
and
flowery
lyrical
imagery,
Bob
Dylan
emerged
from
an
eighteen
month
period
of
seclusion,
introspection
and
recuperation
and
flipped
the
music
world
the
proverbial
bird
in
D-Minor,
releasing
an
album
that
took
just
nine
hours
to
record
and
utilized
barely
more
than
the
"record"
button
to
produce.
While
his
peers
sang
about
"marmalade
skies"
and
asked
us
to
"remember
what
the
door
mouse
said",
Dylan
spoke
of
Saints
and
sinners,
salvation
and
damnation,
and
an
assortment
of
outlaws,
disenfranchised
souls,
hobos
and
drifters.
During
a
period
when
albums
like
The
Beatles'
"Sgt.
Pepper's"
and
Jefferson
Airplane's
"Surrealistic
Pillow"
were
racing
up
the
charts
and
heralding
the
beginning
of
a
new
wave
of
musical
experimentation,
making
legends
of
their
creators
along
the
way,
Bob
Dylan
capped
off
the
year
that
brought
us
the
"Summer
Of
Love"
and
responded
with
"John
Wesley
Harding"
in
December
1967.
An
unambiguous
slight
to
the
Psychedelian
environment
of
the
times,
it
is
a
stark
and
simple
rebuff
to
the
overindulgence
of
his
colleagues.
Bare
and
raw,
certainly
out
of
place
yet
equally
as
important
and
entertaining,
JWH
remains
as
powerful
and
poignant
a
musical
statement
as
it
did
more
than
thirty
years
ago
when
it
first
achieved
Gold
Record
status
in
March
1968,
a
mere
three
months
after
its
release.
Let's
take
a
closer
look
at
this
album
and
both
the
boldness
and
genius
of
Bob
Dylan.
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