Changes

Bob Dylan

1,656 bytes added, 19:46, October 12, 2020
/* Early life */ typo
==Early life==
Born Robert Zimmerman in [[Duluth]], [[Minnesota]], Dylan grew up in Hibbing and left , where by chance he was discovered to attend the [[University of Minnesota]] in [[Minneapolis]]have musical abilities at a very early age. It was there that When later in life he developed a deep interest in [[folk music]], listening wanted to the recordings of artists such as Odetta and [[Woody Guthrie]].<ref>Bob Dylan's roots are in American folk music, with people like [[Pete Seeger]] and Woody Guthrie. [http://www.faqs.org/faqs/music/american-pie/]</ref>In 1961acknowledge his musical influences, he dropped out of college and headed made a point to [[New York City]], where he became part of the burgeoning folk mention Christmas music scene in [[Greenwich Village]] and eventually landed a contract with [[Columbia Records]], for whom while he still records todaywas growing up.
Dylan also found emotional connection with the music of the rock and roll performers of that era. [[Buddy Holly]] was the first broadly successful rock and roll singer whose public image wasn't managed to seem like a movie star, which gave Dylan and the Beatles likewise hope of success in forming their own bands. While in high school he formed a series rock and roll bands that would break up each time when the lead singer would be recruited away to a musical act of their own. During that time he attended a [[Buddy Holly]] concert where the singer's attention was drawn for a moment to the young man watching and learning from him near the stage. Before leaving for college, Dylan had befriended a black disk jockey who shared his interest in rock and roll and from whom he was given access to the radio station's records. Dylan left to attend the [[University of Minnesota]] in [[Minneapolis]]. It was there that he developed a deep interest in [[folk music]], listening to the recordings of artists such as Odetta and [[Woody Guthrie]]<ref> [http://www.faqs.org/faqs/music/american-pie/]</ref> a depth not matched by his decidedly mixed acquisition of skill in playing it. Bob Dylan's roots are in American folk music, with people like [[Pete Seeger]] and Woody Guthrie. In 1961, he dropped out of college and headed to [[New York City]], where he became part of the burgeoning folk music scene in [[Greenwich Village]] and eventually landed a contract with [[Columbia Records]], for whom he recorded during most of his career. Dylan had written a number of original songs, and the music publisher with whom he signed recommended he seek to achieve the modest career goal of publishing a book of his folk songs. This design motivated him to write and perfect his own songs and to write them whether or not they eventually appeared on an album. His first four studio albums<ref>''Bob Dylan'' (1962); ''The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan'' (1963); ''The Times They Are a-Changin''' (1964); and ''Another Side of Bob Dylan'' (1964)</ref> established Dylan as a major voice within the developing protest counterculture of the early Sixties. It was ''Bringing It All Back Home'' (1965), however, that propelled him to international fame and stardom. To howls of protest from his devoted "folkie" fans, Dylan "plugged in" for the first time and the album's glorious fusion of electric guitars, driving rock rhythms and his unique lyrical style<ref>By turns surreal, poetic, visionary and political.</ref> set a benchmark to which all other artists aspired. He arguably never scaled these heights again, especially in terms of producing an album of such consistent quality and musical completeness. His next three albums<ref>''Highway 61 Revisited'' (1965); ''Blonde on Blonde'' (1966); and ''John Wesley Harding'' (1967)</ref> are rightly highly regarded, but after these his output became of increasingly variable quality and ''Blood On The Tracks'' (1975) is his last album from his classic period to be highly regarded by rock critics.
* ... he was busy writing songs extolling the virtues of simple love, family and contentment while staying at home (he didn't tour from '66 to '74) and raking in the royalties. This was quite a change from the earlier, angrier Dylan. [http://www.faqs.org/faqs/music/american-pie/]
He has continued to release new material since, of varying quality and commercial success.
In 1997, he released the well-received album ''Time Out Of Mind''; a live performance of a song from the album at the 1998 Grammy Awards was interrupted by a [[liberal]] performance "artist". In 2004, he published the first volume of ''Chronicles'', his planned autobiography. Since 2005, he has had a weekly radio show on XM Radio called ''Theme Time Radio Hour'', and he chose the Bible as the theme of a recent show, playing songs by the Reverend J.M. Gates, Kitty Wells, and the Reverend Gary Davis. His 2009 album ''Together Through Life'' reached #1 on the pop music charts; at age 68, he is the oldest artist to have attained that mark. Later that year, he released an album of Christmas songs ''Christmas in the Heart'' which included a mix of religious hymns and secular tunes. He has stated that he is a true believer and able to sing the religious songs as such.<ref>http://www.bobdylan.com/cith-conversation</ref> He has opened many concerts in recent years, with a song about changing his way of thinking to follow [[Jesus]], including his 2011 concerts in [[Israel]], [[Vietnam]] and [[China]].<ref>http://notdarkyet.tripod.com/change.html</ref>
 
== Volume of Work ==
 
Bob Dylan is one of the most prolific musicians ever, releasing 39 studio albums, 94 singles, and numerous other works. By comparison, the [[Beatles]] released only 12 studio albums.
== Notes and references ==
Block, SkipCaptcha, Upload, edit, rollback
14,306
edits