Sunday, April 21, 2013
Bob Dylan: Wigwam/Thirsty Boots (2013)
For Record Store Day 2013, Columbia put out a Bob Dylan single with an unreleased demo of "Wigwam" on the A side and a previously unreleased recording, "Thirsty Boots" on the B side. The songs are from the forthcoming Bootleg Series Vol. 10, which is rumored to consist of material from 1969 to 1973, likely meaning outtakes from Nashville Skyline, Self Portrait, New Morning, the Greatest Hits Vol. 2 sessions and the Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid soundtrack.
It's an effective tease for the next volume of the Bootleg series, which, era-wise, is certainly in more dangerous waters then most of the others. "Wigwam" is a demo version, dominated by piano rather then the brass section which Self-Portrait producer Bob Johnson employed. Even better is Dylan's sturdy take on Eric Andersen's 1966 ballad, "Thirsty Boots", which has the passion that so many of the tracks that actually made it onto Self-Portrait lacked.
(Sooner or later this song will get yanked down...)
Bob Dylan.com
Thanks, Jeffen. Didn't manage to get hold of a copy of this on the day. 'Thirsty Boots' is wonderful and I'm really looking forward to the next Bootleg Series.
ReplyDeleteI have never liked Wigwam.I know the Dutch loved it and made it a hit single in their country.Thirsty Boots is just not a strong song so I did not buy it either .
ReplyDeleteI can't believe we're getting more Self Portrait bullshit for a Bootleg Series. Are Bob's people so completely oblivious to what his fans want?
ReplyDeleteI'm listening to it now and it's a blinder...
DeleteI'm with John. After listening to Bootleg 10 - which I bet you have - how do you now feel, Anonymous. It's great stuff. - and enlightening.
DeleteThe sleeve lists "Wigwam" as an "unreleased demo," but that is not right; it is not a demo at all. It is the same take that is on Self Portrait, minus the drum and horn overdubs. If you play the album version and the Record Store Day version at the same time you will find that they play perfectly in sync; every guitar fill, every vocal inflection - they are the same take. It is similar in approach to Let It Be... Naked by the Beatles.
ReplyDeletethe more self-portrait the better; i have loved it since i first bought it in 1970. in answer to greil marcus' question at the time: this stuff is great!
ReplyDeleteThis is a true delight-
ReplyDeleteI have to agree that Self Portrait outtakes are not exactly on the top of my list. It would have been a decent single album, but . . .
ReplyDeletePersonally I'd vote for a Bootleg Series release of the Blood On The Tracks (New York) sessions, or a gospel release.
Marcus Greil is so full of $hit...
ReplyDeleteThis is kinda a link to Harry Smith's Anthology-
DeleteYou are right in re Mr. Marcus's Review in June of '70. I remember reading same when Rolling Stone was 50 cents and hard to fond here in Montreal-
Belle Isle is an offshoot of a Newfoundland Folk Song and one of them ballads that= tests true love. I went on too long here but you are right
as ever
Campbell
Hope that the new Bootleg Series will finally include 'Wanted Man'
ReplyDeletewhat an honor for Bob Dylan to select Eric's gorgeous song to be included....Honestly, as much as I love Dylan, nobody sings that song as beautifully as Eric....
ReplyDeleteBob's vocal performance on the Masterpieces version of "Spanish Is the Loving Tongue" from this era (not the awful version released on "Dylan") is one of his best ever vocal performances. Period. Go check it out if you don't believe me.
ReplyDeleteNote that both Dylan and Eric Andersen had a personal relationship with Edie Sedgwick. Andersen appeared w/Edie in Warhol's film SPACE.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.warholstars.org/warhol/warhol1/warhol1f/space.html
(Also Andersen and Warhol were both from Pittsburgh.)
Babe Ruth did not hit a home run on every at bat....but he hit enough of them to be still revered as the greatest,..only a small minded idiot person with nothing else to think about would expect him to hit a homer every time...
ReplyDelete