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* The Mammoth Book of Bob Dylan ☆ PDF Read by ^ Brand: Running Press eBook or Kindle ePUB Online free. The Mammoth Book of Bob Dylan Bob Dylan transformed not only folk music, but rock ’n’ roll as a whole: he brought the intellectualism of folk lyrics to a genre still dominated by romantic conventions. The Mammoth Book of Bob Dylan explores his phenomenal legacy in over 500 pages of Dylan exposé!. From the phenomenal commercial success of his 1965 epic, gritty single Like a Rolling Stone” to Time Out of Mind, rock’s first treatise on mortality, in 1997, Dylan has been fearlessly br

The Mammoth Book of Bob Dylan

Title : The Mammoth Book of Bob Dylan
Author :
Rating : 4.17 (933 Votes)
Asin : 0762442689
Format Type : paperback
Number of Pages : 512 Pages
Publish Date : 2013-03-16
Language : English

Catholic Herald Fascinating and hilarious anecdotes. Jewish Chronicle A great book as discursive and illuminating as any recent book on Dylan I've read. Manages to catch some of Dylan's magic. Craig McGregor, author of 'Bob Dylan: A Retrospective'

Sean Egan is a journalist, author, and editor whose previous books include The Mammoth Book of the Beatles. He lives in London.

Bob Dylan transformed not only folk music, but rock ’n’ roll as a whole: he brought the intellectualism of folk lyrics to a genre still dominated by romantic conventions. The Mammoth Book of Bob Dylan explores his phenomenal legacy in over 500 pages of Dylan exposé!. From the phenomenal commercial success of his 1965 epic, gritty single Like a Rolling Stone” to Time Out of Mind, rock’s first treatise on mortality, in 1997, Dylan has been fearlessly breaking new ground

Egan's writing is terrible; book is saved by writings by other authors kinojay33 As others have already mentioned, Egan's writing and reviews sound like the ruminations of a casual fan, the type who really likes "Like a Rolling Sone" and can't understand why Dylan's entire oeuvre over a 50 year career can't have the exact same sound, theme & lyrical content.I'll be the first to admit that Dylan has put out a few real stinkers, but Egan's trashing of Dylan's entire output post-"John Wesley Harding" (with the exception of "Blood on the Tracks", which he is still only luke-warm to) is just mean-spirited and ignorant.If this book was Egan's grumpy badmouthing alone, I'd give it one star. But the collected art. Tim Field said Some Good Stuff Buried In Here. I didn't hate this book like some of the other reviewers here - with any anthology there's going to be varied quality of material, especially in a low-rent series like the Mammoth Books. Much of the book is given up to Sean Egan's album by album reviews of Dylan's recordings. Egan has strong opinions, which is okay, but he doesn't seem to care for most of Bob's output. I'd rather read the reactions of someone who is a stronger Dylan enthusiast.The Mammoth Book of Bob Dylan was compulsively readable; I liked Nat Hentoff's New Yorker piece, Jules Siegel's "Well, What Have We Here?", Andy Gill's background info on the recording . "The melody is labored and monotonous and Al Kooper ferociously trying to make his flimsy organ lick interesting only adds to the" according to barry oconnor. Regarding Positively The melody is labored and monotonous and Al Kooper ferociously trying to make his flimsy organ lick interesting only adds to the barry oconnor Regarding Positively 4th Street we read, A couple of memorable phrases the track has no other qualities. The melody is labored and monotonous and Al Kooper ferociously trying to make his flimsy organ lick interesting only adds to the impression of a poor mans Like A Rolling Stone.Should this person be writing at all? Might this person need his ears tested? What to say? Something is happening Mr Egan and you obviously and quite positively don't know what it is.. th Street we read, A couple of memorable phrases the track has no other qualities. The melody is labored and monotonous and Al Kooper ferociously trying to make his flimsy organ lick interesting only adds to the impression of a poor mans Like A Rolling Stone.Should this person be writing at all? Might this person need his ears tested? What to say? Something is happening Mr Egan and you obviously and quite positively don't know what it is.

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