Hard Rain & Slow Trains: Bob Dylan & Fellow Travelers

1974: A Golden Anniversary

Daniel Mackay Season 6 Episode 201

50 years ago, Bob Dylan and The Band returned to the road after precisely 7 years, 7 months, and 7 days since their previous tour concluded. Having jumped from Columbia Records to David Geffen’s Asylum Records, Dylan released two albums under the new label in 1974. He spent the year intermittently living in Los Angeles (where he owned a new home north of the city in Malibu), San Francisco (where he and new intimate Ellen Bernstein spent time together), and New York (where Dylan studied painting with Norman Raeben and was romantically involved with a fellow student). He wrote the bulk of the songs for a new album between March and July, at which point he liberally shared the new songs with friends and acquaintances like Bernstein, Stephen Stills, Tim Drummond, David Crosby, Stephen Stills, Graham Nash, Neil Young, Shel Silverstein, Mike Bloomfield, Peter Rowan, and John Hammond, Jr. When he went into the former Columbia Studio A where he had recorded his first five albums in order to record the new album in September, he was fully prepared to capture these compositions for posterity. However, BLOOD ON THE TRACKS would not be finished until Dylan rerecorded five of the songs at the end of the year in Minneapolis. When it was finally released the following January, it was on Columbia Records. Visit these events and more from the life of Bob Dylan in 1974, as well as a summary of important events from 1974 in "20 Pounds of Headlines," and – as usual – important news from the world of Bob Dylan in 2024. This episode is an ideal listening experience to prepare for the new Live 1974 box set due out September 20th. In "Who Did It Better?" we ask you to go to our Twitter page @RainTrains to vote for which version of "If You See Her, Say Hello" is better: The September 19, 1974 version recorded in New York City that was originally slated for BLOOD ON THE TRACKS or the December 30, 1974 version recorded in Minneapolis that replaced it. It's the golden (50th) anniversary of Dylan’s return to touring, so we are pausing half-way through our own calendar year of 2024 to look back.

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