Product Details
Good as I Been to You

Good as I Been to You
Bob Dylan

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Track Listing

  1. Frankie and Albert
  2. Jim Jones
  3. Black Jack Davey
  4. Canadee-I-O
  5. Sitting on Top of the World
  6. Little Maggie
  7. Hard Times
  8. Step It Up and Go
  9. Tomorrow Night
  10. Arthur McBride
  11. You're Gonna Quit Me
  12. Diamond Joe
  13. Froggie Went A-Courtin'

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #327602 in Music
  • Released on: 1992-11-03
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Import

Customer Reviews

Dylan looks to the past to prepare for the future5
One good thing about writing reviews is the fact that I am often compelled to pick up things I have ignored for a long time. When this album was released, I snatched it up, listened to it a few times, and proceeded to forget about it for some reason. Being less of a Dylan addict at the time, the fact that this album consisted basically of folk music accompanied by impeccable acoustic guitar did not strike me as very significant, and I was slightly disappointed that these songs were all covers. I was not used to this kind of Dylan music, and for that reason I believe this CD failed to captivate me at the time. Listening to it again now, I am amazed by this album's greatness. Acoustic guitar, harmonica, and Dylan's uniquely raspy vocal musings-that's really all Dylan ever needed, and Good As I Been To You is proof that what was true in the 1960s was just as true in the 1990s and will be true until Dylan's greatness is snatched away from this earth.

These songs are all mesmerizing, but Hard Times deserves special attention, as Dylan pours his heart and soul into the song. Arthur McBride is another incredible story-telling saga. Tomorrow Night particularly shows off Dylan's harmonica-playing, and the song's familiarity provides an opening for those seeking to appreciate this impressive album and proves once again that Dylan can in fact sing a love song with great feeling. Don't think that these tracks are all slow and somber anthems, though; a quick listen at Step It Up and Go will show you that Dylan can infuse tons of energy into folk music. Good As I Been To You is Dylan at his most natural, and one can only sit back and revel in the story-telling prowess of one of music's most influential and legendary performers.

Looking back on this album, I can't help but consider it the product of an exceedingly important phase in Dylan's evolution as an artist and musician, one in which he looked back to his roots and drew sustenance for the incredible comeback he would make in coming years. With the mixed success of albums such as Under the Red Sky, clearly it can be said that Dylan was floundering musically at the time this particular album was recorded. While some questioned his decision to record an album of covered folk and blues songs at this particular time, Dylan knew what he was doing, and what he was doing was reinventing himself yet again in preparation for hours and hours of incredible new music with which to delight fans and critics alike in coming years. I think many Dylan fans will now agree that this album keeps getting better as the years go by, but at the same time I can see where those unfamiliar with Dylan's musical progression might not warm up to it so easily for the simple fact that it will probably differ greatly from their expectations.

As Good As He Has Been To Us5
This album blows me away. Best Dylan ever? Very arguably so. It's straight-up, no frills, pure folk, with just Dylan, his guitar, and sometimes harmonica. For those who like their folk synth-free and natural, for those who like their Dylan unplugged and going for it, this one is a GEM. The more you listen to it, the better it gets, too!

Under rated hidden gem5
This was the first Dylan album that I bought when it was released. Till then I has been playing catch up. Waiting for it with bated breath I was sooo disappointed when I discovered it was an album of cover versions. Released during a period of supposed writer's block I didn't hold out much hope. What I found was a gem. Dylan playing songs he loves and nothing else. Great versions of "Jim Jones" "Arthur McBride" "Canadee IO" and "Hard Times" illustrating how effective Dylan's harrassed voice can be when he want's it to be. Great sounding acoustic guitar, great harmonica solos and a great lesson, to the beginner in tradional tunes that if investigated opens up a ocean of talent that nudged and cajoled the master song smith Dylan into the master craftsman of a song writer that he is today. Everyone should behold this album as a thing of beauty. God bless the products of writers block.