Product Details
Highway 61 Revisited

Highway 61 Revisited
Bob Dylan

List Price: £9.99
Price: £4.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

44 new or used available from £1.98

Average customer review:

Product Description

Track Listings 1. Like A Rolling Stone 2. Tombstone Blues 3. It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry 4. From A Buick 6 5. Ballad Of A Thin Man 6. Queen Jane Approximately 7. Highway 61 Revisited 8. Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues 9. Desolation Row

Track Listing

  1. Like A Rolling Stone
  2. Tombstone Blues
  3. It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry
  4. From A Buick 6
  5. Ballad Of A Thin Man
  6. Queen Jane Approximately
  7. Highway 61 Revisited
  8. Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues
  9. Desolation Row

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1306 in Music
  • Released on: 2004-03-29
  • Number of discs: 1

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Dylan was virtually gushing great songs when this masterpiece arrived in the summer of 1965. For the epochal opening of "Like a Rolling Stone" through the absurdly apocalyptic closer, "Desolation Row", his command of surrealistic language was daring and amazing. As a vocalist, he was rewriting the rules of the game. Jimi Hendrix made note of Mr Z's technically suspect pitch and decided that he, too was a singer. And the backing, though ragged, is precisely right. Is this the essential Dylan album? It's certainly one of them. --Steven Stolder

CD Description
Though 1966's BLONDE ON BLONDE is usually singled out as the most innovative Bob Dylan album, its predecessor HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED is the one that definitively marks Dylan's transformation from progressive folk singer to visionary rock poet. It's Dylan's first fully electric album, powered by the manic intensity of Mike Bloomfield's skull-and-crossbones blues-rock guitar leads and Al Kooper's rich organ fills. Whilemany of the songs are presented in a traditional 12-bar blues format, the lyrics find Dylan finally abandoning conventional linear narrative in favour of poetic abstraction, surreal imagery, and biting sarcasm. In the rock world, there hasnever been a lambasting harsher or more cathartic than the excoriation of "Ballad of a Thin Man", and no challenge morebold than that offered in the iconic "Like a Rolling Stone". When Dylan invokes the names of Ezra Pound and T.S. Eliot towards the end of the poetic epic "Desolation Row", he's not just name-dropping; he's merely delineating the company inwhich a work as rich and ground-breaking as HIGHWAY 61 belongs.


Customer Reviews

a 20th century masterpiece5
"Highway 61 Revisited" should be on every "Top Ten non-classical recordings of the 20th century" lists, for many reasons: Its courage and innovation, and the influence it had on the music of its time, and for the impact it continues to have; the strength of its strange but potently poetic lyrics, and the quality of its musicianship; and most of all, because it is fabulous listening.

Dylan turned the musical world on its head when he went "electric", and the musicians he assembled to back him are legendary; Michael Bloomfield, guitar / Al Kooper, organ & piano / Paul Griffin, piano and organ / Bobby Gregg, drums / Harvey Goldstein, bass / Charley McCoy, guitar / Frank Owens, piano / Russ Savakus, bass. The music they make sounds as fresh today as when I first heard it four decades ago; everyone will have their favorites, mine are "Ballad of a Thin Man" and "Tombstone Blues", but all nine tracks are brilliant and powerful.

Fortunately CBS/Sony has released this CD in the same format as the original LP, with Dylan's incomprehensible but terrific liner notes ("On the slow train time does not interfere..."), and with no extra tracks to ruin the feel of the music. It is a recording that is like clear water when compared to the stagnant musical times we live in, and no CD collection is truly complete without it. The sound is excellent and total playing time is 51'37.

Only one word can justify this piece of work5
MAGNIFICENT!!! The best album of all time???
I have all of Bob Dylan's albums but this one, in my opinion is the best. Blonde on Blonde, Blood On The Tracks and many more run it close, but it is Highway 61 that I keep coming back too. From the opening bars of Like A Rolling Stone, you are hooked and there is no going back. Just listen to the lyrics of the album from the start, ending with Desolation Row, which is Dylan's crown jewel on the album. No other songwriter on the planet could write Desolation Row! You have to hear it to believe it. In between there is Tombstone Blues, Ballad Of A Thin Man, Queen Jane, Highway 61, and Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues. All are simply superb.
This album changed rock music forever.... This is essential and fully deserves 5 stars. BUY IT NOW!!!

One of the most important works of the 20th century5
Dont listen to the guy who gave this 1 star. It is obvious that he doesnt realise that poetry doesnt need a political gain...

This album is as rough and ready as it comes. It sounds like it was a whirlwind session, as if everone ran into the studio to record it all in one go, one take each song, before everyone legged it out of the studio once again to follow Dylan on the next leg of his creative evolution. The song that sounds the worst on this album is Like a Rolling Stone; a fantastic song, powerful and spiteful in all its other forms, but the sound of the original is, dare I say it, horrendous. Listen to that 'chuga-a-lug-lug' guitar in the middle of the mix (possibly Dylan) especially when he loses the timing.

I always thought Tombstone Blues would've made a better start. This is a stonking song; violent, fast, like a steam train driving through your stereo. Dylan's voice on this is wonderful, so full of character, especially when he slyly and dirtily sneers "stop all this weeping, swallow your pride. You will not die, it's not poison" (my interpretation of this line doesn't bare thinking about!). The length of this song is impressive too. How they kept up that beat for the entire length of the song is a mystery.

It Takes A Lot To Laugh, It Takes A Train To Cry and From A Buick 6 are sublimely sluggish songs, kind of like (I can only imagine) rolling slowly down a muddy hill, but they still dont lose that loose urgency that appears with the other songs. Ballad of a Thin Man is possibly the dirtiest, most metaphorical song I've ever heard and is delivered with that same disgust and foreboding that poor old Mr Jones must feel for himself.

Highway 61 Revisited returns to the same powerhouse stomp-a-long as Tombstone Blues and is similar too in its humorous, character driven lyrics, a quality of his songs I have always loved. Just Like Tom Thumb Blues is a good song, but every time I hear this version, I have to go put on the vastly superior version from the Bootleg Series vol 4.

Now...what words can I use to describe Desolation Row? Nothing that will do it justice, that's for sure. One of my favourite songs of all time and certainly one of the most beautiful I've ever heard. Again, a wonderful character driven song, featuring Romeo, Cinderella, Casanova, Betty Davis, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Einstein, The Phantom of the Opera, T.S Eliot and others. The imagery that this song envokes and the gorgeous poetry it is formed around is made all the better in its heartfelt delivery. This is a song that I can listen to again and again; indeed, I never really want it to end. During the last harmonica solo, I am always anticipating that hidden verse I've always missed, that perhaps this time his voice will kick in again and the song continues in an everlasting roam. Of course, this never happens, the song comes to a close and all I can do is play it again from the start.

Please, buy this album, because if you have any kind of creative bone in your body then this will serve as the greatest of inspirations. Some of the most beautiful use of the English language ever is contained in this album, of which Dylan is one of the true great masters. His voice may not be to everyone's taste, but the poetry he writes and the way he delivers it makes his songs truly beautiful. When Dylan writes and sings a song, you know he's not messing about...he TRULY means it.

What kind of genius writes like that? The best kind...