Entire Shop
Shows
Artists
Music
DVD
Games
>
Sign In
Your
cart
is empty
Music
:
New Releases
:
Modern Times
Modern Times
Bob Dylan / CD / 2006
Zoom
Send to Friend
Be the first to
review this product
!
Artist
Bob Dylan
Format
CD
Genre
Rock
Label Name
Sony
Producer
Jack Frost
Release Date
2006 09 04
Song List
1: Thunder on the Mountain (5:55)
2: Spirit on the Water (7:42)
3: Rollin' and Tumblin' (6:01)
4: When the Deal Goes Down (5:04)
5: Someday Baby (4:55)
6: Workingman's Blues #2 (6:07)
7: Beyond the Horizon (5:36)
8: Nettie Moore (6:52)
9: The Levee's Gonna Break (5:43)
10: Ain't Talkin' (8:48)
Style.Categories
Album Rock, Pop/Rock, Folk-Rock, Singer/Songwriter, Blues-Rock, Rock & Roll
This product CANNOT be returned once it has been opened.
click here
for more information on our general return policy.
In-Stock
: Ships within 24 hours
When
Bob Dylan
dropped
Time Out of Mind
in 1997, it was a rollicking
rockabilly
and
blues
record, full of sad songs about mortality, disappointment, and dissolution. 2001 brought
Love and Theft
, which was also steeped in stomping
blues
and other
folk
forms. It was funny, celebratory in places and biting in others.
Dylan
has been busy since then: he did a Victoria's Secret commercial, toured almost nonstop, was in a couple films --
Larry Charles
'
Masked and Anonymous
and
Martin Scorsese
's documentary
No Direction Home
-- and published the first of a purported three volumes of his cagey, rambling autobiography,
Chronicles
. Lately, he's been thinking about
Alicia Keys
. This last comment comes from the man himself in
"Thunder on the Mountain,"
the opening track on
Modern Times
, a barn-burning, raucous, and unruly
blues
tune that finds the old man sounding mighty feisty and gleefully agitated: "I was thinkin' 'bout
Alicia Keys
/Couldn't keep from cryin'/She was born in Hell's Kitchen and I was livin' down the line/I've been lookin' for her even clear through Tennessee." The drums shuffle with brushes, the piano is pumping like
Jerry Lee Lewis
, the bass is popping, and a slide guitar that feels like it's calling the late
Michael Bloomfield
back from 1966 -- à la
Highway 61 Revisited
-- slips in and out of the ether like a ghost wanting to emerge in the flesh.
Dylan
's own choppy leads snarl in the break and he's letting his
blues
fall down like rain: "Gonna raise me an army, some tough sons of bitches/I'll recruit my army from the orphanages/ I've been to St. Herman's church and said my religious vows/I sucked the milk out of a thousand cows/I got the pork chop, she got the pie/She ain't no angel and neither am I...I did all I could/I did it right there and then/I've already confessed I don't need to confess again."
Thus begins the third part of
Dylan
's renaissance trilogy (thus far, y'all).
Modern Times
is raw; it feels live, immediate, and in places even shambolic. Rhythms slip, time stretches and turns back on itself, and lyrics are rushed to fit into verses that just won't stop coming.
Dylan
produced the set himself under his Jack Frost moniker. Its songs are humorous and cryptic, tender and snarling. What's he saying? We don't need to concern ourselves with that any more than we had to
Willie Dixon
talking about backdoor men or
Elmore James
dusting his broom.
Dylan
's
blues
are primitive and impure. Though performed by a crackerjack band, they're played with fury; the singer wrestles down musical history as he spits in the eye of the modern world. But
blues
isn't the only music here. There are parlor songs such as
"Spirit on the Water,"
where love is as heavenly and earthly a thing as exists in this life. The band swings gently and carefree, with
Denny Freeman
and
Stu Kimball
playing slippery -- and sometimes sloppy --
jazz
chords as
Tony Garnier
's bass and
George Receli
's sputtering snare walk the beat. Another,
"When the Deal Goes Down,"
tempts the listener into thinking that
Dylan
is aping
Bing Crosby
in his gravelly, snake-rattle voice. True, he's an unabashed fan of the old arch mean-hearted crooner. But it just ain't
Bing
, because it's got that true old-time swing.
Dylan
's singing style in these songs comes from the great
blues
and jazzman
Lonnie Johnson
(whose version of the
Grosz
and
Coslow
standard
"Tomorrow Night"
he's been playing for years in his live set).
$14.69
List Price:
$18.98
Save: $4.29 (23%)
USER REVIEWS
write your own review
No Reviews
© 2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Content provided by
All Music Guide ®
, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.
You May Also Like:
I Love New York: The Complete Unrated First Season [3 Discs]
$38.99
$29.55
Flavor of Love 2: The Complete Unrated Second Season Wowwww! [3 Discs]
$26.98
$24.99
VH1 Metal Mania: Stripped Across America Tour Live
$16.98
$13.15
VH1 Celebrity Fit Club Bootcamp Workout DVD
$14.99
Join the shop newsletter and be the first to know about special offers, discounts and VH1 exclusives:
Home
|
Shows
|
Artists
|
Music
|
DVD
|
Books
|
Cart
FAQ
|
Account
|
Order Status
|
Contact Us
|
Become an Affiliate
Terms of Use
|
Privacy Statement
E-commerce on this website is brought to you by MTVN Direct Inc. powered by Vcommerce.
© MTV Networks. © and TM MTV Networks. All Rights Reserved