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Tonight (August 22nd) on the world famous Classic Album At Midnight on Radio Nova we're playing Bob Dylan's 1976 live album Hard Rain in full on vinyl, with no commercials or interruptions.
You were either a roots man or a 'soul boy' in Jamaica during the 1970s. Rasta and reggae appealed to the former while the latter were drawn to American R&B music.
That's the scene Russell Thompki.
In perhaps one of his most infelicitous lyrics Bob Dylan inserted the adage that it is unwise to change horses in midstream. This lesson comes to mind with regard to the Federal.
It was 48 years ago today (January 20th, 1975) that Bob Dylan's 15th studio set, the groundbreaking, Blood On The Tracks, was released. The album, which was Dylan's return to his Columbia Records following a two-album deal with David Geffen's Asylum, is considered not only Dylan's comeback album, but his crowning artistic statement. Blood On The Tracks hit Number One on March 1st, 1975 for the first of its two-week run, and has gone on to receive double platinum status in the U.S. and in 2015 was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. Highlights on the set include such instant Dylan standards "Tangled Up In Blue," "Shelter From The Storm," "You're A Big Girl Now," "Idiot Wind," and "Simple Twist Of Fate," among others. The initial sessions for Blood On The Tracks took place over four days in New York City in September, 1974. Soon thereafter, the album was mastered and "white label" review copies began