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Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again

"Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" (also listed as "Memphis Blues Again") is a song by American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan from his seventh studio album, Blonde on Blonde (1966). The song was written by Dylan and produced by Bob Johnston. It has nine verses, each featuring a distinct set of characters and circumstances. All 20 takes of "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" were recorded in the early hours of February 17, 1966, at Columbia Records's A Studio in Nashville, Tennessee, with the last take selected for the album. This version also appears on Dylan's second compilation album, Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Vol. II (1971).

"Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again"
Song by Bob Dylan
from the album Blonde on Blonde
ReleasedJune 20, 1966 (1966-06-20)
RecordedFebruary 17, 1966
StudioColumbia Studio A, Nashville
Length7:06
LabelColumbia
Songwriter(s)Bob Dylan
Producer(s)Bob Johnston
Audio
"Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" on YouTube
"Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again"
Single by Bob Dylan
from the album Hard Rain
B-side"Rita May"
ReleasedNovember 30, 1976 (1976-11-30)
RecordedMay 16, 1976
VenueTarrant County Convention Center Arena, Fort Worth, Texas
GenreFolk, rock
Length3:35 (single edit)
6:06 (album version)
LabelColumbia
Songwriter(s)Bob Dylan
Producer(s)
Bob Dylan discography[1] singles chronology
"Mozambique"
(1976)
"Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again"
(1976)
"Baby, Stop Crying"
(1978)

An earlier take of the song was released on The Bootleg Series Vol. 7: No Direction Home: The Soundtrack in 2005, and other takes were issued on The Bootleg Series Vol. 12: The Cutting Edge 1965–1966 in 2015. "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" has received a positive reception from critics, who have variously praised Dylan's lyrics, his vocal performance, and its musicianship.

Dylan has played the song live in concert 748 times, from 1976 to 2010. A live version recorded in May 1976 was included on the live album from that tour, Hard Rain (1976), and was also released as a single with "Rita May" as the B-side. It received a generally negative critical reception.

Background and recording

The album Another Side of Bob Dylan (1964) saw Bob Dylan start to move away from the contemporary folk music sound that had characterized his early albums. Bringing It All Back Home (1965) featured both electric and acoustic tracks, and Highway 61 Revisited later that year was purely electric.[2] In 1965, Dylan hired the Hawks as his backing group,[3] but recording sessions in New York for a new album were not productive with them, and he accepted a suggestion from his producer Bob Johnston that the sessions should transfer to Nashville, Tennessee.[4] Dylan went to Nashville in February 1966, with Al Kooper and Robbie Robertson from the New York sessions also making the trip.[4]

"Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" was written by Dylan,[5] who sang and played harmonica on the song, with Kooper on organ, and members of the A-Team of studio musicians that had been engaged for the album sessions: Charlie McCoy, Wayne Moss and Joe South (guitars), Hargus Robbins (piano), Henry Strzelecki (electric bass) and Kenneth Buttrey (drums).[6] All 20 takes of the song were recorded in the early hours of February 17, 1966, at Columbia Records's Studio A. Dylan reworked the song in the studio, revising lyrics and changing the song's structure as he recorded different takes. According to Clinton Heylin, most of the revisions were to the song's arrangement, rather than to the words. Eventually, after recording for three hours, a master take, the twentieth and final take, lasting seven minutes and six seconds, was chosen.[7][5] It was released as the second track on side two of Dylan's seventh studio album, the double album Blonde on Blonde, on June 20, 1966.[8][9] Take five was released on The Bootleg Series Vol. 7: No Direction Home: The Soundtrack (2005).[10]

In 2015, take 13 was released on the two-disc edition of The Bootleg Series Vol. 12: The Cutting Edge 1965–1966.[11] This, and four additional takes were on the six-disc Deluxe edition,[12] and the entire recording session was released on the 18-disc Collector's Edition.[13] The song has sometimes been listed as "Memphis Blues Again" or "Stuck Inside Of Memphis With The" on album releases; the correct title first appeared when it was included on Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Vol. II (1971).[14]

Analysis and reception

Michael Gray identified several possible influences on "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again", including "The Memphis Blues" by W.C. Handy, who wrote the music, published in 1912, and George A. Norton, who wrote the lyrics the following year. He further notes the influence of Ma Rainey's "Memphis Bound Blues" (1925); "South Memphis Blues" by Frank Stokes (1929); and "North Memphis Blues" by Memphis Minnie (1930).[15] Gray saw similarities with the Bukka White song "Aberdeen Mississippi Blues" (1940), which has the line "Sittin' down in Aberdeen with New Orleans on my mind".[16]

The song has nine verses, each, according to critic Andy Gill, providing "an absurd little vignette illustrating contemporary alienation".[17] Musicologist Wilfrid Mellers described the song as strophic;[18] Literature scholar Timothy Hampton felt that Dylan's "technique of varying the chorus as a way of isolating the singer from the listener" as he employed on some of the Blonde on Blonde tracks is in evidence on "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again", where the chorus is sung differently by Dylan each time.[19]

Journalist Oliver Trager suggested that, like other Dylan songs of the time, the themes were "suspicion of authority figures, solicitous females, and a confused, persecuted, and possibly intoxicated narrator".[20] Mellers wrote that the song, which features a list of characters including Shakespeare, Mona, Ruth, a ragman, a senator, a preacher, a rainman, railroad men, and a deceased grandfather, gave "evidence of the interdependence in Dylan's songs of everyday reality and myth".[18] Each verse includes a distinct set of characters and circumstances.[21] Mike Marqusee felt that "thwarted escapism blends with a sense of impending doom" in the song.[22] He added that:[23]

urban and rural, tradition and innovation are held in a churning stasis. The mysteriously impassable distance between Mobile, the Gulf Coast oil town, and Memphis, the great honey pot on the Mississippi, is the distance between depression and elation, isolation and community, anonymity and recognition, fatalism and freedom. The journey from one to the other is constantly obstructed.

The sociologist John Wells argued that the song "cannot possibly be wholly experienced as a truly remarkable work of art" from reading the lyrics alone, but only when listening to Dylan's performance.[24] He posited that after listening to the track numerous times, listeners would realise, "Mobile no longer just means being stuck in an Alabama city, but ... represents the grotesque, turbulent world we all inhabit."[24] Communication studies scholar Keith Nainby wrote that Dylan "enacted an alienated, tumultuous narrative persona that was troubled, not comforted, by his place and time".[21]

In a positive review of Blonde on Blonde for Asbury Park Press, Dave Margoshes considered the song, which he called a "surrealistic frenetic blues"," to be one of the four "outstanding" tracks on the album.[25] Paul Williams named the track as his favorite from the album when he wrote in Crawdaddy! in 1966 that it was "a chain of anecdotes bound together by an evocative chorus".[26] He offered, "Dylan relates specific episodes and emotions in his offhand impressionistic manner, somehow making the universal specific and then making it universal again in that oh-so-accurate refrain."[27] Williams also praised the musicianship, adding that he had never heard the organ "played so effectively" as by Kooper on the number.[26] In the Record Mirror review, Norman Jopling wrote that the song was "jolly .. with a teen-beaty backing" and was "quite amusing".[28]

Neil Spencer gave the song a rating of 5/5 stars in an Uncut magazine Dylan supplement in 2015, rating it as one of the three "grand statements" on Blonde on Blonde, alongside "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands" and "Visions of Johanna".[29] Author John Nogowski rated the song as "A+". He described it as "a brilliantly funny portrait in black velvet of a world gone mad", and one of Dylan's "most perfectly realized songs".[30]

Live performances

According to his website, Dylan played "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" 748 times in concert between 1976 and 2010.[31] The first live performance was at the University of West Florida, Pensacola, on April 28, 1976,[32] during the Rolling Thunder Revue tour.[33] The performance at Tarrant County Convention Center Arena, Fort Worth, Texas, on May 16, 1976, was included on the live album from the tour, Hard Rain, released on September 10, 1976.[34][35] The album was produced by Don DeVito and Dylan.[34] The Hard Rain version has a duration of six minutes and six seconds.[36] An edited version of this album track, lasting three minutes and 35 seconds, was also released as a single in the United States on November 30, 1976, with "Rita May" as the B-side; the single did not chart.[34][32][36] Critics received the Hard Rain version of the song, which omitted three verses from the original,[37] negatively.[38][39][40] Nogowski rated the version as a B+, but preferred the musicianship on the original.[41]

Personnel

 
Joe South. According to Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon, he "distinguished himself by his brilliant guitar playing and licks in the Nashville style" on the recording.[32]

The personnel for the original album session were as follows.

Musicians[42]

Technical[43]

References

  1. ^ Williams 2004, p. 289.
  2. ^ Dettmar & Latham 2021, pp. 13–14.
  3. ^ Dettmar & Latham 2021, p. 14.
  4. ^ a b Edwards 2021, p. 104.
  5. ^ a b Margotin & Guesdon 2022, p. 228.
  6. ^ Sanders 2020, p. 278.
  7. ^ Heylin 2010, pp. 362–363.
  8. ^ Williams 2004, p. 284.
  9. ^ Heylin 2016, 7290: a Sony database of album release dates ... confirms once and for all that it came out on June 20, 1966"..
  10. ^ Nogowski 2022, p. 372–373.
  11. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas (November 6, 2015). "The Bootleg Series, Vol. 12: The Cutting Edge 1965–1966 Review". AllMusic. from the original on December 15, 2022. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
  12. ^ Nogowski 2022, p. 273.
  13. ^ . Bob Dylan's official website. Archived from the original on February 7, 2016. Retrieved November 29, 2015.
  14. ^ Fraser, Alan. "Audio: International Album Releases (Regular)". Searching for a Gem. from the original on January 27, 2023. Retrieved January 27, 2023.
  15. ^ Gray 2004, p. 301.
  16. ^ Gray 2004, p. 302.
  17. ^ Gill 2011, p. 143.
  18. ^ a b Mellers 1985, p. 147.
  19. ^ Hampton 2020, p. 104.
  20. ^ Trager 2004, p. 590.
  21. ^ a b Nainby 2011, p. 292.
  22. ^ Marqusee 2005, p. 204.
  23. ^ Marqusee 2005, p. 205.
  24. ^ a b Wells 1978, p. 42.
  25. ^ Margoshes, Dave (December 24, 1966). "Blonde on Blonde". Asbury Park Press. p. 7. from the original on January 27, 2023. Retrieved January 27, 2023.
  26. ^ a b Williams 1969, p. 66.
  27. ^ Williams 1969, p. 67.
  28. ^ Jopling, Norman (August 13, 1966). "Bob Dylan: Blonde On Blonde (CBS)". Record Mirror. p. 3.
  29. ^ Spencer, Neil (2015). "Blonde on Blonde". Uncut Ultimate Music Guide: Bob Dylan. p. 25.
  30. ^ Nogowski 2022, p. 61.
  31. ^ "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again". Bob Dylan's official website. from the original on April 15, 2021. Retrieved March 23, 2021.
  32. ^ a b c Margotin & Guesdon 2022, p. 229.
  33. ^ Nogowski 2022, p. 110.
  34. ^ a b c Nogowski 2022, p. 109.
  35. ^ Fraser, Alan. "Audio: International Album Releases (Regular): Bob Dylan with the Rolling Thunder Revue – Hard Rain". Searching for a Gem. from the original on February 14, 2023. Retrieved February 15, 2023.
  36. ^ a b Fraser, Alan. "Audio: 1976". Searching for a Gem. from the original on January 23, 2023. Retrieved January 27, 2023.
  37. ^ Ruhlmann, William. "Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again: overview". AllMusic. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  38. ^ Rachlis, Kit (December 2, 1976). "Hard Rain". Rolling Stone. from the original on August 12, 2022. Retrieved February 15, 2023.
  39. ^ "Why 'Hard Rain' is Bob Dylan's worst ever album". Far Out. 2021. from the original on February 27, 2022. Retrieved February 15, 2023.
  40. ^ Wawzenek, Bryan (September 10, 2016). "How Bob Dylan's 'Hard Rain' album went wrong". Ultimate Classic Rock. from the original on February 15, 2023. Retrieved February 15, 2023.
  41. ^ Nogowski 2022, pp. 110–111.
  42. ^ Sanders 2020, p. 279.
  43. ^ Sanders 2020, pp. 276.

Bibliography

External links

  • Lyrics at Bob Dylan's official website

stuck, inside, mobile, with, memphis, blues, again, also, listed, memphis, blues, again, song, american, singer, songwriter, dylan, from, seventh, studio, album, blonde, blonde, 1966, song, written, dylan, produced, johnston, nine, verses, each, featuring, dis. Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again also listed as Memphis Blues Again is a song by American singer songwriter Bob Dylan from his seventh studio album Blonde on Blonde 1966 The song was written by Dylan and produced by Bob Johnston It has nine verses each featuring a distinct set of characters and circumstances All 20 takes of Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again were recorded in the early hours of February 17 1966 at Columbia Records s A Studio in Nashville Tennessee with the last take selected for the album This version also appears on Dylan s second compilation album Bob Dylan s Greatest Hits Vol II 1971 Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again Song by Bob Dylanfrom the album Blonde on BlondeReleasedJune 20 1966 1966 06 20 RecordedFebruary 17 1966StudioColumbia Studio A NashvilleLength7 06LabelColumbiaSongwriter s Bob DylanProducer s Bob JohnstonAudio Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again on YouTube Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again Single by Bob Dylanfrom the album Hard RainB side Rita May ReleasedNovember 30 1976 1976 11 30 RecordedMay 16 1976VenueTarrant County Convention Center Arena Fort Worth TexasGenreFolk rockLength3 35 single edit 6 06 album version LabelColumbiaSongwriter s Bob DylanProducer s Don DeVitoBob DylanBob Dylan discography 1 singles chronology Mozambique 1976 Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again 1976 Baby Stop Crying 1978 An earlier take of the song was released on The Bootleg Series Vol 7 No Direction Home The Soundtrack in 2005 and other takes were issued on The Bootleg Series Vol 12 The Cutting Edge 1965 1966 in 2015 Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again has received a positive reception from critics who have variously praised Dylan s lyrics his vocal performance and its musicianship Dylan has played the song live in concert 748 times from 1976 to 2010 A live version recorded in May 1976 was included on the live album from that tour Hard Rain 1976 and was also released as a single with Rita May as the B side It received a generally negative critical reception Contents 1 Background and recording 2 Analysis and reception 3 Live performances 4 Personnel 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksBackground and recording EditThe album Another Side of Bob Dylan 1964 saw Bob Dylan start to move away from the contemporary folk music sound that had characterized his early albums Bringing It All Back Home 1965 featured both electric and acoustic tracks and Highway 61 Revisited later that year was purely electric 2 In 1965 Dylan hired the Hawks as his backing group 3 but recording sessions in New York for a new album were not productive with them and he accepted a suggestion from his producer Bob Johnston that the sessions should transfer to Nashville Tennessee 4 Dylan went to Nashville in February 1966 with Al Kooper and Robbie Robertson from the New York sessions also making the trip 4 Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again was written by Dylan 5 who sang and played harmonica on the song with Kooper on organ and members of the A Team of studio musicians that had been engaged for the album sessions Charlie McCoy Wayne Moss and Joe South guitars Hargus Robbins piano Henry Strzelecki electric bass and Kenneth Buttrey drums 6 All 20 takes of the song were recorded in the early hours of February 17 1966 at Columbia Records s Studio A Dylan reworked the song in the studio revising lyrics and changing the song s structure as he recorded different takes According to Clinton Heylin most of the revisions were to the song s arrangement rather than to the words Eventually after recording for three hours a master take the twentieth and final take lasting seven minutes and six seconds was chosen 7 5 It was released as the second track on side two of Dylan s seventh studio album the double album Blonde on Blonde on June 20 1966 8 9 Take five was released on The Bootleg Series Vol 7 No Direction Home The Soundtrack 2005 10 In 2015 take 13 was released on the two disc edition of The Bootleg Series Vol 12 The Cutting Edge 1965 1966 11 This and four additional takes were on the six disc Deluxe edition 12 and the entire recording session was released on the 18 disc Collector s Edition 13 The song has sometimes been listed as Memphis Blues Again or Stuck Inside Of Memphis With The on album releases the correct title first appeared when it was included on Bob Dylan s Greatest Hits Vol II 1971 14 Analysis and reception EditMichael Gray identified several possible influences on Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again including The Memphis Blues by W C Handy who wrote the music published in 1912 and George A Norton who wrote the lyrics the following year He further notes the influence of Ma Rainey s Memphis Bound Blues 1925 South Memphis Blues by Frank Stokes 1929 and North Memphis Blues by Memphis Minnie 1930 15 Gray saw similarities with the Bukka White song Aberdeen Mississippi Blues 1940 which has the line Sittin down in Aberdeen with New Orleans on my mind 16 The song has nine verses each according to critic Andy Gill providing an absurd little vignette illustrating contemporary alienation 17 Musicologist Wilfrid Mellers described the song as strophic 18 Literature scholar Timothy Hampton felt that Dylan s technique of varying the chorus as a way of isolating the singer from the listener as he employed on some of the Blonde on Blonde tracks is in evidence on Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again where the chorus is sung differently by Dylan each time 19 Journalist Oliver Trager suggested that like other Dylan songs of the time the themes were suspicion of authority figures solicitous females and a confused persecuted and possibly intoxicated narrator 20 Mellers wrote that the song which features a list of characters including Shakespeare Mona Ruth a ragman a senator a preacher a rainman railroad men and a deceased grandfather gave evidence of the interdependence in Dylan s songs of everyday reality and myth 18 Each verse includes a distinct set of characters and circumstances 21 Mike Marqusee felt that thwarted escapism blends with a sense of impending doom in the song 22 He added that 23 urban and rural tradition and innovation are held in a churning stasis The mysteriously impassable distance between Mobile the Gulf Coast oil town and Memphis the great honey pot on the Mississippi is the distance between depression and elation isolation and community anonymity and recognition fatalism and freedom The journey from one to the other is constantly obstructed The sociologist John Wells argued that the song cannot possibly be wholly experienced as a truly remarkable work of art from reading the lyrics alone but only when listening to Dylan s performance 24 He posited that after listening to the track numerous times listeners would realise Mobile no longer just means being stuck in an Alabama city but represents the grotesque turbulent world we all inhabit 24 Communication studies scholar Keith Nainby wrote that Dylan enacted an alienated tumultuous narrative persona that was troubled not comforted by his place and time 21 In a positive review of Blonde on Blonde for Asbury Park Press Dave Margoshes considered the song which he called a surrealistic frenetic blues to be one of the four outstanding tracks on the album 25 Paul Williams named the track as his favorite from the album when he wrote in Crawdaddy in 1966 that it was a chain of anecdotes bound together by an evocative chorus 26 He offered Dylan relates specific episodes and emotions in his offhand impressionistic manner somehow making the universal specific and then making it universal again in that oh so accurate refrain 27 Williams also praised the musicianship adding that he had never heard the organ played so effectively as by Kooper on the number 26 In the Record Mirror review Norman Jopling wrote that the song was jolly with a teen beaty backing and was quite amusing 28 Neil Spencer gave the song a rating of 5 5 stars in an Uncut magazine Dylan supplement in 2015 rating it as one of the three grand statements on Blonde on Blonde alongside Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands and Visions of Johanna 29 Author John Nogowski rated the song as A He described it as a brilliantly funny portrait in black velvet of a world gone mad and one of Dylan s most perfectly realized songs 30 Live performances EditAccording to his website Dylan played Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again 748 times in concert between 1976 and 2010 31 The first live performance was at the University of West Florida Pensacola on April 28 1976 32 during the Rolling Thunder Revue tour 33 The performance at Tarrant County Convention Center Arena Fort Worth Texas on May 16 1976 was included on the live album from the tour Hard Rain released on September 10 1976 34 35 The album was produced by Don DeVito and Dylan 34 The Hard Rain version has a duration of six minutes and six seconds 36 An edited version of this album track lasting three minutes and 35 seconds was also released as a single in the United States on November 30 1976 with Rita May as the B side the single did not chart 34 32 36 Critics received the Hard Rain version of the song which omitted three verses from the original 37 negatively 38 39 40 Nogowski rated the version as a B but preferred the musicianship on the original 41 Personnel Edit Joe South According to Philippe Margotin and Jean Michel Guesdon he distinguished himself by his brilliant guitar playing and licks in the Nashville style on the recording 32 The personnel for the original album session were as follows Musicians 42 Bob Dylan vocals acoustic guitar Charlie McCoy acoustic guitar Wayne Moss electric guitar Joe South electric guitar Al Kooper organ Hargus Robbins piano Henry Strzelecki electric bass Kenneth Buttrey drumsTechnical 43 Bob Johnston productionReferences Edit Williams 2004 p 289 Dettmar amp Latham 2021 pp 13 14 Dettmar amp Latham 2021 p 14 a b Edwards 2021 p 104 a b Margotin amp Guesdon 2022 p 228 Sanders 2020 p 278 Heylin 2010 pp 362 363 Williams 2004 p 284 Heylin 2016 7290 a Sony database of album release dates confirms once and for all that it came out on June 20 1966 Nogowski 2022 p 372 373 Erlewine Stephen Thomas November 6 2015 The Bootleg Series Vol 12 The Cutting Edge 1965 1966 Review AllMusic Archived from the original on December 15 2022 Retrieved February 14 2023 Nogowski 2022 p 273 Bob Dylan The Cutting Edge 1965 1966 The Bootleg Series Vol 12 Bob Dylan s official website Archived from the original on February 7 2016 Retrieved November 29 2015 Fraser Alan Audio International Album Releases Regular Searching for a Gem Archived from the original on January 27 2023 Retrieved January 27 2023 Gray 2004 p 301 Gray 2004 p 302 Gill 2011 p 143 a b Mellers 1985 p 147 Hampton 2020 p 104 Trager 2004 p 590 a b Nainby 2011 p 292 Marqusee 2005 p 204 Marqusee 2005 p 205 a b Wells 1978 p 42 Margoshes Dave December 24 1966 Blonde on Blonde Asbury Park Press p 7 Archived from the original on January 27 2023 Retrieved January 27 2023 a b Williams 1969 p 66 Williams 1969 p 67 Jopling Norman August 13 1966 Bob Dylan Blonde On Blonde CBS Record Mirror p 3 Spencer Neil 2015 Blonde on Blonde Uncut Ultimate Music Guide Bob Dylan p 25 Nogowski 2022 p 61 Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again Bob Dylan s official website Archived from the original on April 15 2021 Retrieved March 23 2021 a b c Margotin amp Guesdon 2022 p 229 Nogowski 2022 p 110 a b c Nogowski 2022 p 109 Fraser Alan Audio International Album Releases Regular Bob Dylan with the Rolling Thunder Revue Hard Rain Searching for a Gem Archived from the original on February 14 2023 Retrieved February 15 2023 a b Fraser Alan Audio 1976 Searching for a Gem Archived from the original on January 23 2023 Retrieved January 27 2023 Ruhlmann William Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again overview AllMusic Retrieved April 4 2023 Rachlis Kit December 2 1976 Hard Rain Rolling Stone Archived from the original on August 12 2022 Retrieved February 15 2023 Why Hard Rain is Bob Dylan s worst ever album Far Out 2021 Archived from the original on February 27 2022 Retrieved February 15 2023 Wawzenek Bryan September 10 2016 How Bob Dylan s Hard Rain album went wrong Ultimate Classic Rock Archived from the original on February 15 2023 Retrieved February 15 2023 Nogowski 2022 pp 110 111 Sanders 2020 p 279 Sanders 2020 pp 276 Bibliography EditDettmar Kevin Latham Sean 2021 A chronology of Bob Dylan s life In Latham Sean ed The World of Bob Dylan Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 13 19 Edwards Leigh H 2021 Country Music Dylan Cash and the Projection of Authenticity In Latham Sean ed The World of Bob Dylan Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 100 111 Gill Andy 2011 Bob Dylan the Stories Behind the Songs 1962 1969 London Carlton ISBN 978 1 84732 759 8 Gray Michael 2004 Song and Dance Man III The Art of Bob Dylan London Continuum International Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 8264 6382 1 Hampton Timothy 2020 Bob Dylan How the Songs Work Kindle ed Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 942130 36 9 Heylin Clinton 2010 Revolution in the Air the Songs of Bob Dylan Vol 1 1957 73 Constable ISBN 978 1 84901 296 6 Heylin Clinton 2016 Judas From Forest Hills to the Free Trade Hall A Historical View of Dylan s Big Boo Kindle ed Route Publishing ISBN 978 1 901927 68 9 Margotin Philippe Guesdon Jean Michel 2022 Bob Dylan All the Songs The Story Behind Every Track Expanded ed New York Black Dog amp Leventhal ISBN 978 0 7624 7573 5 Marqusee Mike 2005 Wicked Messenger Bob Dylan and the 1960s New York Seven Stories Press ISBN 978 1 58322 686 5 Mellers Wilfrid 1985 A Darker Shade of Pale A Backdrop to Bob Dylan Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 571 13345 1 Nainby Keith 2011 Free Stuck Tangled Bob Dylan the Self and the Performer s Critical Perspective Contemporary Theatre Review Taylor amp Francis 21 3 286 301 doi 10 1080 10486801 2011 585979 S2CID 194100687 Nogowski John 2022 Bob Dylan A Descriptive Critical Discography and Filmography 1961 2022 3rd ed Jefferson McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 1 4766 4362 5 Sanders Daryl 2020 That Thin Wild Mercury Sound Dylan Nashville and the Making of Blonde on Blonde epub ed Chicago Chicago Review Press ISBN 978 1 61373 550 3 Trager Oliver 2004 Keys to the Rain the Definitive Bob Dylan Encyclopedia New York Billboard Books ISBN 978 0 8230 7974 2 Wells John 1978 Bent Out of Shape from Society s Pliers A Sociological Study of the Grotesque in the Songs of Bob Dylan Popular Music and Society VI 1 39 43 doi 10 1080 03007767808591108 Williams Paul 1969 1st pub Crawdaddy July 1966 Understanding Dylan Outlaw Blues a Book of Rock Music New York E P Dutton pp 59 69 Williams Paul 2004 1990 Bob Dylan Performing Artist The Early Years 1960 1973 Omnibus Press ISBN 978 1 84449 095 0 External links EditLyrics at Bob Dylan s official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again amp oldid 1155218666, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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