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The Bootleg Series Vol. 9: The Witmark Demos: 1962–1964

The Bootleg Series Vol. 9: The Witmark Demos: 1962–1964 is a compilation album by American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, containing demo recordings he made for his first two publishing companies, Leeds Music and M. Witmark & Sons, from 1962 to 1964. The seventh installment of the ongoing Bob Dylan Bootleg Series, it was released on October 19, 2010 on Legacy Records.[1]

The Bootleg Series Vol. 9:
The Witmark Demos: 1962–1964
Compilation album by
ReleasedOctober 19, 2010 (2010-10-19)
Recorded1962–1964
GenreFolk
Length138:28
LabelColumbia
ProducerStan Berkowitz and Jeff Rosen
Bob Dylan chronology
Christmas in the Heart
(2009)
The Bootleg Series Vol. 9:
The Witmark Demos: 1962–1964

(2010)
The Original Mono Recordings
(2010)
Bob Dylan Bootleg Series chronology

It features 47 tracks with Dylan accompanying himself on acoustic guitar, harmonica and occasionally piano. The recordings were only available on pirate recordings until 1991; three of these recordings appeared on the first volume of the series. A fourth demo of "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" was included on The Bootleg Series Vol. 7: No Direction Home: The Soundtrack. While Dylan recorded subsequent versions of most of the songs, the album features 15 that were produced exclusively as demos and had never been heard before except as bootlegs.[2][3]

The Witmark Demos was released in two formats: the standard two-disc set common to the rest of the series; and a four album set. Both releases featured a booklet with an account on the album's significance by historian Colin Escott, along with photos of Dylan from the period when the demos were recorded. The album peaked at number 12 on the Billboard 200 albums chart in its first week, becoming Dylan's 20th album to debut in the top 20.[4]

Background edit

Leeds Music demos edit

Dylan recorded his debut album, Bob Dylan, for Columbia Records in November 1961, when he was 20.[5] The album included two original tracks, "Song to Woody" and "Talkin' New York", the first songs he had written after arriving in New York City's Greenwich Village in January 1961.[6][7] In addition, Dylan recorded one other original during the Columbia sessions, "Man on the Street", which did not appear on the album.[8][9]

Based on the songs Dylan was writing, his producer at Columbia, John Hammond, arranged for the young artist to meet with Lou Levy at Leeds Music Publishing.[10][11] Dylan was offered a $100 advance and signed with a Leeds subsidiary, Duchess Music, on January 5, 1962.[12][13] In addition to agreeing to publish Dylan's songs and pay royalties on sales by other artists, Levy suggested the possibility of producing a songbook once they had enough material, a prospect that excited Dylan as much as anything else.[14] Dylan returned to Leeds the next week and recorded five songs in one demo session: "Poor Boy Blues", "Ballad for a Friend", "Rambling, Gambling Willie", "Talking Bear Mountain Picnic Massacre Blues", and "Standing on the Highway".[15][16] To this he added the two songs from the Columbia sessions that were not used on his album.[17] After signing with Leeds, Dylan pursued songwriting with a new vigor. As he reflected later, "I wrote wherever I happened to be. Sometimes I'd spend a whole day sitting at a corner table in a coffeehouse, just writing whatever came into my head."[11][18]

M. Witmark & Sons demos edit

In the spring of 1962, folk music manager Albert Grossman began to take an active interest in Dylan. One of the organizers of the first Newport Folk Festival in 1959 and manager of a small stable of folksingers, Grossman had recently launched a new act composed of three musicians he had handpicked, Peter, Paul & Mary.[19][20] Grossman had been watching Dylan from the sidelines for nearly a year and played a peripheral part in some of the events leading up to his contract with Columbia.[21][22][23] While Grossman was negotiating Peter, Paul & Mary's contract with Warner Bros. Records, he closed a unique arrangement with Music Publishers' Holding Company, a Warner-owned operation that was the industry's leading publisher. The deal, finalized that spring, gave Grossman half of MPHC's royalties share for any artist he could sign to a publishing contract. Dylan became his first prospect.[24][25][26]

Grossman proposed that Dylan sign with the prestigious publisher M. Witmark & Sons, one of MPHC's eight subsidiaries.[27] After playing some songs for Witmark executive Artie Mogull, Dylan mentioned a complication: he was already under contract with Leeds/Duchess.[28] Dylan was given $1,000 in early July 1962 and approached Leeds about buying out his contract. Since the folksinger had yet to produce any sales, Leeds accepted the money and released Dylan from the agreement.[27][29] Dylan signed a new contract with Witmark on July 12 and immediately recorded a demo of what would become his breakthrough song, "Blowin' in the Wind".[27] Four months passed before Dylan returned to record another song, "Ye Playboys and Playgirls", but the next month, in December, he showed up with seven new compositions, including three that would become classics: "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall", "Ballad of Hollis Brown", and "Tomorrow Is a Long Time".[30]

In all, Dylan visited Witmark about a dozen times, registering his last demos in mid-1964. He recorded a total of 39 songs for Witmark, all of which are included on The Bootleg Series Vol. 9: The Witmark Demos, along with the eight recordings originally registered with Leeds.[31][32][33] Besides early versions of many of his classics, as well as rarities that have appeared on other editions of The Bootleg Series, the set includes 15 songs, an album's worth of material, that had never been officially released in any form.[2][34]

Production edit

The recordings for the Leeds and Witmark demos were never intended for public consumption, but were made to sell Dylan's songs to other artists.[35][36] The demo sessions took place in a tiny 6-by-8-foot studio at Witmark's offices in the Look Building at 51st Street and Madison Avenue, where an engineer would capture the performances on a reel-to-reel. To save tape, the demos were recorded at 7.5 inches per second, half the speed used in professional studios. A Witmark copyist would then transcribe the lyrics and music from the tape, and song sheets would be printed and mailed to recording companies. When a company's artist expressed an interest in a song, Witmark would cut an acetate, a recording on inexpensive plastic, that would be sent to the artist for preview purposes. If acceptable, the song would be recorded.[29][37]

Royalties edit

Royalties from sales of the songs were paid to Witmark, which gave Dylan two cents per record and split its two-cent share with Grossman. In addition, Grossman received 25% of Dylan's payments under the terms of their management contract, which was signed on August 20, 1962, six weeks after the Witmark agreement.[27][29][38] Dylan and Grossman subsequently set up their own publishing company, Dwarf Music, in a contract signed in mid-1965 but back-dated to January of that year[39] By late 1965, more than a year after the last of the Witmark demos, Music Publishers' Holding Company reported in Billboard that at least 237 recordings had been made of Dylan's songs under the copyrights it held.[40]

Demo session dates edit

While the recording dates of the Leeds and Witmark Demos had previously been published, they were not included in the information distributed with the CD or LP. On disc 1, tracks 1–8 are from the demos recorded at Leeds Music on 2 February 1962. Track 9, a demo of "Blowin' in the Wind" and the first song recorded for Witmark is from July 1962. Track 10 was recorded on 1 November 1962, followed by tracks 11–17, which were recorded in December 1962. Tracks 18–22 were registered as recorded in winter 1963, probably February. Tracks 23–25 of disc 1 and tracks 1–2 of disc 2 were recorded in March 1963. Tracks 3–6 date from April 1963, 7–9 from May 1963, and 10–15 were all recorded in August 1963. Track 16, "The Times They Are a-Changin'", was recorded in October 1963, and Track 17 is from December 1963. Tracks 18–19 were the last demos recorded at the Witmark studio, in January 1964. Tracks 20–22 were registered to Witmark in June 1964, though they had been recorded elsewhere.[41]

Critical reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [42]
The Guardian     [43]
Mojo     [44]
Pitchfork Media9.1/10[45]
Tiny Mix Tapes     [46]

Witmark Demos received positive responses from critics. It achieved an 86% positive ("Universal acclaim") at Metacritic based on reviews by 8 critics.[47] AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine said about the songs on Witmark Demos: "they’ve never been presented as completely and in as great fidelity as they are on this two-disc set."[48]

Track listing edit

All songs were written by Bob Dylan, except where noted.

Disc one
No.TitleLength
1."Man on the Street" (fragment)1:07
2."Hard Times in New York Town"1:57
3."Poor Boy Blues"3:01
4."Ballad for a Friend"2:23
5."Rambling, Gambling Willie"3:38
6."Talking Bear Mountain Picnic Massacre Blues"3:42
7."Standing on the Highway"2:32
8."Man on the Street"1:30
9."Blowin' in the Wind"2:38
10."Long Ago, Far Away"2:29
11."A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall"6:49
12."Tomorrow Is a Long Time"3:46
13."The Death of Emmett Till"4:32
No.TitleLength
14."Let Me Die in My Footsteps"1:37
15."Ballad of Hollis Brown"4:08
16."Quit Your Low Down Ways"2:50
17."Baby, I'm in the Mood for You"1:36
18."Bound to Lose, Bound to Win"1:19
19."All Over You"3:52
20."I'd Hate to Be You on That Dreadful Day"2:00
21."Long Time Gone"3:46
22."Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues"3:17
23."Masters of War"4:23
24."Oxford Town"2:33
25."Farewell"3:58
Total length:75:23
Disc two
No.TitleLength
1."Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" (previously issued on The Bootleg Series Volume 7)3:38
2."Walkin' Down the Line" (previously issued on The Bootleg Series Volume 1)3:23
3."I Shall Be Free"4:30
4."Bob Dylan's Blues"1:58
5."Bob Dylan's Dream"3:53
6."Boots of Spanish Leather"5:49
7."Girl from the North Country"3:09
8."Seven Curses"3:13
9."Hero Blues"1:36
10."Whatcha Gonna Do?"3:36
11."Gypsy Lou"3:45
No.TitleLength
12."Ain't Gonna Grieve"1:28
13."John Brown"4:19
14."Only a Hobo"2:25
15."When the Ship Comes In" (previously issued on The Bootleg Series Volume 1)2:56
16."The Times They Are a-Changin'" (previously issued on The Bootleg Series Volume 1)3:03
17."Paths of Victory"4:11
18."Guess I'm Doing Fine"4:08
19."Baby, Let Me Follow You Down" (Eric Von Schmidt, Reverend Gary Davis, Dave Van Ronk)1:56
20."Mama, You Been on My Mind"2:14
21."Mr. Tambourine Man"5:55
22."I'll Keep It with Mine"3:34
Total length:74:39

Limited Edition bonus disc: In Concert – Brandeis University 1963 edit

The In Concert – Brandeis University 1963 disc was given as a limited edition bonus with purchases of Bootleg Series Vol. 9 or Original Mono Recordings at a variety of retailers.

Charts edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ . Bob Dylan.com. Archived from the original on October 18, 2010. Retrieved September 7, 2018.
  2. ^ a b Corbett, Ben (October 22, 2010). . Crawdaddy. Archived from the original on December 25, 2010. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
  3. ^ Love, Joshua (November 5, 2010). "The Bootleg Series, Vol. 9: The Witmark Demos: 1962-1964". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2011-02-23.
  4. ^ a b Billboard 200, 24 October 2010
  5. ^ Dylan was born May 24, 1941 (Gray 2006, p. 192).
  6. ^ Sounes 2001, pp. 80, 94
  7. ^ Gray 2006, p. 70
  8. ^ Bauldie 1991
  9. ^ Bjorner 2010
  10. ^ Dylan, Chronicles: Volume One, pp. 288-291
  11. ^ a b Sounes 2001, pp. 109–110
  12. ^ Heylin 2003, pp. 94–95
  13. ^ Escott 2010, p. 19
  14. ^ Sounes 2001, p. 110
  15. ^ Heylin 2003, pp. 88–89
  16. ^ Escott 2010, p. 20
  17. ^ Olof, "The Yearly Chronicles", 1961
  18. ^ Heylin 2003, pp. 89–92
  19. ^ Sounes 2001, p. 117
  20. ^ Gray 2006, pp. 283–284
  21. ^ Scaduto 1973, pp. 126–127
  22. ^ Sounes 2001, pp. 102–107
  23. ^ Hajdu 2001, pp. 95–96, 102
  24. ^ Heylin 2003, p. 94
  25. ^ Sounes 2001, pp. 117–119
  26. ^ Gross, Mike (March 20, 1965). MPHC Grossing $1 Million Year in Its Folk Operation. Billboard. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  27. ^ a b c d Sounes 2001, pp. 118–119
  28. ^ Escott 2010, pp. 32–35
  29. ^ a b c Heylin 2003, p. 95
  30. ^ Heylin 1997, p. 19
  31. ^ Bjorner, Still on the Road, Witmark Demos, 1961-1964
  32. ^ Heylin 1997, pp. 19–29
  33. ^ Escott 2010, p. 55
  34. ^ Goodman, Dean (2010-08-25). "Early Bob Dylan demos released in new 'Bootleg' set". Reuters. Retrieved 2011-02-24.
  35. ^ Fleming, Colin (October 2010). "How Bob Dylan Sounded Before He Was a Star". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2010-12-04.
  36. ^ Escott 2010, p. 53
  37. ^ Escott 2010, pp. 40–43
  38. ^ Gray 2006, p. 284
  39. ^ Sounes 2001, pp. 209–210
  40. ^ Dylan in Pub Field; Artie Mogull Mgr. Billboard. November 20, 1965. p. 12. Retrieved 2010-12-04. mogull dylan.
  41. ^ Bjorner, Still on the Road, 1962-64
  42. ^ AllMusic review
  43. ^ Maddy Costa (2010-10-14). "The Guardian review". Guardian. London. Retrieved 2012-09-29.
  44. ^ Cameron, Keith (November 2010). "Forever young: Bob Dylan The Bootleg Series No. 9 – The Witmark Demos: 1962–1964". Mojo. p. 122.
  45. ^ "Pitchfork Media review". Pitchfork.com. 2010-11-05. Retrieved 2012-09-29.
  46. ^ "Bob Dylan - The Bootleg Series Vol. 9: The Witmark Demos: 1962-1964". Tiny Mix Tapes. November 1, 2010. Retrieved February 7, 2019.
  47. ^ "The Bootleg Series, Vol. 9: The Witmark Demos: 1962-1964". Metacritic. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
  48. ^ Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. "The Bootleg Series, Vol. 9: The Witmark Demos: 1962-1964". allmusic.com. Retrieved 2010-11-28.
  49. ^ Australian Album Charts, 14-November-2010
  50. ^ "Billboard - Music Charts, News, Photos & Video". Billboard.
  51. ^ "Music Albums, Top 200 Albums & Music Album Charts". Billboard.com. Retrieved 2012-01-17.
  52. ^ Official UK Top 40 Albums Chart, 24 October 2010 3 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine

References edit

External links edit

  • BobDylan.com  – Official web site, including lyrics and touring schedule.
  • Bob Dylan's Witmark Demos  – Documentary trailer by Jennifer Lebeau for the release of The Witmark Demos CD.
  • Leeds Demos and Witmark Demos  – Bringing It All Back Home Page, web site with information on bootlegs of Bob Dylan's songs.

bootleg, series, witmark, demos, 1962, 1964, compilation, album, american, singer, songwriter, dylan, containing, demo, recordings, made, first, publishing, companies, leeds, music, witmark, sons, from, 1962, 1964, seventh, installment, ongoing, dylan, bootleg. The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 is a compilation album by American singer songwriter Bob Dylan containing demo recordings he made for his first two publishing companies Leeds Music and M Witmark amp Sons from 1962 to 1964 The seventh installment of the ongoing Bob Dylan Bootleg Series it was released on October 19 2010 on Legacy Records 1 The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964Compilation album by Bob DylanReleasedOctober 19 2010 2010 10 19 Recorded1962 1964GenreFolkLength138 28LabelColumbiaProducerStan Berkowitz and Jeff RosenBob Dylan chronologyChristmas in the Heart 2009 The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 2010 The Original Mono Recordings 2010 Bob Dylan Bootleg Series chronologyVol 8 Tell Tale Signs Rare and Unreleased 1989 2006 2008 Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 2010 Vol 10 Another Self Portrait 1969 1971 2013 It features 47 tracks with Dylan accompanying himself on acoustic guitar harmonica and occasionally piano The recordings were only available on pirate recordings until 1991 three of these recordings appeared on the first volume of the series A fourth demo of Don t Think Twice It s All Right was included on The Bootleg Series Vol 7 No Direction Home The Soundtrack While Dylan recorded subsequent versions of most of the songs the album features 15 that were produced exclusively as demos and had never been heard before except as bootlegs 2 3 The Witmark Demos was released in two formats the standard two disc set common to the rest of the series and a four album set Both releases featured a booklet with an account on the album s significance by historian Colin Escott along with photos of Dylan from the period when the demos were recorded The album peaked at number 12 on the Billboard 200 albums chart in its first week becoming Dylan s 20th album to debut in the top 20 4 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Leeds Music demos 1 2 M Witmark amp Sons demos 2 Production 3 Royalties 4 Demo session dates 5 Critical reception 6 Track listing 6 1 Limited Edition bonus disc In Concert Brandeis University 1963 7 Charts 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 External linksBackground editLeeds Music demos edit Dylan recorded his debut album Bob Dylan for Columbia Records in November 1961 when he was 20 5 The album included two original tracks Song to Woody and Talkin New York the first songs he had written after arriving in New York City s Greenwich Village in January 1961 6 7 In addition Dylan recorded one other original during the Columbia sessions Man on the Street which did not appear on the album 8 9 Based on the songs Dylan was writing his producer at Columbia John Hammond arranged for the young artist to meet with Lou Levy at Leeds Music Publishing 10 11 Dylan was offered a 100 advance and signed with a Leeds subsidiary Duchess Music on January 5 1962 12 13 In addition to agreeing to publish Dylan s songs and pay royalties on sales by other artists Levy suggested the possibility of producing a songbook once they had enough material a prospect that excited Dylan as much as anything else 14 Dylan returned to Leeds the next week and recorded five songs in one demo session Poor Boy Blues Ballad for a Friend Rambling Gambling Willie Talking Bear Mountain Picnic Massacre Blues and Standing on the Highway 15 16 To this he added the two songs from the Columbia sessions that were not used on his album 17 After signing with Leeds Dylan pursued songwriting with a new vigor As he reflected later I wrote wherever I happened to be Sometimes I d spend a whole day sitting at a corner table in a coffeehouse just writing whatever came into my head 11 18 M Witmark amp Sons demos edit In the spring of 1962 folk music manager Albert Grossman began to take an active interest in Dylan One of the organizers of the first Newport Folk Festival in 1959 and manager of a small stable of folksingers Grossman had recently launched a new act composed of three musicians he had handpicked Peter Paul amp Mary 19 20 Grossman had been watching Dylan from the sidelines for nearly a year and played a peripheral part in some of the events leading up to his contract with Columbia 21 22 23 While Grossman was negotiating Peter Paul amp Mary s contract with Warner Bros Records he closed a unique arrangement with Music Publishers Holding Company a Warner owned operation that was the industry s leading publisher The deal finalized that spring gave Grossman half of MPHC s royalties share for any artist he could sign to a publishing contract Dylan became his first prospect 24 25 26 Grossman proposed that Dylan sign with the prestigious publisher M Witmark amp Sons one of MPHC s eight subsidiaries 27 After playing some songs for Witmark executive Artie Mogull Dylan mentioned a complication he was already under contract with Leeds Duchess 28 Dylan was given 1 000 in early July 1962 and approached Leeds about buying out his contract Since the folksinger had yet to produce any sales Leeds accepted the money and released Dylan from the agreement 27 29 Dylan signed a new contract with Witmark on July 12 and immediately recorded a demo of what would become his breakthrough song Blowin in the Wind 27 Four months passed before Dylan returned to record another song Ye Playboys and Playgirls but the next month in December he showed up with seven new compositions including three that would become classics A Hard Rain s a Gonna Fall Ballad of Hollis Brown and Tomorrow Is a Long Time 30 In all Dylan visited Witmark about a dozen times registering his last demos in mid 1964 He recorded a total of 39 songs for Witmark all of which are included on The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos along with the eight recordings originally registered with Leeds 31 32 33 Besides early versions of many of his classics as well as rarities that have appeared on other editions of The Bootleg Series the set includes 15 songs an album s worth of material that had never been officially released in any form 2 34 Production editThe recordings for the Leeds and Witmark demos were never intended for public consumption but were made to sell Dylan s songs to other artists 35 36 The demo sessions took place in a tiny 6 by 8 foot studio at Witmark s offices in the Look Building at 51st Street and Madison Avenue where an engineer would capture the performances on a reel to reel To save tape the demos were recorded at 7 5 inches per second half the speed used in professional studios A Witmark copyist would then transcribe the lyrics and music from the tape and song sheets would be printed and mailed to recording companies When a company s artist expressed an interest in a song Witmark would cut an acetate a recording on inexpensive plastic that would be sent to the artist for preview purposes If acceptable the song would be recorded 29 37 Royalties editRoyalties from sales of the songs were paid to Witmark which gave Dylan two cents per record and split its two cent share with Grossman In addition Grossman received 25 of Dylan s payments under the terms of their management contract which was signed on August 20 1962 six weeks after the Witmark agreement 27 29 38 Dylan and Grossman subsequently set up their own publishing company Dwarf Music in a contract signed in mid 1965 but back dated to January of that year 39 By late 1965 more than a year after the last of the Witmark demos Music Publishers Holding Company reported in Billboard that at least 237 recordings had been made of Dylan s songs under the copyrights it held 40 Demo session dates editWhile the recording dates of the Leeds and Witmark Demos had previously been published they were not included in the information distributed with the CD or LP On disc 1 tracks 1 8 are from the demos recorded at Leeds Music on 2 February 1962 Track 9 a demo of Blowin in the Wind and the first song recorded for Witmark is from July 1962 Track 10 was recorded on 1 November 1962 followed by tracks 11 17 which were recorded in December 1962 Tracks 18 22 were registered as recorded in winter 1963 probably February Tracks 23 25 of disc 1 and tracks 1 2 of disc 2 were recorded in March 1963 Tracks 3 6 date from April 1963 7 9 from May 1963 and 10 15 were all recorded in August 1963 Track 16 The Times They Are a Changin was recorded in October 1963 and Track 17 is from December 1963 Tracks 18 19 were the last demos recorded at the Witmark studio in January 1964 Tracks 20 22 were registered to Witmark in June 1964 though they had been recorded elsewhere 41 Critical reception editProfessional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 42 The Guardian nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 43 Mojo nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 44 Pitchfork Media9 1 10 45 Tiny Mix Tapes nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 46 Witmark Demos received positive responses from critics It achieved an 86 positive Universal acclaim at Metacritic based on reviews by 8 critics 47 AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine said about the songs on Witmark Demos they ve never been presented as completely and in as great fidelity as they are on this two disc set 48 Track listing editAll songs were written by Bob Dylan except where noted Disc oneNo TitleLength1 Man on the Street fragment 1 072 Hard Times in New York Town 1 573 Poor Boy Blues 3 014 Ballad for a Friend 2 235 Rambling Gambling Willie 3 386 Talking Bear Mountain Picnic Massacre Blues 3 427 Standing on the Highway 2 328 Man on the Street 1 309 Blowin in the Wind 2 3810 Long Ago Far Away 2 2911 A Hard Rain s a Gonna Fall 6 4912 Tomorrow Is a Long Time 3 4613 The Death of Emmett Till 4 32 No TitleLength14 Let Me Die in My Footsteps 1 3715 Ballad of Hollis Brown 4 0816 Quit Your Low Down Ways 2 5017 Baby I m in the Mood for You 1 3618 Bound to Lose Bound to Win 1 1919 All Over You 3 5220 I d Hate to Be You on That Dreadful Day 2 0021 Long Time Gone 3 4622 Talkin John Birch Paranoid Blues 3 1723 Masters of War 4 2324 Oxford Town 2 3325 Farewell 3 58Total length 75 23Disc twoNo TitleLength1 Don t Think Twice It s All Right previously issued on The Bootleg Series Volume 7 3 382 Walkin Down the Line previously issued on The Bootleg Series Volume 1 3 233 I Shall Be Free 4 304 Bob Dylan s Blues 1 585 Bob Dylan s Dream 3 536 Boots of Spanish Leather 5 497 Girl from the North Country 3 098 Seven Curses 3 139 Hero Blues 1 3610 Whatcha Gonna Do 3 3611 Gypsy Lou 3 45 No TitleLength12 Ain t Gonna Grieve 1 2813 John Brown 4 1914 Only a Hobo 2 2515 When the Ship Comes In previously issued on The Bootleg Series Volume 1 2 5616 The Times They Are a Changin previously issued on The Bootleg Series Volume 1 3 0317 Paths of Victory 4 1118 Guess I m Doing Fine 4 0819 Baby Let Me Follow You Down Eric Von Schmidt Reverend Gary Davis Dave Van Ronk 1 5620 Mama You Been on My Mind 2 1421 Mr Tambourine Man 5 5522 I ll Keep It with Mine 3 34Total length 74 39Limited Edition bonus disc In Concert Brandeis University 1963 edit The In Concert Brandeis University 1963 disc was given as a limited edition bonus with purchases of Bootleg Series Vol 9 or Original Mono Recordings at a variety of retailers Charts editChart 2010 PeakpositionBillboard 200 4 12Australian Albums Chart 49 36European Albums Chart 50 13German Albums Chart 51 24UK Albums Chart 52 18Footnotes edit The Bootleg Series Volume 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 Bob Dylan com Archived from the original on October 18 2010 Retrieved September 7 2018 a b Corbett Ben October 22 2010 Album Reviews Bob Dylan Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 and The Complete Mono Recordings Crawdaddy Archived from the original on December 25 2010 Retrieved 2010 11 30 Love Joshua November 5 2010 The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 Pitchfork Retrieved 2011 02 23 a b Billboard 200 24 October 2010 Dylan was born May 24 1941 Gray 2006 p 192 Sounes 2001 pp 80 94 Gray 2006 p 70 Bauldie 1991 Bjorner 2010 Dylan Chronicles Volume One pp 288 291 a b Sounes 2001 pp 109 110 Heylin 2003 pp 94 95 Escott 2010 p 19 Sounes 2001 p 110 Heylin 2003 pp 88 89 Escott 2010 p 20 Olof The Yearly Chronicles 1961 Heylin 2003 pp 89 92 Sounes 2001 p 117 Gray 2006 pp 283 284 Scaduto 1973 pp 126 127 Sounes 2001 pp 102 107 Hajdu 2001 pp 95 96 102 Heylin 2003 p 94 Sounes 2001 pp 117 119 Gross Mike March 20 1965 MPHC Grossing 1 Million Year in Its Folk Operation Billboard Retrieved 2010 11 18 a b c d Sounes 2001 pp 118 119 Escott 2010 pp 32 35 a b c Heylin 2003 p 95 Heylin 1997 p 19 Bjorner Still on the Road Witmark Demos 1961 1964 Heylin 1997 pp 19 29 Escott 2010 p 55 Goodman Dean 2010 08 25 Early Bob Dylan demos released in new Bootleg set Reuters Retrieved 2011 02 24 Fleming Colin October 2010 How Bob Dylan Sounded Before He Was a Star The Atlantic Retrieved 2010 12 04 Escott 2010 p 53 Escott 2010 pp 40 43 Gray 2006 p 284 Sounes 2001 pp 209 210 Dylan in Pub Field Artie Mogull Mgr Billboard November 20 1965 p 12 Retrieved 2010 12 04 mogull dylan Bjorner Still on the Road 1962 64 AllMusic review Maddy Costa 2010 10 14 The Guardian review Guardian London Retrieved 2012 09 29 Cameron Keith November 2010 Forever young Bob Dylan The Bootleg Series No 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 Mojo p 122 Pitchfork Media review Pitchfork com 2010 11 05 Retrieved 2012 09 29 Bob Dylan The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 Tiny Mix Tapes November 1 2010 Retrieved February 7 2019 The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 Metacritic Retrieved 2010 11 30 Erlewine Stephen Thomas The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 allmusic com Retrieved 2010 11 28 Australian Album Charts 14 November 2010 Billboard Music Charts News Photos amp Video Billboard Music Albums Top 200 Albums amp Music Album Charts Billboard com Retrieved 2012 01 17 Official UK Top 40 Albums Chart 24 October 2010 Archived 3 April 2012 at the Wayback MachineReferences editBauldie John 1991 The Bootleg Series Volumes 1 3 Rare amp Unreleased 1961 1991 CD booklet Bob Dylan New York Columbia Records Bjorner Olof The Yearly Chronicles 1961 64 Bjorner Olof Still on the Road Recording sessions amp concerts 1961 64 Bjorner Olof 2010 11 17 Studio A Columbia Recording Studios New York City New York 20 amp 22 November 1961 Bjorner com Retrieved 2011 01 25 Escott Colin 2010 The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 booklet Bob Dylan New York Columbia Records Gray Michael 2006 The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia Continuum International Publishing ISBN 0 8264 6933 7 Hajdu David 2001 Positively 4th Street The Lives and Times of Joan Baez Bob Dylan Mimi Baez Farina and Richard Farina North Point Press ISBN 0 86547 642 X Heylin Clinton 2003 Bob Dylan Behind the Shades Revisited Harper Entertainment ISBN 0 06 052569 X Heylin Clinton 1997 Bob Dylan The Recording Sessions 1960 1994 Macmillan ISBN 0 312 15067 9 Scaduto Anthony 1973 1971 Dylan An Intimate Biography Signet New American Library Shelton Robert 2003 1986 No Direction Home Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 81287 8 Sounes Howard 2001 Down The Highway The Life Of Bob Dylan Grove Press ISBN 0 8021 1686 8 External links editBobDylan com Official web site including lyrics and touring schedule Bob Dylan s Witmark Demos Documentary trailer by Jennifer Lebeau for the release of The Witmark Demos CD Leeds Demos and Witmark Demos Bringing It All Back Home Page web site with information on bootlegs of Bob Dylan s songs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Bootleg Series Vol 9 The Witmark Demos 1962 1964 amp oldid 1172854129, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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