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Following on from June 1970's self-indulgent and often derided "Self Portrait" double album (funnily enough hindsight has many loving it to pieces) - critics and the public alike went nuts for the supposed 'return to form' of October's "New Morning". Bob Dylan & The Band As I recall this came out rather hurriedly after the "disaster" many journalists considered "Self Portrait" to be. He must have been feeling happy and relieved, New Morning being clear evidence of new-found happiness such as (one suspects) he has never quite managed to find since. In order to navigate out of this carousel please use your heading shortcut key to navigate to the next or previous heading.After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.After viewing product detail pages, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in. Faces an underrated album from dylan.Arrived promptly Settled domestically and having since embraced a more direct form of songcraft from his mid-1960s work, NEW MORNING basks in the glow of an artist seemingly content with his lot. It is often assumed that Dylan wrote "Went to See the Gypsy" after meeting "Winterlude" verges on satirical, a humorous love song directed at a girl named Winterlude, and includes the chorus, "Winterlude, this dude thinks you're fine". Dylan doesn't have bad albums and this is proof, being that it was hastily put together and alegedly rushed out in the wake of its predecessor. It has always seemed throwaway and lightweight, to me.Reviewed in the United Kingdom on September 23, 2012 Speaking as someone who only owns a few of the most well-known Bob Dylan albums otherwise, this seems like an uncharacteristically hopeful, clear-headed, conventional and kind of religious sounding album. The exquisite country-rock of John Wesley Harding and Nashville Skyline continued on this 1970 LP: his instant classics If Not for You and the bluesy One More Weekend plus Winterlude; If Dogs Run Free ; the title song, and more! "...Sign On The Window..." - New Morning by BOB DYLAN (2009 Columbia CD - Greg Calbi Remaster) On one level, this is Dylan's expression of domestic tranquility that is similar to Van Morrison's on Tupelo Honey. So I cut this track and it was really good... and he came in and pretended like he didn't understand where to sing on it." New Morning: 新しい夜明け - Bob Dylanのページをご覧の皆様へ HMV&BOOKS onlineは、本・CD・DVD・ブルーレイはもちろん、各種グッズやアクセサリーまで通販ができるオンラインショップです。 Pontaポイントもつかえて、お得な Please try againSorry, we failed to record your vote. My personal favourite is 'Sign On The Window' It is a beguiling piece of work. There was an error retrieving your Wish Lists. Please try againSorry, we failed to record your vote. Very lazy filler. The British pummelled it into the No. Settled domestically and having since embraced a more direct form of songcraft from his mid-1960s work, NEW Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. 現在、Amazon ミュージックアカウントがこの国に関連付けられていません。プライムミュージックをお楽しみいただくためには、ミュージックライブラリに移動して、アカウントを Amazon.co.jp に転送してください。
Having collected many of the Bob Dylan Reissue Series, I was beginning to think that Sony would never re-release this 1970 chart-topper, which underscores why I think it remains such an underrated record some forty years later. Ignore the poor reviews, they make little sense. Indeed, NEW MORNING is a comforting, friendly little album which presents Bob Dylan at his most approachable.