Folk Music
A Bob Dylan Biography in Seven Songs
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Narrated by:
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Ian Porter
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By:
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Greil Marcus
About this listen
Acclaimed cultural critic Greil Marcus tells the story of Bob Dylan through the lens of seven penetrating songs
“Marcus delivers yet another essential work of music journalism.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Further elevates Marcus to what he has always been: a supreme artist-critic.”—Hilton Als
Across seven decades, Bob Dylan has been the first singer of American song. As a writer and performer, he has rewritten the national songbook in a way that comes from his own vision and yet can feel as if it belongs to anyone who might listen.
In Folk Music, Greil Marcus tells Dylan’s story through seven of his most transformative songs. Marcus’s point of departure is Dylan’s ability to “see myself in others.” Like Dylan’s songs, this book is a work of implicit patriotism and creative skepticism. It illuminates Dylan’s continuing presence and relevance through his empathy—his imaginative identification with other people. This is not only a deeply felt telling of the life and times of Bob Dylan, but a rich history of American folk songs and the new life they were given as Dylan sat down to write his own.
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In Catch a Wave, Peter Ames Carlin pulls back the curtain on Brian Wilson, one of popular music's most revered luminaries, as well as its biggest mystery. Drawing on hundreds of interviews and never-before heard studio recordings, Carlin follows the Beach Boys from their earliest days through Brian's deepening emotional problems to his triumphant re-emergence with the release of Smile, the legendarily unreleased album he had originally shelved.
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Not great
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Outlaw
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- Narrated by: John Pruden
- Length: 7 hrs and 37 mins
- Unabridged
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Waylon Jennings. Willie Nelson. Kris Kristofferson. Three renegade musicians. Three unexpected stars. Three men who changed Nashville and country music forever. Streissguth's new book brings to life an incredible chapter in musical history and reveals for the first time a surprising outlaw zeitgeist in Nashville. Based on extensive research and probing interviews with key players, what emerges is a fascinating glimpse into three of the most legendary artists of our times and the definitive story of how they changed music in Nashville and everywhere.
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Revealing little-known Details does Captivate!
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Paul McCartney
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The best-selling author of the definitive biography of former Beach Boy Brian Wilson offers new insight into the life and music of Paul McCartney, one of the world's most popular and influential musicians. Informed by new, exclusive interviews with friends, bandmates, and collaborators, the book describes McCartney's many triumphs as well as his failures, from the Beatles era through his decade with Wings and his subsequent solo career.
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Great...But
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The Never-Ending Present
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From our talent-rich neighbor to the north comes this biography of one of the most successful Canadian rock bands, The Tragically Hip, which announced a year-long tour after sharing the news of lead singer Gord Downie’s inoperable cancer. Now available to US listeners, The Never-Ending Present details what led up to the memorable night when music fans all over the world watched Downie’s heroic final performance.
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Hometown Heroes
- By Tommy Garou on 12-13-18
By: Michael Barclay
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Dig If You Will the Picture
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- Length: 9 hrs and 1 min
- Unabridged
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Ben Greenman, New York Times best-selling author, contributing writer to The New Yorker, and owner of thousands of recordings of Prince and Prince-related songs, knows intimately that there has never been a rock star as vibrant, mercurial, willfully contrary, experimental, or prolific as Prince. Uniting a diverse audience while remaining singularly himself, Prince was a tireless artist, a musical virtuoso and chameleon, and a pop-culture prophet.
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Reads like a indepth career review & analysis
- By herb on 05-18-17
By: Ben Greenman
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Grown-up Anger
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A tour de force of storytelling years in the making: a dual biography of two of the greatest songwriters, Bob Dylan and Woody Guthrie, that is also a murder mystery and a history of labor relations and socialism, big business and greed in 20th-century America - woven together in one epic saga that holds meaning for all working Americans today.
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Hypocritical
- By D. Lichtenstein on 07-13-17
By: Daniel Wolff
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Your Song Changed My Life
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From the beloved host and creator of NPR's All Songs Considered and Tiny Desk Concerts comes an essential oral history of modern music, told in the voices of iconic and up-and-coming musicians, including Dave Grohl, Jimmy Page, Michael Stipe, Carrie Brownstein, Smokey Robinson, and Jeff Tweedy, among others - published in association with NPR Music.
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Cool if you know all interviewed artists
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Shine Bright
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A weave of biography, criticism, and memoir, Shine Bright is Danyel Smith’s intimate history of Black women’s music as the foundational story of American pop. Smith has been writing this history for more than five years. But as a music fan, and then as an essayist, editor (Vibe, Billboard), and podcast host (Black Girl Songbook), she has been living this history since she was a latchkey kid listening to “Midnight Train to Georgia” on the family stereo.
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Ok might have been better reading the hard copy
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Born to Run
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In 2009, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band performed at the Super Bowl's halftime show. The experience was so exhilarating that Bruce decided to write about it. That's how this extraordinary autobiography began. Over the past seven years, Bruce Springsteen has privately devoted himself to writing the story of his life, bringing to this audio the same honesty, humor, and originality found in his songs.
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Me Springsteen's book moved me beyond words...
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King of the Blues
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Riley “Blues Boy” King (1925-2015) was born into deep poverty in Jim Crow Mississippi. Wrenched away from his sharecropper father, B.B. lost his mother at age 10, leaving him more or less alone. Music became his emancipation from exhausting toil in the fields. Inspired by a local minister’s guitar and by the records of Blind Lemon Jefferson and T-Bone Walker and encouraged by his cousin, the established blues man Bukka White, B.B. taught his guitar to sing in the unique solo style that, along with his relentless work ethic and humanity, became his trademark.
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Excellent
- By Sonny Garcia on 01-02-24
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When Giants Walked the Earth
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They were the last great band of the '60s and the first great band of the '70s. They rose, somewhat unpromisingly, from the ashes of the Yardbirds to become one of the biggest-selling rock bands of all time - and eventually paid the price for it, with disaster, drug addiction, and death.
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Very annoying but tolerable for serious fans.
- By M. Allen on 08-14-19
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Torment Saint
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Elliott Smith was one of the most gifted songwriters of the 90s, adored by fans for his subtly melancholic words and melodies. The sadness had its sources in life. There was trauma from an early age, years of drug abuse, and a chronic sense of disconnection that sometimes seemed self-engineered. Smith died violently in LA in 2003, under what some believe to be questionable circumstances, of stab wounds to the chest. By this time fame had found him, and record-buyers who shared the listening experience felt he spoke directly to them from beyond: astute, damaged, lovelorn, fighting, until he could fight no more.
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Almost interesting, often overwrought, poorly read
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Wild Tales
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From Graham Nash - the legendary musician and founding member of the iconic bands Crosby, Stills & Nash and The Hollies - comes a candid and riveting autobiography that belongs on the reading list of every classic rock fan.
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The Best of the Recent Rock Biographies
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By: Graham Nash
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What listeners say about Folk Music
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Tom
- 06-13-23
Disagree with anyone claiming “pretentious”
I found this book very enjoyable and educational. I’m not a Dylan fanboy but i’ve been listening to his stuff since Freewheelin’in ‘63.
Marcus’ work is a mix of Biography, Musicology, History and a sincere appreciation of what he thought Dylan was trying to accomplish as his Life, Career, and Music evolved over the years. I’m not sure I can name another Artist whose songs have mutated as much as Dylan’s. Plotting them on the Graph of the ups and downs of Folk Music’s development was a daunting task and only an Author with Marcus’ Knowledge and Experience would have even tried. I thought he was quite successful.
I particularly preferred the treatment of just a few individual songs like Blowin’ in the Wind, Hattie Carroll, Desolation Row and Murder Most Foul rather than a Survey Course of Dylanography.
Learning the backstories of Mike Seeger and Karen Dalton was an added plus.
All in all, a very intriguing account of an Icon of the Music of my Life that I’m glad I read.
Four Stars ****
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- Steve L
- 11-06-22
Monstrously Pretentious
As a lifelong Dylan fan, I was excited to listen to this book after reading an early review. I even pre-ordered it before it was available to purchase. Mistake. This is overwritten and underreported. Some primary problems:
1. The author's purpose throughout seems to be to demonstrate how much more he knows about obscure folk music and obscure folk musicians than anybody else - except maybe the mighty Bob Dylan.
2. The book is filled with "as ifs" - sentence after sentence describing how Dylan or some other folk master might be feeling as he or she writes/performs these songs. The weight of history. Becoming history, yada yada yada. But there's nothing to back it up. Not one single original bit of Dylan appears here. The author didn't interview Bob and ask him if if any of his conjectures might be true - of course Dylan's notorious doublespeak may or may not have added anything - so he just makes it up and asks the reader to "just imagine."
3. While Dylan's work in the 80s and early 90s obviously fell far short of the very high bar he set early in his career, the author's seven songs jump from "Desolation Row" in 1965 to "Jim Jones" in 1992. Not Blonde on Blonde, not any of Dylan's work with The Band, not even anything from the Blood on the Tracks masterpiece seemed worthy of telling the Bob Dylan story.
It all adds up to a pompous tome, so heavy and self-important it almost implodes on itself. To paraphrase Dylan, "You're an idiot, man. It's a wonder that you think you know how to write."
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2 people found this helpful
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- C. Bruce Gowan
- 10-13-23
Too much opinion, not enough facts
Not very pleased with this one. Author does too much imposing his opinions and not enough sticking to facts. His constant jibes at other performers and unsupported statements, (beliefs as facts) ruined the history, I gave up half way through
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- Mooshy
- 05-31-23
Terrible!!!! Get something else
I agree with the other reviewer who called the book pretentious but that is an understatement. The author is clearly not a Dylan fan and he makes this most evident by disparaging him repeatedly in almost every sentence. Each Dylan song and life event he discusses drips with harshness, contempt and disgust. He is obviously jealous of Dylan’s brilliance and fame. It was upsetting from paragraph one and went downhill from there.
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