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LOVE AND THEFT - 2001


 

TRACKS & LYRICS

AUDIO


Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
Mississippi
Summer Days
Bye And Bye
Lonesome Day Blues
Floater (Too Much To Ask)
High Water (For Charley Patton)
Moonlight
Honest With Me
Po' Boy
Cry A While
Sugar Baby


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Liner Notes


Bob Dylan - Vocals, Guitar, Piano
Larry Campbell - Guitar, Violin, Banjo, Mandolin
Charlie Sexton - Guitar
Tony Garnier - Bass
David Kemper - Drums
Augie Meyers - Vox Organ, B3, Accordion

(Clay Meyers plays Bongos on Tweedle Dee and Honest With Me)

Produced by: Jack Frost
Chief Engineer: Chris Shaw
Recorded and mixed by: Chris Shaw
(Assisted by Jeremy Welsh)
Mastered by: George Marino

Photography by: Kevin Mazur (Front cover & group)
David Gahr (Back cover & booklet back cover)
Art Direction: Geoff Gans (of Culver City)

All songs written by Bob Dylan

Album Notes


Bob Dylan's career has always been about defying expectations. Accordingly he followed 1997's much-heralded TIME OUT OF MIND with a marked about-face. Where its predecessor was a bleak emotional landscape full of languid atmospheres, existential sentiments, and graveyard vocal delivery, LOVE AND THEFT finds Dylan much more energized and hopeful. Instead of swamp-like textures, we get sharp, cracking bar-band blues, and lissome ballads with a '20s/'30s feel. The old codger has never sounded more spry; after observing that "summer days and summer nights are gone," he follows up with "I know a place where there's still something going on." Elsewhere he's variously hunting bear, standing on a table to make a toast, burning down a house, and starting a new empire.

The musical context for all this uproar is informed more heavily by Dylan's earliest Americana roots than anything other than his albums of traditional folk songs. Delta and Chicago blues are templates for many songs, while a few others even more anachronistically suggest a future for Dylan as ghost writer for Leon Redbone. The lyrics themselves are littered with quotes from/references to old blues tunes, but Dylan's classic non-linear structure and wild imagination allow him to transcend his influences even as he assimilates them.

 
 

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