Jan 5: Bob Dylan released “Desire” in 1976 – 41 years ago





Bob Dylan Desire

 The result is a sound and a set of songs unlike anything Dylan or anyone else has ever done before…. The lyrics of “Sara” and “Abandoned Love” (and, for that matter, of “Isis” and “Hurricane”) could not be more perfect, but overall the triumph of Desire is musical
~Paul Williams (Bob Dylan: Performing Artist, Vol 2: The Middle Years 1974-1986)

Recorded in the summer lull before the first Rolling Thunder tour and released soon after it, the stand-out tracks are ‘Isis’, ‘Romance in Durango’ and ‘Black Diamond Bay’, but ‘Hurricane’, ‘One More Cup of Coffee’ and ‘Oh Sister’ are breathing down their necks.
~Michael Gray (The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia)

Desire is considered by many Dylan fans to be among his best albums, It’s number 5 on my list – check out: Bob Dylan’s best albums

 

Let’s kick off with Dylan’s performance of Hurricane on Sept. 10 – 1975 (WTTW-TV Studio, Chicago for “The World of John Hammond”):

And “Isis”, on the Rolling Thunder tour, was (eachnight) Bob Dylan’s biggest risk and greatest triumph….
The filmed footage of “isis” as seen in Renaldo & Clara is also riveting: what sticks in my mind are the images of Bobby Neuwirth flickering his tongue like a snake, and Dylan holding up his crossed wrist as though trying to ward off a vampire (“I picket up his body…”)
~Paul Williams (Bob Dylan: Performing Artist, Vol 2: The Middle Years 1974-1986)

From Wikipedia:

Released January 5, 1976
Recorded July–October 1975
Genre Rock, folk rock
Length 56:13
Label Columbia
Producer Don DeVito

Desire is the seventeenth studio album by American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, released in January 1976 by Columbia Records.

It is one of Dylan’s most collaborative efforts, featuring the same caravan of musicians as the acclaimed Rolling Thunder Revue tours the previous year (later documented on The Bootleg Series Vol. 5); many of the songs also featured backing vocals by Emmylou Harris and Ronee Blakley. Most of the album was co-written by Jacques Levy, and is composed of lengthy story-songs, two of which quickly generated controversy: the over-11-minute long “Joey”, which is seen as glorifying the violent gangster “Crazy Joey” Gallo, and “Hurricane”, the opening track that tells a passionate account of the murder case against boxer Rubin Carter, whom the song asserts was framed. Carter was released in 1985, after a judge overturned his conviction on appeal.

BD-desire-back

 

A well-received follow-up to Blood on the TracksDesire reached #1 on the Billboard Pop Albums chart for five weeks, becoming one of Dylan’s top-selling studio albums (currently certified double platinum), while reaching #3 in the UK. It claimed the number one slot on NME Album of the Year. Rolling Stone named Desire #174 on its list of The 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.

Sara:

Sara, Sara
Sweet virgin angel, sweet love of my life
Sara, Sara
Radiant jewel, mystical wife.

Context:

Desire was released between the two legs of Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue tour. By 1975, Dylan had extensive experience playing with a number of bands, but these groups were assembled by others. In the case of the Hawks (later known as The Band), the group had performed for a number of years before ever meeting Dylan.

bd - rolling thunder revue

Dylan’s idea of forming his own band, who would later be known as the Rolling Thunder Revue, came when he saw Patti Smith and her group play at The Other End (formerly, and currently renamed The Bitter End) on June 26, 1975. Smith had yet to record an album, but she was already attracting a lot of attention from the music press and industry. According to Clinton Heylin, these were her first shows with drummer Jay Dee Daugherty, the culmination of four years spent “compiling a unique rock & roll sound”. According to Smith, Dylan was immediately struck by the chemistry between Smith and her band, and expressed a wish that he had chosen to stay with a single band.

bob dylan & pattis smith

Dylan would spend many nights over the next two weeks in New York’s Greenwich Village and The Other End in particular, eventually meeting Rob Stoner and reacquainting himself with Bob Neuwirth. Stoner would later join his Rolling Thunder Revue, and Dylan would meet the remaining members through Neuwirth. According to Smith, he was thinking about improvisation and extending himself “language-wise”.

bob-dylan-rob-stoner-_madis




 

Recording Sessions

….

On the night of July 30, 1975, Dylan returned to Studio E with a smaller group of musicians, including Stoner, Rivera, Harris, and drummer Howie Wyeth. For the most part, this group of musicians formed the core of the Rolling Thunder Revue. …. Both Dylan and Stoner were pleased with the session, and Stoner suggests that the more intimate sound was much closer to the sound of the completed album.

Five of the nine songs from Desire were recorded at that session, as well as a slow version of “Isis,” the original master take of “Hurricane”, the single-only release “Rita Mae,” and a successful take of “Golden Loom” that was later released in 1991. ..

Check out:

bob-dylan-looking-up-sitting-in-recording-studio-new-york-city-1975

The following night, Dylan held another session, this time recording three songs. From this session, Dylan recorded the master take for “Isis” as well as master takes for “Abandoned Love” and “Sara.” Dylan’s wife Sara, the subject of the song that bore her name, also accompanied him to this session.

Abandoned love – live 1975 @ ‘The Other End’:

I can hear the turning of the key
I’ve been deceived by the clown inside of me
I thought that he was righteous but he’s vain
Oh, something’s a-telling me I wear the ball and chain

Critical reception:

On January 5, 1976, Desire was released, garnering a fair share of critical acclaim.

  • Critic Dave Marsh would call it one of the “two best records Dylan has made since John Wesley Harding”  and gave it a four-star review in the 1979 Rolling Stone Record Guide.
  • Some critics were not impressed; Robert Christgau wrote: “Although the candid propaganda and wily musicality of “Hurricane” delighted me for a long time, the deceitful bathos of its companion piece “Joey” tempts me to question the unsullied innocence of Rubin Carter himself”. He disputed their categorization as protest songs and mused that Dylan’s songs about oppressed “heroes” may have been a reflection of Dylan’s own feelings at the time. Christgau described Dylan’s voice and rhymes as “viscous” and the strength of backing vocalists Ronee Blakley and Emmylou Harris as “distinctly kid”. Christgau negatively compared these tracks with “Sara” and “Isis”, before rating the album a moderate “B−”.

Desire, listened to as a musical work, is a phenomenal album, rewarding from start to finish, over and over again
~Paul Williams (Bob Dylan: Performing Artist, Vol 2: The Middle Years 1974-1986)

Oh, Sister :

Track listing:

All tracks written by Bob Dylan and Jacques Levy, except as noted.

Side one
  1. “Hurricane” – 8:33
  2. “Isis” – 6:58
  3. “Mozambique” – 3:00
  4. “One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below)” (Dylan) – 3:43
  5. “Oh, Sister” – 4:05
Side two
  1. “Joey” – 11:05
  2. “Romance in Durango” – 5:50
  3. “Black Diamond Bay” – 7:30
  4. “Sara” (Dylan) – 5:29

new_york_1975_hurricane_night_

Paul Williams created a playlist of his chosen songs from the recording sessions in his great book “Bob Dylan – Performing Artist 1974-86”:

  1. Sara
  2. Abandoned Love
  3. Oh, Sister
  4. One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below)
  5. Isis
  6. Rita Mae
  7. Hurricane

Spotify:




 Personnel

  • Bob Dylan – vocals, rhythm guitar, harmonica; piano on “Isis”
Additional musicians
  • Vincent Bell – bouzouki
  • Ronee Blakley – background vocals on “Hurricane”
  • Dominic Cortese – accordion, mandolin
  • Emmylou Harris – background vocals
  • Scarlet Rivera – violin
  • Luther Rix – congas on “Hurricane”
  • Steven Soles – background vocals on “Hurricane”
  • Rob Stoner – bass guitar, background vocals
  • Howard Wyeth – drums, piano
  • Eric Clapton – guitar on “Romance in Durango”
Technical personnel
  • John Berg – cover design
  • Ruth Bernal – cover photography
  • Don DeVito – production
  • Stan Kalina – mastering
  • Don Meehan – engineering
  • Ken Regan – cover art
  • Luther Rix – conductor
  • Lou Waxman – recording director

Check out:

-Egil

7 thoughts on “Jan 5: Bob Dylan released “Desire” in 1976 – 41 years ago”

  1. I remember I was sixteen and my dearest friend had bought the vinyl. I remember so well the driving impressions that music and those words had provoked me. That music was also the soundtrack of my life protester. I loved a lot and still loving Desire

  2. Hello, don’t you miss Eric Clapton as an additional musicians playing on Romance in Durango?

    1. Thanks for your observation Billy!

      This seems correct.. (I just copied the “Personnel” section from wikipedia..)

      I did check with Olof’s files -> http://www.bjorner.com/DSN02780%201975%20Early%20sessions.htm#DSN02850
      And “Eric Clapton” played guitar in studio the night “Romance In Durango” was recorded (28 July 1975)… If he played on take 4.. I don’t now.. but I’ve added mr. Clapton to the post anyways..
      As you can see in the session details, there were many musicians in the studio that night. I don’t now how many of these actually played on take 4.
      -Egil

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