July 14: Bob Dylan released Knocked Out Loaded in 1986
“You see, I spend too much time working out the sound of my records these days, .. and if the records I’m making only sell a certain amount anyway, then why should I take so long putting them together?… I’ve got a lot of different records inside me, and it’s time just to start getting them out.”
~Bob Dylan (to Mikal Gilmore, Sept 1985)
“I’m thinking about calling this album Knocked Out Loaded, Is that any good, you think, Knocked Out Loaded?”
~Bob Dylan (to Mikal Gilmore, May 1986)
“Sounds like something he threw together in a week and away forever. But throwing it away is how he gets that off-the-cuff feel, and side two is great fun”
~Robert Christgau (robertchristgau.com)
Among his ten weakest albums, but it includes the brilliant “Brownsville Girl“.
Wikipedia:
Released
July 14, 1986
Recorded
Early 1986
Genre
Rock
Length
36:11
Label
Columbia
Producer
Bob Dylan
Knocked Out Loaded is the twenty-fourth studio album by American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, released on July 14, 1986 by Columbia Records.
The album was received poorly upon release, and is still considered by some critics to be one of Dylan’s least-engaging efforts. However, the 11-minute epic “Brownsville Girl”—co-written by Sam Shepard—has been cited as one of his best by some critics.
The album includes three cover songs, three collaborations with other songwriters, and two solo compositions by Dylan. Most of the album was recorded in the spring of 1986 (several tracks built on instrumental tracks from 1985 sessions), but one track, “Got My Mind Made Up”, was reportedly recorded during a one-day break in the Dylan/Tom Petty “True Confessions” tour in June. One song, “Maybe Someday”, paraphrases a line from T. S. Eliot’s poem Journey of the Magi: Eliot’s “And the cities hostile and the towns unfriendly” becomes in Dylan “Through hostile cities and unfriendly towns”.
Covert Art
The cover art is a reworking of the January 1939 cover of Spicy Adventure Stories.
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Reception
Nevertheless after the overblown robotic coldness of Empire Burlesque this third-rate assemblage of studio scrapings, taken from various sessions 1984–86, has a warmth and human frailty that at least lets you in. Tired R&B (‘You Wanna Ramble’) and rockism (‘Got My Mind Made Up’); immaculately sung but shifty pop (‘Under Your Spell’); a cover of Kris Kristofferson’s wretched ‘They Killed Him’; and Dylan’s fine ‘Maybe Someday’ so badly produced that it is incomprehensible and could be sung by one of the Chipmunks. There’s a tender rendition, well-produced and refreshingly arranged, of the gospel standard ‘Precious Memories’, a robust cut of the good minor Dylan song ‘Driftin’ Too Far from Shore’ (with mad drumming), and, hidden among the dross, ‘Brownsville Girl’, co-written with Sam Shepard: a wonderful and innovative major work, intelligent and subtle, from a Bob Dylan out from behind his 1980s wall of self-contempt and wholly in command of his incomparable vocal resources.
~Michael Gray (The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia)
…Knocked Out Loaded, including four tracks from the spring 1986 sessions, and four overdubs of songs recorded at earlier sessions. The two weakest tracks are written by Dylan alone; three others are written by Dylan in collaboration with other writers (specifically writers of lyrics); and three songs are covers. I like the opening track, an obscure rockin’ blues called “You Wanna Ramble.” At times I quite enjoy Dylan’s performances of”Precious Memories,” “Under Your Spell,” “They Killed Him” (an absurd but rather charming production number, complete with children’s choir), and of course “Brownsville Girl,” the overdubbed version of “Danville Girl,” which serves as the centerpiece of and excuse for the album. Unfortunately, none of this material hangs together with the other tracks in the slightest; Dylan cannot have been surprised when the album (which was released shortly before the end of the tour; I bought a copy July 18) “peaked” on the U.S. charts at #55 (Empire Burlesque at least got to #33) and disappeared from sight shortly thereafter.
~Paul Williams (Bob Dylan: Performing Artist, Vol 2: The Middle Years 1974-1986)
… Still, Knocked Out Loaded is ultimately a depressing affair, because its slipshod, patchwork nature suggests that Dylan released this LP, not because he had anything in particular to say, but to cash in on his 1986 tour. Even worse, it suggests Dylan’s utter lack of artistic direction. Less bad than pointless, Knocked Out Loaded will prove most satisfying to those content to expect the very least from it. (RS 482)
~Anthony Decurtis (Rolling Stone Magazine)
It is considered a “minor Dylan album” by most reviewers, but there are other voices as well.