Bob Dylan Quiz – Lyrics from 1986-89

bob dylan 1987

Many (too many?) 10 correct on the last quiz. That’s great, but I’ve decided to adjust the time limit (yet again) to 100s this time. Let’s see what happens..

Lyrics are easily google-able, but there is a time limit & to google the lyrics is cheating, no fun, and no honor.

Please have fun & be honorable!

[WpProQuiz 6]

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July 12: Butch Hancock is 70 Happy Birthday


 

July 12: Butch Hancock is 70 Happy Birthday

Life in Lubbock, Texas, taught me two things: One is that God loves you and you’re going to burn in hell. The other is that sex is the most awful, filthy thing on earth and you should save it for someone you love.
— Butch Hancock

From Wikipedia:

Butch Hancock is a country/folk music recording artist and song writer. He was born July 12, 1945 in Lubbock, Texas. Hancock is a member of The Flatlanders along with Joe Ely and Jimmie Dale Gilmore, but he has principally performed a solo career.

w/ Jimmie Dale Gilmore & Joe Ely (The Flatlanders)

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Bob Dylan: Waitin’ For You, Cordoba, Spain – July 9, 2015 (video)

bob dylan cordova 2015
Bob Dylan singing Waiting For You @ Cordoba, Spain – July 9, 2015

I never dreamed it could be
A someone made just for me.
When I’m letting her have her way,
I’m here to see what she has to say.
Aw, the poor girl always wins the day.
I’m stayin’ ahead of the game,
And she’s a-doin’ the same,
And the whiskey flyin’ into my head.
The fiddler’s arm has gone dead,
And talk is beginning to spread

Wonderful performance.

35th Guitar Festival
Theatre Axerquia
Cordoba, Spain
July 9, 2015

  • Bob Dylan – vocal & piano
  • Tony Garnier – bass
  • George Recile – drums
  • Stu Kimball – rhythm guitar, maracas
  • Charlie Sexton on lead guitar
  • Donnie Herron – banjo, electric mandolin, pedal steel, lap steel

Continue reading Bob Dylan: Waitin’ For You, Cordoba, Spain – July 9, 2015 (video)

July 11: Elvis recorded Mystery Train in 1955

elvis presley 1955

 

July 11: Elvis recorded Mystery Train in 1955

“Mystery Train” is one of Presley’s most haunting songs, a stark blues number that sounds ancient but was actually first cut only two years before by Memphis blues singer Junior Parker. Presley recorded it with the groove from the flip side of the same Parker single, “Love My Baby,” and Sun producer Phillips’ taut, rubbery echo effect made guitarist Scotty Moore’s every note sound doubled. Presley added a final verse — “Train . . . took my baby, but it never will again” — capped by a celebratory falsetto whoop that transformed a pastoral about death into a song about the power to overcome it.
~rollingstone.com

Train arrive, sixteen coaches long
Train arrive, sixteen coaches long
Well that long black train got my baby and gone

Train train, comin’ ’round, ’round the bend
Train train, comin’ ’round the bend
Well it took my baby, but it never will again (no, not again)

Train train, comin’ down, down the line
Train train, comin’ down the line
Well it’s bringin’ my baby, ’cause she’s mine all, all mine
(She’s mine, all, all mine)

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July 10: The Beatles released A Hard Day’s Night in 1964


A_Hard_Day's_Nigth

July 10: The Beatles released A Hard Day’s Night in 1964

“We were different. We were older. We knew each other on all kinds of levels that we didn’t when we were teenagers. The early stuff – the Hard Day’s Night period, I call it – was the sexual equivalent of the beginning hysteria of a relationship. And the Sgt Pepper-Abbey Road period was the mature part of the relationship.”
– John Lennon (1980)

A Hard Day’s Night is the third album by The Beatles; it was released on July 10, 1964. The album is a soundtrack to the A Hard Day’s Night film, starring the Beatles. The American version of the album was released two weeks earlier, on 26 June 1964 by United Artists Records, with a different track listing. This is the first Beatles album to be recorded entirely on four-track tape, allowing for good stereo mixes.

HDN

In 2000, Q placed A Hard Day’s Night at number 5 in its list of the 100 Greatest British Albums Ever. In 2003, the album was ranked number 388 on Rolling Stone magazine’s list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time.

The soundtrack songs were recorded in late February, and the non-soundtrack songs were recorded in June. The title song itself was recorded on April 16.

“…but A Hard Day’s Night is perhaps the band’s most straightforward album: You notice the catchiness first, and you can wonder how they got it later.

The best example of this is the title track– the clang of that opening chord to put everyone on notice, two burning minutes thick with percussion (including a hammering cowbell!) thanks to the new four-track machines George Martin was using, and then the song spiraling out with a guitar figure as abstractedly lovely as anything the group had recorded.”

– Tom Ewing, Pitchfork

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