Of the virtues, I suppose I think integrity is the most essential. Not dignity – a thief can have dignity.
~Bob Dylan (to Barbara Kerr, Feb 1978)
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‘Dignity’, which describes so resourcefully the yearning for a more dignified world, would have been the album’s [Oh Mercy] ideal opening track. It scorches along musically, declaring its allegiance to the timeless appeal of the blues, while sounding, above all things, fresh. Its lyric, meanwhile, though ‘Dylanesque’ in that it sounds like no-one else’s work and sounds like a restrained, mature revisit to a mode of writing you might otherwise call mid-1960s Dylan, is fully alert and freshly itself, admits of no leaning on laurels, and has the great virtue that while not every line can claim the workaday clarity of instructional prose, the song is accessible to anyone who cares to listen, and offers a clear theme, beautifully explored, with which anyone can readily identify.
~Michael Gray (The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia)
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@ #43 on my list of Dylan’s 200 best songs. It was originally recorded for “Oh Mercy” in 1989, but Dylan wasn’t satisfied with it… and left it. Michael Gray points out that it would have been a perfect opening track to the album… way better than “Political World”… only thing missing was an instrumental solo in the middle.
I will not mess with too many details around the songs recording history.. even Clinton Heylin calls Dignity’s recording history a bit… messy….
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Officially we now have 5 different versions available:
# | released | Album |
1 | 1994 | Bob Dylan’s Greatest Hits Volume 3 Brendan O’Brien remixed version |
2 | 1995 | MTV Unplugged Live version |
3 | 2000 | The Best of Bob Dylan, Vol. 2 Touched By An Angel version* |
4 | 2008 | The Bootleg Series Vol. 8 Piano demo version |
5 | 2008 | The Bootleg Series Vol. 8 Tell Tale Signs version2 |
* First released on the album “Touched By An Angel: The Album” – TV Series soundtrack compilation (1998)