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A Simple Twist of Fate [Hardcover]

Andy Gill , Kevin. Odegard
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Da Capo Press Inc; 1st Da Capo Press Ed edition (29 Jan 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0306812312
  • ISBN-13: 978-0306812316
  • Product Dimensions: 21.1 x 14 x 2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,660,454 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Andy Gill
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Product Description

Review

"So fascinatingly behind-the-scenes that it will make you listen to the album as if you've never heard it before." Esquire" --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Description

An in-depth, eyewitness account of the creation of one of Bob Dylan's most celebrated, anguished albums, written by the album's guitarist and an acclaimed journalist. In 1974 Bob Dylan wrote, recorded, reconsidered, and then re-recorded Blood on the Tracks, and to this day, no one who hears it can avoid being blown away by its emotional power. Commonly referred to as "the greatest break-up album of all time," it was written as Dylan's own twelve-year marriage began to painfully unravel. Songs like "Tangled Up in Blue," "Idiot Wind," and "Shelter from the Storm" have become the template for multidimensional, adult songs of love, longing, and loss.Yet the full story behind the creation of this album has never been told. The authors have drawn upon first-hand information and interviews with the musicians, producers, industry insiders, as well as Dylan's friends, associates, and relatives. A Simple Twist of Fate is an engaging chronicle of how one artist transformed his personal pain and confusion into great art.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
BOB DYLAN STOOD AT A ROW OF VENDING machines with his five-year-old son Jakob, feeding loose change into the coffeemaker, selecting the brew he would sip for the next three hours in the studio down the hall. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
If you ask any Bob Dylan fan about "Blood on the Tracks" you will probably be told two things, a) it is his best album, and b) he recorded it twice. Both of these are only partially true. Because Dylan has been so prolific in his nearly fifty years in the music business, it is virtually impossible to say which is his best album, but this would certainly be up there. As to it being recorded twice, only five of the ten tracks on the album were re-recorded, and it is this process that occupies much of this fascinating book.

What rock journalist Andy Gill has done is examine the genesis of the album and place it in a contextual time line that explains where Dylan was in terms of his life and career in 1974. He is aided by session guitarist Kevin Odegard who played on the Minneapolis sessions. Together they look at how the thirty-three year old Dylan, with an already significant career behind him, came out of semi-retirement to record some of the best songs that he has ever written.

What makes "Blood on the Tracks" so ripe for analysis is the fact that most of the songs are about or appear to be about the state of Dylan's private life in 1974. He, not surprisingly for someone so protective of his privacy, has strenuously denied this, but for anyone who listens to songs like "Tangled up in Blue," "Simple Twist of Fate," or indeed the classic "Idiot Wind" it would be hard to think otherwise. This was largely why the album was re-recorded - along with musical embellishments there are lyrical changes, and in two cases, songs were discarded completely, possibly because of their intensly personal lyrics. These songs ("Up to Me" and "Call Letter Blues") were eventually officially released, the former on 1985's "Biograph" and the latter on 1991's first bootleg series.

The album was eventually released in January 1975 to huge commercial and critical acclaim and it is odd to think that such a pivotal piece of work could be realised with so little time being spent on it. All the sessions, both New York and Minneapolis, barely cover a week, yet the finished product gives the impression of a long and thoughtful gestation. I've always loved "Blood on the Tracks," and don't really care whether the songs are personal, impersonal, surreal or even totally meaningless, it is to me one of Dylan's finest moments. Anyone who feels the same should read Gill and Odegard's book - it gives a wonderfully revealing insight into a moment of contemporary music history.
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13 of 16 people found the following review helpful
By Lawrance M. Bernabo HALL OF FAME TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Last night I attended "Blood on the Tracks Live" at the Pantages Theater in Minneapolis, " at which Kevin Odegard and the other uncredited Twin cities musicians who recorded with Dylan 30 years ago played the entire album live (some of the band members and some invited guest artists, such as Mary Lee Kortes of Mary Lee's Corvette, did the singing). Eric Weissberg was also in attendance, so the NYC contingent was represented as well. "A Simple Twist of Fate: Bob Dylan and the Making of Blood on the Tracks" is really the first book on Dylan that I have read, even though he is a native of the Zenith City (I was out on the deck grilling listening to his concert with Paul Simon when Dylan pointed out he had been born over the side of the hill), so none of this was old hat to me. This was also the first book about the making of an album so I was fascinated by the details: learning how changing the key for "Tangled Up in Blue" made such a difference in the vocals is an example of the memorable detail that made this book worth the reading.

The setting is thirty years ago, when Dylan's marriage to his first wife Sara Lowndes was falling apart and he recorded "Blood on the Tracks," considered by many to be one of the greatest breakup albums of all time. "Rolling Stone" magazine listed it as #16 on the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time List, putting it behind "Highway 612 Revisited" (#4) and "Blonde on Blonde" (#9) in terms of the Dylan oeuvre. The songs were all written in two weeks and originally recorded in just a week with the bluegrass band Deliverance in September of 1974. However, in December of 1974 Dylan played the album for his brother David in Minneapolis, who urged recutting some of the songs with unknown local musicians, thus setting up the great debate over which sessions yielded the greater glory. For the record (pun intended) the five Minneapolis tracks were "Tangled Up in Blue," "You're a Big Girl Now," "Idiot Wind," "Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts," and "If You See Her, Say Hello." However, because the album covers had already been printed, Odegard and the rest (drummer Bill Berg, bassist Billy Peterson, guitarist Chris Weber, keyboard player Gregg Inhofer, and mandolinist Peter Ostroushko) did not get credit.

I also found it interesting to reconsider the album as setting "a new benchmark in confessional songwriting," because I have never really thought of "Blood on the Track" in those terms. I had known that Dylan repeatedly dismissed the idea that this album provided great insights into his psyche, but then that is not exactly the sort of thing you would expect a writer to easily confess to anyway. After all, he once introduced "Tangled Up in Blue" onstage as taking ten years to live and two years to write. For me the lyricism was always the main attraction. Ironically killing time before the concert we went to go see the less than worthy film "Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen" in which the title character gushes on about her rock star idol who is the greatest poet since Shakespeare; I have always considered Dylan a legitimate poet and would just point to the titles of songs like "Tangled Up in Blue" and "Simple Twist of Fate" as being emblematic of his stature as a lyricist.

Consequently, since "A Simple Twist of Fate" the book focuses more on the musical part of the equation. Specifics on chords and what key the harmonica is in are pretty much lost on me, but Odegard and his co-author, journalist Andy Gill, take pains to put such things in terms that neophytes like me can appreciate. For those who are interested in how current events and personal biography work their way into music attention is paid to that side of the creative process as well, although obviously Odegard is primarily concerned with what happened in the studio. The idea that "Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts" could be done in one take boggles the mind.

The end result for me is more of an interest in reading more about the nuts and bolts of the act of creation for other great albums than in wanting to read more about Dylan. The MC at the show last night was doing a nostalgic trip down memory lane, asking the audience to remember what it was like the first time they heard "THE ALBUM," and when he pulled the LP out of the brown paper bag it was "Sgt. Pepper." Of course it is now sadly a pair of Beatles too late to really get the full story on that particular classic album, but I am sure we can all think of some other treasured albums that gets into this sort of detail and not the shallow skimming we get on VH-1 specials.

Final Note: Best songs in the concert? Clearly "Idiot Wind" with vocals by Adam Levy of the Honeydogs. The encore piece, when everybody came on stage to do "Tangled Up in Blue" again comes in second.

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Tom
Format:Paperback
This might be of some minor interest for those of you interested in knowing which mikes were used on what takes, and why the snare drum sounds a particular way halfway one take of some song or other... For the rest of us, this says nothing we didn't already know/didn't have the slightest interest in knowing in the first place. As it actually provides very little new info on the recordings, it spends time on irrelevant side stories provided by those who actually bothered to speak to the author. Avoid!
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