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Together Through Life

3.9 out of 5 stars 106 customer reviews

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The Ultimate Music Guide to Bob Dylan
Read more about Bob Dylan in Dylan: The Ultimate Music Guide. With essays on all his albums alongside rare photographs and archive content from the NME and Melody Maker, it's a definitive overview of Dylan's brilliant life in music.
£3.08 & FREE Delivery in the UK on orders over £20. Details Only 5 left in stock. Sold by MediaMerchants and Fulfilled by Amazon. Gift-wrap available.
The Ultimate Music Guide to Bob Dylan
Read more about Bob Dylan in Dylan: The Ultimate Music Guide. With essays on all his albums alongside rare photographs and archive content from the NME and Melody Maker, it's a definitive overview of Dylan's brilliant life in music.

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Product details

  • Audio CD (27 April 2009)
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Columbia / Sony
  • ASIN: B001VNB56I
  • Other Editions: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (106 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 9,852 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)
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Product Description

Product Description

Together Though Life, produced by Jack Frost, was recorded late in 2008, prompted by the composition of a new song, “Life Is Hard,” which was written for a film by French director Oliver Dahan (La Vie En Rose). The album will be the 46th release from Bob Dylan, and follows 2006’s Platinum album Modern Times, which debuted at number one on the Billboard Top 200 and reached the top of the charts in seven additional countries and the Top five in 22 countries around the world. Bob Dylan’s three previous studio albums have been universally hailed as among the best of his storied career, achieving new levels of commercial success and critical acclaim for the artist.

BBC Review

There's a famous anecdote about Bob Dylan stalking Neil Young around the mid-70s, irked to find that someone was getting chart action by sounding a bit like him. As if to echo those far off days he's now matching the Canadian's recent work rate. His 33rd album appears with unexpected haste following 2006's Modern Times. And while cut from the same bluesy cloth as his 'renaissance' trilogy of albums (Time Out Of Mind, Love And Theft and Modern Times) that seemed like tablets hewn from the very fabric of American history, Together Through Life is a distinctly more light-hearted affair.

The album's vibe is resolutely grounded in jolly 12 bar material, at times making it seem more like some Chicago urban blues tribute. My Wife's Home Town (which actually ends with Bob laughing it up) reads like a stand-up comedian's version of a Muddy Waters standard, and at least has the honesty to co-credit Willie Dixon as a writer. Shake, Shake Mama sees Bob, ''Motherless, fatherless and almost friendless too'', but he sounds remarkably chipper about it. Ultimately it's another masterful reading of 20th century American folk, albeit shot through with some mischievous lyrical twists. Whereas on Modern Times he was listening to Alicia Keyes here (on I Feel A Change Comin' On) he's listening to, "...Billy J Shaver and reading James Joyce''. Go figure...

With Donny Herron's steel playing livening the more standard licks of Mike Campbell the loping bar band feel (If You Ever Go To Houston, Jolene) isn't entirely prevalent. The song which got Dylan's creative juices flowing once more - Life Is Hard, penned for the soundtrack to Olivier Dahan's new road movie, My Own Love Song - revisits his recent forays into swingtime jazz; complete with continental mandolins. Also the addition of Los Lobos' David Hidalgo on accordion adds a dash of Tex Mex spice, particularly on Beyond Here Lies Nothing and This Dream Of You, where additional violin recalls his Desire period.

Despite the fact that for nigh on ten years Dylan's been writing songs that deal in Americana cliches there seems little danger of him regressing into some kind of dullard purism like, say, Van Morrison's. He still injects enough of himself to keep above genericism. Having said that, one can't help feel that too much of this easy-going fare may eventually wear out his current re-deified status. Together Through Life isn't a classic but it's no Self Portrait either. --Chris Jones

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Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: Audio CD
This recording features Dylan's gutsy blues style that has been present on and off throughout his career. It is not a classic, but still better than could be expected for someone of 68, showing that he is perhaps returning more and more, via his track choices and sentiments to his early rural youth influences, and the folk/blues that is indelibly imprinted in his soul. The lyrics alternate between light and dark, nothing too profound, but musically this sound from his latest band is very good indeed including the feature of the much wondered about accordian. Well done Bob, keep 'em coming, and your lifetime fans guessing what the next one will be like.
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Format: Audio CD
I think this is a better record than most of the critics I've read have said. It's not so much about words, though there are some great lines here and there. Throughout the album, Dylan treads a fine line between bathos and banality. No, it's about sound. 'Jack Frost' has really done his time in the galleys and come of age here. It's warm, deeply human, somewhat fetid, yet bright, alive and immediate. Gone is the single coil brilliance of the Larry Campbell/Charlie Sexton period. Instead, we have the darker humbucking sound of Mike Campbell. Add to that the brilliance of David Hidalgo's accordian work, a sound that so suits Dylan it's amazing he hasn't used it more in the past, and you end up with a tight, unified sound. This is a minor collection, to be sure, but one with an overall unity which is absent from earlier Dylan albums which fall into this category. Taken on its own terms, I think it's very good indeed.
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Format: Audio CD Verified Purchase
Although I am a massive Bob Dylan fan, I do find his later offerings a little harder to get into, and 'Together Through Life' is no exception. There are no bad tracks, but again no really outstanding ones either. If I was pushed into it I would have to say that 'Shake Shake Mama' which has hints of his mid 60s work in its arrangement is the pick of the crop. Overall it is the more up-tempo tracks that are catching my ear at present with their New Orleans blues feel. This will be a grower rather than an immediate album, and it would be fair to say that it is 'Modern Times Revisited'. Maybe we still expect Dylan to be continually breaking new ground and proving himself. That is something he no longer needs to do. He has been there, shown us all how it is done and the world is still trying to catch up with him. He has every right to settle into a comfortable groove and it is a good groove! Together Through Life is certainly well worth inclusion in your collection, especially if you are a Dylan fan, and even if you are not.
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Format: Audio CD
Dylan is anything but predictable but at least once a decade he turns out a bona fide masterpiece. Think "Blood on the tracks" (1975) Oh Mercy (1989) and the stunning Time out of Mind (1997). The sixties of course was one long assault on convention that led to the greatest oeuvre in all of rock music. "Together through life" his 33rd album does not fall into this category and neither should we expect it to. Indeed taken with Love and Theft and Modern Times it could be seen as a final part of a trilogy albeit probably the weakest one. That said what is different in the past decade is that the quality control has never dramatically dipped in the way it did on some of his awful 1980s albums (Dylan and the Dead in particular is one of the worse albums of all time). Dylan is on a roll and he is everywhere. It's no surprise that the album is No 1.

"Together" is a warm and beautifully constructed album punctuated with Tex Mex, Rock n Roll and the blues. Dylan's voice is still his best instrument and the songs are hugely enjoyable. There is nothing as venomous as "Idiot Wind, as moody as "Man in the long black coat" as profound as "Not Dark Yet". There is nevertheless the gorgeous "This dream of you" the rocking "Jolene" and the brilliant "Beyond here lies nothing". The backing band is tight as a size 14 shirt and the production crystal. Most importantly Dylan is loving it and probably has another 33 albums up his sleeve. I for one can't wait to hear them.
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Format: Audio CD
I can only assume that some of the reviewers on here listened to this album on a cheap, portable cd player, while sitting in a doorway and drinking meths. Some say this is a worse album than 'Infidels' and 'Empire Burlesque'!! Have you gone stark raving mad or just plain bonkers? While not one of Bob's greatest albums, it still contains a solid collection of old time rockers and blues numbers to satisfy any Dylan fan. Listen to the record a few times and let the vibe sink in and hopefully you'll see what I mean. The stand out track for me is 'Shake Shake Mama'.
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Format: Audio CD
I'm strongly attached to a very large part of Dylan's recorded performances, but the rule has to be when new material is recorded by him,'Don't compare'. His choice of musicians, the total number of them and his use of them would be hard to equal, and he normally has a very keen ear in matching the band to his current material. I believe that's what we should be listening for here. The sound is assured, but almost casual, even careless. It is sharply focussed but loose, almost louche in tone. I think that means he's saying he doesn't give a ........ any more. He's getting older, perspectives are changing in his mind; even more than ever, like the bluesman he always was, he's playing to his own satisfaction. I think it's pretty easy to enter into that satisfaction; I also think that's how he sees it himself in this recording. Though not at the very top of my list of his work,I rate this an excellent album and thoroughly recommend it.
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