WHERE MUSIC LISTENS TO YOU

The obligatory Dylan cover

Posted about 1 year ago
If I don't post a Dylan cover at least once a week, I feel a void in my lifeYes, Yes, such a shallow life

Comments (3)

  1. runobodyii says I don't think I even know this song. I love the fiddle and the female vocal is really nice. I also have a weakness for Mellencamp.
    Permalink posted 03/24/2008
  2. inrumford says "Farewell Angelina" is a song written by Bob Dylan in the middle 1960s, but most famous in the hands of Joan Baez. Written in the middle 1960s, the song was planned to be included on Another Side of Bob Dylan and again for Bringing It All Back Home but failed to make the cut. Baez made the song the lead track of her 1965 album of the same name. Baez' version, though only about half as long as Dylan's recording, was very similar in structure and showed her moving away from pure folk music with the use of string bass accompaniment. Dylan's original recording of "Farewell Angelina" was eventually issued in 1991 on The Bootleg Series. Although "Farewell Angelina" is basically a simple folk love song, some critics have questioned the meaning of some of the more obscure lyrics like "The Jack and the Queen have forsaked the courtyard / Fifty-two gypsies now file past the guards". In more modern times "Farewell Angelina" has remained a continuous part of Joan Baez' concert repertoire, being recorded twice for live albums during the 1980s. The song has also been recorded by New Riders of the Purple Sage, John Mellencamp (on Rough Harvest) , Tim O'Brien and Danny Carnahan's Wake The Dead.
    Permalink posted 03/24/2008
  3. runobodyii says Thanks. I'll have to check out the Tim O'Brien version.
    Permalink posted 03/24/2008

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