Modern Times Bob Dylan

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CD

  • Release Date: 08/29/2006
  • Sales Rank: 10,741
  • Label: SONY
  • UPC: 828768760628
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Modern Times

1LISTENThunder on the Mountain 5:55
2LISTENSpirit on the Water 7:42
3LISTENRollin' and Tumblin' 6:01
4LISTENWhen the Deal Goes Down 5:04
5LISTENSomeday Baby 4:55
6LISTENWorkingman's Blues #2 6:07
7LISTENBeyond the Horizon 5:36
8LISTENNettie Moore 6:52
9LISTENThe Levee's Gonna Break 5:43
10LISTENAin't Talkin' 8:48

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

The length of time that transpires between Bob Dylan releases these days -- it's been five years since Love and Theft, which itself broke a four-year drought -- makes it seem as if the rock legend has come down from the mountaintop with each armful of new songs. This time around, the epic, foreboding material he's crafted backs up that image, with every incisive phrase and every heavy-hanging note underscoring the spiritual, questing vibe. Modern Times isn't exactly a religious album -- not in the standard sense -- but it does carry a stark, apocalyptic tone that can be terrifying (as on the stealthily picked "Ain't Talkin," with its imagery of life as a skein of unending suffering) or vivifying (as on "Beyond the Horizon," where he sets his sights on the afterlife that follows said anguish). More than he has in ages, Dylan builds his tales around classic blues structures, tweaking the 12-bar form ever so subtly on the steely-eyed revenge paean "Someday Baby" and reworking the Muddy Waters classic "Rollin' and Tumblin' " (which he's retrofitted with new lyrics) into a cautionary tale of impending doom. As befits its title, Modern Times is also shot through with Dylan's take on the world around him. Although he's not nearly as direct here as he was in his protest song days, there's no mistaking the passion -- or position -- of songs like "Workingman's Blues #2" (a class-conscious rallying cry that carries traces of Before the Flood in its DNA) and the New Orleans-directed "The Levee's Gonna Break." Unlike its immediate predecessor, Modern Times isn't a particularly aggressive album. At times, in fact, it verges on the parched. But not depleted: Instead, with this steely-eyed disc, Dylan sounds like a man who intends to fight on -- intent on winning every battle. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

A reviewerby Anonymous

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December 25, 2007: Dylan has always been changing. From the early ruckus going electric at The Folk Festival to different words and tempos during live concerts to even foregoing playing his guitar "for standup electric piano during a Philadelphia concert three years ago", one must be ready for anything. The early charge of energy in the beginning of "Thunder on the Mountain" on this collection, really is a preview to a much more laid back, conversational style which harkens to a simpler era. The band and the sound of this album is much less lush with only bassist Tony Garnier returning from the personnel from the early 90's. No strong resonances on his vocal sound and the absence of the numerous sideman and instruments of, for example, "Time Out of Mind", makes this work stand out. It took me to a place which oddly matches that night cover picture of a NYC taxi. Walking through the Village of old, with clubs and sounds emitting from them that were personal and directed to small groups of attentive fans. If these album sounds were heard in such a bygone time, for sure, one must stop by and groove to the sounds of "Rollin' and Tumblin'", that old standby. Am I the only one to detect that this Dylan album moves us to a simpler time before mortgage and credit meltdowns, obese, computer-obsessed, exercise-phobic children and avaricious adults began eating away our American soul?

Modern bluesby Anonymous

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September 23, 2006: Of the latter day "renaissance trilogy" this one seems better, even, than both Love & Theft and Time Out of Mind. The blues covers rock, the singing is subtle and expressive. Dylan has fun with the lyrics, his sense of humor is refreshing on this cd. The enigmatic trickster may not be writing overtly political lyrics like the (excellent) new Neil Young cd, but this music seems to me satisfying and appropriate listening in these times of doom.


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