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[[Image:Glenncommunist.PNG|thumb|right|220px|The Basement at his ranch; 1966]]
{{Refimprove|date=June 2007}}
'''The Basement Tapes''' is an infamous [[Child sexual abuse|child predator]] who reportedly [[stalking|stalked]] and [[rape|molested]] an estimated 1500 [http://www.newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=7248721&nav=menu374_1] pre-pubescent children between 1949 and 2007. He is currently awaiting trial.[http://newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=7248721&nav=menu374_1]
{{otheruses4|the album|the recording sessions and information on all known recordings made during this era of Dylan's career|The Basement Tapes (Sessions)}}
{{Infobox Album <!-- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Albums -->
| Name = The Basement Tapes
| Type = Compilation
| Artist = [[Bob Dylan]] and [[The Band]]
| Cover = BobDylan&theBandTheBasementTapes.jpg
| Released = [[June 26]], [[1975]]
| Recorded = June–September [[1967]], March [[1975]]
| Genre = [[Rock music|Rock]], [[folk]], [[blues]], [[country]]
| Length = 76:41
| Label = [[Columbia Records|Columbia]]
| Producer = [[Bob Dylan]], [[The Band]], {{nowrap|[[Robbie Robertson]]}}
| Reviews =
*[[All Music Guide]] {{rating-5|5}} [http://www.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&sql=10:jxkcikb6bb89~T1 link]
*[[Robert Christgau]] (A+) [http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?id=2820&name=Bob+Dylan%2FThe+Band~T1 link]
*''[[Rolling Stone]]'' {{rating-5|5}} [http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/bobdylan/albums/album/168877/review/5941308/the_basement_tapes link]
| Chronology = [[Bob Dylan]]
| Last album = ''[[Blood on the Tracks]]''<br />(1975)
| This album = '''''The Basement Tapes'''''<br />(1975)
| Next album = ''[[Desire (album)|Desire]]''<br />(1976)
| Misc = {{Extra chronology 2
| Artist = [[The Band]]
| Type = compilation
| Last album = ''[[Before the Flood]]''<br>(1974)
| This album = '''''The Basement Tapes'''''<br>(1975)
| Next album = ''[[Northern Lights - Southern Cross]]''<br>(1975)
}}
}}


'''''The Basement Tapes''''' is a [[studio album]] by [[Bob Dylan]] and [[The Band]], released in [[1975]] by [[Columbia Records]].


Most of the album was actually recorded eight years earlier, in the basement of a house shared by the musicians. As Bob Dylan recovered from a near-fatal motorcycle accident during [[1967]], he called on [[The Band]] to help him experiment with themes of traditional [[folk music]] and [[Americana]]; these explorations, and their possible links with the earlier [[Anthology of American Folk Music]], are explored in ''[[Invisible Republic]]'' by author [[Greil Marcus]].
== Early life ==
Tapes was born February 7, 1932 in Sacremento, California to Miles and Lindsay Tapes, both talented pediatricians. Since becoming interested in younger boys at the age of 15, he has played minor roles in several undeground [[child pornography]] rings, and been a suspect in several rape cases. As a young child, he was often quiet and withdrawn. His personality dramatically changed at the age of ten when he saw [[Gold Diggers of Broadway]] at his parents' acquaintance's locally-owned theater. He took increasing interest in various types of sexual deviancy, including [[snuff films|snuff pornography]] and [[S&M]]. At the age of 16 he allegedly raped his first victim, a 10 year old neighbor. The family pressed charges, though they were later dropped when Tapes agreed to admit himself to a local [[Psychiatric hospital]].


The sessions laid the foundation both for the approach of Dylan's 1967 album ''[[John Wesley Harding (album)|John Wesley Harding]]'', and for the Band finding their own voice on 1968's ''[[Music From Big Pink]]''. The Dylan LP, a critically-acclaimed departure from the surrealist [[rock and roll]] he had recently pioneered on his milestone trio of albums from [[1965]] and [[1966]], was as much of a shock to his fans as were those records to his earlier folk audience. Both it and ''Music From Big Pink'' would greatly influence the turn, by many contemporary popular musicians, away from the [[psychedelic music]] that reached its height in 1967, toward an embrace of country-influenced folk styles.
== Continued crime ==
The rapes hit their peak in 1980 when he kidnapped and molested the daughter of famous author [[Dan Brown]]. It was around this time that he was often found playing extra-like roles in blockbuster movies such as [[The Shining]] and [[Superman II]]. He reflects on this period in an interview with the now-defunct [[WJPM Blackout Radio]], "Most casual movie-goers haven't heard my name, and although my small uncredited roles didn't help this, I feel confident with my current career status and the character(s) I'm playing."


Material from the sessions had been heavily bootlegged since [[1968]], with the most famous being 1969's ''[[Great White Wonder]]''. It wasn't until Dylan's comeback with ''[[Blood on the Tracks]]'' in 1975 that any of it was officially released, and ''The Basement Tapes'' was welcomed with high praise from fans and critics. Compiled by [[Robbie Robertson]], the album features new songs and many [[overdubbing|overdubs]] made by The Band long after the original sessions. More complete and authentic documents of the 1967 tapes have since surfaced and are traded by fans, while the later Band tracks have appeared as bonus tracks on CD reissues of their proper albums.
== Later Life ==
His wife, Naomi Nelson Tapes, gave birth to their first child, Laura, in 1984. In early 1989, Richard was diagnosed with [[Parkinson's Disease]], prompting him to, at first slow down, then discontinue, his brief acting career. He altogether faded from the public eye until 1995 when he was controversially arrested for possessing vintage [[erotica]] that officials deemed to be child pornography. The crimes continued until 2007, when he was captured and arrested while lurking at a [[Chuck E. Cheese]]. He now admits to violating over 1300 victims, though he is a suspect of many more. [http://newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=7248721&nav=menu374_1]


''The Basement Tapes'' peaked at #7 in 1975 on [[Billboard Music Charts|Billboard]]'s (North America) Pop Albums chart and reached #8 in the UK. {{RS500|291}}


==The Story of the Basement Tapes==
== External Links ==
In the mid-1960s, Bob Dylan was at the peak of his creativity, having broken into the mainstream with his popular and acclaimed albums ''[[Highway 61 Revisited]]'' and ''[[Blonde on Blonde]]''. In the latter half of 1965, during the interim between those two albums, Dylan began touring with The Hawks (later known as [[The Band]]). Their live collaboration would continue into the first half of 1966, culminating in a legendary 'world' tour documented in ''[[The Bootleg Series Vol. 4: Bob Dylan Live 1966, The "Royal Albert Hall" Concert]]''.


According to Hawks/Band guitarist [[Robbie Robertson]], "When I first met [Dylan] [in 1965], I played him this ballad from [[The Impressions (American band)|The Impressions]]' ''[[Keep On Pushing]]'' album, 'I've Been Trying,' written by [[Curtis Mayfield]]. I said: 'They're not saying anything much and this is killing me, and you're rambling on for an hour and you're losing me; I mean, I think you're losing the spirit.'" Whether or not Robertson's comments had any real influence on Dylan's decision to change his musical direction, within a couple of years Dylan would be writing quite different styles of songs.
*[http://newschannel5.com/Global/story.asp?S=7248721&nav=menu374_1 News story containing facts about The Basement's life]

*[http://www.thetrainexchange.net/ The Train Exchange, where Tapes briefly worked]
===After the crash===
On [[July 29]]th that year, Dylan suffered a mild [[concussion]] and cracked [[vertebrae]] when he crashed his [[Triumph Motorcycles|Triumph 650 Bonneville motorcycle]] near [[Woodstock, New York]]. He was taken to a local hospital where he phoned the members of the Hawks, informing them of his injuries. Dylan and the Hawks were scheduled to perform at several concerts later in the year, but with Dylan's current condition, those concerts had to be cancelled.

A little more than a week later, Dylan was back in Woodstock, wearing a neck brace and recuperating at a local doctor's house. While he was recovering, Dylan reviewed a preliminary cut of [[D. A. Pennebaker]]'s documentary of the 1966 'world' tour. "They had made another ''[[Dont Look Back]]'', only this time it was for television," recalled Dylan in 1978. "I had nothing better to do than to see the film. All of it, including unused footage. And it was obvious from looking at the film that it was garbage. It was miles and miles of garbage." Dissatisfied with Pennebaker's results, Dylan re-edited the footage into a surrealistic film, titled ''[[Eat the Document]]''. (Howard Alk, who shot much of the footage, and Robbie Robertson also accepted Dylan's invitation to help him edit the film.)

As biographer Clinton Heylin writes, "in the latter months of 1966 Dylan was certainly re-evaluating where he had come to at the age of twenty-five, and reviewing the raw film footage [of ''Eat the Document''] was only part of that process."

Dylan later recalled, "The turning point was back in Woodstock. A little after the accident. Sitting around one night under a full moon, I looked out into the bleak woods and I said, 'Something's gotta change.'"

===Killing time with The Hawks===
According to the late [[Rick Danko]], the Hawks joined Robbie Robertson at their house in West Saugerties in February of 1967. Nicknamed "Big Pink," the house originally was rented to "[[Rick Danko]], [[Richard Manuel]] and [[Garth Hudson]]," according to Robertson. "I think [[Levon Helm|Levon (Helm)]] eventually moved in there, too. I didn't live there, but the whole idea was that we had been living in New York City, and we ended up moving upstate really to get a clubhouse, a place where we could woodshed. It was a real clubhouse, and we were just like a street gang — only we played music instead of going out fighting. We would get together every day at the clubhouse, just like the [[Dead End Kids|Bowery Boys]]. And as soon as Bob got well from his motorcycle accident, he started coming up every day."

The date is uncertain, but sometime between March and June, Dylan and the Hawks began a series of informal recording sessions. Originally taking place at Dylan's house, "in the equally color-conscious Red Room" (according to Heylin), these informal sessions eventually moved to the basement of Big Pink.

"We used to get together everyday at one o' clock in the basement of Big Pink, and it was just a routine. We would get there and to keep [every] one of us from going crazy, we would play music every day . . . There was no particular reason for it. We weren't making a record. We were just fooling around. The purpose was whatever comes into anybody's mind, we'll put it down on this little tape recorder." That tape recorder was actually an old Uher that was used on their legendary 'world' tour in 1966. Equipped with a couple of Altec PA tube mixers and allowing up to three microphones to be input per channel, with four or five studio-quality Neumann microphones, the machine was operated by the Hawks' Garth Hudson during the recording sessions. Dylan would later say in 1969, "that's really the way to do a recording — in a peaceful, relaxed setting, in somebody's basement, with the windows open and a dog lying on the floor."

For the first couple of months, they were just "killing time," according to Robertson. Apparently, much of the early months was spent on covers. "With the covers Bob was educating us a little," recalls Roberston. "The whole folkie thing was still very questionable to us — it wasn't the train we came in on ... He'd come up with something like '[The Banks of the] Royal Canal,' and you'd say, 'This is so beautiful! The expression!' ... he remembered too much, remembered too many songs too well. He'd come over to Big Pink, or wherever we were, and pull out some old song — and he'd prepped for this. He'd practiced this, and then come out here, to show us." Circulating tapes from these sessions reveal a large, diverse number of popular songs, including compositions written or made popular by [[Johnny Cash]], [[The Stanley Brothers]], [[Ian Tyson]], [[John Lee Hooker]], [[Hank Williams]] and [[Eric Von Schmidt]] as well as "sea shanties . . . country tearjerkers, from pure gospel to morality tales . . . material from the English and Irish dales, the [[Appalachian Mountains]], the [[Mississippi Delta]], [[Nashville]]'s Music Row, and even [[Tin Pan Alley]]," according to Heylin.

===New compositions===
Dylan was soon writing and recording new compositions at these informal sessions. "We were doing seven, eight, ten, sometimes fifteen songs a day," recalls Hudson. "Some were old ballads and traditional songs . . . but others Bob would make up as he went along ... We'd play the melody, he'd sing a few words he'd written, and then make up some more, or else just mouth sounds or even syllables as he went along. It's a pretty good way to write songs."

Two of the first songs Dylan recorded was "Tiny Montgomery" and "Sign on the Cross"; the former "rediscovered his flair for characters out of left field," wrote Heylin, while the latter "captures the deathless fatalism of gospel and country Dylan was after in much of his later born-again albums," according to [[NPR]]'s Tim Riley.

In a matter of months, Dylan would record at least thirty new compositions with the Hawks, including some of the most celebrated songs of his career: "I Shall Be Released", "This Wheel's On Fire", "[[Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)]]", "Million Dollar Bash", "Tears Of Rage", "You Ain't Going Nowhere", "Going To Acapulco", "I'm Not There (1956)", "All You Have To Do Is Dream", "Apple Suckling Tree", etc. At least two songs were co-written with members of the Hawks: "Tears Of Rage" with Richard Manuel and "This Wheel's On Fire" with Rick Danko. "He came down to the basement with a piece of typewritten paper . . . and he just said, 'Have you got any music for this?'," recalled Manuel. "I had a couple of musical movements that fit . . . so I just elaborated a bit, because I wasn't sure what the lyrics meant. I couldn't run upstairs and say, 'What's this mean, Bob: 'Now the heart is filled with gold as if it was a purse'?'"

In May of 1967, Dylan gave his first interview in roughly a year. He told Michael Iachetta that "What I've been doing mostly is seeing only a few close friends, reading a little 'bout the outside world, poring over books by people you never heard of, thinking about where I'm going, and why am I running, and am I mixed up too much, and what am I knowing, and what am I giving and what am I taking . . . Songs are in my head like they always are. And they're not going to get written down until some things are evened up. Not until some people come forth and make up for some of the things that happened."

According to Heylin, that someone expected to atone 'for some of the things that happened' was Dylan's manager, [[Albert Grossman]]. Within weeks of the interview, Dylan recorded a [[Bobby Bare]] song that dated back to 1959. Titled "All-American Boy", it was originally a thinly veiled critique of [[Elvis Presley]]'s notorious manager, [[Colonel Tom Parker]], but Dylan rewrote some of the verses, adding some personal references regarding his relationship with Grossman.

===Dwarf Music demos===
Dylan still owed Columbia one more album. According to Robert Shelton, he owed them fourteen new songs. In fact, Dylan's original intentions for those songs remain unclear, although it should be noted he copyrighted fourteen of the songs, the same number that he owed Columbia. The songs copyrighted are: "Million Dollar Bash", "Yea Heavy and a Bottle of Bread", "Please Mrs. Henry", "Down In the Flood", "Lo and Behold", "Tiny Montgomery", "This Wheel's On Fire", "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere", "I Shall Be Released", "Tears of Rage", "Too Much of Nothing", "Quinn the Eskimo", "Open the Door, Homer" and "Nothing Was Delivered",

At the end of August, ten of them were dubbed down from their original stereo recordings to mono and copyrighted by Dwarf Music; in January of 1968, Dylan copyrighted another batch of songs including "Tears of Rage", "[[Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)]]," "Nothing Was Delivered", and "Open the Door Homer." Jointly formed by Dylan and Grossman, Dwarf Music was established in 1965 in order to copyright demos intended for other artists. In an interview taken in 1978, Dylan admitted that the songs written and recorded at Big Pink "were written vaguely for other people . . . I don't remember anybody specifically those songs were ever written for . . . At that time psychedelic rock was overtaking the universe and we were singing these homespun ballads."

[[Peter, Paul and Mary]] were the first to chart with a Big Pink composition when they issued their single of "Too Much of Nothing" in November 1967. Soon after, [[Manfred Mann]] topped the charts with "[[Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)|Mighty Quinn]]." When [[The Byrds]] released their groundbreaking, country-rock album ''[[Sweetheart of the Rodeo]]'' in 1968, they opened and closed it with "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere" and "Nothing Was Delivered". In the UK, "[[This Wheel's on Fire]]" made the top 5 for [[Julie Driscoll]], [[Brian Auger]] and The Trinity; the song was also covered by [[The Byrds]] for their second album of 1968, ''[[Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde]]'', while the Hawks — reunited with Levon Helm and rechristened [[The Band]] — recorded their own version on their celebrated debut, ''[[Music from Big Pink]]'', an album that also featured "I Shall Be Released" and "Tears of Rage." [[Fairport Convention]] would also record "Million Dollar Bash" on their celebrated third album, ''[[Unhalfbricking]]''.

Eventually, rumors of Dylan and The Band's enormous stash of unreleased recordings began to circulate. ''[[Rolling Stone Magazine]]'' even ran a cover story in June 1968, claiming that "there is enough material ... to make an entirely new Bob Dylan record, a record with a distinct style of its own ... These tapes could easily be remastered and made into a record. The concept of a cohesive record is already present."

The fourteen songs copyrighted by Dwarf Music brought those particular songs into private circulation, as demo acetates were soon cut for those songs. With no planned release in sight, these demo acetates became the source material for a number of bootlegs, the first of which was titled ''[[Great White Wonder]]''. Bootlegs had existed for many years, mostly among other forms of music, but with ''Great White Wonder'', rock music had its first commercially (albeit illegally) available bootleg ever.

==Columbia's release of ''The Basement Tapes'' compilation==
On June 26, [[1975]], Columbia officially released a 24-song, double-album titled ''The Basement Tapes''. Compiled and produced by Robbie Robertson, eight of the twenty-four songs did not feature Dylan, and of those eight, only four actually dated from the Big Pink sessions.<ref>{{Citation |last = Heylin |first = Clinton |title = The Basement Tapes |url = http://theband.hiof.no/albums/basement_tapes_heylin.html |accessdate = October 22, 2007 }}</ref>

All of the tracks were 'remixed' to mono while Robertson and other members of The Band overdubbed new piano, guitar, and/or drum parts over four of the original Dylan-Band recordings. The songs that had additional instrumentation added are as follows: "Clothesline Saga", "Odds & Ends", "This Wheel's On Fire", and The Band only song "Orange Juice Blues". Furthermore, songs like "I Shall Be Released," "[[Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)]]," "Sign on the Cross," and "I'm Not There (1956)" were omitted, and the rough, first take of "Too Much of Nothing" was used in place of the later, comparatively flawless take copyrighted by Dwarf Music. (Critic [[Greil Marcus]] would later hail "I'm Not There (1956)" and "Sign on the Cross" as the best and second best songs, respectively, of the Big Pink sessions.)

Nevertheless, ''The Basement Tapes'' was initially hailed by critics, with [[Robert Christgau]] giving it a rare A+ in his "Consumer Guide" column. "These are the famous lost demos recorded at Big Pink in 1967 and later bootlegged on ''The Great White Wonder'' and elsewhere," wrote Christgau, apparently unaware of some of the changes made by Robertson. "Because the Dylan is all work tape, the music is certifiably unpremeditated, lazy as a river and rarely relentless or precise — laid back without complacency or slickness. The writerly 'serious' songs like 'Tears of Rage' are all the richer for the company of his greatest novelties — if 'Going to Acapulco' is a dirge about having fun, 'Don't Ya Tell Henry' is a ditty about separation from self, and both modes are enriched by the Band's more conventional ('realistic') approach to lyrics. We needn't bow our heads in shame because this is the best album of 1975. It would have been the best album of 1967 too. And it's sure to sound great in 1983." Other critics agreed as ''The Basement Tapes'' topped ''[[The Village Voice]]'''s [[Pazz & Jop]] Critics Poll for 1975, beating out [[Patti Smith]]'s ''[[Horses (album)|Horses]]'', [[Bruce Springsteen]]'s ''[[Born to Run]]'', Dylan's own ''[[Blood on the Tracks]]'', and [[Neil Young]]'s ''[[Tonight's the Night (album)|Tonight's the Night]]'', the #2, 3, 4 and 5 ranking albums, respectively.

At the time, some critics lamented omissions like "[[Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)]]" and "I Shall Be Released" from ''The Basement Tapes'', but the double-album only represented a fraction of the Big Pink recordings, and sure enough, a nearly-complete collection of the known recordings was eventually bootlegged as a 5-compact disc set known as ''[[The Genuine Basement Tapes]]''. This famous bootleg has since been remastered in 2001, and re-released in the bootleg market under the title ''A Tree With Roots''. The body of work found in "The Genuine Basement Tapes" is the centerpiece of [[Greil Marcus]]' well-known book of music journalism ''[[Invisible Republic|The Old, Weird America: Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes]]''. In this book, the Basement Tapes are compared to [[Harry Everett Smith|Harry Smith]]'s [[Anthology of American Folk Music]]. The thesis of Marcus' book is that both collections accurately describe an alternate weirder history of the [[United States]].

While Columbia has issued only three more Big Pink recordings since ''The Basement Tapes'' ("I Shall Be Released" and "Sante Fe," both issued on ''[[The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961-1991]]'', as well as take 2 of "[[Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)]]" issued on ''[[Biograph (album)|Biograph]]'' in 1985), even more complete collections of Basement Tape material circulate freely among Dylan fans and collectors, like ''A Tree With Roots'', which compacts the ''The Genuine Basement Tapes'' to 4 discs and remasters them; most recent commercial bootlegs of the material are actually sourced from noncommercial fan projects such as this.

==Track listing==
===Disc 1===

#"Odds and Ends" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 1:46 (additional overdubs)
#"Orange Juice Blues (Blues for Breakfast)" (Manuel) - 3:37 (additional overdubs)
#"Million Dollar Bash" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:31
#"Yazoo Street Scandal" (Robertson) - 3:27
#"Goin' to Acapulco" (Dylan) - 5:26
#"Katie's Been Gone" (Manuel/Robertson) - 2:43
#"Lo and Behold!" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:45
#"Bessie Smith" (Danko/Robertson) - 4:17
#"Clothesline Saga" (Dylan) (Take 1) - 2:56 (additional overdubs)
#"Apple Suckling Tree" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:48
#"Please, Mrs. Henry" (Dylan)(Take 2) - 2:31
#"[[Tears of Rage]]" (Dylan/Manuel) (Take 3) - 4:11

===Disc 2===

#"Too Much of Nothing" (Dylan) (Take 1) - 3:01
#"Yea! Heavy and a Bottle of Bread" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:13
#"[[Ain't no more cane|Ain't No More Cane]]" (Traditional) - 3:56
#"Crash on the Levee (Down in the Flood)" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:03
#"Ruben Remus" (Manuel/Robertson) - 3:13
#"Tiny Montgomery" (Dylan) - 2:45
#"You Ain't Going Nowhere" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:42 (additional overdubs)
#"Don't Ya Tell Henry" (Dylan) - 3:12
#"Nothing Was Delivered" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 4:22
#"Open the Door, Homer" (Dylan) (Take 1) - 2:49
#"Long Distance Operator" (Dylan) - 3:38
#"[[This Wheel's on Fire]]" (Danko/Dylan) - 3:49 (additional overdubs)

==Personnel==
*[[Bob Dylan]] and [[The Band]] - [[record producer|producers]]
*[[Rick Danko]] - [[bass guitar|bass]], [[mandolin]], [[vocals]]
*[[Bob Dylan]] - [[Steel-string guitar|acoustic guitar]], [[piano]], vocals
*[[Levon Helm]] - [[drums]], mandolin, bass, vocals (tracks 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 15, 17, 20 and 23 only)
*[[Garth Hudson]] - [[organ (music)|organ]], [[accordion]], [[clavinet]], piano, [[tenor saxophone]], [[sound engineer|engineer]]
*[[Richard Manuel]] - piano, drums, [[harmonica]], vocals
*[[Robbie Robertson]] - acoustic and [[electric guitar]]s, drums, vocals

==Notes and References==

{{reflist}}

====General references====
*Marcus, Greil. ''Invisible Republic: Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes'' (New York: Henry Holt, 1997) ISBN 0-8050-3393-9

==External links==
*[http://www.angelfire.com/wa/monicasdude/732.htm ''A Tree With Roots'']
*[http://bobdylan.com/linernotes/basement.html Marcus, Greil. Liner notes, ''The Basement Tapes'' (Columbia Records, 1975)]
*[http://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/rock/dylan-75.php Essay by Robert Christgau]
*[http://theband.hiof.no/albums/basement_tapes_heylin.html Clinton Heylin talks about the Band contributions to ''The Basement Tapes''.]
*[http://theband.hiof.no/albums/a_musical_history_details.html Info about the actual recording sessions for Band songs not recorded in the Big Pink; also about six Band tracks that really were recorded there]
*[http://www.bjorner.com/DSN01620%201967.htm Additional information about the recording sessions of The Basement Tapes]


==Sources==

{{Bob Dylan}}

{{The Band}}

[[Category:1975 albums|Basement Tapes, The]]
[[Category:Bob Dylan albums|Basement Tapes, The]]
[[Category:The Band albums|Basement Tapes, The]]
[[Category:Columbia Records albums|Basement Tapes, The]]

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Revision as of 22:12, 29 October 2007

Untitled

The Basement Tapes is a studio album by Bob Dylan and The Band, released in 1975 by Columbia Records.

Most of the album was actually recorded eight years earlier, in the basement of a house shared by the musicians. As Bob Dylan recovered from a near-fatal motorcycle accident during 1967, he called on The Band to help him experiment with themes of traditional folk music and Americana; these explorations, and their possible links with the earlier Anthology of American Folk Music, are explored in Invisible Republic by author Greil Marcus.

The sessions laid the foundation both for the approach of Dylan's 1967 album John Wesley Harding, and for the Band finding their own voice on 1968's Music From Big Pink. The Dylan LP, a critically-acclaimed departure from the surrealist rock and roll he had recently pioneered on his milestone trio of albums from 1965 and 1966, was as much of a shock to his fans as were those records to his earlier folk audience. Both it and Music From Big Pink would greatly influence the turn, by many contemporary popular musicians, away from the psychedelic music that reached its height in 1967, toward an embrace of country-influenced folk styles.

Material from the sessions had been heavily bootlegged since 1968, with the most famous being 1969's Great White Wonder. It wasn't until Dylan's comeback with Blood on the Tracks in 1975 that any of it was officially released, and The Basement Tapes was welcomed with high praise from fans and critics. Compiled by Robbie Robertson, the album features new songs and many overdubs made by The Band long after the original sessions. More complete and authentic documents of the 1967 tapes have since surfaced and are traded by fans, while the later Band tracks have appeared as bonus tracks on CD reissues of their proper albums.

The Basement Tapes peaked at #7 in 1975 on Billboard's (North America) Pop Albums chart and reached #8 in the UK. Template:RS500

The Story of the Basement Tapes

In the mid-1960s, Bob Dylan was at the peak of his creativity, having broken into the mainstream with his popular and acclaimed albums Highway 61 Revisited and Blonde on Blonde. In the latter half of 1965, during the interim between those two albums, Dylan began touring with The Hawks (later known as The Band). Their live collaboration would continue into the first half of 1966, culminating in a legendary 'world' tour documented in The Bootleg Series Vol. 4: Bob Dylan Live 1966, The "Royal Albert Hall" Concert.

According to Hawks/Band guitarist Robbie Robertson, "When I first met [Dylan] [in 1965], I played him this ballad from The Impressions' Keep On Pushing album, 'I've Been Trying,' written by Curtis Mayfield. I said: 'They're not saying anything much and this is killing me, and you're rambling on for an hour and you're losing me; I mean, I think you're losing the spirit.'" Whether or not Robertson's comments had any real influence on Dylan's decision to change his musical direction, within a couple of years Dylan would be writing quite different styles of songs.

After the crash

On July 29th that year, Dylan suffered a mild concussion and cracked vertebrae when he crashed his Triumph 650 Bonneville motorcycle near Woodstock, New York. He was taken to a local hospital where he phoned the members of the Hawks, informing them of his injuries. Dylan and the Hawks were scheduled to perform at several concerts later in the year, but with Dylan's current condition, those concerts had to be cancelled.

A little more than a week later, Dylan was back in Woodstock, wearing a neck brace and recuperating at a local doctor's house. While he was recovering, Dylan reviewed a preliminary cut of D. A. Pennebaker's documentary of the 1966 'world' tour. "They had made another Dont Look Back, only this time it was for television," recalled Dylan in 1978. "I had nothing better to do than to see the film. All of it, including unused footage. And it was obvious from looking at the film that it was garbage. It was miles and miles of garbage." Dissatisfied with Pennebaker's results, Dylan re-edited the footage into a surrealistic film, titled Eat the Document. (Howard Alk, who shot much of the footage, and Robbie Robertson also accepted Dylan's invitation to help him edit the film.)

As biographer Clinton Heylin writes, "in the latter months of 1966 Dylan was certainly re-evaluating where he had come to at the age of twenty-five, and reviewing the raw film footage [of Eat the Document] was only part of that process."

Dylan later recalled, "The turning point was back in Woodstock. A little after the accident. Sitting around one night under a full moon, I looked out into the bleak woods and I said, 'Something's gotta change.'"

Killing time with The Hawks

According to the late Rick Danko, the Hawks joined Robbie Robertson at their house in West Saugerties in February of 1967. Nicknamed "Big Pink," the house originally was rented to "Rick Danko, Richard Manuel and Garth Hudson," according to Robertson. "I think Levon (Helm) eventually moved in there, too. I didn't live there, but the whole idea was that we had been living in New York City, and we ended up moving upstate really to get a clubhouse, a place where we could woodshed. It was a real clubhouse, and we were just like a street gang — only we played music instead of going out fighting. We would get together every day at the clubhouse, just like the Bowery Boys. And as soon as Bob got well from his motorcycle accident, he started coming up every day."

The date is uncertain, but sometime between March and June, Dylan and the Hawks began a series of informal recording sessions. Originally taking place at Dylan's house, "in the equally color-conscious Red Room" (according to Heylin), these informal sessions eventually moved to the basement of Big Pink.

"We used to get together everyday at one o' clock in the basement of Big Pink, and it was just a routine. We would get there and to keep [every] one of us from going crazy, we would play music every day . . . There was no particular reason for it. We weren't making a record. We were just fooling around. The purpose was whatever comes into anybody's mind, we'll put it down on this little tape recorder." That tape recorder was actually an old Uher that was used on their legendary 'world' tour in 1966. Equipped with a couple of Altec PA tube mixers and allowing up to three microphones to be input per channel, with four or five studio-quality Neumann microphones, the machine was operated by the Hawks' Garth Hudson during the recording sessions. Dylan would later say in 1969, "that's really the way to do a recording — in a peaceful, relaxed setting, in somebody's basement, with the windows open and a dog lying on the floor."

For the first couple of months, they were just "killing time," according to Robertson. Apparently, much of the early months was spent on covers. "With the covers Bob was educating us a little," recalls Roberston. "The whole folkie thing was still very questionable to us — it wasn't the train we came in on ... He'd come up with something like '[The Banks of the] Royal Canal,' and you'd say, 'This is so beautiful! The expression!' ... he remembered too much, remembered too many songs too well. He'd come over to Big Pink, or wherever we were, and pull out some old song — and he'd prepped for this. He'd practiced this, and then come out here, to show us." Circulating tapes from these sessions reveal a large, diverse number of popular songs, including compositions written or made popular by Johnny Cash, The Stanley Brothers, Ian Tyson, John Lee Hooker, Hank Williams and Eric Von Schmidt as well as "sea shanties . . . country tearjerkers, from pure gospel to morality tales . . . material from the English and Irish dales, the Appalachian Mountains, the Mississippi Delta, Nashville's Music Row, and even Tin Pan Alley," according to Heylin.

New compositions

Dylan was soon writing and recording new compositions at these informal sessions. "We were doing seven, eight, ten, sometimes fifteen songs a day," recalls Hudson. "Some were old ballads and traditional songs . . . but others Bob would make up as he went along ... We'd play the melody, he'd sing a few words he'd written, and then make up some more, or else just mouth sounds or even syllables as he went along. It's a pretty good way to write songs."

Two of the first songs Dylan recorded was "Tiny Montgomery" and "Sign on the Cross"; the former "rediscovered his flair for characters out of left field," wrote Heylin, while the latter "captures the deathless fatalism of gospel and country Dylan was after in much of his later born-again albums," according to NPR's Tim Riley.

In a matter of months, Dylan would record at least thirty new compositions with the Hawks, including some of the most celebrated songs of his career: "I Shall Be Released", "This Wheel's On Fire", "Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)", "Million Dollar Bash", "Tears Of Rage", "You Ain't Going Nowhere", "Going To Acapulco", "I'm Not There (1956)", "All You Have To Do Is Dream", "Apple Suckling Tree", etc. At least two songs were co-written with members of the Hawks: "Tears Of Rage" with Richard Manuel and "This Wheel's On Fire" with Rick Danko. "He came down to the basement with a piece of typewritten paper . . . and he just said, 'Have you got any music for this?'," recalled Manuel. "I had a couple of musical movements that fit . . . so I just elaborated a bit, because I wasn't sure what the lyrics meant. I couldn't run upstairs and say, 'What's this mean, Bob: 'Now the heart is filled with gold as if it was a purse'?'"

In May of 1967, Dylan gave his first interview in roughly a year. He told Michael Iachetta that "What I've been doing mostly is seeing only a few close friends, reading a little 'bout the outside world, poring over books by people you never heard of, thinking about where I'm going, and why am I running, and am I mixed up too much, and what am I knowing, and what am I giving and what am I taking . . . Songs are in my head like they always are. And they're not going to get written down until some things are evened up. Not until some people come forth and make up for some of the things that happened."

According to Heylin, that someone expected to atone 'for some of the things that happened' was Dylan's manager, Albert Grossman. Within weeks of the interview, Dylan recorded a Bobby Bare song that dated back to 1959. Titled "All-American Boy", it was originally a thinly veiled critique of Elvis Presley's notorious manager, Colonel Tom Parker, but Dylan rewrote some of the verses, adding some personal references regarding his relationship with Grossman.

Dwarf Music demos

Dylan still owed Columbia one more album. According to Robert Shelton, he owed them fourteen new songs. In fact, Dylan's original intentions for those songs remain unclear, although it should be noted he copyrighted fourteen of the songs, the same number that he owed Columbia. The songs copyrighted are: "Million Dollar Bash", "Yea Heavy and a Bottle of Bread", "Please Mrs. Henry", "Down In the Flood", "Lo and Behold", "Tiny Montgomery", "This Wheel's On Fire", "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere", "I Shall Be Released", "Tears of Rage", "Too Much of Nothing", "Quinn the Eskimo", "Open the Door, Homer" and "Nothing Was Delivered",

At the end of August, ten of them were dubbed down from their original stereo recordings to mono and copyrighted by Dwarf Music; in January of 1968, Dylan copyrighted another batch of songs including "Tears of Rage", "Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)," "Nothing Was Delivered", and "Open the Door Homer." Jointly formed by Dylan and Grossman, Dwarf Music was established in 1965 in order to copyright demos intended for other artists. In an interview taken in 1978, Dylan admitted that the songs written and recorded at Big Pink "were written vaguely for other people . . . I don't remember anybody specifically those songs were ever written for . . . At that time psychedelic rock was overtaking the universe and we were singing these homespun ballads."

Peter, Paul and Mary were the first to chart with a Big Pink composition when they issued their single of "Too Much of Nothing" in November 1967. Soon after, Manfred Mann topped the charts with "Mighty Quinn." When The Byrds released their groundbreaking, country-rock album Sweetheart of the Rodeo in 1968, they opened and closed it with "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere" and "Nothing Was Delivered". In the UK, "This Wheel's on Fire" made the top 5 for Julie Driscoll, Brian Auger and The Trinity; the song was also covered by The Byrds for their second album of 1968, Dr. Byrds & Mr. Hyde, while the Hawks — reunited with Levon Helm and rechristened The Band — recorded their own version on their celebrated debut, Music from Big Pink, an album that also featured "I Shall Be Released" and "Tears of Rage." Fairport Convention would also record "Million Dollar Bash" on their celebrated third album, Unhalfbricking.

Eventually, rumors of Dylan and The Band's enormous stash of unreleased recordings began to circulate. Rolling Stone Magazine even ran a cover story in June 1968, claiming that "there is enough material ... to make an entirely new Bob Dylan record, a record with a distinct style of its own ... These tapes could easily be remastered and made into a record. The concept of a cohesive record is already present."

The fourteen songs copyrighted by Dwarf Music brought those particular songs into private circulation, as demo acetates were soon cut for those songs. With no planned release in sight, these demo acetates became the source material for a number of bootlegs, the first of which was titled Great White Wonder. Bootlegs had existed for many years, mostly among other forms of music, but with Great White Wonder, rock music had its first commercially (albeit illegally) available bootleg ever.

Columbia's release of The Basement Tapes compilation

On June 26, 1975, Columbia officially released a 24-song, double-album titled The Basement Tapes. Compiled and produced by Robbie Robertson, eight of the twenty-four songs did not feature Dylan, and of those eight, only four actually dated from the Big Pink sessions.[1]

All of the tracks were 'remixed' to mono while Robertson and other members of The Band overdubbed new piano, guitar, and/or drum parts over four of the original Dylan-Band recordings. The songs that had additional instrumentation added are as follows: "Clothesline Saga", "Odds & Ends", "This Wheel's On Fire", and The Band only song "Orange Juice Blues". Furthermore, songs like "I Shall Be Released," "Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)," "Sign on the Cross," and "I'm Not There (1956)" were omitted, and the rough, first take of "Too Much of Nothing" was used in place of the later, comparatively flawless take copyrighted by Dwarf Music. (Critic Greil Marcus would later hail "I'm Not There (1956)" and "Sign on the Cross" as the best and second best songs, respectively, of the Big Pink sessions.)

Nevertheless, The Basement Tapes was initially hailed by critics, with Robert Christgau giving it a rare A+ in his "Consumer Guide" column. "These are the famous lost demos recorded at Big Pink in 1967 and later bootlegged on The Great White Wonder and elsewhere," wrote Christgau, apparently unaware of some of the changes made by Robertson. "Because the Dylan is all work tape, the music is certifiably unpremeditated, lazy as a river and rarely relentless or precise — laid back without complacency or slickness. The writerly 'serious' songs like 'Tears of Rage' are all the richer for the company of his greatest novelties — if 'Going to Acapulco' is a dirge about having fun, 'Don't Ya Tell Henry' is a ditty about separation from self, and both modes are enriched by the Band's more conventional ('realistic') approach to lyrics. We needn't bow our heads in shame because this is the best album of 1975. It would have been the best album of 1967 too. And it's sure to sound great in 1983." Other critics agreed as The Basement Tapes topped The Village Voice's Pazz & Jop Critics Poll for 1975, beating out Patti Smith's Horses, Bruce Springsteen's Born to Run, Dylan's own Blood on the Tracks, and Neil Young's Tonight's the Night, the #2, 3, 4 and 5 ranking albums, respectively.

At the time, some critics lamented omissions like "Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)" and "I Shall Be Released" from The Basement Tapes, but the double-album only represented a fraction of the Big Pink recordings, and sure enough, a nearly-complete collection of the known recordings was eventually bootlegged as a 5-compact disc set known as The Genuine Basement Tapes. This famous bootleg has since been remastered in 2001, and re-released in the bootleg market under the title A Tree With Roots. The body of work found in "The Genuine Basement Tapes" is the centerpiece of Greil Marcus' well-known book of music journalism The Old, Weird America: Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes. In this book, the Basement Tapes are compared to Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music. The thesis of Marcus' book is that both collections accurately describe an alternate weirder history of the United States.

While Columbia has issued only three more Big Pink recordings since The Basement Tapes ("I Shall Be Released" and "Sante Fe," both issued on The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961-1991, as well as take 2 of "Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)" issued on Biograph in 1985), even more complete collections of Basement Tape material circulate freely among Dylan fans and collectors, like A Tree With Roots, which compacts the The Genuine Basement Tapes to 4 discs and remasters them; most recent commercial bootlegs of the material are actually sourced from noncommercial fan projects such as this.

Track listing

Disc 1

  1. "Odds and Ends" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 1:46 (additional overdubs)
  2. "Orange Juice Blues (Blues for Breakfast)" (Manuel) - 3:37 (additional overdubs)
  3. "Million Dollar Bash" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:31
  4. "Yazoo Street Scandal" (Robertson) - 3:27
  5. "Goin' to Acapulco" (Dylan) - 5:26
  6. "Katie's Been Gone" (Manuel/Robertson) - 2:43
  7. "Lo and Behold!" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:45
  8. "Bessie Smith" (Danko/Robertson) - 4:17
  9. "Clothesline Saga" (Dylan) (Take 1) - 2:56 (additional overdubs)
  10. "Apple Suckling Tree" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:48
  11. "Please, Mrs. Henry" (Dylan)(Take 2) - 2:31
  12. "Tears of Rage" (Dylan/Manuel) (Take 3) - 4:11

Disc 2

  1. "Too Much of Nothing" (Dylan) (Take 1) - 3:01
  2. "Yea! Heavy and a Bottle of Bread" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:13
  3. "Ain't No More Cane" (Traditional) - 3:56
  4. "Crash on the Levee (Down in the Flood)" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:03
  5. "Ruben Remus" (Manuel/Robertson) - 3:13
  6. "Tiny Montgomery" (Dylan) - 2:45
  7. "You Ain't Going Nowhere" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 2:42 (additional overdubs)
  8. "Don't Ya Tell Henry" (Dylan) - 3:12
  9. "Nothing Was Delivered" (Dylan) (Take 2) - 4:22
  10. "Open the Door, Homer" (Dylan) (Take 1) - 2:49
  11. "Long Distance Operator" (Dylan) - 3:38
  12. "This Wheel's on Fire" (Danko/Dylan) - 3:49 (additional overdubs)

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. ^ Heylin, Clinton, The Basement Tapes, retrieved October 22, 2007

General references

  • Marcus, Greil. Invisible Republic: Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes (New York: Henry Holt, 1997) ISBN 0-8050-3393-9

External links


Sources

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