To: Mr. Mojo
I recently watched a documentary on Dylan and I was amazed at the anger and vitriol from the audience he experienced when he plugged in his Fender. People were screaming, booing, throwing things, and he just kept on playing as though nothing was going on.
I've liked both Dylan's acoustic and electric work, and of course, The Band became phenomenal in their own right.
6 posted on
07/29/2006 8:28:01 AM PDT by
Drew68
To: Drew68
The Band became phenomenal in their own right. They sure burned brightly, but unfortunately for a (relatively) short period of time. Their 2nd release - The Band ("The Brown Album") (1969) - could be my favorite album of all time.
8 posted on
07/29/2006 8:31:01 AM PDT by
Mr. Mojo
To: Drew68
People were screaming, booing, throwing things... The libs were trying out new tactics.
To: Drew68
I recently watched a documentary on Dylan and I was amazed at the anger and vitriol from the audience he experienced when he plugged in his Fender. People were screaming, booing, throwing things, and he just kept on playing as though nothing was going on.That's just the way liberals are (those in the audience).
26 posted on
07/29/2006 6:58:50 PM PDT by
SamAdams76
(I am a big fan of urban sprawl but I wish there were more sidewalks)
To: Drew68
I recently watched a documentary on Dylan and I was amazed at the anger and vitriol from the audience he experienced when he plugged in his Fender.PBS featured him on their American Masters series.
At one concert, you can hear Dylan directing the band to " play it loud " as they came on stage for the electric set.
The clips of the press confrences are something else. The press was asking incredibly stupid questions. Some things never change.
35 posted on
07/30/2006 6:13:54 AM PDT by
csvset
("It was like the hand of G_d slapping down and smashing everything." ~ JDAM strikes Taliban)
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson