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Binding: Audio Cassette
EAN: 0074640899348
Label: Sony
Manufacturer: Sony
Publisher: Sony
Release Date: October 17, 1990
Studio: Sony
Editorial Review:
Amazon.com:
This set captures a still-growing Dylan on the edge, just before he makes the jump to rock & roll, continuing to expand the notion of folk music with openhearted, unprecedented compositions and performances like "All I Really Want to Do," "Chimes of Freedom," "My Back Pages," and "It Ain't Me Babe." If Dylan's previous album The Times They Are A-Changin' was a bit too literal and focused on current events, Another Side indulges Dylan's more mythic and expansive side, making more rumor for the humor that would explode when Dylan formed a band. It's just Dylan, guitar, and harmonica here, but Another Side is a rock & roll album without that band. --Jimmy Guterman
Album Description:
We're proud to present an exact reproduction of the rare original mono mix of Another Side of Bob Dylan. Recorded in a single day in June, 1964, Another Side yielded deeply personal and poetic songs like "It Ain't Me Babe," and "All I Really Want to Do," bursting at the seams with lyrical, dream-fueled imagery, often leavened with dashes of whimsy and always set sailing by Bob Dylan's free-ranging imagination.
Album Description:
Japanese pressing of the singer/songwriter's 1964 album, packaged in a limited edition miniature LP sleeve. CBS. 2004.
Average Rating: 
Rating:
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"Another Side" is one of my favorite Dylan albums. I must confess, I really, really like his early stuff. I love the anger in his voice back then. Yes the stuff that comes later is very good, especially "Blood on the Tracks" which kind of reminds me of "Another Side" in a lot of ways, but this record, the last acoustic record Dylan will do for a very long time, is something very special. "Chimes of Freedom" is my favorite all time Dylan song and like "The Times They Are A-Changing," it still has ... Read More
Rating:
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The album in which Dylan declared his separation from protest songs and the political movement that had supported him, especially in the song "My Back Pages."
In this, his fourth album, he goes away from what he called the "finger-pointing songs." Despite his clear separation from the folk movement's musical ideas, the musical form is the same with acoustic guitar and harmonica.
The songs also reflects his tangled relationship with women, including Suze Rotolo. In a great ... Read More
Rating:
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Stripped down folk like this thrives for one reason- talent. The talent to inject a weary charisma and weighty swagger in what would be bland, generic songwriting for so many other artists. ASOBD instead plays out as one of the master craftsman's most approachable, endearingly early efforts.
Rating:
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I didn't have a lot of bread, back in the 60s, and I don't have much now either. But this was my first Dylan album, and I bought it in 1965. It quickly became my favorite album by anyone at the time. I still have the LP and now a CD, and I'll never be without it. The man is and always was AMAZING!
Rating:
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This was Bob Dylan's fourth album, and the last album of his "folk music" period. Despite being musically similar to his previous albums, thematically it is quite different. Instead of being about "issues", as most folk music was at the time, the songs are more autobiographical. Anyway, the songs are great and this is another Dylan masterpiece.