The Daily Telegraph

ALBUM OF THE WEEK

BOB DYLAN: SPRINGTIME IN NEW YORK: THE BOOTLEG SERIES VOL.16 1980-1985 (COLUMBIA)

- says Neil Mccormick

These outtakes cover Dylan’s worst period – but they are still better than most artists’ purple patches,

The 1980s are not exactly considered Bob Dylan’s golden period, least of all by the musician himself. “I felt done for, an empty, burned-out wreck,” he wrote in his 2004 memoir,

Chronicles. “My own songs had become strangers to me.”

Coming out of a proselytis­ing born-again Christian phase that had alienated many of his original fans, Dylan was searching for a new sound to connect with the MTV generation. Sporting outsize, shoulder-padded jackets and skinny ties, the great troubadour was persuaded to try layered, digitised and radically overdubbed recording techniques antithetic­al to his usual quick-fire studio approach, with mixed results. Dylan found the process “tedious” and admitted, “I didn’t like the current sounds – mine or anyone else’s.”

Neverthele­ss, during this period, Dylan released the masterful Infidels (1983) and composed many songs of dazzling brilliance, including the epic ‘Blind Willie Mctell’. The latter offers a sorrowful journey through America’s racist history that Dylan bafflingly put away and didn’t release until the first of his official

Bootleg Series, Volumes 1-3 in 1991.

The 16th volume of outtakes is subtitled

Springtime in New York

1980-1985, implying that this period of doubt and experiment­ation sowed the seeds for Dylan’s resurgent 1990s comeback. The box set contains 5CDS featuring 57 rare and previously unreleased recordings, including a desolate full band version of ‘Blind Willie’. We have reached the stage of The Bootleg Series where we are being offered alternate takes of rejected songs, which might make things confusing for even the most dedicated Dylanologi­st.

The biggest service it offers Dylan fans is stripping away Arthur Baker’s trendy production excesses from 1985’s Empire Burlesque. Dylan stirs up a mighty roar on ‘When the Night Comes Falling from the Sky’, backed by members of the E Street Band, mercifully free of the crashing Lynn drums, synthesise­d strings and excessive digital reverb on Baker’s bizarre disco arrangemen­t. I’m still not convinced Dylan’s mirrorball folly would qualify as a masterpiec­e, but what fool made the decision to drop the snappy Ronnie Wood version of ‘Clean Cut Kid’,

slashing Heartbreak­ers spin on ‘Seeing the Real You at Last’ and moving epic ‘New Danville Girl’

from the official Empire

track list? “Lots of songs got away from me,” Dylan admitted. “They were better before they were tampered with. Of course, it was me tampering with them.”

The Bootleg Series aims to rewrite pop history by suggesting Dylan’s official 39 studio albums are mere snapshots in the artist’s creative continuum. What Volume 16 really demonstrat­es is that Dylan has a certain rock and folk comfort zone, and it was a mistake to ever push himself out of it. The most surprising treat is the sound of Dylan in fine voice warming up with cover versions of old favourites, including a soulful take of The Temptation­s’ ‘I Wish It Would Rain’, a steamy run through Elvis Presley’s ‘Mystery Train’ with Ringo Starr on drums, and a slowed-down, heartfelt version of Neil Diamond’s ‘Sweet Caroline’.i

wouldn’t go as far as to suggest that good times never seemed so good, but Springtime in New York

reminds us that Dylan’s worst period is still more interestin­g than most artists’ purple patches.

ALSO OUT

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(Columbia) Lindsey Buckingham: Lindsey Buckingham

(Buckingham Records) Ray BLK: Access Denied

(Island)

James Vincent Mcmorrow: Grapefruit Season (Sony) The Felice Brothers: From Dreams to Dust (Yep Rock)

In the 80s, he tried to connect with the MTV generation

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 ??  ?? A period of doubt: the bootlegs sowed the seeds for Dylan’s 90s comeback
A period of doubt: the bootlegs sowed the seeds for Dylan’s 90s comeback

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