IF I HAD WINGS LIKE NOAH'S DOVE
I'D FLY THE RIVER TO THE ONE I LOVE
FARE THEE WELL MY HONEY
FARE THEE WELL
IF I HAD WINGS LIKE NOAH'S DOVE
I'D FLY THE RIVER TO THE ONE I LOVE
FARE THEE WELL MY HONEY
FARE THEE WELL
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Easy and fun song to learn on the guitar. Go for it OP.
Not OP but I actually might.
so beautiful
OUTER
This movie is pure kino
SPACE
I never liked Jeff Buckley much, but his covers are always on point.
His is the version I always think of when I hear Dink's Song.
UH OH
I've heard that song before. This movie basically ripped off a bunch of songs that already existed
What happened to John Goodman's character?
woke up eventually
went on to do a lot more heroin, died about 7 years later, alone and out of his mind
Poor Llewyn ;_;
Are you daft? That's what folk music is all about, the passing on of songs.
Llewyn lost almost all sympathy from me when he abandoned the cat on the highway. I was rooting for him up until that point.
I really wish this movie didn't look like it belonged in the Hobbit trilogy.
Didn't he leave it with the fatman inside the car?
Haha nice image, but seriously I have heard that song before by a different singer. It isn't original.
Also several other songs were also copied from other singers.
What I liked about this movie is how importnat the figure of Bob Dylan is. Everything revolves around him changing the folk scene, but subtly
friend you are trying to bait me and I don't appreciate it.
Jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge
Bravo jews
IF I HAD WINGS I COULD FLY
LET ME CONTEMPLATE
I GLANCED AT THE TRUCK
AND I SEE MY HOMEY NATE
HANG ME, OH HANG ME
POOR BOY
I'VE BEEN, ALL AROUND THIS WORLD
All nonsense aside, I have heard several of these songs before.
You do realize the movie is basically two weeks in Dave Van Ronk's life right? It's a small portion from his autobiography.
Why are Coen's movies so depressing lately?
There's a guy on Youtube who did lessons on most of the songs. They are actually pretty good and easy to play.
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Really? So this guy just stole songs for his entire life and got to write a book about it?
kek
Can I learn it, if I never had a guitar in my hands?
Do you prefer his cover of Hallelujah to Leonard Cohen's?
Hail, Caesar! was depressing because it could've been a great story but they didn't really do anything with it.
No, you must pay the copper price.
Ronk was a hack that made shitty flavor of the month folk. Would be like some Indie folkpop Band today
cat ate him
delete this
Prefer John Cale's myself
Buckley's is too long winded and emo
Not particularly; I don't think I've ever heard a version of Hallelujah I really liked. It's a good song, but they're always missing something.
I do think he did If You See Her, Say Hello better than Dylan did, though.
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His cover of Sweet thing is also fucking superb, though certainly not better; just different.
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As I said, though, I really don't like him much - he just hit something really fucking blessed during that second half of the Sine performance.
All of the songs he wrote, and most of his performances - even the first disc of Sine, I just never liked it.
Then again, I felt the same way about his father. From 68-70 Tim Buckley was a god and produced some of my favorite shit. Everything else did nothing for me.
Folk music is absolute trash. Putting mustard up a cat's asshole produces better sounds than folk. Also Bob Dylan was a good poet but a shitty musician. Fucking fight me
Music is mostly a physical experience, user - how we enjoy certain sounds is little different than how we enjoy certain flavors.
We crave them, too, depending on how we feel; just like food. It's simply a matter of what our body wants.
That being said, if you can't find a single Bob Dylan song you like, you probably aren't looking hard enough.
I heard this movie is boring as fuck.
>music is mostly a physical experience
>that
>better than Dylan's IYSHSH
It may be obvious to you and I, user, such heighty and educated individuals that we are.
But as you can see, the poster I was responding to isn't a part of our little genius club. He thought we might get into a fist fight over his music taste, and that music which he doesn't like has no value. I was merely trying to enlighten him, so that he may join us - brilliant fellows that we are.
I certainly wouldn't fight someone over whether or not they like mayonaise, anymore than I would try to claim a food I don't like has no caloric value. Har har, wouldn't that just be a real knee slapper, user? Just a gay old laugh?
I don't actually think you're very smart, user, I was just being ironical. I would definitely get into a fist fight with you.
What can I say, user. Lyrically, it's one of my favorite songs of all time. Hit me like a truck the first time I heard it.
But I just never really liked the version on Blood on the Tracks. I heard an alternate take one time that I liked more, but it was Buckley's version that really made me fall for it as a song.
>ignorant retards talking about music, and Bob Dylan
The second hand embarrassment is real
ILD and Barry Lyndon are top tier pleb detectors
It is, but it makes the music affect the viewer more because of it. Folk music was not born out of joy, it was created from pain, boredom, and the increasingly obvious truth that life lacks inherent meaning.
Thus, in the fashion of Kubrick's Barry Lyndon, PTA's the Master, and their own earlier works, Barton Fink and possibly A Serious Man, they have created a movie that lacks inherent purpose or meaning. It is restless, constantly on the move with nowhere to be. No point or direction, and truly, mind numbingly depressing.
If that doesn't sound like it's for you it's probably not. But the music is very good, I'm sure even pleb viewers can recognize that. My favorite song was the Auld Triangle.
You're kind of an idiot.
>Barry Lyndon
>Barry Lyndon
>9 seconds
>would probably be 1 or 2 seconds if they were similar length posts
I don't know, man, I don't like how he drags it and make every verse long a decade. It kinda works with Hallelujah, but anything written by Dylan is too sacred to me.
I get that a lot, user. I know precisely how stupid I am, and unfortunately that doesn't change anything.
I don't think it's a matter of ignorance, user. I've been listening to Dylan most of my life, I've heard every album, performance and bootleg. I even went as him for Halloween in high school, and really it doesn't get any deeper than that, does it?
I just have extremely mediocre taste in music, that's all.
Blood on the tracks is flawless. Cannot be improved
ONE SECOND PLEASE
Blood on the Tracks [spoilers]only has three good songs.[/spoilers]
I got my tags right like 2 minutes ago, how did this happen. I need to go to bed.
>BOT has only two bad songs and all the rest are masterpieces
Fixed
Outer
Space
> Noah's dove
> Fly a river
At least make your analogies remotely fucking consistent
honestly idiot wind could have done with a different take, and lily, rosemary etc. is a little jarring stylistically, but it is still one of my favourites of all time
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Every song on the album is perfect and each flows perfectly into the next. Don't you ever speak to me or my son again.
spotted the fucking moron
hey dont get me wrong, I love jack of hearts, but it is kind of a leap to get to that johnny cash baseline from meet me in the morning. and idiot wind just seems to go a teeny little bit long.
>idiot wind could have done with a different take
have you heard the Hard Rain version? Because I didn't apreciated BOT take after hearing that one
SHOOT
Idiot wind is maybe his most perfect composition. And talking about Dylan, that's like sayig is the best thing ever written.
WE Sup Forums NOW
That's so hard to say though because what makes it better than Shelter from the Storm? What makes it better than Simple Twist of Fate? What makes it better than Queen Jane Approximately or Visions of Johanna? What makes it better than most of the songs on the basement tapes. Each of those songs are perfect and there's no point trying to compare them to each other. Dylan has made dozens of perfect songs you can only distinguish between your favorites.
No one's claiming it is, cockwipe. Everything in the movie's stolen, including Please Mr. Kennedy.
The movie's a very loose tribute to a folk singer named Dave Van Ronk.
UH OH
My personal favourite goes from Brownsville Girl to Just like a Woman or Simple Twist depending on my humour, but Idiot Wind works like a charm as a love story, as a letter from Dylan to his fans, as a psychodelic vomit...
>And even you yesterday, you've had to ask me where I was at
>I couldn't believe after all these years you didn't know me any better than that
it's fucking gold
Did Oscar Isaac actually do the singing in this movie? He's fucking incredible. I wish he wasn't wasting his time with this star wars/x men bullshit. Ex machina was p good though.
He's not wasted, dude. He's hot right now and making some real money, let the guy have some fun
he was undoubtedly the best part of the new star wars movie but it feels kind of below him in a way.
What was even good about this movie? It was such a borefest
The Bootleg Series has alternate takes of Idiot Wind and If You See Her, Say Hello that are better than the album versions, IMO.
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Also, Inside Llewyn Davis is my favorite movie of the last 5 years.
I am the physical embodiment of unpopular opinions, user. Your hate only fuels me.
Eric Clapton is the most talentless, souless hack ever to disgrace the music industry, for example. He is below modern pop.
That's a lame choice for a favorite Dylan song, user.
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Basement Tapes Vol. 2 is far superior to Vol. 1. It's probably my favorite Dylan album.
O Brother soundtrack was better
That's the If You See Her, Say Hello version I was talking about earlier. Definitely better than the album, but still not quite right to my ears.
They're just not quite perfect takes in the same way that say, Simple Twist of fate was.
Yeah, Simple Twist of Fate is probably my favorite Dylan song. Jeff Tweedy did a pretty great cover of it for the I'm Not There soundtrack.
>That's a lame choice for a favorite Dylan song, user.
I said that my favourite Dylan songs were Girl from the north country is great too.
I never liked Tweedy much as a singer songwriter.
Wilco really shined because of the arrangements, ambience and mixing, and how that contrasted with his voice.
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Without all that he's extremely bland, just like that cover.
Did you ever heard the piano version of She's your lover now? it has that same vibe
Dissun? youtube.com