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Bob Dylan - Live 1966: The "Royal Albert Hall" Concert [Classic Records 200g 2xLP-Set] 24-bit/96kHz & CD-format

Posted By : aksman | Date : 01 Oct 2011 17:47:20 | Comments : 25 |
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Bob Dylan - The Bootleg Series Vol. 4: Live 1966 (The "Royal Albert Hall" Concert)
Vinyl rip in 24-bit/192kHz (presented in 24/96 & 16/44.1) | FLAC (level 8) | m3u, cue & Tech Log
Artwork (w/o booklet) | DR Analysis | 1.95 gb/592 mb incl. recovery | FSonic, FF & WU | Rock
Mastered by Bernie Grundman from the original analog master tapes
Classic Records 200g 2xLP-Set / Cat.#: CK2-65759-200g

It's not just an interesting adjunct to Dylan's '60s discography; it's as worthy of attention as anything else he recorded during that decade.
- Richie Unterberger/AMG (5/5 Stars)



Live 1966: The "Royal Albert Hall" Concert is a two-disc live album by Bob Dylan, released in 1998. Recorded at Manchester's Free Trade Hall. It is from Dylan's famous world tour in 1966, having been extensively bootlegged for decades, and is an important document in the development of popular music during the 1960s.

The setlist consisted of two parts, with the first half of the concert being Dylan alone on stage performing an entirely acoustic set of songs. While the second half of the concert had Dylan playing an "electric" set of songs alongside his band The Hawks. The first half of the concert was greeted warmly by the audience, while the second half was highly criticized, with heckling going on before and after each song.

The album debuted on the Billboard 200 on October 24, 1998 at number 31, and was awarded and certified a gold record on November 11, 2005 by the RIAA.

History

After touring North America from the fall of 1965 through the winter of 1966, Dylan, accompanied by The Hawks (later renamed as The Band), embarked on a six-week spring tour that began in Australia, wound through western Europe and the United Kingdom, and wrapped up in London. Dylan's move to electric music, and his apparent disconnection from traditional folk music, continued to be controversial, and his UK audiences were particularly disruptive with some fans believing Dylan had "sold out".

The electric part of this concert first surfaced in late 1970 or early 1971 on bootleg LPs with various titles. On June 3, 1971, critic Dave Marsh reviewed one bootleg in Creem magazine, writing "It is the most supremely elegant piece of rock 'n' roll music I've ever heard...The extreme subtlety of the music is so closely interwoven with its majesty that they appear as one and the same."

The same month, critic Jon Landau reviewed another edition of the concert:
    “ Needless to say, the album is both musically great and an amazing path back into the temperament of the sixties. Listening to it, it isn't hard to remember Dylan on stage of the Donnelly Memorial Theatre in Boston or at Forest Hills in New York standing toe to toe, eyeball to eyeball with Robbie Robertson between every verse of practically every song, while the guitarist played his fills. Nor is it hard to remember that long, lean, frail look that sometimes made you wonder what gave him the strength to stand up there in the first place, as he remembered the unbelievably complex lyrics to his unbelievably long songs, without ever faltering...It isn't hard for me to remember the booing, the names, the insults he endured just to be standing there with an electric band...On this album the audience claps at the wrong time, claps rhythmically as if to deliberately throw his timing off. At the beginning of 'One Too Many Mornings' he tells a completely psychotic story in a very low voice while the audience makes its noise. As they gradually lose their energy, he finds his and his voice gets louder, until, when they are almost completely silent he says plainly, 'if you only wouldn't clap so hard.' The audience applauds the statement. ”


The early bootleg LPs attributed the recording to one of Dylan's tour-closing concerts at London's Royal Albert Hall that was also recorded, as was a show in Liverpool (May 14), supervised by Dylan producer Bob Johnston. However, Dylan's now-legendary confrontation with a heckler calling out "Judas" from the audience, clearly heard on the recording, was well documented as having occurred at Manchester's Free Trade Hall on May 17, 1966. After "Judas!", there is clapping, followed by more heckles. One of those shouts, barely audible on the record, is a man shouting, "I'm never listening to you again, ever!" Dylan then says "I don't believe you", then after a long pause, "You're a liar." Then, Dylan can be faintly heard telling the band, "play fucking loud", as they start to play "Like a Rolling Stone". At the end, the audience erupts into applause and Dylan says, "Thank you."

After years of conflicting reports and speculation among Dylan discographers, the Manchester source was verified after the preliminary mix of a proposed Columbia edition was bootlegged in 1995 as Guitars Kissing & The Contemporary Fix. Dylan rejected that edition; three years later, he authorized a markedly different version for his second "Bootleg Series" release. One song recorded at Dylan's real Royal Albert Hall concert had been previously released: his May 26, 1966 performance of "Visions of Johanna" on the Box set Biograph. Excerpts from other 1966 UK performances are included in Martin Scorsese's 2005 television documentary No Direction Home. Film footage of the "Judas" incident was discovered and used at the end of the documentary.

When Live 1966: The "Royal Albert Hall" Concert finally was released in 1998, it was a commercial and critical success, reaching #19 in the U.K. The inside leaflet reveals useful information about the conditions of how the concert was recorded and transferred to disc and it confirms that the version of "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue", previously released on the Box set Biograph, duly comes from this concert.

On July 29, 1966, two months after finishing his spring tour, Dylan suffered a motorcycle accident. As a result of his long recuperation, Dylan had to cancel the remaining shows he had scheduled for 1966. However, Dylan would continue to collaborate with the Hawks, and over the next year or so, they would produce some of their most celebrated recordings, many of which were eventually released on The Basement Tapes. Dylan would not embark on another tour until 1974.



    The Accoustic Set

    A1 She Belongs To Me 3:27
    A2 Fourth Time Around 4:37
    A3 Visions Of Johanna 8:08
    A4 It's All Over Now, Baby Blue 5:45

    B1 Desolation Row 11:31
    B2 Just Like A Woman 5:52
    B3 Mr. Tambourine Man 8:53



    The Electric Set

    C1 Tell Me, Momma 5:10
    C2 I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met) 6:07
    C3 Baby, Let Me Follow You Down 3:46
      Arranged By – Bob Dylan

    C4 Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues 6:50
    C5 Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat 4:50

    D1 One Too Many Mornings 4:22
      Backing Vocals – Rick Danko

    D2 Ballad Of A Thin Man 7:55
      Piano – Bob Dylan

    D3 Like A Rolling Stone 8:01

Personnel
    Bob Dylan: guitar, electric guitar, harmonica, piano, vocal
    Robbie Robertson: electric guitar
    Rick Danko: bass, vocal
    Richard Manuel: piano
    Garth Hudson: organ
    Mickey Jones: drums

Dynamic Range

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Analyzed: Bob Dylan / Live 1966: The Royal Albert Hall Concert [Classic Records 200g DoLP]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DR15 -2.22 dB -21.17 dB 3:27 01-She Belongs to Me
DR15 -2.15 dB -21.19 dB 4:35 02-4th Time Around
DR13 -2.44 dB -19.98 dB 8:04 03-Visions of Johanna
DR13 -2.54 dB -21.07 dB 5:37 04-It's All Over Now, Baby Blue
DR14 -3.71 dB -22.49 dB 11:37 05-Desolation Row
DR15 -2.22 dB -23.37 dB 5:47 06-Just Like a Woman
DR16 -3.40 dB -24.13 dB 8:54 07-Mr. Tambourine Man
DR9 -3.00 dB -13.57 dB 4:32 08-Tell Me Momma
DR10 -2.86 dB -14.57 dB 5:54 09-I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)
DR10 -2.89 dB -14.84 dB 4:00 10-Baby, Let Me Follow You Down
DR10 -0.72 dB -14.27 dB 6:26 11-Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues
DR9 -2.84 dB -14.19 dB 4:02 12-Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat
DR10 -1.50 dB -15.01 dB 5:43 13-One Too Many Mornings
DR10 -2.61 dB -14.70 dB 7:52 14-Ballad of a Thin Man
DR9 -0.96 dB -14.65 dB 8:06 15-Like a Rolling Stone
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Number of tracks: 15
Official DR value: DR12

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 16
Bitrate: 907 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================


Technical Log

RCM Hannl 'limited' with "Rotating Brush"
Music Hall MMF 9.1 Turntable
Tonearm: Pro-Ject 9cc evo with Pure Silver Wires
Cartridge: Nagaoka MP-500
Brocksieper Phonomax (Tube Phono PreAmp)
E-MU 0404 external USB 2.0 Audiointerface
Interconnections : Silent Wire NF5
WaveLab 6 recording software
iZotope RX Advanced 2.00 for resampling and dithering

Vacuum cleaning > TT > Brocksieper Phonomax > E-MU 0404 > WaveLab 6 (24/192) > manual click removal >
analyze (no clipping, no DC Bias offset) > converted to 24/96 (16/44.1) with iZotope RX Advanced 2.00
> split into individual Tracks > FLAC encoded (Vers. 1.21)

No silence been removed, please burn gapless to match original tracklayout.


Ripping Note

This sealed box was excellent, 2 perfectly pressed records and a wonderful 40 page booklet. Unfotunately I couldn't take pics of the booklet without destroying it. Hope you forgive me ;)


All files are inside the folders.
High resoulution files are marked as "hr", CD-compatible files as "rb".


The files are interchangeable!!!

Hope you enjoy!!!

Check my blog for more audiophile stuff.


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Posted By: Catriel Date: 01 Oct 2011 17:49:55
two years I've been waiting for this to show up anywhere. thanks a lot, aksman.
Posted By: KnutJ Date: 01 Oct 2011 17:50:11
Thanks for this, Aksman:)Sounds great in my ears...
I wonder if its a way for me to get the scans. I would love to read the booklet:) Of course I fully understand why you did not include them.
Posted By: kongo127 Date: 01 Oct 2011 18:16:41
Today it´s the International Music Day!

What a piece of art to celebrate this! :)

Tubes are already warming-up! :P

Thank you so much Mr. Aksman!
Posted By: eharmonica Date: 01 Oct 2011 18:27:32
I ripped this almost 2 years ago, but quickly put it on my "need to upgrade" pile. Thanks for saving me the hassle. I've got all of the Bootleg Series on vinyl in you're interested.

^^^that was meant for aksman

As for the booklet, it's pretty much the same as the CD version but slightly rearranged and -- of course -- larger.
Posted By: donny naides Date: 01 Oct 2011 18:40:06
Fantastic post as usual!! Many thanks Aksman!!

@eharmonica:
Yes we are most definitely interested in the Bootleg Series on vinyl!!

dn

Posted By: amlabella23 Date: 01 Oct 2011 18:48:30
Thanks for this great share aksman! :)

@eharmonica:
I'm with donny naides, would certainly be interested in the bootleg series on vinyl. Especially vol. 8, contains some of his best recent material imo.
Posted By: MrMacPhisto Date: 01 Oct 2011 19:10:40
Jesus aksman, you post too much good stuff, haha. Thanks a lot for this awesome share.
Posted By: thevangris Date: 01 Oct 2011 20:54:10
This is a great upload, thanks.
Posted By: LX66 Date: 01 Oct 2011 22:26:07
Thanks for RB as always, and thanks a lot for great rips for sure!!!
Posted By: nameismike69 Date: 01 Oct 2011 22:39:53
wow always full of surprises Thanks you Aksman AND GRAB THIS WHILE YOU CAN EVERYTHING DYLAN ON THIS SITE DOES NOT WORK
Posted By: Laserman59 Date: 01 Oct 2011 22:51:25
Thank you Aksman for this great share. :-)
Posted By: samdaman Date: 02 Oct 2011 02:08:23
Thanks for the Baub Dillon aksman!
Check out the acoustic vs. electric DR - looks like they played the whole 2nd set LOUD!
Posted By: RadioClash Date: 02 Oct 2011 05:12:06
Great share, thanks.
Posted By: fredists Date: 02 Oct 2011 12:58:15
Might get it as it's up! THanks aksman for this unknown to me yet live!
Posted By: Ghost of Hedonism Date: 02 Oct 2011 17:00:29
As much as I like the acoustic set I don't like the 2nd (electric) set at all.
But big thanks for your hard work nevertheless.
Posted By: aksman Date: 02 Oct 2011 19:43:41
@ Ghost of Hedonism

I can fully understand you in one way... The sound of the first record is very nice and the whole atmosphere of the recording friendly, while the electric part is the total opposite. Unfortunately also soundwise...
Posted By: terra6 Date: 03 Oct 2011 07:20:12
Gruss & Dank aus Eierland. Cheers
Posted By: ProgWizard Date: 03 Oct 2011 07:30:16
Thank you aksman, you always pleasantly surprize me with your choice of albums to present here. This is great!
Posted By: olli66 Date: 03 Oct 2011 16:59:45
I don't own the cd version so I cannot compare but I just listend to It's all over now, Baby Blue and I noticed "scratches" in Dylan's voice, is this an issue of the source/recording or the rip?
Posted By: xcmbcx Date: 03 Oct 2011 18:34:13
Thank you, aksman!!!
Posted By: appreciative Date: 04 Oct 2011 00:02:53
Thanks aksman.
Posted By: Kel bazar Date: 07 Oct 2011 09:26:31
Thanks !!!!
Posted By: perlerorneq69 Date: 11 Oct 2011 22:05:04
Thank you very much!! :) :) p
Posted By: jack-of-hearts Date: 13 Oct 2011 08:32:00
Thanks for the great share!
Posted By: tbavax Date: 24 Dec 2011 10:25:09
thanks
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