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Bringing It All Back Home

Rate It! Avg: 5.0 (617 ratings)
Bringing It All Back Home album cover
01
Subterranean Homesick Blues
2:18 $1.29
02
She Belongs To Me
2:47 $0.99
03
Maggie's Farm
3:55 $0.99
04
Love Minus Zero
2:49 $0.99
05
Outlaw Blues
3:02 $0.99
06
On The Road Again
2:35 $0.99
07
Bob Dylan's 115th Dream
6:31 $0.99
08
Mr. Tambourine Man
5:25 $1.29
09
Gates Of Eden
5:41 $0.99
10
It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
7:31 $0.99
11
It's All Over Now, Baby Blue
4:14 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 46:48

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

eMusic Review 0

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Douglas Wolk

eMusic Contributor

Douglas Wolk writes about pop music and comic books for Time, the New York Times, Rolling Stone, Wired and elsewhere. He's the author of Reading Comics: How Gra...more »

06.30.09
Bob Dylan, Bringing It All Back Home
1987 | Label: Columbia

The folk scene thought Dylan had betrayed them by "going electric" on the first half of this watershed record and abandoning topical political songs in favor of whatever was on his roiling, restless mind. In fact, he just opened up possibilities for himself — and created folk-rock while he was at it. He's raiding ideas from blues and traditional songs even more deftly than before, and cranking them up until they're as immediate and catchy as the British Invasion pop that had taken over the airwaves in the previous year or so. "Maggie's Farm" is as delicious and resilient a critique of capitalism and its power relations as anyone has ever cooked up; "Subterranean Homesick Blues" pours out of Dylan faster than anyone can parse it. The electric half of the album is also funnier than history tends to remember — its last three songs are straight-up comedy. Every lyric on the album is packed with explosive little bon mots: "you don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows," "you are a walking antique," "skippin 'reels of rhyme," "the highway is for gamblers." And the four imagistic wonders that constitute the original LP's second side were some… read more »

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Bringing It All Back Home

painter1944

1987? You're off by about 20 years on the release date of this masterpiece.... Hope it's just a typo.

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The first of the great troika ....

speedoo

with Highway 61 and Blonde on Blonde. I remember being confused when I first heard it and I was certainly not alone. But Dylan was breaking ground and turning the popular music world on its head. And today I still listen to it regularly.

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Mind Altering

aluap345

This album truly changed who and what I am.

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Breaking Ground

adamwayneparks

Bringing It is Dylan unapologetically looking at the folk-scene in his rear-view mirror. It's the first chance to really listen to Bob Dylan the poet, rather than Bob Dylan the prophet. This album was the ground work for all later masterpieces and catapulted an ever-evolving career from the greatest songwriter OF ALL TIME.

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Greatest rock record of all time

EMUSIC-020B0DA5

Bringing It All Back Home should dethrone Revolver by the Beatles as the greatest rock record of all time. The opening track is the greatest rock song, on the greatest rock album. This album is pure bliss...a timeless masterpiece.

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Here's where he starts cooking

huggable rhino

He was great at folk rock, but this is where he really started stretching out.

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I never get tired of this album

markalexander

This helps explain how this man could rivet an audience of thousands with only a guitar, voice, and harmonica. Pete Seeger said that Bob Dylan had a terrible voice.....and he would trade his voice for it any day. I love it.

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My favourite...

donK

This is my favourite Dylan album at the the moment. No hesitation, buy this album

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One Of A Kind

Croixboy

This is the album that set the stage for the folk-rock genre. Much of what followed in the next 15 years (and even today) descends from this breakthrough album. Thanks, Bob.

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Love this album fa sure

shantij

Thanx for getting it eMusic! Love Itz all over now,baby blue! One of my favs fa sure!

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They Say All Music Guide

With Another Side of Bob Dylan, Dylan had begun pushing past folk, and with Bringing It All Back Home, he exploded the boundaries, producing an album of boundless imagination and skill. And it’s not just that he went electric, either, rocking hard on “Subterranean Homesick Blues,” “Maggie’s Farm,” and “Outlaw Blues”; it’s that he’s exploding with imagination throughout the record. After all, the music on its second side — the nominal folk songs — derive from the same vantage point as the rockers, leaving traditional folk concerns behind and delving deep into the personal. And this isn’t just introspection, either, since the surreal paranoia on “It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding)” and the whimsical poetry of “Mr. Tambourine Man” are individual, yet not personal. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg, really, as he writes uncommonly beautiful love songs (“She Belongs to Me,” “Love Minus Zero/No Limit”) that sit alongside uncommonly funny fantasias (“On the Road Again,” “Bob Dylan’s 115th Dream”). This is the point where Dylan eclipses any conventional sense of folk and rewrites the rules of rock, making it safe for personal expression and poetry, not only making words mean as much as the music, but making the music an extension of the words. A truly remarkable album. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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