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Love And Theft

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Biography

For|the country music group|Love and Theft (band)Infobox album | Name = "Love and Theft"| Type = studio| Artist = Bob Dylan | Cover = Loveandtheftcover.jpg| Released = September 11, 2001| Recorded = May 2001| Genre = Folk rock , blues , alternative country | Length = 57:25| Label = Columbia Records|Columbia | Producer = Jack Frost (Bob Dylan pseudonym)|| Reviews =| Last album = Time Out of Mind
(1997)| This album = "Love and Theft"
(2001)| Next album = Modern Times (Bob Dylan album)|Modern Times
(2006)
"Love and Theft" is the 31st studio album by Bob Dylan , released by Sony BMG|Columbia Records on September 11, 2001 . It featured backing by his touring band of the time, with keyboardist Augie Meyers added for the recording session|sessions . It peaked at #5 on the Billboard 200 , and has been certified with a gold album by the RIAA . http://www.riaa.com/goldandplatinumdata.php? table=SEARCH_RESULTS RIAA website retrieved 03-12-10. WebCite|url= http://www.webcitation.org/5aWxoHiRP|date =2008-09-02 A limited edition release included two bonus tracks on a separate compact disc|disc recorded in the early 1960s, and two years later, on September 16, 2003, this album was one of fifteen Dylan titles reissued and remastered for Super Audio CD|SACD hybrid playback.

Content


The album continued Dylan's artistic comeback following 1997's Time Out of Mind , and was given an even more enthusiastic reception. Though often referred to without quotations, the correct title is "Love and Theft" . The title of the album was apparently inspired by historian Eric Lott|Eric Lott's book Love & Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class, which was published in 1993.
" Love and Theft becomes his Fables of the Reconstruction , to borrow an R.E.M. album title", writes Greg Kot in The Chicago Tribune (published September 11, 2001), "the myths, mysteries and folklore of the South as a backdrop for one of the finest roots-rock albums ever made."

The opening track, "'Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum', includes many references to parades in Mardi Gras in New Orleans, where participants are masked, and "determined to go all the way" of the parade route, in spite of being intoxicated. "It rolls in like a storm, drums galloping over the horizon into ear shot, guitar riffs slicing with terse dexterity while a tale about a pair of vagabonds unfolds," writes Kot. "It ends in death, and sets the stage for an album populated by rogues, con men, outcasts, gamblers, gunfighters and desperados, many of them with nothing to lose, some of them out of their minds, all of them quintessentially American.

"They're the kind of twisted, instantly memorable characters one meets in John Ford 's westerns, Jack Kerouac 's road novels, but, most of all, in the blues and country songs of the 1920s, '30s and '40s. This is a tour of American music—jump blues, slow blues, rockabilly, Tin Pan Alley ballads, country swing—that evokes the sprawl, fatalism and subversive humor of Dylan's sacred text, Harry Everett Smith|Harry Smith 's Anthology of American Folk Music , the pre-rock voicings of Hank Williams, Sr.|Hank Williams , Charley Patton and Johnnie Ray , among others, and the ultradry humor of Groucho Marx ."

Offered the song by Dylan, Sheryl Crow later recorded an up-tempo cover of " Mississippi (Bob Dylan song)|Mississippi " for her The Globe Sessions , released in 1998, before Dylan revisited it for Love and Theft . Subsequently the Dixie Chicks made it a mainstay of their Top of the World Tour|Top of the World , Vote for Change , and Accidents & Accusations Tour s.

As Tim Riley of NPR notes, "Dylan's singing on Love and Theft shifts artfully between humble and ironic...'I'm not quite as cool or forgiving as I sound,' he sings in 'Floater,' which is either hilarious or horrifying, and probably a little of both."

" Love and Theft is, as the title implies, a kind of homage," writes Kot, "and never more so than on 'High Water (for Charley Patton ),' in which Dylan draws a sweeping portrait of the South's racial history, with the unsung blues singer as a symbol of the region's cultural richness and ingrained social cruelties. Rumbling drums and moaning backing vocals suggest that things are going from bad to worse. 'It's tough out there,' Dylan rasps. 'High water everywhere.' Death and dementia shadow the album, tempered by tenderness and wicked gallows humor."

"'Po Boy', scored for banjo with lounge chord jazz patterns, 'almost sounds as if it could have been recorded around 1920," says Riley. "He leaves you dangling at the end of each bridge, lets the band punctuate the trail of words he's squeezed into his lines, which gives it a reluctant soft-shoe charm."

The album closes with "Sugar Baby", a lengthy, dirge-like ballad, noted for its evocative, apocalyptic imagery and sparse production drenched in echo. Praising it as "a finale to be proud of," Riley notes that "Sugar Baby" is "built on a disarmingly simple riff that turns foreboding."

Recording


This album has been incorrectly cited as being recorded digitally into Pro Tools .citation needed|date=January 2011 This album was recorded to a Studer A800 mkIII @ 30ips on BASF/Emtec 900 tape at +6/250 nanowebers per meter. Pro Tools was used solely for editing of specific tracks and was thus used very sparingly. Whatever work was done in Pro Tools was flown right back to the convert|2|in|mm|adj=on masters. It was mixed from the convert|2|in|mm|adj=on masters to an Ampex ATR-102 1-inch 2-track customized by Mark Spitz at ATR Services.Citation needed|date=September 2008
In an interview conducted by Alan Jackson for The Times Magazine in 2001, before the album was released, Dylan said "these so-called connoisseurs of Bob Dylan music...I don't feel they know a thing, or have any inkling of who I am and what I’m about. I know they think they do, and yet it’s ludicrous, it's humorous, and sad. That such people have spent so much of their time thinking about who? Me? Get a life, please. It’s not something any one person should do about another. You’re not serving your own life well. You’re wasting your life."

Reception


Album reviews| rev1 = PopMatters
|rev1Score = favorable http://www.popmatters.com/music/reviews/d/dylanbob-love.shtml PopMatters Review WebCite|url= http://www.webcitation.org/5TNz4BWx5|date =2007-11-16
| rev2 = The A.V. Club
|rev2Score = favorable http://avclub.com/content/node/12923 The A.V. Club Review WebCite|url= http://www.webcitation.org/5PkeJ7Gh8|date =2007-06-20
| rev3 = Spin (magazine)|Spin
|rev3Score = favorable November 2001, p.127
| rev4 = The Village Voice
|rev4Score = favorable http://www.villagevoice.com/music/0139,tate,28446,22.html Village Voice Review WebCite|url= http://www.webcitation.org/5TNz4BZeA|date =2007-11-16
| rev5 = Allmusic
|rev5Score = rating|4.5|5 Allmusic|class=album|id=r548678/review|pure_url=yes Allmusic Review
| rev6 = Q (magazine)|Q
|rev6Score = favorable October 2001, p.122
| rev7 = Blender (magazine)|Blender
|rev7Score = favorable October 2001, p.102
| rev8 = Music Box
|rev8Score = rating|4|5 http://www.musicbox-online.com/bd-love.html Music Box Review WebCite|url= http://www.webcitation.org/5Pkdzdll0|date =2007-06-20
| rev9 = Robert Christgau
|rev9Score = A+ http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php? id=169& name=Bob+Dylan Robert Christgau Review
| rev10 = Rolling Stone
|rev10Score = rating|5|5 http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/album/235544/review/6067312/loveandtheft Rolling Stone Review
| rev11 = George Starostin
|rev11Score = Rating|12|15 http://starling.rinet.ru/music/dylan.htm#Theft George Starostin Review
In a glowing review for his "Consumer Guide" column published by The Village Voice , Robert Christgau wrote: "Before minstrelsy scholar Eric Lott gets too excited about having his title stolen . . . he should recall that Dylan called his first cover album Self Portrait . Dylan meant that title, of course, and he means this one too, which doesn't make "Love and Theft" his minstrelsy album any more than Self Portrait 's dire "Minstrel Boy" was his minstrelsy song. All pop music is love and theft, and in 40 years of records whose sources have inspired volumes of scholastic exegesis, Dylan has never embraced that truth so warmly. Jokes, riddles, apercus, and revelations will surface for years, but let those who chart their lives by Dylan's cockeyed parables tease out the details. I always go for tone, spirit, music. If Time Out of Mind was his death album—it wasn't, but you know how people talk—this is his immortality album. It describes an eternal circle on masterful blazz and jop readymades that render his grizzled growl as juicy as Justin Timberlake's tenor—Tony Bennett's, even. It's profound, too, by which I mean very funny. 'I'm sitting on my watch so I can be on time,' he wheezes, because time he's got plenty of." Christgau gave the album an A+. Later, when The Village Voice conducted its Pazz & Jop Critics Poll for 2001, "Love and Theft" topped the list, the third Dylan album to accomplish this.

In 2003, the album was ranked #467 on Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time , while Newsweek magazine pronounced it the second best album of its decade.cite web | url = http://2010.newsweek.com/top-10/best-albums/love-and-theft-bob-dylan.html| title = #2 'Love and Theft' Bob Dylan | accessdate = 2009-12-27| publisher = Newsweek | date = 2009-12-11 | archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20100106200749/ http://2010.newsweek.com/top-10/best-albums/love-and-theft-bob-dylan.html| archivedate= 06 January 2010 In 2009, Glide Magazine http://www.glidemagazine.com/ ranked it as the #1 Album of the Decade. http://www.glidemagazine.com/articles/55436/glides-best-albums-of-the-decade.html Entertainment Weekly put it on its end-of-the-decade, "best-of" list, saying, "The predictably unpredictable rock poet greeted the new millennium with a folksy, bluesy instant classic."Geier, Thom; Jensen, Jeff; Jordan, Tina; Lyons, Margaret; Markovitz, Adam; Nashawaty, Chris; Pastorek, Whitney; Rice, Lynette; Rottenberg, Josh; Schwartz, Missy; Slezak, Michael; Snierson, Dan; Stack, Tim; Stroup, Kate; Tucker, Ken; Vary, Adam B.; Vozick-Levinson, Simon; Ward, Kate (December 11, 2009), "THE 100 Greatest MOVIES, TV SHOWS, ALBUMS, BOOKS, CHARACTERS, SCENES, EPISODES, SONGS, DRESSES, MUSIC VIDEOS, AND TRENDS THAT ENTERTAINED US OVER THE PAST 10 YEARS". Entertainment Weekly. (1079/1080):74-84

Chart positions


YearChartPosition
2001 Billboard 200 5Allmusic


Allegations of plagiarism


"Love and Theft" generated controversy when some similarities between the album's lyrics to Japanese writer Junichi Saga's book Confessions of a Yakuza were pointed out.This is a reprint of an article from The Wall Street Journal as cited in next footnote.cite news| url = http://www.csudh.edu/dearhabermas/plagiarbk010.htm| title = Did Bob Dylan Lift Lines From Dr Saga?
| accessdate = 2008-09-07| publisher = California State University, Dear Habermas| date = 2003-07-08| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20080724053350/ http://www.csudh.edu/dearhabermas/plagiarbk010.htm| archivedate= 24 July 2008
cite news
| url = http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10576176194220600.html? mod=home_page_one_us
| title = Did Bob Dylan Lift Lines From Dr Saga? | accessdate = 2008-09-07| publisher = Wall Street Journal
| date = 2003-07-08
Translated to English by John Bester , the book was a biography of one of the last traditional Yakuza bosses in Japan. In the article published in the Journal , a line from "Floater" ("I'm not quite as cool or forgiving as I sound") was traced to a line in the book, which said "I'm not as cool or forgiving as I might have sounded." Another line from "Floater" is "My old man, he's like some feudal lord." On the first lines of the book is the line "My old man would sit there like a feudal lord." However, when informed of this, author Saga's reaction was to feel honored and not abused at Dylan's use of lines from his work. Sean Wilentz|Wilentz, Sean . Bob Dylan in America . ISBN 978-0-385-52988-4, p. 310.

Track listing


Tracklist| collapsed =
| headline =
| total_length = 57:25
| all_writing = Bob Dylan
| title1 = Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
| writer1 = Dylan
| length1 = 4:46
| title2 = Mississippi (Bob Dylan song)|Mississippi
| length2 = 5:21
| title3 = Summer Days
| length3 = 4:52
| title4 = Bye and Bye
| length4 = 3:16
| title5 = Lonesome Day Blues
| length5 = 6:05
| title6 = Floater (Too Much to Ask)
| length6 = 4:59
| title7 = High Water (For Charley Patton)
| length7 = 4:04
| title8 = Moonlight
| length8 = 3:23
| title9 = Honest With Me
| length9 = 5:49
| title10 = Po' Boy
| length10 = 3:05
| title11 = Cry a While
| length11 = 5:05
| title12 = Sugar Baby (song)|Sugar Baby
| length12 = 6:40


Tracklist| collapsed = yes
| headline = Limited edition bonus disc digipack release
| title1 = I Was Young When I Left Home
| note1 = Recorded December 22, 1961
| title2 = The Times They Are a-Changin' (song)|The Times They Are a-Changin'
| note2 = Alternate version, recorded October 23, 1963Bjorner (January 25, 2002) http://www.bjorner.com/DSN00340%201963.htm#DSN00590 New York City, New York, October 23, 1963 Bjorner's Still on the Road. Retrieved August 27, 2010

Personnel


  • Bob Dylan & nbsp;– vocals , guitar , piano , producer (music)|producer

  • Larry Campbell (musician)|Larry Campbell & nbsp;– guitar, banjo , mandolin , violin

  • Charlie Sexton & nbsp;– guitar

  • Augie Meyers & nbsp;– accordion , Hammond B3 organ , Vox organ

  • Tony Garnier (musician)|Tony Garnier & nbsp;– bass guitar|bass

  • David Kemper & nbsp;– drum kit|drums

  • Clay Meyers& nbsp;– bongo drums|bongos

  • Chris Shaw& nbsp;– recording engineer


  • References


    reflist
    Bob Dylan
    DEFAULTSORT:Love And Theft Category:2001 albums
    Category:Bob Dylan albums
    Category:Columbia Records albums
    Category:Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Album
    Category:English-language albums
    Category:Albums produced by Bob Dylan

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    de:“Love and Theft”
    es:"Love and Theft"
    fr:Love and Theft
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    ja:??·???·???
    nn:"Love and Theft"
    pl:Love and Theft
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    uk:Love and Theft

    Copyright Citations

    This article is licensed under the GNU License
    Click here for original article: Love And Theft





          

     
       
     
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