Today (April 28), artists from Warner Music Group's Canvasback Music, Atlantic Records and Parlophone joined together — virtually — to cover a Bob Dylan classic.
10.04.2020 - 07:09 / deadline.com
By Bruce Haring
pmc-editorial-manager
He’s survived punk, disco, a deep dive into religion, the rise of boy bands and electronica, Soy Bomb and going electric. Now, 78-year-old Bob Dylan has again shown the young kids how it’s done, scoring his first No. 1 on any Billboard chart with his 17-minute song, Murder Most Foul.
As hard as it is to believe, the Voice of a Generation never had a No. 1 on the Billboard charts under his own name. This time, in the increasingly fractured chart world, his
Today (April 28), artists from Warner Music Group's Canvasback Music, Atlantic Records and Parlophone joined together — virtually — to cover a Bob Dylan classic.
"We hope that it brings a smile to people's faces at this tricky time"
The staff of Pitchfork listens to a lot of new music. A lot of it.
LOS ANGELES — Bob Dylan’s handwritten lyrics to his 1960s classic The Times They Are A-Changin’ are going up for sale with a US$2.2 million asking price in what could mark a world record for rock lyrics.
You'll need quite a lot of money to bag them though
Bob Dylan has released another new song, making it the second single he's dropped in just three weeks. The 78-year-old singer-songwriter made the announcement just before midnight on Friday on his social media accounts.The new tune is titled "I Contain Multitudes," and in a tweet written Friday, he reveals the names of 19th-century historical figures and artists he references in the lyrics.
By Chris Willman
Bob Dylan is back with “I Contain Multitudes,” his second surprise release in a month.
Just weeks after releasing the 17-minute song 'Murder Most Foul'
Bob Dylan is back with another new song after the recent release of “Murder Most Foul.” This one’s called “I Contain Multitudes.” Have a listen below.
Folk rock icon Bob Dylan has forbidden comedian Stephen Colbert from performing a TV parody of his 1965 song Subterranean Homesick Blues.
Folk rock icon Bob Dylan has barred Stephen Colbert from performing a TV parody of his 1965 song Subterranean Homesick Blues.
Chris Martin served as a music guest during Saturday Night Live's first "At Home" episode on April 11.In a live black-and-white recording, the Coldplay frontman performed an acoustic cover of Bob Dylan's "Shelter From the Storm." Martin delivered the classic 1974 track alone surrounded by instruments and with the words "Entrance to Trains" written behind him, likely a reference to SNL's Grand Central-themed stage in New York.His song choice was especially appropriate given that most people
The show held a special 'At Home' episode last night (April 11)
Bob Dylan made personal history this week, as his new single "Murder Most Foul" debuted atop the Rock Digital Song Sales chart (dated April 11), becoming the legend's first-ever No. 1 song as a performer on a Billboard chart. The track started with 10,000 downloads sold in the week ending April 2, following its March 27 rel
Bob Dylan has a No. 1 for the first time!