Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0886973579527
Label: Columbia
Manufacturer: Columbia
Number Of Discs: 2
Publisher: Columbia
Release Date: October 06, 2008
Studio: Columbia
Sales Rank: 171
MPN: 735795
Disc 1:- Mississippi
- Most Of The Time
- Dignity
- Someday Baby
- Red River Shore
- Tell Ol' Bill
- Born In Time
- Can't Wait
- Everything Is Broken
- Dreamin' Of You
- Huck's Tune
- Marchin' To The City
- High Water (For Charley Patton)
Disc 2:- Mississippi (1)
- 32 20 Blues
- Series Of Dreams
- God Knows
- Can't Escape From You
- Dignity (1)
- Ring Them Bells
- Cocaine Blues
- Ain't Talkin'
- Girl On The Greenbriar Shore
- Lonesome Day Blues
- Miss The Mississippi
- Lonesome River - Dylan, Bob & Ralph Stanley
- 'Cross The Green Mountain
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Editorial Review:
Amazon.co.uk Review: Subtitled "Rare and Unreleased 1989-2006", Tell Tale Signs, the eighth of Dylan's long running Bootleg series of officially approved outtakes, comes in two formats. The two-disc version consists of 27 tracks, including alternate versions of songs from his last three studio sets: Oh Mercy, Time out of Mind and Modern Times. Even non-obsessives will be seduced by the highlights here. A lovely sparse solo version of "Most of the Time", just Dylan strumming guitar and blowing a wheezy harmonica, outdoes the Daniel Lanois-produced original. The bleak, stately "Can't Escape from You", the sad and beautiful Civil War epic "Cross the Green Mountain", "The Lonesome River" a bluegrass standard with vocals from Ralph Stanley and a great, lo-fi live version of Reverend Gary Davis's influential "Cocaine Blues" are all standouts. Two versions of "Dignity"--a piano demo that reduces it to an oddly naked state and an unexpected rockabilly take--neatly capture the idea behind these volumes--to expose dedicated fans to the overlooked and underestimated parts of Dylan's constantly shifting oeuvre. --Steve Jelbert
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
All the 29 (so far) 1 star reviews are not reviews of the music but of the marketing of the 3CD version. Amongst them are some very angry long standing Dylan fans who refuse to even buy any of the versions, not merely the over priced deluxe version. Well, thats their loss.
I started listening to Dylan as a teenager in the early 60's and have always felt that the first three albums from the electric period were the peak of an amazing career. This new collection is another wonderful peak that has enabled me to revisit the period they cover and add to my appreciation of his later career. I have not yet found a song to better my personal Dylan favourite 'Desolation Row' but there are several that come close after a few weeks of listening ... Read More:
Rating: -
whatever he made and still makes is worth every cent...what's good about dylan is that he never cheats his fan...
Rating: -
I'll start off with a brief point. A lot of people have marked this item a poor buy because of a very different and overpriced 3cd version of it. But this is the rather cheap 2cd version, the one which is advertised here and the one which I plan to review. By the way, for the completist, there are people selling a copy of the third disc on ebay, so fret ye not!
As far as Bob Dylan is concerned, no two performances of a song should ever be the same. On this release, he proves his point and yet he also proves like Neil Young that he doesn't always release his best songs or the best versions of them. The first track kicks off with such a gorgeous version of Mississippi! I loved the released version, but the way Bob sings it is so tender ... Read More:
Rating: -
How this is averaging so low is beyond me - it's the best album I've heard all year by a country mile. The alternative take of Can't Wait - magestic, unsettling, and superior to the original release in every way - would alone make this unmissable. Add to that the alternative takes of Mississippi - his greatest song of the last decade - and the wonderful unheard track, Girl from the Red River Shore, and this is absolutely essantial. Don't listen to the naysayers - this is a great record.
Rating: -
This is effectively a follow up to Bootleg series vol 1 - 3 (1961 - 91)
How anyone thought they could find 2 let alone 3 discs worth of recent material to compare with those glory years is beyond me. Dylan has had several peaks over the decades, but each has hit a lesser height.
Dylan's released work of the last ten years, while good, does not match the mid seventies era (Planet Waves / Blood on the Tracks / Desire), let alone the mid sixties classics. These outtakes reflect that drop in quality. There is nothing here to match "Blind Willie McTell" or "Last thoughts on Woody Guthrie" that appeared on the vol 1-3 set.
Anyway, the bad stuff first:
There is far too much filler here. The two (two!) versions of "Mississippi" ... Read More:
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