BOB DYLAN FEATURING JOHNNY CASH : TRAVELIN' THRU - THE BOOTLEG SERIES VOL. 15 1967 - 1969

 

Disc One (42:55)

  1. Drifter's Escape
  2. I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine
  3. All Along the Watchtower
  4. John Wesley Harding
  5. As I Went Out One Morning
  6. I Pity the Poor Immigrant
  7. I Am a Lonesome Hobo
  8. I Threw It All Away
  9. To Be Alone with You
  10. Lay, Lady, Lay
  11. One More Night
  12. Western Road
  13. Peggy Day
  14. Tell Me That It Isn't True
  15. Country Pie

Disc Two (52:51)

  1. I Still Miss Someone (With Johnny Cash)
  2. Don't Think Twice, It's All Right / Understand Your Man (With Johnny Cash)
  3. One Too Many Mornings (With Johnny Cash)
  4. Mountain Dew (With Johnny Cash)
  5. Mountain Dew (With Johnny Cash)
  6. I Still Miss Someone (With Johnny Cash)
  7. Careless Love (With Johnny Cash)
  8. Matchbox (With Johnny Cash)
  9. That's All Right, Mama (With Johnny Cash)
  10. Mystery Train / This Train Is Bound for Glory (With Johnny Cash)
  11. Big River(With Johnny Cash)
  12. Girl from the North Country (With Johnny Cash)
  13. Girl from the North Country (With Johnny Cash)
  14. I Walk the Line (With Johnny Cash)
  15. Guess Things Happen That Way(With Johnny Cash)
  16. Guess Things Happen That Way (With Johnny Cash)
  17. Five Feet High and Rising (With Johnny Cash)
  18. You Are My Sunshine (With Johnny Cash)
  19. Ring of Fire (With Johnny Cash)

Disc Three (38:23)

  1. Studio Chatter (With Johnny Cash)
  2. Wanted Man (With Johnny Cash)
  3. Amen (With Johnny Cash)
  4. Just a Closer Walk with Thee (With Johnny Cash)
  5. Jimmie Rodgers Medley No. 1 (With Johnny Cash)
  6. Jimmie Rodgers Medley No. 2 (With Johnny Cash)
  7. I Threw It All Away (With Johnny Cash)
  8. Living the Blues (With Johnny Cash)
  9. Girl from the North Country (With Johnny Cash)
  10. Ring of Fire (With Johnny Cash)
  11. Folsom Prison Blues (With Johnny Cash)
  12. Earl Scruggs Interview (With Earl Scruggs)
  13. East Virginia Blues (With Earl Scruggs)
  14. To Be Alone with You (With Earl Scruggs)
  15. Honey, Just Allow Me One More Chance (With Earl Scruggs)
  16. Nashville Skyline Rag (With Earl Scruggs)

Label : Columbia

Release Date : November 1, 2019

Review (AllMusic) : The 15th volume of Bob Dylan's Bootleg Series focuses on the recordings he made in Nashville in the waning years of the 1960s. There are outtakes from John Wesley Harding and Nashville Skyline, along with a pair of cuts from the Self Portrait sessions, but the fulcrum of the three-disc set is Dylan's sessions with Johnny Cash in February 1969. Some of this is due to pure scarcity. There weren't an extensive number of outtakes from the John Wesley Harding sessions, plus Dylan didn't play with his arrangements in the studio; the seven alternate takes from these sessions prove this point. Then, CBS Nashville wound up not paying the fee for a storage facility, so a number of Nashville Skyline sessions were lost. The outtakes that did survive are lively and friendly, accentuating the good humor that flows through the finished product, but they're so amiable, they're bound to be overshadowed by the disc and a half of Dylan and Cash running through their respective songbooks while supported by Carl Perkins, who was Johnny's guitarist at the time. The Dylan and Cash sessions happened as Bob was in the middle of recording Nashville Skyline, and it was possible that it was intended as the genesis of a duet album that never materialized. While "Girl from the North County" wound up kicking off Nashville Skyline, the rest of the recordings remained in the vaults, bootlegged heavily over the years before appearing in this official, complete form. The additional context of Travelin' Thru - not just the alternate takes of disc one, but a joyous epilogue of a handful of tracks cut with bluegrass banjoist Earl Scruggs in early 1970 - lends some gravity to the amiable, occasionally wobbly Dylan/Cash sessions. The looseness can be ascribed to two mutual admirers attempting to find common ground. The pair knew they shared a bond - Cash patterned his "Understand Your Man" after Dylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right," a connection made apparent when producer Bob Johnston had them sing the songs simultaneously, each sticking to their own lyrics - but finding a groove takes time, and much of the appeal of Travelin' Thru lies in how the duo finally fall into step together. They start to move in the same direction by playing oldies from Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, Jimmie Rodgers, and Cash himself, throwing in a few folk standards and Dylan originals - including "Wanted Man," which Bob wrote for Johnny - along the way. If the results aren't epochal, they're nevertheless illuminating, revealing how these two American icons shared the same musical vocabulary.