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Leonard Cohen, Vancouver, B.C. 20 October 1978. Black and white photo by David Boswell. Have a look att more photos at David’s site: davidboswell.ca.
1978 was the year after the release of Cohen’s seventh album, Death of a Ladies’ Man, produced by the once-famous but lately infamous Phil Spector. The album also featured Bob Dylan Bob in the backing chorus on Don’t Go Home With Your Hard On


Saturday Evening Post, Issue 2261, July 30, 1966. On the cover Bob Dylan, color photo by Jerry Schatzberg.
Cover Text: “Bob Dylan – Rebel King of Rock ‘n’ Roll”, “A Major Report on the New Nuns”, “Free Drugs for Addicts?”
While the publication traces its historical roots to Benjamin Franklin, The Pennsylvania Gazette was first published in 1728 by Samuel Keimer, The following year (1729), Franklin acquired the Gazette from Keimer for a small sum and turned it into the largest circulation newspaper in all the colonies. It continued publication until 1815. It is claimed that the publication reemerged as the The Saturday Evening Post under new ownership as a four-page newspaper. It eventually became the most widely circulated weekly magazine in America after Cyrus Curtis purchased it when it was nearly defunct in 1897 for $1,000. The magazine gained prominent status under the leadership of its longtime editor George Horace Lorimer (1899–1937).
The Saturday Evening Post published current event articles, editorials, human interest pieces, humor, illustrations, a letter column, poetry (with contributions submitted by readers), single-panel cartoons (including Hazel by Ted Key) and stories by the leading writers of the time. It was known for commissioning lavish illustrations and original works of fiction.

Bob Dylan in Central Park, New York City, NY, February 10, 1965. Black and white photo by Richard Avedon. Part of Moma collections.

Bob Dylan, 1962. Black and white photo by Ted Russell.
Reblogged from our tumblr site: ultimate60s.tumblr.com

Bob Dylan in concert, date unknown. Black and white photo by Rowland Scherman.
Rowland Scherman studied Fine Arts at Oberlin College. In 1957, he was the dark room apprentice at LIFE magazine, and upon returning to college he began a photographic career that has spanned nearly a half a century.
Scherman became the first photographer for the newly formed Peace Corps in 1961, and traveled the world to help give the agency its reputation. He shot editorial, fashion, and covers for Life, Look, Time, National Geographic, Paris Match and Playboy, among many others.
In 1968 he won a Grammy Award for that year’s Best Album Cover (Bob Dylan Greatest Hits), as well as the Washington DC Art Director’s Award for Photographer of the Year.
Source: www.morrisonhotelgallery.com

Bob Dylan, Woodstock, NY, 1968. Color photo by Elliott Landy.
Elliott Landy, born in 1942, began photographing the anti-Vietnam war movement and the underground music culture in New York City in 1967. He photographed many of the underground rock and roll superstars, both backstage and onstage, from 1967 to 69.
His images of Bob Dylan and The Band, Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, Joan Baez, Van Morrison, Richie Havens, and many others documented the music scene during that classic rock and roll period which culminated with the 1969 Woodstock Festival.
Read more (fine prints available): www.morrisonhotelgallery.com

Bob Dylan in concert, 1966. Color Photo by Rowland Scherman.
Rowland Scherman studied Fine Arts at Oberlin College. In 1957, he was the dark room apprentice at LIFE magazine, and upon returning to college he began a photographic career that has spanned nearly a half a century.
Scherman became the first photographer for the newly formed Peace Corps in 1961, and traveled the world to help give the agency its reputation. He shot editorial, fashion, and covers for Life, Look, Time, National Geographic, Paris Match and Playboy, among many others.
In 1968 he won a Grammy Award for that year’s Best Album Cover, as well as the Washington DC Art Director’s Award for Photographer of the Year.
Source (and prints available): www.morrisonhotelgallery.com

Cover of Rolling Stone, February 14, 1974 with Bob Dylan. Photograph by Barry Feinstein.
Cover Story: “It’s the Same Old Me – Knockin’ on Dylan’s Door” by Ben Fong-Torres.
…
The cover story starts:
We are in Toronto the third stop of the Bob Dylan tour. Locked in by snow and still locked out, so far, from the inner circles of Dylan and the Band. I’m reduced to television in my hotel room. I choose Channel 6 and get Channel 79, where a newsy-talk program called The CITY Show named after the station’s call letters is on. For some reason, the moderator a sporty-looking fellow, 50 or so, looks familiar but the camera cuts to the program’s “youth reporter” whose report this evening is an earnest attack on Dylan, the tour and tour producer Bill Graham. He is asking where all the money is going; he is characterizing Dylan as a “manipulator” of his fans and the press, secreting himself from the public after that convenient little bike spill and, now, exploiting his absence from the scene. He also has heard that Dylan’s show is comprised mostly of older songs and this, too, is a pisser for him.
The moderator, the man with those penetrating, close-set eyes I’ve seen before, comes to Dylan’s defense.
“I believe there’s a freedom to just sit down if you want to,” he tells the kid. “The public doesn’t own Dylan; that’s why he appealed to you in the first place.”
As for Dylan’s manipulation of the media, he continues, “You know I don’t like to talk about my son too much on the air, but Neil has found that he’s not dependent on all this damned media coverage. [Now I recognize the gentleman: Scott Young, Neil's father and a newspaper columnist in Toronto.] Just a line in the papers is enough.
“Dylan is trying,” he says, “to reestablish that there still is a Dylan around.”
The next night, I met Dylan, bumping into him in the hallway up on his floor, and he agreed to talk — later, in Montreal. Three days later, in Montreal, 33 floors up at the Chateau Champlain, Bob Dylan sat across the table, at ease, in white western shirt and jeans, still sleepy at 3 PM, but willing to talk.
He’s always interested in what his audience is thinking, so I told him about the impression his new love songs seemed to be making. Critics — from Chicago through Philadelphia and Canada — were saying he’d mellowed out, “blunted his image,” “drained the venom from his voice.” He’d moved from urgent, surging metaphorical poetry to clinch-clichŽs, stereotyped images, and an emphatically-stated need for his loved one, a complete turn away from his previous posture of independence, individualism and defiance.
Of course, he’s played with such talk before. In “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight,” he rhymed “moon” and “spoon.” In Montreal, just last night, between “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” and “Gates Of Eden,” he told the audience, “That was a love song, and this one’s another love song.”
With a wife and five children, Dylan is being called a family man, or, as Jonathan Takiff, pop critic for the Philadelphia Daily News put it, “a Dutch uncle.”
“Yeah,” said Dylan. “But those things don’t make a person settle down. A family brings the world together. You can see it’s all one. It paints a better picture than being with a chick and traveling all over the world. Or hanging out all night.
“But,” he maintained, “I still get that spark. I’m still out there. In no way am I not. I don’t live on a pedestal.
…
You can read the full article here: www.rollingstone.com
Cover source: www.rollingstone.com

Cover of Rolling Stone, March 16, 1972 with Bob Dylan, illustration by Robert Grossman.
Cover Stories included: “Bob Dylan – pt. II”, “The Anti-Nixon Juggernaut inNew Hampshire”, “T. Rex Rages, Jonathan Edwards, Bill Winthers & Quincy Jones”.
The “Bob Dylan – pt. II” was the second of two lengthy excerpts from Anthony Scaduto’s authoritative biography of Bob Dylan. The firs publiced on Mar 02, 1972.
…
The second excerpt starts:
Setting off on a cross-country motoring trip, Bob Dylan’s entourage drove through the Holland Tunnel and onto the New Jersey Turnpike on the morning of February 2nd, 1964 — Dylan himself, Daily Mirror writer Pete Karman, mindguards Paul Clayton and Victor Maimudes, the latter behind the wheel. Dylan had put his three companions on the books of Ashes & Sand, the holding company Albert Grossman had set up to protect the newly-successful singer’s financial interests. All expenses were to be paid but apparently only Maimudes, who was officially Dylan’s road manager, was on salary.
The car was filled with used clothing that Dylan had collected for the striking miners in Kentucky. And Dylan’s typewriter. “Gonna write all along the way.” he said.
That first night they stopped in Charlottesville, Virginia, where Clayton had a house. The drive down had been uneventful, which is surprising considering they were all stoned. Clayton high on pills. Dylan and others on grass. As soon as they arrived Dylan called Suze back in New York, then he and his companions spent the night playing Monopoly, drinking wine, smoking to maintain the high edge of psychic excitement.
They went into town the next day, wandering the streets in the downtown area, dropping into a bar for a couple of drinks and moving on again. “Hey, man,” Dylan shouted as they passed a record shop. “Gotta see if the new album’s out yet. Wanna pass ‘em around to people.” They shuffled into the shop. “Got the new Dylan album?” Dylan asked. The girl behind the counter looked up. Lord help her, that’s Bob Dylan, that man there with the funny cap, surrounded by a bunch of freaks. She stumbled out into the aisle, to a bin labeled “Dylan” and pulled out a copy of The Times They Are A-Changin’. “How many you got?” Dylan asked. The girl counted them out. Ten of them. “I’ll take them all,” Dylan said.
He leaned against the counter, under a large poster with his picture on it, signing traveler’s checks, and the word flashed through the store. “That’s Bob Dylan.” “Where?” “Over there.” Four or five kids moved closer, suppressing moans and squeals. Dylan looked around at them, and his guard moved in around him. “Man,” Dylan said, “there’s a lot of people in here. Let’s split.” He hustled out to the street, followed by several of the customers. “They’re closin’ in on us,” Dylan said. “Let’s move.” They began to trot, the kids catching up, then to gallop, into the car, roll up the windows, race away. “Man, that was close,” Dylan said. “They almost got me.”
Later that morning they were on the road again, Clayton driving. Dylan studying the map: “Hendersonville, North Carolina,” he said. “You gotta take this highway” — shoving the map in front of Clayton — “and right outside Hendersonville is where he has his place, Flat Rock. That’s where he lives.” They entered Flat Rock late that afternoon, pulled up to a gas station — Dylan jumped out of the car. “Where’s Carl Sandburg’s place?” he asked the tall gangling mountain man in coveralls. “You know, the poet.” The mountain man considered that for a while, “You mean Sandburg the goat farmer?” he asked.
“No. I mean Sandburg the poet.”
“Don’t know about no poet. There’s a Sandburg has a goat farm. Wrote a book on Lincoln. Little guy. Littler than you, even. If that’s the one, take this road two miles up there, turn left after the little bridge, can’t miss it if you’re sober.”
Stoned, they didn’t miss it. They pulled up to the farm house and knocked on the door. A small, bearded, wizened man came out.
“You’re Carl Sandburg,” Dylan said, not asking. “I’m Bob Dylan. I’m a poet, too.”
“How nice,” Sandburg said, his smile saying another kid who wants to be a poet. But he tried to be gracious and said. “Come, sit a while.” Mrs. Sandburg joined them, smiling but not saying anything.
“I’ve written some songs, Mr. Sandburg,” Dylan said. “I know Woody Guthrie, he’s very sick in a hospital, he talked about you a lot. Got some songs here I’d appreciate you listening to.” He handed Sandburg one of the albums and the poet took it and said, “That’s wonderful,” but it was clear he was simply being polite. They chatted awhile. Dylan rambling on about folk music, and his own songs and poems, subtly telling Sandburg he was a young poet and Sandburg should recognize him because he recognized Sandburg as an older poet. And Sandburg smiled at this scruffy kid promoting his album, hyping himself as a poet. Sandburg polite but not particularly interested.
After about ten minutes Dylan said, “Well, gotta go. Nice meeting you,” and he turned and skipped down the steps and into the car. His entourage piled in after him and they drove off, quickly, Dylan slouching down in the front seat, very quiet, staring straight ahead. Someone handed him a joint and he puffed deeply and said nothing. He was obviously annoyed at his encounter with Sandburg, hurt that the poet had never heard of him.
…
You can read the full article here: www.rollingstone.com
Cover source: www.rollingstone.com

Cover of Rolling Stone, March 4, 1971 with Bob Dylan. Photographer unkown.
Cover Story: “Bringing it All Back Home, Bob Dylan in the Alley” by Jonathan Cott.
…
The article “Bob Dyllan in the Alley” starts:
It was an early evening rain, night comin’ in a-fallin’, and merely on the basis of short advance announcements in Rolling Stone, the Village Voice, and on Howard Smith’s FM radio show, a couple of thousand persons showed up at the Academy of Music on February 8th to catch Dylan’s one-hour color film Eat the Document, shown twice at 7:00 and 9:00 with proceeds going to a Pike County citizen’s group which has been set up to stop strip mining in the South.
Jerry Rubin and Gordon Lightfoot where there. A. J. Weberman (“name me someone that’s not a parasite and I’ll go out and say a prayer for him”), so-called Minister of Defense of the so-called Dylan Liberation Front was standing under the marquee wearing his FREE BOB DYLAN button and passing out a leaflet which concluded “The movie you are about to see is about the old Dylan — a beautiful right-on dude who sang the truth and gave a lot of his bread to SNCC, but the new Dylan, the post-accident Dylan, is a stoned Pig.”
The Academy of Music, with its cavernous dome and its karmic memories of the Chords and the Valentines, early Fifties rock and roll shows rubbed and ingrained into the seats, was the perfect setting for this revisitation of old Dylan lovers hoping to retrieve their fantasies of their hero who used to “meet on edges.” And there everyone was with that “restless hungry feeling,” waiting for some miracle, so called Dylan Liberation Front members in the front rows, confusion boats, kneeling blood hounds, mutiny from stem to bow — all of Dylan’s images coming home to roost.
…
You can read the full article here: www.rollingstone.com
Cover source: www.rollingstone.com
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