蜜芽传媒

Use 蜜芽传媒.com or the new 蜜芽传媒 App to listen to 蜜芽传媒 podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Episode details

Radio 4 Extra,11 Oct 2015,30 mins

Highway 61: Fifty Years On

Available for over a year

Andy Kershaw re-examines the Bob Dylan album that changed popular music and his life. Beginning with the resounding hit of a snare drum, Like A Rolling Stone starts Bob Dylan鈥檚 first fully electrified album, Highway 61 Revisited. When he first heard the song in his mother鈥檚 car, Bruce Springsteen said it was 鈥渓ike somebody kicked open the door to your mind.鈥 The album represents the birth of rock music, as opposed to the pop or beat music that preceded its release. It sounds as subversive now as it did in 1965. Besides revolutionising popular music, the album transformed the life of broadcaster Andy Kershaw. For him, nothing would be the same after Highway 61. Andy travels to America to meet the surviving musicians and hear the extraordinary stories behind the recording sessions. Dylan was only 24 years old when he walked into Columbia Studio A in New York City to record the album in June 1965. For a masterpiece record, it is all the more remarkable that almost no preparation, and absolutely no rehearsal, went into it. Al Kooper, who was brought in as an observer, tells how he mistakenly and fortunately found himself playing the organ on Like A Rolling Stone, discovering the song鈥檚 melody on the spot. Bassist Harvey Brooks talks about the patience that was required to work with the unorthodox Dylan. Legendary Nashville musician Charlie McCoy describes how he was accidentally brought in to play the memorable Spanish-sounding guitar on Desolation Row. And Keith Richards provides a surprising take on Highway 61鈥檚 legacy. Producer: Colin McNulty A Whistledown production for 蜜芽传媒 Radio 4, first broadcast in October 2015.

Programme Website