I'm 17 and My dad died from Alzheimer's recently (he had kids late), I never listened to Bob Dylan but he loved him so much,it was all my dad would listen to, even through his bad memory, whenever we put bob on he would start smiling and get nostalgia and he would start singing along, this song is the last song he ever listened to, my sister played it for him the night he died, this time he was motionless but i know he enjoyed it, this song means so much to me now and I cry every time I play it, but im now a huge bob dylan fan, Everytime i put bob on i feel connected to my dad and thats so special to me, i know bobs gone and wont see this comment lol but i had to put this out here, thank you bob for helping me connect to my father, much love to all the old heads in this comment section still jamming out to Dylan, RIP John Burckhard Sep 2nd 1950- dec 7th 3:24 AM 2024
Bob is still kicking,I did security for him a couple times.he liked OhCarleys meatloaf and the only star to ever give me a tip for watching to make sure he was undisturbed here in columbus ohio.he gave 150.00 dollars and I was dumbstruck.20 years in the Rockstar and not so Rockstar business he was the ONLY one to ever tip me ANYTHING.he is still alive and kicking.that was about 14 years ago maybe more he was playing the shotenstein center
My grandfather is a Vietnam veteran and I never talk with him about the war but he once mentioned to me that when he was stationed there this song would come on the radio all the time and him and his fellow soldiers all loved this song and forgot about the war for a few minutes. So this song holds a special place in his heart.
When I was a senior in high school some korean war veterans came into the pizza parlor we went to and tried to warn us about the viet nam war. We were young and naieve and didn't understand what they were trying to tell us. we played this song non stop. That horrible time has passed and I remembger my lost friends, but rhe song plays on.
@@lilblackduc7312 Let me put it this way, Sr: You have the mission to send a piece of the human heritage to an advanced ALIEN species that wants to make contact with us in the name of knowledge and the mutual greater good. So, name 10 songs that may impress them as part of the human legacy. BE advised, this could be a tricky question, but there are no wrong answers
@@kordTHEwhiteCROW I believe in the phrase, "Under promise and Over deliver"! Here's the best I could do, squeezing it down...AND I still left so, so many out. Look up each one of these and play them: Bo Diddley =Bo Diddley Higher Ground - Stevie Wonder Roll Over Beethoven - Electric Light Orchestra (Chuck Berry) God Gave Rock And Roll To You - Argent Born to Run - Bruce Springsteen Hotel California - Eagles Blue Monday - Fats Domino I Know There's Something Going On - Frida (with Phil Collins) Rocky Mountain Way - Joe Walsh Feling That Way/Anytime - Journey Rock and Roll - Led Zeppelin Brain Damage/Eclipse - Pink Floyd (I Know) I'm Losing You - Rare Earth Addicted to Love - Robert Palmer Driver's Seat - Sniff 'n' the Tears Hey Nineteen - Steely Dan Little Wing - Stevie Ray Vaughan Who Do You Lovw - George Thorogood Stranglehold - Ted Nugent Legs - ZZ Top Stay With Me - Faces Cocaine - Jackson Browne Bartender's Blues - George Jones I've Always Been Crazy - Waylon Jennings
I just want to say, I was born in 1956. I grew up playing music...by ear. My dad and I adored your music, but mostly your poetry..thankyou.. He died at 90 on earth day. I don't expect you'll actually get this message.. but, I miss him every day....I reconnect with him...listening to your music. The hard part is, It's only been a year. I can't play guitar or sing anymore. Hurts too bad. Missing my Dad. Hhmm. Maybe soon..
My father passed in October at age 74. His funeral was the first time I heard this song. He lived in an era of good music, clearly. He played guitar and bass in bands himself, but after losing his fingers in a mechanic accident, completely retrained himself to play the instruments lefthanded.
"La poesía y la música están vinculadas. Y Dylan ha contribuido a fortalecer esa relación, como los trovadores de antaño". Ello se debe a que, en su mayor parte, las letras de Dylan que datan de su primera época abordaban temas sociales y filosóficos en boga por la posguerra, amén de que en ellas se delata una fuerte influencia literaria que desafía abiertamente a la música pop convencional, en su tránsito hacia la contracultura. Universidad Pedagógica Nacional. México
I'm 62. Think I may have been born a bit late but was still able to enjoy the best music. Perhaps, I am a cynic but today's music doesn't seem to have any depth or soul Absolutely adore Dylan and am grateful I lived during the time I did.
I never even heard it until this past year, at 28 years of age. I loved 60's and 70's music but never gave Bob a chance. Some of the best music ever made, and I can't fight anyone who claims this is the greatest song of all time.
This song is good because it presents a tough situation that not many people experience and then asks the listener how do you feel. It ties society closer.
It doesn't. It's literally about Dylan seething and sneeding about the girl he lost to Andy Warhol, of all people. Imagine how much of a loser you need to be to let a flaming homosexual to steal your girl.
I'm 68 years old and I still get chills every time I hear it. If you grew up in the '60's you're unable to hear it without also hearing and feeling the impact it made. More than any other, this is the song that defined and shaped an entire generation. From this point on, we saw the world with brand new eyes.
when I first heard this song,I was wondering how this man could produce such an amazing work,which remind me of myself,regardless of more than 50+ years,regardless of the difference between American&Chinese‘ culture
I was in college in the mid-60s when this song was new, and it blared out of dorm windows from hi fi sets and radios. This was truly a radical shift in sound and mood from the previous generation. Many called it 'hippie music'...lol. All I know is that I love it as much now at age 76 as I did in my early 20s.
My husband was just starting his career as an elementary educator in the San Francisco Public Schools in the mid-late 1960s. His first contract school was Patrick Henry on Potrero Hill. The male principal was a very uptight middle aged family man of Spanish Catholic descent. My husband recently remembered when I was playing Dylan songs on TH-cam, that the school music teacher played the guitar and in the teacher's lunch room played "Times They Are A Changing". It was during the start of the Hippie Revolution and SF was the capitol where everyone flocked to. Other teachers warned him not to sing it when the principal was present. Poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti lived close by and had a child at the school. He had married a younger woman who he had children with. He was associated with City Lights bookstore which was already famous before the Hippie Revolution and the Viet Nam War. When I was in high school in SF it represented The Beat Generation of poets and writers. I just looked at Ferlinghetti on browser, and he died at 101 a year ago. An outstanding man who we met a few times.
@@jillschoenfeldwhite5534 Fascinating story, Jill. Seems like we're of the same generation ( Boomers ). By the time we came of age ( I turned 18 in '63 ) all of the values of our parents' were being questioned, boys grew long hair, society was changing in ways never thought possible. It was truly a 'happening' time. I am so glad I was in my youth back then, and wouldn't trade the memories of it for love nor money.
@@ANDROLOMAMaybe, but we need younger talent inspired by the likes of Bob Dylan writing and singing anthems attacking today’s political villains including Donald Trump and Putin as well as concerns about our childrens future due to climate change.
.. Listening to this Great Dylan Classic for the second or third time out , while riding in a friends car back in the Day on Route 4 near the old ' Alexanders ' , Paramus , NJ was such an experience , ( it was also as hot as todays temp of 90s ) it still helps me carryon my life in a peaceful way .. God Bless you all ..
It has never become dated. I was 11 when it came out. My older brother had a radio and I just chilled out and listened to all four verses. It's puts you in a mood that words can't describe.
At 49- with my life in total shambles. Don’t know what I’m doing. Husband had his fourth stroke and I’m living in the middle of nowhere in the prairies. Totally no plan. Lost. I get this song more than ever.
My sister passed in March 2009 and this was her favorite Dylan song of many. Whenever this came on the radio we’d blast it, fists raised in the air. And sing our hearts out!
I was just three months shy of 16 years old in July of 1965, when this song reached the charts. My sister is 13 months older, and we’d ride around in my dads 63 Pontiac Catalina singing this song along with the AM radio at the top of our lungs. Now we’re both old, but this song is STILL great, and brings back a lot of bitter sweet memories. Dylan is truly one of a kind. BTW, When this song hit the charts in 65, it was THE LONGEST song ever, up to that time, on the popular music charts.
lots of nostalgia being posted in the last week or so . everyone around the same age and still enjoying the memories of those times . all the best to everyone ! 🙏
@@siriosstar4789 And to you as well. Those times indeed were much different from now. Some memories are great, some not do great. But such is life.I was living a much different lifestyle then, and for the next few years. I went through the drug scene, but didn’t come out unscathed. I was delivered from a bad drug habit in 1974, by the grace of God, and have been clean since. God is good.
This song still blows me away, every time I listen to it. The powerful imagery and Dylan's storytelling. This kind of artist is rare today. How times are a changing.
You're wrong -- it's not one of the greatest -- it is the greatest song ever written. Everything about it is perfection from the lyrics to the organ (Al Kooper) to the overall production. Amazing song!
Attended his concerts. Got his autoghraph, a smile, and a handshake! Love his music. I lived his "How Does It Feel." Couldn't get along at home. Wandered in and out of parent's home, seeking self. This was not so uncommon back then. It was safer. Thank you Bobby! I found myself on my own.
I was having an early 60s Dylan sess and it's scary how those songs mean so much 62 years on and describe to a T what all the governments are doing to this planet. They will never put their fingers against the mirror and bow their heads and cry. We're blessed to have lived at the same time as him. Imagine what it would be like without be able to appreciate him Thankfully we don't need to. Just pure unadulterated genius.
Chuck Wilson Wow man so glad to hear that! tell you, depression taught me to make music, music was my medicine! depression is the talent of the artist!
Bob Dylan turned 80 today. He has outlived almost everything and everybody. Only the Rolling Stones have matched him in terms of longevity. His body of work remains without parallel. This track remains utterly flawless. That's why Hendrix who knew about genius covered it.
@@Cherie2257 I’m so glad to have you as a fan of mine, i would love us to talk more on my email address o..f...f.i..c..i..a…l…b…o..b..d…y…l.a...n…1...2…3.…@…. g..m..a..i..l.. c..o..m to know more about your thoughts and advise for me thank you ❤️
The people in life that are talented and blessed God has touched them. With Bob Dylan God has kick him in in ass because the guy is so talented. I've seen him 35 times since 1965 and met him in cleveland , ohio on july 17,1991. He was walking by himself and I looked up and saw him coming my way. Noone was around. He came up to me and shook my hand. I was drunk for a week. I could not beleive I met BOB DYLAN.
That's a great story! If you saw him for the first time in '65, then you must be a boomer like me! I saw Paul McCartney in San Diego in '76. I got up close to the stage, almost next to it. Paul had such a youthful looking face then. Almost child like. He sounded great, playing all the favorites. All the chickies had love in their eyes as they stared at him! Including my girlfriend! We were all boomers then and in awe that we were seeing a "Beatle"! It was an extraordinary night...
Hi guys...I am 74 and saw Ricky Nelson, Bo Diddley and Chuck Berry sing all of their hits and I was not more than 5 foot away front row center stage...what a night !
Let’s pray for him in Jesus name bc he said once in an interview that he made a deal with the devil + got fame + fortune. But... you know, if that is true, I break that agreement in Jesus name. Amen. Time’s gettin short, Bob, + end time Bible prophecies are being completed very very fast right now. Watch J.D. Farag on YT or go to his website JDFarag.org. It’s a hard rain’s a gonna fall: get right w/Jesus, fellow boomers
@@striderm8389 oh strider, lighten the hell up. That's dylan talken like a robert Johnson song. He never mad a pack with the devil. He is just talented. Lighten up dude you sound like my wife who I divorced. All she ever talked about was the end times are coming. So who cares if they are. I am saved and washed in the blood of christ. Only thing that matters is to be ready for the lord's return. Lighten up dude.
Bob Dylan arguably the most influential artist of the 20th Century. He’s as important an artist as anyone from Chaplin, Picasso, Rothko, Hitchcock (among that group the greatest artists maybe ever).
I recall that after Tom Petty passed away someone published a cartoon of him arriving at the Pearly Gates. George Harrison and Roy Orbison (from the Wilburys) were there to greet him. And Petty said, "I can't believe I got here before Dylan."
@@johnbatch9276 KEITH & Mick are in their 80s as well. My mommy just passed in Dec 23 and was 102. She was still very sharp, aware and listened to Dylan with me!!!
I can see why he received a Nobel Prize in Literature for his incredible song lyrics over his lifetime. Absolutely fantastic stuff. This song hits like a sledgehammer even decades later!
Wayne Polk - That's the way 'culture' is built and passed on to subsequent generations. Certain works of visual art, music., poetry and many other human 'creations' stand out in the era in which they came about, and withstand the test of time. " Like A Rolling Stone " sounds as fresh and new to my ears as it did when I first experienced it walking across campus in the mid 1960's.
I play Dylan songs when my wife is around. She cringes and says his voice is horrible. I tell her I wish I could sing like Bob Dylan. One of the Greatest Voices Of All Time!!!!!
I'm grateful that I've lived thru 70's and 80's and survived it lol. Don't be scared about getting old. It's liberating in a way and I will make it! Always have and I know I can. When you get my age, you look to the future and enjoy the time I do have on this earth. No day is promised to any of us. Each day is a gift!
Best song ever. Period. I play it in a loop for six hours straight (I suck at math but that's close to 60 times over and over) when I drive from SF to LA and I never get tired of listening to it.
Im 70 now and I can still remember the smell and taste of the hashish as the needle dropped into the grooves of the song that made the british invasion fade into the distance. We listened to it many more times that night, and it was like none of us had heard it before even though the record had been out for close to 3 years. Music became something bigger but Bob's poetry opened our minds to things that had been just beyond our grasp up until that moment. It was like we were the flowers of spring opening to the warmth of May's morning sunshine.
It really is one of the best songs ever written. I went through being homeless and this song soothed me when I felt panicked or depressed every time I played it .Still dose✌
The thing about Dylan, even more than the incredible lyrics (which are unmatched by anyone), is the absolute intensity of his vocals! He puts everything into his vocal attack, his phrasing, the way he'll stretch out a single note or syllable, and he just nails the emotion that is carried in the lyrics, and that lifts the song way beyond a standard "radio hit". A lot of people say "he can't sing"! They couldn't be more wrong. His singing is the single greatest weapon in his arsenal, and that was so from his first record on. As for the music, that's terrific too. "Like a Rolling Stone" was like nothing you'd ever heard in your life before the first time you heard it. And it remains just as powerful and fresh to this day.
Agreed, so nicely put. I love that he's such an angry singer. Such an expressive singer. Like a mix of singing, pointing a finger, mocking and spoken word. Then again I never thought he couldn't sing. Different singers hit different notes and the charisma a voice has is also important. To little me, at least.
At age 78, I still recall the first time I heard this song on the car radio. I was mesmerized. And I love the session musicians backing him on Highway 61 Revisited..
There's a book written about this one song and its recording, and apparently out of many takes, there was only one that hit it perfectly, and that's the one we hear. All the others aimed but missed, but the one we know touched something fantastic and powerful, divine and otherworldly. All the musicians were in a trance for that one moment, and thus it touches all of humanity, no matter your age or station in life. Bravo Bob!!!
Actually the one and only take here was a start for a great organ player who was in the studio with them and was a guitar player because he snuck into the studio and played the organ for the first time and improvised all the chords progression that is why you can here the organ slightly later than the beat of the song and most of the time after Dylan sang his line. This was the only time they recorded the song till the end and afterwards Dylan liked the organ sound so they published that take although the organ was made by AL kooper who has never played it before!
@billoddiea i believe it was the first take after Kooper snuck onto the organ, but there were like a dozen previous takes. You can actually listen to them on The Cutting Edge album from the Bootleg Series.
Only those listening to Discorporate by Zappa, along with Stuck Inside a Mobile (with the Memphis Blues Again) by Dylan. And in the End, the Love You Take is Equal to the Love, You Make. The Beatles.
Joseph, well said. When Bob Dylan asks “How does it fill?”I can answer because now I know. When I lost my wife 10 years ago I realized the difference between being alone and being lonely. Going from one place to another like a rolling stone trying to make life easier, I realized that there are many others out there trying to salvage something that would make life easier. All of Dylan’s songs tell a story set to music and I’m certain there is always someone out here that can connect to it in his/her own way. Thank you Bob for making difficult times a little easier to experience.👍
The summer of ‘65….at 17….turnin’ on the car radio and hearin’ this tune was a great time to be alive and in the winter of ‘24 and listenin’ thru air pods……took me right back to ‘65 and bein‘ 17…insteada 76👏👏👏. 🎶like a rollin’ stone🎶 Cue-The Old Folks Boogie-Little Feat!
@@MrThermostatic What he sings is 'When you got nothing, you got nothing to lose.' There's no 'ain't' in there. If there were it would be a double negative, but more importantly it would ruin the metre and therefore the flow of the line. And I wasn't being picky in saying it. It was just a casual observation made on the back of a couple of late night scotches. No offence meant to Sylvia R.
@@JJBushfan it's kind of just rolled all together like..."wheny'aint". I can't even hear the line without hearing that ain't sound somewhere in there. You probably never heard it the first time so every subsequent time it's just not noticed
Rest In Peace to Bob Neauwirth, the guy who is pictured holding the camera on the Highway 61 Revisited album cover. He passed away yesterday, May 18, 2022.
What a perfect way to kick off a song. Those first two drum beats and initial organ note; like you're 1 second in and the song is already freaking awesome.
Al Kooper who played the Hammond B2 organ originally wasn't even invited to the recording but joined in the studio in the hope that he could play on his guitar but he was intimidated by Mike Bloomfield's guitar playing. Instead Kooper approached producer Tom Wilson and told him he had a good part for the organ. Wilson belittled Kooper's organ skills, but did not forbid him to play. "He just sort of scoffed at me ... He didn't say 'no'-so I went out there." Wilson was surprised to see Kooper at the organ but allowed him to play on the track. When Dylan heard a playback of the song, he insisted that the organ be turned up in the mix, despite Wilson's protestations that Kooper was "not an organ player."
@@TINSTAAFL1 That organ is so defining, and then when it meets Bob's harmonica, it just takes the song away into the stratosphere! I can't imagine the tune without Kooper's nerve and ambition.
LIKE A ROLLING STONE...A great hit way back when I was a kid. It still is today and will be for many years to come...kind of like...AMAZING GRACE...it is here forever...
One of the best writers, best singers, best musicians of all times. Thanks for a lifetime of wonderful songs. I'm 62 and have been enjoying your music my whole life.
What a song . What a great talent song writer musical genius. I'm 63 and remember this song very well. Woke up with this song on my mind. Thank you Bob.
I recall sitting on the grass on the council strip outside my mum and dads home when I was 15 years old, listening to my transistor radio, and I heard this song come on. It was a revelation, it made me realise that music can actually change the path of your life. So powerful.
Yeah i felt the same when i heard this song on the radio in the summer of 1965. On november 12,1965 i saw dylan live on his first electric tour in cleveland, ohio and on july17, 1991 i met him down by lake erie. He was walking by himself . He was really nice to me.
I'm 17 and My dad died from Alzheimer's recently (he had kids late), I never listened to Bob Dylan but he loved him so much,it was all my dad would listen to, even through his bad memory, whenever we put bob on he would start smiling and get nostalgia and he would start singing along, this song is the last song he ever listened to, my sister played it for him the night he died, this time he was motionless but i know he enjoyed it, this song means so much to me now and I cry every time I play it, but im now a huge bob dylan fan, Everytime i put bob on i feel connected to my dad and thats so special to me, i know bobs gone and wont see this comment lol but i had to put this out here, thank you bob for helping me connect to my father, much love to all the old heads in this comment section still jamming out to Dylan, RIP John Burckhard Sep 2nd 1950- dec 7th 3:24 AM 2024
So sorry for your loss. You sound like a great young man. I'm sure your Daddy's proud of you.
I ❤ this... and I'm sorry for your loss...🙏💛🙏
Pop's probably smiling now...😁🤗
Bob Dylan is still around .... 83 years old in May this year. Maybe he will see your comment!
I'm here cause my dad past and this is one of his songs 🎵 music brings you back to those good times that's what he would want . With all respect.
Bob is still kicking,I did security for him a couple times.he liked OhCarleys meatloaf and the only star to ever give me a tip for watching to make sure he was undisturbed here in columbus ohio.he gave 150.00 dollars and I was dumbstruck.20 years in the Rockstar and not so Rockstar business he was the ONLY one to ever tip me ANYTHING.he is still alive and kicking.that was about 14 years ago maybe more he was playing the shotenstein center
I am a very old rocker..very old..this is one of the greatest songs / poems of modern music..Dylan supreme.
@@macmccreadie8541 Agree!
Absolutely the best - as a 78yr old I play it daily ...
I remember how much I loved his music. Classic
Classic for sure. Yeah you might need new friends
Einfach genial ❤
My grandfather is a Vietnam veteran and I never talk with him about the war but he once mentioned to me that when he was stationed there this song would come on the radio all the time and him and his fellow soldiers all loved this song and forgot about the war for a few minutes. So this song holds a special place in his heart.
This breaks my heart. The Vietnam years were awful.
What if they started a war and nobody came?
When I was a senior in high school some korean war veterans came into the pizza parlor we went to and tried to warn us about the viet nam war. We were young and naieve and didn't understand what they were trying to tell us. we played this song non stop. That horrible time has passed and I remembger my lost friends, but rhe song plays on.
Oh yeah this song will grab your heart❤ especially when you're away from home
❤
This is hands down one of the best songs ever written.
you could say that about a lot of dylan songs
Cuts like a knife
It best describes today's entitled victim culture. They're in for a big fall & a rude awakening very soon, when they get what they're asking for...
@@Vegan_Waterr
Every Song Dylan writes IS the BEST SONG Written!!!
Not possibly.This word in not necessary
At aged 87, I still love this song. Thank you Bob. May, 2023.
Hey Sr, do you have a Top 10 of your favorite musicians?
@@kordTHEwhiteCROW For what it's worth...I'm 65 and it's impossible for me to narrow it down to only 10 top musicians...📻 🎼🎵🎶
@@lilblackduc7312
Let me put it this way, Sr:
You have the mission to send a piece of the human heritage to an advanced ALIEN species that wants to make contact with us in the name of knowledge and the mutual greater good. So, name 10 songs that may impress them as part of the human legacy.
BE advised, this could be a tricky question, but there are no wrong answers
@@kordTHEwhiteCROW I believe in the phrase, "Under promise and Over deliver"! Here's the best I could do, squeezing it down...AND I still left so, so many out.
Look up each one of these and play them: Bo Diddley =Bo Diddley Higher Ground - Stevie Wonder
Roll Over Beethoven - Electric Light Orchestra (Chuck Berry) God Gave Rock And Roll To You - Argent
Born to Run - Bruce Springsteen Hotel California - Eagles
Blue Monday - Fats Domino I Know There's Something Going On - Frida (with Phil Collins)
Rocky Mountain Way - Joe Walsh Feling That Way/Anytime - Journey
Rock and Roll - Led Zeppelin Brain Damage/Eclipse - Pink Floyd
(I Know) I'm Losing You - Rare Earth Addicted to Love - Robert Palmer
Driver's Seat - Sniff 'n' the Tears Hey Nineteen - Steely Dan
Little Wing - Stevie Ray Vaughan Who Do You Lovw - George Thorogood
Stranglehold - Ted Nugent Legs - ZZ Top
Stay With Me - Faces Cocaine - Jackson Browne
Bartender's Blues - George Jones I've Always Been Crazy - Waylon Jennings
@@kordTHEwhiteCROW Have you checked out my reply yet?
Age 93 still listening, it transports me back to the better days. Thanks forever Bob Dylan.
🍀🍀🍀🍀
Heavy man really Heavy on word and upwards in Jesus name amen he is the works
thats great,im know youll always love this song!
Congratulations, you are on top of age!😂
It's wonderful music isn't it? I hope you have a good day sir
It's hard to believe that Bob Dylan is 83 now. Thank you Bob for the years of great music.
Is that his age wow where does the years go ❤
ALWAYS!! He's THE BEST SONGWRITER OF ALLTIME!! WITH THESE BIG LETTERS.
Mate it's hard to believe I'm.74 going on 24 😅
@@carl112466 I hope he feels well
That's actually a lot younger than I thought. lol
There's no time limit on fantastic music
When you got nothing, You got nothing to lose. Art
I just want to say, I was born in 1956. I grew up playing music...by ear. My dad and I adored your music, but mostly your poetry..thankyou.. He died at 90 on earth day. I don't expect you'll actually get this message.. but, I miss him every day....I reconnect with him...listening to your music. The hard part is, It's only been a year. I can't play guitar or sing anymore. Hurts too bad. Missing my Dad. Hhmm. Maybe soon..
he'd love to know you're still playing the songs you enjoyed together
God bless you...he would be proud of your words
My father passed in October at age 74. His funeral was the first time I heard this song. He lived in an era of good music, clearly. He played guitar and bass in bands himself, but after losing his fingers in a mechanic accident, completely retrained himself to play the instruments lefthanded.
Hang in there man i was born in 52 i can relate i miss my dad to take care
@@nicholassaenz4225Estou cuidando do meu que tem 94 anos. Definhando muito rápido!!!😢
There's a reason Dylan is the only recording artist ever to win a Nobel Peace Prize for Literature !!!!!!
Wise Man 👨
Cool trivia. ❤ Weird. Hmmm
"La poesía y la música están vinculadas. Y Dylan ha contribuido a fortalecer esa relación, como los trovadores de antaño". Ello se debe a que, en su mayor parte, las letras de Dylan que datan de su primera época abordaban temas sociales y filosóficos en boga por la posguerra, amén de que en ellas se delata una fuerte influencia literaria que desafía abiertamente a la música pop convencional, en su tránsito hacia la contracultura.
Universidad Pedagógica Nacional. México
His songs are so honest & tragic IT IS poetry. Dylan seems like a “life’s no fair, we struggle we suffer but accept it n get on with it” kinda guy!
He was the only one for many many moons, but there are 2 now....... Kendrick Lamar won it a couple years ago for his album D.A.M.N.
This song is as relevant today as it was when it was written.
Absolutely agree!
I totally agree 💯
so true
My daughter is 16 and she loves this song! Sent it to me to cheer me up, and I was in tears because I raised her right!
You raised her right alright. My father taught me DAD, Steppenwolf, Rollin stones, Beatles, GNR etc etc im 28 right now and im blessed
You certainly did
pmon tv ppl³ 9th😅
Probably the best tune ever penned 😊
Love your story darcy
I’m 74 and it certainly takes me back in time. Absolutely a masterpiece. Keep going Bob you’re way ahead of them all.
Im 72, and i adore it too.
don't ya love how music just takes you back.....
I'm 73 memories of the 60s what great music we had we certainly had good music
I'm 62. Think I may have been born a bit late but was still able to enjoy the best music. Perhaps, I am a cynic but today's music doesn't seem to have any depth or soul Absolutely adore Dylan and am grateful I lived during the time I did.
@@kaseypetz7900 today's music is all beats and mumbling. pathetic
Possibly the greatest rock song of all time. Magnificent, Bob! True genius.
Right?!? All the elements are laid out so plainly. Plaintively. Wicked little song.
It is !!!!
You are mad Man, Highway Star is best than this
@@DrMisaelAmaral actually he is right , voted #1 out of Top 500 greatest songs of all time !!!
I never even heard it until this past year, at 28 years of age. I loved 60's and 70's music but never gave Bob a chance. Some of the best music ever made, and I can't fight anyone who claims this is the greatest song of all time.
Just listening to Bob always takes me back to those awesome years 60-70’s!
This song is good because it presents a tough situation that not many people experience and then asks the listener how do you feel. It ties society closer.
Largestudent198 Such a lovely interpretation.
no it doesn't. Grow up
It doesn't. It's literally about Dylan seething and sneeding about the girl he lost to Andy Warhol, of all people. Imagine how much of a loser you need to be to let a flaming homosexual to steal your girl.
Exactly this! ❤
More Today,Than Ever.
I'm 68 years old and I still get chills every time I hear it. If you grew up in the '60's you're unable to hear it without also hearing and feeling the impact it made. More than any other, this is the song that defined and shaped an entire generation. From this point on, we saw the world with brand new eyes.
Very well said !!! ✌️
@Bob Dylan The only music I'll never stop listening to
So wish I was a teenager in these times of such genius and change!
@@lukegill5558 It was an amazing time to be young and alive!
when I first heard this song,I was wondering how this man could produce such an amazing work,which remind me of myself,regardless of more than 50+ years,regardless of the difference between American&Chinese‘ culture
I was in college in the mid-60s when this song was new, and it blared out of dorm windows from hi fi sets and radios. This was truly a radical shift in sound and mood from the previous generation. Many called it 'hippie music'...lol. All I know is that I love it as much now at age 76 as I did in my early 20s.
That along with Pet Sounds and Sargent Pepper...just no going back after.
@Hunter Vonnegut I'll check it out...thanks!
It is the best song ever!
My husband was just starting his career as an elementary educator in the San Francisco Public Schools in the mid-late 1960s. His first contract school was Patrick Henry on Potrero Hill. The male principal was a very uptight middle aged family man of Spanish Catholic descent. My husband recently remembered when I was playing Dylan songs on TH-cam, that the school music teacher played the guitar and in the teacher's lunch room played "Times They Are A Changing". It was during the start of the Hippie Revolution and SF was the capitol where everyone flocked to. Other teachers warned him not to sing it when the principal was present. Poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti lived close by and had a child at the school. He had married a younger woman who he had children with. He was associated with City Lights bookstore which was already famous before the Hippie Revolution and the Viet Nam War. When I was in high school in SF it represented The Beat Generation of poets and writers. I just looked at Ferlinghetti on browser, and he died at 101 a year ago.
An outstanding man who we met a few times.
@@jillschoenfeldwhite5534 Fascinating story, Jill. Seems like we're of the same generation ( Boomers ). By the time we came of age ( I turned 18 in '63 ) all of the values of our parents' were being questioned, boys grew long hair, society was changing in ways never thought possible. It was truly a 'happening' time.
I am so glad I was in my youth back then, and wouldn't trade the memories of it for love nor money.
I’m an old guy now but when I listen to this genius I’m 15 and in awe of a true poet!
Genius.❤
Billboard ranks this as the number one song of all time. Stunning!
Hello dear, it’s nice meeting you on here
That’s not true although it should be.
I don’t believe that.
The world needs Bob Dylan more now than ever before.
He's still with us.
Yes, die Welt braucht mehr gute Menschen, die die Wahrheit aussprechen ...
@@gerthoffmann5436 Habe sie ein spass zeit?
@@ANDROLOMAMaybe, but we need younger talent inspired by the likes of Bob Dylan writing and singing anthems attacking today’s political villains including Donald Trump and Putin as well as concerns about our childrens future due to climate change.
@@stevenpaulgoulding I couldn't afford kids. Thus, my apathy is explained.
At 68 yrs old, this song is still plays great....considered a significant turning point in rock and roll....the riffs.
The riffs are addicting. Once you get started there's no stopping !
.. Listening to this Great Dylan Classic for the second or third time out , while riding in a friends car back in the Day on Route 4 near the old ' Alexanders ' , Paramus , NJ was such an experience , ( it was also as hot as todays temp of 90s ) it still helps me carryon my life in a peaceful way .. God Bless you all ..
It has never become dated. I was 11 when it came out. My older brother had a radio and I just chilled out and listened to all four verses. It's puts you in a mood that words can't describe.
Dame âge☮️☮️💖
Nostalgie 2023 end
Objectively one of the greatest songs of all time
Dylan was truly one of the greatest poets of the 20th century
@Bobdylan34776 Find something else to do.
is
Noble peace prize
At 49- with my life in total shambles. Don’t know what I’m doing. Husband had his fourth stroke and I’m living in the middle of nowhere in the prairies. Totally no plan. Lost. I get this song more than ever.
best of luck to ya
Better days ahead, friend. 🙏
💫🫶🏼☯️🙏🎆✨💓🌹🧜♀️🌎🎩✨
For those of us who do not turn away from love when it calls…
in strength we stand together ❤let’s turn up the lantern rub the genies lamp ✨☯️💓
God Bbless you and watch over you
My sister passed in March 2009 and this was her favorite Dylan song of many. Whenever this came on the radio we’d blast it, fists raised in the air. And sing our hearts out!
I miss my sister too, I know how you feel 😢
I can't wait for A Complete Unknown to come about.
Sitting on a random Bangkok street drinking Soujiu listening to this masterpiece... Fantastic!
Oh to be in another country that isn't America 🥲
I was just three months shy of 16 years old in July of 1965, when this song reached the charts. My sister is 13 months older, and we’d ride around in my dads 63 Pontiac Catalina singing this song along with the AM radio at the top of our lungs.
Now we’re both old, but this song is STILL great, and brings back a lot of bitter sweet memories.
Dylan is truly one of a kind.
BTW, When this song hit the charts in 65, it was THE LONGEST song ever, up to that time, on the popular music charts.
lots of nostalgia being posted in the last week or so . everyone around the same age and still enjoying the memories of those times . all the best to everyone ! 🙏
@@siriosstar4789 And to you as well.
Those times indeed were much different from now. Some memories are great, some not do great. But such is life.I was living a much different lifestyle then, and for the next few years. I went through the drug scene, but didn’t come out unscathed. I was delivered from a bad drug habit in 1974, by the grace of God, and have been clean since.
God is good.
Yep, I was 17 in 1965 and did the same. Great memories and great music. Still love blasting our music in my car. All the best to you.
"Claiming to be you " ? who are you , certainly NOT bob dylan.
flagged and reported
bless you you sound like wonderful beautiful people
My college friends and I sang this in 1977 driving over the Cascade Mountains in Oregon. That might have been my peak moment.
If so, it was a good one.
I bet you were high and I ain't talking about the elevation.
@Bobdylan347761:12 my shakespere
Happy Daze
Don't worry, I got the joke
What a song , this man the best, its another song that finds you,
This song still blows me away, every time I listen to it. The powerful imagery and Dylan's storytelling. This kind of artist is rare today. How times are a changing.
Hello Dear, it’s nice meeting you on here
Exactly this.
Same as HUN INIT 🤓IT GIVES ME GOOSEBUMPS ALL OVER THE PLACE STILL LOVE IT (COME ON LET'S HAVE IT)LOL
You said it babe.
Rare? More like non-existent
I'm 70 years old today and share a birthday with Bob. Happy Birthday Bob, thanks so much for a great song and wonderful memories.
Absolutely timeless
This will be listened in 100 years and still will be fresh and amazing
Dylan is the only artist I can think of whose work remains fresh. It does not date, it does not get old, it remains timely and TIMELESS.
@@ferociousgumby I don't think it's fresh at all it sounds old worldly to me & that's the way I like it in all it's wisdom
I totally agree. His songs are about Real Life
How does it feel?
Shit like that will win you a much deserved Nobel prize! Dylan is the best, bar none!
One of the Greatest songs of all time, it's timeless. Make of friends who ended up on the street.
I'm sorry 😢😢😢 that your friends ended up on the streets.Shouldnt happen🎉🎉🎉
You're wrong -- it's not one of the greatest -- it is the greatest song ever written. Everything about it is perfection from the lyrics to the organ (Al Kooper) to the overall production. Amazing song!
Bob Dylan! Happy 83rd birthday! I hope you have a healthy and fun year!
"When you got nothing, you got nothing to lose."
Not true
by definition
Damn right. # beware
Beware of those who coulnt care less
It reminds me of Nomadland.
This man spoke out what billions feel around the world
Attended his concerts. Got his autoghraph, a smile, and a handshake! Love his music. I lived his "How Does It Feel." Couldn't get along at home. Wandered in and out of parent's home, seeking self. This was not so uncommon back then. It was safer. Thank you Bobby! I found myself on my own.
Quite possibly, the greatest few minutes of recorded music in all history. An utter and timeless masterpiece.
Well it's definitely his best song. I would put this in the top ten songs of all time!
@@marksmith1960 Just a few spots behind Billie Jean
One of the 3 most iconic songs of the last century along with Tomorrow Never Knows and A Day in the Life by The Beatles
like a prophet....
several minutes*
I am70 years old and still listening to the 1960 and 1970 music by far the best ever
Same and I'm 70 😊
A MEN T O THAT
Moi aussi❤
Same Greets from Greece
Agree!
One of the finest songs ever written. A timeless classic.
1st heard it in 65aged 12 still blows me away now
greatest lyrics ever
I was having an early 60s Dylan sess and it's scary how those songs mean so much 62 years on and describe to a T what all the governments are doing to this planet. They will never put their fingers against the mirror and bow their heads and cry. We're blessed to have lived at the same time as him. Imagine what it would be like without be able to appreciate him
Thankfully we don't need to. Just pure unadulterated genius.
this guy pulled me out of depression more than once. love this song
that is great to hear Sir, i have the condition myself and the words of Bob are disturbing but healing
I'm on the street so this song makes me want to scream HOW THE FUCK DO YOU THINK IT FEELS????!!!!!
This is real
Sorry to hear about that. Glad you enjoy Dylan as much as me.
Chuck Wilson Wow man so glad to hear that! tell you, depression taught me to make music, music was my medicine! depression is the talent of the artist!
This song came out 58 years ago today and still sounds like the most modern thing ever recorded. Nothing has ever topped it.
Its a tough call between this one and "hanging tough" by New Kids on the block
The only song I’ve heard that even comes close is a 1980s tune called “When The Walls Come Down” by The Call. But Dylan stands alone…!
Ich bin jetzt bald 58 und ich liebe dieses Lied mein ganzes Leben lang schon immer absolut gern
Right!?!? The homeless ...
Great est song ever .love it for the last 58 yrsit been out
Possibly the greatest rock song of all time
It’s not a rock and roll song
It’s not a rock and roll song
Folk Rock
Arguably the Best Rock and Roll song of all time. So many memories.
The sheer genius baffles me.
John Price Mozart wrote his first piano concerto at age 4!
@@jaycorby So?
@@LeeRenthlei My point in citing that was that 'genius' in writing music may be found in any era of time.
Most of the great songs were written by people in their 20’s. That’s when humans are most creative.
@@Cromagnon4 actually children are more creative than adults in their 20s. Its just that you need more than creativity to write these lyrics
Still fresh after 55 years. The voice of a generation
THe voice foe ever
The Voice of ALL generations .
Generations
I remember hearing this in 1965 when it first came out and I still listen, at 72 years old.
Bob Dylan isn't a singer
Bob Dylan is a force of nature
Thank you so much for your likes and supports towards my music,I really appreciate God bless you and your family💯
Dylan w/1 L.@@officialbobdyllan.5098
Pretty Awesome when someone that famous and successful takes time to give you a Reply!! That shows real character!!
16 years old, BLESSED to have discovered bob dylan
As a wise 18 year old me too
Welcome aboard young folks
👍
Wow You Sure Discovered The Absolute Truth. Bob Dylan Will always be that his music is incomparable to Anyone.
19 here. Listening to the beatles, dylan, elvis since 2020. Thanks to youtube
Heard this track played at my mate's funeral today - just had to play it again. God bless you Ronnie
Sorry for your loss, rest in peace Ronnie
R.I.P. Ronnie
Go bob . Absolute genius
@bobbydennis8333 Thanks for that - real kind of you
Happy 80th birthday, Bob. Long live the king.
Yes happy birthday
Is he still alife 😶
@@MK-fe5un Yes. He turned 80 on May 24th.
@@carlygrayson956 😲😲😲😃😃😃
Hope you had a great birthday 🎂, Bob. I have always loved your music 🎶🎵
Bob Dylan was , is and forever will be one of the greatest folk singers ever ..
He is a True poet.
I believe he is the greatest
True
Got to be rhe greatest ever
@@alit8528 i think neil young too
no
I never get tired of this one! Takes me back to the 60's.
Bob Dylan turned 80 today.
He has outlived almost everything and everybody. Only the Rolling Stones have matched him in terms of longevity. His body of work remains without parallel.
This track remains utterly flawless. That's why Hendrix who knew about genius covered it.
Thank you so much for your likes and supports towards my music,I really appreciate God bless you and your family
@@officialbobdyllan.5098 Best song ever!!!!!! I love you Bob
@@Cherie2257 I’m so glad to have you as a fan of mine, i would love us to talk more on my email address o..f...f.i..c..i..a…l…b…o..b..d…y…l.a...n…1...2…3.…@…. g..m..a..i..l.. c..o..m to know more about your thoughts and advise for me thank you ❤️
@@Cherie2257 you can write me there on my mail ☝️☝️☝️
@@officialbobdyllan.5098 i'd love to mail you but i can't be arsed making sure i get the right number of dots between each letter in your address
The people in life that are talented and blessed God has touched them. With Bob Dylan God has kick him in in ass because the guy is so talented. I've seen him 35 times since 1965 and met him in cleveland , ohio on july 17,1991. He was walking by himself and I looked up and saw him coming my way. Noone was around. He came up to me and shook my hand. I was drunk for a week. I could not beleive I met BOB DYLAN.
That's a great story! If you saw him for the first time in '65, then you must be a boomer like me! I saw Paul McCartney in San Diego in '76. I got up close to the stage, almost next to it. Paul had such a youthful looking face then. Almost child like. He sounded great, playing all the favorites. All the chickies had love in their eyes as they stared at him! Including my girlfriend! We were all boomers then and in awe that we were seeing a "Beatle"! It was an extraordinary night...
Hi guys...I am 74 and saw Ricky Nelson, Bo Diddley and Chuck Berry sing all of their hits and I was not more than 5 foot away front row center stage...what a night !
Let’s pray for him in Jesus name bc he said once in an interview that he made a deal with the devil + got fame + fortune. But... you know, if that is true, I break that agreement in Jesus name. Amen. Time’s gettin short, Bob, + end time Bible prophecies are being completed very very fast right now. Watch J.D. Farag on YT or go to his website JDFarag.org. It’s a hard rain’s a gonna fall: get right w/Jesus, fellow boomers
@@striderm8389 oh strider, lighten the hell up. That's dylan talken like a robert Johnson song. He never mad a pack with the devil. He is just talented. Lighten up dude you sound like my wife who I divorced. All she ever talked about was the end times are coming. So who cares if they are. I am saved and washed in the blood of christ. Only thing that matters is to be ready for the lord's return. Lighten up dude.
Wow! Lucky you!
Bob Dylan arguably the most influential artist of the 20th Century. He’s as important an artist as anyone from Chaplin, Picasso, Rothko, Hitchcock (among that group the greatest artists maybe ever).
add rabrinath tagore 2 your list they are all GREAT GIANT ARTISTES. 🥷🕉
rabindrath tagore@@jimichang5903
Michael jackson!
I can’t believe how many artists have passed away young, and then there’s Bob Dylan still kicking
Isn't Keith Richards 104 😅😅😅
I recall that after Tom Petty passed away someone published a cartoon of him arriving at the Pearly Gates. George Harrison and Roy Orbison (from the Wilburys) were there to greet him. And Petty said, "I can't believe I got here before Dylan."
@@kennystanley1988 HE IS STILL YOUNG!!
@@johnbatch9276 KEITH & Mick are in their 80s as well. My mommy just passed in Dec 23 and was 102. She was still very sharp, aware and listened to Dylan with me!!!
@@cynthiaawtrey9967 wow your.mum.sounded amazing Cynthia mums are great.i know mine was
Classic. Never gets old. My Dad played this on vinyl when I was a kid. Told me there was nothing else like it and there never will be. Love
My dad played this and many other songs from this era. Love them even today
The national anthem of the 60s
Thank you for your compliment and sincere love, I am not complete without you, as a fan of mine, for which i must be very grateful
He was 100% correct!!
He was absolutely right. It's an absolute anomaly. Stands up against all of the other great pieces of art in any medium from the 20th century.
I can't even explain how much I love this song. Reminds me of my Dad. 😥❤
Bob Dylan is the greatest folk singer in my lifetime. I am so happy I saw him in concert at the Michigan State Fair.
Lucky you !!! Glad you got that chance.
Vacuum of his lies...whoa... when?
Forced rhymes, yes. Invitations to THINK, yes!
Im 39 years old . As of today , I finally listened to his songs. I missed out !!
I can see why he received a Nobel Prize in Literature for his incredible song lyrics over his lifetime. Absolutely fantastic stuff. This song hits like a sledgehammer even decades later!
Wayne Polk - That's the way 'culture' is built and passed on to subsequent generations. Certain works of visual art, music., poetry and many other human 'creations' stand out in the era in which they came about, and withstand the test of time.
" Like A Rolling Stone " sounds as fresh and new to my ears as it did when I first experienced it walking across campus in the mid 1960's.
A Nobel Prize must be proud to be awarded to Bob Dylan!
the greatest song of all time
You are sbsolutly rigjhtly right
He also won a Pulitzer Prize.
I'm 67 now and I appreciate Bob Dylan more now than ever! Great songwriter, poet, and musician all rolled up in to one!!
@@cristovaljesusamado8455 ja, so ist leider ...
Hey
Im 69..Jan 12 1954
Lost u.found u again..are u there
ABSOLUTELY
I play Dylan songs when my wife is around. She cringes and says his voice is horrible. I tell her I wish I could sing like Bob Dylan. One of the Greatest Voices Of All Time!!!!!
For the 1st time since I was 23 yrs old I can relate once again to this song!!! And I'm 74 now. This song says it all
It is so sad but still good i hope
Getting old is overrated...bur we can still feel strong with this song
I am so scared to get old
I'm grateful that I've lived thru 70's and 80's and survived it lol. Don't be scared about getting old. It's liberating in a way and I will make it! Always have and I know I can. When you get my age, you look to the future and enjoy the time I do have on this earth. No day is promised to any of us. Each day is a gift!
I meant to add 60's in there too! That might have been the hardest yrs to get thru!
Best song ever. Period. I play it in a loop for six hours straight (I suck at math but that's close to 60 times over and over) when I drive from SF to LA and I never get tired of listening to it.
me to when I go to las vegas from Riverside ca.I play this song the whole ride there an back
Do you want to make a deal, bro? Cause you deserve it. Sincerely
In a loop :-D ;-) YES! This is so me!
yes
So How does it feel to be on your own ???? With no direction home a complete unknown like a rolling stone 🎉😊😮
I'm 73 and this was the first record I ever owned as a teenager. Still love this song.
Hello🖐Beautiful, How are you doing? How is everything over there?
Bet it has a few scratches.
Im 70 now and I can still remember the smell and taste of the hashish as the needle dropped into the grooves of the song that made the british invasion fade into the distance. We listened to it many more times that night, and it was like none of us had heard it before even though the record had been out for close to 3 years. Music became something bigger but Bob's poetry opened our minds to things that had been just beyond our grasp up until that moment. It was like we were the flowers of spring opening to the warmth of May's morning sunshine.
This song is so perfect: 'Rolling Stone listed "Like A Rolling Stone" as the "Greatest Song of all Time" in 2011' that tells it too...
And they listed satisfaction in second by The rolling stone
It really is one of the best songs ever written. I went through being homeless and this song soothed me when I felt panicked or depressed every time I played it .Still dose✌
I’d say Led Zeppelin - Stairway To Heaven is number 1. But this is definitely up there. Incredible songwriting.
@@shannonnonnahs6943 I hope you're doing well now!
Meta af
The thing about Dylan, even more than the incredible lyrics (which are unmatched by anyone), is the absolute intensity of his vocals! He puts everything into his vocal attack, his phrasing, the way he'll stretch out a single note or syllable, and he just nails the emotion that is carried in the lyrics, and that lifts the song way beyond a standard "radio hit". A lot of people say "he can't sing"! They couldn't be more wrong. His singing is the single greatest weapon in his arsenal, and that was so from his first record on. As for the music, that's terrific too. "Like a Rolling Stone" was like nothing you'd ever heard in your life before the first time you heard it. And it remains just as powerful and fresh to this day.
He can't sing
Agreed. Dylan’s voice is the basis of his music.
Dylan sang from his heart, an times he was living! One of my favorites!
Dylan
Agreed, so nicely put. I love that he's such an angry singer. Such an expressive singer. Like a mix of singing, pointing a finger, mocking and spoken word. Then again I never thought he couldn't sing. Different singers hit different notes and the charisma a voice has is also important. To little me, at least.
At 72, Dylan never gets old for me. I was there at the beginning and I'll be there till THE END.
I agree MrLouisajr-Bob Dylan is timeless. His lyrics are like NO OTHER!!! Have you ever listened to the song Bob Dylans 115th dream? What a trip!
He is 77.
ill be with you my friend....
I don't think so Sue. I have to check it out
At 75, I wholeheartedly agree.
At age 78, I still recall the first time I heard this song on the car radio. I was mesmerized. And I love the session musicians backing him on Highway 61 Revisited..
There's a book written about this one song and its recording, and apparently out of many takes, there was only one that hit it perfectly, and that's the one we hear. All the others aimed but missed, but the one we know touched something fantastic and powerful, divine and otherworldly. All the musicians were in a trance for that one moment, and thus it touches all of humanity, no matter your age or station in life. Bravo Bob!!!
I read that this was the ONLY take
Actually the one and only take here was a start for a great organ player who was in the studio with them and was a guitar player because he snuck into the studio and played the organ for the first time and improvised all the chords progression that is why you can here the organ slightly later than the beat of the song and most of the time after Dylan sang his line. This was the only time they recorded the song till the end and afterwards Dylan liked the organ sound so they published that take although the organ was made by AL kooper who has never played it before!
One off the best songs as of know and life
@billoddiea i believe it was the first take after Kooper snuck onto the organ, but there were like a dozen previous takes. You can actually listen to them on The Cutting Edge album from the Bootleg Series.
Came here from Restore Me by Tahereh Mafi and to say I'm not disappointed.
Who wouldn't listen to this on repeat whilst dissociating?
Warner ❤
HAAH NO WAY SAME
SAME. 😭😭
SAME, definitely Warners song
Only those listening to Discorporate by Zappa, along with Stuck Inside a Mobile (with the Memphis Blues Again) by Dylan.
And in the End, the Love You Take is Equal to the Love, You Make.
The Beatles.
this song of Bob Dylon really explains the 'unexpected circumstances' and 'ups and downs' of life.
Joseph, well said. When Bob Dylan asks “How does it fill?”I can answer because now I know. When I lost my wife 10 years ago I realized the difference between being alone and being lonely. Going from one place to another like a rolling stone trying to make life easier, I realized that there are many others out there trying to salvage something that would make life easier.
All of Dylan’s songs tell a story set to music and I’m certain there is always someone out here that can connect to it in his/her own way. Thank you Bob for making difficult times a little easier to experience.👍
The summer of ‘65….at 17….turnin’ on the car radio and hearin’ this tune was a great time to be alive and in the winter of ‘24 and listenin’ thru air pods……took me right back to ‘65 and bein‘ 17…insteada 76👏👏👏. 🎶like a rollin’ stone🎶
Cue-The Old Folks Boogie-Little Feat!
"When you ain't got nothing, you got nothing to lose." I love this song!
You're the second person who's put an 'ain't' there that ain't there.
@@JJBushfan what do you mean? Of course it's there. What else could he be saying?
@@MrThermostatic What he sings is 'When you got nothing, you got nothing to lose.' There's no 'ain't' in there. If there were it would be a double negative, but more importantly it would ruin the metre and therefore the flow of the line. And I wasn't being picky in saying it. It was just a casual observation made on the back of a couple of late night scotches. No offence meant to Sylvia R.
@@JJBushfan it's kind of just rolled all together like..."wheny'aint". I can't even hear the line without hearing that ain't sound somewhere in there. You probably never heard it the first time so every subsequent time it's just not noticed
@@sylviar.5553 Intriguingly ambiguous. I'm betting on irony.
There will never be another Bob Dylan.
There will never be another muddy waters either
The Cult of Bob grows bigger every day!
To me, all Bob Dylan songs are so enjoyable and peaceful that I want to listen to them all day
I’m honestly here because I saw this song mentioned in Restore Me, the fourth book in the Shatter Me series. God, this song is awesome.
Love it when that happens. I found Tom Waits in a Poppy Z Brite book
LMAO ME TOO I JUST READ THAT PART RN
Its worth listening trust me
At least you are honest ❤
SAME I JUST READ THAT AND RAN HERE
Rest In Peace to Bob Neauwirth, the guy who is pictured holding the camera on the Highway 61 Revisited album cover. He passed away yesterday, May 18, 2022.
Oh my..praying guy..
So sorry to hear that, this song has such a strong message,so true . I'm so happy I lived in the 60s
God bless
Love from Australia 🇦🇺
Wow. RIP. Did not know that
on my birthday
That photo looks like it could've been taken yesterday.
Bob Dylan looked like he came from the future with that fashion
He don't look like that now.
@@michaelward9343 yea no shit lol, it was 55 years ago
😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@thedude633 🤣😂
Or maybe we're just obsessed with pastiche
Like a Rolling Stone is one of those songs that you recognize with the first few notes.
@@DonnaAbrams-qh7zt One of My favorite 💕 Songs of ALL TIME!!
How often do you hear a great song that you love that you can’t recognize in the first few seconds?
I'm to the point with it where I recognize it from the first strike of the drum.
One of the greatest songs written and performed and still chillingly accurate decades later.
True classic cassidy
A true timeless classic, just like the man himself
Hi
What a perfect way to kick off a song. Those first two drum beats and initial organ note; like you're 1 second in and the song is already freaking awesome.
As Springsteen said....that opening snare drum opened up your mind!!
that organ was a Fluke it was turned down and Bob Dylan Said Turn it up who is That Al Kooper
Al Kooper who played the Hammond B2 organ originally wasn't even invited to the recording but joined in the studio in the hope that he could play on his guitar but he was intimidated by Mike Bloomfield's guitar playing. Instead Kooper approached producer Tom Wilson and told him he had a good part for the organ. Wilson belittled Kooper's organ skills, but did not forbid him to play. "He just sort of scoffed at me ... He didn't say 'no'-so I went out there." Wilson was surprised to see Kooper at the organ but allowed him to play on the track. When Dylan heard a playback of the song, he insisted that the organ be turned up in the mix, despite Wilson's protestations that Kooper was "not an organ player."
@@TINSTAAFL1 That organ is so defining, and then when it meets Bob's harmonica, it just takes the song away into the stratosphere! I can't imagine the tune without Kooper's nerve and ambition.
Absolutely. Well worded description.
My 7 year old just requested this! ❤ Another generation gets to experience Dylan...
She has bad taste. Sorry.
The fact the man has a Nobel prize speaks volumes for his writing by far my favourite artist.
muito boa musica que melodia.
Yeah well Barack Obama's got one too
@@jerrygmarchantmarchant141 he’s not a singer though is he not discrediting his work but Bob Dylan is the only artist to revive one
No it doesn't
@@jerrygmarchantmarchant141 i don't really understand why but it is ok
LIKE A ROLLING STONE...A great hit way back when I was a kid. It still is today and will be for many years to come...kind of like...AMAZING GRACE...it is here forever...
Hello🖐Elizabeth, how are you doing? How is everything over there?
One of the best writers, best singers, best musicians of all times. Thanks for a lifetime of wonderful songs. I'm 62 and have been enjoying your music my whole life.
Overrated as hell
@@anycolouryoulike8567 he is not
@@melephant2177 he is.
Don't think twice, you're exactly right.
exactly
75 years old and I still love it. Thank you, Bob Dylan.
Mike Bloomfield on electric guitar and Al Kooper on the Hammond organ. Great backup band. Still sounds fresh after almost 60 years.
Kooper's write up on how he basically snuck himself onto the recording is priceless.
Man if you were around when Bob Dylan first came out with this song you knew this is an AMERICAN MASTERPIECE written by a lyrical genius.
Uh huh
19 years old and this song changed my life.
This is the greatest poet. I'll never get tired of listening!
The focused simplicity, with such detailed broad strokes. Amazing!
Correct
Daniel Molina I Totally Agree! Dylan's A Genius.
Never
Shakespeare be like wtf
What a song . What a great talent song writer musical genius. I'm 63 and remember this song very well. Woke up with this song on my mind. Thank you Bob.
I recall sitting on the grass on the council strip outside my mum and dads home when I was 15 years old, listening to my transistor radio, and I heard this song come on. It was a revelation, it made me realise that music can actually change the path of your life. So powerful.
Cool!!!
Yeah i felt the same when i heard this song on the radio in the summer of 1965. On november 12,1965 i saw dylan live on his first electric tour in cleveland, ohio and on july17, 1991 i met him down by lake erie. He was walking by himself . He was really nice to me.