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Self Portrait (1970)

selfportrait.jpg
3.666665
Average: 3.7 (12 votes)

Album Info:

Engineering -- Neil Wilburn, Don Puluse, Glynn Johns
Photography -- John Cohen, Al Clayton, Camera Press
Album Design -- Ron Coro
Cover Painting -- Bob Dylan

Byron T. Bach
Brenton Banks
George Binkley
Norman Blake
David Bromberg
Albert W. Butler
Kenneth Buttrey
Fred Carter Jr.
Marvin D. Chantry
Ron Cornelius
Charlie Daniels
Rick Danko
Dottie Dillard
Peter Drake
Delores Edgin
Solie J. Fott
Bubba Fowler
Dennis A. Good
Emanuel Green
Hilda Harris
Levon Helm
Frederick Hill
Karl T. Himmel
Garth Hudson
Lillian Hunt
Martin Katahn
Doug Kershaw
Millie Kirkham
Al Kooper
Sheldon Kurland
Charlie McCoy
Martha McCrory
Barry McDonald
Richard Manuel
Oliver Mitchell
Carol Montgomery
Bob Moore
Gene A. Mullins
Gary Van Osdale
June Page
Rex Peer
Bill Pursell
Robbie Robertson
Albertine Robinson
Alvin Rogers
Frank C. Smith
Maeretha Stewart
Anthony Terron
Bob Wilson
Stu Woods

Comments

Not Really A Bad Album

3

While Self Portrait is not a terrible album, it is not really a terrific album either. As a double album, it was not well thought out. I compare it to U2s Rattle and Hum - a mishmash of covers and live performances, without a clear anchor or theme.

Dylan does some terrific covers and some not so good covers. There's a story that at the time Dylan and Simon & Garfunkel were not on speaking terms (not sure why) and Dylan recorded a bad cover of The Boxer here to get back at them for covering The Times They Are A-Changin'.

But Dylan has always been on good speaking terms with Gordon Lightfoot as far as I can recall. Why then, did he do such an aweful cover of Early Morning Rain?

Anyway, it could have been a good album without all the fluff. All The Tired Horses is irritating. You know a great album is often defined by its opener - I recall such albums as Desire, Blood On The Tracks, Slow Train Coming, Bringing It All Back Home, Modern Times, Infidels, Blonde On Blonde and Highway 61 Revisited - all with great opening songs. The opener here is very weak in comparison.

The highlights are Livin' The Blues, It Hurts Me Too, and the two versions of Alberta.

If you are not a Dylan completist, but new to Dylan, this is probably not the best place to start your Dylan collection.

When Dylan switched to David Geffen's Assylum Records to record his 1974 album Planet Waves, Columbia released "Dylan" before PWs release to (as some say), get back at Dylan for switching labels. "Dylan" contains outtakes from the Self Portrait sessions. Some of the covers on "Dylan" are not that bad - better, in fact than some on this album.

If one looks at the whole picture of Dylan's career, one can forgive him for releasing some mediocre albums once in a while. This one is not among his greatest, but it is interesting, and contains some gems. Dylan is and always will be an experimenter. Some of his experiments hit the nail on the head, and some go awry. This album is not a "nail on the head" one, but it offers some perspective on Dylan's talent.

Dude

No Rating

Underrated. Wether he meant to or not its a great album. I could listen to Wigwam for hours.

self portrait

5

It amazes me that people can still crucify this album. It has only taken the public 38 years to realize just how amazing and ahead of it's time it really was. Just think in 38 more years what people will be saying about it. It is so ahead of its time that even the Artist, Himself, slammed it. It is so from an outer (inner) body experience that poor Bobby has not even grasped its value. For shame!

sin exagerar

3

son simples grabaciones de ensayos
y el disco es un puñetero caos
pueden llegar a sonar bien porque dylan y sus músicos no son ni sordos ni mancos
eso sí, yo le pondría 5 estrellas por ser el vacilón más grande de la historia del rock

Days of 49

No Rating

Why when I play Days of 49, Early Morning Rain plays??...just curious

Pagasaurus

This album is BRILLIANT!

5

I really think you're all missing it. Stop looking for 'meanings' and hidden messages and just LISTEN. Dylan's singing on this album, his phrasing and the way he times the lyrics, the absolute mastery and command he has over his voice, is sublime. I truly believe that, at least on this album, he deserves comparison with ANY world-class vocalist (Sinatra, Fitzgerald, the usual suspects) for the way he delivers these songs (not counting the live tracks, which I love for different reasons). Forget analysing, like I said at the beginning, JUST LISTEN!

Hate deep, emotional songs? Then, this is for you!

3

What did it mean? Who knows…personally, I don’t think Dylan himself truly knew. Nevertheless, it came out as the third part of the ‘Country Trilogy’ ("John Wesley Harding" and "Nashville Skyline" as the first two parts), and confused just about everyone. The set is filled with songs that I’ve never heard of, and while some are good (“Copper Kettle” and “Days of ‘49”), the vast majority are just embarrassing (“Blue Moon” and “The Boxer” is a laugh). The originals here are awful. What makes it hard to believe is that this is the same guy that, four years earlier, wrote "Blonde On Blonde". “The Mighty Quinn” finally makes its’ first legal appearance…as a sloppy live recording. “Like A Rolling Stone”, “She Belongs To Me” and “Minstrel Boy” are also live tracks, seemingly coming out of nowhere between the studio tracks. “Like A Rolling Stone” and “She Belongs To Me” are awful versions of the classic tracks. “Wigwam” (which was bizarrely released as a single) and “Woogie Boogie” are actually instrumentals! Nevertheless, it isn’t all a freak show, so maybe if you really enjoyed "Nashville Skyline", you’ll like this.

Okay Is Accurate to Me

2

I like it because it's Bob, and I always enjoy listening to what he's trying to do with artistically with the music. That being said, I personally just can't consider this a good or great record.

Dave

Solid

4

What does Greil Marcus know?
This is a great album (TTRH in 1970).

Selfportrait

4

I absolutely agree with the above. This is one of rock's history most underrated albums and souds today almost like a TTRH transmission with Dylan singing all songs himself.
Don't miss this one, folks!

Underrated

4

This is where Dylan really throws down the gauntlet. For all the folks that thought they knew him and where was headed, we are given this "self portrait" where our hero covers other's tunes and throws in the first of his live reworkings of older songs. He was crucified for this crime back in the day, but time has been kind. Sure, this record is no Blonde on Blonde, but it does add sone insight to who Bob Dylan is as an artist. It's not nearly as bad as many have claimed it to be.

Many people has said it's

3

Many people has said it's one of the worst but it's quite interesting to me. Certainly tere's some strange things that are all but listenable, but there's other really interesting. My favourites in this album are Alberta, Early mornig rain, Bell isle, Take a message to Mary, The boxer, Living the blues and, specially, Let it be me.

Self-Portait

5

Although Bob has certainly released albums that in popular and critical perception were worse than Self-Portrait (Knocked Out Loaded, Down In The Groove, even 1973’s Dylan album) none have received the amount of derision and scorn that this one did. Why exactly? Of all of Bob’s musical U-turns that could’ve turned into career suicides (going from covers to originals, going from protest to personal, going from acoustic to electric, going from rock star to recluse hermit and then returning as a country gentleman) this was the only one that didn’t bring him for fans that he alienated in the process. It was the first move he made that didn’t seem wise in retrospect. Plus the title, Self-Portrait, certainly promised a far more in-depth and personal view of the artist than it delivered. But I think the thing that still bugs Dylan fans about Self-Portrait is the big question that hovers over the entire album: Why’d he do it? Was recording an album almost entirely of covers a big F.U. to Albert Grossman who he was suing for control of his songwriting royalties? (Much like Lou Reed’s Metal Machine Music). Or even a big F.U. to all of those rabid fans who were dissecting even the trite clichés of Nashville Skyline hoping for a deeper meaning? Much like the motorcycle accident, a way/excuse to slow down the star-making treadmill he was trapped on. Or had the “amnesia” set in and this was the best that Bob could do? He has claimed that Self-Portrait was in his own way his “bootleg” record. What did he mean by that? It’s not like this was previously unreleased (legally) material that he put out, like The Bootleg Series or even The Basement Tapes, he deliberately recorded this to sound like a bootleg that didn’t exist. Considering that the big Bob bootleg at the time was The Great White Wonder, which mixed 1961 Dinkytown recordings with 1967 Woodstock demos, he might have meant that Self-Portrait was just as jumbled, schizophrenic and incompatible with itself. For those looking for something Bob’s lyrics, this double album was certainly a disappointment. He didn’t even write 2/3rd of the songs. And those he did write were either really sloppy live versions from the Isle of Wight Festival of previously released songs, or songs with no words (“Woogie Boogie”, Wigwam”) or only two lines repeated ad infinitum (“All The Tired Horses”). Really the only new lyrics on here belonged to “Living The Blues” and “Minstrel Boy”. But I like it. It’s one of my all-time favorite Dylan albums. Of course, that may just be my tendency to root for the underdog. Plus the fact that I was not around to be disappointed during its initial release. But really it’s not that bad. If you look at it right. Don’t think of it as an accurate, in-depth look into Dylan’s whole life. Rather see it as a blurry snapshot from a day in the life. Singing along to a couple of pop tunes on the radio that he kind of likes (“The Boxer”, “Early Morning Rain”). Remembering some old tunes from his past growing up in the 50s (“Blue Moon”, “Let It Be Me”). But mostly some older folk tunes that he discovered later and inspired him in the early days playing (“Copper Kettle”, “Belle Isle”, “Little Sadie”, “Alberta #1” & ”#2”). Even trying to figure out the chords to one of them (“In Search Of Little Sadie”). Goofing around outside the studio making music, ala The Basement Tapes (“Woogie Boogie”, “Minstrel Boy”). Trying to figure out some words (“Wigwam”) or at least the next line (“All The Tired Horses”) of some new songs he’s just started writing. Going to his day job singing songs he doesn’t really feel connected to anymore (the live versions of “She Belongs To Me” and “Like A Rolling Stone” with the forgotten lyrics). It’s almost Dylan’s most recorded record (at least until Empire Burlesque). Unlike all Dylan albums up to this point (and most after) which sound like they were recorded in under a week with a new group of under-rehearsed musicians learning the songs for the first time. This album features what is Dylan’s first vocal overdub, when he harmonizes with himself (almost) on “The Boxer”. And while there are some definite recording tricks and time taken on this album there is still a certain amount of the usual sloppiness on the album (like the unmistakable error that ruins the otherwise perfect “Days Of 49”). But it’s like he’s taken these little doodles on crumpled up napkins and put them into these ornate gilded frames. Much the same way Phil Spector’s production transformed the Beatles’ Get Back project into the perplexing Let It Be. Definitely not what anyone wanted or expected at the time. In some respects, it was so weird, that every album that got decent critical or popular acclaim after it (New Morning, Blood On The Tracks, Infidels, Oh Mercy, Time Out Of Mind) were considered comebacks.

The First Official Dylan Bootleg

3

I think some people don't get Self Portrait (or Saved or Under the Red Sky, for that matter) because they come to it with "Highway 61 Revisited" or "Blonde on Blonde" expectations. Every album should be taken individually. Self Portrait has much more laid-back, casual goals. It's sort of like Dylan's first official bootleg album combined with an episode of "Theme Time Radio Hour"; a hodgepodge of recordings representing Dylan casually introducing us to the songwriters and music styles that influence him. I see Self Portrait as Dylan telling us he's not the infallible god so many unbalanced 60's freaks thought him to be. Take a listen to Theme Time Radio Hour. It's pretty much the same atmosphere. Jovial, casual, and fun.

Haha... And by the way, the version of 'Like a Rolling Stone' on this album is a good example of something being so bad it's good. Dylan messes the lyrics up so badly that language ceases to be important to the song. Here's my favorite 'Self Portrait Rolling Stone' lyric slip-up:

"You said you'd never compromise with a mystery tram wid a ramble in his eye. Heayahoooovacuum ub his eyes. As you stare into the vacuum of his eyes. And saaay do. Would you like to? Come on, now, would you like to. Come on and make a deal."

Fun Fact: This recording is the only Bob Dylan recording in known existence to feature the word 'Heayahoooovacuum."