December 01, 2013

Bob Dylan: His Website Let's You Direct His First Interactive Music Video


                                                                       

                                                                           

                                                                    

Bob Dylan was always a legend in music since he hit the scene in the 1960's, and is now doing something very innovative in this age of technology. 
How many people of my generation don’t have at least one Bob Dylan song in their collection?

Here’s some 1964 footage of “Hey Mr Tambourine Man” as I have always liked this song a lot, and many others too. It has been covered by The Byrds and Melanie Safka as well as others.
Apart from his solo work I still enjoy listening to "The Traveling Wilbury's".
This group was George Harrison's idea.
                                                                 


                                                                    

Many people have claimed they can sing like Bob Dylan. Many more have claimed they can sing better and act better than Bob Dylan.

But how many can claim they have directed Bob Dylan? From today the answer to that one could be millions.

A new promotional video for Dylan's classic, groundbreaking and enigmatic 1965 song, Like A Rolling Stone a song which never had a filmclip at the time - will allow viewers to interact with, redirect and have a wholly individual experience.

The video, made available on BobDylan.com at 4am Australian eastern summer time, can be experienced as one regulation viewing from beginning to end.(you can follow the link watch it there).

However, pressing "play" kicks off new technology which gives you what its creators are calling “16 different television channels” within the video.

Within each of the 16 channels are people lip syncing the lyrics so that the song proceeds, no matter which "channel" you have chosen, but what you see will be completely different to what anybody else watching at the same time will see.

Familiar American television shows and faces feature in the multiple strands of the video and presumably there will be assumptions made about the relationship between some of those faces and the characters described in the long and much debated song.

Since Dylan has a never apologise/never explain policy on his songs that speculation can proceed without fear of contradiction whether you are watching this on your computer, tablets or smart phones.

The video is not a sign that there has been a re-release of the song, which was Dylan’s most successful single, reaching number 2 in the US charts in 1965 despite its extravagant, for the time, length of six minutes and 13 seconds.

It is, however, a sign that there is a new packaging of Dylan albums, a 47CD box with 35 studio albums, six live albums and a double disc rarities collection.

Given that it is called The Complete Album Collection Volume 1, more reissues, and possibly more interactive videos, are likely.

By Bernard Zuel

                                                               


Above picture credit: The Guardian, and more information.

Here’s another treat featuring Bob Dylan and many other favourites of mine. 
It's almost a Who's Who of Classic Rock. Incredible!!

                                                                     


                                                                        

                                                                  

George Harrison, Bruce Springsteen, Mick Jagger, Bob Dylan, Billy Joel, Ringo Starr and others perform "I Saw Her Standing There" at the 1988 Hall of Fame Inductions. http://rockhall.com/
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