June 2001
So which are the big winners and why? Guy Davis' "Sweetheart Like You," from the under-appreciated Infidels, is slow and emotive -- and works because of it. Tom Landa & the Paperboys turn "All Along the Watchtower" into an Irish boiler with plenty of urgency. But the best cover of all is by Dylan friend and musical legend Ramblin' Jack Elliott, whose "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" is done to perfection live and introduced by a very funny story. I'll admit that I'm nearly impossible to please when it comes to Dylan covers, so it's probably no surprise that I find a good deal of A Nod to Bob uninspired, mostly because the performers don't attempt enough with the songs, unlike Tom Landa & the Paperboys, and they miss lift off because of it. Even the always-interesting Greg Brown turns in a rendition of "Pledging My Time" that plods too much for its own good. The sound quality is uniformly decent, even with the various recording venues. Dylan fans like me will want this collection because of its alternate looks at the songs -- successful and not -- while the uninitiated would be better off with Highway 61 Revisited (the DCC remaster if you can find it), Blonde on Blonde, or Blood on the Tracks. This is probably not news in either case, but be forewarned that A Nod to Bob is not the party it could have been. GO BACK TO: |