Black Crow Blues
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1964 song by Bob Dylan
"Black Crow Blues" | |
---|---|
Song by Bob Dylan | |
from the album Another Side of Bob Dylan | |
Released | August 8, 1964 |
Recorded | June 9, 1964 |
Genre | |
Length | 3:14 |
Tom Wilson |
"Black Crow Blues" is a song written by Bob Dylan, released on his 1964 album Another Side of Bob Dylan.
Usually considered a minor work in Dylan's oeuvre, "Black Crow Blues" is the first song he released in which he plays the
Meade "Lux" Lewis".[1]
Michael Gray maintains thus:
- "Black Crow Blues" is itself terrific for the way that it tears into the blues structure with something so fresh, so invigoratingly off the wall, that it makes you laugh just to hear it. At the same time, and without sacrificing any of the hipness paraded by "wasted and worn out" of "My wrist was empty / But my nerves were kickin' / Tickin' like a clock", he nevertheless brings to it, particularly in the last verse, a special rural feel:
- Black crows in the meadow
- Across the broad highway.
- It's funny, honey,
- I don't feel much like a
- Scarecrow today
- so that in the end it is a strange sort of country blues.[2]
Dylan has never performed "Black Crow Blues" live.
References
- ISBN 978-0-8230-7974-2.
- ISBN 978-0-304-70762-1.