Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Bob Dylan bucked executives at his record label and surprised his fans when he came to Nashville in 1966 to record his classic album Blonde on Blonde . Working with the city's unmatched session musicians Dylan produced a rock & roll masterpiece and went on to record two more albums there. Dylan's embrace of Nashville and its musicians the Nashville Cats inspired many other artists among them Neil Young Joan Baez and Leonard Cohen to follow him to Music City. Around the same time Johnny Cash was recruiting folk and rock musicians including Dylan to appear on his groundbreaking network television show The Johnny Cash Show shot at the Ryman Auditorium home of the Grand Ole Opry. This companion book to the exhibit Dylan Cash and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City looks at the Nashville music scene in the late 1960s and early 1970s a time of great cultural vitality for Music City.
Synopsis
After Bob Dylan came to Nashville in 1966 to record his classic album
Blonde on Blonde, his embrace of Nashville and its unmatched session musicians--known as the Nashville Cats--inspired many other artists, among them Neil Young, Joan Baez, Leonard Cohen, and Paul McCartney, to follow. Around the same time, Johnny Cash was recruiting folk and rock musicians--including Dylan--to appear on his groundbreaking network television show,
The Johnny Cash Show.
This book was published as a companion to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum exhibition Dylan, Cash, and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City and features more than twenty commissioned illustrations by noted artist and musician Jon Langford. This book also includes 240 rare photographs and celebrates a time of great cultural vitality for Nashville, tracking the city's music scene in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and illuminates Nashville's rise as a world-class recording center.