Books tagged: bob dylan

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Found: 5 results

Freedom Bird    by Allan Cole
Price: $4.99 USD. 113980 words. Published on February 5, 2011. .

THREE YOUNG SOLDIERS, home from the Vietnam War, discover themselves and their future in San Francisco during the "Summer Of Love."
Drown    by Albie Cullen
Price: $0.99 USD. 81130 words. Published on February 8, 2011. .

Billy Sunday, seemingly always on the verge of rock superstardom is struggling to find himself. But before he can avoid parlaying a misspent youth into a wasted mid-life existence he finds himself at the center of a murder investigation. Drown is a fast paced murder mystery that twists and turns through the music industry.
The Singles of Bob Dylan    by Nick Kniola
Price: $3.30 USD. 8910 words. Published on August 16, 2011. .

The Singles of Bob Dylan provides a brief glimpse into the singles commercially released by Bob Dylan in the United States throughout his career, with descriptions and facts about each of the songs in over forty singles. A brief paragraph of each single allows the reader to find out about some recordings that were released on albums and others that were released exclusively as singles.
Barb Jungr - Essay on pop singers and vocal timbre for Spiked Online 2005    by Dan Travis
Price: $1.00 USD. 3360 words. Published on March 28, 2012. .

In 2005 Barb Jungr, acclaimed British singer, songwriter and performer, wrote this article for Spiked Online, it was immediately picked up by cultural commentators and has been widely quoted ever since. Jungr's understanding of singing, and performance gave a fascinating insight into the way we hear contemporary voices. We await her follow up with anticipation.
Just Like a Woman: The Rock Criticism of Ellen Willis    by Feedback Press
Price: $0.99 USD. 4110 words. Published on April 10, 2012. .

The 1960s, Ellen Willis said, were a time when magazines saw that “there was this thing called youth culture, and they were interested in getting authentic young people to write about it.” Willis was one of these. Right out of the box, her rock criticism was as unsentimental as it was passionate, with the publication of a 1967 essay in Commentary about Bob Dylan that was personal journalism at it.