Bob Dylan

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Bob Dylan is an American singer-songwriter. He was born Robert Allen Zimmerman in Duluth, Minnesota, on May 24, 1941, the son of Jewish immigrants from eastern Europe.

Beginning in the early 1960s as a Woody Guthrie-influenced solo folk singer with an acoustic guitar, he had a huge impact in the middle of the decade by switching to electric, adding a back-up band, and bringing literacy to rock'n'roll. In the late sixties, after a lay-off due to a serious (and at first mysterious) motor-cycle accident, he became identified as the prototype singer-songwriter, at the same time as his music, some say deliberately, lost much of its urgency.

It is generally agreed that the quality of Dylan's records over his long career has varied enormously. His most acclaimed albums are, from the sixties: The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, Bringing it All Back Home, Highway 61 Revisited, Blonde on Blonde and John Wesley Harding; from the seventies: Blood on the Tracks, and Desire, and from the nineties, Time Out of Mind. His two most recent albums, Love and Theft and Modern Times, have also been warmly received.

The Basement Tapes were recorded in 1967 while recuperating from his accident and circulated on a number of bootlegs before a selection was officially issued on two LPs in 1975. The musicians featured include those who went on to form The Band, whose first album, Music from Big Pink, icluded some of the same songs.

Recently he has become an acclaimed disc jockey, presenting his choice of music in Theme Time Radio Hour.