“CBS Records documented Bob Dylan’s October 26, 1963, performance at New York City’s venerable Carnegie Hall for a proposed live LP provisionally titled In Concert, pressing acetates and even printing cardboard sleeves before abruptly scuttling the project for good. The assassination of John F. Kennedy altered most everyone’s plans, of course, and legend also proclaims that execs were flummoxed by the six-minute spoken narrative “Last Thoughts on Woody Guthrie,” one of several cuts added to the album from an April 12 gig at New York’s Town Hall. Bootlegs circulated for years, and in 1991 Columbia officially issued two cuts — the ripped-from-the-headlines “Who Killed Davey Moore?” and the infamous “Talkin’ John Birch Society Blues” — as part of the box set The Bootleg Series, Vols. 1-3. Finally, in conjunction with the 2005 release of Martin Scorsese’s documentary portrait No Direction Home, the label released this six-song promotional disc, beautifully packaged in the vein of the original In Concertcover but still frustratingly incomplete (not to mention unavailable via traditional retail channels). What’s left is an extraordinary record of the young Dylan at the apex of his craft, in transition from the protest anthems on which his early fame rests toward the deeply personal and hauntingly poetic songs that remain his greatest legacy. From a fiery rendition of “The Times They Are a-Changin’” to a jaw-droppingly beautiful “Boots of Spanish Leather,” this is music that transcends space and time. Until the Sony BMG brain trust wises up and releases the Carnegie Hall tapes in full, consumers are heartily recommended to seek out bootleg releases, in particular Wild Wolf’s 1997 release In Concert, which even boasts CBS’ original cover design for good measure.” ~ Jason Ankeny – allmusic.com
Courtesy of Don Hunstein.
Carnegie Hall tape boxes
SW-77110 work tapes were a compilation made from both the Carnegie Hall and the Town Hall concerts. Note the inclusion of songs not played at Carnegie Hall. The tracks were compiled on 17 March 1964, with the unofficial working title “Bob Dylan at Carnegie Hall” which was soon more accurately renamed as one of the early versions of the never released album “Bob Dylan In Concert”.
“Here’s one of our favorite items from the library: a press sheet from around the release of Bob’s March 1965 masterpiece Bringing It All Back Home.”
Legacy Recordings 20120524
“Folk singer and songwriter Bob Dylan, 22, performed on Nov. 8, 1963. The location is unknown.”
Maybe. Similar look to the Carnegie Hall, 26 October 1963 performance, but no stool with notes and as Peter points out no guitar microphone, but where is this concert?
http://www.cbsnews.com/
Carnegie Hall with Harold Leventhal
Carnegie Hall with Suze Rotolo (Photo by Jim Marshall)
Dylan performs a sound check during his first appearance at Carnegie Hall in 1963 (Photo by Don Hunstein)
Outside Carnegie Hall (Photo by Don Hunstein)
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