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Bob Dylan - Infidels (Remastered) '1983/2018

24bit
Infidels (Remastered)
ArtistBob Dylan Related artists
Album name Infidels (Remastered)
Country
Date 1983/2018
GenreFolk Rock,Singer-Songwriter
Play time : 00:41:54
Format / Bitrate 24 BIT Stereo 1720 Kbps / 48 kHz
Media WEB
Size : 97 / 272 / 515 mb
PriceDownload $4.95
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Tracks list

	Tracklist

01. Jokerman
02. Sweetheart Like You
03. Neighborhood Bully
04. License to Kill
05. Man of Peace
06. Union Sundown
07. I and I
08. Don't Fall Apart on Me Tonight
 
After using Slow Train Coming, Saved and Shot Of Love as sounding boards for his
born-again Christianity, Bob Dylan took a trip to Israel amidst rumors that he
was repudiating his new faith and embracing his Judaic roots. Upon returning
from his overseas excursion, Dylan went straight into the studio with
co-producer Mark Knopfler and emerged with Infidels, a record that found the
legendary singer-songwriter recording songs that were more of a political nature
than a religious one.
 
Backed by a band that includes Knopfler and ex-Stone Mick Taylor on guitar and
the legendary reggae rhythm section of Sly Dunbar and Robbie Shakespeare,
Zimmy's biting songs don't lack for solid musical support. Speaking out with
conviction, Dylan uses the hard-driving Neighborhood Bully to praise Israel's
fortitude amidst a sea of hostile Arab relations, while the feisty troubador
rips into corporate greed within the barrage of twangy country guitar that
defines Union Sundown. Jokerman, one of Dylan's most enduring songs, offers a
flirtation with reggae, with Dylan blowing away on harmonica as Knopfler
provides the perfect accompaniment with his distinctive guitar work.
 
Infidels was the first secular record Bob Dylan recorded since Street Legal, and
it's far more like a classicist Dylan album than that one, filled with songs
that are evocative in their imagery and direct in their approach. This is lean,
much like Slow Train Coming, but its writing is closer to Dylan's peak of the
mid-'70s, and some of the songs here -- particularly on the first side -- are
minor classics, capturing him reviving his sense of social consciousness and his
gift for poetic, elegant love songs. For a while, Infidels seems like a
latter-day masterpiece, but toward the end of the record it runs out of steam,
preventing itself from being a triumph. Still, in comparison to everything that
arrived in the near-decade before it, Infidels is a triumph, finding Dylan
coming tantalizingly close to regaining all his powers. (Stephen Thomas
Erlewine, AMG)
 
Bob Dylan, guitar, harmonica, keyboards, vocals
Additional musicians:
Alan Clark, keyboards
Sly Dunbar, drums, percussion
Clydie King, vocals on Union Sundown
Mark Knopfler, guitar, production
Robbie Shakespeare, bass
Mick Taylor, guitar 

Bob Dylan


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