Where did you get that figure from? All I saw was "undisclosed". I thought it might have been more than that.
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When he penned *“Song to*Woody in 62 , whem most charts sounds had the words "twist " in their title.
Did he ever think he'd be selling his catalogue for such a huge amount .
Its alleged to have sold tens of millions of albums, wrote more than*500 songs, which have been *recorded by more than 2,000 artists.
Mind 'blowing ,' and not just in the wind
Where did you get that figure from? All I saw was "undisclosed". I thought it might have been more than that.
Sounds like a good deal for Universal at that price.
Reporting on some media outlets now as an estimated $300 million , guess we will never really know
A great recording from 2006 :
https://youtu.be/0RPkJeziNyI
Great video as well
Here's a little more concerning the sale of Bob Dylan's catalogue https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/07/a...sal-music.html
Remarkable man certainly defined music and perhaps protest within music with his many causes he has sung about, this one is about the wrongly jailed Boxer Hurricane Carter ,who he campaigned for :https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpZvg_FjL3Q
And of course the classic Masters of War https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JEmI_FT4YHU
Genius
Record sales have plumetted.David Crosby also considering selling.
If you can make a shed load of money and your an old timer why not?
I read somewhere that Ray Davies sold all his apart from Waterloo sunset.
It makes sense to liquidate. The pool of most popular songs/albums is just going to get bigger and bigger. And you never know what's around the corner. When the Boomers and Gen Xers are gone, maybe no one will listen to Dylan, the Beatles, the Stones etc. Who knows?
Absolutely. Gilbert and Sullivan operettas have bitten the dust, bar from G&S societies keeping them alive. Rodgers and Hammerstein musicals, still performed quite often in the 90s, are now infrequently seen. The 60s finished over half a century ago. Music from that decade has a similar relevance to me that music from the 1930s had to my parents.
It will be interesting to see what music from the 1960s is still listened to in the 2060s. Barely any would be my guess. I reckon that any music that is still semi popular after 2 generations has done well to survive.
70s music is definitely on the wane. 80s music is seen as "oldies" by Radio 2. Give it 20 years and those who lived through the 80s as teenagers will be in their 70s. Time waits for no man!
I've got an Argos one here you can have for free.
Keep safe in mint condition its soon to be a collectors item and worth billions for generations to come to show bemused folk why we chopped down trees down so one could gaze at a thin paged catalogue of crap andvwatch it play its part in destroying retail department stores and jobs .
My Bob Dylan claim to fame, is when I worked as a golf Instructor in Maine (usa) in 2017 I taught his 11 year old grandson golf while he stayed at our summer camp for 3 weeks. striking resemblance too.
Am I able to say something here ?
The man in his day was a poet in music
But I saw him in Cardiff in 1994 and it was dreadful
Blood on the tracks is his greatest offering in my opinion