1967 Basement Tapes recordings

E97695

The 1967 Basement Tapes recordings are a legendary series of informal, roots-oriented sessions by Bob Dylan and The Band that became foundational to the Americana and folk-rock canon.

Aliases (1)

Statements (49)
Predicate Object
instanceOf Americana recordings
bootleg recordings
demo recordings
folk rock recordings
roots rock recordings
artist Bob Dylan NERFINISHED
The Band NERFINISHED
associatedWithGroup Bob Dylan and The Band NERFINISHED
bootleggedSince late 1960s
circulatedAs underground tapes
contains cover versions
original songs by Bob Dylan
traditional songs
countryOfRecording United States NERFINISHED
criticalReputation foundational to Americana canon
legendary
seminal folk-rock recordings
fullyReleasedAs The Bootleg Series Vol. 11: The Basement Tapes Complete NERFINISHED
genre Americana
country rock
folk rock
roots rock
hasSetting basement of Big Pink
influencedArtist Fairport Convention NERFINISHED
Gram Parsons NERFINISHED
The Band NERFINISHED
The Byrds NERFINISHED
influencedGenre Americana music NERFINISHED
alt-country
country rock
language English
notableSong I Shall Be Released NERFINISHED
Nothing Was Delivered NERFINISHED
Tears of Rage NERFINISHED
This Wheel's on Fire NERFINISHED
Too Much of Nothing NERFINISHED
You Ain't Goin' Nowhere NERFINISHED
partiallyReleasedAs The Basement Tapes (1975 album) NERFINISHED
producerRole self-produced
recordedAfter Bob Dylan motorcycle accident of 1966
recordedAtLocation Big Pink NERFINISHED
West Saugerties, New York NERFINISHED
Woodstock area, New York NERFINISHED
recordedInYear 1967
recordingTechnology reel-to-reel tape recorder
recordingType home recordings
informal sessions
sourceFor The Basement Tapes (1975 album) NERFINISHED
The Bootleg Series Vol. 11: The Basement Tapes Complete NERFINISHED

Referenced by (2)
Subject (surface form when different) Predicate
Bob Dylan and The Band
notableFor
Bob Dylan and The Band ("The Basement Tapes")
notableWork

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