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List Price: $24.95 | | Label: Video Music, Inc.
Salesrank: 26780
Released: July 17, 2007 |
| Our Price: $16.00 |
| Used Price: $18.52 |
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MPAA Rating: NR (Not Rated) Media: DVD |
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| Features:
Best of Color DVD NTSC | |
Editorial Review:
This DVD Set is a 2-disc documentary covering Dylans life and music from his schooldays to his conversion in the late 1970s to fundamental Christianity. With contributions from colleagues as diverse as his high school English teacher, his school friends
Bob Dylan: The Golden Years 1962-1978 Reviews:
Would be better with Closed Captions 
2009-11-22 - It is a very interesting video. However, it would be much better with closed captions for those who can hear sounds, but cannot distinguish words.
Beware 
2008-02-07 - Save your money on this one---a complete waste. No footage of Dylan and no audio either---stick to the dvd's with the autual man himself appearing, talking and singing
Dylan fans will love it 
2008-01-07 - I love this DVD because I am a MAJOR Dylan fan..I think it will appeal
to others such as myself. It does not contain much music but has interviews with those people who have worked with him, written about him, etc. for the bulk of his working life. I found the interviews very, very
interesting and something I will go back and listen to over and over again. For those who are not interested in stuff about Dylan, and just
want music, this would not be recommended.
No new material 
2007-08-23 - I just want to emphasize what Michael Dalton said in his review. All this is is two previously released DVDs: Tales from a Golden Age: Bob Dylan 1941-1966 and After the Crash: Bob Dylan 1966-1978 placed in a new cardboard box. Nothing new. Nothing added except the printing on the box.
If you don't have these other DVDs, you can buy this set and save a few bucks. If you do have the others, save your money.
dry and brittle 
2007-08-20 - This is really a disappointment. There are much better Biographies out there. The Martin Scorcese one and the other about the Rolling Thunder and the Evangelical phases are much better. This one relies on interviews with a few critics who go though the album releases one by and give a commentary about their strengths and weaknesses. Blah. The most interesting part was seeing Weberman in person; he almost looks and sounds normal. Oh yes, and hearing from one of the fellas who worked on Blood on the Tracks; that was nice.
But sorry, just not enough archival footage