from spin mag: https://www.spin.com/2022/10/bob-dylan-jerry-lee-lewis-tribute/and short speech.
Bob Dylan is the latest artist to add to the outpouring of tributes to Jerry Lee Lewis, who died yesterday (Oct. 28) at age 87. At the end of his concert last night in Nottingham, England, Dylan honored the “Great Balls of Fire” singer with a cover
“[I don’t know] how many of you know, but Jerry Lee’s gone,” Dylan said as he introduced the song. “We gonna play this song, one of his. Jerry Lee will live forever, we all know that.”own Nashville Skyline album). Lewis later covered Dylan’s “Rita May” on his self-titled 1979 album.
Dylan and his band went into a version of “I Can’t Seem To Say Goodbye,” a song originally written by Don Robertson and covered by Lewis on his 1970 Sun Records album A Taste of Country.
Dylan and Lewis first crossed paths in the same recording studio in 1969, with Dylan telling Rolling Stone around that time that he wrote “To Be Alone With You” for the piano rock ‘n’ roller (Lewis never recorded it, so Dylan put it out on his
On Sunday, October 30, 2022 at 8:27:20 AM UTC-4, Chris Pyle wrote:cover and short speech.
from spin mag: https://www.spin.com/2022/10/bob-dylan-jerry-lee-lewis-tribute/
Bob Dylan is the latest artist to add to the outpouring of tributes to Jerry Lee Lewis, who died yesterday (Oct. 28) at age 87. At the end of his concert last night in Nottingham, England, Dylan honored the “Great Balls of Fire” singer with a
his own Nashville Skyline album). Lewis later covered Dylan’s “Rita May” on his self-titled 1979 album.“[I don’t know] how many of you know, but Jerry Lee’s gone,” Dylan said as he introduced the song. “We gonna play this song, one of his. Jerry Lee will live forever, we all know that.”
Dylan and his band went into a version of “I Can’t Seem To Say Goodbye,” a song originally written by Don Robertson and covered by Lewis on his 1970 Sun Records album A Taste of Country.
Dylan and Lewis first crossed paths in the same recording studio in 1969, with Dylan telling Rolling Stone around that time that he wrote “To Be Alone With You” for the piano rock ‘n’ roller (Lewis never recorded it, so Dylan put it out on
and then he returned to stage, at the piano, and broke into "you shake my nerves and you rattle my brain"
from spin mag: https://www.spin.com/2022/10/bob-dylan-jerry-lee-lewis-tribute/and short speech. W
Bob Dylan is the latest artist to add to the outpouring of tributes to Jerry Lee Lewis, who died yesterday (Oct. 28) at age 87. At the end of his concert last night in Nottingham, England, Dylan honored the “Great Balls of Fire” singer with a cover
“[I don’t know] how many of you know, but Jerry Lee’s gone,” Dylan said as he introduced the song. “We gonna play this song, one of his. Jerry Lee will live forever, we all know that.”own Nashville Skyline album). Lewis later covered Dylan’s “Rita May” on his self-titled 1979 album.
Dylan and his band went into a version of “I Can’t Seem To Say Goodbye,” a song originally written by Don Robertson and covered by Lewis on his 1970 Sun Records album A Taste of Country.
Dylan and Lewis first crossed paths in the same recording studio in 1969, with Dylan telling Rolling Stone around that time that he wrote “To Be Alone With You” for the piano rock ‘n’ roller (Lewis never recorded it, so Dylan put it out on his
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