
Chickens, screaming cows throw up, cowboy sunset on the prairie stage ... And then a voice: "Take this Bob Dylan wagon wheel and get it on this wagon, and Dad will go to the city next week!" Bobby D & # 39; s pursued dreams once or twice, as this little gem of an unfinished song fell out of his mouth at a jam-seine in the recordings of “Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid”. This is an amazing song, melody is an extraordinary song, harmony requires being late, and the words evoke the pastoral vision of the old west. It’s as if the song was a fragment of an old folk tune that Dylan never hears.
But if the song is all that, why did he just leave her? The song was heavily loaded, embraced by numerous artists, and people like it! Although, sometimes I have to stop calling this song for a moment. Actually, this is not a song at all. Rather, it is a memorable and powerful choir. It was successfully used, thus, by the acoustic quintet in New York, The Old-Time Medical Wolf Show.
They recorded a four-minute version of the song (you can find it on YouTube), in which they wrote their own poems and used the song Dylan as refinancing. The tune they use in their version is effective and fits well with the chorus; and lyrics, although for the most part it's just a bunch of words, such as banjo, North Carolina, string tape, etc., filled with rhyme. Images that are a very "deep southern country, an incoherent group of Woody Guthrie" are a natural continuation of the work with the choir.
The problem is that the song and the record that the band plays is unforgettable, but only because of the part of Bob Dylan. "Tell me, mom, like wind and rain, Tell me, mom, like a train to the south, ayyyyy, mom rock me." This is a pure and simple lyrical prowess. This is not a story about a rambling game girl returning home to see his lady. This is not about an old farm hitting a hay with a farmer’s daughter. This is not a thug smoking the last cigar before a train robbery. All this at once. And I think writing this helped me to understand. I'm going to reveal a secret, Bob, so I hope you listen:
The wagon wheel, Bob Dylan, is only part of the van. So you only give us a part of the song!

