News

Bob Dylan Penned John Lennon Tribute After Touring His Home. In 2009, Bob Dylan was touring Europe when he decided to use one of his off days to tour the childhood home of John Lennon in Woolton, ...
John Lennon plays his Gibson J-160E in his room at the George V Hotel in Paris, January 16, 1964. The Beatles first heard Bob Dylan's music during their January–February residency at the city's ...
John Lennon Was In Awe Of This Bob Dylan Track. When John Lennon was first arriving to the United States as part of the new, suit-clad rock band, the Beatles, Bob Dylan was releasing the third and ...
John Lennon and Yoko Ono in the audience during Bob Dylan’s show at the Isle of Wight Festival, 31st August 1969. (Photo by Jeffrey Mayer/WireImage) The Final Cut ...
Bob Dylan Offers Private Performance To John Lennon The Beatles’ “Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)” is one of John Lennon’s most notable attempts at writing through an introspective ...
The first Lennon solo record is John, Ringo and Klaus Voorman. “John Wesley Harding” is Bob Dylan on piano or guitar, Charlie McCoy on bass and Kenny Buttrey on bass.
Bob Dylan and The Beatles had a mutual admiration and went on to inspire each other to pen some of the best songs. ... "I think Paul got the record from a French DJ," John Lennon recalled.
Within Lennon’s playlist was also a copy of the sole Dylan song he added on: “Positively 4th Street.” Photo: John Lennon, Paris, January 16, 1964. (Harry Benson/Express/Hulton Archive/Getty ...
John Lennon did not single out Bob Dylan in his statement. Rather, he made the sweeping claim that much of America’s country, western, and folk music all came from the British Isles.
In an interview edited for clarity and length, Tench, 71, talked about how two albums by John Lennon and Bob Dylan influenced the production on his new record, how a free-verse poem he’d ...
In an interview edited for clarity and length, Tench, 71, talked about how two albums by John Lennon and Bob Dylan influenced the production on his new record, how a free-verse poem he’d ...