New studio album, featuring 10 tracks, the Jack Frost-produced album is the 36th studio set and marks the first new music from the artist since 2012’s Tempest.
Regarding the repertoire on this album, Bob Dylan commented, “It was a real privilege to make this album. I've wanted to do something like this for a long time but was never brave enough to approach 30-piece complicated arrangements and refine them down for a 5-piece band. That's the key to all these performances. We knew these songs extremely well. It was all done live. Maybe one or two takes. No overdubbing. No vocal booths. No headphones. No separate tracking, and, for the most part, mixed as it was recorded. I don't see myself as covering these songs in any way. They've been covered enough. Buried, as a matter a fact. What me and my band are basically doing is uncovering them. Lifting them out of the grave and bringing them into the light of day.”
Bob Dylan's five previous studio albums have been universally hailed as among the best of his storied career, achieving new levels of commercial success and critical acclaim for the artist. The Platinum-selling Time Out Of Mind from 1997 earned multiple Grammy Awards, including Album Of The Year, while “Love and Theft” continued Dylan's Platinum streak and earned several Grammy nominations and a statue for Best Contemporary Folk album. Modern Times, released in 2006, became one of the artist's most popular albums, selling more than 2.5 million copies worldwide and earning Dylan two more Grammys. Together Through Life became the artist's first album to debut at #1 in both the U.S. and the UK, as well as in five other countries, on its way to surpassing sales of one million copies. Tempest received unanimous worldwide critical acclaim upon release and reached the Top 5 in 14 countries, while the artist s globe-spanning concert tours of the past few years have heavily emphasized that album s singular repertoire. Bob Dylan has sold more than 125 million records around the world.
Review
Other people's songs have long been a staple for Bob Dylan, who first made
his name in Greenwich Village by singing folk songs in the early '60s and often
returned to old tunes as the years rolled by. Sometimes, he'd dip into the
pre-WWII collection of standards known as the Great American Songbook, peppering
setlists with unexpected selections as early as the '80s and even covering Dean
Martin's “Return To Me” for The Sopranos in 2001, and made no secret of his
affection for old-fashioned crooning on the records he's made since
2001's Love And Theft, but even with this long history of overt affection for
pre-rock & roll pop, the existence of 2015's Shadows In The Night might
come as a surprise. Shadows In The Night finds the songwriter whose work marks
the divide where artists were expected to pen their own material finding
sustenance in the Great American Songbook, with every one of its songs recorded
at some point by Frank Sinatra. Its songs are old and Shadows In The Night is
appropriately a defiantly old-fashioned album: a record the way they used to
make them, long before Dylan had a recording contract of his own. Archaic though
it may be—it's a mere 10 songs lasting no longer than 35 minutes, just like
all the long-players of the '50s—it's hard to call it musty, not when Dylan
invested considerable energy in adapting these songs to the confines of his
five-piece road band. Occasionally, this roadhouse crew is augmented by horns
but the brass coloring bleeds into the sweet, mournful slide of Donnie
Herron's pedal steel, accentuating that these renditions aren't nostalgic
covers but reflections of Dylan's present. His voice shows gravelly signs of
wear but he knows how to use his weathered instrument to its best effect,
concentrating on the cadence of the lyrics and digging deep into their emotional
undercurrent. In that sense, Shadows In The Night a truer Sinatra tribute than
the stacks of smiling, swinging empty tuxes snapping along to “It Had To Be
You,” for Dylan inhabits these songs like an actor, just like Frank did way
back when. What Dylan is saluting is not the repertoire, per se—none of these
songs are heavily associated with the Chairmen Of The Board—but rather the
mournful intimacy of Sinatra's “saloon” songs, the records he made to be
played during the pitch black of the night. Four of the songs here can be found
on 1957's Where Are You?, one of the very best of its kind, and that connection
accentuates how Dylan has made a saloon song album with a band that could be
heard at a saloon: just a guitar quintet, taking a moment to breathe, sigh and
perhaps weep. The fact that the feel is so richly idiosyncratic is a testament
to just how well he knows these tunes and these slow, winding arrangements are
why Shadows In The Night feels unexpectedly resonant: it's a testament to how
deeply Dylan sees himself in these old songs. Stephen Thomas Erlewine –
Allmusic.com