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Bob Dylan: A Life in over 100 PopSpots. A compilation of many of our Popspots on Dylan from Facebook plus some from the website. Note: For most of the horizontal photos, you can ENLARGE THEM for easier reading by clicking on them or dragging the photo to your desktop. To see larger versions of some of the entries go to the PopSpotsNYC Facebook page and look in the archive of photos. Note: This is a work in progress. They are in chronological order by year only, not necessarily within the year. Baby Bob Bob Dylan (Robert Allen Zimmerman) was born on May 24, 1941. So in this photo he would be about two years old. circa 1943 - Baby Bob with mother, Beatty, at right. 1956 - Bob at Camp Hertzl, Webster, Wisconsin. circa 1956 - Bob and his buddies at Camp Hertzl, Wisconsin. Front Row: Larry Keegan, Jerry Waldman, Bobby Zimmerman (Dylan), Louis Kemp, David Unowsky. (photo by fellow camper Mark Alpert) circa 1956 - Bob and his buddies at Camp Hertzl, Webster, Wisconsin. Front Row: Larry Keegan, Jerry Waldman, Bobby Zimmerman (Dylan), Louis Kemp, David Unowsky. (photo by fellow camper Mark Alpert) circa 1956 - BOB DYLAN, approximately age 15, in an unverified photo reportedly taken in the basement of his house in Hibbing Minnesota. 1956 - BOB DYLAN with Dale Boutang on Dale's Harley in Dylan's driveway, 1956. . .Location 2425 7th Avenue East at 25th Street, Hibbing, MN. . .photo by Dylan's mother Beatty Zimmerman from the collection of Leroy Hoikkala and Sharon Ness. 1956 - WIDER VIEW - BOB DYLAN with Dale Boutang on Dale's Harley in Dylan's driveway, 1956. . .Location 2425 7th Avenue East at 25th Street, Hibbing, MN. . . photo by Dylan's mother Beatty Zimmerman from the collection of Leroy Hoikkala and Sharon Ness. (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1956 - WIDER VIEW SHOWING FRONT OF DYLAN'S HOUSE - BOB DYLAN with Dale Boutang on Dale's Harley in Dylan's driveway, 1956. . .Location 2425 7th Avemue East at 25th Street, Hibbing, MN. . .photo by Dylan's mother Beatty Zimmerman from the collection of Leroy Hoikkala and Sharon Ness. (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1956 - DYLAN'S HOUSE. . .2425 7th Avenue East at 25th Street, Hibbing, MN 1958 - Bob Dylan with the Golden Chords (Monte Edwardson and Leroy Hoikkala) in the Little Theater of the Hibbing Memorial Building, February 1958. 1958 - Bob Dylan with the Golden Chords (Monte Edwardson and Leroy Hoikkala) in the Little Theater of the Hibbing Memorial Building, February 1958. (a composite) The Hibbing Memorial Building today, via Google Street Views. 1959 - Rarely seen photo of Dylan and fellow students singing at the Hillel House of the University of Minnesota from September 1959. (CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO) (photo via Bob Dylan Center) A photo from the inside of the Ten O'Clock Scholar, Dinkytown, where Dylan played while at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis and after leaving the school. This photo is from a 1964 U. Minn yearbook. (For an entire PopSpots entry on DInkytown in the Dylan years, click here.) (CLICK TO ENLARGE THiS PHOTO AND TEXT) The Outside of the 10 O'Clock Scholar, (circa 1960) which was located at at 418 14th Street, in the Dinkeytown neighborhood of Minneapolis, and has now been replaced by a modern building. 1961 (photo taken in 2014) - Dylan moved to New York in 1961. One of the many low-rent hotels he (and many other musicians) stayed at was the Earle Hotel just off Washington Square (103 Waverly Place). It's now been refurbished into a "boutique hotel called the Washington Square Hotel." At one time Dylan stayed in room 312, which did not face the street but had a window, with airshaft, facing the wall of the building to the left. This was the "crummy hotel" Joan Baez sang about in "Diamonds and Rust," a song about her relationship with Dylan. Other noteables who have stayed there include: Barbra Streisand (who sang around the corner at te Bon Soir nightclub), Maynard Ferguson, Bob Diddley, Ramblin'' Jack Elliiot, the B-52's, Ernest Hemingway, and Dylan Thomas. (click to ENLARGE) 1961 (photo taken in 2014) - This was one of the rooms that Dylan slept in, room 312, in the hotel. The physical space is the same, but the room would have been rather dingy back then. The window open up to a shaft of air and the "view" is of a brick wall of the townhouse next door. (click to enlarge) 1961 - Cafe Wha?, Macdougal Street at Minetta Lane, Greenwich VIllage. This basement club was the first place Dylan played when he came to Manhattan in 1961. It is seen here in the late 1960's. The club was called a "basket club" because in lieu of a salary, after they sang, performers passed a wicker basket around the audience in hope for tips. In this photo, the Fugs, a politically provocative and lyrially edgy musical group from the East Village, were puttting on a show in the ground floor theater. The building was converted from a brick barn for urban horses in 1959. 1961 - Dylan playing harmonica in the Cafe Wha? with Karen Dalton and Fred Neil. Performers were not paid, but were given hamburgers, etc. by the club. Money came from a basket passed around the audience. (photo by Fred McDarrah.) (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1961 - At the time that Dylan Played the Cafe Wha? the stage was in the back of the club. (inner photo by Fred McDarrah.) 1961 - Dylan, 19, plays with Mark Spolestra at the first Indian Neck Folk Festival in Branford, Connecticut, on May 6, 1961. The background Victorian Building is still there as a private home at 93 Linden Ave, Branford, CT. (click to ENLARGE) 1961 - A fantasy composite shot of Dylan playing his first gig on April 11, 1961 at Gerde's Folk City, formerly located at 11 West 4th Street at Mercer Street. Background photo of Gerde's from Sam Falk/Life Magazine. Photo of Dylan by Irwin Gooen. (click to ENLARGE) (Dylan photo by Irwin Gooen) 1961 - Dylan, 19, performs at his second official paying gig at Gerde's Folk City on September 26, 1961. His performance would be written up enthusiastically by Robert Shelton in the New York Times, giving Dylan a big career boost. (Dylan photo by Irwin Gooen) 1961 - This is a photo compostion, showing Dylan on the little stage at Gerdes, with Dylan's image placed over a photo of Jean Ritchie on the small stage at Gerdes. Note the same album cover on the wall in both the Dylan insert (behind the microphone) and in the Richie picture in the background. (Dylan photo by Irwin Gooen) 1961 - Gerde's Folk City was located on the ground floor of a building at the northeast corner of West 4th Street and Mercer Street two blocks east of Washington Square Park and one block west of Broadway. . 1961 - Gerde's Folk City later replaced by the Jewish Institute of Religion of Herbrew Union College. 1961 - After Dylan landed a record contract he rented an apartment on the third floor, back, of 161 West 4th Street near 6th Avenue. 1961 - Dylan in his kitchen at 161 West 4th Street. Dylan photo by Ted Russell. (background photo by Bob Egan) 1961 - THE CARNEGIE CHAPTER HALL - Dylan's first professional solo concert was here on November 4, 1961. The Carnegie Chapter Hall, a meeting room holding about 250 people, was in an upstairs part of Carnegie Hall, NYC. Reportedly about 52 people showed up, not bad for a first concert two miles north of Greenwich VIllage. (click to enlarge) 1961 - The Carnegie Chapter Hall was on the 4th floor or Carnegie Hall and did not have windows facing the street. 1961 - A copy of the poster of Dylan's Carnegie Chapter Hall concert on the fourth floor of Carnegie Hall.. The attendance was only supposedly 52 people for this historical debut, although that filled about 1/5 the small hall. TIckets were $2. 1962 - Dylan does a photo-shoot on musician/photographer John Cohen's roof: Third Avenue and 9th Street, Manhattan 1962. (composite photo: photo of Dylan from a film clip made by John Cohen on Cohen's roof.) 1962 - Another shot on John Cohen's roof, 1962. Location: Third Avenue at 9th Street. (composite photo) 1962 - A composite shot of Dylan playing at Sing Out Magazine's "Hootenanny at Carnegie Hall, Saturday, September 22nd, 8:30 pm. 1962. A shot of Dylan at the performance is overlayed on an edited photo of the Carnegie Hall stage taken in September 1947. (Click to ENLARGE) 1963. In England, Dylan jams late at night at the Troubadour Club basement with friends Eric Von Schmidt, Richard Farina, Ethan Singer, and Martin Carthy (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then left arrow back) 1963. WIth Suze Rotolo on Jones Street, Greenwich Village. The cover of THE FREEWHEELIN' BOB DYLAN. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then left arrow back) Photo by Don Hunstein. 1963. Dylan at the bottom of the steps to his apartment at 161 West 4th Street, 3rd floor. Photo by Don Hunstein. 1963. Dylan in his apartment during the photo session for the cover of The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan. Photo by Don Hunstein. Background photo by Bob Egan. Photo by Don Hunstein. 1963. Dylan with, from left to right: unknown woman, Suze Rotolo Terry Thal, and Dave Van Ronk at Hudson St. at Christopher Street, Greenwich Village. Photo by Jim Marshall. 1963. Dylan about to roll a tire on Hudson Street at Christopher Street. (photo: Jim Marshall) 1963. Rolling a tire on Hudson Street at Christopher Street. (photo: Jim Marshall) 1963. With Suze Rotolo and Dave Van Ronk, at the intersection of Grove St.and Bedford Street, Greenwich Village. Photo by Jim Marshall. 1963. With Suze Rotolo at 7th Avenue South and Morton Street, Greenwich Village. Photo by Jim Marshall. 1963. Dylan plays Town Hall theater in New York CIty as a solo act for the first time on Friday, April 12, 1963. 1963. Dylan on a roof at Broadway and 20th Street, near Union Square, New York. (Photographer undetermined) 1963. Dylan on a roof at Broadway and 20th Street, near Union Square, New York. (Photographer undetermined) 1963. The cover of the paperback of CHRONICLES, PART 1. Dylan on a roof at Broadway and 20th Street, near Union Square, New York. (Photographer not determined) 1963. Dylan on a roof at Broadway and 20th Street, near Union Square, New York. (Photographer undetermined) 1963. Dylan and his girlfriend, Suze Rotolo, at the northwest corner of Gramercy Park, Gramercy Park West and East 21st Street. 1963. 3 more outtakes . . . .Dylan and his girlfriend, Suze Rotolo, at the northwest corner of Gramercy Park, Gramercy Park West and East 21st Street. 1963. Dylan with Gloria Stavers, editor in chief of 16 Magazine in Central Park, near the Gapstow Bridge. The Plaza Hotel is in the background. 1963. Dylan with Gloria Stavers, editor in chief of 16 Magazine in Central Park, having coffee at the zoo cafe. (photo by Gloria Stavers) 1963. Dylan performing "Talkin' John Birch Paranoia Blues" during a May 12, 1963 rehearsal for an appearance on the "Ed Sullivan Show" in New York City. Following the researsal, the network, deeming the song too controversial, asked Dylan to sing a different song on the show. Dylan refused and left and never appeared on the popular show. (click to ENLARGE) (Getty Images) 1963. Dylan performs at a CIvil Rights rally in a cotton field outside Greenwood. Mississippi on July 6, 1963 (photo by Danny Lyon) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1963. JUST THE PHOTO - Dylan performs at a CIvil Rights rally in a cotton field outside Greenwood. Mississippi on July 6, 1963 (photo by Danny Lyon) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1963. Another view of the location - Silas McGee's farm, about three miles southeast of Greenwood, Mississippi. July 6, 1963 (photo by Danny Lyon) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1963. Dylan Dylan singing "North Country Blues" at a Saturday afternoon workshop on July 27. 1963. Location: Newport Casino Porch #1. 1963. Dylan with other folksingers at the first finale song, "Blowin' in the Wind," on opening night of the 1963 Newport Folk Festival, Friday July 26, 1963. Left to right: Peter, Paul and Mary, Joan Baez, Bob Dylan, The Freedom Singers, Peter Seeger. 1963. Bob Dylan, singing with Joan Baez, on the morning of the March on Washington, August 28th, 1963 near the Washington Monument. (composite photo) (click to ENLARGE) 1963. Aeriel view of where Bob Dylan and Joan Baez were singing on the morning of the March on Washington, August 28, 1963. The photo is taken from the top of the Washington Monument, After the morning concert the crowd walked to the Lincoln Memorial for the afternoon of speeches and music. (click to ENLARGE) 1963. Dylan singing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial during the afternoon of the March on Washington, August 28, 1963. (click to ENLARGE) 1963. Red arrow shows where on the Lincoln Memorial steps Dylan performed during the afternoon of the March on Washington on August, 28, 1963. Martin Luther King, Jr. would give his "I Have a Dream" speech there later during the afternoon program of civil rights speakers. (click to ENLARGE) 1963. Dylan does a sound check for his first solo performance at the main auditorium at Carnegie Hall on October, 26, 1963. (photo by Don Hunstein) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1963. Dylan performs at Carnegie Hall on October, 26, 1963. (photo by Don Hunstein) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1963. Dylan next to the East RIver, near the Metro North Bridge at 126th and FIrst Avenue. (photo by Richard Avedon) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then left arrow back) 1963. 2 other outtakes . . . . . Dylan next to the East RIver, near the Metro North Bridge at 126th and FIrst Avenue. (photos by Richard Avedon) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then left arrow back) 1963. Dylan speaks to James Baldwin at the 10th Annual Bill of Rights Dinner held bt the Emergency Civil Liberties Committee (ECLC) at the Americana Hotel, Times Square, New York on December 13, 1963. At the dinner, Dylan received the Tom Paine Award given each year by the ECLC to the "foremost fighter for civil liberties." Dylan made some comments at the speech that were deemed controversial. (The photo is a composite using another event on the same stage from 1978.) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1964. Dylan posing for the cover of ANOTHER SIDE OF BOB DYLAN, southwest corner of 52nd St. and Broadway, Times Square, New York City. (photo by Sandy Speiser) 1964. The cover of ANOTHER SIDE OF BOB DYLAN, southwest corner of 52nd St. and Broadway, Times Square, New York City. (photo by Sandy Speiser) 1964. Dylan in front of window full of masks and novelties, at 52nd Street and Broadway, Times Square, New York. (photo by Sandy Speiser) 1964. (Same photo of Dylan) Dylan in front of Arcade Gallery window, Northwest Corner of 52nd and Broadway, Times Square, New York. (photo by Sandy Speiser) 1964. Dylan talks with French singer Hugues Aufray outside of 53 Boulevard St. Michel, Paris. To Dylan's left, is his assistant Victor Maymudes. (photo by Tony Frank) (photo location: Marie Fotini)> 1964. Dylan at the 1964 Newport Folk Festival, Friday afternoon, July 24th, on the lawn of St. Michael"s School, 180 Rhode Island Avenue, Newport. 1964. Dylan with Ramblin' Jack Elliott on Macdougal Street in front of the Folklore Center. (photo by Douglas Gilbert) 1964. 2 Outtakes . . . . (left) Dylan with John Sebastian and Ramblin' Jack Elliott on Macdougal Street in front of the Folklore Center. (right) Dylan with John Sebastian in front of the Folklore Center.(photo by Douglas Gilbert) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1964. Dylan inside his apartment in a photoshoot by Ted Russell in 1964, superimposed over a phot of the apartment in 2016 by Bob Egan. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1964. Dylan's former apartment at 161 West 4th Street, Greenwich Village, as it looked in 2016. It has since been renovated. (Photo by Bob Egan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1964. Dylan's about to enter his car on West 4th Street- 1/2 block from his apartment. Photo by Ted Russell.(CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1964. Dylan with Peter Yarrow and John Hammond, Jr. in front of Lord and Taylor 39th Street and Fifth Ave, NYC. (photo by Daniel Kramer) (CLICK TO ENLARGE then arrow back) 1964. Dylan and Peter Yarrow ask several New York CIty policement a question in front of Postmans Gloves and Handbags, next to Saks FIfth Avenue, 39th Street and Fifth Ave, NYC. (photo by Daniel Kramer) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, left arrow to get back) The inner photo can be found on the back cover of Bringing It All Back Home. 1964. Dylan with Peter Yarrow and John Hammond, Jr. hailing a cab in front of Saks FIfth Ave. 39th Street and Fifth Ave, NYC. (photo by Daniel Kramer) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, left arrow to get back) 1964. Dylan with Peter Yarrow and John Hamond, Jr. on a truck outside of photographer Daniel Kramer's studio at 25 West 39th Street between 5th and 6th Avenue.. (photo by Daniel Kramer) 1964. The back cover of BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME - where the picture of Dylan, Yarrow, and the two police came from. (photo by Daniel Kramer) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, left arrow to get back) 1964. ANOTHER PHOTO OUTTAKE FROM THE back cover of BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME. Dylan signing autographs after a concert at Town Hall in Philadelphia, October 10, 1964 (photo by Daniel Kramer) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, left arrow to get back) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1964. Dylan points as he is driven by the Penn Plaza Bar, Philadelphia, on October 10, 1964 on the way to give a concert at Town Hall in Philadelphia. (photo by Daniel Kramer). (CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO, then arrow back) 1965. Dylan sits alongside Sheridan Square Park in Greenwich Village on January 22, 1965, as part of a photoshoot for the VIllage Voice, whose office was across the street. (photo by Fred McDarrah/Getty) (click to ENLARGE)
1965. Dylan in a scene from DON'T LOOK BACK behind the Savoy Hotel in London. . . .This is the a still from the song "Subterranean Homesick Blues" that opens Don't Look Back, directed and produced by D. A. Pennebaker. The black-and-white documentary of Bob Dylan's 1965 tour of England was released in 1967. (From Don't Look Back, produced by Leacock-Pennebaker (1965); Pennebaker Films) The scene was filmed behind London's famous Savoy Hotel, at the intersection of Savoy Hill Road and a dead-end alley called Savoy Steps, near the River Thames, in the heart of London. . . . That's the poet Allen Ginsberg (on the right, with the white shawl) the writer of Howl! among other works, and Bob Neuwirth, a musician and, like Ginsberg, a longtime friend of Dylan. It's Bob Neuwirth holding the camera in back of Dylan on the cover of Highway 61 Revisited. 1965. Dylan in a scene from DON'T LOOK BACK behind the Savoy Hotel in London against the modern background. 1965. The card-flipping scene was filmed three times: First, the alley behind the Savoy. Second, the back garden of the Savoy. And third, the roof of the Savoy. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. Dylan with Joan Baez in the back of the Savoy Hotel in the Embankment Gardens during a press photo-shoot. (April 27, 1965). (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1965. The cover of BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME featuring Dylan and Sally Grossman, the wife of his manager. Taken at the Grossman estate in Bearsville, New York. 1965. JUST THE COVER - The cover of BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME featuring Dylan and Sally Grossman, the wife of his manager. Taken at the Grossman estate in Bearsville, New York. 1965. JUST THE BACKGROUND - The couch from the cover of BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME featuring Dylan and Sally Grossman, the wife of his manager. Taken at the Grossman estate in Bearsville, New York. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. THE BACKGROUND AND THE COVER of BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME featuring Dylan and Sally Grossman, the wife of his manager. Taken at the Grossman estate in Bearsville, New York. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. Dylan watching TV in the Grossman home where the BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME cover was photographed. Possibly the same room. Taken at the Grossman estate in Bearsville, New York. He might be watching Dean Martin. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. Bob Dylan, with harmonica, joins the Byrds at Ciro's Nightclub in Hollywood. 1965. LARGE VERSION - Bob Dylan, with harmonica, joins the Byrds at Ciro's Nightclub in Hollywood. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. OUTTAKE FROM CIRO'S - Bob Dylan, with harmonica, joins the Byrds at Ciro's Nightclub in Hollywood. 1965. The cover of HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED. (CLICK TO ENLARGE then arrow back) 1965. The cover location for HIghway 61 Revisited: 4 Gramercy Park West, between East 20th and East 21st Street. At that time Dylan's manager, Albert Grossman, had a large apartment on the floor at the top of the steps, that included the balcony at left. Dylan often stayed here. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. Dylan sits on the front steps of his manager, Albert Grossman's apartment at 4 Gramecy Park West, in Manhattan, for the cover of HIGHWAY 61 REVISITED. Dylan's friend, Bob Neuwirth is in the background, holding one of the photograher's cameras. (photo by Daniel Kramer.) 1965. OUTTAKES from the cover shoot for Highway 61 Revisited from Daniel Kramer's book BOB DYLAN: A YEAR AND A DAY (Taschen, 2018) (photos by Daniel Kramer.) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. A different cropping of the outtake above right from the cover shoot for Highway 61 Revisited. (photo by Daniel Kramer. Kramer's photos of Dylan can be bought at seveal galleries. Just Google "Daniel Kramer Dylan photo") (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. Dylan at Newport, the year he "went electric," playing acoustic at an afternoon workshop. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. Dylan "going electric" at Newport. From the video of the performance. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. Dylan "going electric" at Newport, with a picture of the band at night (in three parts) over a picture of the stage in the day. With Michael Bloomfield, left, on lead guitar, and, at right, bassist Jerome Arnold, and Al Kooper on Hammond organ. Drummer Sam Lay and pianist Barry Goldberg are not pictured. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) (both pictures by Dave Gahr) 1965. The location of the stage where Dylan "went electric' at the Newport Folk Festival in Newport, Rhode Island. The area was then called "Festival Fields." It is now part of the 66 Girard Ave condominium village. 1965. Dylan and his backing band playing at West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, Queens, New York on August 28, 1965, Dylan's first performance after going electric at Newport. The band included: Al Kooper, keyboards; Robbie Robertson, lead guitar; Levon Helm, drums: and Harvey Brooks, bass. 1965. Dylanpreparing rehearsing to play at Forest Hills (The West SideTennis Club) on the afternoon of August 28, 1965. (Dylan photo by Daniel Kramer; background photo by Karl Gedlinka) 1965. Dylan in the alley behind Lawrence Ferlinghetti's City Lights Book Store, San Francisco, with (from left to right) Robbie Robertson, poet Michael McLure, and Allen Ginsberg. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. Dylan in the alley behind Lawrence Ferlinghetti's City Lights Book Store, San Francisco, with (from left to right) Robbie Robertson, poet Michael McLure, and Allen Ginsberg. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1965. A view of the alley from further back.(CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. Bob on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post, July 30, 1966. (photo by Jerry Schatzberg) 1966. The actual photo of the Saturday Evening Post cover. Jacob Street near the Brooklyn Bridge. All the buildings you see, former tanneries, have been demolished and replaced by a huge elderly living facility. 1966. The cover of the 45-rpm for I WANT YOU. Jacob Street, Lower Manhattan (photo by Jerry Schatzberg) 1966. Another view of Dylan on Jacob Street. (photo by Jerry Schatzberg) 1966. Dylan on Jacob Street, lower Manhattan. (photo by Jerry Schatzberg)(CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. The cover of BLONDE ON BLONDE, taken on West Street (the West Side Highway) and Morton Street., Greenwich village. (photo by Jerry Schatzberg) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. The cover of BLONDE ON BLONDE, full view, including back of album. (photo by Jerry Schatzberg) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. The location of the cover of BLONDE ON BLONDE. West Street (the West Side Highway) and Morton Street, Greenwich village. (photo by Jerry Schatzberg) (photo location by WIlliam Jobson) 1966. (CLOSE UP) The location of the cover of BLONDE ON BLONDE. West Street (the West Side Highway) and Morton Street.(CHECK), Greenwich village. (photo by Jerry Schatzberg) 1966.3 OUTTAKES from the cover photo session for BLONDE ON BLONDE. (photos by Jerry Schatzberg) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966 (April). Dylan contempletes the scene in front of Elsinore Castle, Denmark. (photo by Jan Perrson)(CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. Dylan in Stockholm. (photo by Bjorn Larrson Ask) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. Dylan in Old Town, Stockholm. (photo by Bjorn Larsson Ask.) (CLLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO OF DYLAN, then arrow back) 1966. Dylan in England: Queens Gate Mews, Knightbridge, London. From DON"T LOOK BACK (1967) - The "Clip your dog" segment. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. Dylan during a soundcheck at the ABC Theater in Belfast on May 6, 1966. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) (Dylan photo by Barry Feinstein) 1966. Dylan with some local children, by the docks, in Liverpool, England, during the 1966 World Tour. (photo by Barry Feinstein) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. Dylan in Liverpool, England, by the docks during the 1966 World Tour. (photo by Barry Feinstein) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. 1966 World Tour: Dylan at the Aust Frerry, southwest England. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. Bob in the "LSD" doorway, Nottingham, England. (LSD was a gambling related company in England) 1966. (JUST THE PHOTO) Bob in the "LSD" doorway, Nottingham, England. (LSD was a gambling related company in England) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, than arrow back) 1966. Bob Dylan in Nottingham. (photo by Barry Feinstein) 1966 (May). Bob Dylan walks through the Nottingham Gates. 1966. Bob in Edinburgh, Scotland. (photo by Barry Feinstein) 1966. (Just the photo) Bob in Edinburgh, Scotland. (photo by Barry Feinstein) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. Bob Dylan "directing traffic" on a streetcorner in Edinburg, Scotland. (Click to enlarge, then arrow back) 1966. (Just the photo) Bob Dylan "directing traffic" on a streetcorner in Edinburg, Scotland. (photo by Barry Feinstein) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1966. Dylan with French singer Johnny Halliday in Paris during the 1966 World Tour (photo by Barry Feinstein) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1967. The source for the cover photo of the first major biography of Dylan by Anthony Scaduto. (photo by Daniel Kramer) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1969. Dylan on the Isle of Wight 1970. Dylan in a photo session on Houston Street, Greenwich VIllage, by John Cohen. Dylan is crossing Houston at the southwest corner of MacDougal Street. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1970. Dylan carrying a drum along Houston Street, near his practice studio on the ground floor of 124 West Houston Street, and around the corner from his home on MacDougal Street, Greenwich VIllage, NYC. Dylan is on the north side of Houston, walking west from Thompson toward Sullivan. (photo by John Cohen) 1970. In this photo from the Cohen session Dylan is carrying a drum as he crosses southward across Houston Street at La Guardia Place. (photo by John Cohen) (CLICK TO ENLARGE PHOTO, then arrow back) 1970. Dylan walks east along the south side of Houston Street just east of 6th Avenue in Greenwich VIllage. (photo by John Cohen) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1970. From the interior of the SELF PORTRAIT album: Dylan on Bryant Pond Road in Putnam Valley, New York. (photo by John Cohen) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1970. From the interior sleeve fold of the SELF PORTRAIT album: Dylan on Bryant Pond Road in Putnam Valley, New York, about 200 miles north of MAnhattan, near John Cohen's house. (photo by John Cohen) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1971. Dylan makes friends on the Bowery, New York City. (photo by Dave Gahr/Getty Images) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1971. Dylan outside 7 Jones Street, near the Bowery, NYC. (photo by Dave Gahr) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1973. The cover of DYLAN (Columbia, 1973). The cover photo is from a session Dylan did for SELF PORTRAIT in Nashville, Tennessee. (photo by Al Clayton)( CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1973. An illustration by Dylan from the 1973 book WRITINGS AND DRAWINGS FROM BOB DYLAN. (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1975. Dylan outside of the Bitter End nightclub in New York CIty with Patti SMith whose show he had gone to see (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1975. Dylan leaves a red convertible Cadillac on West Third Steet, New York City, and enters Gerde's Folk CIty to perform at a birthday party for Mike Porco, the owner. The event is also the first rehersal for the Rollling Thunder Revue.(photo by Ken Regan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1975. Dylan in a small park along the water in Plymouth, Mass. during the Rolling Thunder tour. Used for the cover of the DESIRE album. (photo by Ken Regan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1975. CLOSER - SHOT: Dylan in a small park along the water in Plymouth, Mass. during the Rolling Thunder tour. Used for the cover of the DESIRE album. (photo by Ken Regan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arreow back) 1975. Dylan on the Rolling Thunder tour in Plymouth, Mass. This photo was taken within minutes of the DESIRE cover. (photo by Ken Regan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1975. Dylan on the Rolling Thunder tour in Plymouth, Mass. This photo was also taken within minutes of the DESIRE cover. Dylan is looking at the Mayflower 2. (photo by Ken Regan) A modern day view of the Mayflower 2 in Plymouth, Mass.. 1975. Dylan on the Rolling Thunder tour in Plymouth, Mass. This photo was also taken within minutes of the DESIRE cover. Dylan is superimposed over the modern day Mayflower 2. (photo by Ken Regan) 1975. Dylan with Allen Ginsberg visiting Jack Kerouac's grave in the Edson Cemetery inLowell, Massachuisetts. (photo by Ken Regan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1975. Dylan with Allen Ginsberg walking through the Edson Cemetary, Lowell, Massachusetts, after visiting the grave of Jack Kerouac, while on the Rolling Thunder tour. (photo by Ken Regan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1975. In a shot from the Rolling Thunder tour, Dylan stands with Sam Shephard (right) and longtime Dylan friend from boyhood, Louie Kemp, next to the Stage Neck Inn, in York, Maine. (photo by Ken Regan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1975. Bob Dylan in Lowell, Massachusetts, during the Rolling Thunder Revue.(photo by Ken Regan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1975. Dylan and other members of the Rolling Thunder Review party in back of the Stage Neck Inn in York, Maine. (photo by Ken Regan) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 1975. Dylan and other members of the Rolling Thunder Review party preparing to film a scene in a diner in North Falmouth, Massachusetts.
1978. Dylan in Santa Monica. The cover shot for STREET LEGAL (1978) (Location by Derek Brown) 1978. Dylan in Paris, exiting from the Hotel Meurice. (location: Marie Fotini) 1986. Dylan with Ruppert Everett and Fiona Flanagan outside the London National Theater in Southbank, London is a publicity shot for the 1986 movie HEARTS OF FIRE. (Getty Images) (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1990 (May). Dylan stands in Tompkins Square Park, the East Village of New York City in the first of a series of shots by longtime friend Allen Ginsberg. (photo by Allen Ginsberg) (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1990 (May) Dylan in a doorway in the East Village of New York (157 Avenue C at 10th Street), while on a walk from Tomkins Square Park to the East River. Photo by Allen Ginsberg. (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1990 (May) Dylan on a walkway of East River Drive at East 10th Street in the East Village of New York, while on a walk from Tomkins Square Park to the East River. Photo by Allen Ginsberg. (CLICK TO ENLARGE) 1999. Dylan behind the shuttered Ambassador Hotel, Los Angeles. (photo by Danny Cinch) (CLICK TO ENLARGE, then arrow back) 2001. A shot from the photoshoot for LOVE AND THEFT. Dylan is on the boardwalk at Brighton Beach, near Coney Island in New York CIty. (photo by Dave Gahr) (cllick to ENLARGE) 2002. Dylan plays with his band at the Newport Folk Festival 2022 at Fort Adams State Park, Newport, Rhode Island. (photo of Dylan by Dave Gahr) 2006. The album cover for MODERN TIMES used a photo by Ted Kroner from 1947. The photo was taken at the bBottom of Central Park West just above Columbus Circle in New York CIty. In the movie "Ghostbusters" the Stay-Puft Marshmallow man appears next to the white building in the center-right of the photo. (photo by Ted Kroner) (CLICK TO ENLARGE then arrow back) |
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