![]() ![]() There are a bunch of exclusive perks only for patrons: playlists, newsletters, downloads, discussions, polls - hell, tell us what song you would like to hear covered and we will make it happen. Cover Me is now on Patreon! If you love cover songs, we hope you will consider supporting us there with a small monthly subscription. His choice of swan songs that night included “Buckets of Rain.” With a powerfully hoarse whisper, audibly struggling for every breath, he embodies the suffering in the song, and yet the lilt in his voice and his playing serve to both counter that suffering and frame it.Ĭheck out more Bob Dylan covers in the archive. He gave his final concert in October 2001, dying four months later the concert was released on CD and titled …and the tin pan bended and the story ended…. Instead, he became “the Mayor of MacDougal Street,” a charismatic man who spread the word about songs and artists old and new. He came from the land of giants.” Van Ronk never made it into the big time – “It just wasn’t where he pictured himself,” Dylan explained, and the fact that he turned down an offer to be in a trio that became Peter, Paul, and Mary bears that out. He was big, sky high, and I looked up to him. In Dylan’s autobiography Chronicles Vol.1, he had a lot of kind words for Dave Van Ronk. Dave Van Ronk – Buckets of Rain (Bob Dylan cover) Call it a fraternal twin of the song it shares the same genetic material, has many observable differences, is recognized by all as a rare occurrence, and really, there’s no need to compare – we should just be thankful that they both exist. ![]() It’s unmistakably folk, but a backwoods, off-kilter sort. “Buckets” is recognizable as Dylan’s, but the musical melody is new – and, somehow, it seems to belong to the words more than Dylan’s own melody. It’s hard to describe what the Wood Brothers do on their cover, from 2008’s Loaded. The Wood Brothers – Buckets of Rain (Bob Dylan cover) It’s easy to get carried away when you’re listening to Neko Case. When you sing “Everything about you is bringing me misery” and your voice absolutely crumples, we want to stay up until three AM drinking Black Labels with you, consoling you, giving your hand fleeting pats, insisting that you deserve someone better and wondering when you’ll realize that the someone better is sitting right in front of you… Ahem. You make “Buckets of Rain” sound so free and easy, with your country sound and your winsome ways with a lyric. ![]() Hair of fire, lungs of leather, larynx more precious than gold. Neko Case – Buckets of Rain (Bob Dylan cover) In 2006, she released Heart of Mine: Maria Muldaur Sings Love Songs of Bob Dylan “Buckets of Rain,” with its light bluesy sound and a surprisingly sultry vocal, was one of the highlights. Maria Muldaur is best known for “Midnight at the Oasis,” but long before she sent her camel to bed, she was part of the Greenwich Village folk scene and a colleague of Dylan’s. Maria Muldaur – Buckets of Rain (Bob Dylan cover) They give “Buckets” a great sound here, brisk and barrelhousy if it was recorded in mono with some crackling overdubbed, people would be forgiven for thinking they’d stumbled across a relic from the twenties. They’re not on any major label, or on any hip indie label – they just like to get together and play. The Booglerizers are five guys from Jersey who play acoustic blues one of them handles the tuba. The Booglerizers – Buckets of Rain (Bob Dylan cover) What follows hews exactly to the name of the feature – there are covers, there are five of them, and they are all good. It’s been studied from hundreds of angles by hundreds of musicians, each filtering Dylan’s writing through their own viewpoint this entry could be called “Five Dozen Good Covers” and would still be leaving unique versions behind. With five short verses and no chorus, the song is as simple and as complex as the human heart. It’s no fun, but they do what they must do, and they do it well. They’ve swept up the ashes of their relationship, and now they’re looking at each other with rueful smiles, permitting themselves to feel both the love they still have and the pain it still brings. ![]() Dylan’s saddened, but he’s also very tender to the one he’s addressing. The closing track of Bob Dylan‘s (greatest?) album Blood on the Tracks, “Buckets of Rain” has little of the invective that colored other songs on the album it’s a long way from the “idiot babe” in “Idiot Wind” to the “honey baby” found here. ![]()
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