News

Bono has a prolific way with words in his own right, but he could only learn from the best. In his eyes, there's one Bob ...
Out of the many Vietnam War protests she performed at in the 1960s and 1970s, Judy Collins can never forget one in Washington ...
Bob Dylan's influences in 1964 led to a thematic shift for his album 'Another Side of Bob Dylan.' Here's a look at the ...
“Like A Rolling Stone” is another. And then, there’s Bob Dylan’s “Hurricane”. It’s a bona fide protest song among a sea of similar tunes, but there’s something different about this on ...
Here are our top 10 songs by local artists (in no particular order) to get your People-Powered Playlist started! There’s a ...
Dylan is the Picasso of popular music. His ‘Ballad of a Thin Man’ speaks more powerfully to what it feels like to be alive in ...
Most of the ‘protest’ songs about the bomb and race prejudice ... His first three Columbia albums—“Bob Dylan,” “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan,” and “The Times They Are A-Changin ...
“I was so shellshocked and this was the only way I knew how to move forward,” Gerber says. “I thought, ‘what can I do that’s ...
GBH News anchor Henry Santoro offered his three playlist picks, all of which take on a common theme: protest songs.
Jesse Welles’ music follows the legacy of Pete Seeger and the band Crosby ... and since then it has seen the likes of Joni Mitchell, Led Zeppelin and Bob Dylan perform within its small wooden walls.
Bob Dylan’s simple line of “I have no apologies to make” — from his song “I Contain Multitudes” — might have seemed an appropriate summation of his concert Monday night in Pittsburgh.
Bob Dylan is still alive. But it was in 1965 — essentially a whole other epoch — that Dylan released “Ballad of a Thin Man,” a simple song that speaks more directly, insinuatingly and ...