Product Details
Theme Time Radio Hour: With Your Host Bob Dylan

Theme Time Radio Hour: With Your Host Bob Dylan
From Ace Records UK

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Turn Your Radio On - Grandpa Jones
  2. Papa's On The Housetop - Leroy Carr and Scrapper Blackwell
  3. Shortnin' Bread - Paul Chaplain & His Emeralds
  4. Seven Nation Army - The White Stripes
  5. Gun Fever (Blam Blam Fever) - The Valentines
  6. Pistol Packin' Mama - Al Dexter & His Troopers
  7. Pistol Packin' Mama - The Hurricanes
  8. Homework - Otis Rush
  9. He Will Break Your Heart - Jerry Butler
  10. Take It Away Lucky - Eddie Noack
  11. Buddy, Stay Off The Wine - Betty Hall Jones
  12. Tears A Go-Go - Charlie Rich
  13. Rich Woman - Li'l Millet & His Creoles
  14. Laughin' & Jokin' - Ernie Chaffin
  15. Me And My Chauffeur Blues - Memphis Minnie accompanied by Little Son Joe
  16. If I Lose - The Stanley Brothers
  17. I Sat And Cried - Jimmy Nelson
  18. Beatnik's Wish - Patsy Raye & the Beatniks
  19. Devil In His Heart - The Donays
  20. Let's Invite Them Over - George Jones & Melba Montgomery
  21. Don't Take Ev'rybody to Be Your Friend - Sister Rosetta Tharpe with the Sam Price Trio
  22. Good Morning Heartache - Billie Holiday
  23. Pouring Water on a Drowning Man - James Carr
  24. I Drink - Mary Gauthier
  25. Mother Earth - Memphis Slim

Disc 2:

  1. Chain Of Fools - Aretha Franklin
  2. Walk a Mile in My Shoes - Joe South & the Believers
  3. Cry Tough - Alton Ellis & the Flames
  4. Tommy Gun - The Clash
  5. (Everytime I Hear) That Mellow Saxophone - Roy Montrell
  6. Those DJ Shows - Patrice Holloway
  7. I Ain't Drunk - Lonnie 'the Cat'
  8. Eat That Chicken - Charles Mingus
  9. Mama, Get Your Hammer - Bobby Peterson Quintet
  10. How High The Moon - Slim Gaillard
  11. Cool Water - The Sons of the Pioneers
  12. Only A Rose - Geraint Watkins
  13. I Walk in My Sleep - Berna-Dean
  14. Stars Fell On Alabama - Jack Teagarden's Chicagoans
  15. Mama Tried (The Ballad From Killers Three) - Merle Haggard & the Strangers
  16. Big Long Slidin' Thing - Dinah Washington
  17. Black Coffee - Bobby Darin
  18. I'd Rather Drink Muddy Water - The Cats and the Fiddle
  19. Ain't Got The Money To Pay For This Drink - George Zimmerman & the Thrills with the Bubber Cyphers
  20. Bottle And A Bible - The Yayhoos
  21. Okie's In The Pokie - Jimmy Patton
  22. If You're So Smart, How Come You Ain't Rich? - Louis Jordan
  23. Ay Te Dejo En San Antonio - Santiago Jimenez
  24. Mona - Bo Diddley
  25. Roadrunner (Twice) - The Modern Lovers

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #26682 in Music
  • Released on: 2008-02-26
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Format: Import

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
Ace is proud to present a 2008 double CD paying tribute to Theme Time Radio Hour hosted by Bob Dylan. For those that are new to the show, each radio program lasts an hour and has a different theme each week, often something simple like 'Drink', or 'Mother'. On the radio program each track is introduced by Dylan with his dry humor, eclectic interest and vast musical knowledge. On this CD set, though, Dylan himself does not appear; just selected tracks that he played on his shows. It's possible to regard this set as the best introduction to music ever.

This is the only officially-authorized release associated with the Theme Time Radio Hour. Its 50 tracks represent the first series of radio shows. The track-listing reflects Dylan's wide taste and ranges from Billie Holiday and George Jones, through Aretha Franklin to the Clash and the White Stripes. Although each track was chosen by Dylan for the radio show, the CD itself was compiled by the show's producer Eddie Gorodetsky and Ace's own Roger Armstrong.

The luxury package contains a 2-CD jewel case with an accompanying 48-page full color book, all in a cardboard slipcase. The sleeve notes include a track-by-track commentary by some of the world's great music writers including Barney Hoskyns, Colin Escott, Billy Vera and Fred Dellar. Each track, no matter how obscure, is illustrated with a sleeve, label shot or photo of the artist.

Other Theme Time Radio Hour compilations have concentrated on the very early material, essentially because that material was in the public domain and thus royalty payments could be avoided. As with all Ace releases, this is a fully legitimate production and royalties are paid on every track.


Customer Reviews

Not Theme Time...but the next best thing5
So much about what I have come to love about music is falling away - "albums" are being replaced by singles downloaded from cyberspace, music magazines (so long No Depression) are shuttering their doors due to lack of ad revenue, and great record stores are closing by the dozen. Into these dangerous straits waded XM Radio and Bob Dylan with the Theme Time Radio Hour - a throwback to simpler times wherein Bob Dylan selects an hour's worth of choice cuts loosely centered around a "theme" like flowers, or marriage or coffee. The show has been a breath of fresh air - it's success due in equal measure to Dylan's pithy narrative style and his impeccable taste in popular music.

What we have here is Ace Records' attempt to anthologize the radio show by choosing 50 cuts that have appeared on Theme Time. There is no "theme" and no Dylan. What we do get is 2 hours of music - most of it blues, R&B, and American roots music. Some of the choices are inspired, the Geraint Watkins cut, "Only a Rose" for example; others - two versions of "Pistol Packin Mama" - less so. The overall effect is akin to listening to a jukebox stocked by Dylan. One could do worse. The packaging is excellent, with track and artist information and a photograph to accompany every song. Sound is more than adequate as well.

If you have access to XM radio by all means listen to Theme Time Radio Hour. If not, this makes a more than acceptable substitute.

Great compilation and presentation!5
This is the best of the Theme Time Radio Hour presentations where Dylan's commentary is absent. (Get the deluxe version of his latest album if you'd like to hear a disc with his DJ patter, which is fascinating in itself.) The booklet is extremely well-done, as good as or better than any in The Bootleg Series, with many photos of those old artists and the cool old 45 single labels etc., with very informative and well-written info about each song.
The music is very eclectic and wide-ranging, some of it 21st-century though most tends to be from the '50s, '40's and '60's. Many styles, from punk to blues to old-timey country, proto-rock, reggae, R&B, gospel, etc. I was surprised by how much I enjoyed most of the songs, though I can see how some people wouldn't like this or that genre. The sound quality on most is surprisingly good, and where it is bad, it has that haunting, "listening in the dark to that weird AM station that sometimes bleeds through" quality that can make a song so evocative of another time and place. If you aren't too narrow-minded in your musical taste, this is highly recommended.

Faith Restoration or How I Learned To Cry Again5
In a world of immitators and regurgitated bland soundscapes, it's so refreshing to see brilliance in the music industry again. Call it a throwback if you will, I'll call it 'actual' entertainment. Either way you slice it there's no denying the musical knowledge stored inside Mr. Zimmerman's brain. I know the show is not entirely all his creation (so thanks go out to the producers, engineers, and everyone else who makes it possible.) but without him as the 'mouth-piece', the show wouldn't have the same style and class. Thank-you, thank-you, thank-you for taking the time to produce a show that has obvious thought behind it. Looking forward to season 3 and what 'themes' may be in store........