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Auburn Annie
01-14-2005, 07:14 PM
ST. PAUL (AP) - A Minneapolis man has donated some of the earliest recordings made by Bob Dylan to the Minnesota Historical Society.

Cleve Pettersen said he made the reel-to-reel tape at a Minneapolis apartment in 1960, after getting to know Dylan at coffeehouses in the Dinkytown neighbourhood of Minneapolis near the University of Minnesota. Dylan, briefly a student at the university, didn't make any formal recordings until two years later. On the tape, he sings traditional folk songs by Woody Guthrie, Jimmie Rodgers and others.

Pettersen, a teenager when he invited Dylan to the apartment to record the songs, has been the sole owner of the tape ever since. But the tape's existence has been well-known by music buffs and Dylan aficionados who have come to know it as the "Minnesota Party Tape."

"The surfacing of this original recording should correct all the rumours and speculation circulating on the Internet and within the circles of Dylan followers and music critics," said Bonnie Wilson, curator at the Historical Society.

The tape includes such songs as Blues Yodel No. 8, San Francisco Bay Blues and Johnny I Hardly Knew You.

The public can listen to the tape, copied onto CDs and cassettes, for free at the Minnesota History Center library in St. Paul, but making copies won't be allowed.

brink
01-14-2005, 09:04 PM
Cleve Pettersen should be commended - can you imagine the amount of money he could have made selling those tapes and then he gives them to the Historical Society. How very cool of him.

Jim Nasium
01-16-2005, 09:40 AM
I can remember hearing excerpts from a private tape recording of Dylan and friend talking music and playing and singing.

One particular conversation was about Johnny Cash, Dylans friend was a fan, and Elvis Presley, Dylan was a fan. The gist, as I recall, was of Dylan saying something like "When you hear Elvis sing you want to join in, when you hear Johnny Cash sing, you want to leave the room."

I cannot say that it is the tape refered to here, I suspect it is.

I heard this on a radio program on the BBC.