Song Information
Song Title: 26 Storeys High Buy CD!
Artist: Bob Dylan
Album: After The Empire

Track Number:
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4 minutes, 1 seconds
Wednesday, March 6 @ 5:48 PM
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Information
Bob Dylan After The Empire (Rattlesnake
RS 288)

Bob Dylan, After The Empire (Rattlesnake RS 288)
Baby Coming Back From The Dead / Nothing Here Worth Dying For (I) / Wont Go Back
Till They Call Me Back Again / Let Me Come Baby / Bring It Home To Me / Im Ready For
Love / 26 Storeys High / You Can Have Her (I) / My Sweet Baby (Round and Around) /
Nothing Here Worth Dying For (II) / You Can Have Her (II) / Find Me / Nothing Here Worth
Dying For (III) / Right Hand Road Blues / Thats All (70:19)

Possible recording location and date; Cherokee Studios, Hollywood, CA May / October,
1985.

Although it has been hinted at, no one really knew what Dylan was really doing in the studio
between the sessions for Empire Burlesque and Knocked Out Loaded and because of the
slump his career had taken as fashions changed, practically no-one cared, mainly the critics
who were busy panning Dylans new output as it was received. He was saved momentarily by
Biograph but people still moaned about how his outtakes were sometimes better than his
established releases, what does a guy have to do to win again?
Keeping within the brief, Dylan who was still bubbling with ideas, re-entered the studio on
halloween 1985 at Cherokee Studios It has been assumed that the players were Bob Dylan
(vocal & guitar), Vito San Filippo (bass), Raymond Lee Pounds (drums), Carolyn Dennis,
Madelyn Quebec, Elisecia Wright (backup vocals) but that doesnt make up for the harp
playing and electric piano that you hear through these tracks and, possibly entertained by
the idea of Neil Youngs Everybodys Rockin' album, Bob threw around a few ideas that
seemed to be based around rock and roll, the sessions still have the nuance of a little 80s
production, and like Empire Burlesque, these sessions can be a lot of fun. These recordings
are a heck of a lot of feeling, Dylans muse, while not burning like it had or would again,
directs him to dismissing any worries of seriousness and instead let him and his band have a
bit of fun.

As it suggests in the small print of my review, these ideas are not generally, fully fleshed out,
a little built maybe but certainly nothing like they might be presented for a full album Jams
possibly Youll notice a few begin to sound like their previous counterparts, Dylan has the
lyrics but the tunes round along on each other. There are blunders as youll read but there are
also sharp moments of clarity that youll catch and wonder why Dylan never actually got
round to pulling them out for use. Just like most of his later output, youll wonder where a lot
of this stuff went Blame it on Dylans disinterest in looking back or for following his instant
decisions but that none of these tracks have appeared again shows a distinct lack of judgment.
Baby Back From The Dead is a long jam of sorts, starting abruptly as the engineer starts the
tape, the phrasing sounds like Honey Dont and includes a couple of pretty apt, if short,
guitar solos. Backing vocals by some of the Queens of Rhythm, call and answer responses.
Sounds like Dylan is having a LOT of fun. Funky drumming with plodding bassline, the
middle quietens before coming screaming back, the electronic piano is much more audible in
the second part of the track too. They end with a clattering full stop.
Nothing Here Worth Dying For (I) starts strongly, Dylan on his own on guitar, bringing in
the rest of the band at the track blossoms but seems to come apart at the end of the last verse,
its all strangely reminiscent of Baby Stop Crying (Dylans repost to a relationship possibly
or is this all about mortality?) An attempt at a solo towards the final section seems to fail quite
badly before the song ends abruptly.

Wont Go Back Till They Call Me Back Again. One of the catchier songs of the album
with a really memorable refrain, it slows the pace down, sounding like a wet Saturday
afternoon, the feeling is deeply reflective. much more classically Dylan for its time, another
lousy solo rears its head before the Queens wisely move things along again.
Let Me Come Baby sounds like it has been formed from the bones of Wont Go Back ...
The same pace, mood and plaintive feel. It is very brief, while a secondary guitar takes on
soloing duties this time, avoiding the clunky soloing of last time.
Bring It On Home To Me features some rather brilliant harp work by Bob, a chugging stomp
and even scat singing by Dylan. It sounds like Bob gets carried away half way through as he
gets too close to the mike with his harmonica and pushes the speakers to feedback. It ends to a
brilliant jam a la, God Knows, sparing with the rest of the band, they bound together to a
fantastic play-about finale.

Im Ready For Love, Buddy Hollyesque in style, Dylans vocals are mixed rather low for
the first minute of this rendition, the rest of the song, well, he seems to be making it up on the
spot. Im not entirely sure that he isnt singing about God at some point but then it begins to
turn towards romance. In the end, its another studio groove possibly the lightest track on the
CD, and at over 8 minutes long, it outstays its welcome a good 3 minutes or so. We also hear
the notes of Nothing Here Worth Dying For again.

26 Storeys High references suicide in a pale spot of slight inspiration for Bob, at first the
lyrics seem to take a little while to build but then get deeper Is this building a Shangri-La
of sorts, are the inhabitants of this tower block all facing a slim future so have decided that the
best way is down or out the door in a bag.

You Can Have Her is a beautifully dismissive track, Dylan disowning and disavowing a
previous love, the frame work for the track is jittery, restless drumming, low bass notes and
the very blush of an electric piano sound underneath. Id almost suggest that you might find
this on any of Keith Richards solo albums such is the sound. It ends at the right moment
however.

My Sweet Baby (Round And Around) is Im Ready For Love, part deux, Albet a very
short version. Seriously catchy, its a very pop song for Dylan, lasting a shade over two
minutes, this track makes you long for just a little bit more.

Nothing Here Worth Dying For (II), seems to come from a different session, there is more
hiss on this version making the whole piece a little quieter Obviously this is still fleshing
out work on the track, a near 9 minute running time throws it open for a lot more
improvisation. Dylan this time is accompanied by the second guitarist, a gentle piano and the
queens lilting harmonies There is a long instrumental break towards the middle while Dylan
gently noodles in the background.

You Can Have Her II The hiss disappears again, the tracks begins with a little studio noise
and one of the queens saying, That was nice ..before the tracks begins. This time, Dylan is
not alone and the girls harmonising starts pretty much immediately with Dylans vocals. Full
of funky drum work, gnarled guitars.

Find Me begins with a choppy call and response guitar and piano duet, the lyrics seem to be
about someone who Dylan already knows but who doesnt quite know him yet.
Nothing Here Worth Dying For III The most embellished of the versions found here, we
found Dylan accompanied with second guitar at first then, after a few lines, with the organ
and the Queens harmonies This is the closest it gets to sounding like a finished article.
Obviously Bob wasnt over enthused by it however or lost his patience and left it alone after
Maybe we might hear a different version on Biograph 2? some day as after the track ends, we
hear Dylan resume the piece again before the tape cuts out.

Right Hand Road Bues Fading in slowly, this much more standardised-for-the-era Dylan
track is a fast blues, piano high in the mix, another of the tracks where it sounds like Dylan is
having fun again. Full of whimsy, giddiness and rhythm.

Thats All A rest for Dylans pen, a rendition of Brandt and Haymes original, its just Bob,
the second guitarist, piano and drummer, maybe its an after hours play, the sisters have left
while Dylan has given out the rest of his ideas and decided, just as the night winds down to
give this a spin. Its lovely to hear Dylan really singing again as he once did Were we to
know thats nearly all he would do come 2016?

Do you need this release? A resounding yes. This is one of those tapes that springs up every
so often, rubs up against the audience recordings and makes them seem like nothing at all.
How often do we get studio outtakes never mind a whole disk of them! Wonderfully
presented by the Rattlesnake label with a bunch of rare photos from the era and easy to read
text all around. A winner Go get it!