User:BennyOnTheLoose/sandbox2

Hendrix version
"the backing is outstanding for its electifying guitar work. The guitar work builds up into a frenzied state and if this record doesn't see the return of the Experience into the top ten, then nothing will"

"magnificent guitar showerings" (Looks like a syndicated article - it appears in a few papers)

"Jimi has brilliantly adapted this one to his own unique psychadelic R. and B. style. This one just had to be a hit"

"Surely, he is one of the few artists who is attuned to Dylan, and we are given a knowledgeable, rhythmical reading of a warning about impending disaster"

"The sense of foreboding cultivated in Dylan's cryptic lyrics is intensified by heavy drums and the wailing wah-wah driven guitar solos — extraordinary even by Hendrix's standards — that replaced the harmonica. We can almost feel the howling wind, mentioned in the last line, tearing through the song" / " But calling it a cover does a disservice to Hendrix — it is as much his song as it is Dylan's, if not more so"

Dylan v
"At only 12 lines, it is more akin to a truncated sonnet" "A jazzy version, featuring a largely incomprehensible Dylan on vocals, can be found on the 1989 album, Dylan &The Dead"

"But rock's most influential artists - Bob Dylan, the Beatles, the Rolling Stones - were finding that serving as the conscience of a generation exacted a heavy toll. Mr. Dylan, for one, felt the pressures becoming unbearable, and wrote about his predicament in songs like All Along the Watchtower. 9There must ...worth " quots

"brings out Dylan's talent for imagery" but felt the track seemed "fragmented and unfinished".

best album...best track on the album "Beatle overtone"

"outstanding" on album

critic Richard Goldstein called it "Dylan's "terrifying glimpse of individual mortality" / (his words?) Dylan "an internalized and deeply personal, even solipcistic, vision " opposed to "Old Friends" which demonstrates empathy

Kendal
Toured with her parents' theatre company, appearing as Jessica, The Merchant of Venice, as Ophelia, Hamlet, as Puck, A Midsummer Night's Dream, and as Viola, Twelfth Night, in Far Eastern and Indian cities.

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 * +Felicity Kendal television appearances