ORIGINAL MASTER RECORDING

BOB DYLAN

OH MERCY

UDSACD 2203

UDSACD 2203 Cover
A Numbered, Limited-Edition, Hybrid SACD, Sourced from Original Master Tapes.

Bob Dylan and Daniel Lanois hit all the right notes on Oh Mercy:. This 1989 album mesmerizes with brilliant songwriting, inspired performances, atmospheric feel, and visionary production.

A
s soon as it was issued, Bob Dylan's Oh Mercy was rightly regarded as a striking return to form.   The 1989 set also won acclaim for the singer's decision to pair with visionary producer Daniel Lanois, whose sonic guidance draws vivid colors, hues, and warmth from the songs - all the while adding significant ambience, effect, and context.   Removed from the circumstances of its original release, Oh Mercy has managed to both justify and transcend such praise. As time wears on, the record only gets better, with its razor-sharp songwriting and atmospheric soundscapes escalating to legendary proportions via Mobile Fidelity's definitive digital reissue.

Achieving a cohesiveness and richness absent from Dylan's other 80s efforts, Oh Mercy further stands out for its on-the-floor immediacy and nuanced treatments.   Gone are the slick, processed, “shoulder pad” synthetic backdrops Dylan employed on the preceding Empire Burlesque.   Borrowing from approaches he used on U2's The Joshua Tree, Lanois serves rather than obscures Dylan's intent - enhancing the topicality of barbed fare like “Political World” and further charging the self-doubting emotions of quizzical compositions such as “What Good Am I?”

For all of Lanois' magic, it's impossible to overlook the brilliance of Dylan's lyrics - or timbre and commitment of his singing.   Many tracks on Oh Mercy have become live staples and fan favorites, and for very good reason.   The swampy, percussive-augmented “Everything Is Broken” finds Dylan at his most forthright and descriptive, with the metaphorical and direct account of estrangement, loss, and chaos applicable to any number of eras, situations, or regimes.   Mystery, voodoo, and portent fill “Man in the Long Black Coat,” appointed by Lanois with aptly spooky devices and designed by its architect to “make an attack on your most vulnerable spots.”

Indeed, vulnerability peppers the second half of Oh Mercy, whether on the unrequited bite of “What Was It You Wanted” or the gentle, heartbreaking look-back ballad “Shooting Star.”   By extension, Dylan strips himself of any defense mechanisms on the romantic albeit somber “Most of the Time,” which rates among the icon's moving creations and captures the memory-haunting aftermath of a dissolved relationship with a frankness, transparency, and self-knowingness few artists would dare commit to tape.

Conversations about how Oh Mercy compares to Dylan's classic 1960s output continue to this day and, if anything, have become deeper and more involved due to the record's still-growing strengths.   That several outtakes – “Series of Dreams,” “Dignity,” and “Born in Time” among them – landed on subsequent Dylan records and are beloved by fans speak to Oh Mercy's lingering magnetism and power.


  1. Political World
  2. Where Teardrops Fall
  3. Everything Is Broken
  4. Ring Them Bells
  5. Man in the Long Black Coat
  6. Most of the Time
  7. What Good Am I?
  8. Disease of Conceit
  9. What Was It You Wanted
10. Shooting Star



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recordings are distributed in Australia by
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