By Tony Attwood
I have written before about how highly I rate “Well, well, well” and since then have discovered a few more covers which again I rate highly. But I should add the caveat that there is at least one other song with the same title, so if you go a-searching you might come up with something that was not co-written by Bob at all.
This first one however does actually make it clear that this is the Dylan co-composition. These guys get a fantastic sound out of the song – it is one of those cover versions which make me think, this must be the original, even though I know it isn’t. It is the care with which the instrumental arrangements fit with the vocals that really knocks me out.
And remember it was co-written by Bob Dylan; how can this be not better known?
With Bonnie Raitt there is a 40 second introduction which isn’t really necessary to listen to in order to appreciate the music. Another artist that appreciates just what a gem this song is. It really deserves to be much better known.
There must be something in this song that makes people want to talk about it rather than sing it. Danny O’Keefe gives us 90 seconds of talk first about how he came to write the song with Bob Dylan, which I can excuse – I mean if Bob ever asked me to help him out with a song, I’d still be talking about it six weeks later. But if you want to know about the songs origins do listen, or otherwise skip forward. As I said last time I featured this song, this is so worth hearing…
I’ll finish with Don Henley, not because I think it is the best of all but because one of the key issues with this song is that allows itself to be re-arranged into many different shapes and approaches and still come out shining. If only artists and their producers were not so drawn to covering the same Dylan songs that everyone else had done, maybe we could have even more superb covers of this wonderful piece.
Previously in the series
- The song with numbers in the title.
- Ain’t Talkin
- All I really want to do
- Angelina
- Apple Suckling and Are you Ready.
- As I went out one morning
- Ballad for a Friend
- Ballad in Plain D
- Ballad of a thin man
- Frankie Lee and Judas Priest
- The ballad of Hollis Brown
- Beyond here lies nothing
- Blind Willie McTell
- Black Crow Blues (more fun than you might recall)
- An unexpected cover of “Black Diamond Bay”
- Blowin in the wind as never before
- Bob Dylan’s Dream
- BoB Dylan’s 115th Dream revisited
- Boots of Spanish leather
- Born in Time
- Buckets of Rain
- Can you please crawl out your window
- Can’t wait
- Changing of the Guard
- Chimes of Freedom
- Country Pie
- Crash on the Levee
- Dark Eyes
- Dear Landlord
- Desolation Row as never ever before (twice)
- Dignity.
- Dirge
- Don’t fall apart on me tonight.
- Don’t think twice
- Down along the cove
- Drifter’s Escape
- Duquesne Whistle
- Farewell Angelina
- Foot of Pride and Forever Young
- Fourth Time Around
- From a Buick 6
- Gates of Eden
- Gotta Serve Somebody
- Hard Rain’s a-gonna Fall.
- Heart of Mine
- High Water
- Highway 61
- Hurricane
- I am a lonesome hobo
- I believe in you
- I contain multitudes
- I don’t believe you.
- I love you too much
- I pity the poor immigrant.
- I shall be released
- I threw it all away
- I want you
- I was young when I left home
- I’ll remember you
- Idiot Wind and More idiot wind
- If not for you, and a rant against prosody
- If you Gotta Go, please go and do something different
- If you see her say hello
- Dylan cover a day: I’ll be your baby tonight
- I’m not there.
- In the Summertime, Is your love and an amazing Isis
- It ain’t me babe
- It takes a lot to laugh
- It’s all over now Baby Blue
- It’s all right ma
- Just Like a Woman
- Knocking on Heaven’s Door
- Lay down your weary tune
- Lay Lady Lay
- Lenny Bruce
- That brand new leopard skin pill box hat
- Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts
- License to kill
- Like a Rolling Stone
- Love is just a four letter word
- Love Sick
- Maggies Farm!
- Make you feel my love; a performance that made me cry.
- Mama you’ve been on my mind
- Man in a long black coat.
- Masters of War
- Meet me in the morning
- Million Miles. Listen, and marvel.
- Mississippi. Listen, and marvel (again)
- Most likely you go your way
- Most of the time and a rhythmic thing
- Motorpsycho Nitemare
- Mozambique
- Mr Tambourine Man
- My back pages, with a real treat at the end
- New Morning
- New Pony. Listen where and when appropriate
- Nobody Cept You
- North Country Blues
- No time to think
- Obviously Five Believers
- Oh Sister
- On the road again
- One more cup of coffee
- (Sooner or later) one of us must know
- One too many mornings
- Only a hobo
- Only a pawn in their game
- Outlaw Blues – prepare to be amazed
- Oxford Town
- Peggy Day and Pledging my time
- Please Mrs Henry
- Political world
- Positively 4th Street
- Precious Angel
- Property of Jesus
- Queen Jane Approximately
- Quinn the Eskimo as it should be performed.
- Quit your lowdown ways
- Rainy Day Women as never before
- Restless Farewell. Exquisite arrangements, unbelievable power
- Ring them bells in many different ways
- Romance in Durango, covered and re-written
- Sad Eyed Lady of Lowlands, like you won’t believe
- Sara
- Senor
- A series of Dreams; no one gets it (except Dylan)
- Seven Days
- She Belongs to Me
- Shelter from the Storm
- Sign on the window
- Silvio
- Simple twist of fate
- Slow Train
- Someday Baby
- Spanish Harlem Incident
- Standing in the Doorway
- Stuck inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again
- Subterranean Homesick Blues
- Sweetheart Like You
- Tangled up in Blue
- Tears of Rage
- Temporary Like Achilles. Left in the cold, but there’s still something…
- The Groom’s Still Waiting at the Altar
- The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll
- The Man in Me
- Times they are a-changin’
- The Wicked Messenger
- Things have changed
- This Wheel’s on Fire
- Thunder on the mountain
- Till I fell in love with you in the north of Norway
- Time Passes Slowly – just sit down and close your eyes
- To be alone with you
- To Ramona: unexpectedly yes!
- Tombstone Blues
- Tonight I’ll be Staying Here With You
- Too much of nothing
- Trouble as you have never been troubled before
- Tryin’ to get to Heaven
- Unbelievable
- “Up to Me” and a return to earlier days
- Visions of Johanna
- Walking down the line
- Whatcha gonna do
What puzzles me about early covers of ‘Well Well Well’ – a song Dylan never recorded and it seems songwriting credits should fall 90% to Danny O’Keeffe & 10% to Dylan – is how did Don Henley get to know it & perform it so well in 1993 (live version in Boston), when the O’Keeffe original only surfaced on the ‘Runnin’ From The Devil’ studio recording in 1999?
One thing I should add Karl is that I don’t check the dates and claims that others make but merely repeat them or publish them (if written by someone else). The only area I’d claim any particular expertise in, is the actual musical compositioin. The dates of recordings I quote are those supplied by others – but not checked by me. (In my defence I’d add that if I did go checking, nothing would ever get published, as the checking would take so long).