It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by thesmokingman
I think Bob Dylan wrote the song
en.wikipedia.org...edit on 19-6-2013 by thesmokingman because: (no reason given)
I'm sorry, but no version can compare to Jimmy Hendrix's.
Originally posted by CosmicCitizen
From a site on song meanings:
You guys are getting too in depth. If you ever get a chance to visit New Paltz, NY, the whole first part of the song would make sense. The town and village are famous for its farmers and the visitors from NYC (Businessmen and Plowmen). It is also famous for it's people who love their weed (feel like life is a joke -Burnouts). Upon the mountain top is the Albert K. Smiley Memorial Tower, which dates back to 1923 which is also one of the most famous attractions in New Paltz. The Princes which kept the view are the brothers Albert K. Smiley and Alfred H. Smiley, who are the men that purchased and cared for the lands on which the Watchtower was later constructed on, and which overlooks New Paltz. The last verse about the riders approaching came from his motor cycle accident in 1966 in which a Red Fox or the "Wild Cat" ran in front of him causing him to lose balance and fall off his bike on the hair pin turn of route 44/55 ironically in a perfect view of the ridge or "Watch Tower" this happened on a windy night hence the wind howling. Don't get to analytical, but look into the area and its history, its very interesting!
en.wikipedia.org...(album)
The dark, religious tones that appeared during the Basement Tapes sessions also continues through these songs, manifesting in language from the King James Bible. In The Bible in the Lyrics of Bob Dylan, Bert Cartwright cites more than sixty biblical allusions over the course of the thirty-eight and a half minute album, with as many as fifteen in "The Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest" alone. An Old Testament morality also colors most of the songs' characters. In an interview with Toby Thompson[2] in 1968, Dylan's mother, Beatty Zimmerman, mentioned Dylan's growing interest in the Bible, stating that "in his house in Woodstock today, there's a huge Bible open on a stand in the middle of his study. Of all the books that crowd his house, overflow from his house, that Bible gets the most attention. He's continuously getting up and going over to refer to something."
Originally posted by concernedcitizen519
I'm sorry, but no version can compare to Jimmy Hendrix's.