Open the Door, Homer Releases Gigs Lyrics Comments

Details

Author
Bob Dylan
Original Band
Bob Dylan & The Band
According to our records, Robyn has played this song 26 times, most recently at Robyn and Emma's house on December 14, 2022. He first performed it at Andy Kershaw's Flat on November 02, 1991, 31 years and 1 month earlier.
Title Artist Label Type Year
The Kershaw Sessions Robyn Hitchcock and The Egyptians Strange Roots Album 1994
Patreon 2024 Robyn Hitchcock Internet 2024
Venue Billed As City State Country Date
Andy Kershaw's Flat Robyn Hitchcock & the Egyptians London England UK 11/02/1991
Mountain Stage (Capitol Music Hall) Robyn Hitchcock & the Egyptians Charleston West Virginia US 01/26/1992
Moby Disc Robyn Hitchcock & the Egyptians Los Angeles California US 04/25/1993
St. James Church Crypt Robyn Hitchcock London England UK 07/14/1994
Newbury Comics Robyn Hitchcock Boston Massachusetts US 04/08/1995
Amherst College Robyn Hitchcock Amherst Massachusetts US 04/09/1995
Park West Robyn Hitchcock Chicago Illinois US 04/15/1995
Largo Robyn Hitchcock Los Angeles California US 11/07/2002
Southbank Centre - Queen Elizabeth Hall Robyn Hitchcock: 50th Birthday Celebration London England UK 03/02/2003
Beachland Ballroom Robyn Hitchcock & the Venus 3 Cleveland Ohio US 11/12/2006
Sellersville Theater Robyn Hitchcock & the Venus 3 Sellersville Pennsylvania US 11/14/2006
Club Congress Robyn Hitchcock & the Venus 3 Tucson Arizona US 04/14/2007
Black Lion Inn Robyn Hitchcock Hereford England UK 05/31/2008
Town square Robyn Hitchcock Cusercoli Italy 08/01/2011
Rams Head on Stage Robyn Hitchcock Annapolis Maryland US 02/25/2014
Concerts In The Studio Robyn Hitchcock Freehold New Jersey US 02/28/2014
The Basement Robyn Hitchcock Sydney New South Wales Australia 05/23/2014
Flying Saucer Club Robyn Hitchcock Melbourne Victoria Australia 05/30/2014
Chapungu Lodge Robyn Hitchcock Thornybush Private Game Reserve South Africa 02/10/2016
Woodstock Playhouse Robyn Hitchcock Woodstock New York US 09/02/2017
The Portland Arms Robyn Hitchcock Cambridge England UK 10/30/2018
The Chef Restaurant Robyn Hitchcock Hoi An Vietnam 12/06/2018
Robyn & Emma's house Robyn Hitchcock & Emma Swift Nashville Tennessee US 04/08/2020
Robyn & Emma's house Robyn Hitchcock & Emma Swift Nashville Tennessee US 04/10/2020
Robyn and Emma's house Robyn Hitchcock London England UK 05/21/2021
Robyn and Emma's house Robyn Hitchcock London England UK 12/14/2022

Comments

From Robyn on Patreon in 2024
Back in the Holy Days of 1967, while Brian Wilson was finding himself unable to finish his SMILE project, Bob Dylan and the Band were making a deliciously incomplete clutch of recordings that became known as The Basement Tapes. These began to appear in Britain a couple of years later on white label, white sleeved LPs known as ‘bootlegs’ - as they weren’t legal releases through CBS, Dylan’s record company. For us Dylan fanatics, bootlegs became the new Holy Grail once we realised that many of them contained better material than his current ‘official’ releases.

“Waters Of Oblivion” was a 12-song compilation of songs that Dylan had apparently written in 1967, right before his official album “John Wesley Harding”. When I found it in Kensington Market in early 1971 I bought it swiftly and greedily. The stylus of my maroon plastic portable record player crackled through a curtain of muffled tape hiss to reveal a nest of, er…well: I could best describe these songs by singing them, or sitting you down to listen to them, which you probably did ages ago. They’re dreams with catchy choruses - portentous, vivid and surreal; yet all of them ring true. They’re playful, soulful, sometimes drunken; much more fun to my 17-year-old ears than the CBS albums Dylan had unleashed since 1966.

There were no recording details; Dylan had recorded them with the Band, apparently - the Tapes seemed to come out of a mist and vanish into a cloud. They went in deep with many, myself included. Over years I’ve occasionally attempted to create ‘accidental’ albums in the same way; mixing up covers and old songs of mine with new creations. It’s not a bad M.O., though the new songs tend to win through because nobody’s heard them before.

These recordings of two Bob Dylan songs “Open The Door, Homer” and “Yea! Heavy And A Bottle Of Bread” date from the early part of this century, 40 years or so after they first appeared among The Basement Tapes. “Open The Door…” struck a deep chord with me; the sense of resignation and world-weariness - not what you’re expected to feel at 17 - nonetheless felt like wise counsel for navigating the grown-up world I was supposed to be entering. The last verse is infused with that desolate wisdom that nobody can conjure like Bob Dylan.

“Yea! Heavy…” could almost be a Velvet Underground outtake from the “Ferryboat Bill” era; they would have had fun with that mechanical two-chord riff. I’ve been singing these songs to myself and with friends at parties for decades. These two takes hail from one of those gatherings; Scott McCaughey is on bass and harmonies, and Bill Reiflin plays drums. And I think Nick Lowe was around.

Scattered beyond the grasp of memory there are recordings of my friends and I singing many songs off the Basement Tapes. But finding them now all is another matter…