- Diamonds & Rust (song)
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"Diamonds & Rust" Song by Joan Baez from the album 'Diamonds & Rust' Released July 1975 Recorded January 1975 Genre Folk Length 4:39 Label A&M Writer Joan Baez Producer David Kershenbaum 'Diamonds & Rust' track listing "Blue Sky" "Diamonds & Rust" "Sweeter For Me" "Diamonds & Rust" is a song written and performed by Joan Baez - it was released in 1975, but had been written the previous November.
In the song, Baez recounts an out-of-the-blue phone call from an old lover, which sends her a decade back in time, to a "crummy" hotel in Greenwich Village; she recalls giving him a pair of cuff-links, and summarizes that memories bring "diamonds and rust" (i.e. time leaves us with both happy and bad memories).
The song, which was a top-40 hit for Baez on the U.S. pop singles chart, is regarded by a number of critics, as well as by Baez fans, as one of her best compositions. It served as the title song on Baez's gold-selling Diamonds & Rust album in 1975.
For her 1995 live recording Ring Them Bells, Baez performed the song as a duet with Mary Chapin Carpenter. In that performance, she changed the end lines: "And if you're / offering me diamonds and rust / I've already paid," to: "And if you... well I'll take the diamonds." And also : "I bought you some cuff links, you brought me something" turned out to be "I bought you some cuff links, you brought me troubles" And on 25 February 2009, in Austin, she sang it, "And if you... well I'll take the Grammy."
Contents
The Bob Dylan connection
The song alludes to Baez's relationship with Bob Dylan ten years before. In her memoir, And a Voice to Sing With (1987), she recounted how she told Dylan that the song was about her ex-husband David Harris, thereby countering the rumors that the song was about Dylan and Baez[citation needed]. Although Dylan is not specifically named in the song, Baez uses phrases from the song in describing her relationship with Dylan in the third chapter of the memoir, and has been explicit that he was the inspiration for the song.
In And a Voice to Sing With, Baez remembers a conversation between her and Dylan:
"You gonna sing that song about robin's eggs and diamonds?" Bob had asked me on the first day of rehearsals.
"Which one?"
"You know, that one about blue eyes and diamonds..."
"Oh", I said, "you must mean 'Diamonds And Rust', the song I wrote for my husband, David. I wrote it while he was in prison."
"For your husband?" Bob said.
"Yeah. Who did you think it was about?" I stonewalled.
"Oh, hey, what the fuck do I know?"
"Never mind. Yeah, I'll sing it, if you like."Baez's marriage to Harris had, in fact, already ended by the time the song was written. In an interview [1] with music writer Mike Ragogna, Baez later admitted that the character in the song is Dylan:
MR: "Diamonds And Rust" was another magic moment. You've said when you began writing the song, it started as something else until Dylan phoned you. Then it became about him. That must have been one hell of a call.
JB: He read me the entire lyrics to "Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts" that he'd just finished from a phone booth in the Midwest.
MR: What was the song about originally?
JB: I don't remember what I'd been writing about, but it had nothing to do with what it ended up as.
- interview in The Huffington Post, 15 October 2009Popular covers
The song was later covered with edited lyrics by Judas Priest for the album Sin After Sin. It was originally recorded a year earlier for Sad Wings of Destiny but not included on the album- and this early version appears on The Best of Judas Priest, Hero, Hero, as well as some remasters of their first album, Rocka Rolla. A live version of the song is on Unleashed in the East. The song remains a staple of Judas Priest live concert performances. In recent years, Priest have been performing a mostly-acoustic version of the song that is more similar to the original than the rock version on their recorded albums.
Cover versions have also been recorded by Blackmore's Night, Great White, Taylor Mitchell, Model M (band) and Thunderstone.
The song has been sampled in two popular hip-hop songs, "Happiness" and "Upgrade Call", by Busdriver and Andre Nickatina respectively. The versions used in both songs are pitched-warped to sound squeaky.
External links
References
- ^ "How Sweet The Sound: An Interview With Joan Baez". October 14, 2009. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mike-ragogna/how-sweet-the-sound-an-in_b_320193.html. Retrieved July 2010.
- Baez, Joan. 1987. And a Voice to Sing With: A Memoir. Century Hutchinson, London. ISBN 0-671-40062-2
Studio albums Joan Baez (1960) • Joan Baez, Vol. 2 (1961) • Joan Baez/5 (1964) • Farewell, Angelina (1965) • Noël (1966) • Joan (1967) • Baptism: A Journey Through Our Time (1968) • Any Day Now (1968) • David's Album (1969) • I Live One Day at a Time (1970) • Carry It On (1971) • Blessed Are... (1971) • Come from the Shadows (1972) • Where Are You Now, My Son? (1973) • Gracias a la Vida: Joan Baez canta en español (1974) • Diamonds & Rust (1975) • Gulf Winds (1976) • Blowin' Away (1977) • Honest Lullaby (1979) • Recently (1987) • Speaking of Dreams (1989) • Play Me Backwards (1992) • Gone From Danger (1997) • Dark Chords on a Big Guitar (2003) • Day after Tomorrow (2008)Live albums Joan Baez in Concert (1962) • Joan Baez in Concert, Part 2 (1963) • From Every Stage (1976) • Live Europe 83 (1983) • Diamonds & Rust in the Bullring (1988) • Ring Them Bells (1995) • Live at Newport (1996; recorded 1963-65) • Bowery Songs (2005)Compilations Folksingers 'Round Harvard Square (1959) • Portrait of Joan Baez (1967) • The First 10 Years (1970) • The Joan Baez Ballad Book (1972) • Hits: Greatest and Others (1973) • The Contemporary Ballad Book (1974) • The Joan Baez Lovesong Album (1976) • Best of Joan C. Baez (1977) • The Joan Baez Country Music Album (1979) • Joan Baez: Classics (1986) • Rare, Live & Classic (1993) • Best of Joan Baez: The Millennium Collection (2000) • The Complete A&M Recordings (2003)Notable songs "Babe, I'm Gonna Leave You" • "China" • "Day After Tomorrow" • "Diamonds & Rust" • "Farewell, Angelina" • "Forever Young" • "Here's to You" • "Honest Lullaby" • "House of the Rising Sun" • "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" • "Joe Hill" • "Lily of the West" • "Love Is Just a Four-Letter Word" • "Love Song to a Stranger" • "Mary Hamilton" • "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" • "Recently" • "Reunion Hill" • "Rexroth's Daughter" • "Scarlet Tide" • "Silver Dagger" • "Speaking of Dreams" • "Stones in the Road" • "Sweet Sir Galahad" • "There but for Fortune" • "We Shall Overcome" • "What Have They Done to the Rain"Related Rob Halford · Glenn Tipton · Richie Faulkner · Ian Hill · Scott Travis
K. K. Downing · Dave Holland · Tim "Ripper" Owens · Al Atkins · Les Binks · Alan Moore · Simon Phillips · John Hinch · Chris Campbell · John Pattridge · John EllisStudio albums Live albums Unleashed in the East · Priest...Live! · '98 Live Meltdown · Live in London · A Touch of Evil: Live · British Steel: 30th Anniversary LiveExtended plays SCOOP 33 · Delivering the Goods · Priest... Live Promo · Night Crawler · Live Meltdown Promo · Nostradamus EPCompilations The Best of Judas Priest · Hero, Hero · Screaming '84 · Beyond Metal · Trouble Shooters · Super Best Judas Priest Collection · The Sharpest Cuts · Pure Classic Gold · Metal Works '73–'93 · Judas Priest Star Box · Prisoners of Pain · The Beast of Judas Priest · The Best of Judas Priest: Living After Midnight · Priest Live & Rare · Simply the Best · Genocide · Breaking the Law · Limited Edition Collector's Box · Delivering the Goods · Metalogy · The Essential Judas Priest · Judas Priest · Greatest Hits - Steel Box Collection · Playlist - The Very Best of Judas Priest · Single Cuts · Setlist · The Chosen FewVideos Judas Priest Live · Fuel for Life · Priest... Live! · Operation Rock & Roll · Painkiller · Dream Deceivers · Metal Works '73 - '93 Video · Live - Angel of Retribution - Halford : Live at Rock in Rio 2001 · Live in London · Electric Eye · Rising in the East · Live Vengeance '82 · British Steel: 30th Anniversary LiveSingles "Rocka Rolla" · "Deceiver" · "Tyrant" · "The Ripper" · "Dissident Aggressor" · "Diamonds and Rust" · "Hell Bent for Leather" · "Exciter" · "Better by You, Better than Me" · "Before the Dawn" · "Evening Star" · "Take on the World" · "Diamonds and Rust (Live)" · "Rock Forever" · "Living After Midnight" · "Breaking the Law" · "United" · "Heading Out to the Highway" · "Sinner" · "Don't Go" · "Hot Rockin'" · "(Take These) Chains" · "You've Got Another Thing Comin'" · "Electric Eye" · "The Green Manalishi" · "Freewheel Burning" · "Love Bites" · "Some Heads Are Gonna Roll" · "Turbo Lover" · "Locked In" · "Parental Guidance" · "Ram It Down" · "Blood Red Skies" · "I'm a Rocker" · "Johnny B. Goode" · "Painkiller" · "A Touch of Evil" · "Night Crawler" · "Burn in Hell" · "Bullet Train" · "Bloodsuckers" · "Feed on Me" · "Machine Man" · "Lost and Found" · "Revolution" · "Worth Fighting For" · "Alone" · "Visions"Tours and concerts Hell Bent for Leather Tour · British Steel Tour · World Wide Blitz Tour · World Vengeance Tour · Retribution Tour · 2008/2009 World Tour · Metal Masters Tour · Epitaph World TourRelated articles Discography · Members · A Tribute to Judas Priest: Legends of Metal · Hell Bent Forever: A Tribute to Judas PriestCategories:- 1975 singles
- Bob Dylan
- Joan Baez songs
- Judas Priest songs
- Songs written by Joan Baez
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