It was the cover of the Bob Dylan song by Peter, Paul, and Mary that really put "Blowin' in the Wind" up on the charts. That was in 1963. It was considered a protest song. Surf the link to the Wikipedia article on this tune, which is number 14 on Rolling Stone's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
Bob Dylan's album, "Blowing in the Wind" was released to the public in 1964, two years after the debut of his first album. The song "Blowing in the Wind" was not released to the public until his second album.
No...that was English folk poet DONOVAN.
Those are rhetorical questions, which Dylan raises to make a point, that the issue of civil rights is obvious and unavoidable.
It's not by Bob Dylan, it's by Neil Diamond.
the song is called "catch the wind" by donovan NOT bob dylan.
Bob Dylan - Blowing in the wind
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I believe that it was the Key of D.
Bob Dylan's album, "Blowing in the Wind" was released to the public in 1964, two years after the debut of his first album. The song "Blowing in the Wind" was not released to the public until his second album.
Bob Dylan. The song is called Blowing in the Wind.
No...that was English folk poet DONOVAN.
"Blowin' in the Wind" was recorded by the folk singers Bob Dylan and Peter, Paul and Mary. Dylan wrote the song in 1962 and released it on his album "The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan," while Peter, Paul and Mary had a hit cover version in the same year.
Bob Dylan - the song is called "Blowin' in the Wind".
for what it's worth, buffalo springfield blowing in the wind, bob dylan war, edwin starr
He's been doing more then one thing in the wind. In the song Blowing In The Wind, he said The answer my friend is blowing in the wind. In the song Subterranean Homesick Blues he was telling us you don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.
Those are rhetorical questions, which Dylan raises to make a point, that the issue of civil rights is obvious and unavoidable.
It's not by Bob Dylan, it's by Neil Diamond.