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| "Absolutely Sweet Marie" | ||||
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| Song by Bob Dylan from the album Blonde on Blonde | ||||
| Released | May 16, 1966 | |||
| Recorded | March 8, 1966 | |||
| Genre | Folk rock | |||
| Length | 4:57 | |||
| Label | Columbia | |||
| Writer | Bob Dylan | |||
| Blonde on Blonde track listing | ||||
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"Absolutely Sweet Marie" is a song written by Bob Dylan, released on his 1966 double album Blonde on Blonde. An exuberantly up-tempo number, "Sweet Marie" is full of diverse, often hardly disguised sexual imagery.
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During a 1991 interview published in Paul Zollo's book Songwriters on Songwriting, Expanded Fourth Edition (New York: Da Capo Press, 1997), Dylan gives an idea of how he sees the song in his explanation of a line about a "yellow railroad":
The song contains the phrase "To live outside the law you must be honest." Jonathan Lethem points to a very similar line in the 1958 film The Lineup: "When you live outside the law, you have to eliminate dishonesty" and that Dylan "heard it…, cleaned it up a little, and inserted it into" this song.[1]
Dylan did not perform "Sweet Marie" live until 1988, and has intermittently played it since, including during a session for his MTV Unplugged appearance.
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