track

Just Like a Woman - Live at Free Trade Hall, Manchester, UK - May 17, 1966

1966Released
5:52

Did You Know?

Interesting facts and trivia about Just Like a Woman - Live at Free Trade Hall, Manchester, UK - May 17, 1966. By Songfacts®.

Dylan wrote this ballad on Thanksgiving Day 1965 while on tour in Kansas City. It was allegedly inspired by Warhol factory pin-up girl Edie Sedgwick, who appears in sleeve photos to Blonde On Blonde and died of a drug overdose in 1971. It could also be about his relationship with fellow folk singer Joan Baez.

The song came under some fire for the line "she breaks just like a little girl," which some listeners felt was disparaging to women. This is a very shallow interpretation, however, and rarely taken seriously by Dylan's fans. Many of Dylan's songs include put-downs, and sometimes those targets happen to be women. Examples include "Like A Rolling Stone" and "Positively 4th Street."

Joe Cocker, Rick Nelson, Rod Stewart. Jonathan King and Richie Havens are among the many artists to cover this song. Manfred Mann is the only artist besides Dylan to chart with it: Their version topped out at #101 in September 1966; Dylan's version made #33 in October.

Song Analysis

Key, BPM (tempo) and time signature of Just Like a Woman - Live at Free Trade Hall, Manchester, UK - May 17, 1966.
FKey
MajorMode
4/4Time Signature
146BPM

Album

The album Just Like a Woman - Live at Free Trade Hall, Manchester, UK - May 17, 1966 is released on.

Released By

The record label that has released Just Like a Woman - Live at Free Trade Hall, Manchester, UK - May 17, 1966.
Columbia/Legacy
Originally Recorded 1966, Originally Released 1985 Sony Music Entertainment Inc.

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