I Shall Be Released . . . Bob Dylan
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G                                                 Am        Bm                                C          D          G
They say everything can be replaced        They say every distance is not near
G                                    Am     Bm                 C               D       G         
So I remember every face           Of every man who put me here
G                                  Am     Bm                 C          D       G     
I see my light come shinin'       From the west unto the east
G                       Am                       Bm    C     D      G     

Any day now,       any day now       I shall be released

They say ev'ry man needs protection They say that every man must fall
Yet I swear I see my reflection Somewhere so high above this wall
I see my light come shinin' From the west unto the east
Any day now, any day now I shall be released

Now yonder standing there in this lonely crowd A man who swears he's not to blame
All day long I hear him shouting so loud Just crying out that he was framed
I see my light come shinin' From the west unto the east
Any day now, any day now I shall be released

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From Songfacts.com »
Bob Dylan wrote this in 1967 but it was not until 1971 on his Greatest Hits Vol. II album that his version was officially released. The Band, who backed up Dylan on his first electric tour, recorded it for Music From Big Pink, which was the 1968 debut album. Their version is the most well-known.

This song could be either an anti-death penalty composition or a metaphoric attempt by Dylan at looking forward to being released from Hell on Earth - possibly awaiting the "release" from the hell of being an innocent man wrongly imprisoned. There is a very solemn, religious hymnal quality to the song that is represented by the lyrics, "My light come shining from the west unto the east," which is an apocalyptic reference.

In Robert Shelton's biography No Direction Home, he gives the song a different meaning. After Dylan's motorcycle accident in 1966, when he was 25, he retreated from the spotlight. This was after he had suffered great disappointment at the reception his European and American tour dates brought. He'd been booed offstage, called a traitor, and attendance dropped at some of his concert dates. Dylan was seriously injured in the accident, and Shelton states that Dylan withdrew not only to recuperate, but to spend the time in self reflection, and with his family. He goes further, saying that the song represents Dylan's search for personal salvation.


*The above file is this author's own work and
represents his interpretation of this well-known
song. This file may only be used for private study,
scholarship, or research.