Joan Osborne channels her inner Bob Dylan on covers album
NEW YORK — When Joan Osborne first met Bob Dylan, the two singers got very, very close. There wasn’t much of a choice — they had to share the same recording studio microphone.
“I’m like literally inches away from his face,” Osborne recalled. “I had to focus so particularly on his mouth and his lips just to get the phrasing right — because I was doing harmony to him and I had to match him — that the whole room became this tunnel.”
On that day in 1998, the two did three quick versions of his iconic song “Chimes of Freedom,” which would play over the end credits of the NBC show “The 60’s.” Each take was completely different.
“You’ve got to be focused on him or you’re going to be left behind. I felt like that was an interesting challenge but also, for me, it was a testament just to the way his mind works so quickly,” she said. “He has an idea. He does it. He’s bored with it, he moves on to something else.”


