Revised: 4/9/2026
| Version | Year | Build | Build Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15.1 | NA | 15.01.00.0187 | 02/16/2026 |
| 15 | NA | 15.00.00.0405 | 08/01/2025 |
| 14 | NA | 14.00.00.0910 | 11/13/2023 |
| 13 | NA | 13.00.00.0891 | 01/10/2023 |
| 12 | NA | 12.00.02.1101 | 10/10/2022 |
| 11 | 2019 | 11.00.04.0201 | 05/18/2021 |
If you want to dive deeper into specific parts of his catalog, let me know: Which interests you most?
In the mid-1960s, Dylan made a controversial choice. He abandoned pure folk music and embraced loud, plugged-in rock and roll. This shift alienated traditional folk fans but permanently altered popular music. Bringing It All Back Home (1965)
Sony's official 2013 release of The Complete Album Collection Vol. One on a limited-edition USB drive recognized this demand, supplying the entire collection in both formats directly alongside the physical CDs. This official source remains the benchmark for anyone seeking a definitive, high-quality digital archive of Dylan's work.
His self-titled debut album featured mostly traditional folk songs and blues covers, highlighting his raw, gravelly vocal delivery. bob dylan complete discography 19592012 320
Across dozens of studio albums, live records and official bootlegs, Dylan’s evolving voice, everyman persona, and uncanny songwriting — non sequitur images, conversational cadences, and moral ambiguity — transformed 20th-century popular music and literature. By 2012 Dylan had amassed a vast discography that resists simple summary: it’s a chronicle of constant motion, continual reinvention, and an enduring commitment to song as living, mutable art.
This era is often viewed as Dylan’s most inconsistent, yet it produced striking highlights and a return to his origins.
Two solo, fully acoustic albums of traditional folk and blues covers that revitalized his vocal delivery. If you want to dive deeper into specific
A fragmented release notable primarily for the 11-minute epic "Brownsville Girl," co-written with Sam Shepard.
A film soundtrack featuring the classic anthem "Knockin' on Heaven's Door."
This transitional album features one acoustic side and one electric side. It includes the rapid-fire surrealism of "Subterranean Homesick Blues" and the poetic depth of "Mr. Tambourine Man." Highway 61 Revisited (1965) This shift alienated traditional folk fans but permanently
A dark, violent, and theatrical album concluding this definitive 50-year chronological run.
Every Bob Dylan Album Ranked From Worst to Best - Paste Magazine