American rock folk legend Bob Dylan released his first album eight years ago, the day before yesterday, entitled "Ruff and Roody Ways."

Dylan's 39th album, which comes 58 years after his debut album, featured a 17-minute song about the assassination of John F. Kennedy, as well as a tribute to American blues singer Jimmy Reed.

The new album is the first collection of Dylan, the Nobel laureate, since "Tampst" in 2012, noting that he released a number of albums that include previous songs after him.

When I was asked, in an interview with The New York Times, the first after he won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2016, about the lyrics of the song "I-Continent Multitude" included in the album, he said, "I think about the death of mankind. The long alien flight of the naked monkey.

"Everyone's life is passing. Every human being, regardless of his strength and might, is weak when it comes to death. "I think about it in general, and not in a personal way."

In this song, Dylan cites Indiana Jones, Anne Frank and Rolling Stones in the same clip. And in the song "Morder Most Fool", which was first launched last March, he talks about the assassination of President Kennedy in Dallas while describing the development of counter culture in the 1960s.

Dylan, who touched on some of his songs in the 1960s and 1970s, also mentions police brutality and racism, such as "Hurricane" the Talsa massacre of 1921.

Despite his old age, Dylan, who was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Barack Obama in 2012, has been making regular tours almost non-stop for the past three decades.

Honorary song for American Blues singer Jimmy Redd.

39

Album number on the legend of American Music Myth.

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