Recorded at Columbia Studios, Nashville, Tennessee.
Bob Dylan – Harmonica & Lead Guitar (on Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat)
Charlie McCoy – Harmonica (on Obviously 5 Believers)
Musicians – Wayne Moss, Charlie McCoy, Kenneth Buttrey, Hargus Robbins, Jerry Kennedy, Joe South, Al Kooper, Bill Aikins, Henry Strzelecki, Jaime Robertson
Produced by Bob Johnston
All photos, original and additional photos are by Jerry Schatzberg.
Produced for Reissue by Steve Berkowitz
CD Stereo Mastering: Greg Calbi/Sterling Sound
CD Mixed by Michael H. Brauer and Steve Berkowitz/Quad Recording Studios
Tape Research: Didier Deutsch
Repackage Design: Skouras Design
The red channel always suffers with jpegs, its something thats technically flawed in the design and its unlikely you'll get better results on rescanning.
This was, by the way, the only 1960s album of Dylan that I had on CD before the 2003 remasters came out, not necessarily because it was my personal favorite but because I could finally listen to this former double LP in one sitting. This being said, Blonde On Blonde may be Dylan's best-ever album musically, made with some renowned session musicians in Nashville (harmonica player, guitarist and bassist Charlie McCoy, guitarist Wayne Moss, guitarist and bassist Joe South, and drummer Kenny Buttrey), besides the familiar Al Kooper on organ and guitar and Robbie Robertson on guitar, and it also contains some of his best compositions, all mostly created unconsciously, something Dylan would lose after his motorcycle accident only a few months later.
You don't need to try it. You can read the letters clearly on a PNG image of the same dimensions (800 x 800 pixels) which, however, has a filesize of 964 KB whereas the JPEG image only has 87 KB - and the maximum filesize on 45cat and 45worlds is 250 KB (and only JPG/JPEG images are accepted).
Edit: Maybe there is a way but I don't know it. The label image on Discogs is JPEG, only 500 x 500 pixels and 170 KB, and is rather well legible.
Blurring black letters on the red disc label on this JPEG image though (you can't read the cat# there), where my original scan was perfectly clear. One day we'll have better ways of saving images here.