© AP
Bob Dylan
Childhood Pal to Sell 1950s Dylan Tape
Sep 27, 11:47 AM EST

The Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS -- As teenagers
in northern Minnesota in the late '50s,
Ric Kangas and Bobby Zimmerman would
spend hours playing guitar and singing.
During one of those sessions, Zimmerman
asked his friend to record it.
Kangas had no idea then
that he was recording the man who would
soon become Bob Dylan. Years later,
he came across the tape, which features
Dylan singing three songs and playing
guitar on another.
Now, Kangas is selling
his "suitcase tape," named
for where he found it.
In early October, Heritage
Auction Galleries in Dallas will offer
the tape for sale. Kangas said one Dylan
expert appraised the tape at about $100,000,
but Kangas has no idea if it will fetch
that much.
A publicist said Wednesday
that Dylan had no comment.
Kangas said Dylan, who
was two years behind him at Hibbing
High School, was impressed by Kangas'
performance at a school talent show.
"Not long after that
we met on the street. He said, 'Hey,
I understand you write songs,'"
Kangas recalled. For the next few months,
he said, the two young men sang and
played songs for each other often.
Within a few years, Dylan
was off first to Minneapolis,
then to New York City, then to international
stardom and acclaim. Kangas, who now
lives in Santa Barbara, Calif., bounced
around the country for many years, working
as a photographer, actor and Elvis impersonator.
He saw Dylan a few more times, the last
time backstage after a show in Memphis
in 1974.
He came across the tape
a few years ago, Kangas said, but couldn't
play it until he found the right kind
of old tape recorder at a garage sale.
Kangas said Dylan sings
three songs, two of them in a much more
melodic voice than what would later
become his trademark. The third, Kangas
said, gives a better hint of the later
Dylan style: "He kind of sings
like a frog."