"Pledging My Time" is an
8-bar blues song various writers link to the influences of
Chicago blues legends
Elmore James and
Muddy Waters, as well as
Mississippi Delta greats
Robert Johnson and the
Mississippi Sheiks. Dylan was first exposed to the blues as a teenager during the 1950s. He wrote and recorded a handful of blues songs for his early
acoustic albums, but began focusing on the genre with his 1965 album
Highway 61 Revisited, which featured several
electric blues tracks. Early in the fall of 1965, about a month after
Highway 61's
release, Dylan was back in Columbia's New York studios to begin work on his next album. After five
sessions that stretched into early 1966 and produced only one usable track, Columbia producer
Bob Johnston convinced Dylan to move the recordings to Nashville, where Johnston had previously worked at Columbia's studios on the city's legendary
Music Row. Dylan, who was on the North American leg of his
1966 World Tour, arrived in Nashville in mid-February with only a couple new songs in mind and only two musicians from the New York sessions, guitarist
Robbie Robertson and organist
Al Kooper. Johnston assembled a studio band that included some of Nashville's top session men, including drummer
Kenny Buttrey, pianist
Hargus "Pig" Robbins, bassist
Henry Strzelecki, and guitarists
Charlie McCoy,
Wayne Moss and
Joe South. After three days in the studio with his new ensemble, Dylan left Nashville in mid-February to play eight dates that took him from New England to Canada to Florida. He returned to Music Row in early March for four more sessions. In the second of these, on March 8, the group laid down three new tracks, "
Absolutely Sweet Marie", "Pledging My Time", and "
Just Like a Woman".) During the session, Dylan borrowed one of Buttrey's drumsticks to beat out a rhythm on the
snare drum to show the musicians the "strong beat" he wanted. Dylan wrapped up recording for the album with sessions on March 9 and 10. "Pledging My Time" was released in the United States on March 22 as the
B-side of "
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35". Both tracks had two verses removed for the release. The second and fifth verses were cut from "Pledging My Time, which fades out at the end of the single's third verse. As a result, the single version ran a mere 2 minutes and 6 seconds, while the album track clocked in at 3 minutes and 50 seconds. The record reached number 2 on the
Billboard Hot 100 and number 7 on the
UK Singles Chart.
Blonde on Blonde was issued as a
double album on June 20 with "Rainy Day Women" and "Pledging My Time" as its first two tracks. ==Composition and lyrical interpretation==