5 Times Bob Dylan Baffled Us By Leaving Great Songs on the Cutting Room Floor

"She's Your Lover Now" (1966):  Dylan's fervent attempt at love's breakdown, a masterpiece with fantastic one-liners, recorded during Blonde on Blonde sessions.

"I'm Not There" (1967): Mysterious Basement Tapes gem, haunting and elusive, capturing Dylan's enigmatic essence with an elusive refrain.

"Blind Willie McTell" (1983):  Dylan's masterpiece, rich in Southern imagery, an acoustic gem with Mark Knopfler, inexplicably left off Infidels.

"Foot of Pride" (1983): Overlooked gem with Knopfler's gritty guitar, Dylan's potent lyrics on societal ills, bypassed for "Union Sundown."

 "Red River Shore" (1997): Time Out of Mind's hidden jewel, a tragic ballad on profound love's engulfing loss, a revelation in 2006.