Bob Dylan, the man of song and dance, lives in that moment between a whisper and a scream, where words cease to submit and begin to sing. He electrifies poetry, transforms folk into rebellion and protest into pop, pushing the boundaries of song. Born in 1941 as Robert Zimmerman in Minnesota, he found his truth on the radio and arrived in New York at twenty, not to preserve folk, but to reinvent it. Greenwich Village became his laboratory, and Dave Van Ronk, the scene's "caretaker," showed him that folk was about blood, not labels. With Joan Baez, his raw voice met a movement that suddenly resonated worldwide, especially when "Blowin' in the Wind" left the clubs and climbed the charts. And when he turned up the amplifiers at Newport in 1965, one thing was clear: Dylan wasn't confined to a genre; he changed its rules. He is in perpetual evolution: folk hero, rock rebel, Nobel Prize-winning poet – all labels are too reductive. His songs transcend trends because they contain contradictions: sacred and profane, intimate and mythical, America grappling with its own conflicts. Dylan is not a genre; he is a climatic phenomenon that everything else must confront. SONGBOOK WITH FRIENDS is a collection of his most beautiful songs, enriched with exceptional interpretations by other artists and iconic tracks composed by close friends he met during his travels.