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Executive Told Bob Dylan 'Your Voice Sounds Like A Sick Cat.' What He Did Next Left Them Speechless November 22, 1961. Bob Dylan sat on a wooden bench outside a Columbia Records boardroom. He was 20 years old. Unknown. Broke. And through the door, he could hear executives deciding his future. "His voice sounds like a sick cat," one of them said. "He'll never sell records," another agreed. "Drop him." Dylan sat there. Listened to every word. Said nothing. Then he stood up, picked up his guitar, and left. He didn't argue. He didn't defend himself. He didn't try to change their minds. He just went back to the studio and kept recording. His first album? Sold 5,000 copies. The executives were right. It was a failure. "I told you," they said. "Cut him." But one man—John Hammond—said: "Give him one more album." That second album contained a song called "Blowin' in the Wind." It became the anthem of a generation. Dylan sold a million copies in months. Then millions more. Then tens of millions. Then over 125 million records across six decades. The executive who said Dylan's voice would never sell? Nobody remembers his name. Bob Dylan? Still recording at 83 years old. This is the story of the greatest quiet revenge in music history. Not with words. Not with confrontation. Just with sixty years of proof. DISCLAIMER: This video contains AI-assisted narration and visuals created for storytelling and educational purposes. The story presented is based on public interviews, widely discussed music history accounts, and interpretive narrative elements. Some dialogue and scenes are reconstructed or dramatized to convey context and emotional truth. This content is not intended to present verified verbatim conversations or make factual claims beyond available public sources. All individuals are portrayed with respect.