Bob Dylan (born Robert
Allen Zimmerman; May 24, 1941) is an American musician, singer-songwriter,
record producer, artist, poet, and writer. He has been an influential figure in
popular music and culture for more than five decades. Much of his most
celebrated work dates from the 1960s when he was an informal chronicler and a
seemingly reluctant figurehead of social unrest. A number of Dylan's early
songs, such as "Blowin' in the Wind" and "The Times They Are
a-Changin'", became anthems for the US civil rights and anti-war
movements. Leaving his initial base in the culture of folk music behind,
Dylan's six-minute single "Like a Rolling Stone" radically altered
the parameters of popular music in 1965. His recordings employing electric instruments
attracted denunciation and criticism from others in the folk movement.
Dylan's lyrics have incorporated
a variety of political, social, philosophical, biblical and literary
influences. They defied existing pop music conventions and appealed hugely to
the then burgeoning counterculture. Initially inspired by the performance style
of Little Richard, and the songwriting of Woody Guthrie, Robert Johnson, and
Hank Williams, Dylan has both amplified and personalized musical genres. His
recording career, spanning fifty years, has explored many of the traditions in
American song—from folk, blues and country to gospel, rock and roll, and
rockabilly to English, Scottish, and Irish folk music, embracing even jazz and
swing. Dylan performs with guitar, keyboards, and harmonica. Backed by a
changing line-up of musicians, he has toured steadily since the late 1980s on
what has been dubbed the Never
Ending Tour. His accomplishments as a recording artist and performer have
been central to his career, but his greatest contribution is generally
considered to be his songwriting.
Since 1994, Dylan has published
three books of drawings and paintings, and his work has been exhibited in major
art galleries. As a songwriter and musician, Dylan has sold more than 100
million records worldwide and received numerous awards over the years including
Grammy, Golden Globe, and Academy Awards; he has been inducted into the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame, Minnesota Music Hall of Fame, Nashville Songwriters Hall
of Fame, and Songwriters Hall of Fame. The Pulitzer Prize jury in 2008 awarded
him a special citation for "his profound impact on popular music and
American culture, marked by lyrical compositions of extraordinary poetic
power." In May 2012, Dylan received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from
President Barack Obama.
Origins and musical beginnings
Bob Dylan was born Robert Allen
Zimmerman (Hebrew name שבתאי זיסל בן אברהם [Shabtai Zisl ben Avraham]) in St.
Mary's Hospital on May 24, 1941, in Duluth, Minnesota, and raised in Hibbing,
Minnesota, on the Mesabi Iron Range west of Lake Superior. His paternal
grandparents, Zigman and Anna Zimmerman, emigrated from Odessa in the Russian
Empire (now Ukraine) to the United States following the anti-Semitic pogroms of
1905. His maternal grandparents, Benjamin and Lybba Edelstein, were Lithuanian
Jews who arrived in the United States in 1902. In his autobiography Chronicles: Volume One, Dylan
writes that his paternal grandmother's maiden name was Kirghiz and her family
originated from Kağızman in north eastern Turkey.
Dylan's parents, Abram Zimmerman
and Beatrice "Beatty" Stone, were part of the area's small but
close-knit Jewish community. Robert Zimmerman lived in Duluth until age six,
when his father was stricken with polio and the family returned to his mother's
home town, Hibbing, where Zimmerman spent the rest of his childhood. Robert
Zimmerman spent his early years listening to the radio—first to blues and
country stations broadcasting from Shreveport, Louisiana, and, as a teen, to
early rock and roll. Zimmerman formed several bands while attending Hibbing
High School. In The Golden Chords, he performed covers of songs by Little
Richard and Elvis Presley. Their performance of Danny and the Juniors'
"Rock and Roll Is Here to Stay" at their high school talent show was
so loud that the principal cut the microphone off. In 1959, his high school
yearbook carried the caption: "Robert Zimmerman: to join 'Little
Richard'." The same year, using the name Elston Gunnn [sic], he
performed two dates with Bobby Vee, playing piano and providing handclaps.
He soon began to perform at the
Ten O'Clock Scholar, a coffeehouse a few blocks from campus, and became
actively involved in the local Dinkytown folk music circuit.
During his Dinkytown days,
Zimmerman began introducing himself as "Bob Dylan". In his
autobiography, Dylan acknowledged that he had been influenced by the poetry of
Dylan Thomas. Explaining his change of name in a 2004 interview, Dylan
remarked: "You're born, you know, the wrong names, wrong parents. I mean,
that happens. You call yourself what you want to call yourself. This is the
land of the free."
1960s
Relocation to New York and record
deal
Dylan
dropped out of college at the end of his first year (May 1960). In January
1961, he traveled to New York City, hoping to perform there and visit his
musical idol Woody Guthrie,
who was seriously ill with Huntington's Disease in Greystone Park Psychiatric
Hospital. Guthrie had been a revelation to Dylan and
was the biggest influence on his early performances. Describing Guthrie's
impact on him, Dylan later wrote: "The songs themselves had the infinite
sweep of humanity in them ... [He] was the true voice of the American
spirit. I said to myself I was going to be Guthrie's greatest disciple."
As well as visiting Guthrie in the hospital, Dylan befriended Guthrie's acolyte Ramblin' Jack Elliott. Much of Guthrie's repertoire was actually channeled
through Elliott, and Dylan paid tribute to Elliott in Chronicles (2004).
From
February 1961, Dylan played at various clubs around Greenwich Village. He befriended and
picked up material from many folk singers in the Village scene, including Dave Van Ronk, Fred Neil, Odetta, the New Lost City Ramblers, and Irish
musicians Tommy Makem and the
Clancy Brothers. In September, Dylan gained some public recognition when Robert
Shelton wrote a positive review in The
New York Times of a show at Gerde's Folk City. The same month
Dylan played harmonica on folk singer Carolyn
Hester's eponymous third album, which brought his talents to the attention of
the album's producer, John
Hammond. Hammond signed Dylan to Columbia
Records in October. The
performances on his first Columbia album, Bob
Dylan, released in March 1962, consisted of familiar folk, blues and gospel material combined with two original
compositions. The album made little impact, selling only 5,000 copies in its
first year, just enough to break even. Within Columbia Records, some referred
to the singer as "Hammond's Folly" and suggested dropping his
contract. Hammond defended Dylan vigorously. In March 1962, Dylan contributed
harmonica and back-up vocals to the album Three
Kings and the Queen, accompanying Victoria
Spivey and Big Joe Williams on a recording for Spivey Records. While working for
Columbia, Dylan also recorded several songs under the pseudonym Blind Boy
Grunt, for Broadside Magazine,
a folk music magazine and record label. Dylan used the pseudonym Bob Landy to
record as a piano player on the 1964 anthology album, The Blues Project, issued by Elektra Records. Under the pseudonym
Tedham Porterhouse, Dylan contributed harmonica to Ramblin' Jack Elliott's 1964 album Jack Elliott.
Bob
Dylan in November 1963
Dylan
made two important career moves in August 1962. He legally changed his name to
Bob Dylan, and signed a management contract with Albert Grossman. Grossman remained
Dylan's manager until 1970, and was notable both for his sometimes
confrontational personality, and for the fiercely protective loyalty he
displayed towards his principal client. Dylan subsequently said of Grossman,
"He was kind of like a Colonel
Tom Parker figure ... you
could smell him coming." Tensions between Grossman and John Hammond led to Hammond being replaced as the
producer of Dylan's second album by the young African American jazz producer Tom Wilson.
From
December 1962 to January 1963, Dylan made his first trip to the United Kingdom.
He had been invited by TV director Philip
Saville to appear in a drama, The Madhouse on Castle Street,
which Saville was directing for BBC
Television. At the end of the play, Dylan performed "Blowin' in the
Wind", one of the first major public performances of the song. The film
recording of The Madhouse on
Castle Street was destroyed by the BBC in 1968. While in London,
Dylan performed at several London folk clubs, including Les Cousins, and Bunjies. He also learned new material
from several UK performers, including Martin
Carthy.
By
the time Dylan's second album, The
Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, was released in May 1963, he had begun to make his
name as both a singer and a songwriter. Many of the songs on this album were
labeled protest songs, inspired
partly by Guthrie and influenced by Pete
Seeger's passion for topical songs. "Oxford Town", for example, was a
sardonic account of James
Meredith's ordeal as the first black student to risk enrollment at the University of Mississippi.
His
most famous song at this time, "Blowin' in the Wind", partially
derived its melody from the traditional slave song "No More Auction
Block", while its lyrics questioned the social and political status quo.
The song was widely recorded and became an international hit for Peter, Paul and Mary, setting a
precedent for many other artists who had hits with Dylan's songs. "A Hard
Rain's a-Gonna Fall" was based on the tune of the folk ballad "Lord
Randall". With its veiled references to nuclear apocalypse, it gained even
more resonance when the Cuban
missile crisis developed only a
few weeks after Dylan began performing it. Like "Blowin' in the
Wind", "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall" marked an important new
direction in modern songwriting, blending a stream-of-consciousness, imagist lyrical attack with a traditional folk
form.
While
Dylan's topical songs solidified his early reputation, Freewheelin' also included a mixture of love songs
and jokey, surreal talking blues. Humor was a large part of Dylan's persona,
and the range of material on the album impressed many listeners,
including The Beatles. George Harrison said, "We just played it, just
wore it out. The content of the song lyrics and just the attitude—it was
incredibly original and wonderful."
The
rough edge of Dylan's singing was unsettling to some early listeners but an
attraction to others. Describing the impact that Dylan had on her and her
husband, Joyce Carol Oates wrote: "When we first heard this
raw, very young, and seemingly untrained voice, frankly nasal, as if sandpaper
could sing, the effect was dramatic and electrifying." Many of his most
famous early songs first reached the public through more immediately palatable
versions by other performers, such as Joan
Baez, who became Dylan's advocate, as well as his lover. Baez was influential
in bringing Dylan to national and international prominence by recording several
of his early songs and inviting him onstage during her own concerts.
Others
who recorded and had hits with Dylan's songs in the early and mid-1960s
included The Byrds; Sonny and Cher; The Hollies; Peter, Paul and Mary; The Association; Manfred Mann; and The Turtles. Most attempted to impart
a pop feel and rhythm to the songs, while Dylan and Baez performed them mostly
as sparse folk pieces. The cover versions became so ubiquitous that CBS started
to promote him with the tag "Nobody Sings Dylan Like Dylan."
"Mixed
Up Confusion", recorded during the Freewheelin' sessions with a backing band, was
released as a single and then quickly withdrawn. In contrast to the mostly solo
acoustic performances on the album, the single showed a willingness to
experiment with a rockabilly sound. Cameron Crowe described it as "a fascinating look
at a folk artist with his mind wandering towards Elvis Presley and Sun
Records."
Protest and Another Side
In May 1963, Dylan's political
profile was raised when he walked out of The
Ed Sullivan Show. During rehearsals, Dylan had been informed by CBS Television's "head of program
practices" that the song he was planning to perform, "Talkin' John
Birch Paranoid Blues", was potentially libelous to the John Birch Society. Rather than comply
with the censorship, Dylan refused to appear on the program.
By this time, Dylan and Baez were
both prominent in the civil
rights movement, singing together at the March
on Washington on August 28, 1963.
Dylan's third album, The Times
They Are a-Changin', reflected a more politicized and cynical Dylan. The
songs often took as their subject matter contemporary, real life stories, with
"Only A Pawn In Their Game" addressing the murder of civil rights
worker Medgar Evers; and the Brechtian "The Lonesome Death of Hattie
Carroll" the death of black hotel barmaid Hattie Carroll, at the hands of
young white socialite William
Zantzinger. On a more general theme, "Ballad of Hollis Brown" and
"North Country Blues" address the despair engendered by the breakdown
of farming and mining communities. This political material was accompanied by
two personal love songs, "Boots of Spanish Leather" and "One Too
Many Mornings".
By the end of 1963, Dylan felt
both manipulated and constrained by the folk and protest movements. These
tensions were publicly displayed when, accepting the "Tom Paine Award" from the National Emergency Civil Liberties
Committee shortly after the
assassination of John F. Kennedy,
an intoxicated Dylan questioned the role of the committee, characterized the
members as old and balding, and claimed to see something of himself (and of
every man) in Kennedy's assassin, Lee
Harvey Oswald.
Another Side of Bob Dylan,
recorded on a single June evening in 1964, had a lighter mood than its
predecessor. The surreal, humorous Dylan reemerged on "I Shall Be Free
No. 10" and "Motorpsycho Nightmare". "Spanish Harlem
Incident" and "To Ramona" are romantic and passionate love
songs, while "Black Crow Blues" and "I Don't Believe You (She
Acts Like We Never Have Met)" suggest the rock and roll soon to dominate
Dylan's music. "It Ain't Me Babe", on the surface a song about
spurned love, has been described as a rejection of the role his reputation had
thrust at him. His newest direction was signaled by two lengthy songs: the impressionistic "Chimes of Freedom", which
sets elements of social commentary against a denser metaphorical
landscape in a style later characterized by Allen
Ginsberg as "chains of
flashing images," and "My Back Pages", which attacks the
simplistic and arch seriousness of his own earlier topical songs and seems to
predict the backlash he was about to encounter from his former champions as he
took a new direction.
In the latter half of 1964 and
1965, Dylan's appearance and musical style changed rapidly, as he made his move
from leading contemporary songwriter of the folk scene to folk-rock pop-music star. His scruffy jeans and
work shirts were replaced by a Carnaby
Street wardrobe, sunglasses day
or night, and pointy "Beatle boots". A London reporter wrote:
"Hair that would set the teeth of a comb on edge. A loud shirt that would
dim the neon lights of Leicester
Square. He looks like an undernourished cockatoo."
Dylan also began to spar in increasingly surreal ways with his interviewers.
Appearing on the Les Crane TV show and asked about a movie he was
planning to make, he told Crane it would be a cowboy horror movie. Asked if he
played the cowboy, Dylan replied, "No, I play my mother."
Going Electric
Dylan's April 1965 album Bringing It All Back Home was yet another stylistic leap,
featuring his first recordings made with electric instruments. The first
single, "Subterranean Homesick Blues", owed much to Chuck Berry's "Too Much Monkey
Business"; its free association lyrics have been described as both
harkening back to the manic energy of Beat
poetry and as a forerunner of rap and hip-hop. The song was provided with an
early music video which opened D.
A. Pennebaker's cinéma vérité presentation of Dylan's 1965 tour of
England, Dont Look Back.
Instead of miming to the recording, Dylan illustrated the lyrics by throwing
cue cards containing key words from the song on the ground. Pennebaker has said
the sequence was Dylan's idea, and it has been widely imitated in both music
videos and advertisements.
The second side of Bringing It All Back Home consisted of four long songs on which
Dylan accompanied himself on acoustic guitar and harmonica. "Mr.
Tambourine Man" quickly became one of Dylan's best known songs when The
Byrds recorded an electric version that reached number one in both the U.S. and
the U.K. charts. "It's All Over Now Baby Blue" and "It's Alright
Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" were acclaimed as two of Dylan's most important
compositions.
In 1965, as the headliner at the Newport Folk Festival, Dylan performed
his first electric set since his high school days with a pickup group drawn mostly from the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, featuring Mike Bloomfield (guitar), Sam Lay (drums) and Jerome Arnold (bass), plus Al Kooper (organ) and Barry Goldberg (piano). Dylan had appeared at Newport
in 1963 and 1964, but in 1965 Dylan, met with a mix of cheering and booing,
left the stage after only three songs. One version of the legend has it that
the boos were from the outraged folk fans whom Dylan had alienated by
appearing, unexpectedly, with an electric guitar. Murray Lerner, who filmed the
performance, said: "I absolutely think that they were booing Dylan going
electric." An alternative account claims audience members were merely
upset by poor sound quality and a surprisingly short set. This account is
supported by Kooper and one of the directors of the festival, who reports his
audio recording of the concert proves that the only boos were in reaction to
the emcee's announcement that there was only enough time for a short set.
Nevertheless, Dylan's 1965
Newport performance provoked a hostile response from the folk music
establishment. In the September issue of Sing
Out!, singer Ewan MacColl wrote: "Our traditional songs and
ballads are the creations of extraordinarily talented artists working inside
disciplines formulated over time ...'But what of Bobby Dylan?' scream the
outraged teenagers ... Only a completely non-critical audience, nourished
on the watery pap of pop music, could have fallen for such tenth-rate
drivel." On July 29, just four days after his controversial performance at
Newport, Dylan was back in the studio in New York, recording "Positively
4th Street". The lyrics teemed with images of vengeance and paranoia, and
it was widely interpreted as Dylan's put-down of former friends from the folk
community—friends he had known in the clubs along West 4th Street.
Highway 61 Revisited and Blonde
on Blonde
In July 1965, Dylan released the
single "Like a Rolling Stone", which peaked at number two in the U.S.
and at number four in the UK charts. At over six minutes, the song has been
widely credited with altering attitudes about what a pop single could convey. Bruce Springsteen, in his speech for
Dylan's inauguration into the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame, said that on first hearing the single, "that snare
shot sounded like somebody'd kicked open the door to your mind". In 2004
and again in 2011, Rolling
Stone magazine listed it as
number one on its list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". The
song also opened Dylan's next album, Highway
61 Revisited, titled after the road that led from Dylan's Minnesota to the
musical hotbed of New Orleans. The songs were in the same vein as the hit
single, flavored by Mike
Bloomfield's blues guitar and Al
Kooper's organ riffs. "Desolation Row", backed by acoustic guitar and understated bass, offers the sole
exception, with Dylan making surreal allusions to a variety of figures in
Western culture during this epic song, described by Andy Gill as "an
11-minute epic of entropy, which takes the form of a Fellini-esque parade of grotesques and oddities
featuring a huge cast of celebrated characters, some historical (Einstein, Nero), some biblical (Noah, Cain and
Abel), some fictional (Ophelia, Romeo, Cinderella), some literary (T.S. Eliot and Ezra
Pound), and some who fit into none of the above categories, notably Dr. Filth
and his dubious nurse."
In support of the record, Dylan
was booked for two U.S. concerts and set about assembling a band. Mike Bloomfield was unwilling to leave the Butterfield
Band, so Dylan mixed Al Kooper and Harvey
Brooks from his studio crew with Robbie Robertson and Levon
Helm, best known at the time for being part of Ronnie Hawkins's backing band The Hawks (later to become The Band). On August 28 at Forest
Hills Tennis Stadium, the group was heckled by an audience still annoyed by
Dylan's electric sound. The band's reception on September 3 at the Hollywood Bowl was more favorable.
While Dylan and the Hawks met
increasingly receptive audiences on tour, their studio efforts floundered.
Producer Bob Johnston persuaded Dylan to record in Nashville in February 1966, and surrounded him
with a cadre of top-notch session men. At Dylan's insistence, Robertson and
Kooper came down from New York City to play on the sessions. The Nashville
sessions produced the double-album Blonde
on Blonde (1966), featuring
what Dylan later called "that thin wild mercury sound". Al Kooper described the album as
"taking two cultures and smashing them together with a huge
explosion": the musical world of Nashville and the world of the
"quintessential New York hipster" Bob Dylan.
On November 22, 1965, Dylan
secretly married 25-year-old former model Sara
Lownds. Some of Dylan's friends (including Ramblin'
Jack Elliott) claim that, in conversation immediately after the event, Dylan
denied that he was married. Journalist Nora
Ephron first made the news public
in the New York Post in February 1966 with the headline
"Hush! Bob Dylan is wed."
Dylan undertook a world tour of Australia and Europe in early 1966.
Each show was split into two parts. Dylan performed solo during the first half,
accompanying himself on acoustic
guitar and harmonica. In the
second half, backed by the Hawks,
he played electrically amplified music. This contrast provoked many fans, who
jeered and slow handclapped. The
tour culminated in a famously raucous confrontation between Dylan and his
audience at the Manchester Free
Trade Hall in England on May 17,
1966. An official recording of this concert was released in 1998: The Bootleg Series Vol. 4: Bob
Dylan Live 1966. At the climax of the evening, a member of the audience,
angered by Dylan's electric backing, shouted: "Judas!" to which Dylan
responded, "I don't believe you ... You're a liar!" Dylan turned
to his band and said, "Play it fucking loud!" as they launched into
the final song of the night—"Like a Rolling Stone."
During his 1966 tour, Dylan was
frequently described as exhausted and acting "as if on a death trip". D. A. Pennebaker, the film maker
accompanying the tour, described Dylan as "taking a lot of amphetamine and
who-knows-what-else." In a 1969 interview with Jann Wenner, Dylan said, "I was
on the road for almost five years. It wore me down. I was on drugs, a lot of
things ... just to keep going, you know?" In 2011, BBC Radio 4 reported that, in an interview which
Robert Shelton had taped in 1966, Dylan claimed that he had kicked a heroin
habit in New York City: "I got very, very strung out for a while ...
I had about a $25-a-day habit and I kicked it." Some journalists
questioned the validity of this confession, pointing out that Dylan had
"been telling journalists wild lies about his past since the earliest days
of his career."
Motorcycle accident and reclusion
After
his European tour, Dylan returned to New York, but the pressures on him
increased. ABC Television had paid an advance for a TV show they
could screen. His publisher, Macmillan,
was demanding a finished manuscript of the poem/novel Tarantula. Manager Albert Grossman had already scheduled an extensive
concert tour for that summer and fall.
On
July 29, 1966, Dylan crashed his 500cc Triumph
Tiger 100 motorcycle on a road
near his home in Woodstock, New
York, and was thrown to the ground. Though the extent of his injuries were
never fully disclosed, Dylan said that he broke several vertebrae in his neck. Mystery still
surrounds the circumstances of the accident since no ambulance was called to
the scene and Dylan was not hospitalized. Dylan's biographers have written that
the crash offered Dylan the much-needed chance to escape from the pressures
that had built up around him. Dylan confirmed this interpretation of the crash
when he stated in his autobiography, "I had been in a motorcycle accident
and I'd been hurt, but I recovered. Truth was that I wanted to get out of the
rat race." In the wake of his accident, Dylan withdrew from the
public and, apart from a few select appearances, did not tour again for almost
eight years.
Once
Dylan was well enough to resume creative work, he began editing film footage of
his 1966 tour for Eat the
Document, a rarely exhibited follow-up to Dont
Look Back. A rough cut was shown to ABC
Television and was promptly rejected
as incomprehensible to a mainstream audience. In 1967 he began recording music
with the Hawks at his home and in the basement of the Hawks' nearby house,
called "Big Pink". These songs, initially compiled as demos for other
artists to record, provided hit singles for Julie
Driscoll ("This Wheel's on
Fire"), The Byrds ("You Ain't Goin' Nowhere",
"Nothing Was Delivered"), and Manfred
Mann ("Mighty Quinn").
Columbia released selections from them in 1975 as The Basement Tapes. Over the
years, more and more of the songs recorded by Dylan and his band in 1967
appeared on various bootleg
recordings, culminating in a five-CD bootleg set titled The Genuine Basement Tapes,
containing 107 songs and
alternate takes. In the coming months, the Hawks recorded the album Music from Big Pink using songs they first worked on in
their basement in Woodstock, and renamed themselves The Band, thus beginning a long and
successful recording and performing career of their own.
In
October and November 1967, Dylan returned to Nashville.
Back in the recording studio after a 19-month break, he was accompanied only by Charlie McCoy on bass, Kenny Buttrey on drums, and Pete Drake on steel guitar. The result was John Wesley Harding, a quiet,
contemplative record of shorter songs, set in a landscape that drew on both the American West and the Bible. The sparse structure
and instrumentation, coupled with lyrics that took the Judeo-Christian tradition seriously, marked a
departure not only from Dylan's own work but from the escalating psychedelic
fervor of the 1960s musical culture. It included "All Along the
Watchtower", with lyrics derived from the Book of Isaiah (21:5–9). The song was later recorded
by Jimi Hendrix, whose version
Dylan later acknowledged as definitive. Woody Guthrie died on October 3, 1967,
and Dylan made his first live appearance in twenty months at a Guthrie memorial
concert held at Carnegie Hall on January 20, 1968, where he was
backed by The Band.
Dylan's
next release, Nashville
Skyline (1969), was virtually
a mainstream country record featuring instrumental backing by Nashville
musicians, a mellow-voiced Dylan, a duet with Johnny
Cash, and the hit single "Lay Lady Lay." Variety magazine wrote, "Dylan is
definitely doing something that can be called singing. Somehow he has managed
to add an octave to his range." Dylan and Cash also recorded a series of
duets, but only their recording of Dylan's "Girl from the North
Country" was used on the album.
In
May 1969, Dylan appeared on the first episode of Johnny Cash's new television show,
duetting with Cash on "Girl from the North Country", "I Threw It
All Away" and "Living the Blues". Dylan next traveled to England
to top the bill at the Isle of
Wight rock festival on August 31,
1969, after rejecting overtures to appear at the Woodstock Festival far closer to his home.
1970s
In the early 1970s, critics
charged that Dylan's output was of varied and unpredictable quality. Rolling Stone magazine writer Greil Marcus notoriously asked "What is this
shit?" on first listening to Self
Portrait, released in June 1970. In general, Self Portrait, a double LP
including few original songs, was poorly received. In October 1970, Dylan
released New Morning,
which some considered a return to form. In November 1968, Dylan had co-written
"I'd Have You Anytime" with George
Harrison; Harrison recorded both "I'd Have You Anytime" and Dylan's
"If Not for You" for his 1970 solo triple album All Things Must Pass. Dylan's
surprise appearance at Harrison's 1971 Concert
for Bangladesh attracted much
media coverage, reflecting that Dylan's live appearances had become rare.
Between March 16 and 19, 1971,
Dylan reserved three days at Blue Rock Studios, a small studio in New York's Greenwich Village. These sessions
resulted in one single, "Watching the River Flow", and a new
recording of "When I Paint My Masterpiece". On November 4, 1971 Dylan
recorded "George Jackson", which he released a week later. For many,
the single was a surprising return to protest material, mourning the killing of Black Panther George Jackson in San
Quentin Prison earlier that year.
Dylan contributed piano and harmony vocals to Steve
Goodman's album, Somebody
Else's Troubles, under the pseudonym Robert Milkwood Thomas in September
1972.
In 1972, Dylan signed onto Sam Peckinpah's film Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid,
providing songs and backing music for the movie, and playing the role of
"Alias", a member of Billy's gang with some historical basis. Despite
the film's failure at the box office, the song "Knockin' on Heaven's
Door" has proven its durability as one of Dylan's most extensively covered
songs.
Return to touring
Dylan
began 1973 by signing with a new record label, David Geffen's Asylum Records, when his contract with
Columbia Records expired. On his next album, Planet
Waves, he used The Band as backing group, while rehearsing for a major
tour. The album included two versions of "Forever Young", which
became one of his most popular songs. As one critic described it, the song
projected "something hymnal and heartfelt that spoke of the father in
Dylan", and Dylan himself commented: "I wrote it thinking about one
of my boys and not wanting to be too sentimental." Biographer Howard Sounes noted that Jakob Dylan believed the song was about him.
Columbia
Records simultaneously released Dylan,
a haphazard collection of studio outtakes (almost exclusively cover songs),
which was widely interpreted as a churlish response to Dylan's signing with a
rival record label. In January 1974, Dylan returned to live touring after a
break of seven years; backed by The Band, he embarked on a high-profile,
coast-to-coast North American
tour, playing 40 concerts. A live double album of the tour, Before the Flood, was released
on Asylum Records. Soon, Columbia Records sent word that they "will spare
nothing to bring Dylan back into the fold". Dylan had second thoughts
about Asylum, apparently miffed that while there had been millions of
unfulfilled ticket requests for the 1974 tour, Geffen had managed to sell only
700,000 copies of Planet Waves.
Dylan returned to Columbia Records, which subsequently reissued his two Asylum
albums on their imprint.
After
the tour, Dylan and his wife became publicly estranged. He filled a small red
notebook with songs about relationships and ruptures, and quickly recorded a
new album entitled Blood on
the Tracks in September 1974.
Dylan delayed the album's release, and re-recorded half of the songs at Sound 80 Studios in Minneapolis with production assistance from his
brother David Zimmerman.
Released
in early 1975, Blood on the
Tracks received mixed
reviews. In the NME, Nick Kent described "the accompaniments
[as] often so trashy they sound like mere practice takes." In Rolling Stone, reviewer Jon Landau wrote that "the record has been
made with typical shoddiness." Over the years critics have come to see it
as one of Dylan's greatest achievements, perhaps the only serious rival to his
mid-1960s trilogy of albums. In Salon.com,
Bill Wyman wrote: "Blood on the Tracks is his only flawless album and his
best produced; the songs, each of them, are constructed in disciplined fashion.
It is his kindest album and most dismayed, and seems in hindsight to have
achieved a sublime balance between the logorrhea-plagued excesses of his
mid-1960s output and the self-consciously simple compositions of his
post-accident years." Novelist Rick
Moody called it "the truest,
most honest account of a love affair from tip to stern ever put down on
magnetic tape."
That summer Dylan wrote a lengthy
ballad championing the cause of boxer Rubin
"Hurricane" Carter, who had been imprisoned for a triple murder
committed in Paterson, New
Jersey, in 1966. After visiting Carter in jail, Dylan wrote
"Hurricane", presenting the case for Carter's innocence. Despite its
8:32 minute length, the song was released as a single, peaking at No.33 on the
U.S. Billboard Chart, and
performed at every 1975 date of Dylan's next tour, the Rolling Thunder Revue, named after the Shoshone medicine man, shaman, teacher, and
activist Rolling Thunder. The
tour was a varied evening of entertainment featuring about one hundred
performers and supporters drawn from the resurgent Greenwich Village folk
scene, including T-Bone Burnett, Ramblin' Jack Elliott, Joni Mitchell, David Mansfield, Roger McGuinn, Mick Ronson, Joan Baez, and violinist Scarlet Rivera, whom Dylan discovered
while she was walking down the street, her violin case hanging on her back. Allen Ginsberg accompanied the troupe, staging scenes
for the film Dylan was simultaneously shooting. Sam Shepard was initially hired to write the
film's screenplay, but ended up accompanying the tour as informal chronicler.
Running through late 1975 and
again through early 1976, the tour encompassed the release of the album Desire, with many of Dylan's
new songs featuring an almost travelogue-like
narrative style, showing the influence of his new collaborator, playwright Jacques Levy. The 1976 half of the
tour was documented by a TV concert special, Hard
Rain, and the LP Hard Rain;
no concert album from the better-received and better-known opening half of the
tour was released until 2002's Live
1975.
The 1975 tour with the Revue also
provided the backdrop to Dylan's nearly four-hour film Renaldo and Clara, a sprawling
and improvised narrative, mixed with concert footage and reminiscences.
Released in 1978, the movie received generally poor, sometimes scathing,
reviews and had a very brief theatrical run. Later in that year, Dylan allowed
a two-hour edit, dominated by the concert performances, to be more widely
released.
In November 1976, Dylan appeared
at The Band's "farewell" concert, along with other guests including Joni Mitchell, Muddy Waters, Van Morrison and Neil
Young. Martin Scorsese's
acclaimed cinematic chronicle of this show, The
Last Waltz, was released in 1978 and included about half of Dylan's set. In
1976, Dylan also wrote and duetted on the song "Sign Language" for Eric Clapton's No Reason To Cry.
In 1978, Dylan embarked on a year-long world tour, performing 114
shows in Japan, the Far East, Europe and the US, to a total audience of two
million people. For the tour, Dylan assembled an eight piece band, and was also
accompanied by three backing singers. Concerts in Tokyo in February and March
were recorded and released as the live double album, Bob Dylan At Budokan. Reviews were mixed. Robert Christgau awarded the album a C+ rating, giving
the album a derisory review, while Janet Maslin defended it in Rolling Stone, writing:
"These latest live versions of his old songs have the effect of liberating
Bob Dylan from the originals." When Dylan brought the tour to the US in
September 1978, he was dismayed the press described the look and sound of the
show as a 'Las Vegas Tour'. The 1978 tour grossed more than $20 million,
and Dylan acknowledged to the Los
Angeles Times that he had
some debts to pay off because "I had a couple of bad years. I put a lot of
money into the movie, built a big house ... and it costs a lot to get
divorced in California."
In April and May 1978, Dylan took
the same large band and backing vocalists into Rundown Studios, a rehearsal
space Dylan had rented in Santa
Monica, California, to record an album of new material: Street-Legal. It was
described by Michael Gray as, "after Blood
On The Tracks, arguably Dylan's best record of the 1970s: a crucial album
documenting a crucial period in Dylan's own life". However, it suffered
from poor sound recording and mixing (attributed to Dylan's studio practices),
muddying the instrumental detail until a remastered CD release in 1999 restored
some of the songs' strengths.
Christian period
In
the late 1970s, Dylan became a born-again
Christian and released two albums
of Christian gospel music. Slow
Train Coming (1979) featured
the guitar accompaniment of Mark
Knopfler (of Dire Straits) and was produced by
veteran R&B producer, Jerry Wexler. Wexler recalled that
when Dylan had tried to evangelize him during the recording, he replied:
"Bob, you're dealing with a sixty-two-year old Jewish atheist. Let's just
make an album." The album won Dylan a Grammy
Award as "Best Male
Vocalist" for the song "Gotta Serve Somebody". The second
evangelical album, Saved (1980), received mixed reviews, and
was described by Dylan critic Michael Gray as "the nearest thing to a
follow-up album Dylan has ever made, Slow
Train Coming II and inferior."
When touring in late 1979 and early 1980, Dylan would not play any of his
older, secular works, and he delivered declarations of his faith from the
stage, such as:
“Years
ago they ... said I was a prophet. I used to say, "No I'm not a
prophet" they say "Yes you are, you're a prophet." I said,
"No it's not me." They used to say "You sure are a
prophet." They used to convince me I was a prophet. Now I come out and say
Jesus Christ is the answer. They say, "Bob Dylan's no prophet." They
just can't handle it.”
Dylan's
embrace of born-again Christianity was unpopular with some of his fans and
fellow musicians. Shortly before his
murder, John Lennon recorded "Serve Yourself" in
response to Dylan's "Gotta Serve Somebody". By 1981, Stephen Holden wrote in the New York Times that "neither age (he's now 40)
nor his much-publicized conversion to born-again Christianity has altered his
essentially iconoclastic temperament."
1980s
In late 1980 Dylan briefly
resumed touring for a series of concerts billed as "A Musical
Retrospective", where he restored several of his popular 1960s songs to
the repertoire. Shot of Love,
recorded the next spring, featured Dylan's first secular compositions in more
than two years, mixed with Christian songs. The song "Every Grain of Sand"
reminded some critics of William
Blake's verses.
In the 1980s the reception of
Dylan's recorded work varied, from the well-regarded Infidels in 1983 to the panned Down in the Groove in 1988. Critics such as Michael Gray condemned Dylan's 1980s albums both
for showing an extraordinary carelessness in the studio and for failing to
release his best songs. As an example of the latter, the Infidels recording sessions, which again
employed Mark Knopfler on lead guitar and also as the album's producer, resulted
in several notable songs which Dylan left off the album. Most well regarded of
these were "Blind Willie McTell", a tribute to the dead blues musician and an evocation of African American history, "Foot
of Pride" and "Lord Protect My Child". These three songs were
later released on The Bootleg
Series Volumes 1–3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961–1991.
Between July 1984 and March 1985,
Dylan recorded Empire
Burlesque. Arthur Baker, who
had remixed hits for Bruce
Springsteen and Cyndi Lauper, was asked to engineer and
mix the album. Baker has said he felt he was hired to make Dylan's album sound
"a little bit more contemporary".
Dylan sang on USA for Africa's famine relief
fundraising single "We Are the World". On July 13, 1985, he appeared
at the climax at the Live Aid concert at JFK Stadium, Philadelphia. Backed by Keith Richards and Ronnie
Wood, Dylan performed a ragged version of "Hollis Brown", his ballad
of rural poverty, and then said to the worldwide audience exceeding one billion
people: "I hope that some of the money ... maybe they can just take a
little bit of it, maybe ... one or two million, maybe ... and use it
to pay the mortgages on some of the farms and, the farmers here, owe to the
banks." His remarks were widely criticized as inappropriate, but they did
inspire Willie Nelson to organize a series of events, Farm Aid, to benefit debt-ridden
American farmers.
In April 1986, Dylan made a brief
foray into the world of rap music when he added vocals to the opening
verse of "Street Rock", a song featured on Kurtis Blow's album Kingdom Blow. Dylan's next
studio album, Knocked Out
Loaded, was released in July 1986 and contained three cover songs (by
Little Junior Parker, Kris Kristofferson and the traditional gospel hymn
"Precious Memories"), plus three collaborations with other writers
(Tom Petty, Sam Shepard and Carole
Bayer Sager), and two solo compositions by Dylan. One reviewer commented that
"the record follows too many detours to be consistently compelling, and
some of those detours wind down roads that are indisputably dead ends. By 1986,
such uneven records weren't entirely unexpected by Dylan, but that didn't make
them any less frustrating." It was the first Dylan album since Freewheelin' (1963) to fail to make the Top 50.
Since then, some critics have called the 11-minute epic that Dylan co-wrote
with Sam Shepard, 'Brownsville Girl', a work of genius.
In
1986 and 1987, Dylan toured extensively with Tom
Petty and the Heartbreakers, sharing vocals with Petty on several songs each
night. Dylan also toured with The
Grateful Dead in 1987, resulting
in a live album Dylan &
The Dead. This album received some very negative reviews: Allmusic said, "Quite possibly the worst
album by either Bob Dylan or the Grateful Dead." After performing with
these musical permutations, Dylan initiated what came to be called The Never Ending Tour on June 7, 1988, performing with a
tight back-up band featuring guitarist G.
E. Smith. Dylan would continue to tour with a small, constantly evolving band
for the next 20 years.
In
1987, Dylan starred in Richard
Marquand's movie Hearts of
Fire, in which he played Billy Parker, a washed-up-rock-star-turned-chicken
farmer whose teenage lover (Fiona) leaves him for a jaded English synth-pop
sensation (played by Rupert
Everett). Dylan also contributed two original songs to the
soundtrack—"Night After Night", and "I Had a Dream About You,
Baby", as well as a cover of John
Hiatt's "The Usual". The film was a critical and commercial flop.
Dylan was inducted into the Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame in January
1988, with Bruce Springsteen's introductory speech declaring, "Bob freed
your mind the way Elvis freed your body. He showed us that just because music
was innately physical did not mean that it was anti-intellectual.
When
Dylan released the album Down
in the Groove in May 1988, it
was even more unsuccessful in its sales than his previous studio album. Michael
Gray wrote: "The very title undercuts any idea that inspired work may lie
within. Here was a further devaluing of the notion of a new Bob Dylan album as
something significant." The critical and commercial disappointment of that
album was swiftly followed by the success of the Traveling Wilburys. Dylan co-founded
the band with George Harrison, Jeff Lynne, Roy Orbison, and Tom Petty, and in late 1988 their
multi-platinum Traveling
Wilburys Vol. 1 reached
number three on the US album chart, featuring songs that were described
as Dylan's most accessible compositions in years. Despite Orbison's death in
December 1988, the remaining four recorded a second album in May 1990, which
they released with the unexpected title Traveling
Wilburys Vol. 3
Dylan
finished the decade on a critical high note with Oh Mercy produced by Daniel Lanois. Dylan critic Michael
Gray wrote that the album was: "Attentively written, vocally distinctive,
musically warm, and uncompromisingly professional, this cohesive whole is the
nearest thing to a great Bob Dylan album in the 1980s." The track
"Most of the Time", a lost love composition, was later prominently
featured in the film High
Fidelity, while "What Was It You Wanted?" has been interpreted
both as a catechism and a wry comment on the expectations of critics and fans.
The religious imagery of "Ring Them Bells" struck some critics as a
re-affirmation of faith.
1990s
Dylan's 1990s began with Under the Red Sky (1990), an about-face from the serious Oh Mercy. The album contained
several apparently simple songs, including "Under the Red Sky" and
"Wiggle Wiggle". The album was dedicated to "Gabby Goo
Goo"; this was later explained as a nickname for the daughter of Dylan and Carolyn Dennis, Desiree Gabrielle
Dennis-Dylan, who was four at that time. Sidemen on the album included George Harrison, Slash from Guns
N' Roses, David Crosby, Bruce Hornsby, Stevie Ray Vaughan, and Elton John. Despite the stellar
line-up, the record received bad reviews and sold poorly.
In 1991, Dylan was honored by the
recording industry with a Grammy
Lifetime Achievement Award from
American actor Jack Nicholson.
The event coincided with the start of the Gulf
War against Saddam Hussein, and Dylan performed
his song "Masters of War". Dylan then made a short speech that
startled some of the audience.
The next few years saw Dylan
returning to his roots with two albums covering old folk and blues numbers: Good as I Been to You (1992) and World Gone Wrong (1993), featuring interpretations and
acoustic guitar work. Many critics and fans commented on the quiet beauty of
the song "Lone Pilgrim", penned by a 19th century teacher and sung by
Dylan with a haunting reverence. In November 1994 Dylan recorded two live shows
for MTV Unplugged. He
claimed his wish to perform a set of traditional songs for the show was
overruled by Sony executives who insisted on a greatest
hits package. The album produced from it, MTV
Unplugged, included "John Brown", an unreleased 1963 song
detailing the ravages of both war and jingoism.
With a collection of songs
reportedly written while snowed-in on his Minnesota ranch, Dylan booked
recording time with Daniel Lanois at Miami's Criteria Studios in January 1997. The subsequent
recording sessions were, by some accounts, fraught with musical tension. Late
that spring, before the album's release, Dylan was hospitalized with a
life-threatening heart infection, pericarditis,
brought on by histoplasmosis. His
scheduled European tour was cancelled, but Dylan made a speedy recovery and
left the hospital saying, "I really thought I'd be seeing Elvis soon." He was back on the road by
midsummer, and performed before Pope
John Paul II at the World Eucharistic
Conference in Bologna, Italy. The
Pope treated the audience of 200,000 people to a homily based on Dylan's lyric
"Blowin' in the Wind".
September saw the release of the
new Lanois-produced album, Time
Out of Mind. With its bitter assessment of love and morbid ruminations,
Dylan's first collection of original songs in seven years was highly acclaimed.
One critic wrote: "the songs themselves are uniformly powerful, adding up
to Dylan's best overall collection in years." This collection of
complex songs won him his first solo "Album of the Year" Grammy Award.
In December 1997, U.S. President Bill Clinton presented Dylan with a Kennedy Center Honor in the East Room of the White House, paying this tribute:
"He probably had more impact on people of my generation than any other
creative artist. His voice and lyrics haven't always been easy on the ear, but
throughout his career Bob Dylan has never aimed to please. He's disturbed the
peace and discomforted the powerful."
2000s
Dylan commenced the new millennium
by winning his first Oscar; his
song "Things Have Changed", penned for the film Wonder Boys, won an Academy Award in March 2001. The Oscar (by some
reports a facsimile) tours with him, presiding over shows perched atop an
amplifier.
"Love and Theft" was released on September 11, 2001. Recorded
with his touring band, Dylan produced the album himself under the pseudonym
Jack Frost. The album was critically well received and earned nominations for
several Grammy awards. Critics noted that Dylan was widening his musical
palette to include rockabilly,
Western swing, jazz, and even lounge ballads. "Love
and Theft" generated
controversy when The Wall
Street Journal pointed out
similarities between the album's lyrics and Japanese author Junichi Saga's book Confessions of a Yakuza.
In 2003, Dylan revisited the
evangelical songs from his "born again" period and participated in
the CD project Gotta Serve
Somebody: The Gospel Songs of Bob Dylan. That year also saw the release of
the film Masked &
Anonymous, which Dylan co-wrote with director Larry Charles under the alias Sergei Petrov. Dylan
played the central character in the film, Jack Fate, alongside a cast which
included Jeff Bridges, Penélope Cruz and John
Goodman. The film polarised critics: many dismissed it as an "incoherent
mess"; a few treated it as a serious work of art.
In October 2004, Dylan published
the first part of his autobiography, Chronicles:
Volume One. The book confounded expectations. Dylan devoted three chapters
to his first year in New York City in 1961–1962, virtually ignoring the
mid-1960s when his fame was at its height. He also devoted chapters to the
albums New Morning (1970) and Oh Mercy (1989). The book reached number two on The New York Times' Hardcover Non-Fiction best seller list
in December 2004 and was nominated for a National
Book Award.
No Direction Home, Martin Scorsese's acclaimed film
biography of Dylan, was first broadcast on September 26–27, 2005, on BBC Two in the UK and PBS in
the US. The documentary focuses
on the period from Dylan's arrival in New York in 1961 to his motorcycle crash
in 1966, featuring interviews with Suze
Rotolo, Liam Clancy, Joan Baez, Allen Ginsberg, Pete Seeger, Mavis Staples, and Dylan himself. The
film received a Peabody Award in April 2006 and a Columbia-duPont Award in January 2007. The accompanying soundtrack featured unreleased songs from Dylan's
early career.
Dylan earned yet another
distinction in a 2007 study of US legal opinions and briefs that found his
lyrics were quoted by judges and lawyers more than those of any other
songwriter, 186 times versus 74 by The
Beatles, who were second. Among those quoting Dylan were US Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Antonin Scalia, both conservatives.
The most widely cited lines included "you don't need a weatherman to know
which way the wind blows" from "Subterranean Homesick Blues" and
"when you ain't got nothing, you got nothing to lose" from "Like
a Rolling Stone".
2006-08: Modern Times
May
3, 2006, was the premiere of Dylan's radio presenting career, hosting a weekly
radio program, Theme Time
Radio Hour, for XM Satellite
Radio, with song selections revolving around a chosen theme. Dylan played
classic and obscure records from the 1930s to the present day, including
contemporary artists as diverse as Blur, Prince, L.L. Cool J and The
Streets. The show was praised by fans and critics as "great radio,"
as Dylan told stories and made eclectic references with his sardonic humor,
while achieving a thematic beauty with his musical choices. In April 2009,
Dylan broadcast the 100th show in his radio series; the theme was
"Goodbye" and the final record played was Woody Guthrie's "So
Long, It's Been Good To Know Yuh". This has led to speculation that
Dylan's radio series may have ended.
Dylan,
the Spectrum, 2007
On
August 29, 2006, Dylan released his Modern
Times album. Despite some
coarsening of Dylan's voice (a critic for The
Guardian characterised his
singing on the album as "a catarrhal death rattle") most reviewers
praised the album, and many described it as the final installment of a
successful trilogy, embracing Time
Out of Mind and "Love and Theft". Modern Times entered the U.S. charts at number one,
making it Dylan's first album to reach that position since 1976's Desire. The New York
Times published an article
exploring similarities between some of Dylan's lyrics in Modern Times and the work of the Civil War poet Henry
Timrod.
Nominated
for three Grammy Awards, Modern Times won Best
Contemporary Folk/Americana Album and
Bob Dylan also won Best Solo Rock
Vocal Performance for
"Someday Baby". Modern
Times was named Album of the
Year, 2006, by Rolling Stone magazine, and by Uncut in the UK. On the same day that Modern Times was released the iTunes Music Store released Bob Dylan: The Collection, a
digital box set containing all of his albums (773 tracks in total), along with
42 rare and unreleased tracks.
In
August 2007, the award-winning film biography of Dylan I'm Not There, written and
directed by Todd Haynes, was
released—bearing the tagline "inspired by the music and many lives of Bob
Dylan". The movie uses six distinct characters to represent different
aspects of Dylan's life, played by Christian
Bale, Cate Blanchett, Marcus Carl Franklin, Richard Gere, Heath Ledger and Ben
Whishaw. Dylan's previously unreleased 1967 recording from which the film takes
its name was released for the first time on the film's original soundtrack; all other tracks
are covers of Dylan songs, specially recorded for the movie by a diverse range
of artists, including Eddie
Vedder, Mason Jennings, Stephen Malkmus, Jeff Tweedy, Karen O, Willie Nelson, Cat Power, Richie Havens, and Tom Verlaine.
On October 1, 2007, Columbia
Records released the triple CD retrospective album Dylan, anthologising his entire
career under the Dylan 07 logo. As part of this campaign, Mark Ronson produced a re-mix of Dylan's 1966 tune
"Most Likely You Go Your Way (And I'll Go Mine)", which was released
as a maxi-single. This was the first time Dylan had sanctioned a re-mix of one
of his classic recordings.
The sophistication of the Dylan 07 marketing campaign was a reminder that
Dylan's commercial profile had risen considerably since the 1990s. This first
became evidenced in 2004, when Dylan appeared in a TV advertisement for Victoria's Secret lingerie. Three years later, in
October 2007, he participated in a multi-media campaign for the 2008 Cadillac Escalade. Then, in 2009, he
gave the highest profile endorsement of his career, appearing with rapper will.i.am in a Pepsi ad that debuted during the telecast of Super Bowl XLIII. The ad, broadcast to
a record audience of 98 million viewers, opened with Dylan singing the first
verse of "Forever Young" followed by will.i.am doing a hip hop version of the song's third and final
verse.
In October 2008, Columbia
released Volume 8 of Dylan's Bootleg
Series, Tell Tale Signs:
Rare And Unreleased 1989–2006 as
both a two-CD set and a three-CD version with a 150-page hardcover book. The
set contains live performances and outtakes from selected studio albums from Oh Mercy to Modern
Times, as well as soundtrack contributions and collaborations with David Bromberg and Ralph
Stanley. The pricing of the album—the two-CD set went on sale for $18.99 and
the three-CD version for $129.99—led to complaints about "rip-off
packaging" from some fans and commentators. The release was widely
acclaimed by critics. The abundance of alternative takes and unreleased
material suggested to Uncut's
reviewer: "Tell Tale Signs is
awash with evidence of (Dylan's) staggering mercuriality, his evident
determination even in the studio to repeat himself as little as possible."
2009: Together Through Life,
Christmas in the Heart
Bob
Dylan released his album Together
Through Life on April 28,
2009. In a conversation with music journalist Bill Flanagan, published on
Dylan's website, Dylan explained that the genesis of the record was when French
film director Olivier Dahan asked him to supply a song for his new road movie, My Own Love Song; initially
only intending to record a single track, "Life Is Hard," "the
record sort of took its own direction". Nine of the ten songs on the album
are credited as co-written by Bob Dylan
The
album received largely favorable reviews, although several critics described it
as a minor addition to Dylan's canon of work. Andy Gill wrote in The Independent that the record "features Dylan
in fairly relaxed, spontaneous mood, content to grab such grooves and
sentiments as flit momentarily across his radar. So while it may not contain
too many landmark tracks, it's one of the most naturally enjoyable albums
you'll hear all year."
On
keyboards at the New Orleans Jazz
and Heritage Festival, April 28, 2006
In
its first week of release, the album reached number one in the Billboard 200 chart in the U.S., making Bob Dylan
(67 years of age) the oldest artist to ever debut at number one on that chart.
It also reached number one on the UK
album chart, 39 years after Dylan's previous UK album chart topper New Morning. This meant that
Dylan currently holds the record for the longest gap between solo number one
albums in the UK chart.
On
October 13, 2009, Dylan released a Christmas album, Christmas in the Heart,
comprising such Christmas standards as "Little Drummer Boy",
"Winter Wonderland" and "Here Comes Santa Claus". Dylan's
royalties from the sale of this album will benefit the charities Feeding America in the USA, Crisis in the UK, and the World Food Programme.
The
album received generally favorable reviews. The
New Yorker commented that
Dylan had welded a pre-rock musical sound to "some of his croakiest vocals
in a while", and speculated that Dylan's intentions might be ironic:
"Dylan has a long and highly publicized history with Christianity; to
claim there's not a wink in the childish optimism of 'Here Comes Santa Claus'
or 'Winter Wonderland' is to ignore a half-century of biting satire." In USA Today, Edna Gundersen pointed out that Dylan was
"revisiting yuletide styles popularized by Nat King Cole, Mel Tormé, and the Ray Conniff Singers." Gundersen
concluded that Dylan "couldn't sound more sentimental or sincere".
In
an interview published in The
Big Issue, journalist Bill Flanagan asked Dylan why he had performed the
songs in a straightforward style, and Dylan responded: "There wasn't any
other way to play it. These songs are part of my life, just like folk songs.
You have to play them straight too."
2010s
On October 18, 2010, Dylan
released Volume 9 of his Bootleg Series, The
Witmark Demos. This comprised 47 demo
recordings of songs taped between
1962 and 1964 for Dylan's earliest music publishers: Leeds Music in 1962, and Witmark Music from 1962 to 1964. One reviewer
described the set as "a kind of alternate early history of Dylan's
songwriting process, 'writing five new songs before breakfast,' as he once
famously quipped". The critical aggregator website Metacritic awarded the
album a Metascore of 86, indicating "universal acclaim". In the same
week, Sony Legacy released Bob Dylan: The Original Mono
Recordings, a box set which for the first time presented Dylan's eight
earliest albums, from Bob
Dylan (1962) to John Wesley Harding (1967), in their original mono mix in
the CD format. The CDs were housed in miniature facsimiles of the original
album covers, replete with original liner notes. The set was accompanied by a
booklet which featured an essay by music critic Greil Marcus.
On April 12, 2011, Legacy Recordings released Bob Dylan in Concert –
Brandeis University 1963 .
The recording was taped at Brandeis
University on May 10, 1963, two
weeks prior to the release of The
Freewheelin' Bob Dylan. The tape had been discovered in the archive of
music writer Ralph J. Gleason,
and had previously been available as a limited edition supplement to The Bootleg Series Vol. 9. The
recording carries liner notes by Dylan scholar Michael Gray, who writes: "(The)
Dylan performance it captured, from way back when Kennedy was President and the Beatles hadn't yet reached America, wasn't
even on fans' radar ... It reveals him not at any Big Moment but giving a
performance like his folk club sets of the period ... This is the last
live performance we have of Bob Dylan before he becomes a star."
The
extent to which his work was studied at an academic level was demonstrated on
Dylan's 70th birthday on May 24, 2011, when three universities organized
symposia on his work. The University
of Mainz, the University of
Vienna, and the University of
Bristol invited literary critics
and cultural historians to give papers on aspects of Dylan's work. Other events,
including tribute bands, discussions and simple singalongs, took place around
the world, as reported in The
Guardian: "From Moscow to Madrid, Norway to Northampton and Malaysia
to his home state of Minnesota, self-confessed 'Bobcats' will gather today to
celebrate the 70th birthday of a giant of popular music."
On October 4, 2011, Dylan's
label, Egyptian Records, released an album of previously unheard Hank Williams songs, The Lost Notebooks of Hank Williams.
Dylan had helped to curate this project, in which songs unfinished when
Williams died in 1953 were completed and recorded by a variety of artists,
including Dylan himself, his son Jakob
Dylan, Levon Helm, Norah Jones, Jack White, and others.
On May 29, 2012, President Obama awarded Dylan a Presidential Medal of Freedom in the White House. At the ceremony,
Obama praised Dylan's voice for its "unique gravelly power that redefined
not just what music sounded like but the message it carried and how it made
people feel".
On September 11, 2012, Dylan released
his 35th studio album, Tempest.
The album features a tribute to John
Lennon, "Roll On John", and the title track is a 14 minute song about
the sinking of the Titanic. In a
preview of the album, Neil McCormick reported in The Daily Telegraph that "popular music's greatest
troubadour is still as brilliant and bewildering as ever". McCormick added
he "was blown away with the mad energy of the album. At 71-years-old Dylan
is still striking out into strange new places rather than revisiting his
past."
Reviewing Tempest for Rolling
Stone, Will Hermes gave the album five out of five stars, writing:
"Lyrically, Dylan is at the top of his game, joking around, dropping
wordplay and allegories that evade pat readings and quoting other folks' words
like a freestyle rapper on fire." Hermes called Tempest "one of [Dylan's] weirdest albums
ever", and opined, "It may also be the single darkest record in
Dylan's catalog." In The
Guardian, Alexis Petridis deprecated attaching such hyperbole to the
album, noting that "the music is the same stew of beautifully played
blues, rockabilly, folk and country as every Dylan album for the last 12 years:
styles you might call pre-rock or, perhaps more pertinently, pre-him."
Petridis argued that: "Bob Dylan, it seems, is determined to see out his
days playing pop music from the era before Bob Dylan changed pop music for
good, as if he'd rather forget that he ever did so." The critical
aggregator website Metacritic awarded the album a score of 83 out of
100, indicating "universal acclaim"
Never Ending Tour
The Never Ending Tour commenced
on June 7, 1988, and Dylan has played roughly 100 dates a year for the entirety
of the 1990s and the 2000s (decade)—a heavier schedule than most performers who
started out in the 1960s. By the end of 2010, Dylan and his band had played
more than 2,300 shows, anchored by long-time bassist Tony Garnier, multi-instrumentalist
Donnie Herron and guitarist Charlie
Sexton. To the dismay of some of his audience, Dylan's performances remain
unpredictable as he alters his arrangements and changes his vocal approach
night after night. Critical opinion about Dylan's shows remains divided.
Critics such as Richard Williams and Andy Gill have argued that Dylan
has found a successful way to present his rich legacy of material. Others have
criticised his onstage vocal style for mangling and spitting out "the greatest
lyrics ever written so that they are effectively unrecognisable", and a
perceived indifference towards his audience.
Dylan's performances in China in April 2011 generated controversy.
Some criticised him for not making any explicit comment on the political
situation in China, and for, allegedly, allowing the Chinese authorities to
censor his set-list. Others defended Dylan's performances, arguing that such
criticism represented a misunderstanding of Dylan's art, and that no evidence
for the censorship of Dylan's set-list existed. In response to these
allegations, Dylan posted a statement on his website: "As far as
censorship goes, the Chinese government had asked for the names of the songs
that I would be playing. There's no logical answer to that, so we sent them the
set lists from the previous 3 months. If there were any songs, verses or lines
censored, nobody ever told me about it and we played all the songs that we
intended to play."
Dylan's 2012 tour commenced in
Rio de Janeiro on April 15, and included performances in Brazil, Argentina,
Chile, Costa Rica, and Mexico. In the summer, Dylan visited Europe, returning
to Kent, England, on June 30, to perform at the Hop Farm Festival. Dylan surprised
fans by accompanying himself on grand piano for half the numbers of his 16 song
set. Dylan's fall 2012 tour of North America began in Lloydminster, Alberta, on
August 10, and ended in Brooklyn, New York, on November 21
Artist
Over a decade after Random House had published Drawn Blank (1994), a book of Dylan's drawings, an
exhibit of his art, The Drawn
Blank Series, opened in October 2007 at the Kunstsammlungen in Chemnitz, Germany. This first public
exhibition of Dylan's paintings showcased more than 200 watercolors and gouaches made from the original drawings. The
exhibition coincided with the publication of the book Bob Dylan: The Drawn Blank Series,
which includes 170 reproductions from the series. From September 2010 until
April 2011, the National Gallery
of Denmark exhibited 40
large-scale acrylic paintings by Dylan, The
Brazil Series.
In July 2011, a leading
contemporary art gallery, Gagosian
Gallery, announced their representation of Dylan's paintings. An exhibition of
Dylan's art, The Asia Series,
opened at the Gagosian Madison Avenue Gallery on September 20, displaying
Dylan's paintings of scenes in China and the Far East. The New York Times reported that "some fans and
Dylanologists have raised questions about whether some of these paintings are
based on the singer's own experiences and observations, or on photographs that
are widely available and were not taken by Mr. Dylan." The Times pointed to close resemblances between
Dylan's paintings and six historic photos of Japan and China which had been
posted on the Flickr website. Dylan's paintings also appeared
to be based on photographs taken by Dmitri Kessel, Henri Cartier-Bresson, and Jacob Aue Sobol. The Magnum photo agency confirmed that Dylan had licensed the
reproduction rights of these photographs.
Dylan's second show at the
Gagosian Gallery, Revisionist
Art, opened on November 28, 2012. The show consists of thirty paintings,
transforming and satirizing popular magazines including Playboy and Babytalk.
In February 2013, Dylan exhibited the New
Orleans Series of paintings
at the Palazzo Reale in Milan.
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