Showing posts with label bob dylan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bob dylan. Show all posts

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Forever Bob


If you know me or read this blog, you know my view of Bob Dylan. Simply put, I think he is the singular most important musical artist of the last half of the twentieth century. And that's with full knowledge that while he wasn't the sperm that birthed the baby that became rock n' roll, he was the brilliant son.
Dylan's first incarnation was folk music, of course, which he changed with glimmering literacy at the zeitgeist. He is on record as denying that he was the Voice of a Generation, although many most assuredly disagree. Then he plugged in and created a ragged sonic bohemianism in a mid-60s fantasmagorium that mesmerized the culture and influenced (and intimidated) his friends and peers. He imagined
Highway 61 Revisited, perhaps still the finest record of the genre. He made the stunning Blonde on Blonde with a pack of Nashville cats, and when the Summer of Love arrived--with Beatles and Beach Boys in Nehru jackets trekking to India to meditate with the Maharishi--Bob Dylan retreated to Woodstock with his family and a sack of quiet songs. He hung out in a basement with that bunch of Canadians in his backing band the Hawks, who then became the Band, and everything changed all over again.
I'm a Bob Cat, all right, so I read with interest
Maureen Dowd's critical take on the Bard's first trip to China, wherein Dylan allegedly agreed to a censored setlist:
Maybe the songwriter should reread some of his own lyrics: “I think you will find/When your death takes its toll/All the money you made/Will never buy back your soul.”
Here's more of Dowd's piece; I'm not one to give much credence to a Beltway writer when it comes to dissertations on music, but Dylan's legacy bleeds into the culture, and has always been about more than a G chord:

“Whatever the counterculture was, I’d seen enough of it,” (Dylan) wrote. He complained of being “anointed as the Big Bubba of Rebellion, High Priest of Protest, the Czar of Dissent.”

Performing his message songs came to feel “like carrying a package of heavy rotting meat,” he wrote...

David Hajdu, the New Republic music critic, says the singer has always shown a tension between “not wanting to be a leader and wanting to be a celebrity.”

In Hajdu’s book, “Positively 4th Street,” Dylan is quoted saying that critics who charged that he’d sold out to rock ’n’ roll had it backward.

“I never saw myself as a folksinger,” he said. “They called me that if they wanted to. I didn’t care. I latched on, when I got to New York City, because I saw (what) a huge audience there was. I knew I wasn’t going to stay there. I knew it wasn’t my thing. ... I became interested in folk music because I had to make it somehow.”

“Folk music,” he concluded, “is a bunch of fat people.”

Hajdu told me that Dylan has distanced himself from his protest songs because “he’s probably aware of the kind of careerism that’s apparent in that work.” Dylan employed propaganda to get successful but knows those songs are “too rigidly polemical” to be his best work.

“Maybe the Chinese bureaucrats are better music critics than we give them credit for,” Hajdu said, adding that Dylan was now “an old-school touring pro” like Frank Sinatra Sr.

Sean Wilentz, the Princeton professor who wrote “Bob Dylan in America,” said that the Chinese were “trying to guard the audience from some figure who hasn’t existed in 40 years. He’s been frozen in aspic in 1963 but he’s not the guy in the work shirt and blue jeans singing ‘Masters of War.’ ”

Wilentz and Hajdu say you can’t really censor Dylan because his songs are infused with subversion against all kinds of authority, except God. He’s been hard on bosses, courts, pols and anyone corrupted by money and power.

I gave up trying to figure out Bob Dylan's career over 30 years ago when he made a Christian record that I didn't entirely hate. I don't know why (if?) he allowed Chinese officials to tell him what to do, but I'm not sure I want to know why Bob Dylan does anything he does. I don't know anything about magic, either, but I still love it when a dove flies out of the handkerchief.

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Monday, December 6, 2010

It Ain't Me, Babe (?)


About four weeks before The Last Waltz, The Band appeared on the second season of NBC's Saturday Night Live program. Buck Henry was the host.
According to the...clip
(available below) found by Bob Dylan's friend Larry "Ratso" Sloman, there is a close-up of someone in the audience, identified as as "Electoral College Dropout." It's my understanding that if there is a closeup of an audience member, special permission must be obtained. This would explain why these "close-ups" usually featured the same staff members over and over again. Has this been kept a secret for over three decades?
Here's the blurb:
On October 30, 1976, The Band appeared as the musical guest on a weekly late night sketch-based comedy show. About 14 minutes into the episode, a man who looked a lot like Bob Dylan wearing a costume (and possibly prosthetics) was briefly featured in the audience. Could this have actually been Bob Dylan wearing a fake nose, hippie wig, and weird clothing?
What do you think? Is it Dylan? Is it Sloman?

Click here to see the clip; I tried to embed it but couldn't size it correctly. (Sorry 'bout that...)
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Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Viva Las Vegas & A Fist Bump For Chumlee



Apparently, Chumlee is on some TV show named Pawn Stars. Never heard of it, but I got the clip after visiting Expecting Rain, which I have heard of, and which actually once posted an item about a Dylan show in Guadalajara that I wrote a couple of years ago for this blog.
Bob Dylan: Reality TV star.
Unreal...
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Tuesday, September 21, 2010

RIP: Summer 2010

Fall's here. Summer never really was...

From the
AP:

No need to root around the closet for sweaters and jackets: Californians never really put them away this year.
"The invisible summer, seamless from spring to fall," said Bill Patzert, a scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory who studies the role of oceans in the global climate.
In Los Angeles, the last full day of summer passed Tuesday under the gloom of a deep marine layer - the low clouds and fog that put a damper on many beach excursions and made a dip in the surf bracing.
"The ocean never warmed," Patzert said.


Or, as Bob Dylan said:

Summer days, summer nights are gone
Summer days and the summer nights are gone
I know a place where there’s still somethin’ going on

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Thursday, September 2, 2010

New Age.


I haven't posted much of anything lately because I'm busy selling SaaS (Inside Baseball, I know, but geeks unite! You know all about it and 99.9 % of you are probably slinging code for an application right now.)
Anyway, I'm not a geek, but I work with 'em--I stare at a screen all day; I conduct webinars hour after hour and when I come home my eyes fall out. So all that time I used to spend blogging is now spent chasing my eyeballs around my living room floor. 
I haven't caught up with 'em yet.
Anyway, when I began this thing, a blog was a "web log." 
(Write something personal, OK? We want a bloodletting. What is a"web log," anyway? I have notebooks full of bloodletting; the last place that shit will ever show up is the Internet.)
Still: I know it ain't much, either, but this atheist, epileptic leftist who's unwilling to blog under a real name or link to Foursquare is pretty happy that you chose to spend a little bit of time visiting JackRabbitCafé. I have some juicy stories to share, but my typing is so poor you'll probably never see 'em here. 
Very un-blogger-like, I know...
(OK, just a l'il bloodletting:)
My back is killing me, and I'm wondering if walking barefoot for miles at a time is causing it.  I can't sleep and I have to pee at 3AM. My knees have ached since Duran Duran, but they are much worse now. I didn't shop for a bong yesterday; I went to Target and bought two pillows instead. I like Lady Gaga, but if I say that to her real fans, they smile and call me, "Sir."
"Sir." Me? 
Welcome to the New Age.
I was so much older then; I'm younger than that now...
Oh, Bob--if only that were true...


Enjoy yourself--it's later than you think..
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Monday, May 24, 2010

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Future Former Child Star Disses The Bard.



Isn't he the kid from "The Bobby Sherman Story?"

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Friday, December 11, 2009

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Tiny Tim, His Then-Girlfriend & The Band.



Excerpted from Examiner.com:

While (Bob) Dylan was recuperating in Woodstock from his motorcycle accident, he and members of the Band started recording what are now known as The Basement Tapes. When more and more unreleased material fell into the hands of collectors, one thing that eventually surfaced was some recordings with Tiny Tim. Tiny and The Band recorded material for the film, You Are What You Eat, an obscure movie co-produced by Peter Yarrow (of Peter, Paul and Mary). Four known songs preserved on tape from this era are "Sonny Boy", "Be My Baby", "I Got You, Babe", and "Memphis, Tennessee." Dylan probably did not play on these tracks.

It is rumored that Dylan offered Tim a cameo in his unreleased television special, Eat The Document. There are also tales of Dylan and Tim privately performing songs for each other.

Bob Dylan played a Tiny Tim recording on the 11th episode of Theme Time Radio Hour. The subject was "Flowers," and the song Dylan played, was, of course, Tiny's biggest hit, "Tiptoe Through The Tulips," from 1968. Here's what Dylan had to say:

“No one knew more about old music than Tiny Tim. He studied it and he loved it. He knew all the old songs that only existed as sheet music.

Tiny Tim died in Minneapolis, Minnesota, on November 30, 1996, when he was 64.

Goddamn, I would've loved to have been in that basement...

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Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Bob Dylan Takes It To The Streets.



Well, you say that I'm an outlaw,

You say that I'm a thief.

Here's a Christmas dinner

For the families on relief.

Those are lyrics from Woody Guthrie's "Pretty Boy Floyd." The song tells the story of the legendary outlaw known to some as a hunted man with a soft heart. Bob Dylan began his career as a Guthrie acolyte before going on to revolutionize popular music. He's neither outlaw nor thief, but he, too, has spent time as a hunted man with a soft heart. Dylan's New York City garbage was famously picked through and written about by obsessed yutz A.J. Weberman, and he ultimately had to move his family from their formerly idyllic hideaway in Woodstock, NY, because he was stalked and followed until he couldn't take it anymore.

But he kept his soft heart.

As previously mentioned on this blog, Dylan has released a Christmas album--Christmas In The Heart--with all future proceeds from the record going to charities combating hunger. And in typically iconoclastic fashion, Dylan has done just one interview to promote the album--to old hand Bill Flanagan--and it is only available through NASNA--the North American Street Newspaper Association.

What is a street newspaper? As NASNA points out:

A street newspaper is a newspaper that primarily addresses issues related to poverty and homelessness and is distributed by poor or homeless vendors. Vendors sell the newspaper for a set price, usually $1, and have to pay the organization a fraction of the price (20% to 40%) for each paper up front. The self-employed vendor sells the papers on the street and keeps the money he or she makes. For many people, this is the opportunity they need to get back on their feet and into permanent housing.

The benefits of street papers go far beyond economic opportunity. For the vendor, they offer a positive experience of self-help that breaks through the isolation that many homeless people experience. They offer the public a means to reach out with their dollar to help a homeless person directly and, over time, form a caring relationship.

Most street newspapers also provide homeless and/or those living on the margins of society the opportunities for expression by publishing their articles, letters and artwork. These publications build a bridge between the very poor and the wider public by helping people to understand the issues and the personal stories of those on the lowest rung of the economic ladder.

Read Flanagan's interview here, and if you see a NASNA vendor on the street, please buy a paper. He or she needs that buck more than you do.



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Monday, November 16, 2009

Bob Dylan: Must Be Santa.


Pass the eggnog and watch the video here. Christmas looks pretty fun on Planet Bob.

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Saturday, October 10, 2009

Former L.A. Times Music Critic Robert Hilburn On Bob Dylan.

UPDATE: Thanks to Expecting Rain's Scott Miller for linking to this post on Monday. At last glance, over 800 visitors clicked over to JackRabbit Cafe´.

Thanks!


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Thursday, September 17, 2009

Listen To Clips Of Bob Dylan's Christmas Album Here*

*UPDATE: Audio clips on Amazon.com.uk seem to be disabled this morning.

Wow--this'll guarantee a cool Yule...
It'll be released October 13; buy it early, as all proceeds are going to Feeding America, the nation's leading domestic hunger-relief charity.

Christmas in the Heart, indeed.

Listen here*

Click here for pre-order information.


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Wednesday, September 16, 2009

RIP: Mary Travers

Mary Travers--the blond, clear-voiced Greenwich Villager in Peter, Paul and Mary--died today in Connecticut. She was 72.

From the New York Times:

The group’s interpretations of Bob Dylan’s “Blowin’ in the Wind” and “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” translated his raw vocal style into a smooth, more commercially acceptable sound. They also scored big hits with pleasing songs like the whimsical “Puff the Magic Dragon” and John Denver’s plaintive “Leaving on a Jet Plane.”

Their sound may have been commercial and safe, but early on, their politics were somewhat risky for a group courting a mass audience. Like Mr. Yarrow and Mr. Stookey, Ms. Travers was outspoken in her support for the civil rights and antiwar movements, in sharp contrast to clean-cut folk groups like the Kingston Trio, which avoided making political statements.

“There was a real possibility that we would lose the entire Southern market over the issue,” Ms. Travers told Robbie Woliver, the author of “Hoot!: A Twenty-Five Year History of the Greenwich Village Music Scene,” an oral history. “But we felt that the issue was more important than the Southern market.”

“They made folk music not just palatable but accessible to a mass audience,” David Hajdu, the author of “Positively Fourth Street,” a book about Bob Dylan, Joan Baez and their circle, said in an interview. Ms. Travers, he added, was critical to the group’s image, which had a lot to do with their appeal. “She had a kind of sexual confidence combined with intelligence, edginess and social consciousness — a potent combination,” he said. “If you look at clips of their performances, the camera fixates on her. The act was all about Mary.”



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Friday, September 4, 2009

Right-Wing Paranoia: The Times They Ain't A-Changin'...


Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues by Bob Dylan:

Well, I was feelin' sad and feelin' blue,

I didn't know what in the world I was gonna do,

Them Communists they wus comin' around,

They wus in the air,

They wus on the ground.

They wouldn't gimme no peace. . .

So I run down most hurriedly

And joined up with the John Birch Society,

I got me a secret membership card

And started off a-walkin' down the road.

Yee-hoo, I'm a real John Bircher now!

Look out you Commies!

Now we all agree with Hitlers' views,

Although he killed six million Jews.

It don't matter too much that he was a Fascist,

At least you can't say he was a Communist!

That's to say like if you got a cold you take a shot of malaria.

Well, I wus lookin' everywhere for them gol-darned Reds.

I got up in the mornin' 'n' looked under my bed,

Looked in the sink, behind the door,

Looked in the glove compartment of my car.

Couldn't find 'em . . .

I wus lookin' high an' low for them Reds everywhere,

I wus lookin' in the sink an' underneath the chair.

I looked way up my chimney hole,

I even looked deep inside my toilet bowl.

They got away . . .

Well, I wus sittin' home alone an' started to sweat,

Figured they wus in my T.V. set.

Peeked behind the picture frame,

Got a shock from my feet, hittin' right up in the brain.

Them Reds caused it!

I know they did . . . them hard-core ones.

Well, I quit my job so I could work alone,

Then I changed my name to Sherlock Holmes.

Followed some clues from my detective bag

And discovered they wus red stripes on the American flag!

That ol' Betty Ross . . .

Well, I investigated all the books in the library,

Ninety percent of 'em gotta be burned away.

I investigated all the people that I knowed,

Ninety-eight percent of them gotta go.

The other two percent are fellow Birchers . . . just like me.

Now Eisenhower, he's a Russian spy,

Lincoln, Jefferson and that Roosevelt guy.

To my knowledge there's just one man

That's really a true American: George Lincoln Rockwell.

I know for a fact he hates Commies cus he picketed the movie Exodus.

Well, I fin'ly started thinkin' straight

When I run outa things to investigate.

Couldn't imagine doin' anything else,

So now I'm sittin' home investigatin' myself!

Hope I don't find out anything . . . hmm, great God!



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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

I Wonder If He'll Sing "Girl From The North Pole?"


I first heard rumblings about a Bob Dylan Christmas album in June or July. I read lots of harsh sniping; about his voice, his stints with or without Christianity, his perceived "cashing in" on a holiday, and the collision of Christmas and Santa and Dylan's Jewish heritage.

As in, "Dylan? A Christmas album?"

If you've followed anything at all to do with popular music over the last, oh, seventy-plus years, you'd already have known that Dylan would hardly be the first Jewish artist to write and/or record Christmas music. Irving Berlin wrote "White Christmas," Sammy Cahn and Jule Styne penned, "Let it Snow! Let it Snow! Let it Snow!" and Johnny Marks wrote "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer," among other classic yuletide tunes. And that's just the top of the charts.

Hark; it's just a f****** holiday album, and it's for a great cause.

Ho, ho, ho.

From BobDylan.com:

Bob Dylan will release a brand new album of holiday songs,Christmas In The Heart, on Tuesday, October 13, it was announced today by Columbia Records. All of the artist’s U.S. royalties from sales of these recordings will be donated to Feeding America, guaranteeing that more than four million meals will be provided to more than 1.4 million people in need in this country during this year’s holiday season. Bob Dylan is also donating all of his future U.S. royalties from this album to Feeding America in perpetuity.

Additionally, the artist is partnering with two international charities to provide meals during the holidays for millions in need in the United Kingdom and the developing world, and will be donating all of his future international royalties fromChristmas In The Heart to those organizations in perpetuity. Details regarding the international partnerships will be announced next week.

“When we reached out to Bob Dylan about becoming involved with our organization, we could never have anticipated that he would so generously donate all royalties from his forthcoming album to our cause,” said Vicki Escarra, president and CEO of Feeding America. “This major initiative from such a world renowned artist and cultural icon will directly benefit so many people and have a major impact on spreading awareness of the epidemic of hunger in this country and around the world.”

Bob Dylan commented, “It’s a tragedy that more than 35 million people in this country alone -- 12 million of those children – often go to bed hungry and wake up each morning unsure of where their next meal is coming from. I join the good people of Feeding America in the hope that our efforts can bring some food security to people in need during this holiday season.”

Christmas In The Heart will be the 47th album from Bob Dylan, and follows his worldwide chart-topping Together Through Life, released earlier this year. Songs performed by Dylan on this new album include, “Here Comes Santa Claus,” “Winter Wonderland,” “Little Drummer Boy” and “Must Be Santa.”

Feeding America provides low-income individuals and families with the fuel to survive and even thrive. As the nation’s largest domestic hunger-relief charity, our network members supply food to more than 25 million Americans each year, including 9 million children and 3 million seniors. Serving the entire United States, more than 200 member food banks supports 63,000 agencies that address hunger in all of its forms. For more information how you can fight hunger in your community and across the country, visit feedingamerica.org.

I'm not a Christian or anything, but I grew up with Christmas and always give it the ol' secular cheer. This year? Dylan and egg-nog and ho, ho, ho...

(And a donation to FeedingAmerica.org.)

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Saturday, August 22, 2009

Charlie Sexton: On The Road Again.

I have nothing against guitarist Denny Freeman, who has been on the road with Bob Dylan since 2005. He's great, but...

From Austin 360:

Diane Scott of the Continental Club has a scoop in this week’s club newsletter. Charlie Sexton has rejoined Bob Dylan’s band, replacing Denny Freeman. “Well, at least it’s Charlie,” Freeman told Scott. The never-ending tour restarts Oct. 5 on the West Coast.

Sexton played guitar for Dylan from 1999 until 2003. At the Bard’s Aug. 4 set at the Dell Diamond, Sexton jammed with the band for about half the set and lit a fire under Dylan, according to assorted reviews.

I've seen every version of Dylan's road band during the 20+ year "Never-Ending Tour," and Sexton's return is welcome news. Now if Bob would give Larry Campbell a call...

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Saturday, August 15, 2009

Dylan To NJ Cops: Don't Think Twice, It's All Right.


How does it feel

How does it feel

To be on your own

With no direction home

Like a complete unknown

Like a rolling stone?


From apnews.myway.com:

Rock legend Bob Dylan was treated like a complete unknown by police in a New Jersey shore community when a resident called to report someone wandering around the neighborhood.

Dylan was in Long Branch, about a two-hour drive south of New York City, on July 23 as part of a tour with Willie Nelson and John Mellencamp that was to play at a baseball stadium in nearby Lakewood.

A 24-year-old police officer apparently was unaware of who Dylan is and asked him for identification, Long Branch business administrator Howard Woolley said Friday.

"I don't think she was familiar with his entire body of work," Woolley said.

The incident began at 5 p.m. when a resident said a man was wandering around a low-income, predominantly minority neighborhood several blocks from the oceanfront looking at houses.

The police officer drove up to Dylan, who was wearing a blue jacket, and asked him his name. According to Woolley, the following exchange ensued:

"What is your name, sir?" the officer asked.

"Bob Dylan," Dylan said.

"OK, what are you doing here?" the officer asked.

"I'm on tour," the singer replied.

A second officer, also in his 20s, responded to assist the first officer. He, too, apparently was unfamiliar with Dylan, Woolley said.

The officers asked Dylan for identification. The singer of such classics as "Like a Rolling Stone" and "Blowin' in the Wind" said that he didn't have any ID with him, that he was just walking around looking at houses to pass some time before that night's show.

The officers asked Dylan, 68, to accompany them back to the Ocean Place Resort and Spa, where the performers were staying. Once there, tour staff vouched for Dylan.

The officers thanked him for his cooperation.

"He couldn't have been any nicer to them," Woolley added.

Ain't talkin', just walkin'
Through this weary world of woe
Heart burnin', still yearnin'
No one on earth would ever know

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