I understand that not everybody likes Dylan. I'm not here to change your mind on him; I have no interest in doing that. If you don't like it, you don't like it. What I am surprised about, is your reasons for not liking him. Lots of people don't care for his voice or outright hate it. I can't argue with that: he has never had a pretty voice, not even when he tried crooning on his country-album Nashville Skyline (1969). Some people don't like his music because it doesn't sound like what they expect pop music to sound like. But what you said about how Dylan didn't make the music "lift off" and how his singing, his lyrics and his music didn't combine in an organic unity simply baffle me. That's exactly why I gave the examples I did, to try to point out the importance of the 'personality' in his voice (for lack of a better description) in shaping the lyrics and working together with the music to come to a result that couldn't be achieved by anybody else --a result that moves the listener exactly because of that one unique combination.
Well, I think a lot of fans of Dylan make the mistake that they want to know what every word he sings means. But they will never get it, because the only one who knows is Dylan, and he ain't telling. A lot of his songs have a clear meaning, like his topical folk songs and a lot of his songs from the 1990's on. The songs of his born-again period even literally spell out the meaning (Jesus, Jesus and Jesus). But on the other hand, a lot of his songs are open to multiple interpretations. And some are so out of this world, that even beginning to try to understand them is a waste of time. Personally, I don't understand why those fans don't just simply sit back and enjoy the music, the singing and the inventiveness of the song-writing. One of his most mysterious songs is 'Changing of the Guards' (1978). Other than a reference to his 16 years in the music business at the beginning and hints at his coming conversion to born-again Christianity at end, I can't make any sense of the lyrics. But I'm not trying to, I simply enjoy how GREAT it SOUNDS.Lazario wrote:Actually, I was describing my reaction to the majority of the songs I've heard from him. I mean that the listener thinks about what the song could mean rather than trying to enjoy it. [...] I'm saying that between enjoying and understanding, that unless you've spent a lot of time with Bob Dylan- a listener is likely to only walk away with a small percentage of either.
My mother hates Bob Dylan, but this song she absolutely loves.
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You're referring to the song 'Gotta Serve Somebody', the opening track to his 1979 album Slow Train Coming, when he had firmly embraced Christianity after having 'seen the light' (a vision of some sort). It turned a lot of his old fans against him. His fans were bitter that the guy who had always questioned everything was now following a rigid set of religious beliefs, and Dylan was bitter because the people who always called him a prophet were now turning away when he was in fact prophesizing. But to come back to the music: I don't think it's one of his best songs either. But it did earn him a great deal of succes. It won the Grammy Award for Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Male in 1980. It stands as Dylan's last hit single, peaking at #24 on the Billboard Magazine Hot 100 singles chart. John Lennon spoofed it with a song called 'Serve Yourself', criticizing Dylan's subjection to religious dogma (though the rest of the album is not about that at all). Disney Duster loved the song, by the way.Lazario wrote:Shockingly I actually heard another one on the radio last weekend that I'd never heard before- but same thing happened there. His singing was... unconventional, the music was hardly something I'd imagine people turned on the radio to hear, the lyrics were ridiculous, and it all came together poorly (rather than comfortably since those qualities usually suit each other). Now, any of those are things not necessarily libel to bother me when listening to a song but honestly, I just wasn't feeling it. I could only imagine you saying, if I could remember the name of the song (I remember he said the word "Serve" a lot- "you gotta serve"), that it wasn't one of his best. So I shouldn't use that to form an initial impression. Which is fair.
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Yes, I agree with your thoughts on 'Tight Connection to My Heart', that it sounds (and looks!) like an imitation of someone/something else. Some other people have suggested the satire-theory, too, but I just think Dylan was struggling to become relevant again after his religious albums tarnished his reputation and his sales figures. The 1980's were hard on him (as they were on a lot of artists who had risen to fame in the 1960's and 1970's). Of course I always loved Paul Simon (especially in combination with Art Garfunkel), so I don't understand what you've got against his singing and especially not what you got against his lyrics. But I guess that's just a matter of taste. What I don't get is how you say Dylan didn't pay attention to the way the music sounded, like Simon. One Dylan's defining moments is when he went 'electric', meaning abandoning the folk music of only a guitar and a harmonica and starting to play with an electric band. Highway 61 Revisited (1966) is a testament to his brilliant artistic vision on the sound of his songs. You can't say that was just an after-thought.Lazario wrote:Of course the difference between him and those songs by Simon is that it seems Paul and the people who worked with him cared about making the sound of the music seem revolutionary, potent, alive. Dylan's more pop / dance music (your 80's example for one, which Bruce Springsteen did better anyway with, you name it: "Tunnel of Love," "Dancing in the Dark," "Glory Days" , but also the song from Wonder Boys) even sounds like a take on something he saw somewhere else. [...]
It's amazing to me you should say this, especially after hearing a song like 'Standing in the Doorway'. How can you say he's detached from the music when you hear a song like that? The same goes for 'Spirit on the Water' (2006), which unfortunately isn't on YouTube. He is every word, he is every sound. I can hear his heart and soul in every word, so 'detached' is the last word I would think of when describing his music. But I think you should just listen to his album Blood on the Tracks (1975) sometimes. I think that's the most perfect conversion of lyrics-music-vocals he ever reached.Lazario wrote:I feel like Dylan is completely detached from the music, his vocals and lyrics. [...] But now? I can't get a grip on it, let alone find it as incredible as you do. To me, "approach" is the right word to describe Dylan. He was on his way to music and never quite got there.
Now, now... That's just a matter of taste. Maybe you're not the kind of person to sit and enjoy a quiet piece of music for over 4 minutes. That happens. I can sit there and just let the music take me away..Lazario wrote:But it might take the work of a defibrillator to wake the listener up after it's finished.Goliath wrote:It takes no essay to immediately understand and enjoy a beautiful love song like 'Boots of Spanish Leather' (1964).
Not sure what you mean with that last line, but of course I agree wholeheartedly with the idea that every person interprets and appreciates a song (or a book, a painting, a movie etc.) differently according to the kind of person they are. And it also depends on the state you're in. For example, the last few months, I've found myself listening much more to Dylan's mid-to-late 1970's and 1990's-2000's works than I did previously and I've left the 1960's-early 1970's stuff laying around in a forgotten corner, because lately I've been more in the mood for more personal, more 'emotional' stuff (for lack of a better word) than for the crazy, surreal or topical songs he did early in his career...Lazario wrote:But again, to offer something of a truce here (because I care about discussing and understanding people's opinions about music): I believe people are meant to appreciate different messages according to the kind of person they are. You say it's about a loved one but he does say "my sweet kiss," so... it's not a goodbye song that applies to any loved one.
However, a new interpretation of his 1960's songs does wonders to spark my interest in them again:
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