Showing posts with label Dylan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dylan. Show all posts

March 19 – Bob Dylan's First!

Posted on March 19, 2018

On this date in 1962, the album Bob Dylan was released by Columbia Records.

Dylan (who was born Robert Allen Zimmerman) had dropped out of college to travel to New York City. He wanted to visit his hero, Woodie Gurthrie, who was seriously ill. He wanted to immerse himself in the folk music scene. He wanted to perform!


Dylan started to get known in the American folk music scene. He explained later that rock'n'roll had appealing, driving beats, but that the lyrics just didn't speak to him. They were catchy instead of deep, fun instead of serious.

Dylan was so serious, he got the record deal with Columbia.

And he was so serious that many of his songs were labeled as protest songs.

As a matter of fact, Dylan came to be labeled as "the voice of a generation."

And...what a voice! Dylan's voice was pretty rough, and that turned some people off. But it was a stand-out for others. Author 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."

Folk musician Joan Baez was
an early promoter of Dylan.

Dylan's early songs were more popular, at first at least, when other singers sang them. It was easier for most audiences to enjoy melodious, mellifluous voices singing songs like Blowing in the Wind and The Times They Are a-Changin.' 

But some of the people who sang Dylan songs dragged him up on stage with them during shows and promoted him in other ways - and soon audiences knew and loved Dylan songs sung by Dylan.

In all the years since the early 1960s, Dylan didn't stick with just one kind of music, just one kind of song. He's written what some people consider popular music (Like a Rolling Stone), rock, blues, and country. He's explored gospel, rockabilly, even Irish folk music and jazz! He's performed on guitar, harmonica, and keyboards, he's sung, he's recorded - but his greatest contribution, surely, is his songwriting.


Blowing in the Wind is one of Dylan's best. This video was crafted by a Brazilian person, I guess, who writes at the end (in Portuguese), "One day this world, now dominated by some, has to again belong to all."

I grew up listening to The Times, They Are a-Changin' covered by Simon and Garfunkel. Check out Dylan's version and the S&G cover

Check out these words of wisdom from Dylan:








May 24 – Happy Birthday, Bob Dylan!

Posted on May 24, 2014

Have you ever heard of Robert Allen Zimmerman? Born on this date in 1941, he wrote songs that became anthems of his generation.

What's an 'anthem'?” you may be wondering. It's a song that is particularly identified with a certain group or nation. It's usually a song that is uplifting, or rousing – and Dylan's songs were meant to rouse people to action or at least to deep thought.

Dylan's song “Blowin' in the Wind” was sung at so many anti-war demonstrations in the United States!

How many times must the cannonballs fly,
Before they're forever banned?
The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind...
The answer is blowin' in the wind...

His song “The Times, They are A-Changin'” was sung at so many U.S. civil rights marches!

Come gather 'round people
Wherever you roam
And admit that the waters
Around you have grown
And accept it that soon
You'll be drenched to the bone
If your time to you
Is worth savin'
Then you better start swimmin'
Or you'll sink like a stone
For the times they are a-changin'.

Dylan managed to capture the ideas of the rebellious 1960s, and because of that he became a somewhat reluctant figurehead of social change movements.

But he was more than just a flash in the 60s pan! He has been influential and celebrated in the music world for more than five decades, incorporating traditions from folk, blues, country, gospel, rock, rockabilly, and even a bit of jazz and swing. He plays guitar, keyboards, and harmonica, and his somewhat-raspy vocals have changed to a very raspy - even croaky - singing voice as Dylan has aged. (Cigarette smoking is partly to blame here.)

Nowadays Dylan also publishes books of drawings and displays paintings in art galleries. But his main contribution to culture remains his songwriting. He's won lots and lots of awards, including Grammy, Golden Globe, and Academy Awards, and he's been inducted in multiple Halls of Fame, including the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He even won a special citation from the Pulitzer Prize jury, in 2008, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Barack Obama, in 2012!



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