Is Bob Dylan overrated?

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And *all* the Last Waltz box set performances, incl. "Hazel" etc.

dow, Friday, 2 December 2022 19:27 (one year ago) link

xpost That version of "Grand Coulee Dam" is on Live 1961-2000---my copy isn't at hand, but was thinking it had more than these 16 tracks---anyway, pretty hot: https://www.amazon.com/Live-1961-2000-Bob-Dylan/dp/B000059RJ3

dow, Saturday, 3 December 2022 00:43 (one year ago) link

ust got his new book from library (as w all his deluxe adventures, will wait for deal on Used, but the $45.00 list price seems reasonable: it's between standard and coffee table sizes, handy enough, yet big enough for impact of new art elements x splendidly reproduced photos, both of which are always apt, frequently witty).
Text is tightly loose, tight enough that it can't be described in any detail w/o spoilers. Will say that he frequently (but not always) starts a discussion by splattering his projections, living all over the song----with a fly-eyed shotgun blast of rock salt, nails, pills, Reader's Digests, Fidel Castro's beard, suggesting that even though he's told interviewers he can't write songs like that no more, that he mebbe can---surely he could come up with appropriate 3-chorders from wherever ----then he steps back, says, "In this song---", discusses it as song, though still in quite a lively way, also may trace in backstory, of song x singer, though eventually says that such may overshadow or weigh down other aspects of the music (speculates that many songs from the Golden Age of Video may have been submerged by such associations).
Can't resist mentioning: "An argument could be made that Ricky (Nelson) was more of a rock & roll ambassador than Elvis": EP made an impact via occasional Ed Sullivan Show etc. appearances, sure but Nelson was on his family's sitcom every week, singing whatever song he was promoting, and (as I recall) in the living room with James Burton and other A-level cats, who looked like they could be his high school classmates.
Of course! And now I also recall Woody G.s line, "I'm the man who's gonna show you what you already know." But Dyl goes waaay beyond that too, duh.
Sometimes with disappointing results (doesn't slow down enough to hear "London Calling" very well). But he gets "Ball of Confusion" as pre-rap riffling of the headlines topicality that's really hard to pull off, also bluegrass and heavy metal as two faces of same thing---in midst of droll, analytical, also gothic presentation of the Osborne Brothers' "Ruby Are, You Mad?"(gets Jack Ruby in there too)---also lends gothic glamor to "The Pretender," goes beyond that for "The Little White Cloud That Cried."

dow, Saturday, 3 December 2022 19:46 (one year ago) link

the motorcyle accident changed Dylan forever - ?

Or was it the sweet chyme of fmae

| (Latham Green), Monday, 5 December 2022 14:38 (one year ago) link

The chimes of famedom laughing?

Soda Stereo Total (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 5 December 2022 19:07 (one year ago) link

two weeks pass...

There are some pretty good quotes in this WSJ interview (I found the full text posted on some messageboard). What Bob’s watching:

I recently binged: “Coronation Street,” “Father Brown,” and some early “Twilight Zones.” I know they’re old-fashioned, but they make me feel at home. I’m no fan of packaged programs or news shows. I never watch anything foul-smelling or evil. Nothing disgusting, nothing dog ass.

Wet Legume (morrisp), Monday, 19 December 2022 23:01 (one year ago) link

How the hell does he get ahold of Coronation Street episodes??

Tracer Hand, Monday, 19 December 2022 23:13 (one year ago) link

The full text is also on Dylan's website:
https://www.bobdylan.com/news/bob-dylan-interviewed-by-wall-street-journals-jeff-slate/

jaymc, Monday, 19 December 2022 23:37 (one year ago) link

Thanks! (Looks like it didn’t come up in my search b/c they removed the headline and intro blurb)

Wet Legume (morrisp), Monday, 19 December 2022 23:54 (one year ago) link

Never knew Dylan was such a fan of "The Stealer." I actually prefer this live version by Faces, originally broadcast on the BBC:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdWcem46UTA

birdistheword, Tuesday, 20 December 2022 00:43 (one year ago) link

honey, can we watch some dog ass tonight? it's been a day

The earth could vomit up its dead, and it could be raining blood, and we’d shrug it off, cool as cucumbers.

corrs unplugged, Tuesday, 20 December 2022 08:39 (one year ago) link

he certainly still has a way with words

corrs unplugged, Tuesday, 20 December 2022 08:39 (one year ago) link

In the book, he says that " Stephane Grappelli is a very good player, butyou have to back to King Oliver, Buddy Bolden, and Louis Armstrong to find the beating heart of jazz." Do early T.Zones take him back to the beating heart of Buddy Bolden. who seems never to have recorded, but maybe Mr. D. knows differently? Since he's somehow got those Coronation Street eps. But either way, and maybe he don't need no Edison cylinders, there are times you got to go back.
Like Vic Damone, "On The Street Where You Live":

Is this really the street where she lives? It has to be her street because the birds are singing here, and there couldn't be birds singing on any other street. You still have some sense of direction, so you start to walk again...The scrutiny doesn't even remotely touch you. There's no place on the planet you'd rather be, than on this dead-end street, the street where she lives.

How long will it take before you realize that your idle life is one of indulgence, but then again, what do you have to lose? The longer you don't see her, the less chance you have to offend her, that's the way you look at it. Let the clock keep ticking, everything could change again. You're on the street where she lives. You could be on any street in the world, but you're partial to this one. It's an ancient street, it's antiquated, and it's been around, and you have to stay on good terms with it. You have to make it your friend.

In the usual "This song" follow-up:

Maybe you wait all day and all night too. Maybe a cop would come by and ask you what you're doing there, If you tell him the truth, that you're just waiting to see somebody, you'll probably be arrested for stalking. Depends on who it is...
If you could sing like Vic Damone, maybe you could buy your way out. Vic Damone married Pier Angeli...Pier Angeli was the love of James Dean's life. Legend says that he waited across the street on his motorcycle on Pier Angeli's wedding day...That says something about life---when Pier Angeli could go from somebody like James Dean to Vic Damone in the blink of an eye. You have to wonder what the connection was. Did she see something of Jimmy in Vic Damone? Or did she just need to get as far away as possible?
Maybe for the rest of his short life, this was a song that belonged to James Dean.

s\

dow, Tuesday, 20 December 2022 19:01 (one year ago) link

It's very good, but hey you guys could write that on a clear day (ie nothing pressing to do)

Mark G, Wednesday, 21 December 2022 15:12 (one year ago) link

Never knew Dylan was such a fan of "The Stealer." I actually prefer this live version by Faces, originally broadcast on the BBC:

Love this. One of the greatest things the Faces ever did.

When I saw Bettye LaVette in 2007, she opened with "The Stealer," which freaked me out (in a good way) because I had no idea at the time that she'd recorded it. One of those wonderful surprise covers you sometimes get at a show.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bpsNwAb-y0E

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Wednesday, 21 December 2022 15:36 (one year ago) link

LaVette is tha bomb--for one thing, she's always had a way with Dylan covers, and the all-D. Things Have Changed shows her adjusting the classics and plunging fearlessly into the 80s thicket, also w good results (me: "Now I get it!")

dow, Wednesday, 21 December 2022 17:29 (one year ago) link

(For more of her UK picks, check what she does with "Talking Old Soldiers" on Scene of the Crime and pretty much all of Interpretations: The British Rock Songbook.)

dow, Wednesday, 21 December 2022 17:34 (one year ago) link

Longest version of the WSJ interview that I've seen:

IN HIS 81 YEARS, Bob Dylan has seemingly lived 100 lives. He conquered the world in the 1960s as a singer-songwriter who defied convention, going on to sell millions of records. He’s earned countless awards, including 10 Grammys, an Oscar, although he didn’t even attend the ceremony to accept it, and even the 2016 Nobel Prize in Literature. And music is only part of his story; Mr. Dylan has also become known among fans and collectors as an accomplished painter, and his 2004 book “Chronicles, Volume One,” an international bestseller, won the National Book Award.

Last month, he added a second book to the catalog. “The Philosophy of Modern Song” (Simon & Schuster) reads both as meditation and fever dream; it is a history lesson about (mostly) songs from the mid-20th Century, but also a rare glimpse into the fertile mind of one of the most creative people of the modern era.

In a lengthy interview, Mr. Dylan ruminated on the explosion of technology and culture during the mid-20th century, when he was young, life in the TikTok age, his lockdown experience and songwriting.

I first heard most of the songs in my book: on the radio, portable record players, jukeboxes. My relationship to them at first was external, then became personal and intense. The songs were simple, easy to understand. They’d come to you directly, let you see into the future.

Nowadays I listen to music: on CDs, satellite radio and streaming. I do love the sound of old vinyl, especially on a tube record player from back in the day. I bought three in an antique store in Oregon about 30 years ago. The tone quality is so powerful and miraculous, has so much depth. It always takes me back to the days when life was different and unpredictable.

I discover new music: mostly by accident, by chance. If I go looking for something, I usually don’t find it. In fact, I never find it. I walk into things intuitively when I’m most likely not looking for anything. Performers and songwriters recommend things to me. Others, I just wake up and they’re there.

Streaming has made music: too smooth and painless. Everything’s too easy. Just one stroke of the ring finger, middle finger, one little click, that’s all it takes. We’ve dropped the coin right into the slot. We’re pill poppers, cube heads and day trippers, hanging in, hanging out, gobbling blue devils, black mollies, anything we can get our hands on. Not to mention the nose candy and ganga grass. It’s all too easy, too democratic. You need a solar X-ray detector just to find somebody’s heart, see if they still have one.

When you hear a great song: you get a gut reaction and an emotional one. It follows the logic of the heart and stays in your head long after you’ve heard it. You don’t have to be a great singer to sing it. It’s bell, book and candle. It touches you in secret places, strikes your innermost being. Hoagy Carmichael wrote great songs, so did Irving Berlin and Johnny Mercer. J. Frank Dobie, Teddy Roosevelt and Arthur Conan Doyle probably could have written great songs, but didn’t.

I can’t listen to music: passively, because I’m always assessing what’s special—or not—about a song and looking for inspiration in fragments, riffs, chords, even lyrics.

Technology is like: sorcery. It’s a magic show, conjures up spirits, it is an extension of our body, like the wheel is an extension of our foot. But it might be the final nail driven into the coffin of civilization; we just don’t know. Nikola Tesla, the great inventor, said that he could take down the Brooklyn Bridge with a small vibrator. Today, we can probably do the same thing with a pocket computer. Log in, log out, load and download; we’re all wired up.

Creativity is: a funny thing. When we’re inventing something, we’re more vulnerable than we’ll ever be. Eating and sleeping mean nothing. We’re in “Splendid Isolation,” like in the Warren Zevon song; the world of self, Georgia O’Keeffe alone in the desert. To be creative you’ve got to be unsociable and tight-assed. Not necessarily violent and ugly, just unfriendly and distracted. You’re self-sufficient and you stay focused.

Very few songs of today will: go on to become standards. Who is going to write standards today? A rap artist? A hip-hop or rock star? A raver, a sampling expert, a pop singer? That’s music for the establishment. It’s easy listening. It just parodies real life, goes through the motions, puts on an act. A standard is on another level. It’s a role model for other songs, one in a thousand.

I write songs when: the mood strikes me, not with a set routine. My method is transportable. I can write songs anywhere at any time, although some of them are completed and redefined at recording sessions, some even at live shows.

While writing my book, I read: books about songwriting and music history, like Arnold Shaw’s “Honkers and Shouters” (Macmillan, 1986), Nick Tosches’ “Dino” (Doubleday, 1992), Guralnick’s Elvis books. But “Philosophy of Modern Song” is more of a state of mind than those.

Technology doesn’t really help me: relax. I’m too relaxed, too laid-back. Most of the time I feel like a flat tire, unmotivated, positively lifeless. It takes a lot to get me stimulated, and I’m an excessively sensitive person, which complicates things. I can be totally at ease one minute, and then, for no reason whatsoever, I get restless and fidgety; doesn’t seem to be any middle ground.

I recently binged: “Coronation Street,” “Father Brown,” and some early “Twilight Zones.” I know they’re old-fashioned, but they make me feel at home. I’m no fan of packaged programs or news shows. I never watch anything foul-smelling or evil. Nothing disgusting, nothing dog ass.

To stay physically active: I box and spar. It’s part of my life. It’s functional and detached from trends. It’s a limitless playground, and you don’t need an app.

I think social media sites: bring happiness to a lot of people. Some people even discover love there. It’s fantastic if you’re a sociable person; the communication lines are wide open. You can refashion anything, blot out memories and change history. But they can divide and separate us, as well.

Lockdown was: a very surrealistic time. Like being visited by another planet or by some mythical monster. But it was beneficial, too. It eliminated a lot of hassles and personal needs; it was good having no clock. I changed the door panels on an old ’56 Chevy, made some landscape paintings, wrote a song called “You Don’t Say.” I listened to Peggy Lee records. I reread “Rime of the Ancient Mariner” a few times over. What a story that is! I listened to The Mothers of Invention record “Freak Out!,” which I hadn’t heard in a long, long time. Frank Zappa was light years ahead of his time. If there’d been any opium laying around, I probably would have been down for a while.

I keep touring because: it is a perfect way to stay anonymous and still be a member of the social order. You’re the master of your fate. But it’s not an easy path to take, not fun and games.

The style of music I first loved was: sacred music, church music, ensemble singing.

But my favorite music is: a combination of genres. Slow ballads, fast ballads, anything that moves. Western swing, hillbilly, jump blues, country blues, everything. Doo-wop, the Ink Spots, the Mills Brothers, Lowland ballads, Bill Monroe, bluegrass, boogie-woogie. Music historians would say when you mix it all up it is called rock ’n’ roll. I guess that would be my favorite genre.

In the book, I thank: the “crew from Dunkin’ Donuts” because they were compassionate, supportive and they went the extra mile.

— Edited from an interview by Jeff Slate


Then there's that other part, maybe already noted upthread, where he says he's seen Metallica twice, mentions some rappers he likes, thinks streaming makes music too easy, although in this part he does say that he streams, vegging out. "Cawll any vegetable/Call it by naame/Calll any vegetable/When you get off the traain."

dow, Monday, 26 December 2022 20:48 (one year ago) link

^That seems like an abbreviated version of what's on bobdylan.com

Wet Legume (morrisp), Monday, 26 December 2022 21:11 (one year ago) link

(Some of the artists he name-checks are... unexpected. Julian Casablancas?)

Wet Legume (morrisp), Monday, 26 December 2022 21:13 (one year ago) link

I don't think Bob Dylan is overrated, but I fear that THE PHILOSOPHY OF MODERN SONG could be.

The book is attractively produced, designed, full of images that tend to reflect (on) the contents and reinforce the atmosphere that Dylan nowadays implies.

The prose is lively, inventive, entertaining, humorous. You can say that he has a gift for this, a voice of his own that no-one else had quite shown, and that we saw it in CHRONICLES, though here it's (even) less earnest and more Barnum.

But ... I'm not sure that what Dylan writes here is always coherent. One recurring tendency that prompts that view is the tendency to say quite contradictory things, like "It's the end of the world, dogs are in the street, the dead are rising from their graves, and you're on top form". Possibly that particular trait is deliberately contrary, a rhetorical effect. But leaving it aside, there is a limit to the cogent and convincing messages to emerge from the book's many entries.

I'm also quite surprised by how often Dylan goes out on a limb to voice what one has to assume is actual opinion, about worldly matters. You might agree or disagree with what he says in these passages, but in taking a stance at all he is taking a risk. I was reminded of another songwriter whose musical credibility has been damaged by his statements, and realised it was Morrissey. I'm surprised that more people haven't suggested that this book might do the same for Dylan.

Examples: in a statement about the mistreatment of Native Americans with which I strongly agree, he manages to swipe at other campaigns for civil rights. In an entry on 'War', the author of 'masters of war' takes a quite ambivalent view of war as a part of human activity, not especially good or bad in itself, and praises G.H.W. Bush's conduct of the 1991 Gulf War as much as he criticises G.W. Bush's conduct of the sequel. In an entry on 'çheaper to keep her' he promotes polygamy and refers to 'women's lib lobbyists ... putting man back on his heels'. In 'witchy woman' he describes 'the progressive woman': 'The lips of her cunt are a steel trap'.

Most people couldn't get away with this.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 12:15 (one year ago) link

I think Ian Penman agrees with you

https://www.city-journal.org/ian-penman-reviews-the-philosophy-of-modern-song?wallit_nosession=1

Piedie Gimbel, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 12:27 (one year ago) link

My warm Facebook take was that it read like AI-generated text that he took a brief look at and brushed up, and that the true workhorse was whoever shepherded all the artwork clearances through.

DPRK in Cincinnati (WmC), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 13:49 (one year ago) link

The one person I know IRL who read it didn’t like it very much.

Wet Legume (morrisp), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 15:44 (one year ago) link

bob's political views have always been messy

book seems about as ambitious as an episode of theme time radio hour

corrs unplugged, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 15:50 (one year ago) link

Theme Time Radio ruled

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 15:53 (one year ago) link

Penman said this is a degraded version of Theme Time Radio, which he liked.

I once read that he, similar to Loretta Lynn, had a magic hatbox full of lyrics which he would draw upon whilst writing songs. Maybe in her case it was an unplugged old refrigerator full of legal pads. In any case, writing a song is different from writing a book and if there is no magical selection process or editing process , magical or not, well then there you go. Ride on, Philistine, ride on.

A Kestrel for a Neve (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 15:55 (one year ago) link

needs a new pony imo

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 15:56 (one year ago) link

xp yeah theme time was great

but perhaps a bit of a stretch to release a greatest theme time segments in book form

corrs unplugged, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 15:57 (one year ago) link

The Penman piece is an excellent take. “Baggy” is an apt word for the book. I enjoy it as an interesting curiosity, & will take the time to listen to the cuts I don’t know — but the title is surely a put-on as deliberately knowing as Self Portrait. At first blush it seems like the literary equivalent of Tempest: late-period Dylan trying way too hard, while not trying hard enough where it would count.

I’ve really only just dipped into it. Maybe there’s some key buried in there that will unlock the come-on for me, but I don’t have quite enough faith in 2022 Dylan as a Great Artist With Something To Say to search too hard in that haystack.

The land of dreams and endless remorse (hardcore dilettante), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 16:30 (one year ago) link

Whoa whoa whoa… Tempest is amazing!

Wet Legume (morrisp), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 16:40 (one year ago) link

I got the book as a gift and have read most of it - I started with no expectations and took for what it is: a curiosity, a mood piece, a cranky opinion column, a collection of perspectives.

We don't go to Bob for accurate information or for authoritative answers or for moral guidance or for a coherent philosophy. We go to Bob for... Bobness. The book is decently full of Bobness.

Part "Old Man Yells at Cloud," part "okay, that's a nice glimpse into the perspective of someone who is a major cultural figure (albeit a deliberately idiosyncratic one)."

A little bit of "Oh, huh, I actually didn't know that" about some piece of old rootsy music. Certainly some of the obscurer tracks were worth a listen, though they will probably not become fixtures on my turntable.

Ye Mad Puffin, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 16:57 (one year ago) link

I must hand it to Penman: that's an excellent, insightful review, better than any of his LRB efforts.

I think he goes wrong in complaining about the absence of rap from the book -- after all, the book contains almost nothing in any genre after about 1979, yet does go out of its way to mention rappers; there's no sense at all that this genre has been excluded more deliberately than others. It might make more sense to point out the lack of Chic or ABBA, which are closer to Dylan's apparent period.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:01 (one year ago) link

Good Times. This is the song of the disco man, the rambling dancer. The lights are on, the crowd is hot, and you're on fire. These are the good times. That's what Nile Rodgers says. Bernard Edwards too. Nothing hoochie-coochie about this groove, nothing soulful or born-again. The rhythm is cooking like a hot dog on a spit and you're going to the end of the line.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:03 (one year ago) link

Does he mention Prince? He seemed to have a thing about him back during the Wilburys...

Mark G, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:09 (one year ago) link

Crowdfunder for Pinefox Disco Themetime Radio Hour!

Piedie Gimbel, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:10 (one year ago) link

I don't think he discusses, in any detail, any record from the last 40 years.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:10 (one year ago) link

After his time, I guess.

A Kestrel for a Neve (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:16 (one year ago) link

A lot of songs are about family. It's a family affair, said Sly Stone. We Are Family - that's what Sister Sledge want to tell you. They have all their sisters with them. Probably brothers too, but they're not talking about that, it's on the down-low. They fly just like birds of a feather. If you think about it a little, it's a strange thing that their name is Sledge, because there's nothing heavy about these sisters. Sledge would make you think of a sledgehammer, like a strongman might hit to win the prize at an old-time carnival. None of that here. It's a different deal. The dancefloor is shiny with satin. Satin dolls, that's what Billie Holiday called them. She knew a thing or two about those. So did Duke, he wrote the song himself. But satin's better than a sledge, if you're going to the dancehall. You can't change your name, though, so we know them as Debbie, Joni, Kim and Kathi Sledge. Maybe they could have been like David Bowie or Vic Damone and called themselves Debbie Dynamite or Kathi Kreme. Appeal to the payola kings and sugar plum fairy manufacturers. But Sister Sledge didn't want any of that. They are family. All the sisters are here. That's what they want you to understand.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:17 (one year ago) link

It's all Bobness, and some of it is ridic self-indulgent, long-winded, giving-us-geezers-a-bad-name-joy-of-typing-impulsivity---further spurred by knowing somebody, a lot of somebodies, incl. reviewers, will actually read it all and post comments---which puts him way ahead of most writers, most bloggers for sure, as he must be well aware, given for inst his warm, even excited comments about the World Wide Web in WSJ excerpt I posted above (thanks for directing me to his site for whole thing).
But that's when he doesn't know or care when to stop in working his material, the word-thought-impulse-memory-theme-time-spaciness that could be shared with his art studio and is with his song bodyshop. given the way he audibly and avowedly builds up his songs from others (Confederate Laureate here, public domain tune there, and recently said somewhere that he may seem totally sociable when really he's got "Tumblin' Tumbleweeds" stuck in his head and is absorbed with turning it into something else).
I think it works out fine most of the time, and I tend to mentally edit whatever I'm reading, so my process is ready for his---though yeah, what he makes of "Witchy Woman" is even worse than the song, quite an achievement.
But when he's really on it, I'm fascinated with the way he breadcrumbs me with good or at least tasty points, from one end of a thought-theme-etc. trail to another (not THE other; there's always a felt sense of alt.lines that could be taken/are still branching out, somewhere in the thicket, like those xpost early Twilight Zone and Coronation St. eps he favors). Lots of info, as YMP says, and like I said in my first post upthread about this book, points about Ricky Nelson as "rock & roll ambassador" every week in thos living room sessions with James Burton et all on (the wholesomely surreal, sometimes "pure products of America go crazy" tangents of Dad)(I say; Dylan Ozzie and Harriet. vs. the occasional appearances of Elvis on The Ed Sullivan Show, in between old school magicians, ventriloquists etc, as Dylan points out, so that El and other modern pop stars (down through Beatles and after) are part of this quaint sideshow context. He doesn't spell out the contrast with Ricky's cool-rocking balancing act in context of Ozzie and Harriet's own balance of family sitcom Cold War boomtown suburban values, also every week feat. the wholesomely surreal, sometimes "pure products of America go crazy" tangents of Dad---but he leads me to it, crystallizing my own prev. impressions of the show from digital antenna TV.
Also what he says about bluegrass and metal and the Fugs and xpost "On The Street Where You Live" and "Detriot City" and "Everybody Cryin' Mercy" and "Viva Los Vegas" and "CIA Man" (and the Fugs overall) and "Where or When" and yeah even if you don't care for the text at all, it's worth checking out (especially from the library, as I did) for the art alone.

dow, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:22 (one year ago) link

Yeah these reviews & quotes have pretty well removed any desire to read this, will check out a playlist tho.

The association with the Tarantino book is one I made too although I didn’t have quite the same instant and deep nope reaction as when I saw that one on display

pilk/pall revolting odors (wins), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:25 (one year ago) link

Sorry! I meant to delete first placement of the "whoLesomely surreal" bit after pasting it in after Dylan's mention of The Ed Sullivan Show.

dow, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:26 (one year ago) link

Saw some tweet today that John Wesley Harding came out 55 years ago today. Five albums in at that point! No new info in this, but somehow "55 years since he was at what seemed like a midpoint" blows the mind.

pinefox A+ as usual

The self-titled drags (Eazy), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:27 (one year ago) link

Just using it for a playlist should work out OK as well (leaving off "Witchy Woman," I'd say).

dow, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:30 (one year ago) link

pinefox A++!

A Kestrel for a Neve (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:30 (one year ago) link

I feel like ilx could crowdsource a parody version that addresses all the gaps in Bob's musicverse, but done in the same style.

So you're on a tropical island, right? Probably somewhere in the Caribbean or maybe not, maybe the Aegean.

Apparently her name is Rio, you're told. But probably not Dolores del Rio. Dolores del Rio got her start as a silent-film star back in the 20s. Anyway you're a bit sunburned and maybe you've had a few too many rum punches, plus someone keeps offering you good blow.

For some reason you're wearing a lime green suit and you're on the bowsprit of an 80-foot yacht. You hear laughter. The phone rings. Why the fuck is there a phone in the ocean?

A saxophone somewhere far off plays. She don't need to understand.

Ye Mad Puffin, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:32 (one year ago) link

Now I am remembering this one time I saw a Robyn Hitchcock show where at one point he did a few minutes of some free assocation speaking at the end of which everybody applauded while James Redd was sitting there arms folded sceptically thinking "it's easy if you let it."

A Kestrel for a Neve (James Redd and the Blecchs), Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:34 (one year ago) link

xpost i was skimming and thought pinefox was quoting from the book! very bob-like. i paused at "You can't change your name, though", and thought ", said robert zimmerman"

Karl Malone, Tuesday, 27 December 2022 18:37 (one year ago) link


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