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William F. Buckley Jr. wasn't exactly taken with Bob Dylan in 1985
when he watched this cornerstone of
popular music do his thing for what was then the largest international
audience ever assembled for a rock concert.
Dylan's thing was to rasp his lyrics into a microphone to
the accompaniment of an acoustic guitar, and that night his audience
was the satellite-connected crowd of Live Aid and a home-viewing
audience of millions. Dylan, as is sometimes his downfall on stage,
was barely audible. And Buckley, an avowed "truth-seeker in
the matter of the rock culture," let him have it. In describing
the spectacle of Dylan, book-ended by Ron Wood and Keith Richards
of the Rolling Stones, Buckley wrote:
. . .Then intense concentration on Dylan, and neither I nor spouse
can pick up a single word he sings, and we frankly doubt that
anyone else could. (Why?) The songs were without discernable melody,
the voice was whiny, with enough gravel in it to stop Jean-Claude
Killy in mid-slope.
Concert reviewers in rock magazines have many times described Dylan
in similar terms. Buckley, in fact, was more gracious than the hyperbole-driven
rock critic. He continued on to clarify that "there is no doubting
the sincerity of the rock-worshippers." It's just that, on
that night, Dylan needed to be dismissed as a matter of taste.
As we Buckley-endorsed rock-worshippers know, it's all a matter
of taste.
Next week, Bob Dylan turns 60. For 40 of his years he has been
one of rocks most acquired tastes, and yet, it can be argued, no
pop icon has had more influence on the lyrical side of genre since
Dylan. Yes, as Buckley pointed out, the voice was never really there
— although a Dylan song sung by Dylan remains bordeaux-rich to many
generations. But great words marrying great music were always there.
Which brings up another problem in the science of Dylan legacy-building:
How great?
The rock critics' hyperbole engulfs Dylan. Foremost, there is the
all-time stretch that he is more than a profound lyricist — that
he is indeed the poet-lyricist, or even the stand-alone poet. This
idea emerged with Dylan in the '60s and it never died, although
many of us thought it did.
Poet Diane Wakoski was taken aback last year when her state senator
Thaddeus McCotter suggested Bob Seger for the nascent position of
poet laureate of Michigan. The rocker's nomination was a deja vu
for Wakoski. She recalled how hip intellectuals in the 1960s argued
over Dylan-as-poet. Wakoski told a reporter, "Bob Dylan is
a great, great, great songwriter, but nobody is calling him a poet
anymore."
Sadly, this isn't true. It's virtually impossible to stumble on
a fresh Dylan article (there are many during these birthday weeks)
that doesn't qualify him as the poet-lyricist, the unofficial poet
laureate of the 1960s, or just the poet. At times, the "poet"
rocker is treated to the studied introspection of the literary critic.
This weekend's fete of Dylan by The New Yorker is titled
"The Work of Bob Dylan." Bob Dylan produced "work,"
other artists just songs.
Perhaps, on the occasion of his 60th, its time to temper the accolades.
For one, no one who ever said Bob Dylan is a poet ever argued it
very well. The beat poet Allen Ginsberg went to his grave saying
Dylan was a great lyric poet, reminding the world that the word
lyric comes from lyre, the stringed instrument of the bards. It
seems contrived to have to jump back so far to justify the poethood
of Dylan.
Michael McClure, in his book Knockin' on Dylan's Door, had
to say in the chapter titled "The Poet's Poet" that Dylan
"is a real poet who lives the poems that he sings." This
is the plaintive argument without substance, in two parts. Part
one argues: "Dylan's no fake, man — he's the real deal."
Well, okay, if you say so. Part two says: "It's like, man,
the guy lives what he writes." Thankfully, this doesn't elevate
one to poetic heights. Motley Crue lived "Girls, Girls, Girls"
to the hilt. There's not a poet among them.
Bob Dylan may have never fully believed he was a poet, either,
although he has claimed the title often enough. In a 1965 interview,
at the height of his creative peak, he said that labeling his music
"rock" or "folk rock" — the equivalent of distorting
old forms — just doesn't work. "It's all music — nothing more,
nothing less," he said. Despite repelling his true musical
predecessors, Dylan spoke unerringly: Music should and must be treated
as music.
Which brings us back to Wakoski's acuteness: He is a "great,
great, great songwriter."
Here's the standard, Dylan's "Blowin in the Wind." It
features some of his most memorable lines, many of which were gospel
during the war protests of the '60s. But its important to remember
that they were recorded in 1962, before the great rages of
Vietnam. The words could apply to Russia under Stalin as neatly
as Cuba under Castro. Good words, like good music, stand up across
the ages:
How many times must a man look up
Before he can see the sky?
Yes, 'n' how many ears must one man have
Before he can hear people cry?
Yes, 'n' how many deaths will it take till he knows
That too many people have died?
The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind,
The answer is blowin' in the wind.
You may notice that it's hard to read these words without hearing
the chord strums below. Neither part — word nor music — stands alone,
and the result is the product of Bob Dylan. It's nothing more, and
certainly nothing less.
As he should, Dylan takes his best works very seriously. He has
argued them as art in a way that rock and folk are not usually argued
as art. In 1985 he was discussing his "Tangled Up in Blue"
with a biographer: The song had evolved from an earlier version
on Blood on the Tracks to a point where Dylan said, "now
I know it's where it should be." The biographer, interviewing
Dylan, says the song, once clear as to the narrator, is now confused
in that respect. Dylan's answer seems delighted, as this was his
artful aim: "I wanted to defy time, so that the story took
place in the present and past at the same time. When you look at
a painting, you can see any part of it or see all of it together.
I wanted that song to be like a painting."
Again, he argues for the whole as sum of its parts. Music + lyrics
= songs.
Dylan does continue to write and tour today (a whopping 100 dates
a year), but the Dylan to whom America owes a debt was built in
the early to mid '60s (Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits, it should
be noted, was released in 1967). This is the point at which we can
neatly divide popular music into Before Dylan, and After Dylan.
With Dylan, folk and rock merged for the first time. Folk
had the depth, and rock had the guts. Since the coupling, rock has
never been the same.
So how much reverence does Bob Dylan deserve? As much as you can
possibly afford a folk-rock performer with meaningful lyrics . .
. whose voice just may have been able to stop Jean-Claude Killy
in mid-slope. Dylan is artist, minstrel, troubadour. His body of
work can in fact be a body of work. But anything more or
other — such as eternalizing him with the title of poet — lessens
pop music as much as it lessens poetry. Bob Dylan is formidable
enough in the category of pop music, and its broad cultural wake.
Why place him elsewhere?
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