Dylan’s 70th Birthday

Here’s something a little different in the Dylan birthday tribute line: his Top 10 Most Overlooked Songs. That’s in the opinion of one guy, so naturally no other Dylan fan in the whole wide world will agree with every choice. I have to admit that I haven’t heard them all, and one or two I don’t really remember. But I agree that “When the Ship Comes In” and “Series of Dreams” deserve to be there. Though Daniel Lanois really should get half-credit for “Series.” I’m having trouble getting this video to play, but maybe it’s just my connection.


 

Craig Burrell has a nice post, too.

Update: The link above only works inside the U.S., because eMusic isn’t licensed to sell the Dylan stuff in other countries, so I’ve lifted the list and added it here, along with the accompanying remarks.

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Top 10 Overlooked Bob Dylan Songs

by Douglas Wolk

“As I Went Out One Morning”

Given his obsession with history and vernacular American music, Dylan was eventually going to have to confront the legacy of slavery head-on. He did it with this affectless, totally twisted John Wesley Harding song, a three-verse koan in which a beautiful slave tries to convince the terrified narrator to be her lover and “fly south” โ€” and she’s not just any slave, but Thomas Paine’s slave. Extra points for the way Dylan’s asthmatic harmonica and Charlie McCoy’s indelible bass counterpoint play off each other.

“Gonna Change My Way of Thinking”

Two underrated talents of Dylan’s are his ability to rattle off killer blues couplets and his willingness to go back and tweak “finished” songs. The original version of this Bible-thumping blues appeared on 1979’s Slow Train Coming, but when Dylan and Mavis Staples remade it as a duet for 2003’s Gotta Serve Somebody compilation, he threw out all but the first verse, came up with a bunch of much funnier half-secular lyrics, cranked his rasp up to “lacerate,” added a bit of spoken dialogue lifted from “Jimmie Rodgers Visits the Carter Family,” and ended up with one of the fiercest rockers of his career.

“If You Gotta Go, Go Now”

The Beatles and Dylan spent a lot of the ’60s volleying songs back and forth, and this salacious Bringing It All Back Home outtake is hilarious both on its own and as a parody of the Fab Four’s sound circa “I Should Have Known Better.” It was a British hit for both Manfred Mann and Fairport Convention (the latter in a French-language, Cajun-style arrangement, as “Si Tu Dois Partir”), but Dylan didn’t bother to put it on an album until The Bootleg Series in 1991.

“Nettie Moore”

Dylan’s spent his whole career repurposing the language of songs written before he was born, but this Modern Times masterpiece is nearly wall-to-wall references. The beginning of the chorus here is lifted from a pre-Civil War tune, “The Little White Cottage, or Gentle Nettie Moore.” (It can’t have escaped Dylan’s notice that another Nettie Moore was a contralto who recorded “Deep River” and “Song of India” in 1922 for Black Swan Records, “The Only Records Using Colored Singers and Musicians Exclusively.”) The “Lost John” of the song’s first line comes from a Woody Guthrie tune; the “blues… falling down like hail” is from Robert Johnson; “where the Southern crosses the Yellow Dog” is not just a line from W.C. Handy’s jazz standard “Yellow Dog Blues,” it’s the particular line Handy claimed he heard a black musician singing in 1903. And so on: As Dylan puts it, “too much paperwork.” What all those allusions add up to, though, is more like a papier-machรฉ mask โ€” “Nettie Moore” is ultimately about a fading consciousness (“the world has gone black before my eyes”) reassembling a lost world of experience around itself.

“New Pony”

Occasionally, Dylan’s recordings sabotage a terrific song. This two-chord Street-Legal number about sex, voodoo and flirtation with evil has a bunch of terrific lines: “Come over here, pony, I wanna climb up one time on you,” Dylan growls. Somehow, the recorded version ended up with a crawlingly slow tempo, a trio of backup singers ceaselessly repeating “How much longer?” and a cheeseball sax solo. Imagine it without the bombast, though, and it’s as deep and unnerving as any blues he’s written. (For another version of the song, sans cheesy sax solo, check out the Dead Weather’s cover of it.)

“Saved”

Dylan doesn’t have much of a rep as a groove artist, but the title track of the second album from his born-again Christian period is the funkiest thing he ever recorded. That’s partly the work of the ace rhythm section โ€” bassist Tim Drummond (a veteran of the James Brown band, who co-wrote the song) and drummer Jim Keltner. More broadly, though, Dylan had finally figured out how to integrate some of the sound of the gospel and soul records he loved into his own music.

“Series of Dreams”

“Look, I don’t think the lyrics are finished,” Dylan groused to producer Daniel Lanois about this surging, dramatic song. “I’m not happy with them. The song’s too long. But I don’t wanna cut out any of the lyrics.” In some ways, “Series of Dreams” was Dylan returning to the lyrical mode of his mid-’60s songs โ€” except, this time, their namedropping specificity has been ripped out, and all that’s left are stasis, ambiguity and the bare walls that once held his grand visions. The arrangement, though, is the closest he’s ever come to Lanois’s other associates U2; its slowly cresting dynamics and thunderous rhythm are unlike much else within the Dylan catalogue.

“Tweeter and the Monkey Man”

Having done a mighty good impression of being creatively blocked in the mid ’80s, Dylan graced the Traveling Wilburys with a long string of awesome throwaways. This loving tribute to/parody of the Bruce Springsteen canon, in which a transgender Vietnam-vet coke dealer and her boyfriend go on the lam to New Jersey, might have been too silly for one of his own records, but the very point of the Wilburys project was for Dylan and his friends to simply have some fun on record.

“When the Ship Comes In”

Dylan’s memoir Chronicles, Vol. 1 discusses the seismic impact that Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill’s Threepenny Opera song “Pirate Jenny” had on him. This 1964 “finger-pointing song” is Dylan’s own “Pirate Jenny”: a revenge fantasy where Dylan explores the dark side of his demands for social justice. It’s pretty clearly inspired by Brecht and Weill’s song โ€” particularly its scenario, in which the ship arrives to wake the sleeping villains and settle some old scores.

“You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go”

Blood on the Tracks has so many earthshaking songs that it’s easy to overlook the ones that are merely wonderful. “Lonesome” is as simple as a Hank Williams standard in some ways, but it’s filled with masterful touches: Dylan rhyming “Honolulu” with “Ashtabula,” the “crickets talkin’ back and forth in rhyme,” the image sequence of “purple clover, Queen Anne lace/ crimson hair across your face,” that heartbreaking chord shift at the end of the bridge. It’s a rare example of a gentle Dylan come-on.

25 responses to “Dylan’s 70th Birthday”

  1. Well, not that nice, but thanks.

  2. The link to the ‘overlooked songs’ appears to be broken.
    ‘When the Ship Comes In’ is one of my favourite Dylan songs. On the Bootleg Series there is a version with piano accompaniment, and that is the version I usually listen to. It’s got a nice jaunty swing to it.

  3. Odd. That link is working for me. But it’s on eMusic and I’m an eMusic subscriber, and although I’m not logged in I’m sure there are eMusic cookies on my computer. Let me try a different browser…IE…works there, too, although I get a slightly different page, with info about how to sign up etc. Don’t know what the deal is.

  4. Janet

    Works for me.
    AMDG

  5. I get an “Oops! Page not found” message from eMusic (rather than from my browser). It must be because I am in a different country.

  6. Are Dylan’s records available on eMusic in the US? They are not available here, which might explain why a list of his songs isn’t accessible either.

  7. Ah, that’s it. I should have thought of that, because people from outside the U.S. complain frequently about it on the eMusic message board. Apparently eMu was unable to permission to offer a lot of the majors outside the U.S. I’ll add a note to that post, with the titles, later. Thanks for pointing out the problem.

  8. I just noticed that I misquoted the title of the piece, too. It’s just “Top 10 Overlooked,” not “Top 10 Most Overlooked.” A slightly different idea.

  9. francesca

    I think it is a really good list, ie I agree with it. Unfortunately, I don’t even dare click on the link, since I’m using a computer in a Dominican Sisters Retreat House. In Washington for a conference before I hit the camino! Remind me to come back to this when I get to somewhere with a ‘home computer’ – probably in Norfolk toward the end of June. Ask me what I thought of the link, if you remember!

  10. Oh heck, I was supposed to have added the list to the post, since the link doesn’t work outside the U.S., and I forgot. Maybe tonight.
    Best of luck on the trail! I’ll remember.

  11. I hate to be excluded from a conversation about Dylan just because I am a Canadian. How much trouble would it be to post the list of ‘overlooked songs’ here?
    I am so curious to know which part of the camino Francesca will be walking! I suppose I’ve missed her again. Well, remind me to ask her when she gets back. Ultreya, Francesca!

  12. Just the same–it’s just a matter of copy/edit/paste either way. Won’t take me long but longer than I should probably, um, borrow from my employer.

  13. I’ve added the list to the post now–adding this comment just to mark recent activity for a bit.

  14. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D-zLxLHG9Vw
    Love this parody. Dylan has been a total jerk in his private life. So is he a great man?

  15. Ha. A friend on Facebook linked to the very same parody when I mentioned Dylan. Since I don’t know the song it was missing something, but the imitation is pretty striking.
    No, not a great man, in my opinion. Arguably a great artist, but that’s a different matter. A few years ago in a bookstore I picked up a book about him, can’t remember the name, and browsed in it a bit. I came across an incident, relatively recent, where Dylan subsidized a coffee shop somewhere and hired the daughter of a friend to run it, which she was really excited about. One day Dylan came in and just vilified everything she’d done and threw her out. If that story is true, he can be a complete jerk (to put it mildly).
    I tend to think that when God judges us things like artistic accomplishment are going to mean next to nothing compared to the ordinary virtues and vices.

  16. Thanks for posting the list. It’s a pretty good one. The only song I do not know is “New Pony”. I especially agree with the ‘overlooked’ status of “When the Ship Comes In” and “Nettie Moore”, both of which are really terrific songs. I have not before heard of a Brecht/Weill connection to “When the Ship Comes In”; I think of it as a kind of gospel song about the end of the world.
    The thing about Dylan is that he has so many wonderful songs that one could make a long, long list of underrated ones. I am tempted to start one of my own right here, but I’ll refrain.
    I have a friend who listens exclusively to classical music, but in response to my constant praise for Dylan he recently asked that I give him “2 or 3 songs” that illustrate what is so great about him. I have a short list of about 80 songs, and I don’t know what to do next!

  17. 2 or 3 songs?…yeah, I don’t know how you would pick those, especially as there’s such huge variation in his work from the very beginning until now, and people have such different reactions to the various phases. A lot of people think Blood on the Tracks is his best album, or one of the top few, whereas I don’t think it’s that great compared to his mid-’60s stuff.
    When I linked to this list on Facebook, a friend there was likewise enthusiastic about “Nettie Moore.” I didn’t even recognize the title, but having figured out that it’s on Modern Times, I got out the cd and listened and was…underwhelmed. I mean, it’s ok but not one I would have picked. On the other hand, I completely agree about “When the Ship Comes In,” even though some of the lyrics are pretty clunky (“And they’ll jerk from their beds…”)

  18. Yes, and “they’ll pinch themselves and squeal”, as well. It’s all part of the child-like glee of the song.
    Blood on the Tracks doesn’t dazzle in the way that the best of his records do, but in its quieter way I think it is definitely near the top. Just think of all the great songs on it: “Tangled Up in Blue”, “If You See Her, Say Hello”, “Lily, Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts”, “Idiot Wind”, “Shelter From the Storm”, “Simple Twist of Fate” — even “Buckets of Rain” is charming. Song for song, I would argue that few of his records (Freewheelin’ among them) can match it.
    Yeah, I’m really stumped with the “2 or 3 songs” limit. I thought of picking one song from each decade, to give a bit of a career arc, but then I’m already up to 5 songs, and it would be ridiculous to summarize Dylan’s 1960s with one song. Then I thought of choosing one song to illustrate each of several facets of his art: Bob the humourist, Bob the prophet, Bob the troubadour, Bob the Christian, Bob the romantic, Bob the wordsmith, etc. But again I’ve exceeded my limit. I also thought of picking a few of his really long songs, so as to squeeze more music into the song limit: “Desolation Row”, “Highlands, “Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands”, “Hurricane”, “Ballad in Plain D”, “Ain’t Talkin’”. I even had the idea to pick a single theme and choose a few songs from across his career that touch on it. (For example: apocalypse, or rainy weather, or death, or travelling.)
    Anyway, I’m stuck, but I sure am enjoying the chance to think about his songs.

  19. francesca

    I could get through to the list, but I simply don’t dare click on the video link in a Retreat House with really nice sisters in it

  20. I don’t think there’s anything at all offensive in the video, but they might think it pretty weird. They probably wouldn’t care for the noise, though.

  21. Francesca

    Yes, it’s the noise that’s the problem. The house is just silent, and the thought of playing a utube video is horrifying. I don’t know what I was thinking, calling them Dominican sisters. They are Franciscan!

  22. Francesca

    finally got to play this video!

  23. Good song, isn’t it?

  24. Francesca

    really excellent, yes.

  25. Francesca

    After reading the (very good) list and listening to this video I experienced a craving to hear ‘When the Ship Comes in’ on youtube. All there seems to be is a ghastly video of BD bawling it at a farmers benefit conference a few years back. But today by accident I found it. It is the first song on the video here on the piece called ‘Only a Pawn in their Game’
    http://experimentaltheology.blogspot.com/

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