Everything about Robert Allen Zimmerman totally explained
Bob Dylan (born
Robert Allen Zimmerman,
May 24,
1941) is an
American singer-songwriter,
author,
musician,
poet, and
artist who has been a major figure in
popular music for five decades. Much of Dylan's most celebrated work dates from the 1960s, when he became an informal chronicler and a reluctant
figurehead of American unrest. A number of his songs, such as "
Blowin' in the Wind" and "
The Times They Are a-Changin'", became
anthems of the
anti-war and
civil rights movements. His most recent studio album,
Modern Times, released on
August 29,
2006, entered the U.S.
album charts at #1, making him, at age 65, the oldest living person to top those charts until
Neil Diamond made #1 at age 67 in May 2008 with his album
Home Before Dark.
Modern Times was later named Album of the Year by
Rolling Stone magazine.
Dylan's early lyrics incorporated
politics,
social commentary,
philosophy and
literary influences, defying existing
pop music conventions and appealing widely to the
counterculture. While expanding and personalizing musical styles, he's shown steadfast devotion to many traditions of American song, from
folk and
country/
blues to
gospel,
rock and roll and
rockabilly, to
English,
Scottish and
Irish folk music, even
jazz and
swing.
Dylan performs with the
guitar,
keyboard and
harmonica. Backed by a changing lineup of musicians, he's toured steadily since the late 1980s on what has been dubbed the "
Never Ending Tour". He has also performed alongside other major artists, such as
John Fogerty,
The Band,
Tom Petty,
Joan Baez,
George Harrison,
The Grateful Dead,
Johnny Cash,
Willie Nelson,
Paul Simon,
Eric Clapton,
Patti Smith,
Emmylou Harris,
Bruce Springsteen,
U2,
The Rolling Stones,
Joni Mitchell,
Jack White,
Merle Haggard,
Jeff Lynne,
Neil Young,
Van Morrison,
Ringo Starr,
Elvis Costello, and
Stevie Nicks. Although his accomplishments as performer and recording artist have been central to his career, his songwriting is generally regarded as his greatest contribution.
Over many years, Dylan has been recognized and honored for his songwriting, performing, and recording. His records have earned
Grammy,
Golden Globe, and
Academy Awards, and he's been inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame,
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame and
Songwriters Hall of Fame. In 1999, Dylan was included in
TIME Magazine's 100 most influential people of the 20th century, and 2004, he was ranked #2 in
Rolling Stone magazine's list of "
Greatest Artists of All Time
", second only to
The Beatles. In January 1990, Dylan was made a
Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres by French Minister of Culture
Jack Lang; in 2000, he was awarded the
Polar Music Prize by the
Royal Swedish Academy of Music; and in 2007, Dylan was awarded the
Prince of Asturias Award in Arts. He has been nominated several times for the
Nobel Prize in Literature.
In 2008, Dylan was awarded a
Pulitzer Prize Special Citation for his "profound impact on popular music and American culture, marked by lyrical compositions of extraordinary poetic power."
Previous recipients of this award include
Thelonious Monk and
John Coltrane.
For a complete list of awards won by Bob Dylan, see
List of Bob Dylan awards and accolades.
Life and career
Origins and musical beginnings
Robert Allen Zimmerman (Hebrew name:
Zushe ben Avraham) was born on
May 24,
1941, in
Duluth,
Minnesota, and raised there and in
Hibbing, Minnesota, on the
Mesabi Iron Range west of
Lake Superior. Research by Dylan’s biographers has shown that his paternal grandparents, Zigman and Anna Zimmerman, emigrated from
Odessa in
Russian Empire (now
Ukraine) to the United States after the
antisemitic pogroms of 1905. Dylan himself has written (in his 2004 autobiography,
Chronicles) that his paternal grandmother's maiden name was
Kyrgyz and her family originated from
Istanbul, although she grew up in the
Kağızman district of
Kars in Eastern
Turkey. He also wrote that his paternal grandfather was from
Trabzon on the
Black Sea coast of
Turkey. His mother’s grandparents, Benjamin and Lybba Edelstein, were
Lithuanian Jews who arrived in America in 1902. Abram was recalled by one of Bob's childhood friends as strict and unwelcoming, whereas his mother was remembered as warm and friendly.
Zimmerman spent much of his youth listening to the radio — first to the powerful
blues and
country stations broadcasting from
Shreveport, Louisiana and, later, to early
rock and roll. He formed several bands in high school: the first, The Shadow Blasters, was short-lived; but his next band, The Golden Chords, lasted longer playing
covers of popular songs. Their performance of
Danny and the Juniors' "Rock and Roll Is Here to Stay" at their high school talent show was so loud that the principal cut the microphone off. In his 1959 school year book, Robert Zimmerman listed as his ambition "To join
Little Richard." The same year, using the name Elston Gunnn, he performed two dates with
Bobby Vee, playing piano and providing handclaps.
Zimmerman enrolled at the
University of Minnesota in September 1959, moving to
Minneapolis. His early focus on rock and roll gave way to an interest in American folk music, typically performed with an acoustic guitar. He has recalled, "The first thing that turned me onto folk singing was
Odetta. I heard a record of hers in a record store. Right then and there, I went out and traded my electric guitar and amplifier for an acoustical guitar, a flat-top Gibson." In the sleeve notes to his album
Biograph, Dylan explained the attraction folk music exerted: "The thing about rock'n'roll is that for me anyway it wasn't enough...There were great catch-phrases and driving pulse rhythms...but the songs weren't serious or didn't reflect life in a realistic way. I knew that when I got into folk music, it was more of a serious type of thing. The songs are filled with more despair, more sadness, more triumph, more faith in the supernatural, much deeper feelings." He soon began to perform at the 10 O'clock Scholar, a coffee house a few blocks from campus, and became actively involved in the local
Dinkytown folk music circuit, fraternizing with local folk enthusiasts and occasionally "borrowing" many of their albums.
During his Dinkytown days, Zimmerman began introducing himself as "Bob Dylan". In his autobiography,
Chronicles (2004), he wrote, "What I was going to do as soon as I left home was just call myself Robert Allen.... It sounded like a Scottish king and I liked it." However, by reading
Down Beat magazine, he discovered that there was already a saxophonist called David Allyn. Dylan adds, "I'd seen some poems by
Dylan Thomas. Dylan and Allyn sounded similar. Robert Dylan. Robert Allyn. The letter D came on stronger."
Relocation to New York and record deal
Dylan dropped out of college at the end of his freshman year. He stayed in Minneapolis, working the folk circuit there with temporary journeys to
Denver, Colorado;
Madison, Wisconsin; and
Chicago, Illinois. In January 1961, he moved to
New York City, to perform there and to visit his ailing musical idol
Woody Guthrie, who was then dying in a New Jersey
hospital. Guthrie had been a revelation to Dylan and was the biggest influence on his early performances. Dylan would later say of Guthrie's work, "You could listen to his songs and actually learn how to live."
From April to September 1961, he played at various clubs around
Greenwich Village and on July 29, 1961 he was broadcast on the WRVR radio programme "Saturday Of Folk Music" playing
Eric von Schmidt's "Acne" in duet with Ramblin' Jack Elliott, duetting with
Danny Kalb on "Mean Old Southern Man," and covering three traditional folk songs ("Handsome Molly," "
Omie Wise," and "Poor Lazarus"). Dylan gained some public recognition after a positive review in
The New York Times by critic
Robert Shelton of a show he played at
Gerde's Folk City in September. Also in September, Dylan was invited to play harmonica by folk singer
Carolyn Hester on her third album, entitled
Carolyn Hester. This brought Dylan's talents to the attention of
John Hammond, who was producing Hester's album for
Columbia Records. Hammond signed Dylan to Columbia that October. The performances on his first Columbia album
Bob Dylan (1962), consisted of familiar folk, blues and
gospel material combined with two of his own songs. Dylan's first album made little impact, selling only 5,000 copies in its first year, just enough to break even. Within
Columbia Records some referred to the singer as 'Hammond's Folly' and suggested dropping his contract. Hammond defended Dylan vigorously, and
Johnny Cash was also a powerful ally of Dylan at Columbia. While Dylan continued to work for Columbia, he also recorded more than a dozen songs, under the pseudonym Blind Boy Grunt, for
Broadside Magazine, a folk music magazine and record label.
Dylan made two important career moves in August 1962. He went to the
Supreme Court building in New York and changed his name to Robert Dylan. In the same month, he also signed a management contract with
Albert Grossman. Grossman remained Dylan's manager until 1970, and was notable both for his sometimes confrontational personality, and for the fiercely protective loyalty he displayed towards his principal client. In the documentary
No Direction Home, Dylan described Grossman thus: "He was kind of like a
Colonel Tom Parker figure...you could smell him coming." Tensions between Grossman and
John Hammond led to Hammond being replaced as the producer of Dylan's second album by the young
African American jazz producer
Tom Wilson.
By the time Dylan's second album,
The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, was released in May 1963, he'd begun making his name as both a singer and a songwriter. Many of the songs on this album were labelled
protest songs, inspired partly by Guthrie and influenced by
Pete Seeger's passion for topical songs. "Oxford Town", for example, was a sardonic account of
James Meredith's ordeal as the first black student to risk enrollment at the
University of Mississippi.
His most famous song of the time, "
Blowin' in the Wind", partially derived its melody from the traditional
slave song "No More Auction Block", while its lyrics questioned the social and political status quo. The song was widely recorded and became an international hit for
Peter, Paul and Mary, setting a precedent for many other artists who would have hits with Dylan's songs. While Dylan's topical songs solidified his early reputation,
Freewheelin' also included a mixture of love songs and jokey, surreal talking blues. Humor was a large part of Dylan's persona, and the range of material on the album impressed many listeners, including
The Beatles.
George Harrison said, "We just played it, just wore it out. The content of the song lyrics and just the attitude — it was incredibly original and wonderful."
The
Freewheelin' song "
A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall", built melodically from a loose adaptation of the folk
ballad "
Lord Randall", with its veiled references to
nuclear apocalypse, gained even more resonance as the
Cuban missile crisis developed only a few weeks after Dylan began performing it. Like "Blowin' in the Wind", "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall" marked an important new direction in modern songwriting, blending a
stream-of-consciousness,
imagist lyrical attack with traditional folk progressions.
The
Freewheelin album presented Dylan as a singer accompanying himself on acoustic guitar. But other tracks recorded at these sessions, with a backing band, showed a willingness to experiment with a
rockabilly sound. 'Mixed Up Confusion' was released as a single and then quickly withdrawn.
Cameron Crowe described it as "a fascinating look at a folk artist with his mind wandering towards
Elvis Presley and
Sun Records".
Soon after the release of
Freewheelin, Dylan emerged as a dominant figure of the so-called "new folk movement" centered in
Greenwich Village. Dylan's singing voice was untrained and had an unusual edge to it, yet it was suited to the interpretation of traditional songs. Robert Shelton described Dylan's vocal style as "a rusty voice suggesting Guthrie's old performances, etched in gravel like
Dave Van Ronk's" Many of his most famous early songs first reached the public through other performers' versions that were more immediately palatable.
Joan Baez became Dylan's advocate, as well as his lover. Baez was influential in bringing Dylan to national and international prominence, jumpstarting his performance career by inviting him onstage during her own concerts, and recording several of his early songs.
Others who recorded and had hits with Dylan's songs in the early and mid-1960s included
The Byrds,
Sonny and Cher,
The Hollies,
Peter, Paul and Mary,
Manfred Mann, and
The Turtles. Most attempted to impart a pop feel and rhythm to the songs, while Dylan and Baez performed them mostly as sparse folk pieces, keying rhythmically off the vocals. The covers became so ubiquitous that
CBS started to promote him with the tag "Nobody Sings Dylan Like Dylan".
Protest and Another Side
By 1963, Dylan and Baez were both prominent in the
civil rights movement, singing together at rallies including the
March on Washington where
Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his "
I have a dream" speech. In January, Dylan appeared on British television in the
BBC play
Madhouse on Castle Street, playing the part of a "hobo guitar-player". On May 12, 1963, Dylan experienced conflict with the media when he walked off
The Ed Sullivan Show. Dylan had chosen to perform "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues" but was informed by the 'head of program practices' at
CBS Television that this song was potentially libellous to the
John Birch Society. Rather than comply with TV censorship, Dylan refused to appear. His next album,
The Times They Are a-Changin', reflected a more sophisticated, politicized and cynical Dylan. This bleak material, addressing such subjects as the murder of civil rights worker
Medgar Evers and the despair engendered by the breakdown of farming and mining communities ("Ballad of Hollis Brown", "
North Country Blues"), was accompanied by two love songs, "Boots of Spanish Leather" and "One Too Many Mornings", and the renunciation of "Restless Farewell". The
Brechtian "
The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll" describes the true story of a young socialite's (William Zantzinger) killing of a hotel maid (Hattie Carroll). Though never explicitly mentioning their respective races, the song leaves no doubt that the killer is white and the victim is black.
By the end of 1963, Dylan felt both manipulated and constrained by the folk and protest movements. Accepting the "
Tom Paine Award" from the
National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee at a ceremony shortly after the assassination of
John F. Kennedy, a drunken, rambling Dylan questioned the role of the committee, insulted its members as old and balding, and claimed to see something of himself (and of every man) in Kennedy's alleged assassin,
Lee Harvey Oswald.
His next album,
Another Side of Bob Dylan, recorded on a single June evening in 1964, had a lighter mood than its predecessor. The surreal Dylan reemerged on "I Shall Be Free #10" and "Motorpsycho Nightmare", accompanied by a sense of humor that has often reappeared over the years. "
Spanish Harlem Incident" and "
To Ramona" are romantic and passionate love songs, while "
Black Crow Blues" and "
I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)" suggest the rock and roll soon to dominate Dylan's music. "It Ain't Me Babe", on the surface a song about spurned love, has been described as a thinly disguised rejection of the role his reputation had thrust at him. His newest direction was signaled by two lengthy songs: the
impressionistic "
Chimes of Freedom", which sets elements of social commentary against a denser metaphorical landscape in a style later characterized by
Allen Ginsberg as "chains of flashing images"; and "
My Back Pages", which attacks the simplistic and arch seriousness of his own earlier topical songs and seems to predict the backlash he was about to encounter from his former champions as he took a new direction.
The times were changing faster than even Dylan could have foreseen. In 1964 and 1965, British groups such as
The Beatles,
The Animals, and
The Rolling Stones took their own interpretation of
Rock and Roll and
R&B to the top of the American charts - the so-called
British Invasion. During the week of April 4, 1964,
The Beatles held the top five positions on
Billboard's singles chart. Dylan heard The Beatles' music all over U.S. radio stations as he drove from state to state, going to and from concerts he gave in the spring of 1964 (he later marvelled to biographer Anthony Scaduto about the outrageous circumstance of The Beatles having eight of the top ten songs "in Colorado!") Dylan was intrigued by their success, enjoyed their music, and expressed an interest in meeting them (The Beatles, in turn, had heard and loved Dylan's first two albums prior to their February, 1964, U.S. debut on
The Ed Sullivan Show). The historic meeting between Dylan and The Beatles took place on August 28, 1964, in The Beatles' New York hotel, during their first full-scale U.S. tour. According to journalist
Al Aronowitz, who ushered Dylan into The Beatles' presence, the five musicians bonded via port wine and a bag of
pot.
Even more pertinent to Dylan's career, the
Newcastle-based group
The Animals had taken a track from Dylan's
eponymous first album - the song "
The House of the Rising Sun" - and set it to a surging guitar and organ-driven backing. The Animals' recording reached Number One on the
Billboard charts in the week of September 5, 1964.
Tom Wilson, Dylan's producer at CBS, was so impressed by The Animals' recording that he went into the studio and tried dubbing a rock and roll backing onto Dylan's 1961 recording. Wilson recalled: " We tried overdubbing a
Fats Domino early rock & roll thing on top of what Dylan had done, but it never quite worked out to our satisfaction."
In the latter half of 1964 and 1965, Dylan’s appearance and musical style changed rapidly, as he made his move from leading contemporary song-writer of the folk scene to
Folk-Rock pop-music star. His scruffy jeans and work shirts were replaced by a
Carnaby Street wardrobe, sunglasses day or night, and pointy '
Beatle boots'. His naturally-curly hair grew longer and somewhat unruly (and by 1966 would fully evolve into another Dylan trademark: the so-called "Dylan 'Fro"). A London reporter wrote: “Hair that would set the teeth of a comb on edge. A loud shirt that would dim the neon lights of Leicester Square. He looks like an undernourished cockatoo.” Dylan also began to play with frequently hapless interviewers in increasingly cruel and surreal ways. Appearing on the
Les Crane TV show and asked about a movie he was planning to make, he told Crane it would be a cowboy horror movie. Asked if he played the cowboy, Dylan replied. “No, I play my mother.”
"Going electric"
His March 1965 album
Bringing It All Back Home was yet another stylistic leap. The album featured his first recordings made with electric instruments. The first single, "
Subterranean Homesick Blues", owed much to
Chuck Berry's "Too Much Monkey Business" and was provided with an early
music video courtesy of
D. A. Pennebaker's
cinéma vérité presentation of Dylan's 1965 tour of
England,
Dont Look Back. Its free association lyrics both harked back to the manic energy of Beat poetry and were a forerunner of rap and hip-hop. In 1969, the militant
Weatherman group took their name from a line in "Subterranean Homesick Blues." ("You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.")
The
B side of the album was a different matter. It included four lengthy acoustic songs whose undogmatic political, social, and personal concerns are illuminated with the semi-mystical imagery that became another Dylan trademark. One of these tracks, "
Mr. Tambourine Man", which would become one of his best known songs, had already been a hit for The Byrds; while "Gates of Eden", "
It's All Over Now Baby Blue", and "
It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" have been fixtures in Dylan's live performances for most of his career. During April - May, Dylan made a very successful tour in England (see
Bob Dylan UK Tour 1965).
That summer Dylan made history by performing his first electric set (since his high school days) with a
pickup group drawn mostly from the
Paul Butterfield Blues Band, featuring
Mike Bloomfield (guitar), Sam Lay (drums), Jerome Arnold (bass), plus
Al Kooper (organ) and
Barry Goldberg (piano), while headlining at the
Newport Folk Festival (see
The electric Dylan controversy). Dylan had appeared at Newport twice before, in 1963 and 1964, and two wildly divergent accounts of the crowd's response in 1965 emerged. The settled fact is that Dylan, met with a mix of cheering and booing, left the stage after only three songs. As one version of the legend has it, the boos were from the outraged folk fans whom Dylan had alienated by appearing, unexpectedly, with an electric guitar. An alternative account claims audience members were merely upset by poor sound quality and a surprisingly short set. Whatever sparked the crowd's disfavor, Dylan soon reemerged and sang two much better received solo acoustic numbers, "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" and "Mr. Tambourine Man." His choice of the former has often been described as a carefully selected death knell for the kind of consciously sociopolitical, purely acoustic music that the cat-callers were demanding of him, with "New Folk" in the role of "Baby Blue".
Dylan's 1965 Newport performance provoked an outraged response from the folk music establishment.
Ewan MacColl wrote in
Sing Out!, "Our traditional songs and ballads are the creations of extraordinarily talented artists working inside traditions formulated over time... But what of Bobby Dylan?... Only a non-critical audience, nourished on the watery pap of pop music could have fallen for such tenth-rate drivel." On
July 29, just four days after his controversial performance at Newport, Dylan was back into the studio in New York and recorded "Positively 4th Street." The song teemed with images of paranoia and revenge. ("I know the reason/That you talk behind my back/I used to be among the crowd/You're in with.") It was widely interpreted as Dylan's put-down of former friends from the folk community — friends he'd known in the clubs along West 4th Street.
Many in the folk revival had embraced the idea that life equaled art, that a certain kind of life defined by suffering and social exclusion in fact replaced art. Folksong collectors and singers often presented folk music as an innocent characteristic of lives lived without reflection or the 'false consciousness of capitalism'. This philosophy, both genteel and paternalistic, was ultimately what Dylan had run afoul of by 1965. But at an Austin press conference in September of that year, on the day of his first performance with
Levon and the Hawks, he described his music not as a pop charts-bound break with the past, but as “historical-traditional music.” Dylan later told interviewer
Nat Hentoff: “What folk music is... is based on myths and the Bible and plague and famine and all kinds of things like that which are nothing but mystery and you can see it in all the songs….All these songs about roses growing out of people’s brains and lovers who are really geese and swans that turn into angels…and seven years of this and eight years of that and it’s all really something that nobody can touch.... (the songs) are not going to die.” It was this mystical, living tradition of songs that served as the palette for
Bringing It All Back Home, but in a nod to the future first openly displayed at Newport, electrically amplified instruments would now become part of the mix.
Highway 61 Revisited and Blonde on Blonde
In July 1965, Dylan released the single "
Like a Rolling Stone", which peaked at #2 in the U.S. and at #4 in the UK charts. At over six minutes in length, this song has been widely credited with altering attitudes about what a pop single could convey.
Bruce Springsteen said that on first hearing this single, “that snare shot sounded like somebody’d kicked open the door to your mind… I knew that I was listening to the toughest voice that I'd ever heard.“ In 2004,
Rolling Stone magazine listed it at number one on its list of the 500 greatest songs of all time. Its signature sound — with a full, jangling band and an organ riff — also characterized his next album,
Highway 61 Revisited, titled after the road that led from Dylan's native Minnesota to the musical hotbed of
New Orleans. The songs passed stylistically through the birthplace of blues, the
Mississippi Delta, and referenced a number of
blues songs, including
Mississippi Fred McDowell's "61 Highway". The songs were in the same vein as the hit single, with surreal litanies of the grotesque flavored by
Mike Bloomfield's blues guitar, a rhythm section, and Dylan's obvious enjoyment of the sessions. The closing song, "
Desolation Row", is an apocalyptic vision with references to many figures of
Western culture.
In support of the record, Dylan was booked for two U.S. concerts and set about assembling a band.
Mike Bloomfield was unwilling to leave the Butterfield Band, so Dylan mixed
Al Kooper and
Harvey Brooks from his studio crew with bar-band stalwarts
Robbie Robertson and
Levon Helm, best known at the time for backing
Ronnie Hawkins. On August 28 at Forest Hills Tennis Stadium, the group was heckled by an audience who, Newport notwithstanding, still demanded the acoustic troubadour of previous years. The band's reception on
September 3 at the
Hollywood Bowl was more uniformly favorable.
Neither Kooper nor Brooks wanted to tour with Dylan, and he was unable to lure his preferred band, a crew of west coast musicians best known for backing
Johnny Rivers, featuring guitarist
James Burton and drummer
Mickey Jones, away from their regular commitments. So Dylan then hired Robertson and Helm's full band,
The Hawks, as his tour group, and began a string of studio sessions with them in an effort to record the follow-up to
Highway 61 Revisited.
While Dylan and the Hawks met increasingly receptive audiences on tour, their studio efforts floundered. Producer
Bob Johnston had been trying to persuade Dylan to record in Nashville for some time. In February 1966 Dylan agreed and Johnston surrounded him with a cadre of top-notch session men. At Dylan's insistence, Robertson and Kooper came down from
New York City to play on the sessions. The Nashville sessions produced the album
Blonde on Blonde (1966), featuring what Dylan later called "that thin wild mercury sound."
Al Kooper said the record was a masterpiece because it was "taking two cultures and smashing them together with a huge explosion": the musical world of Nashville and the world of the "quintessential New York hipster" Bob Dylan.
For many critics, Dylan's mid-'60s trilogy of albums —
Bringing It All Back Home,
Highway 61 Revisited and
Blonde on Blonde — represents one of the great cultural achievements of the 20th century. In Mike Marqusee's words: "Between late 1964 and the summer of 1966, Dylan created a body of work that remains unique. Drawing on folk, blues, country, R&B, rock'n'roll, gospel, British beat, symbolist, modernist and
Beat poetry,
surrealism and
Dada, advertising jargon and social commentary,
Fellini and
Mad magazine, he forged a coherent and original artistic voice and vision. The beauty of these albums retains the power to shock and console."
On November 22, 1965, Bob Dylan married Sara Lownds. Some of Dylan’s friends (including
Ramblin' Jack Elliott) claim that, in conversation immediately after the event, Dylan denied that he was married. Journalist
Nora Ephron first made the news public in the
New York Post in February 1966 with the headline “Hush! Bob Dylan is wed.”
Dylan undertook a "world tour" (see also
Bob Dylan World Tour 1966) of
Australia and Europe in the spring of 1966. Each show was split into two parts. Dylan performed solo during the first half, accompanying himself on
acoustic guitar and
harmonica. In the second half, backed by
the Hawks, he played high voltage electric music. This contrast provoked many fans, who jeered and slowly handclapped.
The tour culminated in a famously raucous confrontation between Dylan and his audience at the Manchester
Free Trade Hall in
England (officially released on CD in 1998 as ). At the climax of the concert,
one fan, angry with Dylan's electric sound, shouted: "
Judas!" to which Dylan responded, "I don't believe you... You're a liar!". However, there was also some conversation in the audience to which this may have been aimed. He then turned to the band and, just within earshot of the microphone, said "Play it fucking loud!" They then launched into the last song of the night with gusto — "Like a Rolling Stone."
After the crash: the Woodstock years and reclusion
After his European tour, Dylan returned to
New York, but the pressures on him continued to increase.
ABC Television had paid an advance for a TV show they could screen. His publisher,
Macmillan, was demanding a finished manuscript of the poem/novel
Tarantula. Manager
Albert Grossman had already scheduled an extensive concert tour for that summer and fall. On
July 29,
1966, while Dylan rode his
Triumph 500
motorcycle in
Woodstock, New York, its brakes locked, throwing him to the ground. Though the extent of his injuries was never fully disclosed, Dylan said that he broke several vertebrae in his neck. In commenting on the significance of the crash, Dylan made it plain that he'd felt exploited at that time: “When I'd that motorcycle accident ... I woke up and caught my senses, I realized that I was just workin' for all these leeches. And I didn't want to do that. Plus, I'd a family and I just wanted to see my kids. "
A sense of mystery still surrounds the circumstances of the accident.
Howard Sounes's biography,
Down the Highway: The Life Of Bob Dylan, points out that no ambulance was called to the scene of the accident, and that Dylan wasn't taken to a hospital. Sounes concludes that the crash offered Dylan the much-needed chance to escape from the pressures that had built up around him, and that it initiated a period of withdrawal from the public gaze lasting for 18 months.
Once Dylan was well enough to resume creative work, he began editing film footage of his 1966 tour for
Eat the Document, a rarely exhibited follow-up to
Dont Look Back. A rough-cut was shown to
ABC Television and was promptly rejected as incomprehensible to a mainstream audience. In 1967 he began recording music with the Hawks at his home and in the basement of the Hawks' nearby house, called "Big Pink". The relaxed atmosphere yielded renditions of many of Dylan's favored old and new songs and some newly written pieces. These songs, initially compiled as demos for other artists to record, provided hit singles for
Julie Driscoll ("
This Wheel's on Fire"),
The Byrds ("You Ain't Goin' Nowhere", "Nothing Was Delivered"), and
Manfred Mann ("
Quinn the Eskimo (The Mighty Quinn)"). Columbia belatedly released selections from them in 1975 as
The Basement Tapes. Over the years, more and more of the songs recorded by Dylan and his band in 1967 appeared on various
bootleg recordings, culminating in a five-CD bootleg set titled
The Genuine Basement Tapes, containing 107 songs and alternate takes. Later in 1967, the Hawks re-named themselves
The Band, and independently recorded the album
Music from Big Pink, thus beginning a long and successful recording and performing career of their own.
In 1997, the critic
Greil Marcus published an influential study of
The Basement Tapes, entitled
Invisible Republic. Marcus quoted
Robbie Robertson’s memories of recording the songs: “(Dylan) would pull these songs out of nowhere. We didn’t know if he wrote them or if he remembered them. When he sang them, you couldn’t tell.” Marcus called these songs “palavers with a community of ghosts” He suggests that “these ghosts were not abstractions. As native sons and daughters they were a community. And they were once gathered in a single place: on the
Anthology of American Folk Music, a work produced by a twenty-nine year old of no fixed address named
Harry Smith.” Marcus argued Dylan’s basement songs were a resurrection of the spirit of Smith’s Anthology, originally published by
Folkways Records in 1952, a collection of blues and country songs recorded in the 1920s and 1930s, which proved very influential in the folk music revival of the 1950s and the 1960s. (The book was re-published in 2001 under the title
The Old, Weird America.)
In October and November 1967, Dylan returned to
Nashville. Back in the recording studio after a 19 months break, he was accompanied only by
Charlie McCoy on bass,
Kenny Buttrey on drums, and
Pete Drake on steel guitar. At the end of the year, Dylan released
John Wesley Harding, his first album since the motorcycle crash. It was a quiet, contemplative record of shorter songs, set in a landscape that drew on both the
American West and the
Bible. The sparse structure and instrumentation, coupled with lyrics that took the Judeo-Christian tradition seriously, marked a departure not only from Dylan's own work but from the escalating psychedelic fervor of the 1960s musical culture. It included "
All Along the Watchtower", with lyrics derived from the
Book of Isaiah (21:5–9). The song was later recorded by
Jimi Hendrix, whose celebrated version Dylan himself acknowledged as definitive in the liner notes to
Biograph. As proof, since 1974 Dylan and his bands have performed arrangements much closer to Hendrix's than to the
John Wesley Harding version. It was during these sessions that Dylan met
Carl Perkins, and co-wrote the song "
Champaign, Illinois" with him, which would appear on Perkin's album "On Top" released the following year. In May 1969, Dylan appeared on the first episode of
Johnny Cash's new television show, duetting with Cash on "
Girl from the North Country", "
It Ain't Me Babe" and "Living the Blues". Dylan next traveled to England to top the bill at the
Isle of Wight rock festival on
August 31,
1969, after rejecting overtures to appear at the
Woodstock Festival far closer to his home.
In the early 1970s critics charged Dylan's output was of varied and unpredictable quality.
Rolling Stone magazine writer and Dylan loyalist
Greil Marcus notoriously asked "What is this shit?" upon first listening to 1970's
Self Portrait. In general,
Self Portrait, a double LP including few original songs, was poorly received. Later that year, Dylan released
New Morning, which some considered a return to form. In the same year Dylan co-wrote "I'd Have You Anytime" with
George Harrison, which appeared as the opening track on the ex-Beatle's album
All Things Must Pass (which also included a cover of Dylan's "If Not For You"). His unannounced appearance at
Harrison's 1971
Concert for Bangladesh was widely praised, particularly a snarling version of "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall". However, reports of a new album, a television special, and a return to touring came to nothing. Dylan's only other studio activity in 1970 consisted of two songs ("East Virginia Blues" and "Nashville Skyline Rag") recorded in December with banjo-player
Earl Scruggs and his sons
Randy and Gary, which would eventually appear on Scruggs' 1971 album
Earl Scruggs Performing With His Family And Friends.
Between March 16 and 19, 1971, Dylan reserved three days at Blue Rock Studios, a small studio in New York's
Greenwich Village . These sessions resulted in one single "Watching The River Flow," and a new recording of "When I Paint My Masterpiece" (which
The Band was about to release on their album
Cahoots), but no album. The only long-player released by Dylan in either '71 or '72 was his second greatest hits compilation, "
Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits Vol. II", which included a number of re-workings of as-then unreleased
Basement Tapes tracks, such as "I Shall Be Released" and "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere'" with
Happy Traum on backup. On
November 4, 1971 Dylan recorded the single "
George Jackson" which would be released a week later. He then returned to the studio in mid-November for a series of as-yet-unreleased sessions with
Beat poet
Allen Ginsberg at the
Record Plant in
New York, intended for Ginsberg's "Holy Soul Jelly Roll" album. The sessions resulted in tracks such as the Dylan/Ginsberg compositions "Vomit Express", "September On Jessore Road" and "Jimmy Berman", as well as a number of Ginsberg originals and
William Blake poems set to music. Ginsberg sang lead on most songs, with Dylan playing guitar and harmonica and providing backing vocals. It is unknown at this time if the sessions will ever be released officially, however there are a number of bootlegs in circulation.
In May 1971,
Time magazine questioned Dylan about the rumour that he'd donated money to
Rabbi Kahane's
Jewish Defense League. Dylan denied giving any funds to the JDL, but said of Kahane, "He's a really sincere guy; he's really put it all together." Rabbi Kahane claimed that Dylan attended several meetings of the
Jewish Defense League in order to find out "what we're all about,"
In 1972 Dylan signed onto
Sam Peckinpah's film
Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, providing the songs (see
Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid) and taking a role as "Alias", a minor member of Billy's gang. Despite the film's failure at the box office, the song "
Knockin' on Heaven's Door" has proven its durability, having been covered by over 150 recording artists.
"On the Road Again"
Dylan started 1973 by contributing his own composition, "
Wallflower", to
Doug Sahm's
"Doug Sahm and Band" album released on
Atlantic Records, as well as sharing lead vocal and playing guitar on the track. (Dylan's own version of the song would later be released on
The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3.) Dylan also signed with
David Geffen's new
Asylum label when his contract with
Columbia Records expired in 1973, and he recorded
Planet Waves with
The Band while rehearsing for a major tour. The album included two versions of "Forever Young".
Christopher Ricks has connected the chorus of this song with
John Keats's
Ode on a Grecian Urn, ("For ever panting, and for ever young"), and Dylan has recalled writing the song for one of his own children: “I wrote it thinking about one of my boys and not wanting to be too sentimental”. It has remained one of the most frequently performed of his songs, and one critic described it as “something hymnal and heartfelt that spoke of the father in Dylan.” Columbia Records simultaneously released
Dylan, a haphazard collection of studio outtakes (almost exclusively cover songs), which was widely interpreted as a churlish response to Dylan's signing with a rival record label. In January 1974 Dylan and
The Band embarked on their high-profile, coast-to-coast
Bob Dylan and The Band 1974 Tour of North America; promoter
Bill Graham claimed he received more ticket purchase requests than for any prior tour by any artist. A live double album of the tour,
Before the Flood which included Dylan with
The Band, was released on
Asylum Records. Later in the mid 70s
Before the Flood was released by Columbia records.
After the tour, Dylan and his wife became publicly estranged. He filled a small red notebook with songs about his marital problems, and quickly recorded a new album entitled
Blood on the Tracks in September 1974. Word of Dylan's efforts soon leaked out, and expectations were high. But Dylan delayed the album's release, and then, by years end he'd re-recorded half of the songs at
Sound 80 Studios in
Minneapolis with production assistance from his brother
David Zimmerman. During this time, Dylan returned to Columbia Records which eventually reissued his Asylum albums.
Released in early 1975,
Blood on the Tracks received mixed reviews. In the
NME,
Nick Kent described "the accompaniments [as] often so trashy they sound like mere practise takes." In
Rolling Stone, reviewer
Jon Landau wrote that "the record has been made with typical shoddiness". However, over the years critics have come to see it as one of Dylan's greatest achievements, perhaps the only serious rival to his great mid 60s trilogy of albums. In
Salon.com, Bill Wyman wrote: "
Blood on the Tracks is his only flawless album and his best produced; the songs, each of them, are constructed in disciplined fashion. It is his kindest album and most dismayed, and seems in hindsight to have achieved a sublime balance between the logorrhea-plagued excesses of his mid-'60s output and the self-consciously simple compositions of his post-accident years." The songs have been described as Dylan's most intimate and direct. A year later, Dylan recorded a duet of the song "Buckets of Rain" with
Bette Midler on her
Songs for the New Depression album.
(External Link
) When Dylan was initially approached to do a duet with Midler, he wanted to record a version of "Friends." While they rehearsed this song, it was the "Blood on the Tracks" closer which was eventually released.
(External Link
)
That summer Dylan wrote his first successful "protest" song in twelve years, championing the cause of boxer
Rubin "Hurricane" Carter whom he believed had been wrongfully imprisoned for a triple murder in
Paterson, New Jersey. After visiting Carter in jail, Dylan wrote "
Hurricane", presenting the case for Carter's innocence. Despite its 8:32 minute length, the song was released as a single, peaking at #33 on the U.S.
Billboard Chart, and performed at every 1975 date of Dylan's next tour, the
Rolling Thunder Revue. The tour was a varied evening of entertainment featuring many performers drawn mostly from the resurgent Greenwich Village folk scene, including
T-Bone Burnett;
Allen Ginsberg;
Ramblin' Jack Elliott;
Steven Soles;
David Mansfield; former
Byrds frontman
Roger McGuinn; British guitarist
Mick Ronson;
Scarlet Rivera, a
violin player Dylan discovered while she was walking down the street to a rehearsal, her violin case hanging on her back; and
Joan Baez (the tour marked Baez and Dylan's first joint performance in more than a decade).
Joni Mitchell added herself to the Revue in November, and poet
Allen Ginsberg accompanied the troupe, staging scenes for the film Dylan was simultaneously shooting.
Sam Shepard was initially hired as the writer for this film, but ended up accompanying the tour as informal chronicler.
Running through late 1975 and again through early 1976, the tour encompassed the release of the album
Desire (1976), with many of Dylan's new songs featuring an almost
travelogue-like narrative style, showing the influence of his new collaborator, playwright
Jacques Levy. The spring 1976 half of the tour was documented by a TV concert special,
Hard Rain, and the LP
Hard Rain; no concert album from the better-received and better-known opening half of the tour was released until 2002, when appeared as the fifth volume in Dylan's official
Bootleg Series. The single "Rita May", an outtake from the
Desire sessions, backed with the
Hard Rain version of "Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again" was also released in promotion of both releases.
The fall 1975 tour with the Revue also provided the backdrop to Dylan's nearly four-hour film
Renaldo and Clara, a sprawling and improvised narrative mixed with concert footage and reminiscences. Released in 1978, the movie received generally poor, sometimes scathing, reviews and had a very brief theatrical run. Later in that year, Dylan allowed a two-hour edit, dominated by the concert performances, to be more widely released.
In November 1976 Dylan appeared at The Band's "farewell" concert, along with other guests including
Joni Mitchell,
Muddy Waters,
Van Morrison and
Neil Young.
Martin Scorsese's acclaimed cinematic chronicle of this show,
The Last Waltz, was released in 1978 and included about half of Dylan's set. In this year Dylan also wrote and duetted on the song "Sign Language" for
Eric Clapton's
"No Reason To Cry" album - no other versions of the song apart from the one which appears on this album have ever been released. In 1977 he also contributed backing vocals to
Leonard Cohen's
Phil Spector-produced album
"Death of a Ladies' Man".
Dylan's 1978 album
Street Legal was lyrically one of his more complex and cohesive; it suffered, however, from a poor sound mix (attributed to his studio recording practices), submerging much of its instrumentation in the sonic equivalent of cotton wadding until its remastered CD release nearly a quarter century later.
Born Again
In the late 1970s, Dylan became a
born-again Christian. From January to April 1979, Dylan participated in Bible study classes at the
Vineyard School of Discipleship in Reseda, Southern California. Pastor Kenn Gulliksen has recalled: “Larry Myers and Paul Emond went over to Bob’s house and ministered to him. He responded by saying, Yes he did in fact want Christ in His life. And he prayed that day and received the Lord.” Dylan released two albums of Christian gospel music.
Slow Train Coming (1979) is generally regarded as the more accomplished of these albums, winning him the
Grammy Award as "Best Male Vocalist" for the song "
Gotta Serve Somebody". The second evangelical album,
Saved (1980), received mixed reviews, although
Kurt Loder in
Rolling Stone declared the album was far superior, musically, to its predecessor. When touring from the fall of 1979 through the spring of 1980, Dylan wouldn't play any of his older, secular works, and he delivered declarations of his faith from the stage, such as:
Robert Hilburn interviewed Dylan about the new direction in his music for the
Los Angeles Times. Hilburn’s article, published
November 23,
1980, began:
Dylan's embrace of
Christianity was unpopular with some of his fans and fellow musicians. Shortly before his December 1980 shooting,
John Lennon recorded "Serve Yourself" in response to Dylan's "Gotta Serve Somebody". By 1981, while Dylan's Christian faith was obvious, his "iconoclastic temperament" hadn't changed, as Stephen Holden wrote in the New York Times:
Rolling Stone editor
Jann Wenner, writing in his review for
Slow Train Coming, commented:
Since the early 1980s Dylan's personal religious beliefs have been the subject of debate among fans and critics. Since his trilogy of
Christian albums, Dylan has been described as a supporter of the
Chabad Lubavitch movement and has publicly and privately participated in Jewish religious events, including the
bar mitzvahs of his sons. More recently, it has been reported that Dylan has "shown up" a few times at various High Holiday services at various Chabad synagogues. He attended a Woodbury, New York synagogue in 2005, and attended Congregation Beth Tefillah, in
Atlanta, Georgia on
September 22,
2007 (
Yom Kippur), where he was called to the
Torah for the sixth
aliyah.
In 1997 he told
David Gates of
Newsweek:
In an interview published in
The New York Times on
September 28,
1997, journalist
Jon Pareles reported that "Dylan says he now subscribes to no organized religion."
1980s: Trust Yourself
In the fall of 1980 Dylan briefly resumed touring, restoring several of his most popular 1960s songs to his repertoire, for a series of concerts billed as "A Musical Retrospective".
Shot of Love, recorded the next spring, featured Dylan's first secular compositions in more than two years, mixed with explicitly Christian songs. The haunting "
Every Grain of Sand" reminded some critics of
William Blake’s verses.
In the 1980s the quality of Dylan's recorded work varied, from the well-regarded
Infidels in 1983 to the panned
Down in the Groove in 1988. Critics such as
Michael Gray condemned Dylan's 1980s albums both for showing an extraordinary carelessness in the studio and for failing to release his best songs.
The
Infidels recording sessions produced several notable outtakes, and many have questioned Dylan's judgment in leaving them off the album. Most well-regarded of these were "
Blind Willie McTell" (which was both a tribute to the dead blues singer and an extraordinary evocation of African American history reaching back to "the ghosts of slavery ships"), "Foot of Pride" and "Lord Protect My Child"; these songs were later released on the boxed set
The Bootleg Series Volumes 1-3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961-1991. An earlier version of
Infidels, prepared by producer/guitarist
Mark Knopfler, contained different arrangements and song selections than what appeared on the final product.
Dylan contributed vocals to
USA for Africa's
famine relief fundraising single "
We Are the World". On
13 July 1985, he climaxed at the
Live Aid concert at
JFK Stadium,
Philadelphia. Backed by
Keith Richards and
Ronnie Wood, Dylan performed a ragged version of "Hollis Brown", his ballad of rural poverty, and then said to a worldwide audience exceeding one billion people: "I hope that some of the money ... maybe they can just take a little bit of it, maybe ... one or two million, maybe ... and use it to pay the mortgages on some of the farms and, the farmers here, owe to the banks." His remarks were widely criticised as inappropriate, but they did inspire
Willie Nelson to organise a series of events,
Farm Aid, to benefit debt-ridden American farmers.
In 1986 Dylan made a foray into the world of
rap music, appearing on
Kurtis Blow's
Kingdom Blow album. In an arrangement set up, in part, by
Debra Byrd (one of Dylan's back-up singers) and Wayne K. Garfield (an associate of Blow's), Dylan contributed vocals to the track "Street Rock." In his memoir,
Chronicles, Dylan writes, "Blow familiarized me with that stuff,
Ice-T,
Public Enemy,
N.W.A.,
Run-D.M.C.. These guys definitely weren't standing around bullshitting. They were all poets and knew what was going on." Dylan's opening rap for "Street Rock" goes, "I've indulged in higher knowledge through scan of encyclopedia / keep in constant research of our report and news media / kids starve in Ethiopia and we're getting greedier / the rich are getting richer and the needy's getting needier."
In July 1986 Dylan released
Knocked Out Loaded, an album which consisted of three cover songs (by Little
Junior Parker,
Kris Kristofferson and the traditional gospel hymn "
Precious Memories"), three collaborations with other songwriters (
Tom Petty,
Sam Shepard and
Carole Bayer Sager), and two solo compositions by Dylan himself. The album received mainly negative reviews;
Rolling Stone called it "a depressing affair", and it was the first Dylan album since
Freewheelin' (1963) to fail to make the Top 50. Since then, some critics have called the eleven minute epic that Dylan co-wrote with Sam Shepard, '
Brownsville Girl', a work of genius, and some websites have even tried to claim that the entire album has been vastly underrated.
In 1986 and 1987, Dylan toured extensively with
Tom Petty and The Heartbreakers, sharing vocals with Petty on several songs each night. The tour was filmed for the documentary
Hard to Handle, directed by
Gillian Armstrong. Dylan also toured with
The Grateful Dead in 1987, resulting in a live album
Dylan & The Dead. This album received some negative reviews. After performing with these different musical permutations, Dylan initiated what came to be called The
Never Ending Tour on June 7, 1988, performing with a tight back-up band featuring guitarist
G. E. Smith. Dylan would keep on touring with this small but constantly evolving band for the next 20 years.
In 1987 Dylan starred in
Richard Marquand's movie
Hearts of Fire, in which he played a washed-up-rock-star-turned-chicken farmer called "Billy Parker", whose teenage lover (Fiona) leaves him for a jaded English synth-pop sensation (Rupert Everett). Dylan also contributed two original songs to the soundtrack - "Night After Night", and 'I Had a Dream About You, Baby" - as well as a cover of
John Hiatt's "
The Usual". The film was a critical and commercial flop.
Dylan was inducted into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in January 1988.
Bruce Springsteen made the induction speech, declaring: "Bob freed your mind the way Elvis freed your body. He showed us that just because music was innately physical didn't mean that it was anti-intellectual." Later that spring, Dylan joined
Roy Orbison,
Jeff Lynne,
Tom Petty, and
George Harrison to create a lighthearted, well-selling
album as the
Traveling Wilburys. Despite Orbison's death in December 1988, the remaining four recorded a second album in May 1990, which they released with the unexpected title
Traveling Wilburys Vol. 3.
Dylan finished the decade on a critical high note with the
Daniel Lanois-produced
Oh Mercy (1989). Lanois's influence is audible throughout
Oh Mercy. The track "Most of the Time", a lost love composition, was later prominently featured in the film
High Fidelity, while "What Was It You Wanted?" has been interpreted both as a catechism and a wry comment on the expectations of critics and fans. The dense religious imagery of 'Ring Them Bells' struck some critics as a re-affirmation of faith. Scott Marshall wrote: "When Dylan sings that 'The sun is going down upon the sacred cow', it's safe to assume that the sacred cow here's the biblical metaphor for all false gods. For Dylan, the world will eventually know that there's only one God." Dylan also made a number of music videos during this period, but only "Political World" found any regular airtime on
MTV.
1990s: Not Dark Yet
Dylan's 1990s began with
Under the Red Sky (1990), an about-face from the serious
Oh Mercy. The album was dedicated to "Gabby Goo Goo", and contained several apparently simple songs, including "Under the Red Sky" and "Wiggle Wiggle". The "Gabby Goo Goo" dedication was later explained as a nickname for Dylan's four-year-old daughter. Sidemen on the album included
George Harrison,
Slash from
Guns N' Roses,
David Crosby,
Bruce Hornsby,
Stevie Ray Vaughan, and
Elton John. Despite the stellar line-up, the record received bad reviews and sold poorly. Dylan wouldn't make another studio album of new songs for seven years.
In 1991 Bob Dylan was inducted into the
Minnesota Music Hall of Fame and in 1992 Dylan performed a brief tour with
Santana.
The next few years saw Dylan returning to his roots with two albums covering old folk and blues numbers:
Good as I Been to You (1992) and
World Gone Wrong (1993), featuring interpretations and acoustic guitar work. Many critics and fans commented on the quiet beauty of the song "Lone Pilgrim", penned by a 19th century teacher and sung by Dylan with a haunting reverence. An exception to this rootsy mood came in Dylan's 1991 songwriting collaboration with
Michael Bolton; the resulting song "Steel Bars", was released on Bolton's album
Time, Love & Tenderness. Twenty-five years after famously failing to perform at the
Woodstock Festival, Dylan appeared at the commemorative event entitled
Woodstock 94. In November 1994 Dylan recorded two live shows for
MTV Unplugged. He claimed his wish to perform a set of traditional songs for the show was overruled by
Sony executives who insisted on a greatest hits package. The album produced from it,
MTV Unplugged, included "John Brown", an unreleased 1963 song detailing the ravages of both war and
jingoism. The same year Dylan provided vocals and guitar on
Mike Seeger's cover of "The Ballad of Hollis Brown" on Seeger's Rounder Records album
Third Annual Farewell Reunion. Dylan booked recording time with
Daniel Lanois at
Miami's
Criteria Studios in January 1997. The subsequent recording sessions were, by some accounts, fraught with musical tension. Late that spring, before the album's release, Dylan was hospitalized with a life-threatening heart infection,
pericarditis, brought on by
histoplasmosis. His scheduled European tour was cancelled, but Dylan made a speedy recovery and left the hospital saying, "I really thought I'd be seeing
Elvis soon." He was back on the road by midsummer, and in early fall performed before
Pope John Paul II at the World Eucharistic Conference in
Bologna,
Italy. The Pope treated the audience of 200,000 people to a sermon based on Dylan's lyric "
Blowin' in the Wind".
September saw the release of the new Lanois-produced album,
Time Out of Mind. With its bitter assessment of love and morbid ruminations, Dylan's first collection of original songs in seven years became highly acclaimed. It also achieved an unforeseen popularity among young listeners, particularly the opening song, "Love Sick". This collection of complex songs won him his first solo "Album of the Year"
Grammy Award (he was one of numerous performers on
The Concert for Bangladesh, the 1972 winner). The love song "
Make You Feel My Love" has been covered by
Garth Brooks,
Billy Joel and, more recently, British singer
Adele.
In December 1997 U.S. President
Bill Clinton presented Dylan with a Kennedy Center Honor in the East Room of the
White House, paying this tribute: "He probably had more impact on people of my generation than any other creative artist. His voice and lyrics haven't always been easy on the ear, but throughout his career Bob Dylan has never aimed to please. He's disturbed the peace and discomforted the powerful."
In 1998 Dylan appeared on
Ralph Stanley's album
Clinch Mountain Country, duetting with the
bluegrass legend on "The Lonesome River."
(External Link
).Between June and September, 1999, Dylan toured with
Paul Simon. They performed a couple of songs together at each show, including "
I Walk the Line" and "
Blue Moon Of Kentucky". (
Simon & Garfunkel had recorded "
The Times They Are a-Changin'" on their debut album,
Wednesday Morning, 3AM, and Dylan had covered "
The Boxer" on his
Self Portrait album.) Dylan ended the nineties by returning to the big screen after a break of ten years in the role of Alfred the Chaffeur alongside
Ben Gazzara and
Karen Black in Robert Clapsaddle's
Paradise Cove.
2000 and beyond: Things Have Changed
2000–2003
In 2000 his song "
Things Have Changed", penned for the film
Wonder Boys, won a
Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song and an
Academy Award for Best Song. For reasons unknown, the Oscar (by some reports a facsimile) tours with him, presiding over shows perched atop an amplifier.
"Love and Theft" was released on
September 11,
2001. Dylan produced the album himself under the
pseudonym Jack Frost, and its distinctive sound owes much to the accompanists.
Tony Garnier, bassist and bandleader, had played with Dylan for 12 years, longer than any other musician.
Larry Campbell, one of the most accomplished American guitarists of the last two decades, played on the road with Dylan from 1997 through 2004. Guitarist
Charlie Sexton and drummer
David Kemper had also toured with Dylan for years. Keyboard player
Augie Meyers, the only musician not part of Dylan's touring band, had also played on
Time Out of Mind. The album was critically well-received and nominated for several Grammy awards. Critics noted that at this late stage in his career, Dylan was deliberately widening his musical palette. The styles referenced in this album included
rockabilly, Western swing, jazz, and even lounge ballads.
"Love and Theft" generated controversy when some similarities between the lyrics of the album to Japanese writer Junichi Saga's book
Confessions of a Yakuza were pointed out. It is unclear if Dylan intentionally lifted any material. Dylan's publicist had no comment.
Between "
Love and Theft" and Dylan's next studio album (to be released five years later) he recorded songs—both originals and covers—for a number of different projects. "I Can't Get You Off of My Mind", Dylan's contribution to the
Hank Williams tribute album "Timeless" was released in September 2001. 2002 saw the release of Dylan's version of "Train Of Love" on a similar
Johnny Cash tribute album called . (Dylan had recorded the song for a Johnny Cash TV tribute, broadcast in April 1999. In his spoken introduction, Dylan thanked Cash "for standing up for me way back when.") In 2002
Solomon Burke recorded a version of the rare Dylan composition "Stepchild" for his
Don't Give Up on Me album. While the song has never surfaced as a studio recording, there are a number of bootlegs in circulation of Dylan playing the track at soundchecks in the late 70's. In February 2003, the 8-minute long epic ballad "Cross The Green Mountain", written and recorded by Dylan, was released as the closing song on the soundtrack to the Civil War movie
Gods and Generals, and later appeared as one of the 42 rare tracks on the iTunes Music Store release of
Bob Dylan: The Collection. A music video for the song was also produced in promotion of the motion picture.
2003 also saw the r