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Here for a Chronological list of Bob Dylan happenings
The
grandchild of Jewish-Russian immigrants, Dylan was born Robert
Allen Zimmerman, on May 24, 1941, in Duluth,
Minnesota, to Abraham Zimmerman
and Beatrice Zimmerman. Five years later in 1946, Dylan's younger
brother David Zimmerman was born. His father, Abraham (Abe),
worked for the Standard Oil Company. In 1947, the Zimmerman family
moved to the small town of Hibbing,
where an unexceptional childhood did little to hint at the
brilliance to come. Robert started writing poems around the age of
ten, and taught himself rudimentary piano and guitar in his early
teens. Falling under the spell of Elvis
Presley, Jerry
Lee Lewis, and other early rock stars, he started forming his
own bands, including the Golden Chords and Elston Gunn and His
Rock Boppers. According to the 1959 Hibbing high school yearbook,
his goal was "to join Little
Richard."
The young Zimmerman left Hibbing for Minneapolis and the University
of Minnesota in the fall of 1959. The sights and sounds of the
big city opened new vistas for him, and he began to trace
contemporary rock and roll back to its roots, listening to the
work of country, rock, and
folk pioneers like Hank
Williams, Robert
Johnson, and Woody
Guthrie. Indeed, his interest in music had become so intense
that he rarely found the time to go to class. He began to perform
solo at local nightspots like the Ten O'clock Scholar cafe and St.
Paul's Purple Onion Pizza Parlor, honing his guitar and harmonica
work and developing the expressive nasal voice that would become
the nucleus of his trademark sound. It was around this time, too,
that he adopted the stage name Bob Dylan, presumably in honor of
the late Welsh poet Dylan
Thomas, though this is an origin he has continued to deny
throughout his career.
The following year, he dropped out of college and went to New York
with two things on his mind: to become a part of Greenwich
Village's burgeoning folk-music scene, and to meet Guthrie,
who was hospitalized in New Jersey with a rare, hereditary disease
of the nervous system. He succeeded on both counts, becoming a
fixture in the Village's folk clubs and coffee houses and at
Guthrie's hospital bedside, where he would perform the folk
legend's own songs for an audience of one. Spending all of his
spare time in the company of other musicians, Dylan amazed them
with his ability to learn songs perfectly after hearing them only
once. He also began writing songs at a remarkable pace, including
a tribute to his hero entitled "Song
to Woody."
In the fall of 1961, Dylan's legend began to spread beyond folk
circles and into the world at large after critic Robert
Shelton saw him perform at Gerde's Folk City and raved in the New
York Times that he was "bursting at the seams with
talent." A month later, Columbia
Records executive John Hammond signed Dylan to a recording
contract, and the young singer-songwriter began selecting material
for his eponymous
debut album. Not yet fully confident in his own songwriting
abilities, he cut only two original numbers, rounding out the
collection with traditional folk tunes and songs by blues singers
like Blind Lemon
Jefferson and Bukka
White. The result (released early in 1962) was an often
haunting, death-obsessed record that, culminating in Dylan's
gravel-voiced reading of "See
That My Grave Is Kept Clean," sounded as much like the
work of an aging black blues man as a twenty-one-year-old Jewish
folksinger from Minnesota.
Promising
as that first album was, it didn't prepare anyone for the
masterpiece that came next. 'The
Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, released in 1963, contained
two of the sixties' most durable folk anthems, "Blowin'
in the Wind" and "A
Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall," the breathtaking ballads
"Girl of the North
Country" and "Don't
Think Twice, It's All Right," and nine other originals
that marked the emergence of the most distinctive and poetic voice
in the history of American popular music. Cementing his reputation
was Peter, Paul, and
Mary's folksy cover of "Blowin'
in the Wind," which went to No. 2 on the pop singles
chart.
Dylan's next album, 'The Times They Are
A-Changin', provided more of the same: the title cut and
"The Lonesome Death of
Hattie Carroll" were the standout protest songs, while
"Boots of Spanish Leather"
was his saddest and most graceful love song so far. At the same
time, Dylan seemed to be tiring of his position at the forefront
of the protest movement: in "Restless
Farewell," the record's last song, he concluded that he'd
"bid farewell and not give a damn." Sure enough, his
next album, pointedly titled 'Another
Side of Bob Dylan', was his most introspective and least
topical to date, and its finale, "It
Ain't Me Babe," was an even more explicit goodbye to the
folk movement he had helped reinvigorate.
The most revealing song on 'Another
Side of Bob Dylan' was "Ballad
in Plain D," which painted a harsh, one-sided,
blow-by-blow picture of Dylan's breakup with his longtime
girlfriend Suze Rotolo, who can be seen on his arm in happier days
on 'The Freewheelin'
album cover. (More than twenty years later, Dylan said this was
the one song in his catalogue that he wished he hadn't released.)
Shortly after his split with Rotolo, he became involved with the
world's most famous folk diva, Joan
Baez. The relationship proved beneficial for them both, as
Baez raided Dylan's unreleased material for her albums and
introduced him to thousands of fans at her concerts.
At the same time, Dylan was itching to move beyond the acoustic
musical constraints the folk movement imposed. Early in 1965, he
went into the studio with a nine piece band and recorded 'Bringing
It All Back Home', a half-electric, half-acoustic album of
complex, incisive, biting songs like "Subterranean Homesick
Blues" (featuring the trademark line, "You don't need a
weatherman to know which way the wind blows"), "Mr.
Tambourine Man," and "It's All Over Now, Baby
Blue." A week after Dylan cut 'Bringing It All Back
Home', 'The
Byrds' electrified his acoustic "Mr.
Tambourine Man," and
by the time it reached the top of the charts the term
"folk-rock" had become part of the contemporary lexicon.
Dylan's
own transition from folk troubadour to rock bard was not quite so
smooth: debuting his new material with the Paul Butterfield Blues
Band at the 1965 Newport Folk
Festival, he was famously booed off
the stage. Such resistance notwithstanding, Dylan's fame had long
since eclipsed Baez's, and their relationship was starting to
crumble. (D.A. Pennebaker's documentary
"Don't Look Back" was filmed
during this period, and it clearly shows the tension between Dylan
and Baez.) He had begun to see Sara Lowndes, a friend of his
manager Albert Grossman's wife, and by the end of the year would
marry her. In the meantime, he recorded and released the album 'Highway 61
Revisited', which contained the monumental single
"Like a Rolling Stone." Clocking in at more than six
minutes, it was the longest, angriest song ever released on a 45,
and it reached No. 2 on the Billboard singles chart.
Next up was 'Blonde on Blonde', a two-record set recorded in
Nashville in early 1966, which took the stream-of-consciousness
lyrics and edgy rock sounds of 'Highway 61 Revisited' to the next
level of artistry. From the raucous party rock of "Rainy Day
Women #12 & 35" to the rambling, hallucinogenic folk 'n'
blues of "Stuck Inside of Mobile With the Memphis Blues
Again" to the poignant, apocalyptic balladry of "Visions
of Johanna" and "Sad Eyed Lady of the
Lowlands," 'Blonde on Blonde' took rock and roll to places no one else had even
dreamed of. A tour of England with 'The
Hawks' (who would later
change their name to 'The Band') produced music that was even wilder
and more astonishing, though many of Dylan's old fans continued to
be baffled. The tour reached its peak at the Manchester Free Trade
Hall on May 17, 1966, when the combo recorded a live set that was
bootlegged--and mis-titled--as 'Live at the Royal Albert Hall'.
By this time, Dylan was routinely being hailed as the most
important voice of his generation, but he was reaching a breaking
point; he was, after all, only twenty-five years old. "The
pressures were unbelievable," he would later tell biographer
Anthony Scaduto. "They were just something you can't imagine
unless you go through them yourself. Man, they hurt so much."
A near-fatal motorcycle accident on July 29, 1966, proved a
blessing in disguise, allowing Dylan to retreat to the solitude of
his home in Woodstock, New York, with Sara and their newborn son
Jesse to reevaluate his career and priorities. (The Dylans would
ultimately have four children, (Jesse, Anne, Samuel & Jakob) with Bob adopting Sara's daughter
(Marie) from a previous marriage; Jakob, the youngest, is now the leader
of the popular band 'The
Wallflowers').
A few months later, the Hawks joined him at Woodstock, and they
began recording the loose, country-flavored tracks that would be
bootlegged (and released eight years later) as 'The Basement
Tapes'.
Dylan's next official release, though, was the even more low-key 'John Wesley
Harding'. Recorded in Nashville with a three-piece
backing band, 'John Wesley Harding' was widely considered to be
Dylan's pointed reaction to 'The
Beatles' musically and technically
complex landmark LP 'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band'--an
interpretation he naturally denied.
While 'John Wesley Harding' earned glowing reviews and reached the
No. 2 spot on Billboard's album chart (making it his most
commercially successful album to date), it also painted Dylan into
an artistic corner. Gone was what he called his "thin wild
mercury sound," and gone were his outlandish, visionary
lyrical flourishes; the simple, often elegant songs that he was
now writing could not support the hype that painted Dylan as one
of the twentieth century's great poets. 'Nashville
Skyline', his
next album, seemed to revel in disappointing fans' expectations:
it was a straight country record, and despite some lovely songs
(especially "I Threw It All Away") and a hit single
("Lay Lady Lay") it was seen as Dylan's first real
artistic misstep.
As it turned out, 'Nashville Skyline' was just the beginning of
Dylan's slide in the eyes of the critical establishment. 'Self
Portrait', the two-record set which followed in 1970, was viewed as
a genuine disaster: "What is this shit?" Greil Marcus
asked in his Rolling Stone review. 'New
Morning', released four
months later, was a comeback of sorts--it was at least listenable--but
it was a far cry from Dylan's best work. The release of his
long-awaited book Tarantula in 1971 didn't do anything to
rehabilitate his reputation in hip circles. Even his inspiring set
at the George
Harrison-organized Concert for Bangladesh--Dylan's
first American concert appearance since his motorcycle accident
five years earlier--seemed to hint at artistic confusion: he
didn't perform a single song written after 1966.
Seemingly
floundering, Dylan accepted an invitation from legendary Western
filmmaker Sam Peckinpah (The Wild
Bunch) to appear in and compose
the score for his new film, Pat Garrett and Billy the
Kid, which
was filming in Mexico and would star Dylan's friend Kris
Kristofferson. The shoot was not a pleasant experience: the
Mexican location proved difficult, Peckinpah was preoccupied with
studio politics (the film was eventually taken out of his hands
and re-cut), and Dylan floundered in the role of Billy's sidekick,
Alias. But the soundtrack album was a success, and the single
"Knockin' on Heaven's Door" broke the Top 20 (and went
on to become one of Dylan's most covered songs).
At this point, it had been seven years since Dylan's motorcycle
accident, and he had not mounted a full-scale tour since. In the
summer and fall of 1973, he and 'The Band' started rehearsing the
Dylan songbook for a comeback tour, and in early November they
took a few days off to record the album 'Planet
Waves'. It was a
hasty, underwritten effort, but that didn't stop it from shooting
to the top of the charts after Dylan and the Band hit the road for
a nationwide tour in January of 1974. (Planet Waves was, in fact,
Dylan's first No. 1 album ever). The concerts were the stuff of
legend, and promoter Bill Graham said that there were mail-order
requests for more than twelve million tickets, though only 658,000
seats were available for the forty shows. An acclaimed two-record
live set, 'Before the Flood', came out within a few months of the
tour, and made it to No. 3 on the charts.
While the tour seemed to reinvigorate Dylan's creative spirit, his
personal life was in a shambles. He and Sara had separated, and
Dylan's confusion, pain, and anger over their split infused the
songs he was writing with a rare passion. The result was 'Blood on
the Tracks', perhaps the most mature, moving, and profound
examination of love and loss ever committed to record. Stunning
songs like "Tangled Up in
Blue," "Idiot Wind,"
and "Shelter From the Storm" were not strictly
autobiographical, but their emotional turbulence clearly reflected
Dylan's anguished state of mind. His second straight No. 1 album,
Blood on the Tracks didn't merely match the brilliance of Dylan's
sixties output--in terms of eloquence and emotional authority, he
had reached new heights.
Later that year, a truncated version of 'The Basement Tapes' was
finally released, and was hailed as a found masterpiece. Another
tour soon followed--the ragtag Rolling Thunder
Revue, which
featured old friends like Joan Baez and
Roger McGuinn, and new
ones such as T-Bone Burnett and playwright
Sam
Shepard, who was
recruited to write a screenplay to be shot on the road. (The
resulting film, the mostly unscripted 'Renaldo and
Clara', was a
confused four-hour debacle that received very limited distribution
in 1978.) Mid-tour, Dylan released 'Desire', which was his third
consecutive No. 1 album; it featured the single
"Hurricane," dedicated to the wrongly imprisoned boxer
Rubin "Hurricane"
Carter. While nowhere near as
impressive as 'Blood on the Tracks', Desire was a well-crafted,
evocative effort that contained at least two great songs: the
playfully cinematic "Black Diamond
Bay," and the
plaintive, heartfelt ode to his estranged wife, "Sara."
The song did not win her back: Dylan and Sara divorced the
following year. Dylan's first post-divorce album, 'Street
Legal',
did not bode well for the future. Overproduced and lyrically
senseless, it was even worse than 'Self Portrait', and the world
tour that followed was a pale shadow of the 'Before the Flood' and
Rolling Thunder shows. At thirty-seven, Dylan seemed, both
personally and professionally, at loose ends. Even so, his next
move took the world by surprise: embracing fundamental
Christianity, he released the overtly born-again album 'Slow Train
Coming'. Much to the surprise of his critics, the record was a
commercial success, reaching No. 3 on the charts, spawning the hit
single "Gotta Serve
Somebody," and earning Dylan his
first Grammy award, for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance.
The
tour that followed was a fire and brimstone affair that managed to
alienate many of Dylan's longtime fans, and his next album, 'Saved',
failed to crack the Top 20. For the faithful, though, his next
record, 'Shot of Love' offered signs of hope: "Every Grain of
Sand" was a gorgeous, philosophical ballad that took a far
more forgiving tone than his past two albums, while "The
Groom's Still Waiting at the Alter" (the non-LP B-side to the
single "Heart of Mine") was a barn-burning rocker that
would have fit nicely on Highway 61 Revisited.
'Infidels' (1983) continued the positive trend: co-produced by Dire
Straits frontman Mark Knopfler, whose graceful guitar work made it
Dylan's best-sounding record ever, it was also his finest
sustained collection of songs since 'Blood on the Tracks'. Veering
away from the overtly religious material of his last three albums,
Dylan recaptured the complexity and emotional subtlety of his best
work on songs like "Jokerman" and "Don't Fall Apart
on Me Tonight." 'Empire Burlesque', his self-produced follow-up
to Infidels, was almost as good, ranging from the blistering soul
of "Tight Connection to My Heart" to the gentle acoustic
ballad "Dark Eyes," with only a few missteps.
While Dylan had toured regularly since returning to the stage with
'The Band' in 1974, beginning in the mid-eighties he hit the road
full-time, first with all-star cronies Tom Petty and the
Heartbreakers and the 'Grateful
Dead', then, starting in 1988, with
a small rock combo led by guitarist and Saturday Night Live
musical director G.E.
Smith. Shows on the so-called Never Ending
Tour were generally sloppy, and Dylan tended to mumble his songs
and glower at his audiences, but he stuck with it--nine years
later, he's hardly spent a month off the road. The original work
he's released over the last decade has continued to contain
flashes of genius, but only the Daniel Lanois-produced
'Oh Mercy'
worked to any sustained effect.
Early in 1997, though, those who lived in hope of an artistically
born-again Dylan had cause for optimism: musician Jim Dickinson
told a Memphis newspaper that he had played on some recent, Daniel
Lanois-produced Dylan sessions featuring new material Dylan had
composed while stuck at home in Minnesota during a blizzard.
According to Dickinson, one cut was seventeen minutes long, and
overall the material was "so good, I can't imagine he won't
use it." The seventeen-minute song turned out to be
"Highlands," the closing cut on the critically acclaimed
'Time Out of Mind', which was released in September and became
Dylan's first gold record of the decade. The success of the album
was noteworthy, but 1997 will go down as the year that Dylan
knocked on heaven's door, literally: in May, on the eve of a
European tour, he was hospitalized with 'Histoplasmosis', a
potentially fatal infection that creates swelling in the sac
surrounding the heart. Happily, the songwriter made a rapid
recovery, and was back on the road by August and continued to tour
through the remainder of the year, including a September date in
Rome at the behest of Pope John Paul
II. In early December, Dylan
was one of five recipients of his country's highest award for
artistic excellence, the Kennedy Center
Honors.
In 1998 Dylan released
'Live 1966', which was known as the
fourth bootleg series, the album was recorded live on May
17, 1966
at Free Trade Hall, Manchester, England. Songs such as "She
Belongs To Me" and "One
Too Many Mornings"
are among this two album set. 1999
was the year of his U.S. tour with Paul
Simon. In 2000, Dylan was awarded 'The Polar Music
Prize' by the Royal
Swedish Academy of Music for his 'Indisputable influence on the
development of 20th century popular music as a
singer-songwriter'. In 2001, Dylan released his latest
masterpiece, 'Love and Theft'
for which he received a Grammy Award in the category 'Best Contemporary
Folk Album' in 2002. At the awards, Dylan preformed 'Cry
A While'.
On
November 26, 2002, Dylan released 'Live
1975', The Rolling Thunder Revue, which is known as the fifth
bootleg series. 22 songs in total with one unreleased song, 'The
Water Is Wide', a traditional song done with Joan
Baez. Also as a special bonus, the album was released
with a DVD with two songs from Bob Dylan's film "Renaldo and
Clara,"
remixed for 5.1 surround sound. These songs are, 'Tangled
Up In Blue' and 'Isis', as well as
an audio version of 'Isis'. This is a
wonderful album to make your collection complete.
What
does Dylan have in store for us in the future? I hope much
more and then some.
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