27 May 2019

Bob Dylan Crime Writer


Last Friday, Bob Dylan turned 78, so a bunch of my friends (Yes, I have friends; I pay them) got together to celebrate.

Jane, our hostess, with the whole motley crew
Everyone brought wine or pizza or dessert, and seven of us brought instruments. The hostess assembled a playlist of Bob Dylan songs to play in honor of the occasion, and she stipulated that we would play a few songs by The Byrds, too. I'm the only one of the invitees who has a 12-string, and never one to let good hubris go to waste, I tried to learn "8 Miles High."

I have four books of Dylan songs on a shelf with my other music.
One tome contains over 350 songs, about a quarter of his output. His Wikipedia bio lists 40 albums and CDs, not including collections, and I didn't count how many songs have been recorded or covered by other artists. I first became aware of him through Peter, Paul & Mary, who had the same manager in the early sixties.

Like most artists learning their craft, Dylan borrowed or stole lyrics from other work, some in the public domain, some not. So did Paul Simon, the Beatles, Led Zeppelin, and a host of others. Some blues lyrics show up so often I could fill in evening performing songs that use a few repeated lines.

Dylan's first album is traditional folk covers, one of which is "The House of the Rising Sun." He copied Dave Van Ronk's version, not long before Van Ronk planned to record the song himself on another label. Their relationship became strained. He kicked Phil Ochs out of his limousine in midtown Manhattan traffic after the latter told him one of his songs would never be a hit. In the 70s, Joan Baez wrote "Diamonds and Rust" as a kiss-off to the guy who dumped her after she helped him get his own foot in the Hootenanny door. Hey, Richard Wagner and Mozart made enemies, too. No one's perfect.
Me (left) with Paul McCarron and Paul Stevens, maybe the 2 best
musicians there. McCarron's wife is one of my former students

Dylan took a huge risk in the mid-sixties when he left folk behind and turned to electric instruments for his more personal and experimental songs. He was booed at the Newport Folk Festival, among other places. One of the "Bootleg" album collections captures his 1966 concert in Manchester, England, where his backing group is the musicians later called The Band. It's a tense affair with a hostile crowd, culminating in someone from the audience shouting "Judas!"

Dylan responds with a line from one of his own songs. "I don't believe you. You're a liar." Then he turns to the musicians and an open mic captures his command. "Play f#*%ing loud." They launch into their encore, "Like a Rolling Stone," and leave the stage in silence so thick you can chew it.

In the early 1980s, Dylan became a born-again Christian, having already explored his Jewish roots (His real name is Robert Allen Zimmerman) in earlier work. He has never stopped exploring his identity and his world--or ours. I've used his work for two of my own titles. Blood on the Tracks is one of my favorite albums, and it's the title of the first Woody Guthrie novel. Postcards of the Hanging, a line from "Desolation Row," became the title of one of my standalones.
Jim Roger and his wife, Dylan fans

Dylan's early protest songs told great stories, many of them true crime sagas. "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll" recounts the case of a black server in a Baltimore club who was fatally beaten by a drunk wielding a cane. The wealthy white man served six months in jail (Sentence deferred so he could harvest his tobacco crop) and paid a $500 fine. Dylan's song showcases his trademark sarcasm, fueled with righteous rage.

"A Pawn in Their Game" is about the shooting of Medgar Evers. Both that song and "Who Killed Davey Moore?" about a boxer who died in the ring after suffering brain damage, use the common folk device of asking questions and having a series of people claim their innocence by passing the buck. Dylan revisited the genre a decade later in "Hurricane," about middleweight Ruben Carter, jailed for the shooting of a clerk during a liquor store hold-up.

My favorite crime song is made up, though. "Lily, Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts" features overlapping plots and a cast of characters taken from Western lore to tell of an unfortunate love affair, an unhappy marriage, a bank robbery and murder in about nine minutes (Sixteen verses). The backing band on that song includes the musicians who dubbed the music for the film "Deliverance." If you don't know the song, it's worth checking out on Youtube.

Over the last several years, I've played 25 or 30 Dylan songs live and several titles still fill my list of possible story titles for when I need them.
Former Hartford police officer Jim Howard also plays harmonica

It's just a matter of time.

(Thanks to Maureen McFarland for the pix of the whole group and me with the Pauls)

7 comments:

  1. Dylan's songs still echo with my generation.

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  2. Sounds like a good party.

    Dylan the artist is a great deal more likable than Dylan the man, alas.

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  3. Janice, you're absolutely right. I'd much rather listen to him than know him.
    I've always liked "Lily, Rosemary & the Jack of Hearts". Also his more political stuff - "I ain't gonna work on Maggie's Farm no more" is my favorite.

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  4. If we are listing people who knew and didn't like Dylan you should hear Richard Farina's song "Morgan the Pirate." It's pretty vicious.

    My first novel Such A Killing Crime was inspired by a line in Mr. Tambourine Man: "Those ancient empty streets too dead for dreaming." Dylan's company wouldn't let me use Too Dead For Dreaming as a title but I paid $25 to use the lines in the book.

    I love "Lily..."

    Rob

    ReplyDelete
  5. Rob, Richard Farina's wife/widow Mimi is Joan Baez's sister, so the animosity makes sense.

    I used a quote from Subterranean Homesick Blues as an epigraph in Run Straight Down (a Warren Zevon title, while we're at it) and they didn't charge me.

    Eve and Janice, mystery/crime writers seem to be the exception to the rule that artists are jerks. I've met romance writers I'd be afraid to turn my back on, but my experience with mystery writers has always been very good. Hey, it's how I got here, right (Thanks, Janice).

    I don't think I could last in a room with Dylan for long, but the same is true of Hemingway, Picasso, Wagner, Fitzgerald, Paul Simon, and a host of others. Nobody except lovers and plaintiffs remember the person as much as they remember the work they produced.

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  6. I’d like to play some Dylan with ya Steve! Dylan was my first ever concert. My friend won tickets from KMET and brought me along. I personally rate Dylan higher than the Beatles, but disagreements are welcome. With many of his songs, it’s like lock-picking to figure out the meaning. When a buddy back in college broke down “Ballad of aThin Man,” my mind was blown.
    Robert-I love Farina. Didn’t know he had Dylan issues!

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  7. I've met two romance writers when they had jobs in court reporting and/or medical transcription, where I worked. Both were lovely people. One of them wrote a mystery novel that didn't get published, so she changed over to romance & made the NYT best-seller list.

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