Jay Michaelson Quotes About Dylan

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  • "Masters of War" [of Bob Dylan] wasn't peacenik, anti-war stuff. With its minor key and uncompromising final lines ("And I hope that you die/And your death'll come soon/ I will follow your casket/ In the pale afternoon...") this was a previously unknown hybrid of caustic political commentary and punk rock, which itself wouldn't be invented for another decade or so.

    War   Keys   Rocks  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • Funny thing about Bob Dylan, the newest Nobel laureate in literature: He's been a master of self-invention for more than 50 years, creating personae, wearing them like masks, and then discarding them as soon as they grew too familiar.

    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • [Bob] Dylan thus deserves the Nobel Prize, not just for "new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition," as the Nobel committee aptly described his work, but also for embodying the contradictions within it.

    Song   Expression   Bob  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • The best songs of this [modern] period - the apocalyptic "High Water," for example - return [Bob] Dylan to where he was in his first phase, updating and transforming American traditional music.

    Song   Water   Phases  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • After an initial solo album in which the young [Bob] Dylan was just finding his voice (i.e., reinventing himself from the middle-class Robert Zimmerman into a pseudo-hobo Woody Guthrie), Dylan put out two acoustic albums that forever changed popular music.

    Class   Two   Voice  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • While [Bob] Dylan's folk fans thought he was selling out [in 1965-67], actually Dylan was lodging a stronger, deeper critique of American hypocrisy.

    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • There has been a ton of excellent music in this period (along with a few misses), evoking scenes like a bar-room brawl at a border-town dive, a washed-up singer in a smoky lounge, and the scenes of violence in Bob Dylan latter-day music videos.I think the ethos of this period is best summed up in the 2001 song "Summer Days".

    Summer   Song   Thinking  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • The most recent incarnation of [Bob] Dylan has been the traveling journeyman/ charlatan who sings roots music, snarls dark lyrics that make "All Along the Watchtower" sound like a Disney tune, hosts an old-school radio show, and turns up in some unusual places, like ads for Chrysler and Victoria's Secret.

    School   Dark   Roots  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • [Bob] Dylan, like Johnny Cash and only a handful of others, simultaneously embodies the American dream and the harsh wake-up call that comes after it.

    Dream   Cash   Bob  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • Weirdly, by the way,[Bob] Dylan also managed to write several beautiful love songs, like "To Make You Feel My Love" (covered by Adele, Garth Brooks, Billy Joel, and who knows who else) and "Most of the Time." Go figure.

    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • In the meantime [1963-65], [Bob] Dylan was writing some of the best love songs in the genre, like "Girl From the North Country," "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright," and "It Ain't Me, Babe."

    Girl   Country   Song  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • Folk music had long been political but [Bob] Dylan's poetry took it to a new level.

    Long   Political   Levels  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • In late [Bob] Dylan, music is the key to immortality, even though the summer days are long gone.

    Summer   Keys   Long  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • [Bob] Dylan would cut out phrases from magazines and then paste them together.

    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • [Bob] Dylan is a contemporary Don Quixote, at once besotted by the promise of America and yet also undermining it.

    America   Promise   Bob  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • [Bob] Dylan's many quotations from classic American roots music (that song is from an album aptly titled Love and Theft) join the aging poet to a tradition that preceded him and hopefully will outlive him as well.

    Song   Roots   Bob  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • [Bob Dylan] is a preacher but also a sinner; a poet but also a pitchman; authentic all-American but also invented persona.

    Bob   Poet   Dylan  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • I suspect many readers might associate [Bob Dylan] with one of the shortest phases of his career, the time from 1963 to '65 when he wrote his most famous "protest songs," like "Blowin' in the Wind" and "The Times They Are a-Changin.'"

    Song   Wind   Careers  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • More of the symbols are stock (does [Bob] Dylan really have hogs lying out in the mud somewhere? I doubt it), but that's the point.

    Lying   Doubt   Bob  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • Religion is commodified; the educational system is a sham; and yet,[Bob] Dylan wonders, everyone has to stand naked sometime.

    Educational   Naked   Bob  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • Except in these latter-day songs, [Bob] Dylan is a grizzled old prophet who's already been to hell and back.

    Song   Bob  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • Unlike many Sixties rockers,[Bob] Dylan sang about getting old, about broken dreams. His return to roots music pointed the way for many of his contemporaries to forsake trying to sound 'current' and to instead make music that would stand the test of time.

    Dream   Roots  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
  • Probably the high-watermark of [Bob] Dylan's career came after he plugged in his guitar ("Judas!" one fan shouted during a concert) and exploded American poetry, combining Beat aesthetics, psychedelic imagery, collage techniques.

    Careers  
    Source: www.thedailybeast.com
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Jay Michaelson quotes about: Dylan Songs Tradition