Personal reflections
inspired by Bob Dylan songs)
Song: “Every Grain of
Sand”
Album: Shot of Love
Release Date: August
1981
This is my 297th Music and Memory blog entry to date, and
I’ve yet to write about the weekly process to these writeups. I figured now was as good a time as any,
seeing as it was an archetypal week in
regards to the way the muse unfolds, and it was highlighted by several key
events including 1) an Al Kooper encounter, 2) my daughter, Charlotte, coming
home for the holidays from Panama, Nicaragua, and Colombia after spending
virtually the entire year in that region, and 3) the “Steeves Man of the Year” Christmas-season
lunch in Boston with my Dad, my son Peter, my 3 brothers, a brother-in law (the
second could not make it), 2 nephews, and a best friend. These big-ticket items, along with a whole
variety of other human interactions, had me contemplating throughout the week
the majesty of my chosen Master Blueprint song, “Every Grain of Sand”.
If I’m in good shape with a given writeup,
I begin the thought process just after posting my prior entry. This past week, however, I was in almost too good a shape seeing as two
Friday’s ago I was still fleshing out last week’s entry centered on the
song “Visions of Johanna” (see Master Blueprint # 46), when “Every Grain of Sand” -
one of the most spiritual songs in Bob Dylan’s entire body of work - began to
sift into my consciousness like….well, like sand through the narrow neck of an
hourglass. In the song, Dylan contemplates the splendor or God, specifically
through the virtuous windows of forgiveness, renewal and redemption, with
lyrics like “in the fury of the moment, I
can see the Master’s hand, in every leaf that trembles and in every grain of
sand”.
From the get-go I started relating grains
of sand to those human interactions I’d experienced the past week. Prior to this, I would not have thought that
it was Bob Dylan’s intention for someone to interpret the song in this way; his
meaning coming across as far more infinite than day-to-day connections with
family, friends, acquaintances, and others.
And it certainly was not in my mind when I concluded early in the year
that “Every Grain of Sand” would be the focus-song for one of my final
entries. But this was the way it played
out, and I now believe the concept works within the context of the song, because
there are infinities in how an interaction between two or more people unfolds,
as well as the possible interconnections between those interactions. Thinking about it more now, I’m certain Bob
Dylan would be open to such interpretation:
Multi-meaning on multilevels is what makes his music so powerful.
Those proverbial grains of sand began
sifting their way through the narrow neck of that proverbial hourglass when I
visited June and John Leary last Friday morning, an elderly couple here in my
hometown whom I’ve connected with for almost a year now. June and John are too feeble to go to Mass on
Sundays, or any day for that matter, and so, I bring Mass to them, as a
Eucharistic Minister. After performing
that duty, I often sit and hear their story; how things are going in their
lives, their memories of yesteryear. Old
age has made it difficult for them to perform the types of daily activities that
most of us take for granted, and they do not live in the best of conditions….
not even close. However, I have never
heard them complain. On the contrary, June
and John are kindly, peaceful, and good natured, and I always leave their home
feeling humbled. With such an
interaction, I could not help but start thinking about “Every Grain of Sand” a
bit prematurely.
The next day, Saturday, Nancy and I decided
to run a handful of errands by walking the roundtrip 4 miles through downtown
Pepperell. As we came upon one friendly
face after another, I thought about the blog entry I was just wrapping up; a
central theme being our move to this town 15 years ago (again see the last entry;
# 46). A great guy I used to coach
soccer with gave us a warm and humorous greeting. Charlotte’s former employer
shared his excitement for us, in the know she would be coming home in a few
days. The banker, the clerk, the neighbor,
the store owner; ‘Season’s Greetings’ all around. That evening we headed to a Christmas party in
town and found ourselves surrounded by a group of close friends who we have
connected with since moving here. There
was much laughter and good cheer.
Sunday after Mass I taught catechism. I’ve been doing this for going on 20 years
now, with most of my recent duties being with the older Confirmation groups (9th-10th
grades). This year, however, I filled in
a need at the 1st grade level.
It’s been a back-to-the-future experience, these youngsters reminding me
of my own daughter and son’s unfiltered world when I first started teaching. Seeing as I began formulating my talking
points for this entry around that time, I could not help but note that these
children are on the other end of the spectrum from where June and John Leary are
at in their lives. Along with the events
that played out in the interim on Saturday, I had, within a 48-hour period, connected
with numerous souls at virtually every stage in life’s journey. I rounded things out even more that evening,
taking my weekly bass guitar lesson from my 30-year-old instructor Jake. We jammed for over an hour, something I’d not
been able to do up to that point in my lessons. I was feeling in the groove;
Jake’s laid-back, improv teaching style a perfect fit for the way I pick things
up.
There was much more to come in the
still-young week, including all three of the prior-mentioned big-ticket items,
but that hourglass in my mind was beginning to accumulate sand. On the way home from Jake’s I removed Blonde on Blonde from the cd player and
queued up “Every Grain of Sand” for the first of many listens.
Late that Sunday afternoon, after sending
my prior blog entry out to friends, family and fellow Bob Dylan fans, I began poring
over a lengthy email that fellow ‘Dylanologist’, kindred spirit, and newfound
friend, Linda Whiteside, had sent me earlier that very same day. The title of the
email was ‘transfigurations’ and, due to prior exchanges with Linda, it
immediately caught my attention: The two
of us have been mutually intrigued by comments Bob Dylan had made in a 2012 Rolling
Stone Magazine interview about having gone through a transfiguration in the
early 60s and we’ve been bouncing related thoughts off one another this past
year in an attempt to understand what he meant.
I’d met Linda back in March in Hibbing
Minnesota, along with a second Linda (Stroback), during the first of 3
‘pilgrimages’ to the locales Bob Dylan is most renowned for (the other two
being Woodstock and Greenwich Village, NY), all of which I’ve now written about
in these pages (entries #10, #34 and #45). Anyhow, during that visit, Linda and Linda took
me on a tour of town, which included a stop at a railroad crossing. The story goes that at that very location, two
friends watched as a young Bobby Zimmerman, tired of waiting for a train to
pass, threw caution to the wind, and darted out on his motorcycle just as the
caboose passed by, without waiting to see if the coast was clear. It wasn’t, because at the exact same instance,
a train was crossing from the other direction, hidden by the train they had
been waiting on. Linda and Linda had
been told by these old friends of Bobby Zimmerman that they were certain he’d
been run over. When they caught up with
him later, happy to see this was not the case, they could tell he was
rattled. They also would come to notice
in the months that followed, that this was a changed young man in their midst. A transfigured man perhaps?
In Dylan’s own words (from the Rolling Stone
interview), “transfiguration is what
allows you to crawl out from under the chaos and fly above it. That’s how I can still do what I do and write
the songs I sing and just keep on moving”.
He goes on to refer to two other motorcycle accidents that came about
years after the railroad crossing Hibbing event, one that killed another Bobby
Zimmerman in 1964, and the one that anyone who knows anything about Bob Dylan’s
life has heard about; that being his well-publicized accident in 1966. He insinuates that these events tie together
somehow in a way that transfigured him. However,
Linda and Linda’s story had me thinking that Dylan may have gotten his transfiguration
moment wrong. In other words, it could
have happened a lot earlier, in Hibbing, at that railroad crossing, which would explain pre-1964 transcendent songs
such as “A Hard Rain’s a Gonna Fall”, “Blowin’ in the Wind” and “The Times They
Are a Changin’” and many others. I’m thinking Linda Whiteside may agree based
on our exchanges over the past year.
Linda’s email was chock full of commentary
about that transfiguration interview, cut and pasted from the labor-of-love Bob
Dylan fan site Expecting Rain ( https://www.expectingrain.com/ ) Linda’s timing was impeccable. It was a labor of friendship, and much
appreciated. Reading that commentary allowed
me to flesh out my thoughts on the topic.
In turn, one of two major loose ends in this Master Blue Print year was
tying itself up quite nicely. Amazingly,
the other one, which I had no expectations of seeing to an endgame, began
playing itself out that very same Sunday evening. For, not long after getting Linda’s email, I
got another email, this one from my longtime great friend Mac, who I have written
about often in these pages. Mac got wind
of a premiere regional showing of the new movie about the life of bluesman Paul
Butterfield: Horn from the Heart, which
was playing at the Regent Theatre in Arlington on Monday evening. Of even more interest, the event would
include a post-movie live interview with Mr. Al Kooper.
Some background is needed. Back in 2016, Mac and I caught a fantastic
Bob Dylan tribute show at the Berklee Performance Center in Boston, with Al
Kooper playing the role of MC. I wanted
to write about it a few months back, but first I needed to fill in some of the
gaps in my memory of the show. I was
especially interested in recalling more of Kooper’s between-song banter, which
was rich in reflection and allegory:
After all, this man has been there and done that when it comes to some
of the most significant moments in Rock history, including playing those famous
organ notes on “Like a Rolling Stone” (and keyboards on much of Blonde on Blonde), and it was clear from
his online interviews and that Berklee event, that he knew how to spin that
yarn. I tried searching out reviews of
the Berklee show, but to my astonishment, there was nothing. How could such an event go undocumented? I finally reached out to the Berklee
Performance Center itself. They were
very cordial, but in the end, were only able to get me the concert flyer (which
I already had). They also suggested that
I try to reach out directly to Al Kooper, sending me the link to his website
which includes information on how to contact him.
Not long after, I did reach out to Al
Kooper, and to my pleasant surprise, he got right back to me. Kooper could not recall much of anything he
said that evening at the Berklee but having been clued into my blog site during
our back and forth exchange, (which of course was necessary to explain my
interest in reaching out to him), he left the door open for me to build something
new on what I’d initiated. I thought
about it, but I had nothing. Nothing
unique anyway. I let the notion
percolate quietly in the back of my mind, but as the weeks and months rolled
by, I concluded that this was not going to work out. It felt too contrived.
Mac had no clue about any of this, which is
why I was floored when he contacted me about this Regent Theatre event at a
time when I was hitting the home stretch with these Dylan blog entries. And so now here I was with Mac in the front
row of the first balcony on Monday nite, watching a documentary about Paul
Butterfield, and anticipating Al Kooper’s commentary afterward. The movie was bittersweet: The super-talented Butterfield having died long
before his time due to substance abuse, as be the case for so many other
musicians. Several of those other
musicians were in the movie too, including Rick Danko, Levon Helm, and Mike
Bloomfield. Horn from the Heart was brutally honest, and included a moving
interview with Paul Butterfield’s son, who felt he’d missed out on significant
aspects of a fatherly figure in his upbringing.
It was tough to watch, and yet, taking in the whole ball of wax - the
rise to fame, the brilliance, the decline, the absenteeism - this was a story
that needed to be told. It was all food
for thought as I watched.
With the documentary over, two chairs were placed
center stage. After a few words of
praise, Kooper was introduced by his interviewer to much applause, and the
75-year-old rock star meandered up on to the stage. He then proceeded to pour his heart out to
the crowd; as insightful and witty as I had remembered him at the Berklee 2
years earlier. He has had relationships
with all the musicians mentioned in this entry so far: Butterfield, Bloomfield,
Danko, Helm, and of course, Bob Dylan.
It was great to witness that he was getting all this out there now, while
he still could (Kooper is also currently hosting his own radio show, where he
gets to really expound).
Anyhow, from my vantage point this was all
beginning to feel eerily familiar: Two
chairs center stage with Mac and I sitting stage left in the front row of the
balcony. The last time I was in this exact
same situation, Pete Townshend was on a book tour, and Mac and I were sitting stage
left in the front row of the balcony, at the Berklee. In that event, I was able
to pose several questions to Townshend when the interviewer opened up the floor
to the audience (see Under the Big Top
# 1: "A Pete Meet and Greet"). Was I in
store to repeat?
The answer is yes. After about 30 minutes of questions and
answers between Al Kooper and the interviewer, talking points were welcomed from
the crowd. Unlike how I had felt at the tail end of my email exchange with
Kooper months earlier, this moment felt genuine. I stood up and with all eyes turned my way I proceeded
to praise the documentary. I then
expressed hope that Horn from the Heart
was the start of a wave of such movies about brilliant musicians who died
before their time, including documentaries that could be done on Rick Danko,
Richard Manuel and Mike Bloomfield.
Their stories needed to be told just like Paul Butterfield’s story; the
magic, the tragic, all of it. One of the
producers was in the crowd. I hope she
took note. Al Kooper certainly did, and
he responded in kind (particularly in the case of Bloomfield, whom he was very
close with). Life as a rock and roll
star on the road can be grueling. It can
have its transcendent moments for sure, but it can also take its toll.
After the show, Mac and I headed down the
stairs and were on our way out the door, when I spotted Al Kooper making his
way up the aisle with an associate. The
only person between him and I was an autograph hound. I stopped in my tracks for the chance to
shake Kooper’s hand, which finally happened after he graciously signed a stack
full of this other guy’s old Blood Sweat and Tear records. As Al and I shook hands, I mentioned our
email exchange. I also mentioned that I
was the guy who posed those talking points from the balcony. He gave me a knowing look and a nod. It was all I needed to confirm that I was on
target with how I dealt with this chain of events. Sometimes, if you just sit
on something for a while, it plays out much better in the end. Significant loose end # 2 all tied up.
As be the case every Master Blueprint week,
my drives to work were intensifying with each passing day, as I repeated “Every
Grain of Sand” on my cd player (along with a handful of other Bob Dylan “Gospel
Years” songs). I’ll say this about Dylan
right here and now: He’s had a renewing effect on my spirituality this
year. With Christmas in the air, this
fact was becoming more apparent. I
believe Bob Dylan’s spiritual effect on our culture will be a significant part
of his legacy when all is said and done; much more so than it is recognized
now.
I continued to read through Linda’s
transfiguration email as the week wore on. One entry led me to a Wiki page for a
1965 album by American fingerstyle guitarist and composer John Fahey titled
“The Transfiguration of Blind Joe Death”.
I’d never heard of this album or this musician before. Further research led me to the following
quote from the producer about recording Fahey perform a key song on the album:
“He sat there with a dog at his feet.
There’s one track where the dog barks in the middle of the music – it was my
decision to leave that false start in”.
This was pretty darn cool, because the version of “Every Grain of Sand”
I had been listening to all week (from the Bootleg Series), includes a dog
barking in the background ( https://vimeo.com/189420194 - the dog barks at 2:15 mark and the 3:10 mark). It was just another outlandish synergistic
moment in a year filled with them.
On Wednesday, I had to miss the office
Christmas party for the biggest event of the week: Charlotte was coming home from a year in Panama
and Colombia. Nancy and I picked her up
at Logan Airport in Boston. There was
much rejoicing. Charlotte’s been
trekking thru all sorts of grains of sand this past year, much of it related to
her internship at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama City,
and some of it on her own weekend time.
She’s explored those sands on protected shores to watch threatened sea
turtles hatch. In the deep rainforests
to catch much more than just a glimpse of resplendent quetzals in flight. In the urban cultural meccas of Bogota,
Medellin, Cali, and Panama City. On mountain peaks in the Andes. On hardened molten lava at the edges of
active volcanoes. Among coral reefs on
both the Atlantic and Pacific shores of the region. Beneath a canopy alive with night monkeys,
another with howler monkeys, and yet another with spider monkeys. I’ve lived vicariously through it all, but
it’s a blessing to have her home now, if only for a brief period.
One line in “Every Grain of Sand” that I
zeroed in on that Thursday morning as I drove into work goes:
“I
hear the ancient footsteps like the motion of the sea
Sometimes
I turn, there’s someone there, other times it’s only me”
I thought of the poem “Footprints in the
Sand”; yet another sandy reference which at its core is about God carrying us
in our hardest of times. The Bob Dylan
lyrics lines above come across as a twist on this poem, where he is pointing
out that, when we are on our game, we connect with the presence of God and the
presence of our loved ones, and in those other often self-inflicted dark times,
we feel (but are not) alone.
I’ve been in both these worlds…. we all
have. But this past week, no doubt, I
was immersed in the former. I was
feeling connected: The grains of sand pouring fast and furious through the
hourglass neck now. Friday continued along this vein with the ‘Steeves Man of the
Year’ gathering, better known as SMOY. I’ve
had the honor of receiving this prestigious award several times, most recently
2 years ago. The recipient chooses the
next year’s location and recipient. Last
year I chose, my Brother-in-Law, Paul.
This year Paul chose my Dad, who has appropriately had his name on the
trophy more often than any of us. Dad
initiated this unique, bonafide annual lunch gathering back in 1999. He (and my Mom) have a knack for launching such
incredibly joyous endeavors. None of us
take it for granted.
Saturday, Charlotte reunited with her 5
best undergrad friends. We hosted the
gathering, Nancy preparing a fantastic meal.
Peter walked in the door not soon after, finally home for the holidays
after a week of grueling exams. It was
quite the moment to see he and Charlotte embrace. Our family was one once again.
On Sunday after Mass, I approached the
pastor, Father Jeremy, to wish him a Merry Christmas. He pulled me aside from the crowd and stated
that a parish benefactor handed him a 100-dollar bill the day before asking
that he give it to someone in need. He
described the moment as somewhat miraculous, but I did not have an opportunity
to get to the meat of why. Anyhow, he
pulled the bill out and asked that I give it to John and June Leary for their
grandson’s and their own Christmas wishes, but I was already way ahead of him
in my mind. I thanked him profusely and
then headed to the local 7-eleven for a cup of coffee and wouldn’t you know it,
there was John Leary sitting at the lone table in the place, sipping on his own
cup of coffee (when he’s feeling up to it, John makes his way slowly to the
store from his apartment one block away, using a walker). I walked over and handed him the $100. He refused to accept until I gave him the
story behind it, at which point he showed me his appreciation, accepted the
bill and slipped it into his empty wallet. We carried on for a bit, exchanging
well wishes. I tried to be subtle, but
there was a dapper gentleman, who appeared to be in his 70s, sitting right behind
John. He immediately picked up on what was going on and was nodding throughout
in admiration. I had never seen this guy before which is unusual in this small
town. As I departed, he thanked me and said, ‘well done’. It all had the feel of scenes in “It’s a Wonderful
Life”; this gentleman playing the role of Clarence Odbody.
My “Every Grain of Sand” week began with
John Leary, and it felt apropos that it would end with him as well. With all those sand grains now in the bottom
of that proverbial hourglass, I flipped it over, and started anew.
Merry Christmas everyone.
- Pete
Personal reflections based on the inspiration of songs. The "Fab Foundations" series (2020) is inspired by the music of the Beatles. "Master Blueprints" (2018) centered on Bob Dylan. "Under the Big Top" (2016) was on the Who. “Forever Young” (2014) was Neil Young centric. “Stepping Stones” (2012) focused on the Rolling Stones. The first 100 postings (the original "Gem Videos") emailed to friends and family and later added here are from 2008 and 2009; include songs from a variety of musicians.
Monday, December 24, 2018
Sunday, December 16, 2018
Master Blueprints # 46: "Lights Flicker from the Opposite Loft, In This Room the Heat Pipes Just Cough”
(Personal reflections
inspired by Bob Dylan songs)
Song: “Visions of Johanna”
Album: Blonde on Blonde
Release Date: June 1966
The woods. Campfires. Hiking. Why was I thinking about these open-space archetypes all week as I listened to “Visions of Johanna”? I mean, on the face of things, the two worlds could not be more diametrically opposed. Listen to that Bob Dylan classic off the 1966 masterpiece Blonde on Blonde at any level, and you only get an urban feel for place. A very urban feel. A New York City feel. Heat pipes, empty lots, all-night girls, night watchmen, the “D-train”, museums, and fish trucks. They are all there in “Visions of Johanna”. Nothing doing for trees, streams and fire pits.
But here’s the thing: This song transcends locale. It also transcends any specific meaning, such as the longing for someone who is not there (although that is a beautiful angle on the song). Much of the reason for this has to do with trailblazing. “Visions of Johanna” and the album it is on, was the thick icing on the cake that Bob Dylan had been baking since he introduced himself to the world four years earlier. For many of us, we can’t help but hear the far bigger and broader narrative. The song and the album were introducing a significant moment in time; a counterculture period that would ultimately prove to affect multiple generations, including mine, and now maybe even my children’s.
And yet, why the woods? To flesh this out, I’ll need to first go back a ways. I grew up in a small town in the 60s and 70s. Indeed, Franklin, Massachusetts was quite rural back in the day. There were certain unique qualities in that town at that time that helped to shape who I am, which can be hard to define. However, over the years I’ve taken stabs at this, and I hope some of it has seeped through in these blog writeups. I’ll be doing more of that here as I try to explain the connection to “Visions of Johanna” ( https://vimeo.com/188544213 ).
Anyhow, that rural Franklin where I spent my formative years is long gone, replaced by suburban sprawl. Fifteen years ago, though, I discovered a modern-day Franklin of yore; Pepperell, Massachusetts. I did some exploring. No traffic lights. No long lines anywhere. A neighborly familiarity at the grocery store. And lots of woods. After some cajoling, I talked my wife Nancy into moving here - she having been raised in the far-more urban Woburn, Massachusetts, where all the creature comforts were within a few minutes driving distance. We have since had the privilege of calling Pepperell our home.
Why the yearning? I mean, I can live just about anywhere. Cities work for me. So, too does the countryside. And the ocean. The mountains. Old. New. Even suburbia. Well, I yearned because I knew a good thing when I experienced it as a kid, and I wanted my kids to have that same experience. After moving to Pepperell, we would take Charlotte and Peter out into the woods regularly, and as they grew up, I’d tell them to get out there on their own with their friends. I’d also tell them that ‘out there’ on the foot trails and under the canopy is where the real magic happens. They took me up on it and came to understand what I was talking about.
What did I mean by this? I was not sure how to explain at first, but over time I’ve gotten better at articulating it. In the woods, you get to experience the dynamic side of your true nature more than anywhere else. You can probably find that dynamism virtually anywhere and in any way if you are of open mind (as be the case with Bob Dylan when he wrote “Visions of Johanna”), but in the woods, it can manifest itself more readily.
I think an example or two will best get my point across. Let me start with a compare/contrast: The use of traditional maps to get from point A to point B vs. the modern-day approach of commanding your car or smartphone to get you somewhere. I have a strong bias to the traditional approach, although I will admit upfront that in a pinch and tight on time, I will turn to new technology to find my destination. But I do try to minimize that dependency. I also realize that some people are simply not blessed with a sense of direction, and so this technology is a godsend for them. But some of us are blessed with the ability to navigate. I’m one of them, and I’ve managed to take this God-given skill and make it a career, working as a computer mapping specialist (GIS) at the United States Geological Survey (USGS) for over 30 years now. In this capacity, I’m surrounded by others of similar ability.
About 15 years ago I was in Denver, and after a long day of work, a group of us chose a place to eat which was a bit off the beaten path. I reached for the paper map in the glove compartment when one of these colleagues pulled out his cell phone and stated, ‘I got this’. He then proceeded to establish our location using GPS and then punched in the address where we were going. Voila! Instant directions. We wouldn’t even have to think. A decade or so earlier, I had a sense on where all this was going; long before digital directions became the widespread technology we use today. In fact, the work my colleagues and I were doing at that time were forging that path. And now, here we were at the transition moment, heading to a restaurant in Denver. You would think I’d have been ecstatic, but this was not my reaction. Instead, I looked at him and the words that came out of my mouth were a half-joking “shame on you!”.
He didn’t get it, so I explained that he and I had these natural abilities of orientation, and if he was not careful he was going to see them erode. My colleague begged to differ, arguing the technology had nothing but beneficial consequences. I don’t know. I guess he had a point. Still, I needed to think more about why I felt the way I did. Not long after, it hit me. I thought of the woods, just like I did this week. And from there I thought of Native Americans and other primitive peoples, their connection to the natural world, and in turn their ability to see the God-given skills in their young people as they experience the natural world. For example, they can see the special ability in one child to track wild animals. They see it in another one who has an uncanny knowledge of where groundwater can be found. Another can understand the communication among a murder of crows. Yet another can decipher the medicinal properties of native plants. And to my point, another who has a detailed map of their world ingrained in his/her mind. This is all dynamic. We too have uncanny, inexplicable skills like these. Most of us will never get anywhere near our capabilities however. Our world is too contrived to allow it.
What does this have to do with “Visions of Johanna”? Well, first off, as with all the music off Blonde on Blonde, this is a deep song that pulled young people back in a dynamic direction. Music like this was simply not written in the mid-60s, or any time before that, particularly in the genre of rock and roll. But it blossomed after. In other words, Bob Dylan brought intellect to rock and roll and to a generation of rock listeners. This was not just the type of intellect where someone would say he was ‘well read’. The lyrics in all his songs play this out, but all I have to do is use the lines in “Visions of Johanna to prove this point. And so, it was also a philosophical intellect (“But Mona Lisa musta had the highway blues, you can tell by the way she smiles”). It too was faith intellect (“and Madonna, she still has not showed”). It was an intellect that explored deeper meaning and emotion related to love (“Louise, she’s all right, she’s just near, she’s delicate and seems like the mirror, but she just makes it all too concise and too clear, that Johanna’s not here”), empathy (“The peddler now speaks to the countess who’s pretending to care for him, sayin’ ‘Name me someone that’s not a parasite and I’ll go out and say a prayer for him’”), and quite often what it meant to be American (“and the country music plays soft, but there’s nothing, really nothing to turn off”). It was even an intellect related to humor (“Hear the one with the mustache say, ‘Jeez, I can’t find my knees’”). Most important though, it was an intellect based on insight to our yearning for dynamics in our lives (“The fiddler he now steps to the road, he writes ev’rything’s been returned which was owed, on the back of the fish truck that loads, while my conscience explodes”).
Bob Dylan could have kept his voice in the folk world, and he would have done quite well there. But by ‘going electric’ he opened his brilliance to mass appeal. In turn, he initiated a movement. The youth of the free world were not only ready for his sound, they were also ready for his intellect. Say what you will about the 60s counterculture, but one thing that can’t be denied, and which resonates to this day, is that there was an underlying effort to grasp a deeper meaning to life. To separate the real from the fake. The essential from the superfluous. The substance from the material.
One place I’ve always felt closer to the flame is literally close to the flame: Sitting around a campfire. We have a firepit in the backyard here in Pepperell. As be the case in the many camping trips we’ve enjoyed over the years with friends and family, this is the spot where you really can unwind. It’s also where people tend to open up, more so than usual. And the intellect and dynamics of the conversations ramp up a notch or two as well. Stare into that fire long enough and all sorts of visions start jumping out. I occasionally find myself connecting with the elders of some ancient tribe, passing the peace pipe. And, I find myself connecting with my younger self; many moons spent under the stars, be it winter, summer, spring or fall, with a fire crackling in front of me and my friends. All those great discussions about love, hopes and dreams. My conscience exploding in those moments.
My son Peter has spent many-a-night sitting around that firepit with his friends when he was in high school. And he did this at his friends’ homes too. But more importantly, he did the same thing in the woods, like I did in Franklin in my high school years. As he grew, and we talked, I could see the experience of dynamic life unfold in his eyes. It was so cool to see. I was thankful. It guaranteed we could connect on many levels for as long as time allowed.
I’m not sure of this next point, but I’m thinking the 60s introduced a new/ancient atmosphere back into the American culture: That peace-pipe circle and its meaning. As mentioned above, it happened outdoors, but the indoors was not exempt. In this case, the key ingredients were friends and loud music. Yes, maybe a bong was sitting in the center of that circle, but it was not essential. What was essential was listening to that music. There were lyrics to read in the album sleeves. There was off key singing. There was air guitar. There was the requisite Hendrix poster on the wall. There was nodding in approval. There was intelligent interpretation. In those moments, I’m telling you, there was also telepathy. Bob Dylan gets the credit in my book for bringing it all back home: The peace-pipe circle that is.
As for my daughter Charlotte, well, the fact that she’s hiking in some remote forest in Colombia as I type this speaks for itself. I remember the moment when I could begin to envision her path in life. We were on an overnight ferry coming home from an amazing trip to Newfoundland. Charlotte was around 13 at the time. The week there had a remote rugged feel to it. Puffins. Icebergs. Fjords. Caribou. On that trip home, all the cabins on the ferry were booked and so, as with many others, we sprawled out on the comfortable reclining chairs in the general seating area. Charlotte could not sleep and so she roamed the deck. When the horns blew to announce that we were soon docking, we gathered our stuff and headed down to the car. As we loaded, Charlotte looked at me and said “Dad, I saw poster a poster on the wall last nite. It said, ‘you couldn’t be any further from Disney than you are right now’”.
Today, I’d like to credit Pepperell and Bob Dylan for that moment.
It’s good to have stability, but I think there should always be more than a little room for the dynamic. So, if you know someone who is not married to their smart phone. Or they drive a shit box. Or they like to use paper maps. Or, they find far more appeal to identifying a plant than living in luxury. Or they shake their head often at the greed around them. Or they see the forest for the trees, literally and figuratively, then you might not have to look any further than the effect that the ideals of the counterculture 60s had on them. It’s all by choice, folks. And, it may be the only way to leave sufficient mental space for dynamic life, an open mind, and of course, those visions.
- Pete
Song: “Visions of Johanna”
Album: Blonde on Blonde
Release Date: June 1966
The woods. Campfires. Hiking. Why was I thinking about these open-space archetypes all week as I listened to “Visions of Johanna”? I mean, on the face of things, the two worlds could not be more diametrically opposed. Listen to that Bob Dylan classic off the 1966 masterpiece Blonde on Blonde at any level, and you only get an urban feel for place. A very urban feel. A New York City feel. Heat pipes, empty lots, all-night girls, night watchmen, the “D-train”, museums, and fish trucks. They are all there in “Visions of Johanna”. Nothing doing for trees, streams and fire pits.
But here’s the thing: This song transcends locale. It also transcends any specific meaning, such as the longing for someone who is not there (although that is a beautiful angle on the song). Much of the reason for this has to do with trailblazing. “Visions of Johanna” and the album it is on, was the thick icing on the cake that Bob Dylan had been baking since he introduced himself to the world four years earlier. For many of us, we can’t help but hear the far bigger and broader narrative. The song and the album were introducing a significant moment in time; a counterculture period that would ultimately prove to affect multiple generations, including mine, and now maybe even my children’s.
And yet, why the woods? To flesh this out, I’ll need to first go back a ways. I grew up in a small town in the 60s and 70s. Indeed, Franklin, Massachusetts was quite rural back in the day. There were certain unique qualities in that town at that time that helped to shape who I am, which can be hard to define. However, over the years I’ve taken stabs at this, and I hope some of it has seeped through in these blog writeups. I’ll be doing more of that here as I try to explain the connection to “Visions of Johanna” ( https://vimeo.com/188544213 ).
Anyhow, that rural Franklin where I spent my formative years is long gone, replaced by suburban sprawl. Fifteen years ago, though, I discovered a modern-day Franklin of yore; Pepperell, Massachusetts. I did some exploring. No traffic lights. No long lines anywhere. A neighborly familiarity at the grocery store. And lots of woods. After some cajoling, I talked my wife Nancy into moving here - she having been raised in the far-more urban Woburn, Massachusetts, where all the creature comforts were within a few minutes driving distance. We have since had the privilege of calling Pepperell our home.
Why the yearning? I mean, I can live just about anywhere. Cities work for me. So, too does the countryside. And the ocean. The mountains. Old. New. Even suburbia. Well, I yearned because I knew a good thing when I experienced it as a kid, and I wanted my kids to have that same experience. After moving to Pepperell, we would take Charlotte and Peter out into the woods regularly, and as they grew up, I’d tell them to get out there on their own with their friends. I’d also tell them that ‘out there’ on the foot trails and under the canopy is where the real magic happens. They took me up on it and came to understand what I was talking about.
What did I mean by this? I was not sure how to explain at first, but over time I’ve gotten better at articulating it. In the woods, you get to experience the dynamic side of your true nature more than anywhere else. You can probably find that dynamism virtually anywhere and in any way if you are of open mind (as be the case with Bob Dylan when he wrote “Visions of Johanna”), but in the woods, it can manifest itself more readily.
I think an example or two will best get my point across. Let me start with a compare/contrast: The use of traditional maps to get from point A to point B vs. the modern-day approach of commanding your car or smartphone to get you somewhere. I have a strong bias to the traditional approach, although I will admit upfront that in a pinch and tight on time, I will turn to new technology to find my destination. But I do try to minimize that dependency. I also realize that some people are simply not blessed with a sense of direction, and so this technology is a godsend for them. But some of us are blessed with the ability to navigate. I’m one of them, and I’ve managed to take this God-given skill and make it a career, working as a computer mapping specialist (GIS) at the United States Geological Survey (USGS) for over 30 years now. In this capacity, I’m surrounded by others of similar ability.
About 15 years ago I was in Denver, and after a long day of work, a group of us chose a place to eat which was a bit off the beaten path. I reached for the paper map in the glove compartment when one of these colleagues pulled out his cell phone and stated, ‘I got this’. He then proceeded to establish our location using GPS and then punched in the address where we were going. Voila! Instant directions. We wouldn’t even have to think. A decade or so earlier, I had a sense on where all this was going; long before digital directions became the widespread technology we use today. In fact, the work my colleagues and I were doing at that time were forging that path. And now, here we were at the transition moment, heading to a restaurant in Denver. You would think I’d have been ecstatic, but this was not my reaction. Instead, I looked at him and the words that came out of my mouth were a half-joking “shame on you!”.
He didn’t get it, so I explained that he and I had these natural abilities of orientation, and if he was not careful he was going to see them erode. My colleague begged to differ, arguing the technology had nothing but beneficial consequences. I don’t know. I guess he had a point. Still, I needed to think more about why I felt the way I did. Not long after, it hit me. I thought of the woods, just like I did this week. And from there I thought of Native Americans and other primitive peoples, their connection to the natural world, and in turn their ability to see the God-given skills in their young people as they experience the natural world. For example, they can see the special ability in one child to track wild animals. They see it in another one who has an uncanny knowledge of where groundwater can be found. Another can understand the communication among a murder of crows. Yet another can decipher the medicinal properties of native plants. And to my point, another who has a detailed map of their world ingrained in his/her mind. This is all dynamic. We too have uncanny, inexplicable skills like these. Most of us will never get anywhere near our capabilities however. Our world is too contrived to allow it.
What does this have to do with “Visions of Johanna”? Well, first off, as with all the music off Blonde on Blonde, this is a deep song that pulled young people back in a dynamic direction. Music like this was simply not written in the mid-60s, or any time before that, particularly in the genre of rock and roll. But it blossomed after. In other words, Bob Dylan brought intellect to rock and roll and to a generation of rock listeners. This was not just the type of intellect where someone would say he was ‘well read’. The lyrics in all his songs play this out, but all I have to do is use the lines in “Visions of Johanna to prove this point. And so, it was also a philosophical intellect (“But Mona Lisa musta had the highway blues, you can tell by the way she smiles”). It too was faith intellect (“and Madonna, she still has not showed”). It was an intellect that explored deeper meaning and emotion related to love (“Louise, she’s all right, she’s just near, she’s delicate and seems like the mirror, but she just makes it all too concise and too clear, that Johanna’s not here”), empathy (“The peddler now speaks to the countess who’s pretending to care for him, sayin’ ‘Name me someone that’s not a parasite and I’ll go out and say a prayer for him’”), and quite often what it meant to be American (“and the country music plays soft, but there’s nothing, really nothing to turn off”). It was even an intellect related to humor (“Hear the one with the mustache say, ‘Jeez, I can’t find my knees’”). Most important though, it was an intellect based on insight to our yearning for dynamics in our lives (“The fiddler he now steps to the road, he writes ev’rything’s been returned which was owed, on the back of the fish truck that loads, while my conscience explodes”).
Bob Dylan could have kept his voice in the folk world, and he would have done quite well there. But by ‘going electric’ he opened his brilliance to mass appeal. In turn, he initiated a movement. The youth of the free world were not only ready for his sound, they were also ready for his intellect. Say what you will about the 60s counterculture, but one thing that can’t be denied, and which resonates to this day, is that there was an underlying effort to grasp a deeper meaning to life. To separate the real from the fake. The essential from the superfluous. The substance from the material.
One place I’ve always felt closer to the flame is literally close to the flame: Sitting around a campfire. We have a firepit in the backyard here in Pepperell. As be the case in the many camping trips we’ve enjoyed over the years with friends and family, this is the spot where you really can unwind. It’s also where people tend to open up, more so than usual. And the intellect and dynamics of the conversations ramp up a notch or two as well. Stare into that fire long enough and all sorts of visions start jumping out. I occasionally find myself connecting with the elders of some ancient tribe, passing the peace pipe. And, I find myself connecting with my younger self; many moons spent under the stars, be it winter, summer, spring or fall, with a fire crackling in front of me and my friends. All those great discussions about love, hopes and dreams. My conscience exploding in those moments.
My son Peter has spent many-a-night sitting around that firepit with his friends when he was in high school. And he did this at his friends’ homes too. But more importantly, he did the same thing in the woods, like I did in Franklin in my high school years. As he grew, and we talked, I could see the experience of dynamic life unfold in his eyes. It was so cool to see. I was thankful. It guaranteed we could connect on many levels for as long as time allowed.
I’m not sure of this next point, but I’m thinking the 60s introduced a new/ancient atmosphere back into the American culture: That peace-pipe circle and its meaning. As mentioned above, it happened outdoors, but the indoors was not exempt. In this case, the key ingredients were friends and loud music. Yes, maybe a bong was sitting in the center of that circle, but it was not essential. What was essential was listening to that music. There were lyrics to read in the album sleeves. There was off key singing. There was air guitar. There was the requisite Hendrix poster on the wall. There was nodding in approval. There was intelligent interpretation. In those moments, I’m telling you, there was also telepathy. Bob Dylan gets the credit in my book for bringing it all back home: The peace-pipe circle that is.
As for my daughter Charlotte, well, the fact that she’s hiking in some remote forest in Colombia as I type this speaks for itself. I remember the moment when I could begin to envision her path in life. We were on an overnight ferry coming home from an amazing trip to Newfoundland. Charlotte was around 13 at the time. The week there had a remote rugged feel to it. Puffins. Icebergs. Fjords. Caribou. On that trip home, all the cabins on the ferry were booked and so, as with many others, we sprawled out on the comfortable reclining chairs in the general seating area. Charlotte could not sleep and so she roamed the deck. When the horns blew to announce that we were soon docking, we gathered our stuff and headed down to the car. As we loaded, Charlotte looked at me and said “Dad, I saw poster a poster on the wall last nite. It said, ‘you couldn’t be any further from Disney than you are right now’”.
Today, I’d like to credit Pepperell and Bob Dylan for that moment.
It’s good to have stability, but I think there should always be more than a little room for the dynamic. So, if you know someone who is not married to their smart phone. Or they drive a shit box. Or they like to use paper maps. Or, they find far more appeal to identifying a plant than living in luxury. Or they shake their head often at the greed around them. Or they see the forest for the trees, literally and figuratively, then you might not have to look any further than the effect that the ideals of the counterculture 60s had on them. It’s all by choice, folks. And, it may be the only way to leave sufficient mental space for dynamic life, an open mind, and of course, those visions.
- Pete
Saturday, December 8, 2018
Master Blueprints # 45: "How Many Roads Must a Man Walk Down, Before You Call Him a Man”
(Personal reflections inspired by Bob Dylan songs)
Song: “Blowin’ In the
Wind”
Album: The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan
Release Date: May 1963
Pilgrimage 3 of 3
Back in early March I visited the town of
Bob Dylan’s upbringing, Hibbing, Minnesota, while on a work trip to
International Falls, Minnesota, which I wrote about in Master Blueprint #
10. I took another Dylan-related journey
to Woodstock, in the Catskills of Upper State New York in early September, in
search of inspiration from that geographic cornerstone in his life, which I
wrote about in Master Blueprint # 34. And
my trilogy of Bob Dylan-centric destinations was completed this past weekend
when I traveled with my wife Nancy to Greenwich Village, in the heart of
Manhattan, New York City.
This was the 8th trip to the Big
Apple in my lifetime, all of which have been very memorable. Scattered among
them, I’d pretty much taken in all the major sightseeing locales: The Statue of
Liberty, the Empire State Building, Central Park, Rockefeller Center, Times
Square, the United Nations, the Museum of Natural History, Strawberry Fields,
Tribeca, Little Italy, Chinatown, Soho, Harlem, and of course, Greenwich
Village. I have written about a handful
of my excursions to NYC in these Music
and Memory blog pages over the past decade, including two indelible winter
road trips with my Canadian brethren back in the 80s, each of which was spent
homeless for a night (see Under the Big
Top # 7 here ). Another writeup that comes to mind was about
heading down with a crew of great friends to see the Who perform Quadrophenia at Madison Square Garden
(see Under the Big Top # 9 here ). And then there was the fantastic Ray Davies
show at the Westbeth Theatre that I witnessed with my great friend Mac, which
I’ve discussed here and there in these pages.
I drove through a blizzard to see that one.
One trip I’d not elaborated on was taken in
the spring of 2001, a few months before 9/11 (which, by the way is an event
which I have also written about….see Under
the Big Top # 37 here ). That was the last time I’d traveled to
Manhattan. I was with Nancy and the kids. Charlotte was only six at the time. Peter was two. I recently dug through the photos from that
trip, knowing I’d be heading back there soon.
One photo is of us on a ferry heading out to the Statue of Liberty. It was a beautiful day, not a cloud in the
sky. Behind us are the Twin Towers,
glimmering in the sunlight. It brings
back great memories, but it’s also eerie when I look at that photograph. 9/11 was also cloudless.
Seventeen years have passed since that trip. Our daughter is 24 now, our son 20. Empty Nesters, Nancy and I, with quite a bit
more freedom to hit the road. Not that I’m anywhere near there yet, but I now
have another angle on why people travel a lot in their retirement: Life on the road gets you to think out of the
box far more than life at home, which in turn can get the creative juices
flowing. From this perspective, travel
tends to feed itself. Nancy and I have
done a lot of travelling over the years, before and with children. Those experiences can now pay off in ways that
were unforeseen until these recent insights.
All we must do at this point is get back out there.
As mentioned in the last entry (Blueprint #
44), marriage is a blending of two individual’s values. which played out to a tee over the weekend,
seeing as Nancy and I tackled not one, but two locales for this trip, the other
being Asbury Park, New Jersey. This one was
Nancy’s contribution. She’s a big
Southside Johnny fan, he who is one of a handful of Jersey Shore rock stars who
got his feet wet playing at the local clubs along the boardwalk, including the
most famous of them all, the Iron Horse (where we got to spend some time
exploring that Friday evening). Nancy
and I have been to a good number of Southside Johnny’s shows in the Boston area
over the years, she more than myself.
He’s a helluva showman.
Anyhow, from a Bob Dylan ‘pilgrimage’ and
blog-writing perspective, this side trek rounded out the journey
perfectly. For example, Dylan’s image
was surprisingly cropping up all over the place in Asbury Park: Street art,
murals, postcards, and other depictions. I’m now thinking this must have had a
lot to do the man who inducted Dylan into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: Bruce
Springsteen. The Boss is already a legend
in this neck of the woods. His image,
along with others in his E Street Band takes up about half the wall space at
the Iron Horse (Southside Johnny and the Asbury Juke cover a fair percentage
too). And so, if Bruce Springsteen looks
up to Bob Dylan, it must follow that so does most everyone else who lives
there.
Nancy and I strolled the lengthy boardwalk early
Saturday morning from the Asbury Park Convention Hall deep into neighboring
Ocean Grove and back, talking about Charlotte (now in Colombia), Peter’s
schoolyear, Hurricane Sandy, “Under the Boardwalk”, the value of sand dunes, and
the day ahead. Back at the Convention
Hall, which was just opening for business, (photo below) we split up for a bit
while shopping around. My mind wandered
to my blog world. I thought about Bob
Dylan getting detained by police while roaming the nearby streets in the
pouring rain about 10 years ago, looking into the windows of a property that
was for sale. It’s been speculated he
was in search of the home where Bruce Springsteen penned “Born to Run” ( Dylan-detained-Jersey-Shore ). I thought
about Dylan’s supposed ‘ode’ to Bruce Springsteen and his Jersey haunts, that
being the song “Tweeter and the Monkey Man” off the Traveling Wilburys first
album, which Joan Osborne performed brilliantly two nights earlier at the
Wilbur Theatre in Boston (again see Blueprint # 44). Was “Tweeter” and the Monkey Man” praise, or
parody? Bob Dylan’s not sayin’. Finally, I thought about the relationship
between these two men and the effect Dylan has had on so many of us,
Springsteen right there near the top of the list.
The first part of our journey complete, we then
drove north up the Garden State Parkway and Route 95, veering East on Route 78
into Jersey City, the Holland Tunnel minutes away. I’d never had this view of Manhattan before, usually
looking at it from the Northeast, North, or Northwest. It was impressive. The elevated highway view revealed the
immensity of the metropolis in front of us, from Battery Park to the George
Washington Bridge. There’s nowhere else like
it in the world to my knowledge. I
thought about Bob Dylan and what he must have felt like arriving here for the
first time, hitchhiking from the Midwest on a wing and a prayer, in the harsh
winter of 1961, a full year and a half before I was born. What was he doing
there amongst the populous right now, 57 years later, near the end of his
Beacon Theatre residency? I thought
about many of the other musicians and bands who adopted New York as their
home-away-from-home over the years, including British groups like the Rolling
Stones and the Who, and most notably, John Lennon. I thought about those earlier treks of mine
into New York. I thought about Spider Man
swinging from high rise to high rise, and all the great movies filmed there. Aside from those random thoughts, Nancy and I
were having fun, laughing at the cars in the cash lines as we cruised into the
tunnel, having just gotten our first ever EZ Pass the day before (we the
hapless ones to that date).
Arriving in Manhattan we veered north a few
blocks into Greenwich Village and immediately found a metered parking spot near
the intersection of Bleecker and LaGuardia. We were here! I thought I would be able to rely on my
earlier instincts with this area, but in many ways, it was as if I were tackling
the Village for the first time. The
familiarity was vague, which may have had something to do with coming at it
from a different direction. Anyhow,
right in front of our car was The Bitter End, where Bob Dylan’s Rolling Thunder
Review band took shape in the mid-70s.
Great place to start. It turned
out this was ‘open mic’ day. Musicians
and their guitars were signing up and lining up, waiting for the place to
open. Nancy and I got in line with them. When the doors opened, we took in the aura of
the place and watched the first musician perform. Her music was a bit of a downer, she obviously
struggling, singing about selling out to make ends meet. But she was singing from the heart and she
was passionate. Good luck there, young
lady. Many struggling musicians got
their start on that stage, some who became quite famous. Hopefully you will get to where you want to
be too.
As already mentioned, I was very much aware
of Bob Dylan performing that nite at the Beacon Theatre on the Upper West Side,
and we dabbled with the idea of heading that way later in the day to see if we
could scalp tickets. The fact of the
matter was that, like my Woodstock adventure, very little was planned for this
trip, partly because we were not sure until the last minute if it would pan out
due to other factors back home, and partly because… that’s the way we operate. Amazing things can happen when you wing it,
or they can fall flat. It’s a crap
shoot. But truthfully, the Dylan show was not my focus. Being with Nancy in Greenwich Village was my
focus; dining, shopping, doing whatever.
A melding of our values was my focus. Besides, I’ve seen so many great shows
over the years, including Bob on five occasions. And so, I vowed I was not
going to let that whisper get too loud in my ear.
Despite this inner declaration, the notion
was still tugging at me. However, at the
same time I was beginning to feel the effects of the prior 5 weeks; work travel
(see Blueprint # 41), concerts, Thanksgiving, burning the candle at both ends,
people hacking all around me all that time.
My body was yelling at me; cold, flu… something was happening. I was suppressing it, but for how long? We had not booked a place to stay yet. That was both good and bad. Good because it gave us flexibility. Bad because it seeped into our thinking more
than we would have liked. We are usually
good in this sort of situation, but Manhattan is a different beast than
virtually anywhere else we’d made last minute decisions like this over the
years. There were a few options for us;
places to stay. But they were pricey to
say the least. Worth it in most
situations was my thinking. But in my
state?
We chewed on our options as we roamed the
streets, taking in our surroundings, and soon found ourselves in Washington
Square Park (photo below) which was full of life. Then over to the Washington Square Park
Hotel, which is no longer the dirt-cheap place it used to be when Bob Dylan
used it as a virtual squat house upon arriving in the city. I thought about Joan Baez’ song “Diamonds and
Rust”, which is about her romance with Bob Dylan and which mentions this hotel. I thought about what that namesake Park in
front of it must have been like in the 60s. A few blocks further down we passed
the iconic location where Bob Dylan and Suze Rotolo were photographed for the
cover of Dylan’s second album The
Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, the first song on it being this entry’s Blueprint. I was feeling the vibes.
As darkness settled in, we made our way
down to Soho for some Christmas shopping, and then up over to Little Italy,
where we found a nice Italian restaurant for dinner. My appetite was there, but I was fading, with
the rain now coming down hard too, and the forecast for Sunday being more of
the same. We were slowly concluding that
this was our last downtown stop of the day, and so, we took our time, and
enjoyed it. Then we headed back to our
car.
We flirted with the idea of stopping
somewhere on the way home and staying the nite, perhaps taking in some place in
Connecticut or upper-state New York the next day, but in the end, we drove all
the way back to our home in Pepperell Massachusetts. For a good stretch we listened to the
excellent soundtrack to the even more superb movie “I’m Not There”. Nancy is not as enamored by Bob Dylan’s
vocals as I am. Not by a long shot. But when the cover of “Ballad of a Thin Man”
came on she made the comment that she liked Dylan’s vocals in the original. I thought, ‘now that’s some very keen insight’, seeing as I’ve made the same
observation myself. There is hope!
My mind wandered again as we drove late
into the nite. I thought once more about
my last Blueprint entry (# 44) and the song of choice from it, “High Water (for
Charley Patton)”. It’s a song of such
foreboding. One contemplative aspect
related to the song is that the album it’s on, “Love and Theft” - which includes many other foreboding tunes - was
released on 9/11/2001. Even though I’ve
always known this fact, I did not bring it up for that entry, seeing as it did
not fit my storyline. It does here though.
How has the world changed in the 17 years
since I was last in New York, back in 2001, months before 9/11? I recalled a Rolling Stone interview with Bob
Dylan week’s after that album release and that catastrophic event. I searched for and found it a few days after
settling in back home this week. As I had remembered, this reread once again revealed
Dylan’s comments to be very poignant throughout the article. It’s a real time capsule of a piece. Near the end of the interview Bob Dylan was
asked about 9/11. First, he quoted a verse
from the Rudyard Kipling poem “Gentlemen-Rankers”, which goes:
“We
have done with Hope and Honour, we are lost to Love and Truth
We are dropping down the ladder rung by rung
And the measure of our torment is the measure
of your youth
God help us, for we knew the worst too young!”
(I recalled showing this to my Dad back in
those heavy, heavy weeks after 9/11. Dad
was quiet after reading this). Bob Dylan then went on to say, “If anything my
mind would go back to young people at a time like this”.
Young people. My son and my daughter
today. American, Iraqi, and Afghani youth, on the cusp of fighting their parents
and grandparents battles after 9/11 (I’m sure Dylan was referring to all of
them with that quote above). And of
course, Bob Dylan when he released The
Freewheelin Bob Dylan in 1963, at the tender age of 21, along with its
powerful opener, “Blowin’ in the Wind” ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vWwgrjjIMXA
) which was his true introduction to the free world. Unlike those Gentlemen-Rankers of yore, Bob
Dylan not only knew the worst too young, he expressed it, perfectly, in that
very first hit, and he never let it go. I
am grateful for having recognized this. My
visits to New York City, Woodstock and Hibbing contributed to that recognition. I’m grateful for that too.
- Pete
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