Back after a long absence, in between other writing and musical activities.
Back after a long absence, in between other writing and musical activities.
Member since:13.07.2000
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‘Highway 61 Revisited’ was Bob Dylan’s sixth album, and the second on which he used a band, or more specifically, a rhythm section, plus musicians like Al Kooper (organ) and Mike Bloomfield (guitar).
Highway 61 itself stretches north to south from Minnesota, Dylan’s homeland, down through the Mississippi Delta, and the record has been likened by some as a journey to his Minnesotan roots and Mississippi-styled Blues music.
(Oh, forget the geography lesson John! The music is the message.)
Topped and trailed by two of his most powerful songs ever, it remains one of his defining albums. Alongside its successor, ‘Blonde On Blonde’ (1966), and moving on a few years to ‘Blood On The Tracks’ (1975), it’s arguably one of the three best he ever recorded.
The opening track, ‘Like A Rolling Stone’, was a real mould-breaker for its time. Six-minute singles were not the done thing in the summer of 1965 - a single was simply seven inches of black vinyl - but Dylan broke the rules with this astonishingly fierce yet poetic epic. (Significantly, it was his highest-charting single ever – No. 2 US, No. 4 UK).
For a long time, critics were trying to analyse exactly whom it was directed at, but whether he was having a go at one or two individual acquaintances or just sounding off against the world in general, it hardly matters. That opening slap on the drums, that majestic wash of Hammond organ, that tumbling forth of phrases, and that soaring, searing ‘How does it feel’ chorus, all combine to produce something magical.
He’s performed it on several of his live albums. But while it’s surely a pretty stunning experience to see and her him perform it onstage (assuming he’s having a good night and remembering the words properly), only one other version – that explosive climax to the 1966 live set where he is heckled by a member of the audience and called ‘Judas’ and snarls out ‘I don’t believe you – you’re a LIAR!’ ; over the opening bars - can compare on record with this original, definitive take. (Forget the 1969 Isle of Wight one on ‘Self Portrait’, which is pathetic).
‘Tombstone Blues’ may be poetry, but it’s also flat out garage rock. Much the same can me said about the brisk ‘From A Buick 6’ and the album’s cantering title track, with its galloping piano and police siren wail sound effects. In a way these three tracks are rock’n’roll of a sort, basically only using three chords (‘Tombstone’ only uses two), but the poetry and imagery of the lyrics elevates them to something else. It’s interesting to note that on two subsequent live albums, ‘Before The Flood’ (1974) and ‘Real Live’ (1984), he and his bands at the time did full-blown rock’n’roll versions of ‘Highway 61 Revisited’, the latter complete with a ‘Johnny B. Goode’-style intro.
More measured in musical pace, if not lyrically, are the slower ‘It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry’, a rolling blues, the more melodic, enigmatic ‘Queen Jane Approximately’ and ‘Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues’. The ghostly ‘Ballad Of A Thin Man’ is unsettling with its cynical pointed refrain, ‘Something’s happening but you don’t know what it is, do you, Mr Jones?’
As a finale, there’s the haunting, nightmarish ‘Desolation Row’. An 11-minute acoustic work, with just a lightly-picked lead guitar supplementing Dylan’s strummed chords and short burst of harmonica. I’ve seen this ten-verse extravaganza called ‘surrealist poetry’ – “They’re selling postcards of the hanging, they’re painting the passports brown.” I’m tempted to quote more, but one has to stop somewhere. Suffice to say, this brings back memories of coll ege days when a friend on my course, a fellow Dylan fanatic and regular bar prop, and I used to quote lines from the song when we were both slightly drunk. (We found it hilarious, irreverent fools that we were).
Seriously, this really is one of his most amazing lyrics ever, full of little stories, descriptions of a nightmare landscape, observations which are surreal, funny, deadly serious and apocalyptic at the same time. A nod to the boxes below - I wouldn't call the lyrics exactly 'Sublime', but they are - well, they are - pretty damn powerful. (Please can we have a 'Powerful but not really Sublime' drop-down thingy, ciao? Er, well, you don't ask, you don't get.)
Putting my old wrinkly rocker hat on for a moment, it’s probably difficult for the average music punter under 25 to appreciate the full significance of this album. But at the time, it really was a musical milestone. And it was no coincidence that the Beatles and the Rolling Stones also started trying to say much more in their lyrics at around the same time. Robert Allen Zimmerman was indisputably the most influential individual figure in rock music in 1965, bar none. And I wouldn’t be surprised if Noel Gallagher, who was born that same year, has paid homage to it either. If so, he’s not alone as regards his generation.
Like a number of other vintage releases, the price varies widely. Amazon have three probably more-or-less indistinguishable versions, the cheapest being £5.97. I've seen it recently in megastore sales for prices between £8.99 and £4.99.
(Guilty secret – I still have it on vinyl, and I paid 75p for it secondhand, nearly mint in 1973…)
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