Bob Dylan And The Creative Leap That Transformed Modern Music



BY TED OLSON
PROFESSOR OF APPALACHIAN 
STUDIES AND BLUEGRASS, OLD-TIME 
AND ROOTS MUSIC STUDIES,
EAST TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY

The Bob Dylan biopic ā€œA Complete Unknown,ā€ starring TimothĆ©e Chalamet, focuses on Dylanā€™s early 1960s transition from idiosyncratic singer of folk songs to internationally renowned singer-songwriter.

As a music historian, Iā€™ve always respected one decision of Dylanā€™s in particular ā€“ one that kicked off the young artistā€™s most turbulent and significant period of creative activity.

Sixty years ago, on Halloween Night 1964, a 23-year-old Dylan took the stage at New York Cityā€™s Philharmonic Hall. He had become a star within the niche genre of revivalist folk music. But by 1964 Dylan was building a much larger fanbase through performing and recording his own songs.

Dylan presented a solo set, mixing material he had previously recorded with some new songs. Representatives from his label, Columbia Records, were on hand to record the concert, with the intent to release the live show as his fifth official album.

It would have been a logical successor to Dylanā€™s four other Columbia albums. With the exception of one track, ā€œCorrina, Corrina,ā€ those albums, taken together, featured exclusively solo acoustic performances.

But at the end of 1964, Columbia shelved the recording of the Philharmonic Hall concert. Dylan had decided that he wanted to make a different kind of music.

From Minnesota to Manhattan

Two-and-a-half years earlier, Dylan, then just 20 years old, started earning acclaim within New York Cityā€™s folk music community. At the time, the folk music revival was taking place in cities across the country, but Manhattanā€™s Greenwich Village was the movementā€™s beating heart.

Mingling with and drawing inspiration from other folk musicians, Dylan, who had recently moved to Manhattan from Minnesota, secured his first gig at Gerdeā€™s Folk City on April 11, 1961. Dylan appeared in various other Greenwich Village music clubs, performing folk songs, ballads and blues. He aspired to become, like his hero Woody Guthrie, a self-contained artist who could employ vocals, guitar and harmonica to interpret the musical heritage of ā€œthe old, weird America,ā€ an adage coined by critic Greil Marcus to describe Dylanā€™s early repertoire, which was composed of material learned from prewar songbooks, records and musicians.

While Dylanā€™s versions of older songs were undeniably captivating, he later acknowledged that some of his peers in the early 1960s folk music scene ā€“ specifically, Mike Seeger ā€“ were better at replicating traditional instrumental and vocal styles.

Dylan, however, realized he had an unrivaled facility for writing and performing new songs.

In October 1961, veteran talent scout John Hammond signed Dylan to record for Columbia. His eponymous debut, released in March 1962, featured interpretations of traditional ballads and blues, with just two original compositions. That album sold only 5,000 copies, leading some Columbia officials to refer to the Dylan contract as ā€œHammondā€™s Folly.ā€

Full steam ahead

Flipping the formula of its predecessor, Dylanā€™s 1963 follow-up album, ā€œThe Freewheelinā€™ Bob Dylan,ā€ offered 11 originals by Dylan and just two traditional songs. The powerful collection combined songs about relationships with original protest songs, including his breakthrough ā€œBlowinā€™ in the Wind.ā€

ā€œThe Times They Are A-Changinā€™,ā€ his third release, exclusively showcased Dylanā€™s own compositions.

Dylanā€™s creative output continued. As he testified in ā€œRestless Farewell,ā€ the closing track for ā€œThe Times They Are A-Changinā€™,ā€ ā€œMy feet are now fast / and point away from the past.ā€

Released just six months after ā€œThe Times,ā€ Dylanā€™s fourth Columbia album, ā€œAnother Side of Bob Dylan,ā€ featured solo acoustic recordings of original songs that were lyrically adventurous and less focused on current events. As suggested in his song ā€œMy Back Pages,ā€ he was now rejecting the notion that he could ā€“ or should ā€“ speak for his generation.

Bringing it all together

By the end of 1964, Dylan yearned to break away permanently from the constraints of the folk genre ā€“ and from the notion of ā€œgenreā€ altogether. He wanted to subvert the expectations of audiences and to rebel against music industry forces intent on pigeonholing him and his work.

The Philharmonic Hall concert went off without a hitch, but Dylan refused to let Columbia turn it into an album. The recording wouldnā€™t generate an official release for another four decades.

Instead, in January 1965, Dylan entered Columbiaā€™s Studio A to record his fifth album, ā€œBringing It All Back Home.ā€ But this time, he embraced the electric rock sound that had energized America in the wake of Beatlemania. That album introduced songs with stream-of-consciousness lyrics featuring surreal imagery, and on many of the songs Dylan performed with the accompaniment of a rock band.

ā€œBringing It All Back Home,ā€ released in March 1965, set the tone for Dylanā€™s next two albums: ā€œHighway 61 Revisited,ā€ in August 1965, and ā€œBlonde on Blonde,ā€ in June 1966. Critics and fans have long considered these latter three albums ā€“ pulsing with what the singer-songwriter himself called ā€œthat thin, that wild mercury soundā€ ā€“ as among the greatest albums of the rock era.

On July 25, 1965, at the Newport Folk Festival, Dylan invited members of the Paul Butterfield Blues Band on stage to accompany three songs. Since the genre expectations for folk music during that era involved acoustic instrumentation, the audience was unprepared for Dylanā€™s loud performances. Some critics deemed the set an act of heresy, an affront to folk music propriety. The next year, Dylan embarked on a tour of the U.K., and an audience member at the Manchester stop infamously heckled him for abandoning folk music, crying out, ā€œJudas!ā€

Yet the creative risks undertaken by Dylan during this period inspired countless other musicians: rock acts such as the Beatles, the Animals and the Byrds; pop acts such as Stevie Wonder, Johnny Rivers and Sonny and Cher; and country singers such as Johnny Cash.

Acknowledging the bar that Dylanā€™s songwriting set, Cash, in his liner notes to Dylanā€™s 1969 album ā€œNashville Skyline,ā€ wrote, ā€œHere-in is a hell of a poet.ā€

Enlivened by Dylanā€™s example, many musicians went on to experiment with their own sound and style, while artists across a range of genres would pay homage to Dylan through performing and recording his songs.

In 2016, Dylan received the Nobel Prize in literature ā€œfor having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition.ā€ His early exploration of this tradition can be heard on his first four Columbia albums ā€“ records that laid the groundwork for Dylanā€™s august career.

Back in 1964, Dylan was the talk of Greenwich Village.

But now, because he never rested on his laurels, heā€™s the toast of the world.

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