oh.

Posting slowdown? Me frowning a shitload and generally hatin’?

Yup.

As PF reminded me, it’s September. So this month, you all get to add Hurricane Katrina, the New Orleans Flood of Ought-Five, and Hurricane Rita to your 9-11 reflections, while I add these two recent seasons of ire to my own, well-aged one. I really thought I would get out of the month without the black time.

Interestingly, the specific catalyst is clearly the house deal. I drive or walk around my neighborhood and wander the hall of my apartment saddened by the anticipation of missing it, which even I find both absurd and appalling.

Dye Land

As I noted yesterday, I first really became a serious appreciator of Bob Dylan about ten years ago, when I first picked up a cutout copy of Good As I Been to You, the first of two stripped down, scratchy-voice-and-guitar records of mostly old-time songs. The other record, World Gone Wrong, is entirely comparable.

The records were the occasion of much headscratching in the press at the time they were released, 1992 and 1993. For me, they arrived well after their initial release date and just as I had nearly worn out my copy of the great CD re-release of the legendary Smithsonian Folkways Anthology of Folk Music, which I picked up on release in 1997. Whoops, that makes it under ten years ago. Whatever.

On vinyl, I think I had The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, Blonde on Blonde, and one other record, possibly Highway 61 Revisited. Of these, Freewheelin‘ was my clear favorite, as I largely eschewed the shaggy-dog compositional techniques seen on the other records.

However, Good As I Been To You‘s spare, affectionate, and utilitarian renditions of old songs both familiar and new to me struck my ears with the weight of an archetype. It was a record I had been wanting to hear since my enthusiasm for Billy Bragg first prompted me to look into Dylan’s early work. The record remains my favorite recording by Dylan. Curious where the old man had gone since recording these songs, I picked up Time out of Mind, and loved it. I also really like Love and Theft, but Time out of Mind is something different, like listening to someone’s dreams after a night of listening to really old folksongs. Amused by the shambolic bounce of the record, I started looking back at the earlier works, including the late-sixties period so beloved by so many. To my surprise, I found I now understood some of the enthusiasm, as I wrote here a while ago.

This past spring, Greg and Stacey gave me a copy of Chronicles, Dylan’s autobio, and to my surprise, devoured it, chuckling. The first section, a generous memoir of Dylan’s arrival in Greenwich Village in the early sixties, seemed to me to be based directly on Desolation Row. I recall thinking that he had reused sections of the lyric throughout; I don’t recall if I was ever able to establish this as a fact or not. Even if he did not, he engaged with his recollections to tie his experience of the Village to the deep past. When the below-grade Villlage clubs are described as firelit rooms from another era, Dylan deliberately riffs on Martin Scorsese’s vision of Old Five Points in Gangs of New York. Dylan recalls the clubs as a kind of magic cave whereupon entering he gained access to the America of all past times and was granted the mystical power to return from that time to our own bearing visions and dreams of souls long gone.

Whether or not Dylan actually believes this is simply not germane. He wants the reader to believe he does, I think, the better to fulfill his role as a performer. In “Masters of War,” he wrote ” I want you to know that I can see through your masks.” As Scorsese seems to be helping his old friend to say in the film I’m watching tonight, for Dylan, there may only be the masks.

die LAN

I should write a few words on Dylan, I suppose.

I have always been puzzled, and not a little put off, by the hulking, derelict infrastructure of the boomer adoration for Bob Dylan, incarnations 2 (folkie/activist) and 3 (imperial achitect of late-sixties rockism).

However, even as a youngster, i always had an appreciation for the well-crafted song, and in any of Dylan’s many manifestations, he has been able to do this. The song that first overcame my punkish rejection of the long-haired flapdoodle whiner was “Masters of War,” a song whose sentiments I still embrace. However, the structure and technique of the song impresses me less, today, than Ozzy Osbourne’s bastard reinterpretation, “War Pigs.” Which song accords the addressed members of society the proper respect? The choice, it seems, is clear.

Nonetheless, Dylan’s raw, confrontational energy appealed to me very much. It struck me that it was important to learn about what one finds distasteful, yet holds in ignorance. Why, I wondered, did my elders hold the author of “Leopardskin Pillbox Hat,” “Everybody Must Get Stoned,” and “Mr Tambourine Man” in such esteem? I could see no distinction between these songs and any other pop–radio AOR pap polluting my eardrum, ten years past its’ prime.

“Everybody Must Get Stoned,” in particular, while not without its’ charms, had well overstayed its’ welcome in my ears by the time I was, oh, ten. Honestly, this song, still a mainstay of classic rock radio as a consequence of its’ ponderous length, simplicity, and frat-boy, groupthink chanting chorus (cf. the title, any Martians reading this note), is charming only insofar as your personal friends, individuals you know and love and forgive their drunken moments, may have recorded it. To wit, not to you, and also not to me.

I found the celebrated works of Dylan’s youth occasionally brilliant, but I did not generally locate his brilliance in the same works that persons of his initial consumer base chose to. In fact, his work was really something that primarily appealed to me on a scholarly basis. This changed for me about ten years ago, when I picked up a cutout, clearly used copy of “Good as I Been to You” for about five bucks.

More to come.

Reinvention

I’m gonna be busy Monday and Tuesday night, looks like.

This is old damn news, but dylanchords is not just a useful resource for finding chords to songs that Dylan has performed; looking though the site, I found chords for many traditional songs that I have long been familiar with but not seen in this familiar format.

Velvet

The Velvet Underground Web Page. Helpful to me today as I began to assemble a list of the Velvets records I have or once had on vinyl in an attempt to plan for obtaining the missing material in digital format. The most challenging aspect will doubtless be locating the initial, un-remastered CD releases of these records. Why do people gotta fuck with a good thing?

For the record, here’s what I’m digging for:

Title Original Release Date
The Velvet Underground and Nico 1967
White Light/White Heat 1968
The Velvet Underground 1969
Loaded 1970
Live at Max’s Kansas City 1972
1969 Velvet Underground Live 1974
VU 1985
Another VU 1986

I currently have White Light/White Heat, the Loaded 2-disc remastered version, and Another VU on CD. I had thought I had The Velvet Underground and Nico, but I appear to have lost it. On vinyl, I think I have all of these, with the possible exception of the 1969 live record. On CD, I also have the recently-released Quine tapes.

Hard Times

I am, and as far as I know, always have been, a pessimist.

Listening to news reports of the second hurricane-related flooding of New Orleans as gas prices rise are not proving to be conducive to the frame of mind traditionally associated with the experience of buying a new home which may be characterized as “happy,” “triumphant,” or “pleasant.”

Despite this, I do believe that the home we have a bid in on is the home that we will be buying.

Ejaculation

You know, it’s a beautiful thing when a news editor pitches a news item to a publication’s senior editor and the senior editor’s response to the pitch is “Holy crap!”