Decades of dead-souled, dead music in zombie filled arenas.
By Phil Hall
Prospero in his cell busy indwelling, might have time to ponder the mystery of the myth that is Bob Dylan. He is concealed behind a dark blue velvet curtain embroidered in gold; Dylan with a megaphone standing on a stool, blown up from Minnesota.
Dylan is not a poet. Dylan is a songwriter. If you want to know who should get the plaudits for the early musical-political then it is not Dylan. It is Dave Van Ronk and Phil Ochs, names that, for all his attributions, Dylan doesn’t mention quite as often as he mentions Elvis and Little Richard. Bodies, maybe, that he steps over as they sink into the mud.
Of course a middle class Jewish boy from Little Hibbing, you would think, would have to be pretty stubborn to traverse the 1960’s without ever being properly politicised. Christ’s sake, how is that even possible? How can a man who was at the centre of the Civil Rights maelstrom of the 1960s be so apolitical now?
To be hanging over Woody Guthrie sucking at Guthrie’s socialist soul while Guthrie lay paralysed; to echo Pete Seeger and still to learn nothing. Instead, to fall into mythomania and develop a mild case of the Messiah – occasionally, unconvincingly disavowed.
Dylan got an education that mastered and extended musical forms, but he spaffed buckets of his energy and blood against a wall. After a while, Dylan stopped complaining about war. He didn’t write about the environment or injustice or any of that stuff (Do Jesse James and Hurricane Carter count?). Instead Dylan wrote about the twists and turns of relationships where, as the unreconstructed man, he possessed most of the agency. Or, at the very least, he had God on his side.
This is the essence of cultural appropriation. To squeeze the juice out of other people’s music. It is the dark end of the street of cultural appropriation because it decontextualises, depoliticises; White Rock and Roll; Clapton kick-starting Rock against Racism when he expressed his obnoxious support for Enoch. Miles Copeland and Son kick starting The Police. If Dylan wanted to talk properly about Kennedy’s murder and not just pose, he would have fingered James Angleton.
Decades of dead souled, dead music in zombie filled arenas headlined by people like Dylan. Because, of course, what is Dylan if he isn’t the arch appropriator; a musical vampire? It is the curse of the musical vampire that all of his songs, almost without exception, sound better in the mouths of the people whose souls he cribbed them from.
But he cribbed well. Dylan started out as the great fanboy genius. The Quentin Tarantino of music. Because, clearly, Dylan is a genius, a Zelig of music. He is an all American hobo, except he isn’t. He’s a troubadour at a banquet, except he isn’t. He’s a working class English folksinger, except he isn’t. He’s a white Mexican, except he isn’t. He’s a boxer and a mobster, except he isn’t. He’s a gospel singer and composer, except he isn’t. He’s calling us to prayer. Well, that he does.
But because Dylan is, in fact, a genius, his songs, the songs he Stanislavskys into, all sound so right. Outside the dogs really are barking. You believe it, but Dylan isn’t for Bernie he was for Obama. You can get better politics out of Hollywood than you can out of Dylan, out of people like Ben Affleck and Matt Daemon.
No one should give two cents for Bob Dylan’s opinions on any subject that requires any degree of intellectual honesty. That’s not what Dylan is for. What is so beautiful and ironic and right about Dylan is that, invariably, everyone else sings his songs better than he does.
But, oh my God when they do sing his songs they are revealed to be the best songs. They are beautiful powerful songs, reclaimed from stolen property and recycled up into glory.
Phil Hall is a college lecturer. He is a committed socialist and humanist. Phil was born in South Africa where his parents were in the ANC. There, his mother was imprisoned and his father was the first journalist from a national paper to be banned. Phil grew up in East Africa and settled in Kingston-upon-Thames. He has also lived and worked in the Ukraine, Spain, Mexico, Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi. Phil has blogged for the Guardian, the Morning Star and several other publications and he has written stories for The London Magazine. He started Ars Notoria in May 2020.