August 30, 2012
Bob Dylan's
35th album begins with a train whistle exploding in his mind. He sees an old oak
tree he used to climb and imagines a woman smiling through a fence. He hears the
voice of "the mother of our Lord" – and still, that whistle, screaming "like the
sky's gonna blow apart." It's astonishing, " Duquesne Whistle" suggests, how
much can be channeled through a simple sound.
The body count alone distinguishes it, with songs about the Titanic disaster
("Tempest"), a three-way murder-suicide ("Tin Angel") and the assassination of
his old acquaintance John Lennon
("Roll On, John"). "Pay in Blood" is a portrait of raging evil delivered in
snarling vocals – Dylan is so close-miked you can practically hear the phlegm
rattle. "Early Roman Kings," with David Hidalgo's cantina-blues accordion,
conjures "lecherous and treacherous" despots "in their sharkskin suits."
Lyrically, Dylan is at the top of his game, joking around, dropping wordplay and allegories that evade pat readings and quoting other folks' words like a freestyle rapper on fire. "Narrow Way" is one of Dylan's most potent rockers in years, and it borrows a chorus from the Mississippi Sheiks' 1934 blues "You'll Work Down to Me Someday." "Scarlet Town" draws on verses by 19th-century Quaker poet and abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier; and allusions to Louis Armstrong and the Isley Brothers pop up elsewhere.
"Roll On, John," the closing song, was written for a man who wrestled with
the oppressiveness of fame and deification as much as Dylan has. "I heard the
news today, oh, boy," he sings, referencing Lennon's murder and a Beatles lyric
in a voice that throbs with survivor's guilt. It's a prayer from one great
artist to another, and a reminder that Dylan now stands virtually alone among
his 1960s peers. His own final act, meanwhile, rolls on. It's a thing to
behold.
http://www.rollingstone.com/music/albumreviews/tempest-20120830
That notion defines Dylan's career, and especially
his output of the past decade – music built from traditional forms and drawing
on eternal themes: love, struggle, death. With its jazzy, pre-rock groove,
"Duquesne Whistle" could be from any of Dylan's last three albums, 2001's Love and Theft, 2006's Modern Times or 2009's Together Through Life. But then the song
ends, Dylan gets off the train and soon one of his weirdest albums ever truly
starts. Tempest is musically varied and full of curveballs. It may also
be the single darkest record in Dylan's catalog.
Lyrically, Dylan is at the top of his game, joking around, dropping wordplay and allegories that evade pat readings and quoting other folks' words like a freestyle rapper on fire. "Narrow Way" is one of Dylan's most potent rockers in years, and it borrows a chorus from the Mississippi Sheiks' 1934 blues "You'll Work Down to Me Someday." "Scarlet Town" draws on verses by 19th-century Quaker poet and abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier; and allusions to Louis Armstrong and the Isley Brothers pop up elsewhere.
The two most powerful cuts here are rooted in fact.
At nearly 14 minutes, "Tempest" is epic – 45 verses (with no chorus) about the
sinking of the Titanic, set to an Irish melody with accordion and
fiddle. Historical accuracy is beyond the point; the reference to Leonardo
DiCaprio feels truer to folk tradition than his absence would be. Meanwhile, the
scenes are horrifying: passengers plunging into icy waters; "Dead bodies already
floating/In the double-bottomed hull"; some men turning murderous; another
offering his lifeboat seat to a crippled child. The metaphor is inescapable: a
seemingly unsinkable behemoth going down amid small acts of bravery that change
little, rich and poor doomed equally.
The guy from the Guardian was rather more objective i.e. less grovelling. Post that one!
ReplyDeleteJust saw/heard the Winnipeg show & ho - lee shit! This guy is unstoppable. His baby grand is turned way up as well as his mike. Just as it should be. Only played "Scarlet Town" off of Tempest but it blended in beautifully with the rest of show. Definitely catch at least one more on this leg of the tour!
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