Bob Dylan was the
first of these, and he has launched a loosely connected but hugely important
tribe of music-prophet disciples. From early adopters like Jimi Hendrix and the
Beatles to the rock culture makers who matter today, each new voice adds its
own color to the music within the gaps between past and present and media and
myth that Dylan introduced to pop. (Ten of these disciples are conveniently
listed here in an otherwise
unconvincing piece in Salon.)
Just
below the stage where Dylan and his disciples play gather rock prophecies’ most
devout fans. When it comes to Dylan, these are fans with a capital F – as in
fanatics, followers and believers who experience by and through Dylan a depth
of connection in which eccentricity skirts obsession and madness.
Joan Baez, a former lover and one of Dylan’s first patrons, addresses Dylan’s
pull in Martin Scorsese's 2005 Bob-umentary No
Direction Home:
There are
no veils, curtains, doors, walls, anything, between what pours out of Bob's
hand onto the page and what is somehow available to the core of people who are
believers in him. Some people would say, you know, 'not interested,' but if
you're interested, he goes way, way deep.
Pulitzer Prize winner David Kinney’s The Dylanologists (Simon &
Schuster, 256 pages) introduces some of Dylan’s fiercest believers, explaining
a lot about pop and prophecy along the way.
The
Dylanologists
One man
who traveled halfway around the world to collect a screw from a piano Dylan had
banged upon decades before. Another purchased the old window frames from
Dylan’s childhood home. Some pilgrims have seen Dylan perform hundreds of
times, spending sleepless nights in cold and rain in order to be the first
person through the door for general admission shows, or trekking to Greenwich
Village, Malibu, or Hibbing High School to catch a whiff of a man who is not
there. These are tapers, scholars, traders, and goads whose identities are
defined by their hunger for all things Dylan.
Kinney –
who interviewed me for the book and quotes me on the absurdity of trying too
hard to pin Dylan down to a single religious trope – is an excellent researcher
and storyteller. He shapes a coherent arc of Dylan fandom out of the intense
narratives of some Dylan’s most charged and colorful believers.
For the
merely curious and uninitiated, The Dylanologists is a fine primer for
charting the ups and downs of his Dylan’s career as well as a stellar example
of long form, deep dig journalism about the good, the bad, the ugly and the
weird within an odd subculture.
It’s also
a great read for those of who have fallen in deep with Dylan ourselves, even if
most of the material covered is familiar. We know many of these Dylanologists
personally, whether they have helped us with research, or we have bumped into
them online, in a class or at a show. Even if we have balanced our heavy doses
of Dylan with all variety of other people, art, and things, we certainly
understand their hunger. After all, Bruce Springsteen, Joni Mitchell, Jimi
Hendrix, and Pete Townshend are among the renowned disciples who are on record
about how hearing Dylan changed their lives, too. I, for one, do not at all
mind being in such company.
But that
does not mean that this is always a pleasant book to read. It’s been pointed out that many of the book’s
mini-narratives add up to a to a very sad, even grating experience. For one
thing, all but a few of the figures in the book have never met Dylan himself,
which, according to an exchange used as the book’s epigram, is probably a very
good thing:
FAN: “You
don't know who I am, but I know who you are.”
BOB
DYLAN: “Let's keep it that way.”
Many of
Kinney’s main figures are pathetic with a capital P, as in tangled up in
pathos, a dramatic suffering that prompts empathy. Dylan is a constant presence
in their lives – animating their day-to-day like the holy spirit or a
patron saint, but the pairing is in many ways cruel. It’s not just a crush, but
crushing, an unrequited love, flush with fantasy and need that cannot and
should not be fulfilled. As much as Dylan gives Dylanologists through his art,
it is never enough to feed their hunger completely.
Descriptions
of encountering Dylan’s music for the first time read like stories of
conversions, not conversations. People are touched by a force beyond their
ability to control. This is more than the flutter of the muse in music; it’s
more like revelation requiring servitude for life. Once the Dylanologists get
that old-time Bob Dylan religion, they cannot shake it. The parallel to
conversion is a serious one, because in the spiritual landscape where
Dylanology rules, it is nothing less than a contemporary translation of
old-time religion.
Bob Dylan
in an Age of Disenchantment
Philosopher
Charles Taylor’s magnum opus A Secular Age surveys the landscape of
spirit and belief in West from 1500 until today. He asks:
Why was
it virtually impossible not to believe in God in, say, 1500 in our Western
society, while in 2000 many of us find this not only easy, but even
inescapable?
Once,
Taylor claims, there was relative equilibrium between human and divine forces
in the world:
Human
agents [were] embedded in society, society in the cosmos, and the cosmos
incorporate[d] the divine.
According
to Taylor, beginning around 1500, the world defined religiously primarily by
Christianity – call it the West – underwent dramatic changes.
As a
result of the natural evolution of corporate religion, various movements for
religious reform, and the Enlightenment, relations of person, society, and the
divine were no longer typical, stable ways of being in the world. Slowly but
steadily, "porous" selves open to the influence of divine or
supernatural forces prescribed or tolerated by traditional religions became
"buffered" selves, protected by rationality, focused internally on
their unique experience. Taylor believes that this is the beginning of a
secular world, a world of disenchantment.
The
enchanted world is animated and defined by faith, superstition, magic, myth,
and chains of tradition both written and oral that connected people to communal
meaning within the predictable tensions of person, society, and the divine.
What we now might of think of holdovers from the “old world” – songs and
incantations, relics of saints, holy sites and visions, fables and folk
remedies, curses and totems and prayers and amulets that call upon powers from
beyond the human realm to protect or enhance human life – are the raw materials
that fuel the enchanted world.
Rock
stars are born into a world defined by disenchantment and emerged as prophets
embodying ancient tropes as Willis’ translators and mediators without the
burden of the moral, political, or social pressures (and oppression) of
traditional religion.
As German
sociologist Max Weber wrote nearly a century before Taylor, in a landscape
drained of the charisma and energy of religion – even with the benefits of liberation for religion – the force of its spirit can return in unexpected
and necessary ways. No one knows, he wrote,
whether at the end of this tremendous development entirely
new prophets will arise, or there will be a great rebirth of old ideas and
ideals.
Bob Dylan
leads the entry of pop music into the religious vacuum of the 20th
century. With fundamentalism and secularism each raging in their own way,
Dylan shows (whether he likes it or not and whether he means it or not) how to
translate the magic of ancient tropes into the uniquely powerful communication
of rock and roll.
People
most sensitive to this embodiment of the ageless in the secular age go deep
with it, as deep as conversion, as deep as changing their lives, as deep as
religious believers have always gone. Dylan touches them like the hand of God
might touch cloaks of pilgrims. Such power and glory are not about Dylan per
say, though he is obviously a rare talent and surely some kind of prophetic
vessel. It’s about a movement in which he was a key figure of transformation – a
convener and conveyor of energy and connections inherent in religion that
secular society had left behind in a large part due the havoc all religion had
wrought for so long.
Name your
chauvinism or division or corruption of power for any historical period we know
anything about and religion will almost certainly be hanging around the concert
hall, if not standing at center stage calling out the next tune. But religion
has also inspired our greatest music, writing, acts of kindness, and connection
with forces greater than our own limited selves. Rock and roll prophecy to mind
the gaps when religious consensus has gone the way of the mass culture – away.
But what kind of prophecy is it?
What Kind
of Love Is This That Goes from Bad to Worse?
As I wrote in a review of
Todd Hayne’s pseudo-Dylan biopic I’m Not There some time ago,
Elijah might be the best prophet for thinking about rock and roll prophecy in
general and Dylan prophecy particularly.
Stories of Elijah’s countless masks, rages, and demands animate the Hebrew
Bible in an age of Judges just prior to the classical prophetic age of figures
like Jeremiah, Isaiah, and Ezekiel. Elijah, like the early Dylan, wants to
speak truth to power. When people fall for trickery and choose faith for the
wrong reasons, Elijah runs away, eventually rediscovering the eternal not in
the earthquake or the fire, but in a still, small voice – perhaps, we might
say, the voice of an individual singing a very personal tale. Then, with the
command of the divine at his back, he covers his face, re-proclaims his zeal
for justice, and, despite the many enemies before him, takes to the road, an
outlaw forever.
In Jewish
commentaries and folklore, Elijah can be found everywhere, in disguise, at the
gates of a city in the morning and in the houses of royalty by night; he
blesses the poor, unsettles the rich, and continually shuffles the deck of fate
with his many faces, always in disguise, keeping people on their spiritual toes
because of the possibility that he might actually be near.
Yet Elijah is most famous for the moment he does not arrive at all, his wine
glass untouched but for the banging on the Passover table as a child wakes with
a start to open the door. The prophet makes no sound, raises no hand, and opens
no gates to salvation on the holiday when the Exodus from bondage in Egypt is
replayed by all who come to celebrate it. “I’m Not There,” he might say as
people seek him with eyes tightly shut, not wanting to know what a lethal dose
of salvation might really mean.
5 comments:
Steven, this is a terrific piece. Thoughtful, well conceptualized, and really well written. I'm a Dylan junkie and have waded through reams of hagiography, and super-intellectualized and personalized lyric analysis - the work of the Dylanologists - and the difference with this piece is that it's at play in the field where archetypes, tradition, and reality meet, clash, and renew. And makes more sense than Mr Marcus. (I hope I'm making sense.) Anyway, thanks. Guess I'll have to bookmark your blog.
Thanks Richard...I'm glad you enjoyed this. " at play in the field where archetypes, tradition, and reality meet, clash, and renew..." Couldn't ask for more than that. SHA
Stephen, as someone who is not (yet?) A Dylan junkie, I learn so much from you and so appreciate your writing. You are officially my Dylan rebbe.
Thank you, Mr. Jake... :)
List stories like the Salon article are lazy subjective journalism. Consider that rock and roll is a religion, a shared collection of beliefs in the music and lifestyle in which Dylan is merely a main but not the only prophet. Devotees come in all styles and strengths like those who pilgrimage to the wailing wall and Lourdes to agnostics who deny their adherence.
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