Well,
maybe just a little something. Two reviews:
** **
Counting Down
Bob Dylan: His 100 Finest Songs by Jim Beviglia
Most
of us are dilettantes most of the time. We dabble in this and that, sometimes
out of simple interest and sometimes for some productive purpose. Either way,
we rely on the specialists who research, organize, and present the information
in which we can dabble. Suppose you wish to write some historical fiction
involving, say, a Carthaginian merchant trader: you will want to know something
about what the ships of that era were like. (The book to consult in that case
would be The Ancient Mariners by the
superb classicist Lionel Casson.) You don’t need to know everything: just
enough to suit the needs of your story, but that requires the detailed work of
a scholar from which to pick and choose.
Jim Beviglia
is quite the specialist regarding the music of Bob Dylan. His familiarity with
Dylan’s albums from repeated listening goes beyond simple fandom. For example,
he writes about understanding the gist of the song “Lily, Rosemary, and the
Jack of Hearts” from the 1975 Blood on the
Tracks album, “It probably won’t happen the first time; it may not even
happen the tenth.” I’m more of a Dylan dilettante. I like and admire much of
his music, but I have no wish to listen to the Western-flavored “Lily,
Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts” ten times. I’m glad Beviglia did however. I’m
also glad he wrote about it since the next time I do hear it I’ll be able to
get more out of it than I likely would on my own.
All
such lists are idiosyncratic. His #1 pick “Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands” from
the 1966 Blonde on Blonde album
probably isn’t yours. Though I like the song it isn’t mine. Songs and genres (Dylan
performs in several) affect each of us in a personal way. He acknowledges this
when commenting on his #10 pick “Like a Rolling Stone”: “Which is why labeling
it the best rock song of all time and labeling it the tenth best Dylan song
need not be contradictory statements.” Fortunately, 100 songs are enough to cover
the spectrum. He gives a page or two of analysis to each number.
Dylan’s
lyrics can be deep pockets that accommodate a lot of different meanings, but
they somehow often affect us on a subverbal level as well. Beviglia makes sense
of the lyrics where he can and explains why opacity is sometimes better where
he can’t. The lyrics even when seemingly simple often subvert themselves. In
the case of It Ain’t Me, Babe, for
example, the narrator’s surface admission that he doesn’t measure up has an
underlying accusation that the demands are unreasonable: “someone who will die
for you and more.” Beviglia doesn’t get hung up on the words alone but gives
due regard to the musical whole. Dylan no doubt would approve, for in his
acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize in literature he told the committee they
had made a mistake: “But songs are unlike literature. They’re meant
to be sung, not read. The words in Shakespeare’s plays were meant to be acted
on the stage. Just as lyrics in songs are meant to be sung, not read on a page.
And I hope some of you get the chance to listen to these lyrics the way they
were intended to be heard: in concert or on record or however people are
listening to songs these days.” (He took the prize
money though: he’s not a dummy.)
A lot of the expected Greatest
Hits songs are included on Beviglia’s list but so are relatively obscure selections
from every studio album (and from a couple bootlegs) up through 2012 including albums
from the 1980s, which were not Dylan’s best regarded decade. (“Greatest hits”
and “finest” are not interchangeable terms, after all.) There are also representatives
from every one of his genres including folk, blues, country, rock, and however
one might categorize what he did with the Traveling Wilburys. My copy of the
book is currently on a shelf under my stereo where it is likely to remain for
consultation the next time I dabble with a Dylan album.
One glaring omission from the book is not the author’s fault
since it was published prior to Dylan’s 2020 album Rough and Rowdy Ways,
which I reviewed positively last August. I think one or two numbers from this
album might otherwise have muscled into the 100.
** **
The Pretty Reckless – Death
by Rock and Roll
Like
most of my generation I find the bulk of today’s hit pop music uninspiring –
not offensive, just meh. Fortunately for those of us who don’t want to just
keep replaying old music instead, there is plenty of solid work being done by
young rock and blues artists. They even have big youthful audiences: just not
big enough for any of their albums to have cracked the top ten billboard chart
in more than a decade. One finally has. It is by a band Amazon has recommended
to me for years based on my other purchases, and on this occasion I took the
AI’s advice.
There
always are some bands that it is chic to dismiss (along with their fans) for
reasons other than their music even as they remain a significant presence in
the industry. One of them since 2010 has been The Pretty Reckless. It’s been a
long time since I was a kid and I have no kids of my own, so I never watched a kid-oriented
TV show called Gossip Girl and
thereby was unaware prior to a few months ago that frontwoman Taylor Momsen,
currently 27, had a previous career as a child actress. It has been a
double-edged sword for her: instant name recognition but a tendency for many
not to take her seriously on that account. Also, she happens to be an
exceptionally attractive young lady and isn’t remotely shy or apologetic about
exploiting the fact, which is also double-edged in today’s peculiar social
environment. The band’s 2021 album Death
by Rock and Roll should put an end to that dismissal. It is rock to take
seriously.
Out of
curiosity I have also sampled the band’s previous three albums, which are OK.
They have a few genuine highlights, but overall they are generic hard rock that
is just OK. They sound like a band that would be a favorite at the local pub
but nothing more. (Remember music clubs? Was that only a year ago?) The new
album is still straightforward rock and roll but it has a mature sound and definitely
has benefited by input from members of Soundgarden and Rage Against the
Machine. For those of us tired of electronic sounds and overmixing, it is
refreshingly real. The lyrics are affecting, the vocals are strong, and the
instrumentals professional. It’s a good album.
Three
of the tracks may be familiar to the reader since they were released as singles
in 2020. The title track was a major hit while an acoustic version of it (not
on the album but on YouTube) was almost as popular as the fully amped one. The
album itself was delayed, first by the deaths of two people associated with the
band and then by covid restrictions. The tracks are not all of a kind but range
from the thumping “My Bones” to the melodic “Got So High.” “Rock and Roll
Heaven” refers back to Taylor’s own age: 27 being the year rockers notoriously
have trouble getting past.
It is
only February and, in truth, I don’t listen to many new albums anymore anyway,
but with those caveats it’s my favorite album of the year so far.
Death by Rock and Roll, title track