Another Side of Bob Dylan
Another Side of Bob Dylan | ||||
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Tom Wilson | ||||
Bob Dylan chronology | ||||
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Another Side of Bob Dylan is the fourth studio album by the American singer and songwriter Bob Dylan, released on August 8, 1964, by Columbia Records.
The album deviates from the more
Despite the album's thematic shift, Dylan performed the entirety of Another Side of Bob Dylan as he had previous records – solo. In addition to his usual acoustic guitar and harmonica, Dylan provides piano on one track, "Black Crow Blues". Another Side of Bob Dylan reached No. 43 in the United States[2] (although it eventually went gold), and peaked at No. 8 on the UK charts in 1965.
A high-definition 5.1 surround sound edition of the album was released on SACD by Columbia in 2003.[3]
Writing
Throughout 1963, Dylan worked on a novel and a play. A number of publishers were interested in signing Dylan to a contract, and at one point, City Lights (a small but prestigious company specializing in poetry) was strongly considered. However, as Dylan worked on his book at a casual pace, his manager, Albert Grossman, decided to make a deal with a major publisher.
Macmillan's senior editor, Bob Markel, said, "We gave [Dylan] an advance for an untitled book of writings ... The publisher was taking a risk on a young, untested potential phenomenon." When Markel met with Dylan for the first time, "there was no book at the time ... The material at that point was hazy, sketchy. The poetry editor called it 'inaccessible.' The symbolism was not easily understood, but on the other hand it was earthy, filled with obscure but marvelous imagery ... I felt it had a lot of value and was very different from Dylan's output till then. [But] it was not a book."[4]
It would be years before Dylan finished his book, but the free form poetry experiments that came from it eventually influenced his songwriting. The most notable example came in a six-line coda to a poem responding to President
the colors of Friday were dull / as cathedral bells were gently burnin / strikin for the gentle / strikin for the kind / strikin for the crippled ones / an strikin for the blind
This refrain would soon appear in a very important composition, "Chimes of Freedom", and, as biographer Clinton Heylin writes, "with this sad refrain, Dylan would pass from topical troubadour to poet of the road."[5]
In February 1964, Dylan embarked on a 20-day trip across the United States. Riding in a station wagon with a few friends (Paul Clayton, Victor Maymudes, and Pete Karman), Dylan began the trip in New York, taking numerous detours through many states before ending the trip in California. (At one point, Dylan reportedly paid a visit to poet Carl Sandburg.) "We talked to people in bars, miners," Dylan would later say. "Talking to people – that's where it's at, man."[6]
According to Heylin, "the primary motivation for this trip was to find enough inspiration to step beyond the folk-song form, if not in the bars, or from the miners, then by peering deep into himself." Dylan spent much time in the back of the station wagon, working on songs and possibly poetry on a typewriter. It was during this trip that Dylan composed "Chimes of Freedom", finishing it in time to premiere at a Denver concert on the 15th. "Mr. Tambourine Man" was also composed during this trip.[7]
It was also during this trip that
In January 1964, while the Beatles were in France, George Harrison bought the French release of The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan (1963), titled En Roue Libre, which they played repeatedly, impressed by the lyrics and "just the attitude!" As the Beatles began to influence Dylan and vice versa, Dylan's personal life was undergoing a number of significant changes. When Dylan returned to New York in March, he rented an electric guitar.[10] He continued his romance with folksinger Joan Baez, though their stage appearances together began to dwindle. Dylan's girlfriend Suze Rotolo apparently had had enough of the affair. Soon after Dylan returned to New York, the two had an argument. At the time, Suze was staying with her sister Carla, and when Carla intervened, Dylan began screaming at Carla. Carla ordered Dylan to leave, but he refused to go. Carla Rotolo pushed Dylan, and he pushed her back. The two of them were soon practically fighting. Friends were called and Dylan had to be forcibly removed, effectively ending his relationship with Suze Rotolo.[11] In a 1966 interview, Dylan admitted that after their relationship ended, "I got very, very strung out for a while. I mean, really, very strung out."[12]
One account of Dylan's first experience with psychedelics places it in April 1964; producer
Dylan later left for Europe, completing a few performances in England before traveling to Paris where he was introduced to a German model, Christa Paffgen, who went by the name of
Recording
With Dylan's commercial profile on the rise, Columbia was now urging Dylan to release a steady stream of recordings. Upon Dylan's return to New York, studio time was quickly scheduled, with
The first (and only) recording session was held June 9 at
Nat Hentoff's article on Dylan for The New Yorker, published in late October 1964, includes remarkable descriptions of the June 9 session. Hentoff describes in considerable detail the atmosphere in the CBS recording studio and Dylan's own asides and banter with his friends in the studio, with the session's producers, and Hentoff himself.[17]
Ramblin' Jack Elliott was present during part of this session, and Dylan asked him to perform on "Mr. Tambourine Man." "He invited me to sing on it with him," recalls Elliott, "but I didn't know the words 'cept for the chorus, so I just harmonized with him on the chorus." Only one complete take was recorded, with Dylan stumbling on some of the lyrics.[16] Though the recording was ultimately rejected, Dylan would return to the song for his next album.
By the time Dylan recorded what was ultimately the master take of "My Back Pages", it was 1:30 in the morning. Master takes were selected, and after some minor editing, a final album was soon sequenced.
Songs and themes
As Dylan told Nat Hentoff in The New Yorker, "there aren't any finger-pointin' songs" on Another Side of Bob Dylan, which was a significant step in a new direction.[17] Music critic Tim Riley writes, "As a set, the songs constitute a decisive act of noncommitment to issue-bound protest, to tradition-bound folk music and the possessive bonds of its audience [...] The love songs open up into indeterminate statements about the emotional orbits lovers take, and the topical themes pass over artificial moral boundaries and leap into wide-ranging social observation."[18]
"The compassion that laces all the complaints in '
"Black Crow Blues" is a traditional twelve-bar blues arrangement with original lyrics.[20]
"'Spanish Harlem Incident' is a new romance that pretends to be short and sweet," writes Riley, "but it's an example of how Dylan begins using uncommon word couplings to evoke the mysteries of intimacy [...] her 'rattling drums' play off his 'restless palms'; her 'pearly eyes' and 'flashing diamond teeth' off his 'pale face.'"[21]
"
Along with the later track "Motorpsycho Nitemare", the lyrics on "I Shall Be Free No. 10" have been referred to as "surrealistic talking blues".[22]
Described by Heylin as "the most realized song on Another Side",[23] "To Ramona" is one of the most celebrated songs on the album. A soft, tender waltz, Riley writes that the song "extends the romance from ideals of emotional honesty out into issues of conditioned conformity ('From fixtures and forces and friends / That you gotta be just like them') [...] in 'Spanish Harlem Incident,' [Dylan's] using flattery as a front for the singer's own weak self-image; in 'To Ramona,' he's trying to save his lover from herself if only because he knows he may soon need the same comfort he's giving her."[21]
"Motorpsycho Nitemare", based in part on Alfred Hitchcock's film Psycho (1960), satirizes both the rise of the American '60s counter-culture as well as the mainstream's paranoid reactions to it.[24][25]
Riley describes "My Back Pages" as "a thorough X-ray of Dylan's former social proselytizing [...] Dylan renounces his former over-serious messianic perch, and disowns false insights. [...] 'I was so much older then / I'm younger than that now.'"[26]
Described by Riley as "the unalloyed sting of a romantic perfidy",[27] "I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)" would be dramatically rearranged for a full-electric rock band during Dylan's famous 1966 tour with The Hawks.
According to Heylin, "Ballad in Plain D" takes its melody and refrain ("my friends say unto me...") from the Scottish folk song, "I Once Loved a Lass (The False Bride)".[28] "The song graphically details the night of his breakup with Suze," writes Heylin. "Dylan's portrayal of Carla as the 'parasite sister' remains a cruel and inaccurate portrait of a woman who had started out as one of [Dylan's] biggest fans, and changed only as she came to see the degrees of emotional blackmail he subjected her younger sister to." Asked in 1985 if there were any songs he regretted writing, Dylan singled out "Ballad in Plain D", saying "I look back at that particular one and say ... maybe I could have left that alone."[29]
"
Four songs from Another Side of Bob Dylan were eventually recorded by The Byrds: "Chimes of Freedom", "My Back Pages", "Spanish Harlem Incident", and "All I Really Want to Do". In addition, they were introduced to their breakthrough hit single "Mr. Tambourine Man" through a copy of Dylan's unreleased recording from the June 9, 1964 album session. All received their share of critical acclaim.
Reception
As Another Side of Bob Dylan was prepared for release, Dylan premiered his new songs at the Newport Folk Festival in July 1964. The festival also marked Dylan's first meeting with Johnny Cash; Dylan was already an admirer of Cash's music, and vice versa. The two spent a night jamming together in Joan Baez's room at the Viking Motor Inn. According to Cash, "we were so happy to [finally] meet each other that we were jumping on the beds like kids." The next day, Cash performed Dylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" as part of his set, telling the audience that "we've been doing it on our shows all over the country, trying to tell the folks about Bob, that we think he's the best songwriter of the age since Pete Seeger ... Sure do."[31]
Though the audience at Newport seemed to enjoy Dylan's new material, the folk press did not. Irwin Silber of Sing Out! and David Horowitz criticized Dylan's direction and accused Dylan of succumbing to the pressures/temptations of fame. In an open letter to Dylan published in the November issue of Sing Out!, Silber wrote "your new songs seem to be all inner-directed now, inner-probing, self-conscious" and, based on what he saw at Newport, "that some of the paraphernalia of fame [was] getting in your way." Horowitz called the songs an "unqualified failure of taste and self-critical awareness."[32]
The album was a step back commercially, failing to make the Top 40, indicating that record consumers may have had a problem as well.[33]
Dylan soon defended his work, writing to columnist Ralph J. Gleason that "the songs are insanely honest, not meanin t twist any heads an written only for the reason that i myself me alone wanted and needed t write them [sic]."[34]
Legacy
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
MusicHound Rock | 4/5[37] |
The Rolling Stone Album Guide | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Tom Hull | A−[40] |
Years later, mixed reactions over Another Side of Bob Dylan remained but not for the same reasons. Critics later viewed it as a 'transitional' album. Clinton Heylin claimed that "Dylan was simply too close to the experiences he was drawing upon to translate them into art. He was also still experimenting with the imagery found on 'Chimes of Freedom' and 'Mr. Tambourine Man.' 'My Back Pages,' the least successful example of the new style, was replete with bizarre compound images ('corpse evangelists,' 'confusion boats,' etc.)."[41] Salon.com critic Bill Wyman dismissed it as "a lesser, 'relationship' album", but conceded that "Chimes of Freedom" was a "lovely hymn to the 'countless confused, accused, misused, strung-out ones an' worse'."[42]
However, Tim Riley called it "a bridge between folkie rhetoric (albeit superior) and his troika of electric rants ... a rock album without electric guitars, a folk archetype that punches through the hardy, plainspoken mold. Built on repeated riffs and coaxed by the controlled anxiety of Dylan's voice, the songs work off one another with intellectually charged élan. It's a transition album with a mind of its own."
Outtakes
A complete take of "Mama, You Been on My Mind" was recorded for the album, but for reasons unknown, it was rejected. Described by Tim Riley as "the echo of a left-behind affair that rebounds off a couple of self-aware curves ('I am not askin' you to say words like 'yes' or 'no,' / ... I'm just breathin' to myself, pretendin' not that I don't know),"[44] the song was soon covered by Joan Baez, as well as Judy Collins, who had a considerable amount of commercial success with it. Dylan's version would not see release until The Bootleg Series Volumes 1–3 (Rare & Unreleased) 1961–1991 in 1991. However, Dylan would periodically perform the song in concert, occasionally with Baez as his duet partner. Rod Stewart would later cover the song for his critically acclaimed album, Never a Dull Moment (1972), and a version by Jeff Buckley appears as an out-take on the 2004 reissue of Grace (1994). Johnny Cash covered the song on his album Orange Blossom Special (1965). It was covered by Linda Ronstadt on her 1969 album Hand Sown ... Home Grown with altered lyrics as "Baby, You've Been on My Mind".
Though "
Dylan also recorded two additional songs that did not make the album. The first is "Denise Denise", a song which uses the same music as "Black Crow Blues" but with different lyrics. The second is "California", which again uses "Black Crow Blues"' music as the basic structure of the song. A small section of the "California" lyrics were reused in "Outlaw Blues", a song that appeared on Dylan's next album, Bringing It All Back Home. Both outtakes are circulating.[45]
Track listing
All tracks are written by Bob Dylan
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "All I Really Want to Do" | 4:04 |
2. | "Black Crow Blues" | 3:14 |
3. | "Spanish Harlem Incident" | 2:24 |
4. | "Chimes of Freedom" | 7:10 |
5. | "I Shall Be Free No. 10" | 4:47 |
6. | "To Ramona" | 3:52 |
Total length: | 25:31 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Motorpsycho Nitemare" | 4:33 |
2. | "My Back Pages" | 4:22 |
3. | "I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)" | 4:22 |
4. | "Ballad in Plain D" | 8:16 |
5. | "It Ain't Me Babe" | 3:33 |
Total length: | 25:06 |
Personnel
- Bob Dylan – vocals, acoustic guitar, piano, harmonica
- Tom Wilson – production
Charts
Chart (1964) | Peak position |
---|---|
UK Albums (OCC)[46] | 8 |
US Billboard 200[47] | 43 |
Certifications
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
United Kingdom (BPI)[48] Sales from 2004 |
Silver | 60,000^ |
United States (RIAA)[49] | Gold | 500,000^ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
References
- ^ "An Open Letter to Bob Dylan". edlis.org. Retrieved February 21, 2021.
- ^ "Bob Dylan". Billboard. Retrieved January 24, 2023.
- ^ "Columbia Releases 15 Bob Dylan Albums on Hybrid SACD". highfidelityreview.com. September 16, 2003.
- ^ Heylin 2011, pp. 140–42.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 143.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 146.
- ^ a b Heylin 2011, p. 147.
- ISBN 0-7475-5414-5.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 148.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 149.
- ISBN 0-552-99929-6.
- ^ Alexander, Rachael (May 24, 2011). "Hidden tape reveals Dylan was 'strung out' on heroin in 1960s". Irish Independent. Archived from the original on December 1, 2024. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
- ^ Riley 1992, p. 151.
- ^ Tanenhaus, Sam (August 10, 2014). "A Dylan Insider's Back Pages". New York Times. p. AR1. Retrieved October 9, 2019.
- ^ Heylin 2011, pp. 157–58.
- ^ ISBN 0-312-15067-9.
- ^ a b Hentoff, Nat (October 24, 1964). "The Crackin', Shakin', Breakin' Sounds". The New Yorker. Retrieved January 4, 2018.
- ^ Riley 1992, p. 83.
- ^ Riley 1992, pp. 84–85.
- ^ Rabinowitz, Allen (August 7, 2014). "Another Side of Bob Dylan Turns 50". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
- ^ a b Riley 1992, p. 87.
- ^ Browne, David (August 8, 2016). "How Bob Dylan Shed His Spokesman Role on 'Another Side'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 159.
- ^ Heylin 2009, p. 188.
- ^ "55 Years Ago: Bob Dylan Turns a Page With 'Another Side of Bob Dylan'". Ultimate Classic Rock. Retrieved March 26, 2020.
- ^ a b Riley 1992, p. 85.
- ^ Riley 1992, p. 91.
- ^ Nelson, Lesley. "I Once Loved a Lass (The False Bride)". contemplator.com. Retrieved June 27, 2017.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 158.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 155.
- ISBN 9-781-4597-3724-2.
- ^ Heylin 2011, pp. 162–63.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 165.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 164.
- ^ "Another Side of Bob Dylan". AllMusic. Retrieved August 20, 2012.
- ^ Flanagan, Bill (March 29, 1991). "Dylan Catalog Revisited". EW.com. Retrieved August 20, 2012.
- ISBN 1-57859-061-2.
- ISBN 0-7432-0169-8. Retrieved August 22, 2015.
- ISBN 978-0857125958.
- ^ Hull, Tom (June 21, 2014). "Rhapsody Streamnotes: June 21, 2014". tomhull.com. Retrieved March 1, 2020.
- ^ Heylin 2011, p. 163.
- ^ Wyman, Bill (May 22, 2001). "Bob Dylan". Salon.com. Archived from the original on September 20, 2024. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
- ISBN 0-7535-0493-6.
- ^ Riley 1992, p. 94.
- ^ Heylin 2009, pp. 223–24.
- ^ "Bob Dylan | Artist | Official Charts". UK Albums Chart. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
- ^ "Bob Dylan Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved December 1, 2024.
- ^ "British album certifications – Bob Dylan – Another Side of". British Phonographic Industry.
- ^ "American album certifications – Bob Dylan – Another Side of Bob Dylan". Recording Industry Association of America.
Bibliography
- ISBN 9780571272419.
- ISBN 978-1-55652-843-9.
- ISBN 0-306-80907-9.