The New Zealand Herald

A night of whisky and confession­s

Times they aren’t a changin’ – Dylan is as relevant as ever

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Bob Dylan’s new album begins and ends with death, “as all things do”, he accurately notes in the first line of opening number I Contain Multitudes. It’s a mood. I took a sip of my whisky, straight, no ice, leaned back in my chair and closed my eyes.

Earlier in the day I’d been sent a digital advance copy of his new album Rough and Rowdy Ways. And while I acknowledg­e that the proper and correct way to listen to ol’ Bob is on vinyl, that unfortunat­ely doesn’t release until next month. My hand was forced.

Especially as I’d already exercised great will and restraint in not listening to the couple of songs he’d put out in the lead-up, including the much-raved-about, 17-minute epic, Murder Most Foul.

With no patience left in the tank, I downloaded the songs, waited until the family was tucked up in bed, dimmed the lounge lights and engaged in one of the most unromantic ways to listen to music by pressing play on my computer.

A gentle, melancholi­c strum filled the air, and 10 seconds later Dylan, up front and gravely – and with each of his 79 years proudly weighing down his words like a gold medallion – began his confession.

“I fuss with my hair, and I fight

blood feuds, I contain multitudes,” he explained. “I drive fast cars, and I eat fast foods, I contain multitudes,” he laughed. “I sing the songs of experience like William Blake, I have no apologies to make,” he stated in defiance.

“I’m a man of contradict­ions,” he continued. “I’m a man of many moods,” he admitted. “I contain multitudes,” he concluded, in what is perhaps – or perhaps not – the ultimate answer to all those Dylan diehards who have dedicated their lives to unravellin­g the mystery of his.

As an album opener it sets the mood. Like lapping waves on the shoreline the song’s soft, lilting rhythms coupled with Dylan’s introspect­ive vocals lull you into reflection as you listen to one of the most purposeful­ly opaque artists to ever live reveal it all. Sort of.

You could write 10,000 words on any one line alone from this song. Heck, you could write 10,000 words on just the way he coos the word “multitudes” alone, breaking up and imbibing each syllable with the weight and complexity of a life that’s been lived.

His lyrics dart between truth and fiction, biography and myth building, romanticis­m and thuggish violence. Is he fabricatin­g when he threatens, “I carry four pistols and two large knives”? He sounds like he means it, man. And, of all the artists in their senior years, it’s easy to believe that Dylan is someone who actually does. His rugged outlaw approach to folk music informing everything he’s ever done.

After, he segues into the raw blues stomp of False Prophet, a song that, bar the croak of his voice, could slot onto his 1965 game changer Highway 61Revisite­d with ease. It’s one of a handful of up-tempo joints that break up the album but never its vibe.

Elsewhere, the sublime beauty of I’veMadeUpMy­MindtoGive­Myself toYou, is both love song and lament, MotherofMu­ses is a gospel interlude, while the Frankenste­in vaudeville of MyOwnVersi­onofYou is a brilliant example of Dylan’s whimsical wordplay. “Can you look in my face with your sightless eyes?” he wonders of his creation.

It’s Dylan’s first album of original material since 2012’s Tempest,and damn, he has a lot to say, even if I didn’t always know what he was on about. But that’s par for the course with me and Dylan and not surprising when each lyric can simultaneo­usly mean everything and nothing.

The crucial things is I always feel like I understand or feel what he means.

The album builds to the startling MurderMost­Foul; a song that starts off being about the Kennedy assassinat­ion before freewheeli­ng out to document American culture, politics, history, memories, music and, well, everything.

The song’s hypnotic, with Dylan’s almost spoken-word stream of consciousn­ess floating on a whitewater stream of soft guitar, fragile piano and bows drenched in sadness.

It is simply remarkable. A song about the past written by a 79-yearold that perfectly encapsulat­es the global chaos of today. Of pandemics and protests. Divisivene­ss and hatred. A world where Neo-Nazis are making a comeback and saying something as simple as Black Lives Matter is considered controvers­ial.

It’s said those who don’t know history are doomed to repeat it. Dylan’s final lyric on the album is, PlayMurder­MostFoul. I poured another whisky and did.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Bob Dylan’s lyrics swing between truth and fiction, biography, myth building, romanticis­m and violence.
Photo / Supplied Bob Dylan’s lyrics swing between truth and fiction, biography, myth building, romanticis­m and violence.
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