Wales On Sunday

Dylan breaks Nobel silence

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BOB DYLAN said he was left “speechless” after learning he had become the first musician to be awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.

The 75-year-old was controvers­ially handed the prestigiou­s accolade earlier this month for “having created new poetic expression­s within the great American song tradition”.

The Swedish Academy said Dylan, who is due to show a collection of art in London in November, acknowledg­ed the prize for the first time this week in a phone conversati­on.

They said he told Sara Danius, Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy: “I appreciate the honour so much.”

And he said: “The news about the Nobel Prize left me speechless.”

After failing to comment on the award immediatel­y after it was announced, Dylan was called “impolite and arrogant” by an official from the Academy.

But in an interview with the Daily Telegraph he said he “absolutely” wants to attend December’s Nobel Prize Award Ceremony “if it’s at all possible”.

He told the newspaper being awarded the prize was “hard to believe”, adding it was “amazing, incredible.”

“Whoever dreams about something like that?”

Dylan became the first American to win the literature prize since Beloved author Toni Morrison in 1993.

His win was praised by literary figures and critics, with a leading academic hailing him as the Tennyson of our times.

Professor Seamus Perry, chairman of the English Faculty at Oxford University, described Dylan as “one of the greats”, saying: “He is, more than any other, the poet of our times, as Tennyson was of his, representa­tive and yet wholly individual, humane, angry, funny, and tender by turn.”

The decision was not received well by everyone, with Trainspott­ing author Irvine Welsh labelling it an “ill conceived nostalgia award”.

The Scottish novelist and playwright tweeted: “I’m a Dylan fan, but this is an ill conceived nostalgia award wrenched from the rancid prostates of senile, gibbering hippies.”

Born Robert Zimmerman on May 24 1941, in the backwaters of Minnesota, he reinvented himself as folk singer songwriter Bob Dylan.

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