The Borneo Post

When Bob was Bobby: Memoir offers insider’s look at enigmatic Dylan

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NEW YORK: From Bob Dylan’s first hard-driving blues number at summer camp to the rollicking Rolling Thunder Revue concert tour, the legendary musician’s childhood best friend had a front row seat to the action.

Now Louie Kemp has released a backstage pass of sorts into the mythology of Dylan, in the form of a memoir released this week, dishing on everything from the folk hero’s Passover Seder meal with Marlon Brando to his own food fight at a Chinese restaurant with Joan Baez.

The duo first met in northern Wisconsin in 1953, when Dylan was still Bobby Zimmerman, 12 years old, his guitar already attached as if a limb.

As rambunctio­us pre-teens at a Jewish camp in the northwoods of the Midwestern state – Dylan grew up just over the border in the blue-collar mining town of Hibbing, Minnesota – the friends got in their fair share of trouble, notably for a shaving cream prank on their peers that saw them steal a car.

But despite his antics Dylan was confident in his fate: “He always told me and the other kids that he was gonna be a rock and roll star,” Kemp told AFP. “He said it so many times that finally I believed him.”

“He just had a natural musical talent that was combined with an unbelievab­le drive.”

The rest, of course, is history – but Kemp, now 77, felt compelled to write down his unique perspectiv­e in the book entitled “Dylan & Me: 50 Years of Adventures,” having known the legend throughout the evolution of his illustriou­s career.

“It would be selfish for me to take all these stories and adventures to my grave,” he said. “He felt comfortabl­e with me because he knew I didn’t have an agenda. He trusted me just like I trusted him – but in his case it was more important.”

“Once you become famous it’s hard to make new friends that you can really feel trustworth­y with. In our case those roots went back so far, that wasn’t a concern.”

Kemp goes on to describe how his friend Bobby Zimmerman became Bob Dylan on the University of Minnesota campus in the northern state’s Twin Cities, hitchhikin­g through Wisconsin’s capital city Madison, then Chicago, before finally reaching New York’s bohemianmi­nded Greenwich Village.

Dylan quickly rose to fame as a regular in the Village’s burgeoning folk scene, propelled to celebrity after Baez began inviting him to play at her concerts.

“The first song that I heard of his was ‘ Blowin’ in the Wind’ and I said, ‘Oh my God, he wrote that? How the hell did he do that?’” Kemp recalls. “That blew everybody away, including me.”

“And they just kept coming out of him, like water out of a faucet.”

It wasn’t long before Dylan called on his childhood friend to visit him out East.

He later invited Kemp on a movie set in Mexico – Dylan was scoring the film “Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid,” which included the classic “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door” – and to join his highprofil­e comeback “Tour ‘74.”

The superstar then asked Kemp to produce his “Rolling Thunder Revue” – the concert tour featured in a recent pseudodocu­mentary by Martin Scorsese – that saw Dylan sweep into smaller towns with a cast of fellow musicians including Joni Mitchell to play for those priced out of his larger concerts.

“He doesn’t have the ego that goes with most people in entertainm­ent,” Kemp said of his old pal, who is now 78. “He never changed in that respect. He was always down-to-earth.”

“I gotta give him credit – the fame never got to him.”

Kemp illustrate­s a number of amusing anecdotes, including one night when the revered actor Brando turned “chartreuse” after eating too much horseradis­h at a Jewish ceremonial dinner.

He also recounts Dylan’s role as best man in Kemp’s 1983 wedding, where the icon delighted guests with an impromptu performanc­e.

“Our relationsh­ip was like any two friends – one just happens to be Bob Dylan,” Kemp said. “To me he’s always been Bobby Zimmerman.” — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Dylan (centre) poses for a photo at his fiftieth birthday in 1991, with friends Louie Kemp (left) and Larry (last name unknown).
— AFP photo Dylan (centre) poses for a photo at his fiftieth birthday in 1991, with friends Louie Kemp (left) and Larry (last name unknown).

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