The Star Malaysia

We need sages like Dylan, especially now

- By MAHIR ALI

IN his latest documentar­y, 1971: The Year That Music Changed Everything, the British filmmaker Asif Kapadia marks the 50th anniversar­y of a purported annus mirabilis for Western popular music.

There’s plenty of evidence for that, which makes it all the more remarkable that barely a peep was heard from the previous decade’s designated “spokesman for his generation”.

The solitary song Bob Dylan released the year he turned 30, in 1971, was George Jackson, an unexpected tribute to a radical black activist shot while trying to escape from prison.

Dylan had supposedly drawn a line under “finger-pointing songs” several years earlier, but by then his burgeoning songbook already boasted a bunch of timeless entries, from Blowin’ in the Wind and Masters of War to The Times They are A-Changin’ and A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall, their topicality destined to withstand the wear and tear of a turbulent age.

Thereafter he became more opaque, determined not to be a spokesman for anyone other than himself. The songs continued to pour out, mesmerisin­gly surrealist­ic in their imagery, and indefinite­ly open to interpreta­tion. Then the stream of consciousn­ess seemed to dry up. During the hiatus, Dylan dug deep into the traditions of “the old, weird America”.

But Dylan never entirely shut himself off from the weirdness of the contempora­ry twists and turns of his homeland. There were no songs explicitly about the Vietnam War even as his generation was protesting about it on the streets. But George Jackson didn’t come out of the blue. Listen to The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll, from 1963, and you’ll understand why. (And then to Hurricane from 1976.)

“Sometimes I think this whole world/ Is one big prison yard,” he sings in the 1971 single. “Some of us are prisoners/ The rest of us are guards.”

What could be more topical 50 years later, whether it’s Black Lives Matter or Gaza on your mind?

We’ll probably never know what Dylan thinks about the avalanche of tributes that has greeted him on his 80th birthday this week, but then he has always been reluctant to reveal himself. He made up fabulous tales about himself when he turned up as an itinerant folksinger in New York’s Greenwich Village 60 years ago, bursting with Woody Guthrie songs but beginning to make up some of his own.

They were mainly derivative, but in some ways also highly original. It was the originalit­y that stood out when he was signed up in 1961 as a recording artist by Columbia Records.

Last year, soon after the Covid-19 pandemic prompted lockouts across much of the world, Dylan dropped the longest track he had ever laid down.

Murder Most Foul, a nearly 17-minute rumination on the 1963 murder of American president John F. Kennedy, not only captures the zeitgeist of the times (and revives a few conspiracy theories) but finds much to say about the cultural landscape of the years that followed. The late masterpiec­e, more declaimed than sung, fits right into the template of the subsequent album, Rough and Rowdy Ways, arguably his best since Desire in 1976.

Who knows, perhaps he felt obliged to prove himself worthy of the Nobel Prize in Literature he earned in 2016.

He was characteri­stically reticent about acknowledg­ing it at the time, taking weeks to respond. When he eventually came up with a speech, it reflected on the blues, on MobyDick and All Quiet on the Western Front, and referred to Shakespear­e and Homer, concluding with a quotation from the latter: “Sing to me, o Muse, and through me tell the story.”

Fellow North American poet Leonard Cohen said the accolade was like pinning a medal on Everest for being the highest mountain.

It was Dylan’s way of pointing out that, like his predecesso­rs, he is a storytelle­r. He was influenced by those who came before him, and strongly influenced his contempora­ries and their successors. He has been called out as a plagiarist, but so was Shakespear­e who plundered Plutarch for some of his tragedies, giving those tales an enduring lease of life. Dylan can be excused for aspiring to an affinity.

Perhaps some of his albums, particular­ly through much of the 1980s, are inexcusabl­y appalling. Perhaps five discs of croonerwor­thy classics from the Great American Songbook, relying on vocal cords that gave up the ghost 30 years earlier, are excessive.

But filter out the dross, and you’re still left with an unmatched body of poetic work across 60 years, frequently leavened with wit and wisdom, acknowledg­ed by scholarly works and dedicated university institutes.

That’s reason enough to wish him many happy returns, embrace his bewilderme­nt in wondering: “I don’t know what’s going to happen when I’m not around to sing any more”, and tentativel­y accept his contention that he may not be properly appreciate­d for another 100 years. – Dawn/Asia News Network

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