The burning of Beatles records and magazines in the American South in 1966. |
Back in 1966, John Lennon was worried about whether he'd be killed as The Beatles criss-crossed America in a summer filled with race riots and a heated controversy over a comment he made about the group being more popular than Jesus Christ. But there was another performer, one who was confused with being a prophet, having similar qualms that summer: Bob Dylan. Not only did the events in that season of hate alter the path of Dylan's career, it dramatically transformed the artist himself. He went from being a man making history to one who feared becoming its pawn. That summer determined not only his retreat from pop stardom, where a reluctant avatar suddenly saw the possibilities of betrayal, it also changed the game. With Dylan's Another Self Portrait, which contains unreleased sessions of music that make up two albums (Self Portrait, New Morning) during his retreat from his audience between 1969 and 1971, and on sale in stores today, you can hear in many of its songs the desire for solace. But the quiet in their sound, the soft beauty of "Pretty Saro," the contemplative quest in "Went to See the Gypsy," is deceptive. Another Self Portrait also has room for the tragic seduction of "House Carpenter," and the plaintive account of brutal murder in the traditional "Little Sadie." What all these songs have in common is that they portray a man seeking refuge in the more subtle confinements of the chamber room. But he couldn't hide from a world he helped create.
Just before The Beatles began confronting the many pitfalls of being idolized pop stars in 1965, folk troubadour Bob Dylan had decided to enter the pop arena himself. During the early part of the Sixties, Dylan had been an active member of the American folk revival, a dedicated musical movement that had aligned itself with the Civil Rights struggle, and were committed to carrying on the long, ennobled tradition of left-wing activism. The movement was led by such stalwart figures as Pete Seeger, Odetta, Ramblin' Jack Elliott and Joan Baez and they had as their figurehead, the legendary Woody Guthrie. What Elvis had been to the birth of rock, Guthrie certainly was to the heart of the American folk movement. Within this revival was yet another quest for a renewed country and the music carried a righteous spirit to get them there. Unlike The Beatles' utopian ideals, though, their vision had an authentic set of values attached, and it wasn't located in a place in the mind. These believers looked out into America with an obligation to the dream of JFK's New Frontier. They demanded an America with justice for black and white, men and women. In their music, it was held that the values of the marketplace would never take precedence over the value of human life. They refused the urban hustle and bustle for what they saw as the honest simplicity of the rural communities. Unlike pop music, perceived by the folk community as an ugly symbol of capitalist corruption, their music set out to document the pure struggle of all peoples, not just one artist's petty self-interest. If you were to write a folk song, it wasn't going to be "I Wanna Be Your Man," but rather, "We Shall Overcome."
Into this sacred world, stepped an enigma named Bob Dylan. Dylan had abandoned his actual name of Robert Zimmerman, and he set out to become a folk-singing legend before the age of 25. By 1965, however, he abandoned the rustic look of the folk hero and donned a leather jacket. Dylan radically altered his repertoire as well by borrowing players from Paul Butterfield's Blues Band, picking up an electric guitar and plugging in. One night, at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, a loud and unhappy community expressed their displeasure when Dylan took a traditional folk song named "Penny's Farm," and turned it into the loud urban blues of "Maggie's Farm" (a song he had included that same year on his half-electric/half-acoustic Bringing it All Back Home). With this song, he declared his independence from a movement that had recently crowned him their young leader. "I ain't gonna work on Maggie's farm no more," he boldly cried out. It was quite clear from the power of his voice exactly whose farm he wasn't gonna work on. Just before Newport, Dylan stated his mission when he tore up the pop charts with an electrifying six-minute single called "Like a Rolling Stone." In it, he announced to his followers that, unlike their topical songs, his music was no longer going to usher in a better world. Dylan had made it clear to those who loudly booed him, and to anyone who cared to listen, that his music wasn't a product of history. His music was about to make history.
Bob Dylan at Newport Folk Festival, 1965 |
To face the angry swarm of betrayed folk fans, Dylan brought on board a Canadian rock group from Toronto called The Hawks. As the American crowds hissed, jeered and loudly booed, drummer Levon Helm (the only American in the group) decided to haul his tail back to Arkansas. Being a proud Southerner, Levon didn't play music to bear insults. After then securing drummer Mickey Jones, the group headed to England, the proud home of the Fab Four. But unlike the Fab Four, they weren't greeted with any "yeah, yeah, yeah's." The hostility, in fact, grew so intense that each concert became one more bloody battle in a long, protracted war. Dylan began each concert with a set of his acoustic music, but the lyrics were sometimes slowly drawn out, emphasizing the sound of his voice rather than the literal meaning of the lyric. When he came back from the intermission, however, with the crowd mostly calmed and expectant, he and The Hawks launched into some of the loudest, most powerful rock heard from a live stage. Their highly amplified music took no prisoners and it asked no favours. "It was a musically revolutionary time," remembers The Hawks' lead guitarist Robbie Robertson. "Who else can talk about playing all over North America, Europe and Australia and being booed every single night?"
Bob Dylan & The Hawks on tour in 1966 |
Dylan and his fans (photo by Barry Feinstein) |
In 2002, when singer/songwriter Robyn Hitchcock re-enacted the entire Manchester Free Trade Hall show from 1966 at the Borderline Club in London, many in the audience sought to play Keith Butler during the evening performance. A few yelled "Judas!" – after the wrong song – either unable to remember Butler's place in the story, or perhaps wishing to alter its time line. Maybe they wanted to see if they could change the outcome of the show. But someone did eventually step into Butler's shoes at the correct moment before Hitchcock and his group, imagining themselves as Dylan & The Hawks, found their way into "Like a Rolling Stone." Although the spirit of the evening was all in good fun, with an absence of the possible danger lurking in 1966, Hitchcock's performance held up as a reminder of the shadow side hidden in the allure of utopian ideals. The Beatles' "There's a Place" once held out a hand that invited us to venture to another place, asking us to be an active partner in a dream rather than remaining a passive consumer. "I'll let you be in my dreams, if I can be in yours," Dylan once sang in "Talkin' World War III Blues." But what Dylan and The Beatles were to discover in 1966 was the risk of asking people to take part in your dreams. Once they do, maybe the dream is no longer yours to control.
- Kevin Courrier is a freelance writer/broadcaster, film critic and author (Dangerous Kitchen: The Subversive World of Zappa, Randy Newman's American Dreams, 33 1/3 Captain Beefheart's Trout Mask Replica, Artificial Paradise: The Dark Side of The Beatles Utopian Dream). Courrier teaches part-time film courses to seniors through the LIFE Institute at Ryerson University in Toronto and other venues. His forthcoming book is Reflections in the Hall of Mirrors: American Movies and the Politics of Idealism.
No comments:
Post a Comment