GARY PIG GOLD ON BOB DYLAN, A YONGE STREET BAR BAND, AND THE DEATH, 50 YEARS AGO THIS MONTH, OF ROCK AND ROLL

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As most pretty-pointedly shown throughout Martin Scorsese’s remarkable No Direction Home, the ’66-model Bob Dylan was an American idol at the indisputable peak of his powers as the [insert your own convenient pigeonhole here] Poet/Laureate of a Generation, Crown Prince of the (Thinking Man’s) Hit Parade, or – my personal favorite – Snot-headed, Venom-spewing Anti-Rockstar of All Time.

Dylan '66

Don’t believe a word they say though: if truth be told, the Robert Allen Zimmerman of this period was in fact a man fatally absorbed in his own myth-making, squirming under the pressures of an over-demanding manager, sinking under his obligations to a wholly unsympathetic recording conglomerate, and to top it all was apparently stuffed to the gills in all manner of dangerously recreational pharmaceutica. blowtorch_002Or, as Tony Glover’s brilliant liner notes inside The Bootleg Series Volume 4: Bob Dylan Live 1966, The “Royal Albert Hall” [sic!] Concert summarize, “Bob was not just burning the candle at both ends – he was using a blowtorch on the middle.”

True enough, 1966 was a tough year for rock ‘n’ rollers. Many crashed (Brian Wilson, for one) and several surely got burned (John Lennon, most obviously). Dylan, for his part, did manage to snap his neck in two after peeling over the handlebars of his motorcycle that July, but just two months earlier was still in the fiery midst of The Never Ending Tour, Mach One. To the skeptical (at best), resentful (at worst) audiences of western Europe that spring, he had brought not only his trusty old acoustic and some nice folk tunes, but had defiantly snuck onto his tour plane as well a loud, raucous, extremely plugged-in rhythm ’n’ rock combo from the wilds of T.O. (by way of Arkansas) named, you bet, The Hawks.

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This was indeed the proverbial boxing match wanting to happen, for insofar as his reverent disciples throughout the British Isles were concerned the ’66-styled Bob was still the poe-faced, freewheelin’ baby Guthrie of “Blowin’ In The Wind” and “The Times They Are A’Changin’.” Electric guitars and Carnaby Street-bright leather fashions? Those were just toys kids played with on that damnable scrapheap called the Top Forty.

Yes, but the times – not to mention the voice, the instrumentation, and especially the attitude – had indeed changed since their Boy Wonderful first toured the Empire (captured for posterity, by the way, in the still-magnificent Dont Look Back film). And you know, it goes without saying that most people then, as they do now, seem to react to change negatively. Some violently so.

imagesJust listen, for example, to the poor old souls inside the Manchester Free Trade Hall on the night of May 17, ’66: They may sit politely as Bob impatiently rushes through his acoustic set (preserved on Live 1966 Disc One), but no sooner had his accomplices wheeled their amps onstage and kicked – literally – into a defiant “Tell Me, Momma” (with its oh-so-appropriate “I know that you know that I know that you show something is tearing up your mind”) that all holy hell began ripping loose. Remember, if you will, that Dylan and his Hawks were the only band on the road that year to come equipped with their very own sound system. Thus freed from having to rely on the puny public address systems of sports arenas and, in the case of England, 100-year-old music halls, Bob & Co. were fiendishly bent on producing some of the loudest r’n’r yet to be heard by man or beast.

Live1966

Also some of the best: “I Don’t Believe You” and “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues” prove there was NO finer band operating in the world at the time, with Robbie Robertson’s “mathematical” (as Dylan so aptly called it at the time) guitar work jabbing and slicing with all the poise and finesse of a rusty soup-can lid to the throat. The inimitable Garth Hudson happily adds just the right touch of carnival madness throughout with his hurly-gurdy organ work, but it’s most certainly Dylan, front and center, who carries the proceedings throughout …and carries them clear on up into the stratosphere at times.

For starters, anyone out there who still thinks the guy, quote, can’t sing, unquote, should be strapped down this instant with a pair of headphones and his exquisite ’66 rendering of “I Don’t Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)”: Most each and every line inexplicably ducks, weaves, then ultimately soars with a totally unparalleled sense of suspense and high drama. In short, This guy sings his effin tail off!  (May I remind the still-unconvinced right about here that no less an expert on the subject of vocal pipes as Francis Albert Sinatra was an unabashed admirer of Dylan’s singing style …I say, forever resting my case).

But that ain’t all! With its concluding two salvos, “Ballad Of A Thin Man” and the epochal (definitive rending of, by the way) “Like A Rolling Stone,” Dylan not only screeches the Manchester concert to its wholly apocalyptic end, but pulls off in the process the near impossible: Delightfully terrifying, blisteringly brilliant, and with a raw, unburdened majesty he – nor anyone else for that matter – has yet to recapture, the Hibbing Kid embodies in these conclusive fourteen minutes everything that’s still sorely lacking in Popular Music, and pop culture as a (w)hole, this half-a-whole-century (!) down the road. In a word? Danger. Substance. Permanence and pre-eminence. Need I say more?

Some insist that after duly carving his statement with such beautiful cacophony, there was honestly nowhere left for Dylan to go but down and perhaps even out. Others say 1925-2the man simply paused after that convenient bike wreck to reassess and eventually reinvent himself, as he periodically continues to do to this day (strangely, within eighteen short months of his shoot-out at the ol’ Free Trade Hall, Bob had successfully mutated into the solemn, bewhiskered backwoods oracle of John Wesley Harding). But perhaps this all goes part and parcel with the risks one ultimately faces when aiming too close to the sun, artistically speaking. Bob Dylan Live 1966 captures, as no other record ever has, exactly what it must feel like to peer over that ever-elusive edge, if only for a moment, towards that wondrous splendor known as, sonically speaking at least, The Promised Land. In doing so, it reveals a power and a glory that even this motley bunch of pill-heads with their new electric guitars must’ve been quite awed at having conjured in Manchester that long-ago historic night.

Dylan and the band

Rock ’n’ roll, for one, just doesn’t seem brave enough to want to shoot this high anymore, and we are all, believe you me, at a great disadvantage and a great loss because of it.

=GPG=

Gary appears here whenever he wants

Contact us at: dbawis@rogers.com.

DBAWIS_ButtonGary Pig Gold may have grown up in Port Credit, run away to Hamilton to join his first rock ‘n’ roll group, hung out with Joe Strummer on his first-ever night in the UK, returned to T.O. to publish Canada’s first-ever rock ‘n’ roll (fan)zine, run away again gary pig gpld facong leftto Surf City to (almost) tour Australia with Jan & Dean, come home again to tour O Canada with that country’s first-ever (authorized!) Beach Boys tribute band …but STILL, he had to travel all the way back to the USSR to secure his first-ever recording contract www.GaryPigGold.com

 

2 Responses to “GARY PIG GOLD ON BOB DYLAN, A YONGE STREET BAR BAND, AND THE DEATH, 50 YEARS AGO THIS MONTH, OF ROCK AND ROLL”

  1. nicely put. i always thought that live rock never got better than this. and this was kinda the first real live rock! the beginning and the end!
    having said that, my other fave bob is 10 years later on the rolling thunder tour, that tv special hard rain (and live alb same name) is amazing bob. talk about singing his head off, he never sang better! and the band is crack on! best drummer he ever had. they were on fire, and all wearing turbans, and bob playing searing slide guitar! 66 and 76. yeah.

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