BOB DYLAN
After dabbling briefly in rock music as pianist for Bobby
Vee, Robert Zimmerman of Duluth, Minnesota took himself off to
Greenwich Village, New York, where he first of all transformed
himself into a folk singer, then transformed the very notion of
folk music.
Barely 20-years-old, Bob Dylan was spotted early in 1961
playing autoharp and singing at the Folklore Center in Greenwich
Village by a writer from the Village Voice. His report
described Dylan as "extraordinary" and predicted his
emergence within the year as a major talent to be reckoned with.

Dylan's official New York debut came at Gerde's Folk City in
Greenwich Village on 11 April 1961, opening for bluesman John
Lee Hooker. Just over a fortnight later he made his recording
debut, earning $50 for playing harmonica on Harry
Belafonte's recording of Midnight Special.
On 29 September, noted New York Times music critic
Robert Shelton lent weight to the Village Voice opinion
when he gave Dylan his first major press review.
Raving over a Dylan slot at Gerde's, Shelton described him as
"a cross between a choirboy and a beatnik" who was
"bursting at the seams with talent". Shelton ended his
review with the words "Mr Dylan is vague about his
antecedents and birthplace, but it matters less where he has been
than where he is going, and that would seem to be straight
up".
That same day, Dylan had played harmonica on a recording
session for his friend, folk singer Carolyn Hester, through whom
he had met veteran record producer John Hammond.
Hammond (whose previous signings included Billie
Holiday, Count Basie and Aretha
Franklin) was so impressed by Dylan's talent and Shelton's
review that he offered a contract with $1,000 advance.
Colombia
Records' faith in the young folk singer's potential was underlined
by the fact that he was signed to the label for five years at an
unprecedented royalty rate of only 4%.
On November 20th and 22nd Hammond and Dylan recorded his debut
album at a cost of $400, with the working title Bob Dylan.
In May 1963 Dylan walked out of CBS' Ed
Sullivan Show after being told he could not perform his
anti-segregationist song Talking John Birch Society Blues.
In the same year, folk trio Peter,
Paul and Mary had chart hits with Dylan compositions Blowin'
in the Wind and Don't Think Twice It's Alright,
although Dylan's own early singles were not faring as well.
In August however, sales of Freewheelin', his second
album, rocketed him into place as the world's number one folk
music star.
Around the same time, scare-mongering began in the press,
suggesting that his songs were in fact Kremlin-inspired propaganda
designed to brainwash the youth of the Western world . . .
Despite writing such obvious protest songs as Blowin' In
The Wind and The Times They Are A-Changin', Dylan
denied being a 'protest' singer. "Don't put me down as a man
with a message", he insisted. "My songs are just me
talking to myself. I have no responsibility to anybody except
myself".
Like a lot of things surrounding Bob Dylan, what's known in pop
shorthand as "Dylan goes electric" splinters into a
kaleidoscope of stories. Few agree on what happened when he
plugged in and amped up through Maggie's Farm and Like
a Rolling Stone at the Newport Folk Festival on 25 July 1965.
He is said to have been inspired by The
Byrds' electric treatment of his songs, but was promptly booed
off stage, allegedly in tears, by the audience of folk purists.
Dylan's organist Al Kooper claims the audience didn't boo because
Dylan had forsaken the purity of acoustic folk, but because his
set was too short. But tensions ran high backstage - Folkies Pete
Seeger and Alan Lomax were appalled to see their protégé roaring
towards the dark side of psychedelic pop.
Whatever it was that happened, Newport became rock music's
shock that was heard around the world: Before it, pop and protest
were mutually exclusive. In Dylan, they merged.
His first real chart success came in August when Like A
Rolling Stone made it to Number 2 in the USA.
A
motorcycle crash in 1966 put him out of circulation, and when he
returned in 1968 it was with the simpler, countrified style of John
Wesley Harding.
Although Dylan hit another creative peak in the mid-Seventies
with the albums Blood On The Tracks and Desire,
his conversion to Christianity in the latter part of the decade
caused many of his early fans to desert him.
His evangelical-flavoured material from the Slow Train
Coming album was booed when he performed it live on tour.
Dylan continued to tour and release albums for the faithful and
the hopeful.
At the turn of the 1980s (his most accident-prone decade by
miles), Bob Dylan released Oh Mercy. His fans rejoiced,
the world spun off its axis, and then he brought out the pretty
threadbare Under The Red Sky. For some, the
disappointment positively ached.
The influence of Dylan's early works is inestimable. His songs
were the very basis of the folk-rock genre and, in particular, the
early career of The Byrds.
Echoes of Dylan can be heard down the decades in the works of
everyone from The Beatles to Simon
& Garfunkel and Bruce
Springsteen.
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