Hip Hop Fan Reacts To Subterranean Homesick Blues by Bob Dylan

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 23 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 670

  • @anntelford8647
    @anntelford8647 Рік тому +42

    The reference advising to "stay away from those
    That carry around a fire hose" is about the use of fire hoses to control protests/riots (see Watts Protests in the 60s, etc.).

    • @t.c.bramblett617
      @t.c.bramblett617 6 місяців тому +1

      And his line about weathermen was actually picked up by the Weather Underground, the 60s radical group, as their name!

  • @jamesg.respess105
    @jamesg.respess105 11 місяців тому +7

    I'm an old guy; I was listing to everything Dylan in the '60s and after. I would memorize dozens of his songs and perform them for my friends. When Rap and Hip-Hop came around I wondered if anyone was drawing the connection with some of the verses of Bob Dylan. It's also interesting to see that much of his poetry is just as relevant as it was when he composed it.

  • @a2zme
    @a2zme Рік тому +171

    Believe it or not, this was a Top 40 hit in 1965 .. yup .. you could turn on the radio, hear a Frank Sinatra tune and then this revolutionary sound would play next.
    #theMaster

    • @CipherSerpico
      @CipherSerpico Рік тому +6

      There was another decent band that you could occasionally hear on the Radio.
      They aren’t very well known now, but back at that time-they had one or two songs that were pretty good.
      The Beatles.

    • @jjhpor
      @jjhpor Рік тому +2

      @@CipherSerpico Yeah, pretty good. You could say Dylan and the Beatles were pretty good. Nothin' like 'em. before or after. Nothing. Ever. OK. maybe Mozart.

    • @CipherSerpico
      @CipherSerpico Рік тому

      @@jjhpor Ya, I know that Moe guy.
      Polish fella, right?
      Moe Zart?

    • @ernestbivens7088
      @ernestbivens7088 7 місяців тому +1

      Well said. Rap is like Dylan, not the other way around.

  • @anotherjoshua
    @anotherjoshua Рік тому +165

    NOBODY was writing songs like this in 1965. He was so ahead of his time. Still is.

    • @neilmartin99
      @neilmartin99 Рік тому +3

      Frank Zappa.

    • @backbeat44
      @backbeat44 Рік тому +4

      um, Chuck Berry

    • @RobWitchdoctor
      @RobWitchdoctor Рік тому +2

      @markbushnell4019 You expressed that well mate, you are an excellent wordsmith. And I couldn't agree more with what you have said!

    • @ktrsBklyn
      @ktrsBklyn Рік тому +6

      And he was 24 when he wrote this !! It’s so wise and world-weary.

    • @mattflynn1342
      @mattflynn1342 Рік тому +1

      Absolutely!

  • @NondescriptMammal
    @NondescriptMammal Рік тому +80

    This isn't his only song that presages rap, he had several that were of a style known as "talking blues", which was also a style often used by Woody Guthrie, who was arguably Dylan's primary musical influence.

    • @georgereynolds2276
      @georgereynolds2276 Рік тому +2

      Charlie Patton was a blues singer who was rapping in the late "twenties.

    • @NondescriptMammal
      @NondescriptMammal Рік тому +2

      ​@@georgereynolds2276 Christopher Bouchillon released the song "Talking Blues" in 1927

    • @petepop4319
      @petepop4319 7 місяців тому

      rap is hillbilly and hillbilly's can spit and talk at the same time

    • @wildwillie5408
      @wildwillie5408 3 місяці тому +2

      @@georgereynolds2276 Robert Johnson too

  • @alpetrocelli4465
    @alpetrocelli4465 Рік тому +60

    I knew that once rap music fans heard this tune they’d recognize Dylan’s genius & range. Folk, protest, rock, country, rap, he does it all. Happy to see you get to this tune. Great reaction.✌️❤️🎶

  • @garethpert4799
    @garethpert4799 Рік тому +84

    The music video for this track is iconic - and has been ripped off so many times. In the background of the video you also see Allen Ginsberg, an American beat poet best known for Howl. Dylan was definitely ahead of his time. I love the comic nature of this song.

    • @Phil_Kawana
      @Phil_Kawana Рік тому +2

      Isn't Ginsburg talking to Lawrence Ferlinghetti in this video?

    • @hydraulicfacechannel2147
      @hydraulicfacechannel2147 Рік тому +6

      @@Phil_Kawana he's talking to bob neuwirth

    • @Phil_Kawana
      @Phil_Kawana Рік тому +1

      @@hydraulicfacechannel2147 Ah, thanks for that, you're right. For some reason I'd thought it was Ferlinghetti for years...

    • @jamesfitzgerald6636
      @jamesfitzgerald6636 Рік тому +2

      It’s filmed in an alley, next to savoy hotel in London.

  • @thecowfy
    @thecowfy Рік тому +4

    You're chillin on it like we did 50-60 years ago. Makes it classic.

  • @lawrencesmith6536
    @lawrencesmith6536 Рік тому +30

    Talkin blues....the godfather of rap. 13 years before the first real rap song. Also, in the late 60s a radical splinter group of the SDS, took the name Weathermen from this song

  • @patrickkeyes5916
    @patrickkeyes5916 Рік тому +73

    This isn’t Dylan “trying out rap.” He wrote this in 1965. But I’m really happy you’re introducing this to your audience. Love it.

    • @Camothor10
      @Camothor10 Рік тому +7

      He knows when it was written he is just comparing it to rap because it is nearly an early form of rap before it had that name

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 Рік тому +9

      @@Camothor10 Nope: he grew up on "Rap" and that's the only "music" he knows, as if "Rap" were something new or "revolutionary".
      TALKING BLUES is what it was called during the 1920s-50s, and Dylan got it from Woodie Guthrie.

  • @lgot123
    @lgot123 Рік тому +18

    The 60s protest/anti-war group called “The Weathermen” took their name from the line in this song, “You don’t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows.”

  • @christinelegate8137
    @christinelegate8137 Рік тому +21

    The “ Talking Blues “ was a style way before current Rap. Dylan is a lyrical genius .

  • @kevinjones4559
    @kevinjones4559 Рік тому +7

    The video is worth finding .

  • @danielroach1241
    @danielroach1241 Рік тому +35

    Bob Dylan was awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize for literature. You have almost but not quite heard a teeny, tiny bit of Dylan's output. Keep it up.

    • @ronreynolds1610
      @ronreynolds1610 Рік тому +2

      Him getting the Nobel Prize rattled some cages , lol , of course , some day there should be a Dylan award ,but then again Bob doesn't do it much for an award ,IMO....

  • @jonathanhenderson9422
    @jonathanhenderson9422 Рік тому +19

    As much as I can't fault you listening to Dylan during his hey day, he also has a lot of later day masterpieces that are just as impressive even if they're not as well known: Ain't Talkin', The Man in the Long Black Coat, Most of the Time, Mississippi, Not Dark Yet, Highlands, Every Grain of Sand, Tempest, and even several songs from his last album (his best in years): I've Made Up My Mind to Give Myself to You, Black Rider, Key West, and Murder Most Foul.

  • @jamesmccormick9532
    @jamesmccormick9532 Рік тому +15

    What an amazing song to do. Analyzing Dylan is like finding an electron. Not in any one place until you analyze, and then it is your own perspective that most affects the measurement.

    • @dickmckenna9447
      @dickmckenna9447 Рік тому

      I agree. Dylan is above most of us mortals. It's kind of like a first grader analyzing a university graduate. ✌️😊

  • @SunKou7
    @SunKou7 Рік тому +20

    Check out "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream", from the same album. It's one of my favorites of his lesser-talked-about works. It doesn't have quite the same flow as Subterranean, but I think it's one of his funniest songs. It's the best surreal scramble of Columbus, Moby-Dick, and American history you'll ever hear!
    Also I dig the Samurai Chambloo ED beat at the end of the vid! Now I have to go listen to the whole song...

  • @dantallman5345
    @dantallman5345 Рік тому +18

    This has always felt to me like he was dispensing wisdom to young people while jumping rope. Iconic song. Cool reaction.

    • @mattmalinas
      @mattmalinas Рік тому +2

      :)) awesome comparison!

    • @cindybradley3543
      @cindybradley3543 Рік тому +2

      Good way to put that song, in particular! Never thought of it that way but it makes sense.

    • @alphajava761
      @alphajava761 Рік тому +1

      Yeah. It has that rhythm to it.

  • @oxaloacetate
    @oxaloacetate Рік тому +7

    You should listen to Maggie's Farm too, it's from that same album

  • @jackbackband7733
    @jackbackband7733 Рік тому +5

    I'm so glad you found this and enjoyed it! It really is hip hop what sixty years before it's time? You gotta see the official video and maybe do another take on this.

  • @coyote4237
    @coyote4237 Рік тому +4

    I'm so used to hearing this with the visual of Dylan's video, it was weird not to see it while listening.

  • @aaronfledge
    @aaronfledge Рік тому +19

    I second Tombstone Blues to do next. During his pure "folk" era Dylan wrote a lot of songs that tackled specific political issues directly, and after he went electric and his lyrics got more metaphorical he was accused of selling out. But the political angle never left - this, It's Alright Ma, Tombstone, Stuck Inside of Mobile and so many more are stuffed with social commentary. The freeing up of his writing style just meant he could tackle *everything* at once - violence, religion, the police, government authorities, race, imperialism, corruption, hypocrisy, you name it.

    • @fantasypgatour
      @fantasypgatour Рік тому +3

      Tombstone Blues is in some ways his best song.

  • @vincentvancraig
    @vincentvancraig Рік тому +8

    “Tombstone blues” is Dylan’s third “proto-rap” masterpiece of 1965, check it out....and ive been waiting for u to do this song, thanks, i needed a good thing to happen, my day has been crap.

  • @gdmyers47
    @gdmyers47 Рік тому +7

    You should have done the video of the song; as IT is iconic, parodies of it showing up in commercials, TV shows, movies, and other forms of media.

  • @Chapps1941
    @Chapps1941 Рік тому +4

    Dylan is the Greatest Artist from the 20th Century
    Any art, any genre.

  • @Hartlor_Tayley
    @Hartlor_Tayley Рік тому +5

    The Inkwell was a folk club in Boston that Bob used to hang around.

    • @anthonykane201
      @anthonykane201 7 місяців тому +1

      Didn't know that. You could also take this lyric to be Dylan talking about someone trying to write a book, song, script, etc. Especially when he sings, "Hard to tell, if anything is gonna sell"

    • @Hartlor_Tayley
      @Hartlor_Tayley 7 місяців тому

      @@anthonykane201 or maybe if a song is going to sell.

    • @anthonykane201
      @anthonykane201 7 місяців тому

      Could be, not this one, he had a radio hit with it! The way I interpret it, it could be directed toward anyone, and he was especially directing it towards young people, "Look Out Kid"

  • @peterliljeholmen5703
    @peterliljeholmen5703 Рік тому +24

    Was waiting and hoping for you to do this one ‘cause I was certain that you would like it! Brilliant track way ahead of time and as usual a great reaction! I’m crossing all my fingers that you will do ‘Desolation row’ next as it is fantastic and I’m convinced you’ll appreciate that one too! Greetings from Sweden.

    • @helenespaulding7562
      @helenespaulding7562 Рік тому +5

      Gawd, I hate it when people say something is “ahead of its time”. Having been a young adult at this time, I assure you it was very much OF its time. It just SEEMS modern now because of all the imitation.

    • @MagicianCamille
      @MagicianCamille Рік тому +1

      @@helenespaulding7562 Relax

    • @immortalserito774
      @immortalserito774 Рік тому +3

      Desolation Row perhaps the greatest s9ng ever....

    • @doriwiljt
      @doriwiljt Рік тому +3

      Desolation Row and one of my favorites Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowland

    • @helenespaulding7562
      @helenespaulding7562 Рік тому +3

      @@MagicianCamille I know, I know. It’s just that several people, on this reaction alone, said “ahead of its time”. Not to mention it happening on other reactions as well. This was just one time too many. Didn’t mean to pick on this guy in particular.
      I’ll do some deep breathing. 😉😏

  • @chungboislim2061
    @chungboislim2061 Рік тому +2

    It's dope that you see the similarity to hip-hop, I always tell people this was the first rap song. I grew up listening to Hip-hop and first heard Bob Dylan in high school. I immediately fell in love with his music because of his lyricism. He was my gateway from Hip-hop to all the other fantastic music out there and is my all time favorite musician.

  • @Sumotori.
    @Sumotori. Рік тому +7

    His video of the song “ Subterranean Homesick Blues” is the first music video ever, followed years later by MTV, in which he was the first artist on MTV music. Hats off the genius of Bobby Dylan! Thank you for your insightful commentary of the song. No wonder why George Harrison said to Johnston ( Nashville studio producer) : You’ll hear Bob Dylan in the next 500 years. Please Check out “ I Want You”, “ Hurricane “, “ The death of Hattie Carroll”, “ Winterlude”, “ Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door”, “ Forever Young”, “ Just Like A Woman”, “ Blowing In The Wind” if you did not cover them in your channel. God Bless

    • @AndersRDH
      @AndersRDH Рік тому

      The first on MTV were " Video Killed the Radio Star"? What are you talking about Dylan being the first?

  • @stevewebster973
    @stevewebster973 Рік тому +4

    Check out Bob Dylan’s 115th Dream ~ off the same album. Hilarious too.

  • @lizmil
    @lizmil Рік тому +3

    I am glad you appreciate Dylan’s sense of humor. So many people don’t realize how funny he is.

  • @michele-33
    @michele-33 Рік тому +5

    You would def get a kick outta the 'music video' that goes along with this song. 👍
    Ps: Suggested the vid before you said it..😎

  • @johnrosemeyer
    @johnrosemeyer Рік тому +3

    If you want to hear some vocal acrobatics check the Monkees "Goin' Down."

  • @stephenqualtrough7322
    @stephenqualtrough7322 Рік тому +3

    There is the long rambling semi rap of Brown'sville Girl mainly seemingly about a Gregory Peck western . Bob being batty but brilliant

  • @hyzercreek
    @hyzercreek Рік тому +2

    Walk This Way by Aerosmith 1975 was rap before rap. But the first rap record was a 1949 record called Gospel Boogie by LeRoy Abernathy. It's total rap and they sing this song in churches a lot more these days since people think it's rap. But it was 1949!! Just search the song and there you are, the first rap record. The Pilgrim Travelers covered Gospel Boogie with Lou Rawls but it was original to LeRoy Abernathy who wrote it in 1947.

  • @johnbrowne3950
    @johnbrowne3950 Рік тому +1

    The Weather Underground was a far left militant group in the 1960s that Dylan may have been referring to when when he says you don't need a weather man to know which way the wind blows.

    • @Matt_D_370z
      @Matt_D_370z Рік тому

      The Weather Underground got their name from Dylan's line in the song.

  • @helenespaulding7562
    @helenespaulding7562 Рік тому +3

    No, the fire hose was a reference to the fact that back then, the police, especially in the South, would use fire hoses at full force to break up demonstrations. We used to see it on TV regularly….mainly black young people being knocked over by the force of the water.

  • @alanmccarthy2605
    @alanmccarthy2605 Рік тому +5

    My two sons love rap I always point them to this track, both love Dylan too just goes to show brainwashing works ha. The first song I put on for them both in car ride home from hospital?
    Forever Young.

  • @SpaceCattttt
    @SpaceCattttt Рік тому +14

    If you listen to the band, it's hilarious how they don't know when the chord changes will come, so they're simply following Dylan's lead and hoping for the best!

    • @1DaTJo
      @1DaTJo Рік тому +1

      Yeah! And sometimes the bass player plays the wrong note because Dylan adds two more lines.

  • @mikewypasek8855
    @mikewypasek8855 Рік тому +3

    Fascinating take on this song. It’s nice to see the song analyzed like this and an appreciation for the lyrical structure.
    I always believed that the line “weather man” was a reference to the Weather Underground but perhaps not. And the fire hoses as a reference to thebold police actions to quell protestors by using wayer hoses and water cannons.
    Anyway, count me in as a new subscriber i like your style

    • @emsleywyatt3400
      @emsleywyatt3400 9 місяців тому

      You got that backwards. The group took the name from the lyric.

  • @larryzink8978
    @larryzink8978 Рік тому +2

    To folkies of the day this is an amped up exponent of the "talkin blues" category. Another talkin blues of dylans is his song " if dogs run free" which is more beatnicky from his "New Morning" album.

  • @karenmandeville7116
    @karenmandeville7116 Рік тому +1

    i think the reference to those who carry round the fire hose-the cops used to turn fire hoses on protesters.

  • @lesliesylvan
    @lesliesylvan Рік тому +3

    Bob Dylan was one cool cat. Remains a key element in Rock -Folk history spawned by the Vietnam War (police state) era. . . Protect the Constitution 📜🎸 Rock on, for Posterity . . .

  • @jonathanaldecoa1099
    @jonathanaldecoa1099 2 дні тому

    This is Dylan doing his version of Talkin’ Blues. Talkin’ Blues has a rich history and Bob was just tapping into that style. Excellent song 🕺😎

  • @hyzercreek
    @hyzercreek Рік тому +1

    Walk This Way by Aerosmith 1975 was rap before rap. But the first rap record was a 1949 record called Gospel Boogie by LeRoy Abernathy. It's total rap and they sing this song in churches a lot more these days since people think it's rap. But it was 1949!! Just search the song and there you are, the first rap record.

  • @TrianglesAndCircles
    @TrianglesAndCircles Рік тому +3

    Who's Maggie in this song you may ask? Try Maggie's Farm by Bob Dylan.

  • @phillipharrison7283
    @phillipharrison7283 Рік тому +3

    Great you're getting into Bob's lyrics and delivery. In a similar style is 'Tombstone Blues' which sounds like a rap delivery with a fast paced blues backing. It contains several excellent short vignettes all with tremendous lyrical description. .....the sun's not yellow, it's chicken...🤣

  • @Matt_D_370z
    @Matt_D_370z Рік тому +5

    "Dylan was a big hip-hop fan-ever since rapper Kurtis Blow turned him on to artists like N.W.A and Public Enemy. 'These guys were definitely not bullshitting, Dylan wrote in "Chronicles." 'They were beating drums, tearing it up, hurling horses over cliffs.' "It's All Good" is his most gangsta moment: He adopts a Howlin' Wolf growl to flip the hip-hop catchphrase, kissing off a collapsing world where it isn't all good at all" (Rolling Stone "Bob Dylan: The Complete Album Guide" p. 67).

  • @jillmadigan9841
    @jillmadigan9841 Рік тому +2

    Bob Dylan inspires a great deal of artistry and shocked his mostly folk/protest fans when he 'went electric.' You're absolutely correct about Dylan's music being an influential part of the roots of many Hip Hop artists.

  • @vynilrob9719
    @vynilrob9719 Рік тому +2

    I chuckle at this 'cause I did this at a Karaoke club and a person asked me, ”Was Bob Dylan 'rapping' on this song?"...I told him that nah, it's his 'folk flow'! Great vid, sir!

  • @davidgagne3569
    @davidgagne3569 Рік тому +2

    Hopefully I'm not double posting. I've loved this song for many years. "Twenty years of schoolin' and they put you on the day shift" Damn straight.
    You noticed Allen Ginsberg in the video.Thus the ties between the Beat Generation and the flower power '60's generation becomes apparent. The Beats paved the way for the hippies and the hippies paved the way for... well.

  • @aaron4wilkins
    @aaron4wilkins Рік тому +2

    There was a 1960's very Radical group, the Weathermen, that took their inspiration for their name from the line in this song
    "A domestic radical protest group called the Weather Underground or originally called the Weatherman or the Weathermen, a name taken from a line in a Bob Dylan song, the Weather Underground was a small offshoot of Students for a Democratic Society, or SDS, a group created in the turbulent ‘60s to promote social change.
    When SDS collapsed in 1969, the Weather Underground stepped forward, inspired by communist ideologies and embracing violence and crime as a way to protest the Vietnam War, racism, and promote other radical aims. “Our intention is to disrupt the empire ... to incapacitate it, to put pressure on the cracks,” claimed the group’s 1974 manifesto, Prairie Fire.
    By the next year, the group had claimed credit for 25 bombings-including at the U.S. Capitol, the Pentagon, the California Attorney General’s office, and a New York City police station plus many others..."

  • @jumblechaos9035
    @jumblechaos9035 Рік тому +6

    So hard to have a favourite Dylan track because there’s so much quality and so much variety, but this is right up there. Like you say, the subject matter, the rhythm is all so modern - put his vocals over a different beat and it’s hip hop.
    Fun connection for you too - Radiohead have a track on OK Computer called Subterranean Homesick Alien which references this.

  • @akeleven
    @akeleven 8 місяців тому +2

    Bob Dylan was talking to his generation. Us, the boomers , the hippies, the generation that demonstrated against the Vietnam War. The government was cracking down on hippie drug use to get out the demonstrations that were destroying support for Vietnam War. We were the generation that was dying in Vietnam! Dylan was our official spokesperson.

  • @meursault1654
    @meursault1654 Рік тому +29

    For 30 years I used Dylan and Bob Marley to help teach poetry. The kids into rap always got it.

  • @billspencer9430
    @billspencer9430 Рік тому +4

    Bob Dylan's 115th Dream is worth a listen.

  • @jeffmartin1026
    @jeffmartin1026 Рік тому +2

    "those that carry around a fire hose" - reference to the Police/Military who used fire hoses against people protesting/fighting for their civil rights in the '60s.

  • @dwhite849
    @dwhite849 Рік тому +7

    This song was done in 1965 - way earlier than hip hop or rap No one was doing anything like this at the time

    • @Ck-zk3we
      @Ck-zk3we Рік тому

      Rhyming over a beat goes back to the beginnings in Africa
      Bob added modern instruments, he didn’t invent it

    • @BobSoltis1
      @BobSoltis1 Рік тому

      @@Ck-zk3we Where is your proof for such a statement?

  • @cathyhetzel7692
    @cathyhetzel7692 11 місяців тому +4

    Bob Dylan- Winner of the Nobel prize in Literature!

  • @WendyDarling1974
    @WendyDarling1974 4 місяці тому

    I memorized this around 30 years ago and enjoyed hearing you break it down.

  • @cazgerald9471
    @cazgerald9471 Рік тому +1

    This is one of the rare songs you should actually watch the video - Dylan made a promotional film for this back in the day

  • @michaelbush200
    @michaelbush200 Рік тому +5

    Big fan of your channel, my friend! Maybe now check out 'Pump It Up' by Elvis Costello, who has said that SHB was a direct influence...then listen to 'Born Slippy' by Underworld to see it all come full circle in a 90s dance style...the Chuck Berry song is "Too Much Monkey Business' if you want to see how all this started...great reaction as always to Bobby D!

    • @Hexon66
      @Hexon66 Рік тому +2

      Check out Dylan's book "The Philosophy of Modern Song". He evaluates (Theme Time Radio Hour style) scores of songs. And he is simultaneously fawning and brutal in his assessment of EC and Pump It Up. It's fantastic.

  • @thebacons5943
    @thebacons5943 Рік тому +1

    Possibly the “first” ever music video accompanied this song. Same album was It’s Alright Ma. Seriously revolutionary, groundbreaking stuff in music history.

  • @Bastikovski99
    @Bastikovski99 Рік тому +1

    The song is called “Blowin in the Wind.” 😁

  • @James-dh6ld
    @James-dh6ld Рік тому +5

    Rap is direct x factual x confrontational .
    Dylan was evocative, he liked the flow x sound to birth emotion . Direct meaning rarely matters , it's the thoughts x emotions the listener interprets he's after.
    In this case as I always think, he's railing against the system..

    • @machoward6443
      @machoward6443 Рік тому

      Yes! The "back home" of the album title is contemporary society.

  • @jamieoconnor1916
    @jamieoconnor1916 Рік тому +1

    Another fantastic video sir thanks 😊 I love your analysis 😀 syed respect 🙏 this songs 🎵 story still rings true today

  • @JCL1970
    @JCL1970 Рік тому +4

    Check out the song..Bob Dylan's 115th dream... probably his funniest song.

  • @reneemaciag3084
    @reneemaciag3084 Рік тому +1

    The song you may have been trying to remember in the second verse is "Blowin' In the Wind" ("The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind. . .") Also, some have contended that the far-left militant group, The Weather Underground, got their name from this line.

  • @Adam-ie5wy
    @Adam-ie5wy Рік тому +1

    It would be great to hear your comments on 'Stuck Inside of Mobile with the Memphis Blues Again" or the "Highway 61 Revisited" track. Also by the way in 1986 Dylan was invited to add an intro to a Kurtis Blow track, "Street Rock" which is quite cool.

  • @altaclipper
    @altaclipper Рік тому +2

    I have to admit I'm surprised that you know that was Alan Ginsberg in the background of the video. That video was actually the opening of "Don't Look Back" which is considered one of the best music movies ever. Worth a look.

    • @machoward6443
      @machoward6443 Рік тому

      At this time Dylan linked up with Ginsberg and Andy Warhol. The subsequent album "Highay 61 Revisited" is all about the bohemian/beat culture and the mainstream's inability to understand it.

    • @altaclipper
      @altaclipper Рік тому

      @@machoward6443 Dylan hated Warhol. He was a bit homophobic and his crew were pot smokers and very macho and Warhol‘s crowd were hustlers, drag queens and speed freaks. The two groups were not compatible. The one time Dylan went to the Factory to do one of Warhol‘a “screen tests”, he was difficult (par for the course for him) and borderline abusive. On the way out, he helped himself to one of Warhol‘s life-size Elvis portraits (which he later traded for a couch). Warhol was incensed, but they were all afraid of Dylan and his roadie who was with him. The whole story is in the “Factory People” documentary. The episode with Edie Sedgwick was just the icing on the cake.

  • @dasbohnenmensch8029
    @dasbohnenmensch8029 Рік тому +2

    some other great dylan songs that show how versatile he and his voice are would be Idiot Wind (maybe the funniest and most savage chorus of his) or Girl from the North Country (a duet with Johnny Cash)

    • @W0rdsandMus1c
      @W0rdsandMus1c Рік тому +1

      And the most beautiful love song ever written "Lay Lady Lay" to me anyway

  • @tenacious_she
    @tenacious_she Рік тому +1

    I adore your perspective on Dylan!! I think you would really enjoy his cadence in the song "Tombstone Blues" and would love to see you analyze it. Loving this channel, keep up the good work!

  • @jackbackband7733
    @jackbackband7733 Рік тому +2

    The answer my friend is blowing in the wind...

  • @benhinds2971
    @benhinds2971 Рік тому +3

    Love how excited you got about this one. I had to stand up and pace around because I got into with you. And I first heard this 30yrars ago. I think this is on Highway 51. If so, I'm telling you every song on that album is a classic.

    • @laurabrevitz3944
      @laurabrevitz3944 Рік тому

      "If you see me coming, you better RUN....."
      Pure genius.

    • @123thof
      @123thof Рік тому +1

      No, it's from "Bringing It All Back Home" and other album is "Highway 61 Revisited." Not putting you down, just saving you embarassment down the line.

  • @warrenhughes911
    @warrenhughes911 Рік тому +1

    Great reaction again..
    This might have been 1st music video!!

  • @TeddeBest
    @TeddeBest Рік тому +3

    Love your channel, enjoy your comments, thanks a lot! My suggestions are " Highway 61 revisited" and "Stuck inside of Mobile with the Memphis blues again". And because you cannot limit yourself to just Dylan [ is that even true?] I suggest "Tomorrow never knows"
    by the Beatles for something completely different!

  • @jonathanhenderson9422
    @jonathanhenderson9422 Рік тому +1

    I "knew" this song long before I ever heard it as my dad always used to quote "don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows" and "pump don't work 'cause the vandals took the handle."

  • @michele-33
    @michele-33 Рік тому +5

    *Who Killed Davey Moore* has a rap delivery - it's early Dylan about the death of a boxer and division of responsibility.
    You will find that Bob had at least 10 different voices thru the decades.
    You won't recognize him at times :)
    Many of us are living vicariously thru you listening to our fav music for the first time.

  • @pauljohnstone180
    @pauljohnstone180 Рік тому +181

    Bob Dylan wasn't "trying" to rap. Rap didn't exist in 1965. Bob Dylan was doing Bob Dylan. RAP SOUNDS LIKE DYLAN!! Not he other way around.

    • @joeljoss1916
      @joeljoss1916 9 місяців тому +8

      I was just about to say something just like that.👍

    • @NRobbi42
      @NRobbi42 9 місяців тому +15

      Talking Blues predates Dylan by decades 💀

    • @ED-cn7sn
      @ED-cn7sn 9 місяців тому +7

      Ya but Dylan is a time traveler and in 1960 he went to 1992 and heard rap and went back to 1960 and copied it.

    • @joeljoss1916
      @joeljoss1916 9 місяців тому +2

      @@ED-cn7sn well, that's one interesting take on it. 🤔

    • @akeleven
      @akeleven 8 місяців тому +5

      Yes. I hate the way these retrospective channels apply their own present to pretend the past was influenced by musicians that followed. Instead of understanding how each new generation is influenced by the past.

  • @mattreynolds612
    @mattreynolds612 8 місяців тому +1

    5:25 Hes referencing Police tactics on crowd control in the South in the '60s. They often turn firehoses on civil rights protesters. 🌈✨

  • @jimd7260
    @jimd7260 Рік тому +1

    Have you heard "A Hard Rain's A Gonna Fall"?

  • @davidalexander-watts6630
    @davidalexander-watts6630 Рік тому +1

    I always heard this as Dylan singing about things people said to him, or other young people, rather than him giving advice to others.

  • @alphajava761
    @alphajava761 Рік тому +5

    Positively 4th Street, I Want You, Just Like A Women, Masters Of War .. among many by Dylan. Dylan changed his style a lot, that's why I recommended these tracks.. there's too many tracks to type that are great.

    • @cavanrouse8428
      @cavanrouse8428 Рік тому +1

      Love Dylan can not listen to rap or hip hop.. as they seem very juvenile in comparison to Dylan.

  • @thomasgruseck7971
    @thomasgruseck7971 Рік тому +3

    You should react to Dylan's entire "Blood on the Tracks" album.

  • @jjsmith7470
    @jjsmith7470 Рік тому

    Hey man. I think your interpretations are awesome. Don't take any crap from anyone. You are articulate, insightful, and truly appreciative of the great music you are discovering. I enjoy your perspective. Good stuff!

  • @machoward6443
    @machoward6443 Рік тому +2

    Take a look at "The Gates of Eden" and/or "A Hard Rain's Gonna Fall" for similar "life sucks" commentary on contemporary society.

  • @frankavellone1175
    @frankavellone1175 Рік тому +2

    Watch Dylan's video with the song that features Beat poet Allen Ginsburg in the background...

    • @davidlinn2368
      @davidlinn2368 Рік тому

      Note that he spells “success” as “suckcess”

  • @hangballl
    @hangballl Рік тому +1

    Dylan did a rap again in 1990 called TV.Talkin song

  • @Ck-zk3we
    @Ck-zk3we Рік тому +3

    Fire hoses were used on civil rights marchers in the 1960s

  • @viviennerose6858
    @viviennerose6858 6 місяців тому +1

    I'm old school Bob Dylan fan, but i really Love your analysis. Take no notice of the haters 😊

  • @georgecoventry8441
    @georgecoventry8441 10 місяців тому +1

    There had been nothing like this song before it came out. It was astounding. And it made a stunning introduction to his groundbreaking album "Bringing it All Back Home" in 1965. The interesting thing was, when Dylan moved away from writing "topical" songs or "protest" songs about specific incidents and issues...as he had done in his 2nd and 3rd albums...and it had made him the darling of the New Left at the time...he actually began writing songs which were either very personal....or which, in effect, protested just about *everything* that was happening in society. Rather than focusing on one specific issue, songs like "It's Alright, Ma", "Gates of Eden", and "Desolation Row" (to name just three of them) were taking aim at almost every aspect of the dominant culture at the time. They were, in fact, far more revolutionary in their nature than the more overt "protest" material that had preceded them....and at the same time, they were far more personal. He had the gift of writing in a way that could hit many different targets and on many levels, all at the same time. Joan Baez said later that he was "so good with words, and at keeping things vague" in her own brilliant song "Diamonds and Rust", which is about her and Bob Dylan back then. You should review that song some time. "Diamonds and Rust" Joan Baez.

  • @peterhawryluk8430
    @peterhawryluk8430 2 місяці тому

    I told everyone of my friends for 20 years. Dylan wrote and sang the first rap song. This song was written by Dylan as thing to live by in New York City . Dylan rocks 🎸

  • @claudiogallucci563
    @claudiogallucci563 7 місяців тому +1

    I'm 47 and I'm NOW FINALLY listening to Dylan and Velvet Underground better late thrn never .. Dylan is really like many say a genius best poet ever . Amazing
    Great UA-cam channel bro keep it up

  • @user98xp
    @user98xp Рік тому

    The way he uses his voice is just called spoken word, I believe. Bob Dylan's old stuff was way before my time too. Its really fun to listen to for a number of reasons. Have fun.
    Love and peace.

  • @imopen2
    @imopen2 Рік тому +2

    Lily, Rosemary, and the Jack of hearts by Dylan please!

  • @mervmartin2112
    @mervmartin2112 10 місяців тому

    "You don''t need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows", was the motto of the Weather Underground. (SDS)

  • @joed1950
    @joed1950 Рік тому +1

    "Don't follow leaders and watch the parking meters" This song was written when there were demonstrations on the streets to protest the War In Viet Nam. The reference to leaders and meters is that the police would try to get leaders and parking meters were dangerous if you run into one as you are running away from the police.
    "You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows". There was a violent radical underground group in the u s in the late 1960's. They robbed a bank and killed a guard at the bank among other crimes. The name of this group was "The Weathermen". and the name is from the line in this song.
    IMHO, this song is about, amongst myriad other themes, living a life of political dissidence and being able to stay out of jail (subterranean). And being aware that the Authorities (FBI, CIA Local Police ETC.) have bugged everything, "...plants in the bed", "phones tapped", "plain clothes (undercover cop), No-Doz (drugs), fire hose (water cannon).
    Thank you.

    • @Joseph-ax999
      @Joseph-ax999 8 місяців тому

      The radical group, the Weathermen came about several years after this song. No-Doz was he name of an over the counter caffeine tablet. I once took too many of them and it gave me a horrible headache.

  • @sahewins
    @sahewins Рік тому +1

    You should check out Bob Dylan's 115th Dream. I'd love to hear your analysis of it .

  • @steve55sogood16
    @steve55sogood16 Рік тому +1

    Try "Murder Most Foul", even in his 70's, still amazing, the 60's, in a long song!

  • @mve5225
    @mve5225 Рік тому +1

    There is a is a style of Folk Music called Talking Blues. Check out Dylan's Talking World War 3 Blues.