Friday, December 31, 2010

"Bob Dylan's 115th Dream"

"They asked me for some collateral and I pulled down my pants"
History: This song, the 7th track on Bringing it all Back Home, is about a Columbus-like trip to the Americas but w/ the use of dream logic, it takes place in modern-day New York City & features characters from other sea narratives like Captain Ahab (here called Captain Arab). At one point in the dream, crew members are arrested & Dylan needs to raise money to go their bail. When looking for a loan, the bankers ask for collateral.

Analysis: Here, Dylan is making a rather obvious "dick joke" as he offers his phallus as collateral. This suggests that his cock is of unusual size or shape, & therefore worthy of the money he needs. There are also homoerotic undertones here as he may be implying he will have sex w/ the banker in order to spring his friends... they get sprung after he gets sprung... as it were. Of course, he's also prostituting himself here, trading sex for the release of his seamen. In general, the song is a critique of European expansion & the dissemination of Western hegemonic forces throughout the new world. Here, of course, we have the play on words that Derrida suggested later (in his book Dissemination) regarding "dissemination": the spreading of ideas & Semen: the spreading out of male power. However, but involving sailors in he mix, Dylan is also able to add the word "seamen" to this fun linguistic game.

Other reading of this line may suggest that he's actually trading his pants, not his phallus for their release. If this is the case, he is willing to sell the very clothes he is wearing top save his friends; however, it seems as though he would need to take them off to accomplish this, not just down as the lyric suggests.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

You Better Go Back To From Where You Came: A new blog all about the humor in Dylan lyrics

I was listening to Bringing it All Back Home the other day & thinking about the age-old claim that he is the "voice of a generation." Even the weird intro to his concerts says this. I've always wondered who it is that he got to record that strange message, but it turns out, at least according to the Wikipedia page about it, that he has a crew member read it every night. But that's not the point of this post; the point being that we're here to celebrate the weirdness that is Dylan's lyrics (& if you're lucky, random quotes from interviews & books). No where in that stage intro does it mention his humor.
"Ladies and gentlemen please welcome the poet laureate of rock 'n' roll. The voice of the promise of the 60s counterculture. The guy who forced folk into bed with rock. Who donned makeup in the 70s and disappeared into a haze of substance abuse. Who emerged to find Jesus. Who was written off as a has-been by the end of the '80s, and who suddenly shifted gears releasing some of the strongest music of his career beginning in the late '90s. Ladies and gentlemen — Columbia recording artist Bob Dylan!"
He's definitely written some funny shit, but no one ever talks about it. We always get "He's so serious," or "His commitment to social change is so important," or "If he just didn't mumble so much." That said, this new blog is meant to celebrate the humor in his songs. In each post, you'll get a quote picked @ random & then some rather uninformed commentary.
There have been books documenting the wit & witticism of everyone from Dan Quayle to Keith Richards & from George W. Bush to Chuck Norris. Never has the wit & witticism of Dylan been chronicled though, so here you go. Your 1st lyric post will follow soon.