
if i had a blog in 2004, would certainly have reviewed bob
dylan's "
chronicles: volume one," years ago! i read it when it was a hardcover, still gracing the bestseller list. i just finished the paperback edition, which i picked up for a buck at
the library book fair in september. it was a timely find since i had just heard
dylan at propect park, brooklyn, a few weeks earlier!
if anything, the book was even more fascinating the second time around.
dylan combined two versions of himself in chronicles: volume one - the young musician making his way in a cold (literal and figurative) new york city in the early 1960's and, then, the middle-aged, bottomed out, performer putting the pieces of his career back together - cutting the album "
oh mercy" in the heat and humidity of 1989
louisiana. the contrasting images work well in telling his story - especially with
dylan's stripped down, brutally honest descriptions.
my favorite part of the book was the vivid new york city sights and sounds he paints to start off his autobiography. he looks back at himself 40+ years earlier, and the images pour out as if he walked those same streets the day before. i found his recollections of the trips out to new jersey to visit woody
guthrie in the hospital (and the rambling trip deep into
brooklyn in search of some unrecorded
guthrie song's, and meeting his young son,
arlo) especially moving. but even his descriptions of the beat bars and coffee shops that he honed his trade were vivid portraits of yesterdays
greenwich village scene.
it's a bumpy jump 25 years into his future, mid-way
thru his concert tour with tom petty (and a snippet of his brief tour with the grateful dead) to learn how he
re-figured his guitar technique, changed his attitude toward his long catalog of songs, and was reborn - so to speak - as a touring musician. ironically, once he has that
epiphany, his hand gets torn up and he can't play, much less tour - which led him to start writing songs again! it's those very songs (which got a nod of approval from no less than
bono) that he records in the "oh mercy" sessions!
then, just as he jumped from the 60's to the 80's, he returns to his
pre-1960's (
pre-
nyc) life and talks about his family and childhood. this section, too, was filled with incredible nuggets of
dylan history - especially his first encounter with woody
guthrie records and the intense impact
guthrie's music had on the young
dylan. he described
guthrie's impact on him in these words:
"one thing for sure, woody
guthrie had never seen nor heard of me, but it felt like he was saying, '
i'll be going away, but
i'm leaving this job in your hands. i know i can count on you.'"
for any
dylan fan, this book is must reading. but, even more significantly, for any fan of music history, this book is also must reading. while there are plenty
dylan biographies out there, nothing beats reading his own take on himself and his experiences. i honestly can't wait for the second volume of his autobiography (and, rumor has, it
dylan was to have begun writing volume two of chronicles in may, 2008)!