BOB DYLAN: TEMPEST (2012)
1) Duquesne Whistle; 2) Soon
After Midnight; 3) Narrow Way; 4) Long And Wasted Years; 5) Pay In Blood; 6)
Scarlet Town; 7) Early Roman Kings; 8) Tin Angel; 9) Tempest; 10) Roll On John.
So, what does it take to put Dylan back in
«grand» mode these days? Song lengths expanded — check. Deep folk roots
revisited — check. Focus on lyrical intertextuality — check. Stern, Old
Testament-worthy singing tones — check. What couldn't have hurt, perhaps, would
be a little more emphasis on musical backing and production values, but since
Bob himself is once again listed as producer (he even dropped the «Jack Frost»
nickname for the occasion), it is perhaps better to be minimalistic. And he
wouldn't want to, or be able to, pull a Daniel Lanois all by himself anyway.
After the relative disappointment of Together Through Life, Tempest is clearly a return to...
return to spirit, rather than form. If at all possible, Bob's voice
seems to have taken another round of beating over those three years — and so
has his chord-assembling, what with just about every song on the album riding the
same mini-groove from top to bottom, and most of the mini-grooves «borrowed»
from other people's songs at that. So anybody who claims that «Dylan is back in
top form!» should probably rent a time machine and go back a few decades just
to remind oneself what «top form» actually means. But the thing that got
critics and fans alike heap up another heap of praise here is not «form» — it
is attitude. The one thing that really has not changed one bit about Dylan in
fifty years is that he is still a great manipulator. He may forget about it
every once in a while, but on Tempest,
he does not forget.
In fact, the first signs of manipulation are right
there at the very beginning — ʽDuquesne Whistleʼ opens deceptively low-key-ish,
like something your local jugband outfit would practice on your porch. Then,
several bars later, the band suddenly kicks in with full force: the main melody
does not undergo too much of a change, but the listener gets a jolt — «okay,
thank God, the man is still rocking and I'd already started worrying that he'd
given up on it...». Now you already feel a little predisposed towards the song,
and the entire album with it. Even if there is really nothing about the melody
of ʽDuquesne Whistleʼ that you haven't already heard a million times.
Next thing you discover is that the darkness is
back. You kind of expected that when you saw the word Tempest, but you'd never believe this guy in advance, right? None
of the songs are really «tempestuous», but then, musically, Dylan has always
been more of a harbinger of tempest (ʽAll Along The Watchtowerʼ, etc.) than a
master of tempest, and from that angle, Tempest,
in spots, is even scarier than Time Out
Of Mind — the latter was, after all, extremely personal and intimate,
whereas Tempest pours it out rather
than keeps it within.
Two dirge-like epics stand out in particular.
ʽScarlet Townʼ flows on like a funeral procession, with a mournful lead violin
part (vaguely reminiscent of Rivera's parts on Desire — and is it a pure coincidence that her name was «Scarlet»?)
and the guitar, piano and banjo assembled in a drony three-part rhythm that is
best associated with barren earth and scattered ashes. Lyrics-wise, there are
numerous references to sickness, death, the end, and so forth, but,
surprisingly enough, the words on the whole do not paint any properly «apocalyptic»
picture; in fact, the protagonist clearly likes
it in «Scarlet Town», whatever that be a metaphor for (life here on Earth, most
probably). We might suspect a thin streak of masochism here, but then, all of
us who like ourselves some of that heavy-shit depressing music are already
masochists, in more than one way.
For sheer unusualness, however, and the honor
of hitting the heaviest upon first listen, I will probably single out ʽTin
Angelʼ. Now that you think about it, it was a perfectly organic choice for
Dylan to take a centuries-old murder ballad (ʽMatty Grovesʼ, which most people
probably know through the unforgettable Fairport Convention version with Sandy
Denny on vocals; topical similarity to ʽBlack Jack Daveyʼ detected, too, but
is less self-evident) and turn it upside down — in the place of «husband kills
lover and wife», we now have a more complex scheme of «lover kills husband, wife
kills lover and herself» — it is even a little surprising how he got around to
doing it so late in his career. (Maybe he holds the opinion that all murder
ballads should not be written at an earlier age than seventy).
Anyway, there is exactly one melodic hook to the song — that deep, haunting «zooop» on Tony
Garnier's bass part that you get to hear approximately forty times over the
song's nine minutes, and one which you probably already heard far more times
incorporated into one too many bass solo parts on classic and not so classic
jazz records; but yes, minimalistic genius strikes again, as that little bit of
bass twiddle becomes a key part in creating a working atmosphere of dread and
doom. The tale takes nine minutes to unwind, but that bass part, it sort of
lets you know from the very beginning that the Fates have already woven the
stuff to completion, and everybody is going to be dead when we get to the end.
You don't even have to know anything about ʽMatty Grovesʼ, or about the murder
ballad tradition in general, to get that sense. And don't forget to throw in
the grim banjo part as the bass's only lonely counterpart — the equivalent of a
funeral church bell. My only problem is: what the hell is an «electric wire»
doing in the context of this song? And «lowered himself down on a golden
chain»? Were they making love in some sort of James Bond setting, or am I too
dumb to even begin asking those sorts of questions?...
Strangely enough, the title track, in
comparison to those two, does not sound «dark» at all — even if, or maybe because, it is an almost literal
retelling of the story of the Titanic, cast in the form of a 14-minute long
Irish ballad, accordion and fiddle at the ready. The primary asset of the tune is
its surprise value. Fourteen minutes? Irish ballad? Fiddle? Titanic? Oh God, he couldn't have caught
on to James Cameron now, could he? No, no, hope it's at least Roy Ward Baker
(for that matter, Roy Ward Baker had just died in 2010; another
coincidence?)... and so on. Outside of that, I am not sure what to feel or
think — the song feels like a laborious stylistic exercise more than anything
else, and even lyrically, its complete straightforwardness and evasion of any
unexpected twists or metaphors is in sharp contrast with the rest of the
album. Where ʽTin Angelʼ was a stylistic transformation, a typically Dylanesque
twist on a traditional form, ʽTempestʼ almost seems bent on explicitly purging
out the Dylanesque. It is curious, but it is hardly likely to end up on
anybody's top list of Bob favorites.
Individually, the rest of the songs range from
almost intentionally annoying (ʽNarrow Wayʼ — seven minutes of a grumbly
four-note blues riff on endless repeat is too much for me; ʽEarly Roman Kingsʼ
— another post-modernist massacre of an old groove, the honor going to Muddy
Waters' ʽMannish Boyʼ this time) to endearingly sentimental (ʽSoon After
Midnightʼ; ʽLong And Wasted Yearsʼ — the kind of late-evening balladry that
he'd introduced on Love & Theft),
and in between you have at least one oddball musical hybrid, ʽPay In Bloodʼ, a
menacing, but ultimately toothless roots-rocker whose melody actually changes — for a change! — from verse to
bridge and then once again from bridge to chorus, yes, with actual chord
changes that first put the song into «threatening» mode one minute (0:27) and
then into «soothing» mode (0:48) not a minute too soon. In between those two
extremes, the song sort of sounds like a rip-off of the Stones' ʽHand Of Fateʼ,
though, and, (not) knowing Bob, I cannot guarantee that this is simple coincidence,
either. The guy's memory is a bottomless well, there is no telling what is
going to be fished out next — and he's exacerbated it by fighting Dylanologists
all his life.
There is no simple logical explanation, either,
of why he deemed it wise to end the album with a metaphor-drenched, but easily
guessable tribute to John Lennon (ʽRoll On Johnʼ). I'd like to think that, perhaps, he thought the time had finally come
to invoke his spirit — perhaps even to «sacrifice» to his spirit, yielding the
album's coda to the memory of a dead hero — you know, in the good old «times
are so shitty, we need a John Lennon here to set them right» kind of way... but
I guess the truth is really that he probably just "heard the news today oh
boy" on some John-related topic and suddenly realized he'd all but
forgotten to write a John Lennon song in the past thirty years. Truth be told,
ʽRoll On Johnʼ is far more flattering to John's memory than John's ʽServe
Yourselfʼ was flattering to Bob back in 1979 — and there's not even a single
denigrating reference to Yoko on the list!
On the whole, Tempest unquestionably deserves a thumbs up, but buyer beware:
sixty-eight minutes of this stuff will be properly appreciated only by somebody
who can at least partially put it in its proper context. If you know little of
Bob Dylan, less of Muddy Waters, and nothing at all about Irish folk or murder
ballads, this will be nothing more than a horrendously raspy old man gurgling
out verbose stuff over simplistic, monotonous melodies — quite a relevant
warning for 2012, a year when there are music-listening teenagers around who
were born in the year of Dylan's
third (fourth?) creative revival. And Tempest
I wouldn't list as a fifth creative revival — it is more of a staying-afloat
record, showing that the old guy still has some interesting things to say in
some interesting way, which, really, is far more than we could feel ourselves
justified to demand. For that matter, ʽRoll On Johnʼ could just as well be
ʽRoll On Bobʼ. Heck, maybe it was
ʽRoll On Bobʼ and he just felt a modesty attack at the last minute. Doesn't matter. Just keep on manipulating us, Mr. Zimmerman.
Check "Tempest" (CD) on Amazon
Check "Tempest" (MP3) on Amazon
"[The title track']s complete straightforwardness and evasion of any unexpected twists or metaphors..." What about the watchman in the refrain, who 'lies dreaming' through the whole disaster - as opposed to the version by the Carter family, where he's up and about in five lines - and somehow still lies dreaming at the end, when everybody else on the boat is dead? (If he was actually on the boat in the first place.)
ReplyDeleteAnyway, "Tempest" certainly isn't going to be competing with anything from the 60s if I have to make a list of my favorite Bob Dylan songs, but it's probably my favorite on this album (competition: "Tin Angel").