BOB DYLAN: PLANET WAVES (1974)
1) On A Night Like This; 2)
Going Going Gone; 3) Tough Mama; 4) Hazel; 5) Something There Is About You; 6)
Forever Young; 7) Forever Young (v. 2); 8) Dirge; 9) You Angel You; 10) Never
Say Goodbye; 11) Wedding Song.
Blood
On The Tracks may be more
«polished», generally accomplished and certainly better known, but Dylan's
fourth phase — that of the «introverted / tortured / self-centered songwriter»
— properly begins here, on this somewhat half-hearted collaboration with The
Band. A three-year break from «proper» songwriting, or at least recording, can
sometimes be detrimental, and, in fact, I have always tended to look at Planet Waves as the first official
album in Dylan's career to be seriously plagued with meandering filler. But
«temporary loss / slackening of songwriter skills» was not the only reason for
this impression.
As Bob's family life was beginning to
disintegrate in his most serious personal crisis to date, there was no way he
could avoid letting his feelings on the matter spill out — in fact, this was
probably the first time in his life when he found himself hurting so bad, it
couldn't help but lend an air of deep tragedy to everything he was doing. There
is a bunch of cheerful, happy songs
on Planet Waves — in fact, it starts
out with quite a merry romp — but they mostly sound forced, sometimes almost
hyperbolically so: the only reason I can see for the existence of the second,
«upbeat» and rather corny version of ʽForever Youngʼ sequenced right after the first, slow and
melancholy one, is to show how very, very, very
hard it is for the man to stay optimistic.
ʽGoing Going Goneʼ, ʽDirgeʼ, ʽHazelʼ, and
ʽWedding Songʼ all convey a sense of desperation, the likes of which Dylan fans
had never yet experienced from the man. Before the crash, he was fierce, cocky,
locked up tight, and most of the genuine feelings that seeped in through the
walls were aggressive. After the crash, he'd softened up, got subtler and
wiser, but everything generated in 1967-70 was still primarily an act of
mystification — we never saw an inch of «the real Dylan» on either John Wesley Harding or Self Portrait (never mind the
misleading title), or if we did, there was no surefire telling where exactly he
would pop up.
Planet
Waves, from that angle, is the
first «mature» Dylan album, although «maturity» is by no means associated with
higher quality — it simply means that the man gets more... well, more grounded
in concrete personal situations, I'd say. The biggest shift is in the lyrics
department, as the sophisticated wordplay starts making more literal sense. The
love songs are good old-fashioned
love songs, none of that "ceremonies of the horsemen" «bullshit», and
the lost, or, rather, in-the-process-of-getting-lost love songs are all soaked
with fear, anxiety, depression, even occasional guilt and remorse (though
mostly implied, particularly on ʽDirgeʼ, where the exaggerated hatred thrown at
the female antagonist reveals hatred of oneself — he'd be much more careful
about whitewashing his own spirit on Blood
On The Tracks). And with ʽForever Youngʼ, he is really concerned about writing a song that could be sung as a
meaningful lullaby to a three-year old — without having to worry about the
three-year old asking unanswerable questions about Captain Arab and those
one-eyed midgets.
All of this means that there is a transition
taking place, and that the transition is rough. Neither, I am afraid, was his
choice of The Band to back him up during the recording sessions here as good as
all the previous choices. Robertson and Co. do not seem to have properly sensed
that change in Bob, or, if they did, they weren't able to fully latch on to it.
They could certainly sound somber and tragic if they'd worked themselves up for
it, but it almost seems like they thought they were just going in for another
round of Basement Tapes, and
realized that they weren't when it was already much too late. The music tends
to be a little relaxed, a little sloppy, generally sparse and spontaneous (none
of the production intricacies of The Band's first two or three albums found
their way on here — not that Bob would be interested, of course), more
appropriate for a quiet campfire evening ("on a night like this!")
without too much on your mind than for a soul-baring session. Just a big
mistake on Dylan's part here — his first big one, I'd say.
That said, more than half of the songs still
pass the grade. ʽForever Youngʼ is the only «golden classic», but it is,
indeed, the first straightforwardly anthemic song that Bob wrote in about a decade,
cleverly worded so as to appeal to his kids as well as a general audience — and
as simple as the melody is, there is a touch of easily cracked genius here: the
"forever young, forever young" chorus is sung with such a tragic
inclination that the emptiness of the
wish becomes felt. This is basically a prayer to reach the unreachable, and we
have the whole bunch here — love, affection, sadness, desperation, acceptance
of fate. Small wonder the chorus did not make it to the second, upbeat version:
it has no place there whatsoever, as the vibe is completely different (and
utterly anticlimactic; whoever would prefer the second part to the first would
fit my personal understanding of a proverbially «heartless» person).
My second favorite song would probably have to
be ʽGoing Going Goneʼ — the one that must
have played out like a shock to the listeners after the expectable little
opening folk dance of ʽOn A Night Like Thisʼ. Luckily, Robbie got the vibe
right on this one, adding some quietly dry, stingy electric lead lines — nasty
pain impulses reflecting the protagonist's state of mind — and the lyrics do
not mince words much: "I've just reached a place / Where the willow don't
bend / There's not much more to be said / It's the top of the end". And on
one hand, it is funny that the
proverbial «top of the end» has been stretched out to about forty years now,
with the total amount of everything that has
been said (and written, and sung) far exceeding what had been done in the
previous decade — and yet on the other hand, he is also absolutely correct: Planet Waves is the first, and far from
the last, album in Bob's career on which he is not searching for anything new,
he just says it all the way it is. ʽGoing Going Goneʼ is not the first time
that he had sounded depressed, but it is the first time he sounds depressed
about himself, rather than Hattie
Carroll, St. Augustine, or the chronologically frozen inhabitants of Desolation
Row.
ʽDirgeʼ and ʽWedding Songʼ raise the bar on
tension even further — the music is stripped down to its basics (on ʽDirgeʼ it
is just Bob on minimal piano and Robbie accompanying him on acoustic, on
ʽWedding Songʼ Dylan goes completely solo) and the singer's voice is raised to
a scandalous howl. Melodically, they are not too interesting, and the howling
prevents subtlety, but it all essentially depends on whether you are willing to
empathize or if you think that the songs exude too much self-pitying, and that
their monotonousness makes them either too boring or just simply too
unbearable. Difficult decision; I am not a big fan of either, but it seems like
this kind of stuff was something Bob needed
to do at the time (ʽWedding Songʼ was written and recorded at the very last
moment, like a final attempt to get that particular stone off his back).
I cannot say anything positive about songs like
ʽNever Say Goodbyeʼ or ʽTough Mamaʼ except that all my years of Dylan-listening
experience come together to suggest that Bob's heart just wasn't in them. He
may have felt that getting back to a little rock'n'roll with his old friends at
his side would do him good, but this is limp, half-assed rock'n'roll, a far cry
from the spirited performances of 1965-66. ʽOn A Night Like Thisʼ, where they
turn down the volume and place their faith in Garth Hudson's accordeon, works
much better than all those other numbers put together — perhaps because it is
not so far removed from the soft country-rock sound that was fresher in Bob's
memory than his «garage» days. Like a fussier, merrier take on ʽI'll Be Your
Baby Tonightʼ where the singer is at last ready for some active participation; Bob's "...and let it burn, burn, burn,
burn on a night like this" is my second favorite bit of phrasing on the
record after the ʽForever Youngʼ chorus.
All in all, this just doesn't properly fit the
criteria for a «thumbs up» type of album. Like The Times They Are A-Changin', this is essential listening for
everyone interested in Bob's thorny evolution path, but it only has two or
three essential songs on it, as such: to the ones already listed one could,
perhaps, add the New Morning-style
soul ballad ʽHazelʼ, and that's just about it. (No wonder that most of these
songs would not be revisited by Bob in subsequent concert performances — only
ʽForever Youngʼ and, to a lesser extent, ʽHazelʼ seem to have survived his
personal reassessment). What I see here is a temporarily derailed man, unable
to properly pull it together, and a bunch of old friends who do not really
understand how they can help. But even if it is a relative «disaster», its very
disastrous nature makes it all the more intriguing for the non-casual Dylan
fan, not to mention the Dylan historian.
Check "Planet Waves" (CD) on Amazon
Check "Planet Waves" (MP3) on Amazon
And so begins the leap frogging of inferior Dylan albums to get to the good material, with the leaps getting incrementally bigger.
ReplyDeleteI must admit I'm one of those that tuned out after Nashville Skyline. I intend to give these later albums a listen based on what I've been reading here just to satisfy my curiosity.
ReplyDeleteI get what you're saying, George, but I've always loved this record. This record is all about feeling for me, and I'm in love with depressed, pissed-off Dylan. Besides, it has some of his best singing, the harmonica is back with a vengeance, and the songs, which I wish he had spent more time polishing up, are more melodic than usual. It doesn't sound like he spent much time writing (or recording) this album, but that contributes to its loose, spontaneous vibe. "You, angel, you/ You're as f— got me under your wing." Why bother re-recording it?
ReplyDeleteI remember your complaints about the Band backing on the old site, but I still don't hear it. They sound amazing to me all around.
I don't know... I sound like an unreasonably defensive Dylan fan—like I must justify every single Dylan album—but I promise I'm not. I just happen to like listening to this one more than several of his more highly regarded albums, including New Morning, Nashville Skyline, and John Wesley Harding. I find the spirit and spontaneity very charming.
It is lopsided, though: Side 1 is much better than Side 2.
DeleteTotally agree. Planet Waves gets way more listens from me than all the albums you listed. It is great
DeleteI can't help but agree with the comment above. I was secretly hoping for some serious reassessment here or even a minor "thumbs up". I honestly can't see how "Self-Portrait" can be better than this. The mood is still on a "relaxed" side for most of the time and I really, REALLY dig that little guitar in the background. "Dirge" heralds the "I'm pissed off again" mood which will strike back just a year later. "Wedding song" is oddly straightforward but I like it this way. Both add some weight to the otherwise lightly vibe. Plus, no ultra-boring, sleep inducing epic like "Joey" spoils the picture half way through.
ReplyDelete"Thought I'd shaken the wonder/ And the phantoms of my youth/ Rainy days on the Great Lakes/ And walking the hills of old Duluth..." His singing here makes me melt. There's nothing here I don't like. Garth Hudson's sneaky organ lines rule, too.
DeleteSomething There Is About You a syntactical nightmare may be, and a draggy drunken mess, but when see I a blonde beauty on the tube, that first verse always sums up my fuzzy feeling:
ReplyDeleteSomething there is about you that strikes a match in me
Is it the way your body moves or is it the way your hair blows free?
Or is it because you remind me of something that used to be
Somethin’ that crossed over from another century?
One more thought: I wish he had substituted "Nobody 'Cept You" for "Wedding Song," which I think was the original plan.
ReplyDeleteAgree all sounds kinda sloppy but I hear emotion and feeling from Dylan on this record. The kind of pain that could break you. If they had of polished these songs maybe that would have been lost. It's why it never gets old for me.
ReplyDeleteI've always liked Planet Waves, more than Blood on the Tracks, Desire, or Street Legal.
ReplyDelete