Saturday, Jun 14, 2014 11:00 AM EDT
10 musicians influenced by Bob Dylan who are better than Bob Dylan
Jim Hendrix, Neil Young and Joni Mitchell
are among the Dylan disciples who prove how overrated he is VIDEO
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Noah Berlatsky
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Bob
Dylan may be the most overrated performer in the history of popular
music. This is especially impressive since he’s often great; a talented
songwriter with a quick wit and (at least early in his career) an
ability to assimilate diverse styles without compromising his own
vision. These strengths, though, were accompanied by real weaknesses. As
a singer, he mimicked the roughness of roots sources without capturing
their nuance or power, often resulting in self-parody. As a lyricist, he
had a tendency to mistake Beat poet doggerel bathos for profundity. It
often seems like he’s been celebrated as much for the flaws as for the
virtues — his incompetence seen as punk rock authenticity and his
pomposity as literary bona fides.
Inevitably, given his status as
ultimate awesome courageous rock God, Dylan has influenced just about
everybody. And, inevitably too, given the gap between his standing and
his sometimes quite good but rarely godlike music, many of those he’s
influenced have outshown him. Below is a list of just a few performers
influenced by Dylan who are better than he is.
Jimi Hendrix, “Wait Until Tomorrow”
This is probably the least controversial suggestion on the list;
Hendrix is one of the few performers whose reputation approaches the
stratospheric heights of Zimmerman’s. His cover of “All Along the
Watchtower“ is his most famous Dylan lift, and the song certainly
benefits from Hendrix’s more expressive singing, as well as from the
hard rock sturm und drung that distracts somewhat from the half-baked
fantasy lyrics. But I think something like “Wait Until Tomorrow” is
maybe a better showcase. The humor and the forays into tongue-twisting
wordplay (“the mixed-up mind of you”) touch on Dylan, even as the song
employs a gut-bucket, loose-limbed virtuosity that is simultaneously
more swaggering and rootsier than anything Dylan ever put together.
Donovan, “Get Thy Bearings”
Donovan was initially billed as the British Bob Dylan, and early tracks
like “Catch the Wind” were certainly heavily influenced by Dylan’s
latter-day Guthrie shtick. Donovan’s range was always greater than his
American contemporary’s, though, and his combination of ominously fey
British folk with pop and rock was significantly odder and more
original. “Get Thy Bearings” sounds like Steely Dan for faerie
singalong; certainly a funnier, and slyer, folk betrayal than Dylan
going electric.
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Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash, “It Ain’t Me, Babe”
Cash loved Dylan’s music, and covered a number of his songs over the
years. This duet with June is probably the most famous — and also a good
indication of why Cash is superior to his source material. Dylan’s
version of “It Ain’t Me, Babe” is fairly straightforward; a kiss-off
song that teeters on the edge of puerile bad-boy self-mythologizing.
Cash’s version doesn’t teeter, though; he hams it up, from the sneered
“No, No, No” which is phrased as “Nyah, Nyah, Nyah” to the way he spits
out “Babe!” all done with mountain chorus harmonies and horns in the
background. Cash is willing to emphasize the song’s ridiculousness.
Dylan wasn’t — either out of misplaced sedateness or, less charitably,
because he didn’t realize how ridiculous it was.
Velvet Underground, “Run Run Run”
Dylan’s influence on Lou Reed’s New Yawk talk-singing is obvious, but
you can hear “Highway 61 Revisited” and “Blonde on Blonde” in the artsy
rootsy groove of something like “Run Run Run” as well. Reed’s
collaborators were a lot more well-equipped to combine high-art cool and
primitive throb than Dylan was, though, and Reed’s lyrics, at this
stage of his career, anyway, channel Dylan’s snark without his forays
into bathos (need I mention the embarrassment that is “Just Like a
Woman”?) In a lot of ways, “The Velvet Underground and Nico” could be
seen as the perfect Dylan album, the one the man himself never quite
managed.
Neil Young, “Ambulance Blues”
Or alternately you could see “On the Beach” as the perfect Dylan album.
Certainly the drone of “Ambulance Blues” manages to channel the bleak
oddness of the Anthology of American Folk for the modern apocalypse in a
way that Dylan would have envied — nor could Dylan have come up with
music as perfect as that cello sawing through the drone-metal slow
groove. Where “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” seems to strain after
visionary oomph, Young’s laconic, “You’re all just pissin’ in the wind”
and “It’s hard to know the meaning of this song” are written by a guy
who learned from someone other than Dylan that saying less is sometimes
the thing to do.
Townes Van Zandt, “No Place to Fall”
Van Zandt’s idiosyncratic, Dylan-inspired delivery and phrasing were
especially poorly served by the recording studio — most of his official
albums are just about unlistenable. The live set, “Rear View Mirror,” is
all the more wonderful for its rarity, though. Van Zandt’s Dylan
influence is obvious, but so is his debt to the more plain-spoken, and
just generally better, poetry of Hank Williams. “Nashville Skyline” is
one of my favorite Dylan albums, but its blend of country and folk
sounds mannered and unconvincing compared to this.
Joni Mitchell, “A Case of You”
Joni Mitchell has sometimes lauded and sometimes scorned Dylan’s music
in her public statements, but his example certainly paved the way for
her as a folk-tinged singer-songwriter. You can understand she might be a
touch resentful, though, when she’s so much less respected and so much
better at both the singing and the songwriting than he is. Maybe she’d
be more appreciated if her phrasing sucked and her lyrics were
gibberish.
Beatles, “Happiness Is a Warm Gun”
The Beatles were famously influenced by Dylan during the “Rubber Soul”
sessions, but you can also hear him hanging over the nonsense lyrics and
highbrow snottiness of Lennon’s “Happiness Is a Warm Gun” from the
“White Album.” The nod to Bob, though, also emphasizes the
really-not-Bob bits — the psychedelic proto-metal heaviness, the actual
willingness to do some songwriting, rather than just having one idea and
wandering on with it till the track ran out. And of course, the fact
that the person singing can actually sing.
Sly Stone, “Jane Is a Groupee”
Stone was a huge Dylan fan, though it doesn’t necessarily come out in
much of his music. Lyrically, “Jane Is a Groupee” could be a nod to
Dylan songs like “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” — though it’s hard
to trace a direct path from one to another, since misogyny is such a
rock star universal. The soul vocals, snarling guitar and proto-funk
rhythm certainly don’t owe much to any era of Bob — though in the long
run they’d arguably be more influential than Dylan himself.
Minutemen, “Bob Dylan Wrote Protest Songs”
Dylan’s political commitments vacillated through his career, but his
early activism remains iconic, and inspired this Minutemen classic. I’d
probably take that crazed skittery D. Boon guitar solo over the bulk of
Dylan’s oeuvre — though, thankfully, there’s no need to choose between
Dylan and his heirs, since we’re lucky enough to have both.
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