Chapter 1: Becoming Bob Dylan (1960-64)
Chapter 2: Electric Dylan (1965-66)
Chapter 3: Rural Glory (1967)
Chapter 4: Take Me As I Am (1968-73)
Chapter 5: Back in the Rain (1974-78)
Chapter 6: The Changing of the Guard (1978-81)
Chapter 7: Rock ’n’ Roll Dreams (1983-90)
Chapter 8: Good Enough for Now (1989-97)
Chapter 9: Bob Dylan Revisited (2000-12)
Epilogue
Further Reading
Further Listening
Donald Brown is an editor, theater critic, and book reviewer at The New Haven Review. He teaches at Yale and since 2006 has commented on music, movies, and books on blogocentrism. He has a degree in Art History and Comparative Literature from the University of Delaware and a doctorate in Comparative Literature from Princeton University, where he studied as a Mellon fellow.
In recent years there has been a plethora of books on the enigmatic
Mr. Dylan, but this entry in Rowman & Littlefield’s Tempo music
series on rock, pop, and culture is a bit different as it explores
Dylan’s music through the lens of social and cultural history. In
nine fascinating chapters, Brown, a freelance writer and editor,
follows Dylan chronologically through his career, from young
troubadour in Greenwich Village who unwittingly became the
spokesman of a generation through his controversial electric
transformation to the “rural glory” of the Basement Tapes to his
richly creative Blood on the Tracks period to his born-again phase
to his current renaissance as a rock elder and cultural force.
Brown’s discussion of individual songs and albums is particularly
insightful. This concise examination of the Dylan corpus is
especially good for younger generations who may want to better
understand how a musician in his early seventies can still be so
compelling and relevant in twenty-first-century America. A useful
Dylan and cultural events timeline and an annotated discography
round out the volume.
*Booklist*
Many studies of Bob Dylan’s life and career have been overly
comprehensive, to the delight of his obsessive fans. It is
refreshing to read editor, theater critic, and blogger Brown’s
crisp and concise contribution to Dylan scholarship. The author
organizes the book into nine chronological periods of the
musician’s ever-changing life, up through the release of Tempest in
2012. Along the way he references key national and world events and
cultural influences that were relevant to Dylan’s creative output.
The narrative flows smoothly, and many songs receive a paragraph of
mini-interpretation. The final section, covering the years 2000–12,
is especially interesting as it documents the unexpected resurgence
of Dylan’s career with three major albums and relentless touring.
Brown devotes much more space to a close reading of the newer
songs. VERDICT Brown proves that he is very well versed in all
things Dylan with this very accessible work. While it covers
familiar territory, the book’s strength is a thorough assessment of
Dylan’s career, album by album, song by song. Both longtime fans
and newcomers to Dylan’s work will appreciate Brown’s approach.
*Library Journal*
Cultural critic Brown explores the entire catalogue of Bob Dylan in
tandem with the social, political, and personal events that
unfolded over the course of the artist’s lifetime. Emphasizing the
dual history approach, the book begins by aligning Dylan’s timeline
with the national one. Dylan performs at the March on Washington
for Jobs and Freedom, reads Joseph Conrad while recording 'Blood on
The Tracks,' and influenced by the women in his life, moves towards
religious music in the early 80s. Brown dissects almost every song
on each of Dylan’s albums, including the records he produced in the
late 80s, which he admits represent a 'nadir' for the artist. The
string of in-depth, song-by-song album reviews are glued together
with quick history lessons. Many writers have already explored
Dylan in his historical context, including most of the great first
wave of pop critics, like Ellen Willis and Greil Marcus, as well as
academic historians such as Princeton’s Sean Wilentz. Brown is
thorough in his analysis
*Publishers Weekly*
In nine fascinating chronological chapters, music and literature
critic Donald Brown analyzes Bob Dylan's recording career. Drawing
on an array of published sources but mostly the recordings
themselves, the author begins with 'Becoming Bob Dylan.' Because of
the plethora of Dylan biographies, many listed in the helpful
bibliography . . . . Brown offers limited biographical details and
. . . plunges into Dylan's first record, Bob Dylan, with an
analysis of each song. This is the format of all the chapters: a
brief description of the musical, historical, and biographical
context of the record, then a critical analysis of the songs. . .
.There is a helpful discography. The book's chief contribution lies
in Brown's critical analyses of so many songs. Summing Up: Highly
recommended. All readers.
*Choice Reviews*
While many of the stories of Dylan’s life have been dissected ad
nausea in just about every bit of medium imaginable, Brown’s
approach is refreshing; a nearly album by album retrospective of
one of the most culturally significant and musically influential
musicians in modern history. In addition, unlike many biographies
on Dylan, Brown is objective enough to point out when the albums
were uneven and, for most of the 1980’s, downright mediocre. While
it’s clear from his writing and exhaustive knowledge of the music,
that Brown is a fan of the singer, it’s nice to read an impartial
take on this exhaustive catalog of music. ... Brown has written a
book that manages to be ideal for both the casual Dylan fans and
the diehard acolytes of the singer.
*Examiner*
Bob Dylan: American Troubadour is a welcome addition to the Dylan
library, simply because it is one of the better general
introductions to Dylan's work. . . that has appeared in recent
years. [It] is an excellent starting point for the novice Dylan fan
[and]. . . contains enough surprising insights to have even the
most seasoned Dylan reader leading towards the edge of his seat.
Excellent book.
*Bob Dylan in (Het) Nederland(s)*
Time spent with this highly readable book will almost certainly
send readers back to rediscover Dylan’s work, and the reader will
come away with a new appreciation for Dylan’s more popular
material, as well. Highly recommended.
*Musoscribe*
Brown’s book [is] a must read for Dylan enthusiasts.
*Journal of American Culture*
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