Hey Mr Tambourine Man
By the Rev. Dr. Ed
Hird
One of the most romantic dates that my wife Janice and I go
on is to the local library. We are both
avid readers. When I become excited
about a new book, I love to read out a section to Janice. Because she dearly loves me, she will usually
put down her own book and give me some quality time. After a while, Janice will usually say: “Can
I go back to reading my own novel because I am right in the middle of an exciting
part?”
One of my most exciting finds at the library was a new
biography by Ian Bell, entitled “Once Upon a Time: the lives of Bob Dylan”. The
Financial Times describes this book as the best Dylan biography yet.” WB Gooderham of The Guardian, UK described
‘Once Upon a Time as “Knotty, beguiling, contrary, infuriating and as ambitious
as its subject, this could be the most vital Dylan biography yet.” As part of writing this Deep Cove Crier
article on Bob Dylan, I have been asking friends, neighbours, relatives and
local business people as to what they think and know about Bob Dylan. I discovered that Dylan has had a remarkably
long shelf life, appealing to a wide variety of very diverse people.
My favorite Dylan song is Hey, Mr Tambourine Man. No one can ever fully agree to what Dylan
means in his mysterious, playful lyrics.
Hunter S Thompson dedicated his book Fear
and Loathing in Las Vegas to Bob Dylan because of this song allegedly
promoting Mr Tambourine Man as a drug pusher.
Dylan told Joni Mitchell’s husband Chuck that the Tambourine Man was the
one common musician in the New Orleans funeral Jazz Bands that helped people
grieve the death of their loved ones, and embrace their own mortality. I see Dylan as an enigmatic Tambourine Man
who is playing songs for us in our jingle jangle world.
The Byrds' version of this song convinced Dylan to switch to
rock & roll.Like our Canadian Bruce Cockburn, Bob Dylan is one of the most
private, elusive public figures in the world.
The grueling pace of touring and interacting with the media has
destroyed many musicians over the years.
Dylan himself often lost himself for a while in the midst of such media
onslaught. As June Sawyers ironically
put it in Book List, Dylan is an artist who, to this day, defends his right of
“artistic autonomy, refusing to be anyone but himself, whoever that may be. “
Michael Dyer of the Japan Times
Newspaper has called Bob Dylan the single most important artist in the history
of popular music. What pains many of
Dylan’s fans is that he keeps artistically reinventing himself again and
again. Just when you have ‘figured’ Dylan
out, he surprises you. The real Dylan is
always blowing in the wind. At age 74,
Dylan the Tambourine Man will likely reinvent himself many more times before he
goes home to the Lord. You cannot put
Dylan in a box. When Dylan switched from
folk to rock, he was publicly booed and called a ‘Judas’. When he embraced Jesus in the 1980s, many
people walked out of his concerts. Geoff
Dyer of the New York Times commented: “The conversion to Christianity was the
point at which I, like many others, first jumped ship, but again, bootleg
recordings have since made clear that as a result of his newfound faith, Dylan
rocked harder than he has ever done since.”
Some people have never been able to forgive Dylan for spiritually
reinventing himself. After Dylan’s
explicit spiritual trilogy of albums “Slow Train Coming, Saved, and Shot of
Love”, he has become more parabolic and subtle in talking about his faith. Sometimes less is more. When I came to faith, some people dismissed
my conversion as a phase that I would get over.
My hunch is that Dylan’s coming to faith was more than just a phase. Dylan the Tambourine Man, far from the
twisted reach of crazy sorrow, is continuing to enable us ‘to dance beneath the
diamond sky with one hand waving free, silhouetted by the sea, circled by the
circus sands.’
Back in 1976, The American Guide magazine asked Dylan how he
imagined God. He memorably said: "I
can see God in a daisy. I can see God at night in the wind and rain. I see
Creation just about everywhere. The highest form of song is prayer. King
David's, Solomon's, the wailing of a coyote, the rumble of the earth. It must
be wonderful to be God. There's so much going on out there that you can't get
to it all. It would take longer than for ever.”
I am struck by how deeply the African-American churches have
embraced Dylan’s Gospel music. Blues and
Folk music have deep roots in the African-American community. While other people may have been offended by
Dylan’s Gospel music, the African American churches have transformed these
songs into large choir productions. Even
if Dylan never again writes such explicit Gospel music, I believe that his
Gospel songs will continue to impact many new generations. Music has a way of outliving its composer,
even Dylan.
I thank God for Bob Dylan the Tambourine M an who continues
to fascinate so many of us. Through his
evocative songs, he takes us ‘down the foggy ruins of time, far past the frozen
leaves, the haunted, frightened trees, out to the windy beach.’ Only God really knows Bob’s heart. Our calling is to enjoy his music and
remember to pray for him and other musicians.
There are few tougher callings than that of a travelling Tambourine Man .
The Rev. Dr. Ed Hird, Rector
-published in the November 2015 Deep Cove Crier
-author of Restoring Health: body, mind and spirit and Battle for the Soul of Canada
2 comments:
Wonderful biographical piece, Ed! I've basically lived on or beyond the rim of much popular music, so in this article you have enriched my knowledge and helped provide me a sense of attachment to him. Thanks. ~~+~~
Boy, I learned a lot in a few short moments. Interesting information on an immensely gifted man! Thanks for the memories, Ed.
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