“If I’m here at eighty, I’ll be doing the same thing I’m doing now. This is all I want to do – it’s all I can do . . . I think I’ve always aimed my songs at people who I imagined – maybe falsely so – had the same experiences that I’ve had, who have kind of been through what I’d been through. But I guess a lot of people just haven’t.
“See, I’ve always been just about being an individual,
with an individual point of view. If I’ve been about anything, it’s probably
that, and to let some people know that it’s possible to do the impossible.
“And that’s really all. If I’ve ever had anything to
tell anybody, it’s that you can do the impossible. Anything is possible. And
that’s it. No more.”—American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan quoted in Mikal Gilmore,
“Bob Dylan at Fifty,” Rolling Stone, May 30, 1991
Bob Dylan may have spoken of being 80 in this
interview with Mikal Gilmore, but there surely must have been times when he
wondered if he would make it, especially with the brush with mortality that
produced his 1997 CD, Time Out of Mind.
Many of us who have listened to the composer of “Forever
Young” find it hard to imagine him at such a stage in his life. A poet of the
counterculture for nearly as long as baby boomers can remember, he has seen
that fringe movement transform into part of the cultural mainstream.
Too bad that Dylan couldn't have paused more often in the
“Never-Ending Tour” of live appearances that has ruined his voice to such an extent that it has often hopelessly garbled the
delivery of his own lyrics.
But then again, Dylan’s always been about overturning
expectations. No sooner had he been labeled “the voice of his generation” than
he began to experiment with one genre after another, often trying fans’
patience and loyalty.
For all of these sometimes whiplash-inducing changes
in tone, Dylan has remained, Gilmore wrote in Night Beat: A Shadow History
of Rock ‘n’ Roll (1998), “a man who isn’t aiming to change the world so
much as he’s simply trying to find a way to abide all the heartbreaks and disillusion that
result from living in a morally centerless time.”
No comments:
Post a Comment