Thursday, May 26, 2011

WASN'T THAT A PARTY? (HAPPY BIRTHDAY BOB DYLAN)




Wow.

Yes it was a wow kind of night at Petit Cafe Campus on Bob Dylan's 70th birthday. A very Montreal wow.

No matter who or what I'm listening to I always make it back to Dylan. At least once a month. Yes, I'm somewhat addicted (not obsessed as one Gazette Letter to the Editor suggested. If you're really looking for obsessed, you have no idea.) but it feeds my core belief about the human condition. That the head, the heart and the soul are one. And when they're all working together it's sheer beauty. Music, especially live music, gets me to that place. Dylan's music transports me out of the ballpark, out of sight and out of this world. Nobody comes close. A Bruce Springsteen concert is a live event like no other, the greatest show in rock and roll. Some of his songs are brilliant and attending a Springsteen concert can be a spiritual experience but ultimately I've always felt more affected in a physical sense. Listening to Dylan makes the experience metaphysical.



I'm constantly plugged in to a wide variety of music but in anticipation of Dylan's birthday I started working backwards all the way to his debut album in 1962, aided by the newly released Mono versions of his first eight albums plus the also recently released Witmark Demos which feature many of his classics being recorded onto tape for the very first time. The number of quality songs that Bob Dylan has written is beyond staggering. The fact that he managed to write so many great songs that also happen to be so meaningful is beyond remarkable. And that so many of these great songs have crossed the borders - often straddling them - of so many various American music genres (folk, country, blues, rock, gospel, soul) is almost beyond belief.



Bob Dylan will always be identified, mostly, with the 1960's. If, God forbid, he had never gotten up after falling off his motorcycle in Woodstock in 1966, his body of work would still be held up as a model for aspiring songwriters and performers. His troika of albums in the mid-60's, "Bringing it all Back Home", "Highway 61 Revisited" and "Blonde on Blonde", recorded during an 18 month period, raised the bar to a level that's never been equalled. And doubtless, never will be. But his production in the 60's didn't stop there. While recuperating from his accident and/or an addiction to heroin (perhaps) and amphetamines (probably) Dylan and The Band recorded the highly influential "The Basement Tapes" (only a portion of which were ever officially released) followed by "John Wesley Harding" and "Nashville Skyline". No wonder he decided in 1970 to record a double album of mostly covers ("Self Portrait"). Although derided by critics, time has again proved that Dylan was way ahead of the pack. Which major rock star since has NOT put out their own version of "Self Portrait"?



Dylan in the '70's was almost as brilliant beginning with "New Morning", which featured Bob on keyboards for the majority of the songs ("What's he doing on keyboards???" has been a common complaint by some of his "fans" after attending a Dylan concert in recent years. Well, he was actually doing it 40 years ago). He composed his first film soundtrack "Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid" and then, if not replicating his mid-60s output, coming fairly close in releasing "Planet Waves", "Blood on the Tracks" and "Desire" in rapid succession. Some people point to 1978's "Street Legal" as the beginning of a decline but I love that album. It's sound was horribly muddy upon initial release but nicely cleaned up in a recent remastering. His marriage over by then, it's Dylan singing at his soulful best. As the 70's ended Dylan released "Slow Train Coming", an album that revealed his conversion to Christianity which prompted hundreds of thousands of his "fans" to replay, en masse, the chant of "Judas!" that was hurled at Dylan while on stage in Manchester, England in 1966 because he had the audacity to pick up an electric guitar. This time it was because the same guy who sang "..don't follow leaders" had apparently committed the ultimate betrayal by singing about Jesus. As somebody who has never been a believer in organized religion I did not, as many of my fellow Jews did, throw in the towel and consider him to be some kind of traitor. His vocal performances on that album - and on the tour that followed - left little doubt as to the sincerity of where he was emotionally. And, dammit, how else would I have discovered Shirley Ceasar or The Dixie Hummingbirds or The Blind Boys of Alabama?





There's no doubt Dylan floundered in the 1980's. His autobiography "Chronicles Vol. 1" explains that era well. But the 80's also featured songs like "Solid Rock", "The Groom's Still Waiting at the Altar", "Every Grain of Sand", "Jokerman", "Dark Eyes", the epic "Brownsville Girl", "Silvio", "Everything is Broken",  "Most of the Time" and one of his greatest ever, "Blind Willie McTell". A life's work for some. A "bad" decade for Bob Dylan.

Dylan seemed to get his groove back in the early 90's. And, as Van Morrison once suggested in concert, "It's Too Late To Stop Now!" He's still on the road, "...heading for another joint..." at age 70 bringing his body of work to a new generation of fans and, on those real good nights, reminding so many of his long time fans what attracted them in the first place. It's Dylan as performance artist. I watch him now, as I had the opportunity to do so a few months ago at UMass in Amherst, spitting out his words at the lip of the stage, to "Ballad of a Thin Man":

You see somebody naked
And you say "Who is that man?"
You try so hard
And you don't understand
Just what you will say
When you get home


Performing naked, with nothing but a harmonica in one hand while answering the never ending criticism that still comes his way. (A recent Wall Sreet Journal editorial suggested he should retire while Maureen Dowd of The New York Times raked him for agreeing to perform in China while being "censored".  A claim that had no truth to it at all.)

All the truth in the world adds up to one big lie
  -Things Have Changed (Oscar winning song, released 2000)



I don't know when or even if I would have discovered Dylan if not for my late sister Cherise who was playing something off "Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits" while I was reading Red Fisher in the Montreal Star. I put the paper down and walked into the room where my sister was. Anticipating my question while no doubt studying my face, she said "It's Bob Dylan. You like it? He's great".

 It was in the spirit of Cherise, and the city I love and the musicians who help me love it, and of course the man who links us all, that I decided, with a little help from my friends Lloyd Fischler, Gary Silverman, Glenda Rother, Mojo Len and Bill Brownstein, to throw a Bob Dylan 70th birthday bash at Petit Cafe Campus. Every musician who was asked to play, for nothing but beer, played. Some waited nearly eight hours but they played their asses off. Gary and I tried to get a surprise special guest to show (Levon Helm, Garth Hudson, Jimmy Lafave and Greg Keelor, among others, politely declined) but then it wouldn't have become the magical Montreal moment that it was. Jammed to beyond capacity, the front door was locked at some point after 9:30. Yes it was noisy, but shit happens in a bar. And the artists gave so much. Some of the most mesmerizing performances took place in the final hour in front of about 50 die hards who waited out 30 acts and nearly seven hours.

Among those still applauding at 3 AM was my sister, Rhona.

Thank you all.

BobFest 2011
May 24 @ Petit Cafe Campus
8:10 PM - 3 AM

  1. Bob Dylan (Recording)  - "All I Really Want To Do"
  2. Future Ex-Wives (Andrew Tupper & Graham Playford) w/Shane Murphy - "If You Gotta Go, Go Now (Or Else You Gotta Stay All Night)"
  3. Craig Morrison & Friends w/Ryan Fleury, RD Harris, TerryJoe Banjo & Danielle Lebeau-Petersen
  4. Alex Nesrallah - "Love Minus Zero/No Limit
  5. Alex Nesrallah - "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue"
  6. Craig Morrison - "Seven Days"
  7. Craig Morrison - "My Back Pages"
  8. Craig & Alex - "Mr. Tambourine Man"
  9. Gerry Kandestin - "Just Like A Woman"
  10. Gerry Kandestin - "Man in the Long Black Coat"
  11. Pat Loiselle - "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues"
  12. Danielle Lebeau-Petersen w/The Jimmyriggers & Lee Mellor  - "Buckets of Rain"
  13. Danielle & Everybody - "Odds & Ends"
  14. Lloyd Fischler - Reads Greil Marcus on Dylan
  15. Beaverness (Mathieu Dudemaine & Simon Turcotte) - "Love Sick"
  16. Beaverness  - "John Wesley Harding"
  17. Bill Brownstein - Speaks & Intros...
  18. The Steamfitters (Peter Kalichman, Marc Gold, Gord Langsner, Richard Weiss) - "Goin' To Acapulco"
  19. The Steamfitters - "Ring Them Bells"
  20. The Steamfitters - "Leopard Skin Pillbox Hat"
  21. Lloyd Fischler - Reads Patti Smith on Dylan
  22. The Van Roskies (Jaime Roskies, Susan Khouri, Jeff Montesano, Mel Backstrom, Tony Odze) -     "Like A Rolling Stone"
  23. The Van Roskies - "I Shall Be Released"
  24. Lazarus Moan (Mark Goodwin, RD Harris, Ron Stutz, Stuart Patterson, Eric Lemoyne) -      "Going, Going Gone"
  25. Lazarus Moan w/Jim Zeller - "Watching The River Flow"
  26. Bones Malones (Bones Malones, Mike G, Pat McLelland, Phil Cahouette) - "Political World"
  27. Bones Malones - "Beyond Here Lies Nothing"
  28. Matt Large & The Smalls - "Lonesome River"
  29. Matt Large & The Smalls - "Man of Constant Sorrow"
  30. Terry Joe Banjo - "Man on the Street" & "Troubled And I Don't Know Why"
  31. Pat Lesyk & Jonathan Moorman - "It Ain't Me, Babe"
  32. Pat & Jonathan w/TerryJoe Banjo & David Pearce  - "Wagon Wheel"
  33. Norm Rennie w/TerryJoe Banjo on mandolin - "Senor (Tales of Yankee Power)"   
  34. Pat Mastey w/TerryJoe Banjo - "Tangled Up In Blue"
  35. Pat Mastey w/TerryJoe & Craig Morrison - "Isis"  
  36. Tim Smith - "Simple Twist of Fate"    
  37. Laurel Jackson w/DLebeau-Petersen, Katie Sevigny, Andre Kirchoff & David Pearce - "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere"
  38. Bobby Dove - "The Cuckoo"
  39. Bernard Perusse - Reads Arlo Guthrie on Dylan & Intros...
  40. The Echohunters (Larry Cassini, Gord Fleming, Carl Rufh, Rob Couture, Sylvain Dancausse) - "Don't Think Twice, It's Alright"
  41. The Custom Outfit (Derek William, Kevin Moquin, Derek Harrison, David Dixon, Catherine Planet) w/TerryJoe Banjo - "Ballad of Hollis Brown"
  42. The Custom Outfit  w/TerryJoe Banjo - "Masters of War"
  43. The Future Ex-Wives  - "Girl From The North Country"
  44. The Future Ex-Wives w/Shane Murphy - "It Takes A Lot To Laugh (It Takes a Train To Cry)"
  45. Filly & The Flops (Felicity Hamer, Eddy Blake Eaton, Gabrielle Lambert, Christopher Reid, Mike Hand) - "Wallflower"
  46. Fillly & The Flops - "You're No Good"
  47. The Jimmyriggers (Andre Kirchoff, David Pearce, RD Harris & Mark Goodwin) - "Queen Jane Approximately"
  48. The Jimmyriggers - "Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You"
  49. The Jimmyriggers w/Lee Mellor & Jim Zeller - "Cold Irons Bound"
  50. Lee Mellor w/The Jimmyriggers & Danielle Lebeau-Petersen - "Chimes of Freedom"
  51. Lee Mellor & The Jimmyriggers - "Slow Train Coming"
  52. Dave & Bill Gossage w/ Bud Rice - "Ballad of a Thin Man"
  53. Dave & Bill Gossage w/ Bud Rice - "Forever Young"
  54. Annakin Slayd - "Subterranean Homesick Blues"
  55. Leela (The Damn Truth) w/Jim Zeller - "She Belongs To Me"
  56. Leela w/ Jim Zeller - "Oh Sister"
  57. Johnny Griffin w/ Anthony "Ducky" Lombardi & Nick Power- "Meet Me in the Morning"
  58. Johnny Griffin w/Anthony "Ducky" Lombardi & Nick Power - "Satisfied Mind"
  59. Rob Lutes & Rob MacDonald - "In My Time of Dying"
  60. Rob Lutes & Rob MacDonald - "I Threw It All Away"
  61. Rob Lutes & Rob MacDonald  w/JZeller - "Blind Willie McTell"  
  62. Jim Zeller w/ JD Slim (Jean-Denis Belanger) - "I'll Be Your Baby Tonight"  
  63. Jim Zeller w/ JD Slim, RD Harris, Mark Goodwin, David Pearce & Tony Lombardi - "Lay Lady Lay"
  64. Paul Deslauriers w/Sam Harrison on Cajon - "Most Likely You'll Go Your Way (And I'll Go Mine)"
  65. Paul Deslauriers w/Sam Harrison- "Down in the Flood (Crash on the Levee)"
  66. Shane Murphy Band  - "Highway 61"
  67. Shane Murphy Band  - "See That My Grave Is Kept Clean"
  68. Shane Murphy Band  -  "Rainy Day Women # 12 & 35"
  69. Shane Murphy Band  -  "Highway 61 (Revisited)" 
         
   The Lights came on at 3:05 AM.

   So When does Keith Richards turn 70?



6 comments:

  1. Wow, excellent work Mitch. I'm Evan Dowbiggin, a fellow sports fan who's a bigger music junkie. I've got a blog I used to do a lot with at musicofevansmind.blogspot.com and have written for an online entertainment magazine called www.pressplus1.com. One of the last things I put on my blog was an essay of sorts on Dylan's middle years. If you have time to skim, here it is! http://musicofevansmind.blogspot.com/2010/09/bob-dylan-1978-94-navigating-through.html

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  2. It was a blast Mitch! Not sure when Keith turns 70, but I've got dibs on "Gimme Shelter".

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  3. ditto on the "blast" bit.....and for Keef's 70th,put me down for "Eileen".....

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  4. I was among the last 50, from 7h30 on. Great show Mitch.
    Would've like more hits like my fave Stuck inside of Mobile..., Desolation row...
    But Hey! 300 diehard Dylan fans in a small room for 7 hours can't be beat.
    Why not make it an annual event?
    Dylan hasn't that many birthdays to come, sadly.
    It would be nice too, if more francophone talent was present. Dylan, like the Stones and the Beatles crosses the language barrier.

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  5. Interesting point about Street Legal. He's made a point of remastering it numerous times, and while it's not as good as its predecessors -- tough standard! -- it holds up pretty well.

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  6. Supercool pictures. Seems the real love of music lies with you with fun and entertainment. Hope you do well in future too.

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