Bob Dylan
Zimmy, Blind Boy Grunt, The Voice of a Generation...

Contents


Life and Times          Influences        About        Discography

Life and Times

Young Bob Dylan Bob Dylan Bob Dylan on cover of LIFE Magazine 70's Bob Dylan 80's Bob Dylan

Folk rock singer-songwriter Bob Dylan was born Robert Allen Zimmerman on May 24, 1941, in Duluth, Minnesota. While attending college, he began performing folk and country songs,
taking the name "Bob Dylan." In 1961 Dylan signed his first recording contract, and he emerged as one of the most original and influential voices in American popular music.
Dylan has continued to tour and release new studio albums, including Together Through Life (2009), Tempest (2012), Shadows in the Night (2015) and Fallen Angels (2016).
The legendary singer-songwriter has received Grammy, Academy and Golden Globe awards, as well as the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the Nobel Prize for Literature.

Dylan's Influences

From the beat poets to Russian literary legends, Dylan's influences are individuals who explain the inexplicable through experience, philosophy, and consideration
Woody Guthrie
Woody Guthrie

Woody Guthrie is widely cited as one of Dylan's most important influences. The autobiography of Guthrie, who composed "This Land Is Your Land," fell into the hands of Bob Dylan in September 1960, when he was a college student. In Dylan's memoir Chronicles, he describes reading the book;

"like a hurricane, totally focused on every word, and the book sang out to me like the radio."

A few months after reading the book, Dylan told a New York crowd:

"I been travellin' around the country, followin' in Woody Guthrie's footsteps."

He wrote "Song to Woody" for his 1962 album Bob Dylan, followed up by the poem "Last Thoughts On Woody Guthrie," which can be heard on the album The Bootleg Series, Vols. 1-3: Rare & Unreleased.

Jack Kerouac
Jack Kerouac

Bob Dylan was obsessed with Beat writing and the bohemian scene of the 1950s, so naturally he loved what he described as the "breathless, dynamic bop phrases" of Jack Kerouac. He said, "I read On the Road in maybe 1959. It changed my life like it changed everyone else's." In Chronicles, Dylan describes moving to Minneapolis from his remote Minnesota community for university:

"I suppose what I was looking for was what I read about in On the Road - looking for the great city, looking for the speed, the sound of it, looking for what Allen Ginsberg called the 'hydrogen jukebox world.'"

Though he'd never meet Kerouac, Dylan and Ginsberg visited the writer's grave in Lowell, Massachussetts, in 1975.

Leo Tolstoy
Leo Tolstoy

Dylan was such a big fan of Leo Tolstoy that he went to the writer's historic estate, located outside of Moscow, and had this to say about his visit, from Chronicles:

"...this was where [Tolstoy] went later in life to reject all his writings and renounce all forms of war. One day when he was 82 years old he left a note for his family to leave him alone. He walked off into the snowy woods and a few days later they found him dead of pneumonia. A tour guide let me ride his bicycle."

Allen Ginsberg
Allen Ginsberg

Dylan and Ginsberg's storied friendship is chronicled widely in the media. The New Yorker describes Ginsberg as a "sometime mentor" to Dylan:

"...in the mid-1960s, the two would complete important artistic transitions, each touched and supported by the other. On and off, their rapport lasted for decades."

The night after Ginsberg's death in 1997, Dylan performed "Desolation Row" at a New Brunswick show and dedicated the performance to his friend. Dylan said the song was Ginsberg's favourite. The song "See You Later Allen Ginsberg" appears on Bob Dylan and the Band: The Basement Tapes.

About Dylan

Ever Rebelious...
       Dylan was known for his propensity to ignore the status quo. Most, if not all, artists who have tried to follow his lead as a rebellious, original genius (or those who came before him) were unable to achieve the notoriety, esteem and respect that his person and music demanded.

       The origin of Dylan's rebellious nature can't be pinpointed. In high school Dylan was a known delinquent, this identity being solidified in 1956 when the principal of Hibbing High School forced him off the talent show stage for performing a piece by Little Richard. Dylan responded with his yearbook quote, stating his life goal was to "join Little Richard."

       In the summer after his high school graduation, Zimmerman was working as a busboy at a Fargo, North Dakota cafe when he conned his way into a band with future music star Bobby Vee, called The Shadows, by claiming he had just been on the road with Conway Twitty and only showcasing his piano skills in the key of C. The stage name Zimmerman gave himself was Elston Gunnn. The group arrangement didn't last for very long, due to lack of funds for all involved, and Zimmerman/Gunnn left for Minneapolis at the end of the summer to attend the University of Minnesota.

A Lucky Son of a Gun
       Dylan was first signed to Columbia by John C. Hammond in a remarkable twist of fate. Hammond heard Dylan playing harmonica on Carolyn Hester's third album, entitled "Carolyn Hester" (1961) and decided on a whim, and against the judgement of his superiors, that he was record-making material. Thus Dylan's first record "Bob Dylan" was recorded, all the while Dylan (who had by now changed his name legally) continued roaming about New York City, recording under the pseudonym Blind Boy Grunt for another label/magazine Broadside, meeting with the then-ill Woody Guthrie, and becoming himself as an artist.

       But Dylan was nowhere near security in the most uncertain time in music recording history - Columbia and other big labels were trying to find contemporary sounds without allowing them to develop naturally, and without knowing what exactly the world needed and wanted to hear. Dylan was perceivably novel of course, but Columbia was looking for something different and strongly considered dropping Dylan before The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan was even recorded. This is when Dylan's friendship with the late Johnny Cash became one of the most vital relationships he had made to date.

       Cash and Dylan were known to spend time together as early as 1962, when Columbia was openly discussing dropping Dylan before he even had the chance to record his famous second album The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan. John Hammond claimed it was Cash’s endorsement of Dylan that helped to convince Columbia not to make a colossal mistake by dumping Dylan. In 1969, Dylan returned the favor by making his first television appearance in three years to perform on the first episode of The Johnny Cash Show.
Bob Dylan yearbook photo
Bob Dylan with John Hammond
Bob Dylan with Johnny Cash

Discography

Album Released Produced By Editor's Favorite Track
Bob Dylan 1962 Legacy & Sony Music Distribution Song to Woody
The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan 1963 Columbia & Legacy Bob Dylan's Blues
The Times They Are A-Changin' 1964 Columbia The Times They Are A Changin'
Another Side of Bob Dylan 1964 Mobie Fidelity Sound Lab Song to Woody
Bringing It All Back Home 1965 Columbia & Legacy Song to Woody
Highway 61 Revisited 1965 Columbia & Legacy Song to Woody
Blonde on Blonde 1966 Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab Song to Woody
John Wesley Harding 1967 Columbia Song to Woody
Nashville Skyline 1969 Columbia & Legacy Song to Woody
Self Portrait 1970 Columbia Song to Woody
New Morning 1970 Columbia Song to Woody
Dylan 1973 Sony Music Distribution Song to Woody
Planet Waves 1974 Columbia Song to Woody
Before The Flood 1974 Columbia Song to Woody
Blood on the Tracks 1975 Columbia & Legacy Song to Woody
The Basement Tapes 1975 Columbia Song to Woody
Desire 1976 Columbia Song to Woody
Hard Rain 1976 Columbia Song to Woody
Street Legal 1978 Columbia & Sony Music Distribution Song to Woody
Slow Train Coming 1979 Columbia Song to Woody
At Bodukan 1979 Columbia Song to Woody
Saved 1980 Columbia Song to Woody
Shot of Love 1981 Columbia Song to Woody
Infidels 1983 Columbia Song to Woody
Real Live 1984 Columbia Song to Woody
Empire Burlesque 1985 Columbia Song to Woody
Knocked Out Loaded 1986 Columbia Song to Woody
Down in the Groove 1988 Columbia Song to Woody
Dylan & the Dead 1989 Columbia Song to Woody
Oh Mercy 1989 Columbia Song to Woody
Under the Red Sky 1990 Columbia Song to Woody
Good as I been to You 1992 Columbia Song to Woody
World Gone Wrong 1993 Columbia Song to Woody
MTV Unplugged 1995 Columbia Song to Woody
Time Out of Mind 1997 Columbia Song to Woody
Love and Theft 2001 Columbia Song to Woody
Masked and Anonymous 2003 Columbia Song to Woody
Bob Dylan: Les Chronques, Vol. 1 2005 Sony BMG Song to Woody
Modern Times 2006 Columbia & Sony BMG Song to Woody
I'm Not There [Original Soundtrack] 2007 Columbia Song to Woody
Together Through Life 2009 Columbia Song to Woody
Christmas in the Heart 2009 Sony Music Distribution & Columbia Song to Woody
Bob Dylan's Country Selection 2011 Chrome Dreams Song to Woody
Tempest 2012 Columbia Records Song to Woody
Shadows in the Night 2015 Columbia Song to Woody
Fallen Angels 2016 Columbia Song to Woody
Triplicate 2017 Columbia & Sony Music Distribution Song to Woody