Sunday, 13 October 2013

Tangled Up In Blue

Recently, I have become more and more infatuated with 2 masterpieces in particular; Joni Mitchell’s ‘Blue’ from 1971 and Bob Dylan’s ‘Blood On The Tracks’ from 1975. The latter I have loved ever since I first heard it a couple of years ago, whereas Blue took maturity and patience to really latch on to. Now that I have heard both of these albums more times than I can count, I thought it would be interesting to look at them in the context of 70’s society and try to find commonalities.

The early 70’s was a strange time for music. Undoubtedly, this is the time that music was forced to take on a new face in popular culture. The aftermath of the hippy movement was a tough pill to swallow for many who had helped shape it. The ecstasy of flower power had been replaced by an overwhelming glumness and many of the figureheads of the 60’s counterculture were either losing control or taking complete U turns with their musical direction. The Beatles were over, Bob Dylan was still in seclusion and releasing what was essentially country music. Legends like Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and Brian Jones had all fallen victim to drug overdoses. The 60’s was never coming back and the popular music scene was being remoulded.

One of the perhaps understated artists to emerge from the late 60’s was Joni Mitchell. A singer-songwriter who would not come to many peoples attention until the summer of 1971, when she put out arguably her greatest collection of songs, ‘Blue’. Aptly named, this masterpiece comprised of 10 songs written by Joni about two relationships. Firstly, after a tough breakup with Graham Nash, she took to Europe to write some of the songs for the album. But undoubtedly the main protagonist for the finished album was James Taylor, whom Joni had become romantically involved with soon after her breakup with Nash. As she has since remarked, every single lyric on the album is 100% honest and it really does piece together a perfect collage of where Mitchell was at this point in her career, both artistically and personally. It is also an album that, for me, slots in perfectly with the context of early 70’s popular music. There is no flashy, psychedelic production prevalent here, rather an acoustic and somewhat traditional style. The lyrics also occasionally touch on the overwhelming feeling around the music business and society at the time, “reading the news and it sure looks bad, they won’t give peace a chance, that was just a dream some of us had.”

What I love about the album is that it doesn’t attempt to hide behind anything and Joni isn’t afraid to be self-critical. With her amazing vocal range, Mitchell manages to paint a beautiful picture of the ebb and flow of a relationship and the thin line between love and heartbreak. It is an album I think most people can relate to in some kind of way. 

Three years later, Bob Dylan would write his own masterpiece, by no means his first. At the time ‘Blood On The Tracks’ came along, Dylan was definitely arriving at a bridge in his career. The days of the freewheeling folk hero and ‘voice of a generation’ were long gone, although the echoes were perhaps still ringing in his ears. Still, his cooling off period was drawing to a close as well and Bob was back on the road touring with the band once more. During the spring of 1974, he started attending art classes with Norman Raeben, who arguably reignited the flame responsible for many of the songs on Blood On The Tracks. It was a significant move for Dylan, but a strangely alienating one too. Raeben seemed to spark something in Dylan that had been lying dormant for over half a decade, not only through paint, but by helping him see things more from an ‘nonlinear’ perspective. Dylan has often cited this spring as being a tipping point in his marriage and the beginning of a downward spiral, which would end in divorce 3 years later. It is a dark but incredibly rational record, dealing with heartbreak at its very core. For perhaps the first time in his already illustrious career, Bob Dylan sounded stripped back to the flesh and completely exposed emotionally. He has said that he finds it difficult to relate to people who can “enjoy that kind of pain.” It is clear he made Blood On The Tracks for himself, maybe to deal with the turmoil of his failing marriage.

These are most definitely two albums for the ages and in Mitchell’s case, I consider it her magnum opus. But why am I talking about them both in the same post? Despite both artists being put under the ‘folkie’ tag earlier in their respective careers and being loose musical acquaintances, these two artists and albums are not intrinsically linked. Or are they? There is evidence to suggest that Blood On The Tracks was partly inspired by Blue. Especially the epic opener, ‘Tangled Up In Blue’. Bob once commented that he wrote this song after spending a weekend immersed in Mitchell’s masterpiece. I get the sense through knowing Bob’s occasional vagueness in interviews that perhaps the whole of this album was critically influenced by Blue.

After all, the two albums paint pictures that overlap in more ways than one. The themes of losing a love are very real in both cases. On the surface, Blue doesn’t sound inherently sad. There are moments of hope and moments of blissful nostalgia. But as the songs sink in, you sense Joni’s crippling loneliness and despair. There is hope for salvation, but a realisation that is not possible. Dylan tackles these exact same feelings on BOTT. Tangled Up In Blue feels like you are looking into a romantic nightmare. The song is littered with sporadic imagery that flies past you almost before you can process the emotion. Simple Twist Of Fate and You’re A Big Girl Now are a slower pace, before the infectious Idiot Wind takes you right back to the rhythm of the first track, with even more vigour and ferocity. The album continues ebbing and flowing in similar fashion for the entire 10 tracks. Blue also has this same variety in pace and emotion, which is outstanding for an album that takes just 35 minutes to listen to. The fact that both Dylan and Mitchell instill the jubilant highs, terrible lows and eventual crushing heartbreak of a typical relationship is what makes these 2 records genius for me. There is a lingering bitterness but also an honest confessional tone present in both cases.
 
Perhaps a more minor link between Dylan and Mitchell is that Bob learned the open D/E tuning from Joni. A tuning he would use prolifically for the first time on a record during the New York sessions for Blood On The Tracks. This shows that they did have a personal connection at this very significant time and may have even jammed together regularly. This new ‘open’ style of tuning was used very powerfully at the recording sessions in New York. Of course, many of the final cuts would eventually be scrapped and replaced by versions recorded in Minnesota a few months later. Joni would go on to play on Dylan’s Rolling Thunder Revue tour in 1975 and at The Last Waltz a year later.

These two albums are significant cornerstones for both the artists that wrote them and the whole context of popular music in the 1970’s. There has been speculation that Joni and Bob have not always seen eye to eye, which is ironic considering how great these songwriters were in their own right. It is clear to me that however respectful Joni Mitchell and Bob Dylan were to each other at the time, subconsciously there was influence happening in both directions when they sat down to pen these classics. 

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Vlogging YouTube Channel!

I just started a second YouTube channel, just for the hell of it really! I have been watching more and more vlogs recently from various people on YouTube. I can't quite work out what it is about them that's so addictive, as often it is just documenting peoples daily lives, but I love it! I'm really gaining an insight into how other people live from day to day and that's helping me make more of myself too. So I though I'd try it myself.

I'm going to be uploading to the new channel from time to time so it would be cool if you could head over and subscribe. I made my first vlog yesterday which was really fun to do, but I think my editing skills have a way to go! I'm going to London at the weekend with my brother so the next one should be up then. Remember to check out my main channel (MrDylanRecords) for music and vinyl content.

New Channel
First Vlog!

MrDylanRecords

Thanks!