
“I is another.” – Rimbaud
“Say one more stupid thing to me before the last nail is driven in.”
– Bob Dylan
“Your best friends are my worst enemies – Angelina.” – Bob Dylan

Happy Birthday, Bob!
May you live as long as Willie Nelson is now and on and beyond (and same to you too, Willie; you two are kindred spirits).
But when Bob Dylan ever does pass on (not die), I will instantaneously think of what Bob himself said about himself after Elvis moved on: “After Elvis died, I didn’t talk for a week.”
I will not (probably) be silent that long, but my heart will break (in a certain way). And I will know (deep down) that times have changed.
I’ve seen Bob play live an uncountable number of times across five decades: in the ’80s, the ’90s, the ‘00s, the ’10s, the ‘20s.
I’ve seen him drunk (I mean me, although it was obvious that he was too at least a few times), I’ve seen him sober, I’ve seen him on drugs, I’ve seen him not on drugs, and I’ve seen him with my (now ex-) wife when she was preggo with the twins.
After the show she said: “It looked like you were studying him the whole time.”
That’s because I was studying him the whole time.
I’ve been studying the man (on and off) since I was thirteen years old.
I’ve seen him in Iowa, I’ve seen him in Missouri, I’ve seen him in Wisconsin, I’ve seen him in Kansas, and I’ve seen him in Illinois, many times, both in Chicago and at other locations.
(Side note: many folks don’t know that Iowa is our (the USA’s) Number One Agricultural State, which is true; it isn’t California. Reminder: Robert Zimmerman was born and bred in Minnesota.)
I’ve seen him with Tom Petty, I’ve seen him with the Grateful Dead, I’ve seen him with his own bands, I’ve seen him at the first Farm Aid in 1985, and I’ve seen him (and heard him) in my mind all the time, especially when all you beautiful ladies said goodbye.
(I never say “hi” and I never say “bye” to the beautiful ladies. They say hi and they say bye when the time comes: I’m still here; just don’t get too close any more; I don’t know why!)
(True beauty emanates from the inside outward and resides mostly in the eyes. Plastic beauty can be beautiful on the outside, but when you peer into the dead or predatory eyes, it chills the effect more than a little.)
The last time I saw Bob live he was with Willie and Mellencamp on the Outlaw tour, here in Illinois, two years ago.
He hid behind his piano wearing a hoodie the whole time and really pissed off a lot of the audience because he’d turned all his well-known songs into some sort of seemingly incoherent (but only seemingly) jazz.
Boos even started to go up here and there in the crowd.
I almost went over and told one guy to shut his fucking mouth.
I was ready to tear his head off if he didn’t listen to me.
But I restrained myself.
It was like some puny little fool in a football jersey standing there hurling rotten eggs at Mount Rushmore (even tho’ the dude was six feet three).
Because that’s what Dylan is: he’s as big as Mount Rushmore.
And maybe bigger. (Even tho’ he’s only five feet seven – or less.)
They say that when Dylan and Cash used to hang out together, they didn’t even talk.
As the great American fiction writer Barry Hannah (RIP Barry; your two greatest works are the short story “Water Liars” and the short novel Ray) once said: “I don’t need to meet Bob Dyan. He’s already shaken my hand.”

END NOTE:
For an answer to a full-scale nuclear war (which is becoming more likely by the hour, however unlikely that sounds), listen to “Let Me Die in My Footsteps” by Dylan, 1962. (And read the Bible and the Tao Te Ching.)
(Faulkner rightly said: “All it can do is kill us.”)
ONGOING NOTE: For a great song about public heroes dying, see and hear Waylon and Willie’s song “Heroes” (2:46) off their 1982 album WWII. Not to be confused with “My Heroes Have Always Been Cowboys” – which is also true.


(All images provided–brilliantly–by DWB)
I remember him in the sixties – we were there together and Blowing in the Wind was a favourite then and still is now. Yes, a great poet no doubt. Happy birthday Bob.
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Hi Diane
Yes, I also like to remember that Bob played right before Martin Luther King, Jr., gave his “I Have a Dream” speech in front of the Lincoln Memorial, opening for him, so to speak. If I remember correctly, Peter, Paul and Mary did “Blowin’ in the Wind” right before that. (I wasn’t alive at the time but I know from the history books.) Thank you!
Dale
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Hello Drifter
Bob is eighteen years older than me. That places him in that magical generation of adults too young to be in charge yet were the coolest people when I was a kid. The ones who were what you wanted to be, the ones who wrote the cool songs, made the cool movies and were also fed to Vietnam and jail. Still all magic after all these years.
Leila
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Hi (and High) LA
I also like to remember that it was Bob himself who introduced the Beatles to ganja, aka weed, in NYC. And that they also credited him with helping them move beyond “she loves you, yeah yeah yeah” to “Words are flowing out like endless rain into a paper cup…” Then again, they helped him move from folk to folk rock and rock. One of the greatest instances of mutual influence in the latter half of the 20th cen. John, especially, was utterly obsessed with Dylan as man and artist (according to all the available evidence).
Thank you!
The D
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Some fine SS tributes above. Cant resist adding a few more, because I’ve loved the guy to bits for more than sixty years.
He didn’t appeal to my parents generation (my dad called him ‘a pub singer’), which made him all the more special to my adolescent self. Mercurial, he never got in a rut, always changing, sometimes just from album to album. A true poet with some great rhymes (realise/alibis) and half-rhymes (shoes/food). A music industry innovator – the first 6 minute single, the first double album. The commitment to live music with endless touring.
May he stay forever young -mick
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Hi DWB
Wow I really enjoyed this! What struck me first was the picture with the hundred foot long shadow legs. Like an alien from “The War of the Worlds.” Amazing picture!
It’s great that Dylan played all of those places in the Midwest, and you got to see him in all of those different states and states of mind.
Wild, how Dylan said he didn’t speak for a whole week after Elvis passed.It makes you wonder if every single word Dylan said had some mystical import or the makings of a poem.
I’m always fascinated with J Cash. I like Dylan and his associates a lot better than “The Rat Pack.” Different music genres–that Vegas stuff doesn’t appeal to me.
That last concert sounds crazy. I like your description of the 6′ 3 squirt and Mt Rushmore.
Could you imagine not speaking for a whole week.
Excellent!
CJA
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