Bob Dylan Releases “Rough and Rowdy Ways”

Legendary US folk singer Bob Dylan releases his first album of original songs in eight years on June 19, 2020, with the ten-track "Rough and Rowdy Ways." (File/AFP)

In the times of unprecedented health and economic hardships, music lovers have got something to really rejoice. US folk and rock legend Bob Dylan has released his first album of original songs in eight years with the ten-track “Rough and Rowdy Ways.”

Dylan’s 39th studio album, which got released on Friday, comes 58 years after his first. It features a 17-minute ballad about the assassination of John F Kennedy, as well as a tribute to American electric bluesman Jimmy Reed.

“Rough and Rowdy Ways” is the Nobel winner’s first collection of new material since “Tempest” in 2012, although he has released a number of cover albums in the interim.

The songs in the album run through 20th century pop culture, touch on myths and refer to historical and fictional figures — some light, others tragic.

In “I Contain Multitudes,” Dylan cites Indiana Jones, Anne Frank and the Rolling Stones in the same verse.

“Murder Most Foul,” first revealed in March, retells the shooting of President Kennedy in Dallas, Texas while describing the evolution of 1960s counterculture.

The song, which rose to the top of the Billboard chart, is packed with artist name-drops including the Eagles, Charlie Parker, Stevie Nicks, Woodstock and The Beatles.

Dylan — some of whose most-loved songs from the 1960s and 70s addressed police brutality and racism, such as “Hurricane” — also mentions the Tulsa race massacre of 1921.

The “Birdman of Alcatraz,” a convicted murderer who became a respected ornithologist raising birds in prison, gets a mention, too.

Recounting Kennedy’s slaying, Dylan sings: “We’re gonna kill you with hatred, without any respect / We’ll mock you and shock you and we’ll put it in your face / We’ve already got someone here to take your place.”

In “False Prophet,” the album’s six-minute second track, Dylan sounds cocky and unapologetic as he addresses his own mythology.

“I ain’t no false prophet / I just said what I said / I’m just here to bring vengeance on somebody’s head,” he sings over a slow blues riff.

British music magazine NME called the album “arguably his grandest poetic statement yet.”
In a review on its website, critic Mark Beaumont wrote “Rough? Perhaps, but it certainly has the warmth and lustre of the intimate and home-made.”

Rolling Stone magazine hailed it an “absolute classic,” calling it one of Dylan’s “most timely albums ever.”

“As Dylan pushes 80, his creative vitality remains startling — and a little frightening,” wrote critic Rob Sheffield.

Despite his years, Dylan, awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom from Barack Obama in 2012, has toured almost non-stop for the past three decades.

The coronavirus crisis forced him to cancel a string of dates in Japan and North America this spring and summer, but he has promised to be back on the road as soon as it’s safe to do so.

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