Saturday, February 26, 2011

The Bob Dylan encyclopedia By Michael Gray

The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia: Revised and Updated Edition

If any popular musician merits an 800-plus page encyclopedia, it is Bob Dylan. This massive effort covers many of his songs, albums, and film work, as well as just about every personality associated with the folk singer/rock star. But this is no dry reference tome: Dylan expert Gray (Mother: The Frank Zappa Story; Song and Dance Man III: The Art of Bob Dylan) writes in the brash and opinionated style often associated with the British popular music press (he is, after all, a Briton). For example, writing of Dylan's onetime lover Joan Baez, he notes the "strident gauchery of her rigid delivery." While he praises Robbie Robertson's "intelligent, never-faltering, beguiling guitar work," he chides the "ego and domination" of his takeover of the Band in the post-Dylan years. Entries also cover diverse influences from Bertold Brecht to T.S. Eliot to Blind Willie Johnson. Bottom Line Gray freely quotes from a variety of sources, in addition to relying on his own considerable knowledge, helpfully including source notes at the end of most entries. Overall, this is an amazingly well-researched and surprisingly readable work. Recommended for larger public and all music libraries. [The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland will host an exhibit on Bob Dylan through September; Gray will speak at the museum on August 30. Ed.] Dave Valencia, King Cty. Lib. Syst., WA

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Fans of Bob Dylan have a multitude of choices when it comes to biographies and retrospectives, but author Michael Gray (Song & Dance Man #3: The Art of Bob Dylan) outdistances them all with this voluminous collection of all things Dylan. Over the course of 823 pages Gray considers everything from railroad imagery in Dylan's songs to his use of nursery rhymes, covering the topics thoughtfully and thoroughly. An entry on Rubin "Hurricane" Carter details the plight of the wrongfully jailed boxer immortalized in Dylan's song "Hurricane," including not only a biography of the fighter, but details of the song's recording and live performance. Even the briefest of encounters merits an entry, such as when Neil Diamond challenged Dylan to top him as he came offstage. Dylan's reply: "Waddaya want me to do-go onstage and fall asleep?" Gray's knowledge of his subject is seemingly boundless, yet he manages to maintain a critical eye and keep Dylan's work in perspective. "Unbelievable," a song off Dylan's Under the Red Sky album, is called "a hopeless piece of rockist sludge picked from the obscurity of the album and issued as a single. Almost any other track would have fared better ." While Gray is certainly a fan, it's this impartiality that fuels the book and gives it weight. Insightful and entertaining, Gray's tome will broaden appreciation of the artist, his influences and his legacy. 100 b&w illustrations.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Rock 'n' roll historian and Bob Dylan authority Gray offers a detailed volume featuring entries related to Dylan's life, artists who influenced him and were influenced by him, musical styles he created, and background stories of specific Dylan songs and recordings. Gray states in his preface that this work was prompted by friends and readers of his books (Song & Dance Man: The Art of Bob Dylan, 1972, and its 900-page revised edition, 2000) who suggested that he present some of that material in a more "reference-based" way.

Most of the entries are sketches of musicians, although Gray includes actors, authors, and other nonmusicians. These entries provide brief biographies and then explain how the people are connected to Dylan: how they worked with him, influenced or were influenced by him, and which of his songs they performed or recorded. The 3-page entry for Johnny Cash, for example, tells of Cash's defense of Dylan when Columbia Records wanted to drop him, their first meeting at the Gaslight Cafe in Greenwich Village, and their duo performances and recordings.

Gray's opinions and editorializing are prevalent throughout. This makes for unique entries, such as Interviews and the myth of their rarity (in which he claims Dylan actually averaged one interview per month over 40 years) and Dylan being "bored" by his acoustic material 1965-66, the myth of. In fact, the entire book is written in a refreshingly relaxed manner, as befits a music critic and fan.

The volume comes with more than 100 black-and-white illustrations and an accompanying CD-ROM with a searchable PDF version of the text. Although there is another published Dylan reference work, Oliver Trager's Keys to the Rain: The Definitive Bob Dylan Encyclopedia (Billboard, 2004), the current volume is a valuable addition to academic and large public library collections, primarily because of Gray's knowledge and reputation as a Dylan expert. Steven York
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 736 pages
  • Publisher: Continuum (June 15, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0826469337
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826469335

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