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Bob Dylan Turns 70

An L.A. Weekly birthday tribute

An Oscar nominee for her role in Robert Altman's Nashville, Ronee Blakley continues to act and sing and is currently editing her second film as a director, One Blood.

Ronee Blakley: I was in New York doing press for the movie Nashville and staying at the Sherry-Netherland hotel, and David Blue was playing at the Other End on Bleecker Street. So I headed down and was by myself in the middle booth and David was onstage. I was harmonizing by myself from the back of the room, the way we used to do things like that. At the end of the show, Bobby Neuwirth said, "Ronee, there's someone I'd like you to meet ... Bob Dylan." [Owner] Paul Colby shut the club down and Dylan got onstage and started to play and I got onstage and started to play a little four-handed piano with him and we were having fun. People started coming into the club: [Mick] Ronson, [Roger] McGuinn, [Allen] Ginsberg. And Bob asked me to go on tour with him and I said I couldn't. And Neuwirth said, "NO??? Nobody says no to Bob Dylan!" I had to go because I had a tour beginning and I was set to meet my band in Muscle Shoals, Ala., the next day.

Just like Al Jolson's blues: Bob Dylan at the 2011 Grammy Awards
PHOTO BY LESTER COHEN/GETTY IMAGES
Just like Al Jolson's blues: Bob Dylan at the 2011 Grammy Awards
Nobody walks in L.A. (not even Bob): Dylan in his Jag, 1976
PHOTO BY BRAD ELTERMAN
Nobody walks in L.A. (not even Bob): Dylan in his Jag, 1976

I went to Muscle Shoals and met with the boys and they said, "You've got to go on the road with him, it'll be better for all of us." I called Bob and I said the band said I could come and [he said] come back to New York. A limousine picked me up [in New York], took me to the studio and I recorded "Hurricane" that night and I still hadn't slept!

The Rolling Thunder Revue was an experience that could be placed in flashing neon lights in my life. It was just that great. Bob is exciting to work with. The intensity of his performance, the intensity of his vocals. The meaning, the passion, what lies behind the words. For one thing I happen to love his voice. Some people say as if it's a given [that] he doesn't have a great voice, but I disagree. I think he has a superb voice and what he does with it is great.

McGuinn once said he'd never seen Bob eat. How does he do what he does? I think he had a very nice meal and bottle of wine with [then wife] Sara, but I never saw him gadding about, even though we all saw each other every day. He doesn't hang out with everybody as much as others might like him to? Maybe that's true, but how else is he going to preserve what he's doing? He's a worker and he works hard and he's worked a long time. He's given us his life, his life energy, his life force, and we should be grateful.

Kinky Friedman: One of the best times I spent with him was in Mexico in 1976 on the island of Yelapa. They had no electricity on the island. We stayed there for two weeks. Bob, Louie Kemp, Gary Shafner and Dennis Hopper and there were several hundred townspeople. There was a big chess tournament in the square. Bob and Louie entered me as the American champ to play the Mexican champ and I won. And I wore the Jesus coat Bob had given me, this fancy Nudie's outfit [Bob's country music–style outfit with a huge Jesus Christ face on the back]. That was a great moment. It was downhill from there, unfortunately, as far as my chess career was concerned.

While we were on Yelapa, an interesting thing happened. We were walkin' on the beach, there wasn't anybody around, and Bob was wearing his black leather jacket. It was warm and he was feelin' a chill nobody else could feel maybe, I don't know. Strange northern behavior. Somebody had a guitar and a guitar case and they set it down. At one point Bob kinda wandered over there, sat down, took the guitar out kind of in a dream state, strumming to himself on this deserted beach. It was like a movie scene. I wandered off, came back 10 minutes later, the place was surrounded by people. So he just put the guitar away when too many people showed up. It reminded me of something he'd said, that he liked playing better when he actually played for people that weren't listening, in the very early days when people'd be eatin' their dinner or talkin'. He felt comfortable with that, more so than a bunch of mesmerized robots who loved him, or thought they did.

And then the incident on the plane was funny. We were flying Southwest Airlines at the last minute in Texas and there was no first class and Bob was sitting next to this young girl who, when she realized she was sitting next to Bob Dylan, she just totally jumped through her asshole for America. She was very excited and she starts screaming, "I CAN'T BELIEVE IT! I CAN'T BELIEVE THAT I'M SITTING NEXT TO BOB DYLAN! I CAN'T BELIEVE IT!" That's when Bob turns to her and he says, "Pinch yourself."

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Sandra Harmon
Sandra Harmon

,In 1964, my first job, one I really liked, was working at M. Witmark & Sons, then a leading publisher of sheet music for the “Tin Pan Alley” music industry. Although “Tin Pan Alley” no longer exists, it originally was a concentrated area in New York City, West 28th Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenue, where there was a collection of New York City centered music publishers and songwriters who dominated the popular music in the U.S. during the late 19th century and early 20th century. In those early days, the music houses in lower Manhattan had a steady stream of songwriters, vaudeville and Broadway performers, musicians and song pluggers coming and going. Aspiring songwriters came to demonstrate tunes they hoped to sell. ‘"Song pluggers" were pianists and singers who made their living demonstrating songs to promote sales of sheet music. In 1936, Witmark was bought out by Warner Bros, and by 1963, when I went to work there, it was run by Artie Mogul, an A&R legend who had discovered Peter, Paul and Mary, an American folk singing trio who ultimately became one of the biggest acts of the 1960s. The trio was composed of Peter Yarrow, Paul Stookey and Mary Travers. Albert Grossman, Peter, Paul and Mary’s manager, had brought the trio to Artie and now he was bringing his newest act, who he was raving about, a singer/songwriter named Bob Dylan, nee Robert Allen Zimmerman from Hibbling, Minn. Artie had made a deal with Dylan, negotiated for him by Grossman, for the princely sum of $1,000 a song But Artie never doubted that he had found someone special in Dylan and shouted his praises to all who would listen. Artie Mogul, a very talented A & R man, and a funny, likeable guy, was also a degenerate gambler, and my main job was to keep the bookies around the country to which he owed money, off his back. It was not an easy thing to do, especially when I had to endlessly beg them not to come over to the office and break his legs, bash in his head, render him impotent or just throw him out a window. I spent the day on the phone with these apes, or sometimes stood guard against them in the waiting room. But my secondary job, given to me when Simeon Saber, the 65 year old professional copier who had worked for Witmark for over forty years, and whose job it was to produce lyrics and sheet music from the artists under contract for the publisher to sell, had been asked to transcribe the lyrics of, among other songs, “Blowin In The Wind”, “The Times They Are A-Changin” and “Mr. Tambourine Man“. After a few days, Simeon threw up his hands and asked Artie to find a younger copier. Happily, thrillingly, although I was not a professional anything, that job fell to me to me and I began to spend that part of the day when I wasn’t fielding threats to Artie, transcribing the lyrics of new songs that that Bob Dylan had recently composed, and which he sent us on tapes, on which he sang, played the harmonica, and sometimes played guitar or piano. He usually accompanied each tape with a sheet of lined, legal sized paper on which he wrote the lyrics to each song, some of which had crossed out lines and additions. For me, neither the songs themselves, nor the written out lyrics, were not all that easy to understand, so I had to play them over and over again to get each word, each phrase, so they would be accurate as sheet music. The more I listened, the more I heard, the more I understood, the more I fell in love with Bob Dylan. I had never heard anyone say the things he said, and especially the way he said them. Listening to him opened my mind to a world beyond anything I had known and for the first time in my life I began to feel as if I had found a kindred spirit and was ready to find my own way in the world. Since then and to the present, I love Bob Dylan

Dylan b4 sold-out
Dylan b4 sold-out

[NOT listing dept.] (live · entertainment/music · instrumentalists/vocalists · all ages) Thursday, May 26thSHOWCASE: And OPEN MIC / JAM: "signature"* Companion Events - Every week Thursday 7pm SHOWCASE: "Aufwiedersehn" Featuring - FUASI ABDUL-KHALIQ + PHIL RANELIN "Guest Solos" And JAM: (standards/originals · multi-genre - Blues, Classical, Country, Gospel, Jazz, Latin, Pop, R&B, Rock&Roll, Roots, Soul...)8pm (sign-up 7:30pm) OPEN MIC / JAM: You, other VIPs, " 'heavy surprise guests' & 'stellar assortment of top-flight jazz musicians' "* w/ D'z, Lady & Gentlemen - In-House Live Jazz Trio - Karen HERNANDEZ - Music Director/piano & Tony DUMAS -bass · Ralph PENLAND - drums "redoubtable jazz vets"*DOLORES PETERSEN Presents: @ HSB&G 6122-6124 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood["*" - LA Weekly]

Mike Palecki
Mike Palecki

It wasn't until I was living in Malibu and hearing accounts from tradesmen at the bar about Dylan's homeowner's blues, that I admitted he was just as human as anyone. That didn't stop me from turning into a trembling fool one morning when I pulled into the gas station on Point Dume and spotted Dylan pumping gas into a VW Beetle. I hadn't felt that vulnerable since Catholic grammar school when the wooden ruler whacked my knuckles."Whatza matter, haven't you ever seen God pumping gas?" snarled Dylan. I was busted. How he knew about the "Re-elect Bob Dylan for God" button I wore in the 60's,I'll never know. I was sure he also knew about me hiding in the bushes on various nights to hear him, The Band, Eric Clapton, Joe Cocker and Becca's mom-Bonnie Bramlett playing at Shangri-La Ranch. The dogs must have gotten too fat on all the Milk Bones I fed them to keep quiet.Feeling dizzy, I heard the words that could only have come from the spirit of Valerie, who always ranked Dylan #2. The last time I saw her, we found the door to the medieval turret in Laguna Beach unlocked and sat on the spiral staircase vibrating with the crashing waves as gossamer clouds streamed past a crescent moon. "You're not Donovan", I stammered. Dylan started laughing and hollered, "Shut up! Shut up!" as he jumped into the Beetle and sputtered off.

mr. burns
mr. burns

hi mike p. do you have more of that story? was it pubished in "moutaineer" a few years back?enlighten us! more!

Mayareese73
Mayareese73

oh this is one of those acts we're supposed to like because the media tells us to? well this rag likes Ke$ha, too. calling thses acts 'genius', and telling us, if we think otherwise, we're thinking too much. well if your brain has been replaced by med marijuana, any thinking is thinking too much. the dumbing down of america. and anybody screaming 'hater, knows that it takes one to know one, and has been on an ongoing hate parade, against legitimacy, in the past.

frogeyed
frogeyed

what the hell are you going on about? which story do you intend to respond to?

Patron's Pick
Patron's Pick

[listing dept.] (multi-genre · live entertainment/music · instrumentalists/vocalists) SHOWCASE: And OPEN MIC / JAM: "Companion Events" Thursday, May 19th7pm SHOWCASE: "Exclusive" - past performers & special guests showcased And JAM...8pm (sign-up 7:30pm) OPEN MIC / JAM: w/ You, other special guests, VIPs & D'z "Lady & Gentlemen" In-House Live Jazz Trio - Hernandez & Dumas · Penland " 'Master' accompanist/improv-musicians "DOLORES PETERSEN Presents: @ HSB&G 6122-6124 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood

Billyjamespr2002
Billyjamespr2002

Nice job, Michael -- take a nap -- you deserve it --Happy returns of the day Bob...billy

Patron's Pick
Patron's Pick

[incorrectly named events/inadequately listed dept.] (live multi-genre • entertainment/music • entertainment/music • instrumentalists/vocalists) May 12th SHOWCASE: And OPEN MIC / JAM: "Companion Events" Every week Thursday 7pm SHOWCASE: Pro-Vocalists - CAROL HATCHETT & LISA STEELE - Two experienced R&B, rock'n-pop'n Soul Sis'tas. One singer gets funky with some Funk while the other gets busy with all that Jazz And JAMs... (both "Companion Events" will feature "D'z" Trio)8pm (sign-up 7:30pm) OPEN MIC / JAM: You, other VIPs, " 'heavy surprise guests' & 'stellar assortment of top-flight jazz musicians' "* w/ "Lady & Gentlemen" In-House Live Jazz Trio "redoubtable jazz vets"* Karen HERNANDEZ - Music Director/piano & Tony DUMAS - bass · Ralph PENLAND - drums " diverse 'Master' accompanist/improv-musicians " - all about Jazz/LA DOLORES PETERSEN Presents: @ HSB&G 6122-6124 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood(" - LA Weekly"*)

 

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