Self Portrait (1970)Recorded Apr 1969-Mar 1970
Released June 8, 1970
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"What is this shit?!" wrote Greil
Marcus in his Rolling Stone review of this album, and there is something to that
question. There are only three possible explanations to the mix of the blatant
sentimentality of I forgot more (and a bunch of others),
the ludicrous chord changes of "In search of
Little Sadie", the duet between the old, nasal Dylan and the new country-crooner
Dylan on "The Boxer", which is fun on the first hearing, but gets quite dull
already on the second (and I don't know what happens after the second hearing), and - the
best of them all - "All the tired horses",
which brilliantly captures the mood of this album. Either it was, as Dylan himself has explained, conceived as a collection of country standards, maybe inspired by the sessions with Johnny Cash in 1969. This would imply that it's a serious effort. If so, it's the best proof that his muse was silent at the moment (as Paul Williams asks: if the tracks that ended up on Self Portrait and Dylan were just warm-ups for the band, then where are the real tracks?). Or it was, as Dylan himself has also explained, an attempt to shake off the annoying role of icon and voice of a generation that he felt he was being forced into and kept locked up in - a big "fuck you" to everyone caring to take it as a provocation. But why then the effort? There are more sessions for these albums (counting also New Morning) than for any other Dylan album. And why the inclusion of tracks that are actually quite enjoyable, among the shit? Or was it, perhaps, an ironic kick in the butt to the country idiom, and a clever, multi-level analysis of sentimentality and of his own music-making, where the packaging adds to the wit of the music? I wish I could say that the third alternative is the correct answer, but I can't. What I can say is that Dylan was experimenting with his singing style, not only in the direction of country, but also a blues style which sounds new (and actually quite fresh!) in his oeuvre. They also seem to be having a good time, at least on some of the tracks (whereas others sound very uninspired). It is an amusing album, but not a good one... Postscript: Wigwam stretches limits too, but mostly those of patience. Postscript II: I couldn't resist to put up this note, posted at r.m.d: Hello- |