Saturday, 30 November 2024

A Complete Unknown - the life and times of Bob and Joan

Bob Dylan fans are abuzz about the new biopic 'A Complete Unknown' starring Timothee Chalomet, depicting Dylan's emergence in the early 1960s. 

Much has been made of Chalomet's resemblance to the young Dylan and his insistence on doing his own singing and playing in the movie. I've linked to the movie trailers at the foot of this piece.

I'm interested to see how the film, which opens on Christmas Day,  portrays the relationship between Bob and Joan Baez. It's a love story with an enduring fascination. Although their romance ended in the mid-60s, they have performed together many times over the years.

Baez nurtured Dylan's career early on, allowing him to share her stage and introducing him to the wider folk music world outside of Greenwich Village. She became his muse and musical sidekick and he was more than happy to use her as his jumping off platform. 

In later life, Dylan acknowledged the debt he owed to Baez, but he did a poor job of repaying it at the time. For her part, Joan was guilty only of blind devotion. 

For anyone who wants to delve deeper into the Bob and Joan backstory, I'd recommend David Hadju's excellent book 'Positively 4th Street'. Hadju weaves Bob and Joan's lives in with Joan's sister Mimi and her partner Richard Fariña. Mimi and Richard had their own musical partnership and Fariña was also a budding novelist. What separates the book from the many other Dylan biographies is the insight to how their everyday lives were intertwined and how their careers developed in quite different ways. 

Early in the story, Baez takes great pride in showing off her boyfriend to the folk music community and to the civil rights and peace movement (Ban The Bomb!) of the early to mid 60s. Their duets at Newport and concert halls across America are rightly held as historic moments. 

As Hadju's book notes: "This gorgeous woman, who is an icon in her own right, latches onto you and says, I'll be your everything, including being your lover. She adopted him. She found this guy who gave voice to all that powerful stuff, and she nurtured him in that role. He made out on every level."

Baez and Dylan in 1963
The candid chat between Bob and Joan in Martin Scorsese's 'Rolling Thunder Revue' movie, where they discuss how their lives diverged, is poignant because it's clear even then (1975) that Joan still holds a candle for him. Joan’s love for Bob goes way beyond the music, but it's really not clear how far Bob's love for Joan extends, beyond fond memories of their time together.  

As we saw in D.A. Pennebaker's movie 'Don't Look Back' about his UK tour in 1965, when Joan accompanied him to the UK, it was fairly obvious he didn't want her there. On that tour he didn't - as she had expected - reciprocate by inviting her onstage to perform with him.

Bob would later say he was just trying to deal with the craziness of his life at that point. He had created this monster, the voice of a generation. Everyone looked to Bob for the answer and his response was to be increasingly cryptic and surreal. Contemporary reviewers referred to Dylan as a poet - how he "knew" and how he was "telling it like it is". But as NME writer Mick Farren noted in a retrospective mid-1970s assessment of Blonde On Blonde, "If Dylan was really telling it like it is, we'd all know exactly what he was talking about."

But Hadju's book is not a story about doomed love. It shows a relationship in full bloom, noting how Bob and Joan had a similar sense of the absurd, and at times it appeared as if they were having a private joke against the world. 

"A lovely thing was happening and I didn't want it to end," Joan said later.

Hadju's story does have a tragic ending, with the death of Richard Fariña in a motorcycle accident in 1966, just as he was launching his first novel. It was his partner Mimi Baez’s 21st birthday. 

Three months later, Dylan came off his bike near his home in Woodstock, New York. He knew he could have died on his motorcycle, as Fariña had. Ironically, the accident offered him the perfect excuse to go into hiding.

Dylan wrote, in his memoir, Chronicles, Vol 1: “I had been in a motorcycle accident and I’d been hurt, but I recovered. Truth was that I wanted to get out of the rat race. Having children changed my life and segregated me from just about everybody and everything that was going on. Outside of my family, nothing held any real interest for me and I was seeing everything through different glasses.”

Hadju wrote: “For a year and a half after the accident, Dylan stayed in seclusion in Woodstock, while rock musicians absorbed and drew upon his ideas.

Of Bob's classic mid 1960s albums, Hadju concludes, “The trio of records uniting poetry with elements of folk and rock and roll – Bringing It All Back Home, Highway 61 Revisited and the double Blonde On Blonde, came to be acknowledged as pop masterworks and charted a whole new style of music."

Today, it seems that Bob and Joan are no longer in contact, but she no longer harbours any bitterness towards him, recognising that what they did together was unique and in many ways historically significant.

A Complete Unknown - movie trailer

A Complete Unknown featurette

Bob Dylan & Joan Baez - It Ain't Me Babe (Live 1964)

Sunday, 10 November 2024

Music while you work. Some recommendations

Working from home certainly has its advantages - it can actually make you more productive, as long as you keep the distractions to a minimum. Easier said than done, but I'm living proof that it's possible.

Distractions

My working life in the last 20 years has involved extended periods of travel, mostly around Asia, followed by several weeks of relative isolation in my workroom in Auckland, New Zealand.

One key component in balancing work and home life is music, so I've put together some suggestions for how music can make the WFH situation more enjoyable.

It's important to have structure to your day and to build any important  distractions formally into the day. So, for example, a 15 minute break, morning and afternoon, for some reading or guitar practice. 

In a home/work environment, some music sits better than others. If what I'm doing doesn't require too much creative concentration - data inputting, say - I'll go for something tuneful and engaging. In most cases, where I'm writing, I need music without a beat. As a drummer in another life, I find it hard not to zero in on the rhythm if I've got rock or funk music playing.

ECM Records

The answer is invariably the acoustic, analogue jazz and ambient music emanating from the German label ECM. Their remarkable catalogue has been described as 'the most beautiful sound next to silence'. What separates it from new age doodling is the quality of the composition, the playing and the recording.

The constant factor in the 'ECM sound' is Talent Studios in Oslo, Norway, where most of the classic albums were recorded by sound engineers Jan Erik Kongshaug and Martin Wieland. 

My collection of ECM records is mostly on vinyl and is largely from the label's classic period in the 1970s, when it still had people like Chick Corea and Pat Metheny on its roster. 

My favourite ECM artist is Ralph Towner - such a beautiful and uplifting guitarist, whatever mood you're in.

The catalogue is huge, but here are some recommendations based on my own collection:

ECM - the most beautiful sound next to silence
























John Abercrombie/Ralph Towner - Sargasso Sea
Anouar Brahem - Thimar
Gary Burton/Steve Swallow - Hotel Hello
Gary Burton Quintet - Ring
Chick Corea/Gary Burton - Crystal Silence
Chick Corea - Return To Forever
Egberto Gismonti - Sol Do Meio Dia
Charlie Haden/Jan Garbarek - Magico
Zakir Hussain - Making Music
Keith Jarrett - My Song / Belonging
Keith Jarrett - Nude Ants
Pat Metheny Group / Offramp / First Circle
Enrico Rava - The Plot
Ralph Towner - Anthem
Ralph Towner - Diary / Solstice
Ralph Towner -  Solo Concert
Ralph Towner/Gary Burton -Matchbook
Eberhard Weber - Fluid Rustle
Kenny Wheeler - Gnu High

One of my all-time favourite atmospheric jazz records is the Pat Metheny and Lyle Mays album 'As Falls Wichita, So Falls Wichita Falls'. It is a wonderfully sequenced LP that evokes various moods, largely uplifting. But it can also be contemplative, if listened to away from your desk.

Acoustic guitar music

There's a lot of really good acoustic guitar music around, but I'm definitely old school. I tend to listen to the folk players from the past, such as Davy GrahamBert Jansch and John RenbournJohn FaheyStefan Grossman and Leo Kottke, with more modern exceptions like James Elkington and kiwi (via Long Island) guitar genius Nigel Gavin.

Recommended while you work:
Bruce Cockburn - Circles In The Stream
James Elkington - Wintres Woma
John Fahey - Of Rivers & Religion
Nigel Gavin - Visitation
Gitbox Rebellion - Curveball
Stefan Grossman - Guitar Instrumentals (Memphis Jellyroll)
Michael Gulezian - Unspoken Intentions
Michael Hedges - Aerial Boundaries
The Bert Jansch Sampler
Pat Metheny - One Quiet Night
Pentangle - Sweet Child
The John Renbourn Sampler
Alan Stivell - Reflections

Jazz

Some people take inspiration or motivation from their chosen background music. The Japanese author Huraki Murakami says he almost always works listening to music. Murakami used to own a jazz bar in Tokyo and has at least 10,000 vinyl records. He has a nice work life situation too, as you can see below.
Murakami's study room

Here's a list of jazz recordings I'll play while I work:
Cannonball Adderley - Somethin' Else
Ron Carter - All Blues
John Coltrane- Blue Train
Chick Corea - Piano Improvisations Vol 2
Miles Davis - Sketches of Spain
Miles Davis - My Funny Valentine
Miles Davis - In A Silent Way
Miles Davis - Jack Johnson
Kevin Eubanks - Spirit Talk 1 & 2
Bill Evans Trio - Portrait in Jazz
Stan Getz - Reflections
Herbie Hancock - Maiden Voyage / Empyrean Isles
Charles Mingus - Tijuana Moods
Modern Jazz Quartet - Blues at Carnegie Hall
Wes Montgomery - So Much Guitar
Steps Ahead

Ambience

For music to take me off into another realm, I keep coming back to one consistent source of ambient quality - the San Francisco radio station Hearts of Space. Their soundscapes are designed mainly for those seeking transcendence - and stoners - but they are also suitable for the home worker seeking music to put them in the zone. Highly recommended. Here's a link that shows their various ambient music sub-genres: https://v4.hos.com/channels 

The Hearts Of Space website - slow music for fast times

Their slogan is Slow Music For Fast Times. The shows are all themed and typically last around 40 minutes to an hour. There are free programs once a week and a subscription streaming service. 

The quality of the music, to these ears, is always high.

This was the very first Hearts of Space show that I heard back in 1990s - Drifter, which gives you a good idea of what to expect:
https://v4.hos.com/programs/details/445

Alternatively, for a more varied ambient menu, you could try Flow State, a service that sends out two hours of ambient work-friendly music every weekday. Artists they’ve highlighted include Johann JohannssonKhruangbinDavid BordenSteve Reich, and Ludovico Einaudi.

I hope you get some enjoyment from these lists. 
Keep calm and stay safe, wherever you are. Enjoy the music.