Product Details
The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia

The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia
By Michael Gray

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Product Description

Bob Dylan's outreach is too wide, too deep and too long for any book about him to cover it all. He'll be 65 years old when this book is published. His career spans 45 years of American history, and that history has intersected with his prolific songwriting, recording, touring, acting, filmmaking, TV appearances and interviews. He has published a novel and a book of drawings, composed for movie soundtracks and written a best-selling autobiography. He has found a place in the world of literature and academic study as well as in popular music. He is important to the history of the times, having given voice to a generation at a time of huge social change and political struggle; his songs are enmeshed in the story of the civil rights movement as well as the folk revival movement. His busy life has embraced everything from Bohemian excess to being Born Again. His work has revolutionised song, reaching into every area of popular music from folk to blues to rock to gospel. He has met and worked with untold hundreds of musicians, politicians, celebrities, singers, poets, writers, painters, filmmakers, actors and activists. He has released several dozen albums, written many hundreds of songs, in many cases adapting them from older folk and blues material, and recorded songs by many other composers. He has been the subject of an enormous number of books, academic conference papers, showbiz stories, essays and concert reviews. He has attracted more fanzine enthusiasm, and inspired more websites, than almost anyone in the world. In order to resist the forces of infinity pushing this book beyond all bounds, it was decided to exclude some categories of entrant. There are, inevitably, exceptions, but in principle the following have been omitted: background business people like concert promoters, accountants, lawyers, managers, music publishers, booking agents, film producers and so on; the majority of photographers, album-cover designers and magazine editors; and people whose only connection with Dylan is that they have made cover-versions of his songs. The many different kinds of entry that are in the book include: biographies of singers, musicians, songwriters and composers who have influenced Dylan and/or worked with him; critical assessments and factual details (including place and date of recording, date of release and original catalogue numbers) for all Dylan's albums and for a large number of individual songs from all through Dylan's decades of work; and Dylan's key career and biographical moments. It also includes: biographies of writers, poets and other key cultural figures who have impacted on Dylan's work and/or who are mentioned within it, from William Blake to William Carlos Williams and from Lenny Bruce to Franz Kafka, in each case delineating the often surprising ways in which they connect to Dylan's work; short biographies of music critics and authors of books and major websites on Dylan; critical assessments and facts on Dylan's own books and films; and discursive subjects, from Dylan Interpreters to Cowboy Heroes, and from The Use of Hollywood Dialogue in Dylan's lyrics, to 'frying an egg on stage'.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #225943 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-06-08
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 736 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
'likely to become the biggest selling Dylan book of all, the Encylopedia majors on its author's unparalleled expertise, his critical judgment and a ready intelligence and authorial finesse. In three quarters of a million words, he paints a massive canvas. Over 730 pages, its daunting breadth of coverage and sheer level of detail is deeply impressive. From today, Michael Gray's new Encyclopedia is destined to be the most important Bob Dylan book, bar none.' The Dylan Daily (website) 'Michael Gray is arguably the pre-eminent Dylan scholar - enviably knowledgeable, scabrously tart and enthusiastically iconoclastic [and his] irreverence is one of the joys of The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia. It won't be the last word on Dylan but it is easily the most comprehensive. Sunday Herald (Scotland) 'A corker. A great labour of love. It stands comparison with David Thomson's Biographical Dictionary of Cinema as a sustained piece of entertaining, opinionated, heartfelt and argumentative writing. The book is thronged with life [and] leads you irresistibly from one connection to another. Throughout there is a rich sense of what these people have meant to Dylan - and what he has meant to them, and to all of us who have merely listened and been moved. London Evening Standard

Collective Magazine
`A masterpiece for the coolest of coffee tables'

Dylan Daily
`Michael Gray's Encyclopedia is destined to be the most important
Bob Dylan book bar none'


Customer Reviews

A magnificent and illuminating guide to Bob Dylan's universe.5
This hefty 736 page tome is an utterly engrossing encyclopedia which represents the fruits of over 30 years' assiduous research by that doyen of Dylan writers, Michael Gray.
As well as detailed analyses of many of Dylan's songs and albums there's an astonishingly wide range of entries from Blind Willie McTell & Sleepy John Estes to Arthur Rimbaud & William Blake.
'The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia' is an entertaining and illuminating guide to Dylan's universe which, in the words of the author, will "open up a wider world, to be sent down a thousand boulevards".
Anyone with the slightest interest in Dylan should get hold of a copy of this magnificent, literate and endlessly fascinating book which also includes a searchable CD-rom of the entire text.

The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia5
Michael Gray's 'The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia' is that increasingly rare combination of the beautifully-written with the beautifully-produced book. A 736-page tome bound in black leather, with Dylan's visage emerging in a silvered photo-negative format on the front, the initial attraction demanded by the book's appearance is sustained when you hold, open and begin to read the entries in this superlative assessment of Dylanology. For make no mistake, this is no mere category by category listing, but a partisan, opinionated and, above all, informed and informative series of interpretations of Dylan's life and career ouvre, and those who touched and were touched by its progress.

The author is the most amenable of companions on the journey upon which he takes the reader. He is witty to the point of inducing laugh-out-loud moments. He is also capable of great depth, and his insight into the lyrics is astonishing. Gray is, of course, an established Dylanphile; but he is no sycophant. He can be as critical of Dylan where he sees this as merited as he can be of collaborators and contemporaries such as Robbie Robertson and the Rolling Stones. In the entry for Rubin 'Hurricane' Carter, for instance, Gray concludes of Dylan's 'Hurricane' that "[a]lmost every line of Dylan's song is inaccurate, from its depiction of events and who was where when through to its depiction of Carter." He adds the rider, however, that "None of this makes any difference to 'Hurricane' as a creative achievement, any more than the facts of Pretty Boy Floyd's life can have any power over the life of Woody Guthrie's song about him. Dylan's record has a blazing vivacity, a life-affirming generosity of sweep; it's a scintillating rendition of a skilful, affecting narrative crafted with great skill, not as a 'message' but as lines of song shaped as a series of cascades and sung with much verve, alertly expressive in its detailing, its ability to change mood and pace, and to dart in, paint a quick and vivid picture and move on. It's cinematic and celebratory." In other words, Dylan was duped by 'Hurricane' Carter (who'd sent a copy of his book 'The Sixteenth Round' to Dylan), but such is Dylan's art that the facts (rightly) don't get in the way of a great song.

Elsewhere, in the Rolling Stones' entry, Gray writes of how 'In middle age, decades after their prime, the once-incomparable rock band the Rolling Stones toured with Bob Dylan, rather briefly, in South America, in April 1998. On the 4th and 5th, during the Stones' sets in the River Plate Stadium in Beunos Aires, Argentina, Dylan came on stage and shared vocals with Mick Jagger as the Stones played Dylan's 'Like a Rolling Stone.' The on stage collaboration was repeated in Brazil, on April 11 in Rio de Janiero and two nights later in San Paolo.........Three years earlier, on July 27, 1995, they had tried this out at a Rolling Stones concert in Montpellier, France, though on this occasion Dylan had sung only the second verse of the song and Jagger all the rest. This was eight days after the Stones had studio-recorded the song themselves with stupefying dullness.........."

The volume is as up to date as anything can published can be, with an informed look at Dylan's song 'Cross the Green Mountain' and the accompanying video featuring him for the Civil War movie 'God's and Generals' (elsewher Gray gives a learned expose of Dylan's involvement with Sam Peckinpah for the latter's 'Pat Garret and Billy the Kid'). Gray also includes a wryly humorous look at Dylan's acceptance of an honourary doctorate at St Andrew's University in 2004.

Pick up this waspishly errudite, vastly informative, and lavishly produced volume and begin leafing through it and you will be hooked. It's a book to be dipped into to read, not just to look things up.

A great book5
This book is insightful and entirely enjoyable. It is a bit like having Michael Gray to talk to; as I read one entry, a question about what he might think about some related matter occurs and usually I can have that question answered too. I am finding it, in other words, a very companionable read. The Bono entry is very amusing, especially the bit about the end of the 1984 tour. I also liked Dylan's waspish remark to Led Zeppelin's manager; I hadn't heard that one before. I like the way Gray tries to track down what has happened to people now as well, making clear that being connected with Bob Dylan shouldn't be the only way to value people, even in the Bob Dylan Encyclopedia. The most exciting entry so far has been the 'Every Grain of Sand' one; I know it is largely 'Song and Dance Man' revisited but I have just started teaching 'Hamlet' for the first time so it was good to be reminded of Gray's thoughts. The Maynard Mack essay he quotes is a wonderful thing and I think the Hamlet connection goes further than the crucial reckoning with 'Providence' that is discussed. In Dylan's:
I hear the ancient footsteps like the motion of the sea.
Sometimes I turn, there's someone there; other times, it's only me.
I hear the ghost of old Hamlet, an echo of 'to take arms against a sea of troubles' and the complex sense of the unstable nature of the self which is so central to Shakespeare's play. The weighing up of the relative merits of Blake's 'concrete noun [of] abstract noun' figure compared to Dylan's deployment of it is typically judicious and, yes, the 'shoes of indolence' is great. The Encyclopedia's had me rereading Yeats' 'Vacillation' too and that's been inspiring.

The entry on 'Masked and Anonymous' embodies a great strength of the book. It is typically even-handed, but, most admirably, it is a prime example, among hundreds, of a dedicated attentiveness to Dylan's work. There is a line I cherish from the philosopher Malebranche - 'Attention is the natural prayer of the soul' - and the disciplined good faith of so many of the enquiring readings of Dylan's work offered here seems compatible in spirit with this remark. Gray denies Dylan the right to rest on his laurels and that is absolutely as it should be. Gray has, moreover, with typical clear-mindedness resisted so many of the horrible ticks of fandom - even while remaining courteous to Paul Williams, Williams writing represents the opposite pole to Gray's. (Although, to give Williams his due, he does share the Encyclopedia's strength of giving the later work as much consideration as the earlier.)

As Gray suggests himself at the beginning of the book, this work treats Dylan as an exciting creative presence in the world, and links Dylan's life and work to a fine array of cultural concerns. The Bob Dylan Encyclopedia finds so many new lights in which to ponder the uneven brillaince of Dylan's songs that I can feel only gratitude that it exists.