in response to Tony Ling's - Bob Dylan Song #34 - When the Ship Comes In
Takes some time until you get to the Biblical core of this song.
Major and minor chords?
"Weather Underground" ?
"Clean for Gene" ?
Bobby wrote this song, possibly, as a sort revenge. Suze pretty much says that he was furious after being refused admission to a hotel because of his "appearance".
There certainly is a great energy to this tune - a weightless defiance.
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06-30-03 23:27
by the way Kurt Weil und Bertolt Brecht --- credits for Pirate Jenny
Wonderful, wonderful song. Rousing and another, relatively, early example of Bob mixing sources and comin' up with a unique sound. When you hear the Clancy Brothers sing this, or Peter, Paul and Mary, it sounds like an Irish chantey. Arlo smooths it and twangs it. Bob, well Bob. I got to sing this with the late Tom Intondi, and Rod McDonald. It's in the singing of this song, that the liberating quality is felt. Probably the song that most brought me out of my pubescent angst. I could always play this song with conviction, it just sails right along.
But see what Bobby has got going. A "spiritual" with elements of Oh, Mary Don't You Weep. He uses the words of the slaves "drownded" and then mixes up stuff you'll hear in his "down in the basement havin' some fun tunes" ... the fishes will laugh.... And then, pure gospel, visions of Beyond, the sands will roll out a carpet of gold.
As ragged clown points out; this is beautifully sounding poetry. It was also "topical". A song of freedom, the chains busting, with awesome power. With the lyrics of Lay Down Your Weary Tune, and A Hard Rain's A Gonna Fall, this is probably the strain of visionary writing that leads up to Chimes of Freedom and beyond.
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"
Before I went to Carroll's church, I had not quite understood why her death was "lonesome". But of course, as Rev Jessup noted: "Not one of those people stood up for her." In a party full of elegant guests, Hattie Carroll was on her own. "
- Ian Frazier
The Guardian, Friday 25 February 2005