Her chariot is an empty hazel-nut
Made by the joiner squirrel or old grub,
Time out o' mind the fairies' coachmakers.
And in this state she gallops night by night
Through lovers' brains, and then they dream of love...
-Mercutio, Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare
This week Sony unfurled the latest in the Bob Dylan Bootleg Series. Volume 8 contains unreleased and little-known tracks from 1989 to the present. In Dylan's sprawling archive of songs, this constitutes the later period, even though some of these tracks are nearly twenty years old. The highlights of the release are the alternate and unused tracks from 1997's Time Out Of Mind, a bitter, dark, and ultimately beautiful record that reflects on loss and alienation. Time Out Of Mind is not a light record. It starts with the following lines:
I'm walking through streets that are dead
Walking, walking with you in my head
My feet are so tired, my brain is so wired
And the clouds are weeping
Did I hear someone tell a lie?
Did I hear someone's distant cry?
I spoke like a child; you destroyed me with a smile
While I was sleeping
I'm sick of love but I'm in the thick of it
This kind of love I'm so sick of it...
For the next hour or so the singer walks us down dirt roads, paces around rooms, lays around one-room country shacks, rides midnight trains, drifts in and out of dreamless sleep, walks through the middle of nowhere, rolls through stormy weather, is lost somewhere and has made a few bad turns. This is a picture of a man shot out of a cannon, alone and drifting though time and space, wandering a bleak landscape. In the one slightly "lighter" track, the sixteen-minute talking blues "Highlands," based around a repeating Charlie Patton guitar riff, Dylan has a playful conversation with a waitress, yet still he explains:
Insanity is smashin' up against my soul
You could say I was on anything but a roll
It's grim out there. I listened to this record on a road trip - start to finish - last summer for the first time in a few years. I made a conscious decision to leave my iPod (which usually operates only in shuffle) at home and to bring only CDs in my rented vehicle. For whatever reason, this is the one Dylan record I brought and I played it multiple times as I whizzed through the landscape.
In "Not Dark Yet" he gets a letter written "so kind," which got me thinking about another song, "Tryin' To Get to You," best known from Elvis Presley's Sun Sessions, which contains my favorite Scotty Moore guitar part. Sam Phillips erased Elvis's piano track which leaves Scotty playing an alternating lead and rhythm part, start to finish. In "Tryin To Get To You," featured here below in multiple versions, including the original by vocal group The Eagles - no, not those Eagles - the singer also gets a loving letter, and sets out on a journey to find his baby. We never really find out if he gets there. He travels over mountains, through valleys, night and day, trying to get there.
So, allow me to go out a limb here, and consider that maybe these songs from Time Out Of Mind, offer the view of the aftermath and the unraveling of the mind and the soul of a man following a fruitless search - that maybe the letter was just a cruel hoax - and the singer has readjusted his expectations from trying to get to her, to "trying to get to heaven, before they close the door".
Download:
"Tryin' To Get To You" mp3
by The Eagles, 1954.
available on
We're Gonna Rock - We're Gonna Roll"Tryin' To Get To You" mp3
by Elvis Presley, 1955.
available on
The Sun Sessions
"Tryin' To Get To You" (alternate version) mp3
by Roy Orbison, 1956.
available on
Rocker****************************
"Tryin' To Get To Heaven" mp3
by Bob Dylan, 1997.
available on
Time Out of Mind"Million Miles" mp3
by Bob Dylan, 1997.
available on
Time Out of Mind"Standing In The Doorway" mp3
by Bob Dylan, 1997.
available on
Time Out of Mind"Not Dark Yet" mp3
by Bob Dylan, 1997.
available on
Time Out of Mind"Red River Shore" mp3
by Bob Dylan, 1997.
available on
Tell Tale Signs: the Bootleg Series Vol. 8"Can't Wait" mp3
by Bob Dylan, 1997.
available on
Tell Tale Signs: the Bootleg Series Vol. 8"Marching To The City" mp3
by Bob Dylan, 1997.
available on
Tell Tale Signs: the Bootleg Series Vol. 8top photograph © Mark Seliger