jeudi 7 février 2019

bob Dylan's most moving song ever (ne meurs pas trop vite, petit oiseau blessé) ... and his real possessions and material worlds he lives in ...


à réfléchir sur THE MAN WHO IS BOB DYLAN, less than one hour a day (the rest of the time, he's an old man watching golf and base ball on tv" (confidence de TONY GARNIER, on bassiste, il y déjà 8 ou 7 ans


turn off music, awful music's volume, and hear, crétins de dylaniens, qui est vraiment votre vieille idole
ongue vie à toi, petit oiseau, petit squelette blessé ...
et puisses-tu encore, avant ta douce mort droguée, composer une autre douce mélodie,
comme ta dernière grande chanson avec accélération et ralentissement,
SUGAR BABY (sur"love and theft", 2001),
une chanson à laquelle tu t'essayes encore (mal) de temps en temps ....
(toutes ces dylaneries savantes et obscures viennent évidemment de CLUB SKORECKI

2 commentaires:

  1. Bad news, bad news came to me where I sleep
    Turn, turn, turn again
    Sayin' one of your friends is in trouble deep
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    Tell me the trouble, tell me once to my ear
    Turn, turn, turn again
    Joliet prison and ninety-nine years
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    Oh what's the charge of how this came to be?
    Turn, turn, turn again
    Manslaughter in the highest of degrees
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    I sat down and wrote the best words I could write
    Turn, turn, turn again
    Explaining to the judge I'd be there on Wednesday night
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    Without a reply I left by the moon
    Turn, turn, turn again
    And was in his chambers by the next afternoon
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    Could you tell me the facts, I said without fear
    Turn, turn, turn again
    That a friend of mine would get ninety-nine years
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    A crash on the highway flew the car to a field
    Turn, turn, turn again
    There was four persons killed and he was at the wheel
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    But I know him as good as I'm knowin' myself
    Turn, turn, turn again
    And he wouldn't harm a life that belonged to someone else
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    The judge he spoke out of the side of his mouth
    Turn, turn, turn again
    Sayin', "The witness who saw he left no doubt"
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    That may be true, he's got a sentence to serve
    Turn, turn, turn again
    But ninety-nine years, he just don't deserve
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    Too late, too late for his case it is sealed
    Turn, turn, turn again
    His sentenced is passed and it cannot be repealed
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    But he ain't no criminal and his crime it is none
    Turn, turn, turn again
    What happened to him could happen to anyone
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    And at that the judge jerked forward and his face it did freeze
    Turn, turn, turn again
    Sayin', "Could you kindly leave my office now, please"
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    The room was funny and I stood up so slow
    Turn, turn, turn again
    With no other choice except for to go
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    I walked down the hallway and I heard his door slam
    Turn, turn, turn again
    I walked down the courthouse stairs and I did not understand
    Turn, turn to the rain and the wind
    And I played my guitar through the night to the day
    Turn, turn, turn again
    And the only tune my guitar could play
    Was, "Oh the cruel

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  2. Percy's Song" is a song written by Bob Dylan. It was an outtake from October 1963 sessions for Dylan's third album, The Times They Are A-Changin'. It was not officially released until 1985, on the compilation Biograph. In the notes to that album, Dylan credits Paul Clayton for the song's "beautiful melody line."[1][2][3] He had played "The Wind and the Rain" to him, a variant of "The Twa Sisters", Child ballad 10.[4]

    Dylan wrote the song from the point of view of a narrating character.[1] The song relates the story of a fatal car crash and a subsequent manslaughter conviction and 99-year sentence in Joliet Prison that is handed down to the driver (a friend of the first-person narrator). The narrator goes to ask the sentencing judge to commute his friend's sentence which he considers too harsh, but the sentence stands. The story of the hard-hearted judge is reminiscent of the Child ballad Geordie.[5]

    Joan Baez performs "Percy's Song" in the film Dont Look Back.[6] The British folk rock group Fairport Convention recorded "Percy's Song" on their third album, Unhalfbricking.

    Cover versions[edit]
    Fairport Convention, Unhalfbricking (1969)
    Arlo Guthrie, Washington County (1970)
    References[edit]
    ^ Jump up to: a b Bob Dylan, quoted by in the note on "Percy's Song", liner notes to Biograph, Columbia Records, 1985.
    ^ Keys to the rain: the definitive Bob Dylan encyclopedia, Oliver Trager, Billboard Books, 2004, ISBN 978-0-8230-7974-2
    ^ The formative Dylan: transmission and stylistic influences, 1961-1963, Todd Harvey, Scarecrow Press, 2001, ISBN 978-0-8108-4115-4
    ^ "If There's an Original Thought Out There, I Could Use It Right Now: the Folk Roots of Bob Dylan", Matthew Zuckerman, 1997. [1], #14
    ^ https://52folksongs.com/2012/08/31/fs51-geordie/
    ^ Bob Dylan: a descriptive, critical discography and filmography, 1961-1993, John Nogowski, McFarland, 1994 ISBN 978-0-89950-785-9

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