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The tempest may howl and the loud thunder roar
And gathering storms may arise
But calm is my feeling, at rest is my soul
The tears are all wiped from my eyes



 


Sunday, January 13, 2008

Grace ...10:09 am

I like Bob’s 1980 song Saving Grace for a lot of reasons. For one, (… continue reading …)

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Saturday, January 12, 2008

Rochester! ...8:52 pm

To accompany a front-page report on the passing of a new law in Iraq allowing some former Baathists to be eligible for government positions, and President Bush’s praise of said move towards reconciliation, the BBC chooses to post a photo of Saddam Hussein. And not just any photo, but one where he seems to be adopting a rather Jack Benny-ish posture of bemusement. Just kinda curious.

Saddam Hussein

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Notes ...8:10 am

A reader writes about last week’s edition of Bob’s radio show:

[George Jones -- Just One More
( "A song written by Dallas Frasier. Like they say in AA, 'One's too many, and a hundred ain't enough.'" )]

Bob never ceases to amaze me. I’ve been in AA just over a year and have actually heard that very thing in meetings. Had I never heard it with my own ears, the comment would have just been received as a nice turn of phrase.

But for we alcoholics, it is a statement full of truth and power.

Just, wow.

Well, I have to say, Bob never ceases to amaze me too. These shows are pure gold. Humor, wisdom, nonsensical trivia, and great music — all of it brilliantly balanced, especially in this, his second season on XM Radio. It’s like he was born to do it. Most of us are lucky if we figure out the one thing we were born to do. Bob seems to be able to just keep finding more. I mean, even his music career — in isolation — is really like multiple music careers. He leaves it all behind and starts again, at least in a certain sense, over and over. Then there’s his book(s), his paintings, not to mention his, ah, notable turns on the silver screen (which after all include not only acting but writing and direction). It’s 2008, and we still don’t know what to expect next from the soon-to-be sixty-seven year-old. That really is amazing, and he deserves great credit for his willingness to keep putting himself out there in so many different ways.

On a not completely unrelated note, there is this from author Nick Hornby’s blog:

As I get older, I appreciate the greatness of Bob Dylan more and more. (This, perhaps, proves that Dylan is, after all, God: my increasing respect contains an echo of the bet-hedging interest in religion that people traditionally discover in their later years. I’m scared that I’ll be met at the Pearly Gates by a Dylanologist who will tell me that I haven’t listened to enough mid-sixties bootlegs, or that I’m too ignorant of the 80s albums, to be let in.) I have always liked his music, but for real Dylan fans, this isn’t good enough: saying that you like his music is, to their strange way of thinking, the same as saying that you don’t like it — there’s not enough wild-eyed zeal in your enjoyment for them.

What he’s getting at in that last sentence is true enough. The thing is, if someone tells me that they like one particular Dylan album or “period,” but not the rest, then it communicates to me the fact that they don’t get Dylan, and I would be inclined to try and argue them into a broader appreciation of his work (though not as aggressively inclined as I used to be).

Hornby goes on in his post to describe “I’m Not There” as the “best film about a musician, or I think any artist” that he can think of. Now, there’s something I don’t get. I enjoyed “I’m Not There” on a certain level — found it very humorous a lot of the time — but, fundamentally, I don’t think it’s really about Dylan, and I believe even the director has stated this clearly enough. One thing it is about is the wildly varying perceptions of the star known as Bob Dylan that many people have had through the decades. And it’s about other things too. But what it doesn’t do is give you anything concrete and true about the actual Bob Dylan himself. That’s not necessarily a condemnation of the film, since it may not have been aiming to do that, and indeed I don’t think that it was. If you want to know something of “the real Bob Dylan,” the place to begin and end is always going to be his own work, isn’t it? It’s not as a rule autobiographical, but it is as a rule truthful, on a deeper level, and that matters more, I think.



On Monday, I’m delighted to say that I expect to be posting a new Q & A with Joseph Bottum, who is the Editor of First Things, a writer and a poet himself, and a profoundly perceptive fan of Bob Dylan’s.

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Friday, January 11, 2008

Let us not talk falsely now ...12:54 pm

Fred Thompson wowed them last night in South Carolina. Is it too late, or are we just supposed to believe it’s too late? Well, clearly it’s not technically too late, but I think Thompson needs to come in first or a close second in South Carolina in order to carry on, and that requires making up a lot of ground between now and January 19th. He needs a certain amount of luck, and most of all he needs to keep the pedal to the metal, and make some news between now and then. Luck I can wish him. The other stuff is up to him.

From Human Events — and their endorsement of Thompson today — is this:

We like the way Thompson unhesitatingly attacks the liberal ideologues and their activists such as MoveOn.org and the ACLU, and the way he reaches out to those we knew as the Reagan Democrats.

The question now is whether Sen. Thompson will do what he has not yet done: Take the advantages he is given by his intelligence, his principles, his political skills and this endorsement and make the best use of them.

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Wednesday, January 9, 2008

NUMBER ONE ...11:46 am

Theme Time Radio Hour with your host Bob Dylan

It was an appropriate theme for the first new edition of XM Radio’s “Theme Time Radio Hour with your host Bob Dylan” of 2008, which aired last week. Lots of records that (… continue reading …)

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Tracks of her tears ...8:44 am

In a post about three weeks ago, yours-truly said: “Despite what’s been going on on the Democratic side, I think that Hillary has to remain the nearly prohibitive favorite to win that nomination.” Yesterday’s New Hampshire results demonstrate why that remains the case. In writing her off, the media did Hillary Clinton a great favor, it seems. Now she has just the kind of “comeback” narrative that money could never buy. I must say that Mrs. RWB, whose perceptions must always be taken to heart, attributes the seeming change in fortunes for Hillary to that widely covered tearful interlude from the day before yesterday. Contrary to my instinct that Hillary was injuring herself with what appeared to be a moment of public self-pity, Mrs. RWB says this would have struck a chord with a lot women out there, of a certain age, who feel they try so hard but fail to get their due. That would never have occurred to me. But, clearly, if you look at the exit poll information, something happened yesterday with the women’s vote in New Hampshire.

Does this mean we can expect lots more tears welling up in Mrs. Clinton’s eyes when the going gets rough? What a dismaying thought.

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Sunday, January 6, 2008

Barack breaks through ...5:37 pm

From today’s NY Daily News:

CONCORD, N.H. - Twenty-year-old Max Nichols sums up Barack Obama’s sales pitch in one word: “Amazing.”

“He definitely has my vote,” said Nichols, a college student who plans to vote for Obama.

“He’s younger than the other candidates, so we relate to him easier,” said Nichols, explaining the 46-year-old senator’s appeal to young voters. “He seems to take a stance that is more similar to young people’s stances on change. Obviously, the younger generation is always wanting a lot of change.”

Gimme my change, please!

Well, it’s understandable in a twenty-year-old, placing one’s hope in something as undefined as change. Those times they are always a-changin’, as we know.

Hillary may have been “making change,” as she says, for thirty-five years, but Obama deserves credit for already having made one significant change, simply by winning a presidential nominating caucus while being a black man.

Yesterday I found myself treading on dangerous ground, discussing the current primary election goings-on with a close relative who is a Democrat and is extremely liberal (Noam Chomsky territory when he feels like it). He is currently very high on Barack Obama, clearly enough seeing him right about now as MLK, JFK and RFK all rolled into one. He posited that he had seen or read of Republicans who were saying that they too liked Obama and could vote for him. (Obama himself is talking up this kind of, er, “coalition building.”) Well, I’m dubious, to say the least, as to the nature of any Republicans who can see themselves voting for someone who intends to pursue policies at direct odds with what Republicans generally stand for, but I didn’t make this point. I did say this, and I meant it: I think that many, many people — most certainly including Republicans, and definitely myself — are happy to see a presidential contest in a nearly all-white state being won by a black candidate. It is very good to see a page being turned on this subject (although far from the final page), and to see the racial part of “racial politics” becoming that much less significant. I also said — while neither expecting nor receiving any agreement — that some credit for the turning of this page should also be given to President Bush, and to the black individuals he appointed to the highest possible positions in his administration. We will soon have had eight years in which the Secretary of State of the United States has been black — previously completely unprecedented. First Colin Powell, and now Condoleeza Rice have occupied this most responsible and high-profile job in the United States government (and this is to say nothing of the diversity amongst the rest of George W. Bush’s appointees). Breaking that barrier — albeit an invisible one — that kept black individuals from the highest appointed positions in government has made it, I believe, that much easier for this latest breach of an invisible barrier, the barrier that supposedly kept blacks from being viable presidential candidates. I am very glad to see Obama blowing up that barrier.

My liberal relative, audibly overjoyed with my expression of something positive about Barack, has probably put me in the column of “Republicans who will vote for Obama.” Well, maybe … if Ron Paul wins the Republican nomination.

Hmm. Well, on consideration, no. The chance to see President Paul trying to run the country would be too hilarious to miss. (Talk about “making change.”)

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A blessing ...10:40 am

From Numbers, Chapter 6: (… continue reading …)

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Saturday, January 5, 2008

Debatable ...9:04 pm

Winners of the Republican debate tonight were Rudy and Fred. Neither is seriously competing in New Hampshire, but both did themselves some significant good for the contests that are coming down the line. Romney dealt badly — petulantly, really — with the knocks that came his way. Huckabee just seemed small. McCain was McCain, and he always is, and deserves credit for that (if little else).

The Democrats are depraved. The only questions that really matter at this point are:

(1) Will Hillary go nuclear on Obama in the coming days?
(2) What means will she use to get the dirt out?
(3) Will it in fact destroy Obama?
(4) Will it be clearly identified as coming from Hillary and also destroy her as a consequence?
(5) Will Edwards then straddle both of their corpses and steal the nomination?

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Thursday, January 3, 2008

Voting in Iowa ...7:38 pm

Forget the cable tv. The Hawkeye Cauci are being “liveblogged” by Dave Burge at his essential Iowahawk journal.

6:18 PM: Tammy is giving me the total stinkeye because the caucus people are showing up late and she want all of them out of the house before Grey’s Anatomy. Like it’s my fault eVite’s default time zone is Pacific. A couple of UAW union guys from Waterloo show up and give me shit about my Yamaha. Hey, if Harley made a dirtbike maybe I’d buy it. I give them some Old Milwaukee which shuts them up. Some Huckabee supporters arrive with a hot dish and an abortion poster.

Addendum: Just call RWB the Duke-Maker. Leveraging this site’s recent endorsement, Fred Thompson finishes third in Iowa.

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