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== Monicasdude and undiscussed major overhaul ==
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Monicasdude, the wiki is having big problems right now so I'm not going to get into it much today, but please step back and consider what you're trying to do. I don't know if you're new to Misplaced Pages or what, but I can tell you that if we have to go to arbitration on this you will not come out ahead. Total overhaul of Featured Articles without any discussion is not acceptable. You invoke the "be bold" statement on the FA page. Did you read further along in that statement:
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''But please note: be bold in updating pages does not mean that you should make deletions to long articles on complex, controversial subjects with long histories . In many such cases, the text as you find it has come into being after long and arduous negotiations between Wikipedians of diverse backgrounds and points of view. An incautious edit to such an article can be akin to stirring up a hornet's nest, and other users who are involved in the page may react angrily. Even so, the editing of gross grammatical errors is welcome.''
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I did read some of your edits. You're a capable writer. However, you introduced probably more factual errors than you fixed and, overall, your version is far from an improvement in my judgment. I think you have the Dylan knowledge and overall literacy to improve this article, but it will have to be on a statement-by-statement basis, with Talk.


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I won't be back on Misplaced Pages for the rest of today and maybe not at all tomorrow. If you persist in the revert war without discussion, your work will be reverted immediately on my return and arbitrators will be called in. (Also, why don't you have a User Talk page? It's your choice but it's another ''iffy'' kinda thing, you know?). ] 17:34, 30 May 2005 (UTC)
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== wonderfull SPON.de article (in German) ==
Nice article about a very, very loyal long-term fan in (former Eastern) Germany: https://www.spiegel.de/geschichte/bob-dylan-in-oel-wie-das-gemaelde-aufs-konzert-in-ost-berlin-kam-a-52cdc5fa-eef8-4e9f-bced-379d61a1075a


== Going electric ==
You didn't read the revision before you reverted it. You don't cite any errors in the revisions. Bob Dylan's public career is not a complex and controversial subject, and you don't cite any examples of revisions which violate the policy section you quote. You're not an admin, and your demand for "statement-by-statement" pre-review of contributions I might make -- to say nothing of your declaration that you are going to premptively revert any contributions I may make until your "return" is an unmistakeable demonstration of your bad faith and refusal to abide by community rules. Dispute resolution has been contacted. It's plain from your comments to other users here that you lack respect for opinions which do not conform to yours. My contributions will continue.


This page says Dylan only played three songs at Newport in 1965, but the main page about the controversy says he played five there the following night. ] (]) 01:12, 27 July 2024 (UTC)
User: Monicasdude
:At Newport 1965, Dylan and his band, including Bloomfield and Kooper, played a short electric set of three songs (Maggie's Farm, LARS, Takes A Lot To Laugh) and then left the stage to a mix of cheering and booing. After a pause, Dylan was persuaded to return to the stage where he played 2 songs solo on acoustic guitar: Mr Tambourine Man and It's All Over Now Baby Blue. see ] (]) 21:51, 27 July 2024 (UTC)
3:40 PM EST 30 May 2005


Retire! Such a waste of time at Pine knob. No singing ] (]) 00:31, 16 September 2024 (UTC)
:<b>"You didn't read the revision before you reverted it."</b> Wrong. I did read it before reverting. <b>"...you don't cite any examples of revisions which violate the policy section you quote"</b>. Your main policy violation is that you're doing a major overhaul of a FA without discussion. <b>"It's plain from your comments to other users here that you lack respect for opinions which do not conform to yours"</b>. I have been with Misplaced Pages since early `02 and have successfully collaborated with dozens of editors on hundreds of articles, some of them recognized as among the best. I show respect where it is due. You say you have "contacted dispute resolution". Who?. When?. Let's get on with it. ] 01:22, 5 Jun 2005 (UTC)


== Semi-protected edit request on 9 October 2024 ==
::I haven't read the changes very closely so I don't know which version is better. However, there's no Misplaced Pages policy stating that changes to a featured article need to be approved first. It's wise to discuss changes and form a consensus of course, but there is no requirement that every change to an FA needs to be debated first. If that was the case, we might as well lock featured articles. ] 02:20, Jun 5, 2005 (UTC)


{{edit semi-protected|Bob Dylan|answered=yes}}
:::I'm not saying every change needs to be "approved" first. I am saying (and I think it is the mainstream Misplaced Pages approach) that a featured article carries a serious built-in weight of consensus which should be respected, and this respect should take the form of discussion *before* substantial changes. This discussion is not necessarily an "approval" process by some self-appointed article-guardian (if more people liked Monicasdude's version I would instantly bow to consensus). Monicasdude has done none of this. He simply bulldozed in and totally re-arranged an article of very high quality. Perhaps no single policy provision is being violated, but any responsible admin would be asking Monicasdude to slow down and discuss. Normally I would fully engage here and there's little doubt continued intransigence by Monicasdude would lead to some form of intervention having the net result of restoring the article. However, I'm very ill and cannot devote the time/energy. So it's so long for now, fellas. If I get a respite (damn chemotherapy), I'll be back to fight for the right. Those who are now editing off of this new, worse version should bear in mind that a large battle is probably ahead, two or so months from now, one that will likely result in a giant reversion. So if you want to make sure your own efforts count you might think about resisting M's overhaul now. ] 19:12, 5 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Under "Honors" for Bob Dylan, please list that Bob Dylan is a 32° Scottish Rite Freemason, in the Valley of Los Angeles. His home Lodge is Santa Monica-Palisades Lodge, No. 307. ] (]) 14:44, 9 October 2024 (UTC)


{{Not done}}: please provide ] that support the change you want to be made.<!-- Template:ESp --> ] (]) 17:43, 9 October 2024 (UTC)
::::The article has been edited hundreds of times since the "Featured" tag was applied, often substantially, with hardly a dozen subjects discussed on the talk page. That's more than an edit a day. What's being preached now is not what's been practiced. <br />I'm not going to sling mud back. I think that if you look at the series of edits I've made, they consist principally of correcting a significant number of undisputed factual errors (e.g., where the Zimmerman family lived when Robert was born, the name of Dylan's first wife), rearranging discussions of events into chronological order, and removing a number of clear violations of the NPOV policy (often recitations of lyrics with accompanying subjective praise). I've filled in some gaps; more remain, especially in the post-1975 discussions that I've yet done very little with (e.g., Bob and Sara Dylan's divorce). I believe I've improved the article; I've to hear any good faith disagreement on substantive points. ] 00:20, 6 Jun 2005 (UTC)


== Dishonesty -- Dylan can't live outside the law ==
:::::<b>"The article has been edited hundreds of times since the "Featured" tag was applied, often substantially, with hardly a dozen subjects discussed on the talk page."</b> But don't you see? Nearly all of these edits were small and measured (the substantial ones mostly *were* discussed here), often small enough so that a good edit summary served to justify them. What you've done is something else entirely-- a total all-at-once overhaul...<b>"I think that if you look at the series of edits I've made..."</b> No, many of your edits are complete reworkings of entire paragraphs. For instance, the "Tom Paine Award" paragraph. In the previous version it was a full, detailed treatment giving the reader some real flavor of "back in the day". Probably thinking you're being tight and concise, you chopped it to two bare sentences evocative of nothing (yes, these are subjective judgments but, for my money, where there is a one-on-one dispute, tie goes to the FA version as it carries the weight of consensus) I have allowed a good number of my own edits on other articles to be canceled for this very reason... Now, about factual errors. A ten second glance brings up these questions: 1) Your version says Dylan's forebears were "Lithuanian, Russian and Ukranian". In fact, no scholar or writer I'm aware of has taken this up as an issue to be verified, so we are left with Dylan's own statements, many made in his younger days when he demonstrably fabricated tales from whole cloth. Most of the names themselves clearly appear to be of German-Jewish derivation (Zimmerman, Greenstein, Edelstein, etc.,.) and until some real investigation is carried out, a responsible article can only say what the names look like and what Dylan claims, as did the old version. Yours instead makes an unsupported flat statement;


In the book, ''The Double Life of Bob Dylan: A Restless Hungry Feeling, 1941-1966'', author Clinton Heylin notes that the first time Dylan’s name appeared in print relative to his music career was in the August 6, 1961 ''New York Mirror'' where Pete Karman reported as follows, “Bob Dylan of Gallup, New Mexico played the guitar and harmonica…”
::::::You're dead wrong here. The information was first presented in Robert Shelton's ''No Direction Home''; Shelton was the only biographer to get a substantial interview with Abraham Zimmerman; he also interviewed Beatty, and David Zimmerman, as well as, if I remember correctly, at least one of Abraham's brothers. The family history is corroborated in Heylin's BTS2, which has additional details from other sources. ]


In those early days, somewhat George Santos-style, Dylan, apparently seeking to burnish his folksinger resume, claimed to have ridden the rails hobo style, worked in a carnival, and so forth.
:::::::What did Abraham Zimmerman say? I have read elsewhere that his antecedents need looking into, and as such the old version is plainly better for now. <b>(JDG)</b>


But he was outed in the November 4, 1963, issue of ''Newsweek'' which set the record straight regarding his Hibbing, MN middle-class origins.
::::::::That you read something, somewhere, that you can't cite is no reason to reject well-sourced, reliable, published information. ]


One would have thought that would have taught him a lesson, but no.
:::::::::You remembered the title of a book! That's quite something. Pray what did the book *say*?? <b>(JDG)</b>


For instance, concerning his ''Chronicles: Volume One'' book of 2004, Dylan biographer Clinton Heylin has shown skepticism concerning the factualness of the book: "Jesus Christ, as far as I can tell almost everything in the Oh Mercy section of Chronicles is a work of fiction. I enjoy ''Chronicles'' as a work of literature, but it has a much basis in reality as Masked And Anonymous…”
:::::2) Your version says "He quit formal studies in early 1961, heading directly to New York City..." He did not go directly to NYC upon leaving university. There is a documented stint in a Denver dive in this interval and in Chronicles he mentions some extended time back in Hibbing before departing. The old version's "eventually landing in New York City" is accurate;


When he released his song, “Murder Most Foul,” he issued this statement:
::::::I probably should have made even more substantial changes here. I let the 1961 date for quitting formal studies stand, because I don't have a rock-solid alternative date. However, there's a fairly solid chronology here. Dylan spent the summer of 1960 in Denver, and returned to the Minneapolis area in the fall of 1960, at about the time the fall semester began. Whether he'd technically quit college at that point isn't clear enough to me, but it looks like his family paid for the fall 1960 semester. At the December/winter break, he finally told his family that he was not continuing in school, then spent the semester break in Chicago. He then headed back toward Minneapolis, but during a stayover in Madison, WI, decided to (finally) act on his desire to try his luck in New York City. He took a well-documented ride with Fred Underhill and Dave Berger from Madison to New York City, arriving January 24, 1961. Documented, in various stages, by Shelton (who bought into some of Dylan's fabrications), Heylin, and John Bauldie. If you put Dylan's decision to quit college in 1961, the only event you can associate it with is his decision to abandon Minneapolis as his home base, and when he made that decision he headed directly to NYC. The version of events you cite looks to be straight out of Bob Spitz, and it's long been discredited.<br />It would be better to say "Dylan quit college at the end of his freshman year, but stayed in Minneapolis, working the folk circuit there, with temporary sojourns in Denver and Chicago. In January 1961, while heading to Minneapolis from Chicago, he changed course, and headed to New York City." But that change would have been even more drastic, and imposed my opinion on a debatable point (the date Dylan formally quit college). ]


“Greetings to my fans and followers with gratitude for all your support and loyalty across the years. This is an unreleased song we recorded a while back that you might find interesting. Stay safe, stay observant and may God be with you. Bob Dylan, March 27, 2020”
:::::::From this muddle you get "heading directly to New York City"?? Again, after all that, it's clear the old version is nearer the mark. <b>(JDG)</b>


But Fiona Apple, who played piano on the song, later confirmed that the song had in fact been recorded only one month previously, in February 2020.
::::::::Since the old version is long-discredited misinformation, it should be corrected, not reinstated. ]


In his January 6, 2023 weekly column on CounterPunch, Jeffrey St. Clair notes, "From his recent interview with the ''Wall Street Journal'', it sounds like Dylan’s gone back to Jesus: 'I’m a religious person. I read the scriptures a lot, meditate and pray, light candles in church. I believe in damnation and salvation, as well as predestination. The Five Books of Moses, Pauline Epistles, Invocation of the Saints, all of it.'”
:::::::::What in tarnation are you trying to say? Your own account above admits there was substantial time between quitting college and arriving in NYC, which is exactly what the real version said. Then you characterize that as "long-discredited misinformation"... At the moment, of the 4 potential factual problems I identified a few days ago with a 10-second glance at your hacks, 3 remain in grave doubt. Johnjacobjingleheimerschmidt what a slog this already is and it's obviously only beginning. ] 04:24, 8 Jun 2005 (UTC)


Maybe that’s true, but given that in so many interviews Bob adopts a putting-one-on tone, why should one believe that?
::::::::::Your version has Dylan quitting college early in 1961, then going from Minneapolis to Hibbing to Denver to Chicago to Madison to Greenwich Village in the span of about 3 weeks, probably less. And that's dead wrong, and it's long-discredited. As for the rest, your being in a state of denial is hardly reason for anyone to entertain "grave doubts" about anyone's accuracy but your own. ] 01:04, 9 Jun 2005 (UTC)


Especially when compared with this previous statement of his from the article:
:::::::::::Uh, the old version said "eventually heading to NYC". That's all I'm talking about and it's more accurate than yours. As for the rest, we'll see in a few days who else has grave doubts. Where's Monica? Maybe she can help you see what you're doing here before... I'm starting to think you're an old hand at this. You prolly decided not to have a User Talk page because it would just fill up with people wailing over your evisceration of their work. You can run but ]


In 1997, he told David Gates of ''Newsweek'':
:::The old version said "He quit formal studies in early 1961, eventually drifting to New York City." And it's wrong. Just a few paragraphs back, you insisted that Dylan went to Hibbing and Denver in January 1961; the Chicago and Madison stays in January 1961 are well-documented and undeniable. Your version of events doesn't square up with the documented record, with interviews with people who knew Dylan at that time, etc, etc. ] 19:41, 9 Jun 2005 (UTC)


"Here's the thing with me and the religious thing. This is the flat-out truth: I find the religiosity and philosophy in the music. I don't find it anywhere else. Songs like "Let Me Rest on a Peaceful Mountain" or "I Saw the Light"—that's my religion. I don't adhere to rabbis, preachers, evangelists, all of that. I've learned more from the songs than I've learned from any of this kind of entity. The songs are my lexicon. I believe the songs." ] (]) 14:53, 10 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::3) A sentence in your new "Tom Paine Award" paragraph reads: "Accepting the "Tom Paine Award" from the National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee at a ceremony shortly after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, a drunken, rambling Dylan questioned the role of the committee, insulted its members as overweight and balding, and claimed to see something of himself (and of everyman) in assassin Lee Harvey Oswald." The literal meaning of this is that *all* the committee's members were overweight and balding. The old version's "many overweight and balding members" was good. Also, to my knowledge Dylan said nothing pointing to some sort of "everyman" significance. Where did you get this?;


:What changes are you recommending for the article? ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 15:21, 10 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::Another case where I probably should have made even more substantial changes. Dylan didn't insult members of the committee as "overweight"; he did say they were "old" and implied they "haven't got any hair on their head." The version you prefer states that the members of the committee actually were overweight and balding, a factually unsupported generalization. As for the "everyman" reference, that comes out of Dylan's apology/explanation to the committee; he says that "when I spoke of Lee Oswald, I was speakin of the times"; and goes on to claim, rather inchoately, that violent times put violent impulses in men -- in Oswald, in Dylan, and by implication in everyone. ]
::If I think of how this awkward info on the guy can be unawkwardly "woven in," I'll do that and half expect some Dylan worshipper to take it down.
::Anyone else is welcome to do this.
::I wanted the record to show, at least on the talk tab, this bad habit of Dylan's. ] (]) 15:41, 13 October 2024 (UTC)
:::I'm not sure that anything Dylan has said is "illegal", he hasn't said these statements in a court, but I've seen it said many times that what he says about his life is often opaque or outright incorrect. Is there still something in the article about this? It seems to me there might have been at one time. If there isn't, it should probably be mentioned as adding difficulties for accurate biographies of him.] (]) 20:22, 13 October 2024 (UTC)
::::I've added material noting that ''Chronicles'' borrows from many sources including ''Time'' magazine and the novels of Jack London. Also Heylin's comment in his 2023 biography that ''Chronicles'' is factually inaccurate. ] (]) 11:42, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::Thanks for that.
:::::"Thinking out loud":
:::::Perhaps a separate page listing out examples of Dylan in this regard.
:::::For instance, there is a separate page entitled, "Bob Dylan and the Band 1974 Tour."
:::::With a separate page, this ongoing character flaw of his comes into "focus" compared to examples appearing hither and thither in his page.
:::::I wonder if anyone who knew him, associates or other artists, ever commented on this.
:::::Keith Richards, for instance, can be pretty blunt in his criticisms of other artists.
:::::What I compiled above, however, might be seen as a mere stub page unless there are further examples.
:::::Plus, what title would such a page have?
:::::"Bob Dylan, Big Fat Liar," probably won't do. ] (]) 18:11, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::Not a good idea, imho. ] (]) 23:29, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Really, no, we don't need that. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 01:28, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Well, here's the link to the 1963 ''Newsweek ''outing for someone to add to that part of his life with the superscript for footnote, etc.:
::::::::https://www.newsweek.com/bob-dylans-75th-birthday-revisit-our-infamous-1963-profile-462801 ] (]) 01:33, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::For me, the most significant outcome of Andrea Svedberg's 1963 ''Newsweek'' hack attack was that it inspired Dylan to write "]" on the '']'' album. (see p. 215 of Shelton's 1986 biography ''No Direction Home''.) Here we are, 61 years later, Dylan is the most famous song writer of his generation and a Nobel Prize winner. "Oh a false clock tries to tick out my time/ To disgrace, distract, and bother me/ And the dirt of gossip blows into my face/ And the dust of rumors covers me/…So I’ll make my stand/ And remain as I am/ and bid farewell and not give a damn"<br/>
:::::::::I'll try to add that info, and the Svedberg/Newsweek cite, to the "Restless Farewell" article when I have a moment. ] (]) 10:19, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Sounds good, but the ''Newsweek ''article was dated, November 4, 1963 and Misplaced Pages has "Restless Farewell" recorded on October 31, 1963, tho, since, mags like ''Newsweek ''come out before their cover date, maybe he immediately wrote a song upon seeing their expose.
::::::::::But regardless: "and not give a damn" -- at first he ''did''. Maybe it was the Heylin ''Double Life'' book where I read it, but the ''Newsweek ''story had him lying low for a spell as a result of their story on him. ] (]) 15:36, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::Maybe he immediately wrote ''and was able to record'' a song upon seeing the ''Newsweek ''expose, book studio time, round up producer Tom Wilson, and so forth. ] (]) 15:42, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
:Dylan was always a self-mythologizer; this is hardly a surprise. He creates and recreates himself, kinda the same way his idol Woody Guthrie did. M.mk seems to think this is a shameful thing, something to be written up as a criticism or a controversy. I disagree; it's worth a comment or two, at best. "Liar"? That's pretty nasty (and blows right through BLP). "To live outside the law you must be honest" -- yeah, and I don't see anywhere Dylan "lived outside the law". ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 15:55, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
::Oh and by the way, magazines were and are indeed published a week to a month before the cover date. is the current ] cover, for example, dated a week from yesterday. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 16:03, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
::By titling this thread the way I did, I was alluding to a line from "Absolutely Sweet Marie."
::It's a really good thing one cannot find hagiographic pieces on Misplaced Pages.
::I am thankful for that. ] (]) 16:19, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
:::In Heylin's ''Double Life'', after the brief Gallup, NM quote by Karman in the ''New York Mirror'', Heylin's first, rather dramatic, remark is, "It starts with a ''lie''." (emphasis added) This as opposed to Heylin calling it self-mythologizing, Dylan recreating himself, or such. ] (]) 17:05, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
::::After the Preface, that is how Heylin opens his book. ] (]) 17:09, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
::::I think we should make it clear that in ''Chronicles'' and elsewhere, Dylan has frequently mythologized himself. OTOH... Dylan doesn't owe anyone the details of his life. Many people in show business are very close-mouthed about their past and private life. Some have created personas with back stories out of whole cloth, for various reasons. Some people talk a lot about their past, but people's memories of their past are frequently incorrect in various ways. Basically, I agree that it's a good point that he has told many tall tales about his past, that should be in the article (and Mick has been working on that), but I feel like you want us to make value judgements about Dylan, that he is a "liar", a bad person, for telling untruths. I'm not sure that's within our purview at Misplaced Pages. As long as the untruths are not told maliciously, I think to some extent it is just part of how many celebrities cope with or manage their fame and public image.] (]) 17:20, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::Point taken.
:::::Dylan early established himself with songs like "Blowin' in the Wind," "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll" and so forth (songs he later called finger-pointing songs, then saying he wasn't going to do those any more) as something like a truth-teller and this has "followed him around" to this very day whereby, for instance, even people like Robert Fripp would ask on a King Crimson forum several of years ago, "Would Dylan lie for money?" when making some point about integrity.
:::::Well, in the case of ''Chronicles'', for instance, yes, it seems so, Mr. Fripp. Sorry to burst your bubble.
:::::Hopefully the outed other celebrities don't keep doing it.
:::::"The truth is the most articulate thing you can say." --John Lydon ] (]) 17:34, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::So write something, well sourced, backing your position, and see if you can get consensus for keeping it in the article. Your accusatory tone here doesn't indicate you'll do well at establishing the proper ]; surprise us. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 17:42, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::Maybe I will, but I had two very brief things taken down within minutes re Mal Evans, the Beatles' assistant, based on the new book about him, so who wants to expend the effort when emotions run so high about "idols" and one's work then gets removed?
:::::::(See talk tabs for "Here, There and Everywhere" and "Sgt. Pepper" (song) where I describe my attempts.)
:::::::Incidentally, the "typical" celebrity doesn't have a truth-teller "millstone" around their neck like Mr. Dylan created for himself with his early songs though I still would prefer people not make up things about their past no matter who they are. I guess that's just me. ] (]) 17:54, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Given that this is BOB DYLAN, I'm a little surprised that more people than three aren't weighing in -- or piling on me, heh.
::::::::But thanks for taking the time. ] (]) 19:01, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::We've known for a long time not to use his ''Chronicles'' or anything else he's said or written as a ]. That's all that really matters regarding his veracity. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 20:30, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::"We've known for a long time not to use his ''Chronicles''..."
::::::::::Congratulations, since the average bloke plunking down $27 for the hardcover probably has no inkling of that cos there's nothing in the jacket copy nor a prefatory comment from Mr. Dylan on the liberties he takes.
::::::::::The average bloke thinks he's gonna get something straight from the horse's mouth, but it's more like from the horse's ass.
::::::::::As a result, Heylin says about it:
::::::::::"He's not the first guy to write a biography that's a pack of lies..."
::::::::::Note the L-word. ] (]) 01:04, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::So under ''Rough and Rowdy Ways'', concerning the info there for "Murder Most Foul," I added after the Dylan statement about the song:
:::::::::::"Fiona Apple, who played piano on the song, later revealed that the song had in fact been recorded only one month previously, in February 2020."
:::::::::::I tried to make the word "revealed" link to:
:::::::::::https://en.wikipedia.org/Murder_Most_Foul_(song)#Release
:::::::::::as a source for her statement, but then the word "revealed" would disappear behind a weird link thing. ] (]) 16:12, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::Perhaps it would be better to just copy the source from the song article? However, I'm not sure the article needs this at all, both when the song was recorded, and whether "a while" could be "a month"... That's a pretty nitpicky. "a while" is a pretty vague term. Frankly, given the length of the article, I might vote for removing both Dylan's message about the song and the bit about Fiona Apple saying when it was recorded.] (]) 17:28, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::: I agree. ] (]) 00:02, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::I put it in because:
:::::::::::::Dylan issued a statement on his website and via social media on the day that the single premiered calling it "an unreleased song we recorded a while back that you might find interesting". '''This spurred speculation that the recording may have been years old and perhaps even an outtake from his 2012 album Tempest.'''
:::::::::::::Such speculation is only natural given his vague word choice.
:::::::::::::Length of the article: A single added sentence to clarify Mr. Dylan's impreciseness is too much to bear?
:::::::::::::Yeah, that's nitpicky all right.
:::::::::::::I'll be the first to admit I have not mastered the superscript/footnote thing.
:::::::::::::Fiona's statement comes from here:
:::::::::::::Pelly, Jenn (December 8, 2020). "Fiona Apple on How She Broke Free and Made the Album of the Year". Pitchfork. Retrieved February 10, 2021. ] (]) 17:47, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::Removing his message covers for him -- heh. ] (]) 17:51, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::I propose, in the section "Protest and Another Side"
:::::::::::::::https://en.wikipedia.org/Bob_Dylan#Protest_and_Another_Side
:::::::::::::::After the paragraph that begins:
:::::::::::::::"By the end of 1963, Dylan felt manipulated and constrained by the folk and protest movements...."
:::::::::::::::The following about the 1963 ''Newsweek ''profile of Dylan:
:::::::::::::::In the November 4, 1963 issue of ''Newsweek'', Dylan was profiled revealing that his colorful stories of his background such as working in a traveling carnival and where he hailed from were false, that his background was that he "grew up in a conventional home, and went to conventional schools" in Hibbing, Minnesota.
:::::::::::::::Indeed, biographer Clinton Heylin reports that the first time Dylan’s name appeared in print relative to his music career was in the August 6, 1961 ''New York Mirror ''where Pete Karman reported as follows, “Bob Dylan of Gallup, New Mexico played the guitar and harmonica…”
:::::::::::::::Biographer Robert Shelton reported that Dylan "exploded with anger" and went "underground" for weeks after reading the ''Newsweek ''piece.
:::::::::::::::Sources for footnoting (I am not at all experienced in those):
:::::::::::::::"Revisit Our Infamous 1963 Profile of Bob Dylan," https://www.newsweek.com/bob-dylans-75th-birthday-revisit-our-infamous-1963-profile-462801
:::::::::::::::Heylin, Clinton, ''The Double Life of Bob Dylan: A Restless Hungry Feeling, 1941-1966''. Little, Brown & Co., 2021. ISBN: 9780316535212
::::::::::::::: ] (]) 16:04, 17 October 2024 (UTC)


I’m not enthusiastic about {{u|M.mk}}’s proposed addition. I agree with what {{u|Brianyoumans}} wrote above, including the point that "Dylan doesn't owe anyone the details of his life." The article makes clear that he grew up in a middle class home in Hibbing and even commenced studies at the University of Minnesota. He dropped out after less than a year, travelled to New York to meet Woody Guthrie and then re-invented himself in the Greenwich Village folk scene. What catapulted Dylan to fame was not his fake biography but the quality of his songs. At the age of 22, "Blowin’ in the Wind" and "A Hard Rain’s a-Gonna Fall" earned him stardom at the Newport Folk Festival, the title "the voice of his generation" (which he loathed) and his songs were widely covered by other artists including Peter, Paul and Mary, Sonny and Cher and the Byrds who took his compositions into the pop charts. Fwiw the article notes: "At the University of Minnesota, Dylan told friends that Dillon was his mother's maiden name, which was untrue." ''Chronicles'' is not factually correct. And the Scorsese/Dylan ''Rolling Thunder'' film contains numerous fictitious elements.
:::::::Can't check now, but I distinctly remember "overweight", and in any case the literal meaning of your sentence is just plain wrong. I accept your explanation for "everyman". <b>(JDG)</b>


As part of his lengthy musings on this subject {{u|M.mk}} proposed a Misplaced Pages article with the title "Bob Dylan, Big Fat Liar"; perhaps that was a joke but that still seems to be the thrust of {{u|M.mk}}’s latest contribution. I'll try to devise a sentence about the ''Newsweek'' article, but what is significant imho is the quality of Dylan’s work and how his continual musical and stylistic re-inventions propelled him towards the Nobel Prize in Literature. ] (]) 23:52, 17 October 2024 (UTC)
:::You "distinctly remember" wrongly, and the transcript of the speech is directly linked from the article. ]
:I'm not sure {{u|M.mk}} has the right wording, but Dylan creating this false past for himself, perhaps sort of an imitation of his hero Woody Guthrie, seems to be a fact of his very early career. It seems worthy of inclusion, especially since he seems to have continued to indulge in mythologizing himself at various times.] (]) 01:25, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
::Ok, I’ve added something about the ''Newsweek'' profile of Dylan and “Restless Farewell”.<br/>
::According to Heylin, the chronology is: 23 October 1963, Andrea Svedburg interviews Dylan, who dislikes the tone of her questions and storms out. (Svedburg’s article includes the false rumor that “Blowin’ In The Wind” was not written by Dylan but by a New Jersey High School student.) The article hits the news stands around 29 October. 31 October, Dylan records “Restless Farewell”. See Heylin, 2009, ''Revolution In The Air, The Songs of Bob Dylan: Volume One'', pp. 170–172. ] (]) 14:26, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
:::"Dylan creating this false past for himself, perhaps sort of an imitation of his hero Woody Guthrie, seems to be a fact of his very early career. It seems worthy of inclusion, especially since he seems to have continued to indulge in mythologizing himself at various times..."
:::Yes, indeed. Thank you.
:::"M.mk proposed a Misplaced Pages article with the title 'Bob Dylan, Big Fat Liar'; perhaps that was a joke..."
:::Yes, essentially a joke.
:::A note: People are free to like the guy as I once did (and still respect much of his work), but his "self-reinventions" and other, to me, lies, have me no longer trust anything he has to say.
:::Go well, Bob. ] (]) 15:03, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
::::One of ya may as well add the backstory to "Restless Farewell" to the stub of info about the song:
::::https://en.wikipedia.org/Restless_Farewell ] (]) 15:39, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::Sorry, ran across this and can't resist (there really could be a Misplaced Pages article on Bob's dishonesty and it would be "never ending" -- heh):
::::: If you had the chance to ask Dylan one question, what would it be? What would you want to hear him talk about in an honest way?
::::: In an honest way? ''If I could get him to answer honestly'', I’d ask him something about either motorcycles or Child Ballads. Both of which fascinate me, both of which I have a similar passion to him for.
:::::https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/bob-dylan-biographer-clinton-heylin-interview-double-life-book-1166784/ ] (]) 19:33, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::I'm beginning to think that your continued use of the term "dishonest" is a violation of ]. ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 20:33, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::On the mere talk tab?
:::::::SORRY!!(!)!
:::::::This wouldn't be an issue were it not for Bob's, er, habit in this regard. Choose your euphemism. "Self-reinvention," that's sweet.
:::::::Me and Heylin -- whose book publishers violate the stricture also. ] (]) 01:15, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::As a result of discussion on this page, I've re-written the ] article to try to give a bit more nuance and depth to the story of the ''Newsweek'' interview and how BD transformed the incident into the final song on his third album. As per {{u|Jpgordon}} and {{u|Brianyoumans}} I think repeated use of the terms "liar" and "dishonesty" are a misrepresentation of Dylan and a violation of ]. ] (]) 14:57, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::I would agree with that. Reading over the article again (well, most of it, anyways) I think it gets across how Dylan is. He's brilliant, he tells truth, but he's also an unreliable narrator, especially of his own life. He's secretive and he's just seemingly odd at times. I don't think we're whitewashing him here. I think if we were going to call him "liar" I would want examples of how he had told malicious lies that hurt people. I don't see that. I see him spinning stories for his own sometimes obscure reasons.] (]) 17:11, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::No. If we were going to call him "liar", we'd need ] calling him this long before we even considered it, and we'd still be running afoul of ]. Now, are there instances of this "lying" where it actually has mattered in the least, other than frustrating occasional biographers and blurb writers? ]<sup><small>]</small></sup> 19:30, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::Well, then, you're all agreed.
:::::::::::Open letter:
:::::::::::Dear Bob:
:::::::::::I am sorry for my reckless word choices herein.
:::::::::::I don't know what came over me.
:::::::::::As for telling the truth, why start now?
:::::::::::Best wishes,
:::::::::::Mark
:::::::::::P.S. Some "metaphysical" food for thought:
:::::::::::"...he who confuses you, confuses himself."
:::::::::::from ''Conversations with Seth'', Vol. 2, Chapter 1 by Susan Watkins ] (]) 15:39, 25 October 2024 (UTC)


== Can we switch the photo back? ==
:::::4) You say "Dylan secretly married Sara Lownds..." Are you sure you're not thinking of his later marriage, which was in secret? I haven't read that Sara was secret in any way...


The lead photo that was changed recently is awful. Can it be switched back to the previous one (or any other one that isn't this horrible)? ] (]) 19:36, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
::::::Then you're poorly read. Dylan concealed his marriage from virtually everyone; no public announcements, no disclosures even to longtime friends. Heylin, in "Day By Day," calls it "secret"; Shelton, in "No Direction Home," said Dylan "kept quiet." Dave Van Ronk tells of meeting Dylan with Sara in December 1965, and not hearing of the marriage; Jack Elliott, as I recall, told a story about asking Dylan about a rumored marriage, with Dylan denying it. The story was broken three months later by Nora Ephron in the New York Post, treating it as a headline-worthy disclosure of a previously unknown event. ]


:No one is "Forever Young." ] (]) 01:13, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
:::::::So, you are sure. Very good. As I said, we should have been going through like this *before* your massive Save. I've no doubt much of your factual material would withstand scrutiny. Stylistically and thematically, I'm not so sure. We'll see what others say. <b>(JDG)</b>
:It would be good to find a more recent one that was a bit more flattering, I suppose. He looks kind of old and grumpy. On the other hand, maybe he *is* old and grumpy at this point. ] (]) 01:58, 28 October 2024 (UTC)


== Accident? ==
::::::::Your being poorly read is hardly justification for demanding that changes be pre-screened for your approval. ]


There is scepticism in some quarters that the motorcycle accident ever happened. It seems to have no support independent of Bob. They suggest he just wanted to get out of the tiresome commitments he had ahead of him. ] (]) ] (]) 10:32, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Being a wiseass won't get you too far here. It so happens I hadn't read specifically on the Lownds marriage. There are plenty of other areas in this topic on which I could take you to school. Please respond to the basic point being made here: that your giant overhaul of this FA is against guidelines and should be reversed. ] 06:45, 6 Jun 2005 (UTC)
:If you look at the Tony Scherman ''American Heritage'' piece that is used as a source in our article, it seems like there is some question as to the severity of his injuries and the reason for his long convalescence, but it seems likely there was an accident and that he had injuries - he did seek medical care immediately afterwards, he was seen wearing a neck brace, he has told various stories about the incident but never that it didn't happen. It may well be that he used it as an excuse to step back, but that's mentioned in our article.] (]) 15:16, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
::Concur with {{u|Brianyoumans}}. Dylan biographers agree with what Dylan himself wrote in his autobiography ''Chronicles'': "I had been in a motorcycle accident and I'd been hurt, but I recovered. Truth was that I wanted to get out of the rat race." I don't think a single Dylan biographer writes it never happened. ] (]) 11:00, 26 November 2024 (UTC)


== Hebrew name ==
:::::This is after just a 10-second glance. But I don't want to haggle over this or that sentence. You are simply in the wrong to roll out a massive, undiscussed overhaul to this FA. Please be big and revert yourself and I promise you many of your edits will get in after due deliberation. ] 01:40, 6 Jun 2005 (UTC)


Any thoughts on using the phrase "Hebrew name:" instead of just "Hebrew:" before his Hebrew name. The way it is now makes it look like the Hebrew is just a translation/transliteration of his English name, which it is not. -] (]) 18:48, 27 December 2024 (UTC
Can I suggest that somebody take on the task of listing the points of difference (besides style) between the 2 versions. I think Monicasdude would be in a good position to present such a list, since he? best knows what is included, but perhaps there is some other party interested enough to do some of it --] 06:59, 2005 Jun 12 (UTC)
:I suggest moving the Hebrew name to a a separate sentence, such as the following.

::His ] is ''Shabtai Zisl ben Avraham'' ({{langx|he|שבתאי זיסל בן אברהם}}).
:There are three major differences: style, in that I've boiled tsome sections down and tried to maintain a consistent tone; chronology, since I've rearranged discussion to keep events, as much as practical, in chronological order; and NPOV-adherence, where I've removed several blocs of text which plainly violated the applicable standard, and were added to the article without talk activity. It's the latter that seems to have triggered JDG's responses. I've also cleaned up a significant number of minor (and unquestionable) factual errors -- e.g., the number of nontopical songs on Dylan's 3rd album, the date of the "Last Waltz" concert, where the Zimmerman family lived when Robert was born -- and added some linking text to fill in gaps in the chronology. I've also added the major biographies and recordings references to the "Further Reading" section, cleaned up the links a bit, and worked on several of the affiliated pages.<br />
:::&dash; &nbsp; ] (]) 21:20, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:The dispute isn't about the substance of my edits. User JDG has been quite explicit in his comments, in the talk page and his edit summaries, that he is reverting the page not because of substance -- he has made virtually no substantive objections -- but because he demands that editors of this page comply with his own policies regarding editing rather than the standard Misplaced Pages guidelines. ] 14:58, 12 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Will everyone please tone down the rhetoric here and in the edit summaries? There is no call for throwing around terms like "thuggery" and "vandalism". ] 07:30, 12 Jun 2005 (UTC)

::Okay, ], do you dispute the substance of any of ]'s edits? If yes, please list the edits that trouble you. If you are only disputing the fact that the eidts were made, and not their substance, then this page should revert to ]'s edits. ] 10:56, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)

=="Couple" v. "Few"==

Minor point, but: The sentence begins "His performances, like his album . . ." There were more than 2 original songs in his live sets then, but only about half a dozen appeared regularly (and not all in the same set, of course). Heylin's "Day By Day" gives some setlists from the period, some have 3, 4, maybe 5 originals mixed in. That's why I think "couple" is a shade too specific, since the main (grammatical) subject is the live sets. ] 19:44, 3 Jun 2005 (UTC)

You're right. Sorry for the oversight.

== Christian Conversion ==

I made an edit earlier about Dylan's pre-''Slow Train Coming'' hints of Christianity, but it was taken out. I think it might be of interest to the reader that the Bible (both Old and New Testaments) and Christian tradition had greatly influenced much of Dylan's work, especially since his motorcycle crash, after which he started to extensively read the Bible. ''John Wesley Harding'' in 1967 is stock full of religious stuff, even extrabiblical Christian material (St. Augustine). ''Blood on the Tracks'' in 1975 references crucifixion in "Idiot Wind" and "Shelter From The Storm." ''Desire'' in 1976, although only cowritten by Dylan (except for "Sara"), contains explicit Christian language in "Oh, Sister": "We died and were reborn, and then mysteriously saved." Also in "Sara," a song about his wife since 1965 (I believe), he mentions those Methodist bells, suggesting that they married in a Christian church, which could explain who personally introduced him to Christianity (as early as 65). And of course on ''Street Legal'' in 1978, there is extensive (though subtle) Christian and apocalyptic imagery. Obviously all this information should not go in our favorite featured article, but maybe a brief mention of his pre-1979 Christian leanings. ] 21:46, 5 Jun 2005 (UTC)

:Tixity, I encourage you to stay on top of this page to make sure your work survives the current troubles. As you can see above, Monicasdude has embarked on a very unfortunate, undiscussed major overhaul to a very popular, recognized article and his intransigence has resulted in messy reversions that can't help but endanger the work of more responsible editors. Judging from his past behavior, the current version will soon be knocked back to his private concoction and you will have to make sure your edits survive the jump. As noted above, when I have the time and energy I will be bringing fullblown arbitration to bear on this article. Hopefully after that you'll be able to contribute without worries. ] 22:15, 5 Jun 2005 (UTC)

::Tixity, please note that JDG was the one who removed the edit you're talking about, and that I have restored it each time I reverted the page after his (to my mind) vandalism. ] 23:09, 5 Jun 2005 (UTC)

:::Of course you "restored" it. His edit was made while your version was live, so reverting to yourself brings it back. Tix, it's going to be a rough slog, judging from this chap's out-of-all-proportion self-confidence. Keep it on Watch. ] 00:20, 6 Jun 2005 (UTC)

== Please give your opinions. ==

Anyone reading this, please review the dispute between Monicasdude and myself (see above on this Talk page and the Edit History) and record your vote below: Do you prefer the version he keeps reverting to, or the one I keep reverting to? We have to get this beyond a one-on-one battle. Mdude carries no more authority than I do, and vice-versa. Neither of us is backing down. Please, we need your opinion. ] 19:35, 14 Jun 2005 (UTC)
&nbsp;<p>
'''For the long-established version favored by JDG:'''<br>
]
&nbsp;<p><br><p>
'''For Monicasdude's overhauled version:'''<br>
]
&nbsp;<p><br><p>
&nbsp;<p><br><p>
:Please note that I did not vote in this excessively personalized poll, and that User JDG took it upon himself to cast "my" vote. I do not believe it is appropriate, or consistent with overall Misplaced Pages guidelines and policies, to vote this way. Instead, I would hope that users raise whatever questions they may have about the accuracy and appropriateness of the edits I have made in accordance with the standard Misplaced Pages processes. I believe the edits I made produced a more accurate and reliable article, more consistent with Misplaced Pages guidelines; and that, rather than simply arguing JDG v MD, editors whould engage in the continuous process of improvement. In comparison to other FAs regarding important American musicians, like the ones regarding Louis Armstrong and Miles Davis, the Dylan article was grossly inferior, and while "my version" (which includes recent edits from other users) has reduced the distance, it is still substantial, and much more improvement is possible. ] 20:32, 14 Jun 2005 (UTC) (Accept no substitutes!)
::Informal polling is a time-honored first-tier dispute resolution mechanism on Misplaced Pages. I did not "vote" for Mdude. I listed his username under the obvious position he holds. Mdude is trying to muscle aside all opinion but his own. Do not let this happen, folks. ] 22:01, 14 Jun 2005 (UTC)

'''Only the sith deal in absolutes.''' I think that there are good parts to them both - the new one has some sections too cut up to even make sense, but the old one did have some unnecessary paragraph structure and crap. Overall, i'd have to go with monica's dudes' one, with some additions from JDG's. ] 16:07, Jun 15, 2005 (UTC)

'''Abstain''' I'm not sure this can be sorted by a poll. Could you not just discuss the veracity of the two versions and settle on a compromise? ] 10:51, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)
:I agree. It's not as though Monicasdude's version has major POV issues or whatnot...a compromise of the two versions would be better. ] &mdash; ] 14:05, Jun 15, 2005 (UTC)

::Ok, I'm thinking of a way to propose this that might have a remote chance of getting Mdude's participation. ] 15:53, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)

Forget the poll. The only way to sort this out is to form some kind of compromise.

JDG, do you feel that any ''material'' as been taken out or put in? Or this a re-arranging? I did try and compare the two versions, but my monitor is not wide enough!

Monicasdude, do you feel you edits have to be 'all at once'? Or are you prepared to take it one section at a time? ] (] 16:39, Jun 15, 2005 (UTC)

::Given the amount of disentangling and rearranging that had to be done just to arrive at a reasonably straightforward and accurate chronology (up through 1978; the later period needs major work), it seemed to me more appropriate to make one integrated edit. As the history shows, I'd been trying to make individual changes for a few weeks previously -- only one of which raised any substantive questions -- but that process wasn't terribly efficient.
:As a starting point, I'll give a half dozen example of changes I've made, which should be non-controversial, but at the same time demonstrate the serious flaws in the article as it stood. (When I refer to the pre-existing article, I'm generally referring to the article as it stood on 01:37, 15 May 2005, before my series of edits began.)

::1. Duluth v. Hibbing. The pre-existing version of the article said Dylan and his family lived in Hibbing when he was born. The major Dylan bios -- Heylin and Shelton in particular -- say that the Zimmerman family lived in Duluth, but moved to Hibbing after Dylan's father contracted polio. The same version of events is found in the Life In Hibbing link I added (coincidentally) this morning.

::2. Times They Are A-Changin'. Pre-existing article said the album was almost entirely downbeat/topical songs, with one exception. Actually three nontopical songs on the album, as simple reference to the tracklist demonstrates.

::3. Newport 1965. Dylan was not backed by the Butterfield Blues Band. Neither Butterfield nor keyboardist Mark Naftalin played with Dylan that night. Al Kooper and Barry Goldberg did; neither was a member of the PBBB. See http://www.bjorner.com/DSN00785%20(65).htm#_Toc490789042 for backup. A similar error afflicts the report of Dylan's Forest Hills/Hollywood Bowl 1965 concerts, since Dylan did not perform with the Hawks at those shows, but hired two members for his own band.

::4. Levon Helm/Basement Tapes. Pre-existing article has Levon Helm rejoining the Hawks/Band at "Big Pink" early in 1967 and playing on the Basement Tapes. Helm actually returned late in 1967 and played on few if any of the Basement Tape sessions. Backup: Clinton Heylin's "Recording Sessions" book; Levon Helm's autobiography. "This Wheel's On Fire."

::5. "First explicit protest song in 10 years." The pre-existing article describes the 1975 "Hurricane" this way, and it's dead wrong. Dylan wrote, recorded, and released "George Jackson" in 1971. Backup: http://www.bjorner.com/DSN01885%201971.htm#DSN01980 His last explicit topical songs prior to that were written in 1963, released early in 1964 on Times They Are A-Changin'.

::6. "Gospel" tours. The pre-existing article that Dylan refused to play any secular songs while touring to support his "Gotta Serve Somebody" (1979), "Saved" (1980), and "Shot Of Love" (1981) albums. This is dead wrong. Dylan's purely "gospel" concerts were during his three relatively short tours in the fall of 1979, the winter of 1980, and the spring of 1980, ending May 21, 1980. Saved was released on June 20, 1980. Dylan resumed touring on November 9, 1980; during this "Musical Retrospective" tour (a name apparently provided by Bill Graham), he mixed religious and secular music. During the tour, he sang 40 different songs; about two dozen of them were secular. That breakdown is a bit misleading, because he pretty much played the same set of "gospel" songs on most nights, while mixing up the covers and selections from his own older songs. By the last night of that tour, he'd reached a 50/50 mix. See Olof's Files, at http://www.bjorner.com, for backup and details.

:That's a representative sample. None of these should be at all controversial; all of them are commonly reported, and rarely if ever disputed. It's a measure of how poor the scrutiny of Dylan article was that the errors were left standing for so long.

:There were also a large number of NPOV violations in the pre-existing article; I'll give one egregious example:

:: '''"Solid Rock", "Saving Grace", "Pressing On" and "In the Garden" from Saved (1980), plus "Every Grain of Sand" and the title song from Shot of Love (1981), along with the Shot of Love outtakes "Caribbean Wind" and "Angelina", have been recognized by many as among the greatest contributions to gospel music by a 20th century white composer. '''

::This is completely unsourced nonsense, sheer puffery for some editor's favorite songs.

::The pre-existing article is laced with highly subjective comments about "masterpieces" and "gems," expositions of favored lyrics (without regard to copyright problems), and downright odd observations (saying that "nearly an entire generation" of Americans memorized "Subterranean Homesick Blues," for example.

:The links were weirdly incomplete; the "further reading" omitted most of the major biographies. Several of the subordinate pages -- the discography, some of the individual album pages -- were seriously fouled up. And so forth. I have yet to see any substantive quarrel with my edits; JDG provided a small, superficial reply a while back, but falls back only on broad and unsourced denials.
] 19:04, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)

:::Is your list of these issues (which are generally not the ones I am most concerned with), your way of giving me an assurance you are ready to work in a spirit of compromise? ] 19:21, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)

::::No. It's a direct response to Dan100's question, and should remain threaded that way. I don't accept the subtext of your question, implying that I haven't previously shown an willingness to work in a "spirit of compromise"; you are, after all, the one who reverted the article a dozen or so times without addressing substance. If you have substantive objections, you should set them out, at whatever pace you choose, so that everyone who's interested can address them and determine whatever compromises, if any, are appropriate. ] 20:16, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)

:::::I'm really tired of this BS. You '''have''' shown no willingness to compromise. You're about the most selfish editor I've ever come across, afflicted with about the largest overestimation of his own skills. While I have conceded you know parts of the subject and have ability as a writer, you haven't had the slightest kind word for me. You're 100% about pride and total control. This absurdity that my reversions are almost criminal while yours are pure righteousness and that the large block of text above wherein I address substance has no weight just shows your terminal, willful blindness. Earlier today I extended the hand of cooperation and I'm met with just more of the same. This article can fly all the way into mediocrity&ndash; I'm done with you. ] 01:06, 16 Jun 2005 (UTC)

::Thanks for your input '''Dan100''', '''Shiri''', '''Steve Block''' and '''SECProto'''. This is how I propose to go forward... Normally I would immediately list side-by-side comparisons of sentences and paragraphs and try to get Mdude to see why one or another should be changed from his version, but this is a big article and just listing the comparisons would take a lot of effort, nevermind the haggling on each one. I don't object to effort, but, as you may have read above, I am seriously ill and cannot sit at the computer for more than about 8 minutes at a time. So to do this right away would be totally draining and I need to keep something in the tank for things like forcing myself to eat, forcing myself into the shower, etc.,. SO, if I can get an assurance here from Monicasdude that he is ready to work in something like a spirit of compromise, I will list one or two comparisons as energy allows and we can take it from there over the next few weeks. What do you say Mdude? ] 18:58, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)
<hr>

I must say, at face value (not knowing much about Dylan), Mdude's edits no not look unreasonable. Unless his edits contravene our core policies on content (and they don't ''appear'' to), I see no immeadiate reason why they should not stand. JDG, if you do feel that the likes of NPOV, Cites Sources and Verifiability are being breached, perhaps when you're feeling better you could explain that. I understand that could be quite a task that you probably have no wish to undertake, but I see no other way forwards. Perhaps you could only highlight changes (if any) which clearly fail the mentioned policies. ] (] 18:47, Jun 16, 2005 (UTC)

== What happened to this article? ==

What happened to this article? It is now full of gross grammatical and spelling errors and embarrassingly clunky phrasing. Somebody help.

----

: I noticed the producer of Blonde On Blonde was erroneously named Bruce Johnston. I changed this to Bob Johnston, the producer's correct name

: ] 00:53, 26 Jun 2005 (UTC)

== The introduction to this article is badly skewed ==

The introduction to this article is rather odd in that it positions Dylan exclusively as a songwriter. It is true that songwriting is probably his greatest contributions, but to entirely ignore the fact that Dylan was a recording artist and (an extremely enduring) performer, is to miss a core distinction between him and some of his predecessors in the American songwriting pantheon; Bob Dylan has spent much of his life recording and performing. In addition to being a first-rank songwriter, Bob Dylan is a Rock Star. And it's not like performing was occasional adunct to his writing; he wrote with his own performance in mind. The fact of his performance role must surely have influenced the writing greatly. His reputation - including the highpointss and the lows - has been formed in reaction to his recordings as much as the songs themselves. One can get all the through the introduction without even learning that he performed his own music. I think that anyone who sees Bob Dylan as the Stephen Foster or Irving Berlin of his generation is seeing only part of the picture; he is also reasonably thought of the Frank Sinatra of his generation - in fact, the uniting of those two roles - songwriter and performer - with all the synergies *and* all the comprimises that implies is a central part of his story. ]

::A very well-taken point. As you may note, I've made some significant revisions in the body of the article recently -- not without contention -- and I believe there's a good deal more to be done. I haven't seen it as worthwhile to redo the intro section until the reshaping of the body is more finished --and the intro will need to be aligned with the main text. ] 00:16, 27 Jun 2005 (UTC)

:I'm dismayed by the deletion of the references to Woody Guthrie & Hank Williams at the head of this article. I think these names are an excellent pointer to why Dylan's stature is higher than his contemporaries - such as Joni Mitchell and Neil Young - excellent though these artists are. Like Guthrie and Williams, Dylan created a mythic account of America in his work. I don't want to get into an endless revert/delete battle but does anyone agree with me? ] 07:15, 11 July 2005 (UTC)
::I agree; I think it's important to mention Guthrie, at least. I think it's notable that ] is not mentioned anywhere in the article. -- ] 04:08, 12 July 2005 (UTC)
::I agree also. Another example of MDude's turning this into just-another-music-article about just-another-singer/songwriter. When will MDude and probably the majority of casual editors here understand that Dylan is unique in his generation and that this statement is not POV but is an accurate portrayal of majority public POV? The answer is: Never, I'm afraid. They have no sense of Dylan's stature and place in cultural history, so relevant comparisons to other artists of great historical stature will strike them as out of place. Woeful. I would encourage both of you to jump in on this point and others and to edit freely. So long as this article is MDude's private reserve, that's how long it will be tedious and unrepresentative of Dylan's place in modern Folk and Rock and Roll. I tried it myself but he just wore me out. It will take at least a two-on-one. ] 18:02, 20 July 2005 (UTC)

::::Since I didn't make the disputed edit (and don't particularly agree with it), the references to me in these comments are particularly inappropriate. ] 20:54, 20 July 2005 (UTC)

:::::To "AlexKass" you said "A very well-taken point". Now you say you "don't particularly agree with it". More Mdudeified gravity-defying illogic... Mick gold, where are ya? I see you doing things like reverting vandalisms but when are you going to step up and help take this article out of Mdude's underwear drawer? For starters, how about getting the Stephen Foster, Woody Guthrie, Irving Berlin and Hank Williams mentions back in there where they belong? ] 02:17, 27 July 2005 (UTC)

::::::User:AlexKass did not make the edit you find objectionable, and my agreement with his comments on an unrelated point has nothing to do with whatever point you are attempting to make. ] 04:26, 27 July 2005 (UTC)

:::::::The point is not unrelated. In fact it's self-same. Quit your bobbing and weaving and own up to your own opinions. ] 13:52, 28 July 2005 (UTC)


::Hi JDG I’m right here. As far as Stephen Foster, Irving Berlin, Woody Guthrie & Hank Williams go, I found myself thinking ‘Maybe I don’t miss them.’ It’s called having second thoughts. This article already seems very long. To be honest, I have a problem with Stephen Foster and Irving Berlin in Dylan’s context. Hank Williams and Woody Guthrie, yes of course. And I would add Robert Johnson to those two. But perhaps it works without them. I have some sympathy with you, JDG, because I think you’re suffering. But your attacks on Monicasdude seem to me apocalyptic and over-personal. He has made constructive edits. I’ll go on thinking about this article & improving it when I can see a way. But right now I’m a bit busy with work. Take care. ] 06:29, 28 July 2005 (UTC)

:::You're right, Mick-- I do get a bit dramatic. Sometimes it seems to leak from a character flaw or two, but more often it's done semi-consciously as a rebellion against the staid, disinterested tones affected by people who are really as motivated by ego as I am, or even moreso... I'd hope you'd reconsider about Foster and Berlin. The key thing is to highlight D's stature as a pure <i>songwriter</i>. Yes, the recordings, the performances, the `tude, all that is extremely important. But what will remain as the decades, then centuries, wear on will be the lyrics and expertly matched tunes... Take it from Mr. D himself: "Me, I go back to Stephen Foster."... About Mdude's constructive edits-- yes, he has made a few. I've never denied he has some good knowledge in certain areas of the topic and that his prose is up to snuff in factual matters. But his added facts and corrections to existing sloppily stated facts pale next to his disruption of the article as a whole. For instance, he's apparently the one who has excised almost all the quoted lyrics from the article. This is extremely damaging to the article as, again, D's chief importance lies in his lyrical contributions. The reader should be given generous helpings. Here we have an artist whose primary talent is transmitted in a form perfectly reproducible in an encyclopedia, and MDude strolls up and goes slash/slash from a very misplaced idea that the lyrics represent "article bloat" or something or other. It's a travesty, plain n' simple. ] 13:52, 28 July 2005 (UTC)

::::Please review the wikipedia fair use guidelines -- which don't apply exclusively to images -- as well as other resources concerning "fair use" of song lyrics. The best you can usually do, in very specific educational contexts which wikipedia doesn't qualify for, is 10% of the text, without getting permission/payment. Aside from the fact that lyric analysis pretty much qualifies as "original research" unless carefully sourced. ] 15:33, 28 July 2005 (UTC)

:::::As is strangely typical of you, you put forward absurdities wrapped in very level-headed language. It's pretty interesting, really, how you manage to convincingly sound like you know what you're talking about while the actual truth value of your statements hovers close to zero. None of the lyrics formerly quoted in this article even approached violation of fair use of song lyrics. They were all snippets of much longer pieces and were given as brief examples to illustrate why D's primary claim to fame is as a lyricist. That is, the lyrics and associated text were in no way "original research". Alongside at least a dozen other ways in which the recent overhaul degraded this article, said article will remain fundamentally deficient until the lyric quotations are restored. ] 04:44, 9 August 2005 (UTC)

== Birthplace ==

I seem to recall that Dylan was born not in Duluth but rather in nearby ]. While I have no reference at hand to verify this, I thought I would bring it to the attention of those who are more expert on this subject. ] Co., ] 18:28, 19 July 2005 (UTC)

::Heylin's "Day By Day" entry for 5/24/41 says: "At 9:05 pm a son, Robert Allen, is born to Beatty and Abraham Zimmerman, at Saint Mary's Hospital, Duluth." There is a Saint Mary's Hospital in Duluth (although it modified its name in 1997); I can't find any reference to one in Two Harbors via Google. Heylin's comment sounds to me like he was transcribing information from a birth certificate; at the time he wrote the first version of "Day By Day," he could have just walked into the Vital Statistics office for Duluth and bought a copy, so I'd bet that's the source and his info is correct. ] 20:56, 19 July 2005 (UTC)

== Most Famous Songs ==

There are two blaring ommissions in that list. "Rainy Day Women" (everybody must get stoned) and "Shelter from the Storm". There is absolutely no excuse to exclude these songs!!! ]

:Which perfectly illustrates the problem with having such a section. Even if it's attributed to the "perceived consensus of rec.music.dylan", it's still an arbitrary and subjective list. ] 01:07, August 1, 2005 (UTC)

And the section is deleted. I'd thought that the "perceived consensus referred to an EDLIS poll run through rmd, but I just tracked down the rmd post describing the "best" list and it's either the personal opinion of one "Steve H." or unverifiable original research. Can't find any sources at all for the "most famous" list, and since it also leaves out the Oscar-winning "Things Have Changed" I doubt it has a sound empirical basis. ] 01:25, 1 August 2005 (UTC)

== Plagiarism ==

In August 1993, the Wall Street Journal had a front page article detailing allegations of plagiarism of lyrics by Bob Dylan. These were lyrics from "Love and Theft" taken from Junichi Saga's "Confessions of a Yakuza." One example, a line from Dylan's song "Floater," "I'm not quite as cool or forgiving as I sound," sounds like Saga's line, "I'm not as cool or forgiving as I might have sounded." I would think this allegation would be mentioned.

:I believe what you a referring to is a 2003 article. A google search of ''bob dylan plagiarism'' came up with an interesting New York Times article entitled "Plagiarism in Dylan, or a Cultural Collage." Which refers to the 2003 Wall Street Journal article.] 21:14, August 2, 2005 (UTC)

:Certainly worth adding to the "Love And Theft" article, not a major point in Dylan's career overall. The whole "plagiarism" label was mostly internet hype; Dylan took a few lines from a book and built up entirely unrelated songs around them. Whether it was "fair use" or copyright infringement is one very appropriate question, but nobody responsibly charged plagiarism. Since the book he took the lines from claims to be an unauthorized memoir of a yakuza's life, drawn from the yakuza's own words without permission, there are certainly several levels of ironies to be explored. ] 00:15, 3 August 2005 (UTC)

== Nobel Prize in Literature Nomination ==
Dylan was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature thsi past year because of his songwriting ability. It was controversial but also very interesting. Although "officially" nominees are not made public I think this should be put somewhere in the article although I don't know where. Can anyone help? ]

:There's a member of the Nobel Academy (or whatever) who's been nominating him every year for at least a decade, if I remember right. It's not a very official thing, and I don't see it was terribly noteworthy as long as it's restricted to the one nominator. ] 13:51, 3 August 2005 (UTC)

:The person who has been nominating him every year is Gordon Ball, an author and literature professor at the Virginia Military Institute. However, he has done so because of the urging of ]. In fact Ginsberg was the first to nominate him in 1996. I wouldn't necesarily say that this ISN'T noteworthy considering it's rare to have a songwriter "unofficially" nominated for the Nobel Prize. ]

::Let me try again. I think, in context, the omission of an unsuccessful, unofficial Nobel nomination isn't very significant, since so many of the substantial awards Dylan has received -- Polar Music Prize, Gish Medal, Commandeur des Artes et Lettres (which name I've probably butchered), Kennedy Center honors, for example -- are also omitted. The page definitely needs a section on such recognition, and I want to thank you for volunteering to provide the initial draft. Looking forward to seeing it. ;-) ] 23:41, 3 August 2005 (UTC)

:::Actually I didn't notice that many of his awards were omitted. My mistake. I don't think I have the "Dylan expertise" to tackle such a job with the fear of butchering the article :) --] 17:01, 5 August 2005 (UTC)

== Proposal ==

Yeah, the article continues its plummet. I propose adding the following down near "External Links":

"This article has gone through an unusual number of revisions and a recent major overhaul. Some contributors believe the best version to date can be found ."

Any objections? ] 04:31, 9 August 2005 (UTC)

I have no objections, and I think that this article should be restored to that version. It's kind of odd, this article has somewhat followed the same path as Dylan's career(quality wise).

:While I would also tend to agree that many of the edits since May 30 have made the article worse rather than better, it's really not good WP practice to point to some earlier version as the "right" version... especially in the main text itself. Besides, not ''every'' change made has been for the worse, even if the overall direction hasn't been right.
:Unfortunately, the much more difficult task of moving forward rather than taking a snapshot of one particular moment of the past is also the '''right''' thing to do. Section by section, what's important that has been changed (either wording or content)? Make changes one at a time (even if the change is to restore some earlier sentence/paragraph/etc), and where appropriate, provide motivation for the change here on the talk page. ] 00:57, 2005 August 11 (UTC)

::That's just what JDG has refused to do in the past. If you go back through these comments a bit, you'll see multiple requests for him to do that. The most he did was to raise objections, then provide no evidence in support of his objections. Lulu, if you want to question specific points that you think "have made the article worse," I'm ready to discuss them (at least the changes I made). ] 01:25, 11 August 2005 (UTC)

:I agree with Lulu, I am not a big fan of linking to an earlier version. This current version is what we have, and we should work on this article, regardless of whether it's better or worse than the previous version. -- ] 09:57, August 11, 2005 (UTC)

:I just made a fairly brief comparison between the current version, and that version. I can't see anything that has been removed that I'm disappointed with, with the exception of the list of his most popular songs. I agree with the removal of the list of his "best" songs, because they had no consensual basis. The list of most popular could probably be backed up by the fact that half of them have their own articles. I think the introduction paragraph is better in the current version than it was before, although I still feel it could use some work. Anyway, I don't think that their should be a link to an older versions. JDG, if you can't be bothered to state your problem(s) with the new version, or even add anything useful to the article, I don't think you should be angry or disappointed at the state of the article (which i find perfectly acceptable). don't take this as a personal attack, its meant as a sort of reflection. ] 14:47, August 11, 2005 (UTC)

::SEC, I don't understand why you think I "can't be bothered" to state my problems. If you simply scroll up you will find me stating my problems all over the place, in approximately 3X the detail of MDude's responses. Let's isolate on just one "problem": MDude's removal of nearly all quoted lyrics from the article. If you scroll up a ways you will see my arguments for restoring the quotations and MDude's ineffective response. This problem alone (and there are many others) causes the current version to be just plain inferior to those earlier versions... I had such a bad experience trying to get MDude to make his changes in a moderate, discussed way that I'm strictly hands-off this article now. But I encourage you, Mick Gold, Lulu and other discerning editors to get in there and turn this back into a collaboration. I guess the current article must be used as the starting point for that, but if you use the link in my proposed text at the start of this Talk section you should be able to use that version as an ongoing reference for what needs to be changed... If you look again at that older version I think you will find many worthy paragraphs that have been entirely blown away or completely gutted in the recent versions. Sometimes bringing an old paragraph back wholesale would be best. Sometimes striking a balance between the livelier style of the old version and MDude's cleanup of some sloppily stated facts would be best. And so on... ] 18:57, 11 August 2005 (UTC)

:::my apologies then, that part of my comment was off base. ] 18:22, August 13, 2005 (UTC)

:::::You shouldn't apologize; you were almost entirely correct. I've been dealing with this guy's verbal assaults for months, and he always backs away rather than putting up specifics. The "bad experience" he had was the essentially unanimous rejection of his positions by other editors and contributors. ] 02:11, 16 August 2005 (UTC)

== Fair Use ==

It would be nice if you did not make up your own standards regarding "fair use" and lyrics, and instead applied the conventional ones. The lyric citations that I excised were not "snippets," as you claimed, but substantial quotations, often of full verses, in one case 12 lines from a 72-line song. Since you refuse to supply any source for your claims, I will quote the "fair use" guidelines from the University of California Press, which are fairly standard:

:Some material that is considered to have high commercial value is treated by its owners as if it had a special status, to which the fair use exception does not apply. The most common example is a song lyric. The music publishing industry insists that lyrics cannot be quoted, even briefly, even in scholarly works, without permission–and the industry has the will and the means to enforce its position. Always obtain permission to use song lyrics that are in copyright.

] 19:21, 11 August 2005 (UTC)

:This tone by Monicasdude is really not helpful, IMO. While I don't believe there was some earlier golden version in which all was well, and the text perfect (see ), I can see how JDG got annoyed by the caustic tone Monicasdude adopted accompanying edits. So please chill out, all around.

:On the specific issue of Fair Use, the quoted UC Press recommendation is '''far''' too restrictive. The "music publishing industry" are most certainly blood-sucking slimebags who blatently, and frequently, abuse the legal system for their own ends. That's a given. But despite the character of record labels, there really does remain Constitutional and legal protection of scholarly/academic discussion of lyrical materials. I know UC Press doesn't want to get sued, even where they'd win; and I don't think WP wants to get sued either. But for a not-for-profit scholarly project to quote 12 lines from a song lyric&mdash;specifically if those lines are genuinely analyzed&mdash;is '''unambiguously''' within Fair Use.

:Let's not completely remove all beneficial content out of the (so far, only imagined) whims of malevolent music publishers. This isn't a comment on the specific lines or specific commentary that once existed in the article (I haven't even looked at which song/verse is at issue). But clearly much of Dylan's significance is as a lyricist, and you cannot explain his connections with either his influences or followers without providing a modicum of lyrical content. ] 19:49, 2005 August 11 (UTC)

::Lulu makes a very good point in a very succint and precise way. Dylan, for the majority, is renowned for his lyrics which gave birth to quite a unique type of music. This type of usage can be described as "fair" and, indeed, essential. Without reference to lyrics, this article becomes mute. ] 03:06, 12 August 2005 (UTC)

:::"Fair use" is a technical copyright term, with an established set of rules. There's something of a grey area with regard to lyrics, but the general rule, is a lot closer to the citation I gave than any of the other ideas people seem to have (the "12-line" comment is definitely off base).

::::Y'know Monicasdude, there's a saying that you attract more flies with honey than with vinegar. A tone of contempt really doesn't win you points, as you seem to think it will.

::::So yeah, I know that ''Fair use'' is a technical term in copyright law. No shit! I don't happen to be a lawyer, but I ''have'' written for some law journals and written software licenses, and am kinda the ''de facto'' IP advisor for some organizations. In other words, I almost certainly know more about the matter than you do.

::::::'''Only the Sith deal in absolutes''', as somebody said a while back. However, it's been my experience that when somebody announces that he/she has no professional training on a point, cites no sources for his/her position, and announces that nevertheless he/she "knows more" about the subject than the person he/she is arguing with, that he/she is typically wrong about both the point being argued and the expertise of the person being argued with. ] 16:04, 13 August 2005 (UTC)

::::::Yeah, you're right that you were wrong to propound something about which you have no expertise or training. Thanks for apologizing. Now let's all move past mystification of the concept of Fair Use. (I assume the Sith thing is something about Star Wars?). ] 17:51, 2005 August 13 (UTC)

::::::::No wonder you've had multiple RfCs filed on you. ] 20:07, 13 August 2005 (UTC)

:::::::::Ok now you're getting into it with someone else who dares a little input on this article. Don't spout off about RfCs. If I wasn't such a fundamentally peaceful man you would have had RfCs and worse on you from your total disregard of other editors a few months ago... And it doesn't help that Lulu is totally correct on this point while you're totally incorrect. Fair Use of song lyrics has been worked out pretty finely by other Wikipedians editing music articles and no one, including two of the better known Admins invited for that purpose, saw anything wrong with the lyric quotes as they stood before you and your machete came along. ] 00:19, 16 August 2005 (UTC)

:::::::::::The previous fair use discussion was about an image; the lyric quotes weren't discussed. As for RfCs, you couldn't get a single editor to support your positions the first time around, so that's a pretty idle bit of invective. ] 01:29, 16 August 2005 (UTC)

::::::::::::My comments related to lyrics.] 01:35, 16 August 2005 (UTC)

::::::Yes, but JDG was referring to a much older discussion about images used in the article. It's in the talk page archive, just before the "sleeping subways" section. ] 01:59, 16 August 2005 (UTC)

::::However, Monicasdude is right that there is no bright line distinction about fair use. 12 lines isn't automatically fair use because of the relatively short length. If, in fact, 12 lines are used without significant commentary, it's certainly not permissible. But if those lines are used as a necessary element of a scholarly discussion, they are equally clearly OK.

::::The rule we use should show some subtlety and context, not just say "no quoting, period!" ] 02:06, 2005 August 13 (UTC)

:::And quite a few other articles on songwriters here get by very well without quotations -- Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Willie Nelson, Townes Van Zandt, Bruce Springsteen (except for a blurt someone tagged on), Lucinda Williams, and many others. FWIW, by the way, there was _no_ lyric analysis and _no_ substantive commentary in the older version of the article, just blocks of lyrics characterized as good, memorable, inscrutable, and other superficial labels. If an individual song needs a comment (and not many will) requiring a lyrics reference, just make the reference and link the title to the lyrics at bobdylan.com.
:::And read the wikiguidelines on fair use, too.
:::As for the "music publishing industry" -- who are not the music labels who issue CDs -- they represent songwriters, and have on occasion done tremendous work in prying royalties out of the megalabels and the Clear Channels of the world and into the hands of often-poor songwriters who earned them and deserve them. For the great majority of working singer-songwriters, their publishing royalties, collected and protected by music publishers, are an important source of income, without which they couldn't continue performing careers. Calling them "malevolent" is thoroughly wrongheaded. ] 23:16, 12 August 2005 (UTC)

== Killing lead?! ==

I'm not sure why the anonymous editor from 84.100.* seems intent on reducing the lead to nearly nothing. The changelog indicated that s/he believes this is WP policy. In short, it ''is not'' WP policy to kill the lead. Take a look at just about any other article for examples.

The before-TOC section should be a relatively self-contained "compact encyclopedia" entry. The length depends somewhat on subject matter, but for a relatively notable topic like this one, two moderate length paragraphs is about right. Three paras starts to feel too long, IMO. But except for topics where there is very little total information (i.e. "Tinytown is a village of 120 people in central Missouri"), one or two sentences is ''too little'' for the lead.

Basically, the lead lets a reader feel like they have a general sense of why a topic is interesting, and ''what'' the thing is. E.g. Dylan isn't ''just'' a songwriter born in 1941 (true, but not enough to motivate the summary). He's also known for a few particular songs, has influences from a few styles, had a political/artistic effect briefly characterized as such-and-such. Not everthing you might say (that comes after the TOC), but enough for a reader to feel like she wasn't "cheated" by the information she gets in the lead. ] 18:45, 2005 August 12 (UTC)

:Examples of other articles with about this balance I describe (taken from links in the Dylan article): ], ], ]. All similarly important musicians (who have done other things like songwriting, acting, etc), with similar couple-paragraph leads. For that matter, cities linked like ] or ] show the same pattern also. ] 18:51, 2005 August 12 (UTC)

::I agree that the introduction should not be absurdly short ("Dylan is a major songwriter"). Introductions are not supposed to be "as short as possible" but rather should give some indication of what the article is about. However, as written now (even after I removed a couple of POV sentiments) it is not very encyclopedic and reads somewhat like a fan site. Can this be fixed?

::Whether or not the lead is well-written, do not move it, fix it (also moving it does not make it any better as a piece of encyclopedic writing) ] 20:44, 12 August 2005 (UTC)

:::Well, yeah... you've made a good start at removing the flowery/fandom tone. I think the Weathermen connection is a bit too footnote-ish for the lead also, FWIW. The comparison with other important 20th C songwriters in an earlier version seemed more relevant. In general though, I agree the tone could stand to be more encyclopedic. ] 21:14, 2005 August 12 (UTC)

::::I agree with that, I found the reference to the Weathermen to be somewhat odd in its position in the opening statements. perhaps it could go under a section about his influences or something? i dunno. ] 03:13, August 13, 2005 (UTC)

== late 80s religious beliefs ==

deleted recent addition which was out of place in terms of the article's chronology, and stated conclusions about Dylan's religious beliefs which were neither sourced nor verifiable. W/regard to the photographs, Dylan on at least one occasion commented that people were reading more than they should have into his participation in one of his son's bar mitzvah (in Jerusalem). ] 16:13, 14 August 2005 (UTC)

:While Monicasdude's general desire to stir rancor rather than cooperate makes it harder to work on changes than it should be, he's partly right here. The "jewish roots" thing is way overplayed. But the fact that Dylan stopped doing explicitly xtian stuff is definitely worth noting at the conclusion of the discussion of his xtian period. ] 17:42, 2005 August 14 (UTC)

::Monicasdude's general interest is in accuracy, and Dylan didn't stop playing explicitly Christian music in the late 1980s. We are, after all, talking about the guy who opened quite a few of his turn-of-the-millennium concerts with bluegrass gospel classics, seasoned other shows with covers of "Rock Of Ages" and "Pass Me Not O Gentle Savior," and last year played one or more songs from his "Christian" trilogy of albums at dozens of concerts. ] 19:17, 14 August 2005 (UTC)

:::Stopped recording might then be a better choice of words? ] 22:05, August 14, 2005 (UTC)

::::Even that's off target. There are Infidels outtakes (e.g., "Lord Protect My Child") that some people view as no less Christian than songs on his evangelical albums; in 1992, at the first (unused) set of sessions for the album that became Good As I Been To You, he recorded "Rise Again," a gospel cover that he'd played frequently during his fall 1980 tour. (There's probably more, aside from some debatable Oh Mercy recordings; he reportedly recorded regularly for some time in his home/garage studio, and that stuff's almost entirely undocumented.) Trying to make conclusive statements on Dylan's religious beliefs is notoriously chancy; we are talking about the guy who toured the world in 1986 with "In The Garden," often complete with rap about Jesus as his hero, as a centerpiece of his sets, and simultaneously recorded an appearance for a Lubavitcher telethon. ] 13:01, 15 August 2005 (UTC)

== Seeger/Newport '65 ==

If the Seeger story is to be mentioned at all, it needs a qualifier. Seeger generally denies the story (see, e.g., Sounes' bio of Dylan); there are no first-hand accounts of it; and there are first-hand accounts of Seeger saying something of the sort occurring during the Butterfield Blues Band's performance earlier in the evening. . There are multiple sources (Jac Hotzman, Joe Boyd) for the account which instead has Seeger in his car, windows rolled up, hands over ears, slowly driving away. A few online references:

http://buffaloreport.com/020826dylan.html

http://www.billboard.com/bb/bb110/1965_more.jsp

http://www.berkshireweb.com/rogovoy/interviews/feat010605.html

http://listserv.acsu.buffalo.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0309c&L=hwy61-l&F=&S=&P=12743

http://www.wholeearthmag.com/ArticleBin/406.html

Among other problems with the standard story, it has Seeger backstage arguing with the soundman, even though the mixing board wasn't backstage.

] 17:59, 15 August 2005 (UTC)

:If there is a qualifier, let's keep it understandable to everyone that reads it otherwise its inclusion will be pointless.] 18:04, 15 August 2005 (UTC)

::I ''do'' think that WP readers should know the word ''apocryphal''&mdash;there's a separate WP project that uses only basic language. We could link the word to its Wiktionary definition if needed.

::However, reading the sentence again, I think it's better without any adjective. While "apocryphal" is technically accurate, it borders on pedantic in its correctness (not so much as Monicasdude's 5 long background articles, but still). Just saying "there's a story..." is fine to give the general concept being presented); we don't need to do a precise archaelogy of the development of a tangential story. ] 18:40, 2005 August 15 (UTC)

:::I agree that it is better without an adjective. ] 22:17, 15 August 2005 (UTC)

::::Then delete the Seeger sentence altogether. Seeger denies it happened; there are no eyewitness accounts supporting it, and there are quite a few denying. It's not appropriate to have an urban legend in the text without any language pointing out its unreliability.] 01:26, 16 August 2005 (UTC)

:::::It was stated as "one account" and not a fact. That was sufficient.] 01:41, 16 August 2005 (UTC)

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wonderfull SPON.de article (in German)

Nice article about a very, very loyal long-term fan in (former Eastern) Germany: https://www.spiegel.de/geschichte/bob-dylan-in-oel-wie-das-gemaelde-aufs-konzert-in-ost-berlin-kam-a-52cdc5fa-eef8-4e9f-bced-379d61a1075a

Going electric

This page says Dylan only played three songs at Newport in 1965, but the main page about the controversy says he played five there the following night. Seananony (talk) 01:12, 27 July 2024 (UTC)

At Newport 1965, Dylan and his band, including Bloomfield and Kooper, played a short electric set of three songs (Maggie's Farm, LARS, Takes A Lot To Laugh) and then left the stage to a mix of cheering and booing. After a pause, Dylan was persuaded to return to the stage where he played 2 songs solo on acoustic guitar: Mr Tambourine Man and It's All Over Now Baby Blue. see Mick gold (talk) 21:51, 27 July 2024 (UTC)

Retire! Such a waste of time at Pine knob. No singing 2600:1007:B0AB:DD68:1CEB:36E8:8D2B:5D0B (talk) 00:31, 16 September 2024 (UTC)

Semi-protected edit request on 9 October 2024

This edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request.

Under "Honors" for Bob Dylan, please list that Bob Dylan is a 32° Scottish Rite Freemason, in the Valley of Los Angeles. His home Lodge is Santa Monica-Palisades Lodge, No. 307. MaynardEdwards (talk) 14:44, 9 October 2024 (UTC)

 Not done: please provide reliable sources that support the change you want to be made. PianoDan (talk) 17:43, 9 October 2024 (UTC)

Dishonesty -- Dylan can't live outside the law

In the book, The Double Life of Bob Dylan: A Restless Hungry Feeling, 1941-1966, author Clinton Heylin notes that the first time Dylan’s name appeared in print relative to his music career was in the August 6, 1961 New York Mirror where Pete Karman reported as follows, “Bob Dylan of Gallup, New Mexico played the guitar and harmonica…”

In those early days, somewhat George Santos-style, Dylan, apparently seeking to burnish his folksinger resume, claimed to have ridden the rails hobo style, worked in a carnival, and so forth.

But he was outed in the November 4, 1963, issue of Newsweek which set the record straight regarding his Hibbing, MN middle-class origins.

One would have thought that would have taught him a lesson, but no.

For instance, concerning his Chronicles: Volume One book of 2004, Dylan biographer Clinton Heylin has shown skepticism concerning the factualness of the book: "Jesus Christ, as far as I can tell almost everything in the Oh Mercy section of Chronicles is a work of fiction. I enjoy Chronicles as a work of literature, but it has a much basis in reality as Masked And Anonymous…”

When he released his song, “Murder Most Foul,” he issued this statement:

“Greetings to my fans and followers with gratitude for all your support and loyalty across the years. This is an unreleased song we recorded a while back that you might find interesting. Stay safe, stay observant and may God be with you. Bob Dylan, March 27, 2020”

But Fiona Apple, who played piano on the song, later confirmed that the song had in fact been recorded only one month previously, in February 2020.

In his January 6, 2023 weekly column on CounterPunch, Jeffrey St. Clair notes, "From his recent interview with the Wall Street Journal, it sounds like Dylan’s gone back to Jesus: 'I’m a religious person. I read the scriptures a lot, meditate and pray, light candles in church. I believe in damnation and salvation, as well as predestination. The Five Books of Moses, Pauline Epistles, Invocation of the Saints, all of it.'”

Maybe that’s true, but given that in so many interviews Bob adopts a putting-one-on tone, why should one believe that?

Especially when compared with this previous statement of his from the article:

In 1997, he told David Gates of Newsweek:

   "Here's the thing with me and the religious thing. This is the flat-out truth: I find the religiosity and philosophy in the music. I don't find it anywhere else. Songs like "Let Me Rest on a Peaceful Mountain" or "I Saw the Light"—that's my religion. I don't adhere to rabbis, preachers, evangelists, all of that. I've learned more from the songs than I've learned from any of this kind of entity. The songs are my lexicon. I believe the songs." M.mk (talk) 14:53, 10 October 2024 (UTC)
What changes are you recommending for the article? --jpgordon 15:21, 10 October 2024 (UTC)
If I think of how this awkward info on the guy can be unawkwardly "woven in," I'll do that and half expect some Dylan worshipper to take it down.
Anyone else is welcome to do this.
I wanted the record to show, at least on the talk tab, this bad habit of Dylan's. M.mk (talk) 15:41, 13 October 2024 (UTC)
I'm not sure that anything Dylan has said is "illegal", he hasn't said these statements in a court, but I've seen it said many times that what he says about his life is often opaque or outright incorrect. Is there still something in the article about this? It seems to me there might have been at one time. If there isn't, it should probably be mentioned as adding difficulties for accurate biographies of him.Brianyoumans (talk) 20:22, 13 October 2024 (UTC)
I've added material noting that Chronicles borrows from many sources including Time magazine and the novels of Jack London. Also Heylin's comment in his 2023 biography that Chronicles is factually inaccurate. Mick gold (talk) 11:42, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for that.
"Thinking out loud":
Perhaps a separate page listing out examples of Dylan in this regard.
For instance, there is a separate page entitled, "Bob Dylan and the Band 1974 Tour."
With a separate page, this ongoing character flaw of his comes into "focus" compared to examples appearing hither and thither in his page.
I wonder if anyone who knew him, associates or other artists, ever commented on this.
Keith Richards, for instance, can be pretty blunt in his criticisms of other artists.
What I compiled above, however, might be seen as a mere stub page unless there are further examples.
Plus, what title would such a page have?
"Bob Dylan, Big Fat Liar," probably won't do. M.mk (talk) 18:11, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
Not a good idea, imho. Mick gold (talk) 23:29, 14 October 2024 (UTC)
Really, no, we don't need that. --jpgordon 01:28, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
Well, here's the link to the 1963 Newsweek outing for someone to add to that part of his life with the superscript for footnote, etc.:
https://www.newsweek.com/bob-dylans-75th-birthday-revisit-our-infamous-1963-profile-462801 M.mk (talk) 01:33, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
For me, the most significant outcome of Andrea Svedberg's 1963 Newsweek hack attack was that it inspired Dylan to write "Restless Farewell" on the The Times They Are a-Changin' album. (see p. 215 of Shelton's 1986 biography No Direction Home.) Here we are, 61 years later, Dylan is the most famous song writer of his generation and a Nobel Prize winner. "Oh a false clock tries to tick out my time/ To disgrace, distract, and bother me/ And the dirt of gossip blows into my face/ And the dust of rumors covers me/…So I’ll make my stand/ And remain as I am/ and bid farewell and not give a damn"
I'll try to add that info, and the Svedberg/Newsweek cite, to the "Restless Farewell" article when I have a moment. Mick gold (talk) 10:19, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
Sounds good, but the Newsweek article was dated, November 4, 1963 and Misplaced Pages has "Restless Farewell" recorded on October 31, 1963, tho, since, mags like Newsweek come out before their cover date, maybe he immediately wrote a song upon seeing their expose.
But regardless: "and not give a damn" -- at first he did. Maybe it was the Heylin Double Life book where I read it, but the Newsweek story had him lying low for a spell as a result of their story on him. M.mk (talk) 15:36, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
Maybe he immediately wrote and was able to record a song upon seeing the Newsweek expose, book studio time, round up producer Tom Wilson, and so forth. M.mk (talk) 15:42, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
Dylan was always a self-mythologizer; this is hardly a surprise. He creates and recreates himself, kinda the same way his idol Woody Guthrie did. M.mk seems to think this is a shameful thing, something to be written up as a criticism or a controversy. I disagree; it's worth a comment or two, at best. "Liar"? That's pretty nasty (and blows right through BLP). "To live outside the law you must be honest" -- yeah, and I don't see anywhere Dylan "lived outside the law". --jpgordon 15:55, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
Oh and by the way, magazines were and are indeed published a week to a month before the cover date. Here is the current The New Yorker cover, for example, dated a week from yesterday. --jpgordon 16:03, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
By titling this thread the way I did, I was alluding to a line from "Absolutely Sweet Marie."
It's a really good thing one cannot find hagiographic pieces on Misplaced Pages.
I am thankful for that. M.mk (talk) 16:19, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
In Heylin's Double Life, after the brief Gallup, NM quote by Karman in the New York Mirror, Heylin's first, rather dramatic, remark is, "It starts with a lie." (emphasis added) This as opposed to Heylin calling it self-mythologizing, Dylan recreating himself, or such. M.mk (talk) 17:05, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
After the Preface, that is how Heylin opens his book. M.mk (talk) 17:09, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
I think we should make it clear that in Chronicles and elsewhere, Dylan has frequently mythologized himself. OTOH... Dylan doesn't owe anyone the details of his life. Many people in show business are very close-mouthed about their past and private life. Some have created personas with back stories out of whole cloth, for various reasons. Some people talk a lot about their past, but people's memories of their past are frequently incorrect in various ways. Basically, I agree that it's a good point that he has told many tall tales about his past, that should be in the article (and Mick has been working on that), but I feel like you want us to make value judgements about Dylan, that he is a "liar", a bad person, for telling untruths. I'm not sure that's within our purview at Misplaced Pages. As long as the untruths are not told maliciously, I think to some extent it is just part of how many celebrities cope with or manage their fame and public image.Brianyoumans (talk) 17:20, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
Point taken.
Dylan early established himself with songs like "Blowin' in the Wind," "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll" and so forth (songs he later called finger-pointing songs, then saying he wasn't going to do those any more) as something like a truth-teller and this has "followed him around" to this very day whereby, for instance, even people like Robert Fripp would ask on a King Crimson forum several of years ago, "Would Dylan lie for money?" when making some point about integrity.
Well, in the case of Chronicles, for instance, yes, it seems so, Mr. Fripp. Sorry to burst your bubble.
Hopefully the outed other celebrities don't keep doing it.
"The truth is the most articulate thing you can say." --John Lydon M.mk (talk) 17:34, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
So write something, well sourced, backing your position, and see if you can get consensus for keeping it in the article. Your accusatory tone here doesn't indicate you'll do well at establishing the proper WP:NPOV; surprise us. --jpgordon 17:42, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
Maybe I will, but I had two very brief things taken down within minutes re Mal Evans, the Beatles' assistant, based on the new book about him, so who wants to expend the effort when emotions run so high about "idols" and one's work then gets removed?
(See talk tabs for "Here, There and Everywhere" and "Sgt. Pepper" (song) where I describe my attempts.)
Incidentally, the "typical" celebrity doesn't have a truth-teller "millstone" around their neck like Mr. Dylan created for himself with his early songs though I still would prefer people not make up things about their past no matter who they are. I guess that's just me. M.mk (talk) 17:54, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
Given that this is BOB DYLAN, I'm a little surprised that more people than three aren't weighing in -- or piling on me, heh.
But thanks for taking the time. M.mk (talk) 19:01, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
We've known for a long time not to use his Chronicles or anything else he's said or written as a WP:RS. That's all that really matters regarding his veracity. --jpgordon 20:30, 15 October 2024 (UTC)
"We've known for a long time not to use his Chronicles..."
Congratulations, since the average bloke plunking down $27 for the hardcover probably has no inkling of that cos there's nothing in the jacket copy nor a prefatory comment from Mr. Dylan on the liberties he takes.
The average bloke thinks he's gonna get something straight from the horse's mouth, but it's more like from the horse's ass.
As a result, Heylin says about it:
"He's not the first guy to write a biography that's a pack of lies..."
Note the L-word. M.mk (talk) 01:04, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
So under Rough and Rowdy Ways, concerning the info there for "Murder Most Foul," I added after the Dylan statement about the song:
"Fiona Apple, who played piano on the song, later revealed that the song had in fact been recorded only one month previously, in February 2020."
I tried to make the word "revealed" link to:
https://en.wikipedia.org/Murder_Most_Foul_(song)#Release
as a source for her statement, but then the word "revealed" would disappear behind a weird link thing. M.mk (talk) 16:12, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
Perhaps it would be better to just copy the source from the song article? However, I'm not sure the article needs this at all, both when the song was recorded, and whether "a while" could be "a month"... That's a pretty nitpicky. "a while" is a pretty vague term. Frankly, given the length of the article, I might vote for removing both Dylan's message about the song and the bit about Fiona Apple saying when it was recorded.Brianyoumans (talk) 17:28, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
I agree. Mick gold (talk) 00:02, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
I put it in because:
Dylan issued a statement on his website and via social media on the day that the single premiered calling it "an unreleased song we recorded a while back that you might find interesting". This spurred speculation that the recording may have been years old and perhaps even an outtake from his 2012 album Tempest.
Such speculation is only natural given his vague word choice.
Length of the article: A single added sentence to clarify Mr. Dylan's impreciseness is too much to bear?
Yeah, that's nitpicky all right.
I'll be the first to admit I have not mastered the superscript/footnote thing.
Fiona's statement comes from here:
Pelly, Jenn (December 8, 2020). "Fiona Apple on How She Broke Free and Made the Album of the Year". Pitchfork. Retrieved February 10, 2021. M.mk (talk) 17:47, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
Removing his message covers for him -- heh. M.mk (talk) 17:51, 16 October 2024 (UTC)
I propose, in the section "Protest and Another Side"
https://en.wikipedia.org/Bob_Dylan#Protest_and_Another_Side
After the paragraph that begins:
"By the end of 1963, Dylan felt manipulated and constrained by the folk and protest movements...."
The following about the 1963 Newsweek profile of Dylan:
In the November 4, 1963 issue of Newsweek, Dylan was profiled revealing that his colorful stories of his background such as working in a traveling carnival and where he hailed from were false, that his background was that he "grew up in a conventional home, and went to conventional schools" in Hibbing, Minnesota.
Indeed, biographer Clinton Heylin reports that the first time Dylan’s name appeared in print relative to his music career was in the August 6, 1961 New York Mirror where Pete Karman reported as follows, “Bob Dylan of Gallup, New Mexico played the guitar and harmonica…”
Biographer Robert Shelton reported that Dylan "exploded with anger" and went "underground" for weeks after reading the Newsweek piece.
Sources for footnoting (I am not at all experienced in those):
"Revisit Our Infamous 1963 Profile of Bob Dylan," https://www.newsweek.com/bob-dylans-75th-birthday-revisit-our-infamous-1963-profile-462801
Heylin, Clinton, The Double Life of Bob Dylan: A Restless Hungry Feeling, 1941-1966. Little, Brown & Co., 2021. ISBN: 9780316535212
M.mk (talk) 16:04, 17 October 2024 (UTC)

I’m not enthusiastic about M.mk’s proposed addition. I agree with what Brianyoumans wrote above, including the point that "Dylan doesn't owe anyone the details of his life." The article makes clear that he grew up in a middle class home in Hibbing and even commenced studies at the University of Minnesota. He dropped out after less than a year, travelled to New York to meet Woody Guthrie and then re-invented himself in the Greenwich Village folk scene. What catapulted Dylan to fame was not his fake biography but the quality of his songs. At the age of 22, "Blowin’ in the Wind" and "A Hard Rain’s a-Gonna Fall" earned him stardom at the Newport Folk Festival, the title "the voice of his generation" (which he loathed) and his songs were widely covered by other artists including Peter, Paul and Mary, Sonny and Cher and the Byrds who took his compositions into the pop charts. Fwiw the article notes: "At the University of Minnesota, Dylan told friends that Dillon was his mother's maiden name, which was untrue." Chronicles is not factually correct. And the Scorsese/Dylan Rolling Thunder film contains numerous fictitious elements.

As part of his lengthy musings on this subject M.mk proposed a Misplaced Pages article with the title "Bob Dylan, Big Fat Liar"; perhaps that was a joke but that still seems to be the thrust of M.mk’s latest contribution. I'll try to devise a sentence about the Newsweek article, but what is significant imho is the quality of Dylan’s work and how his continual musical and stylistic re-inventions propelled him towards the Nobel Prize in Literature. Mick gold (talk) 23:52, 17 October 2024 (UTC)

I'm not sure M.mk has the right wording, but Dylan creating this false past for himself, perhaps sort of an imitation of his hero Woody Guthrie, seems to be a fact of his very early career. It seems worthy of inclusion, especially since he seems to have continued to indulge in mythologizing himself at various times.Brianyoumans (talk) 01:25, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
Ok, I’ve added something about the Newsweek profile of Dylan and “Restless Farewell”.
According to Heylin, the chronology is: 23 October 1963, Andrea Svedburg interviews Dylan, who dislikes the tone of her questions and storms out. (Svedburg’s article includes the false rumor that “Blowin’ In The Wind” was not written by Dylan but by a New Jersey High School student.) The article hits the news stands around 29 October. 31 October, Dylan records “Restless Farewell”. See Heylin, 2009, Revolution In The Air, The Songs of Bob Dylan: Volume One, pp. 170–172. Mick gold (talk) 14:26, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
"Dylan creating this false past for himself, perhaps sort of an imitation of his hero Woody Guthrie, seems to be a fact of his very early career. It seems worthy of inclusion, especially since he seems to have continued to indulge in mythologizing himself at various times..."
Yes, indeed. Thank you.
"M.mk proposed a Misplaced Pages article with the title 'Bob Dylan, Big Fat Liar'; perhaps that was a joke..."
Yes, essentially a joke.
A note: People are free to like the guy as I once did (and still respect much of his work), but his "self-reinventions" and other, to me, lies, have me no longer trust anything he has to say.
Go well, Bob. M.mk (talk) 15:03, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
One of ya may as well add the backstory to "Restless Farewell" to the stub of info about the song:
https://en.wikipedia.org/Restless_Farewell M.mk (talk) 15:39, 20 October 2024 (UTC)
Sorry, ran across this and can't resist (there really could be a Misplaced Pages article on Bob's dishonesty and it would be "never ending" -- heh):
If you had the chance to ask Dylan one question, what would it be? What would you want to hear him talk about in an honest way?
In an honest way? If I could get him to answer honestly, I’d ask him something about either motorcycles or Child Ballads. Both of which fascinate me, both of which I have a similar passion to him for.
https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/bob-dylan-biographer-clinton-heylin-interview-double-life-book-1166784/ M.mk (talk) 19:33, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
I'm beginning to think that your continued use of the term "dishonest" is a violation of WP:BLP. --jpgordon 20:33, 23 October 2024 (UTC)
On the mere talk tab?
SORRY!!(!)!
This wouldn't be an issue were it not for Bob's, er, habit in this regard. Choose your euphemism. "Self-reinvention," that's sweet.
Me and Heylin -- whose book publishers violate the stricture also. M.mk (talk) 01:15, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
As a result of discussion on this page, I've re-written the Restless Farewell article to try to give a bit more nuance and depth to the story of the Newsweek interview and how BD transformed the incident into the final song on his third album. As per Jpgordon and Brianyoumans I think repeated use of the terms "liar" and "dishonesty" are a misrepresentation of Dylan and a violation of WP:BLP. Mick gold (talk) 14:57, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
I would agree with that. Reading over the article again (well, most of it, anyways) I think it gets across how Dylan is. He's brilliant, he tells truth, but he's also an unreliable narrator, especially of his own life. He's secretive and he's just seemingly odd at times. I don't think we're whitewashing him here. I think if we were going to call him "liar" I would want examples of how he had told malicious lies that hurt people. I don't see that. I see him spinning stories for his own sometimes obscure reasons.Brianyoumans (talk) 17:11, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
No. If we were going to call him "liar", we'd need reliable sources calling him this long before we even considered it, and we'd still be running afoul of WP:BLP. Now, are there instances of this "lying" where it actually has mattered in the least, other than frustrating occasional biographers and blurb writers? --jpgordon 19:30, 24 October 2024 (UTC)
Well, then, you're all agreed.
Open letter:
Dear Bob:
I am sorry for my reckless word choices herein.
I don't know what came over me.
As for telling the truth, why start now?
Best wishes,
Mark
P.S. Some "metaphysical" food for thought:
"...he who confuses you, confuses himself."
from Conversations with Seth, Vol. 2, Chapter 1 by Susan Watkins M.mk (talk) 15:39, 25 October 2024 (UTC)

Can we switch the photo back?

The lead photo that was changed recently is awful. Can it be switched back to the previous one (or any other one that isn't this horrible)? KokiriEmerald (talk) 19:36, 27 October 2024 (UTC)

No one is "Forever Young." M.mk (talk) 01:13, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
It would be good to find a more recent one that was a bit more flattering, I suppose. He looks kind of old and grumpy. On the other hand, maybe he *is* old and grumpy at this point. Brianyoumans (talk) 01:58, 28 October 2024 (UTC)

Accident?

There is scepticism in some quarters that the motorcycle accident ever happened. It seems to have no support independent of Bob. They suggest he just wanted to get out of the tiresome commitments he had ahead of him. Burraron (talk) Burraron (talk) 10:32, 22 November 2024 (UTC)

If you look at the Tony Scherman American Heritage piece that is used as a source in our article, it seems like there is some question as to the severity of his injuries and the reason for his long convalescence, but it seems likely there was an accident and that he had injuries - he did seek medical care immediately afterwards, he was seen wearing a neck brace, he has told various stories about the incident but never that it didn't happen. It may well be that he used it as an excuse to step back, but that's mentioned in our article.Brianyoumans (talk) 15:16, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
Concur with Brianyoumans. Dylan biographers agree with what Dylan himself wrote in his autobiography Chronicles: "I had been in a motorcycle accident and I'd been hurt, but I recovered. Truth was that I wanted to get out of the rat race." I don't think a single Dylan biographer writes it never happened. Mick gold (talk) 11:00, 26 November 2024 (UTC)

Hebrew name

Any thoughts on using the phrase "Hebrew name:" instead of just "Hebrew:" before his Hebrew name. The way it is now makes it look like the Hebrew is just a translation/transliteration of his English name, which it is not. -KaJunl (talk) 18:48, 27 December 2024 (UTC

I suggest moving the Hebrew name to a a separate sentence, such as the following.
His Hebrew name is Shabtai Zisl ben Avraham (Hebrew: שבתאי זיסל בן אברהם).
‐   William Avery (talk) 21:20, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
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