Bob Dylan Nato Col Nome Di Robert Allen Zimmerman Duluth 24 Maggio 1941 È Un Cantautore E Compositore Statunitense. Distintosi Anche Come Scrittore Poeta Pittore Attore E Conduttore Radiofonico È Una Delle Piú Importanti Figure Degli Ultimi Cinquant’anni Nel Campo Musicale In Quello Della Cultura Popolare E Secondo Molti Della Letteratura.La Maggior Parte Delle Sue Canzoni Piú Conosciute Risale Agli Anni Sessanta Quando L’artista Si È Posto Come Figura Chiave Del Movement Il Movimento Di Protesta Americano. Canzoni Come «Blowin' In The Wind» E «The Times They Are A-Changin'» Sono Diventate Gli Inni Dei Movimenti Pacifisti E Per I Diritti Civili. Erede Di Woody Guthrie Ha Scritto Innumerevoli Canzoni E Ballate Molte Delle Quali Entrate A Far Parte Dell'immaginario Collettivo Di Più Generazioni Blowin' In The Wind My Back Pages Chimes Of Freedom Song To Woody Desolation Row O Mr Tambourine Man Per Citarne Solo Alcune . Ha Sempre Rifiutato Ogni Tipo Di Etichetta Che Per Lui È Stata Coniata Ma Per Molti Suoi Ammiratori È Stato A Lungo Un Paladino Dei Reietti E Dei Diseredati Per Altri - E Per La Critica Ufficiale E Underground - Semplicemente Una Rockstar. Dylan È Anche Attore Regista Cinematografico E Autore Di Colonne Sonore. Nel 2004 Ha Dato Alle Stampe La Prima Parte Della Sua Trilogia Autobiografica Chronicles - Volume 1. Secondo La Prestigiosa Rivista Musicale Rolling Stone - Che Ha Chiamato A Giudicarle Centosettantadue Fra Rockstar Produttori E Critici Discografici - La Sua Canzone Like A Rolling Stone È La Migliore Fra Le Principali 500 Di Tutti I Tempi. Un Musical Dal Titolo The Times They Are A-Changin' Centrato Sulle Sue Canzoni È Stato Ideato Da Twyla Tharp E Messo In Scena A Broadway Ad Ottobre 2006.
Frogtoon Musica - Informazioni sulla canzone: Ballad of a Thin Man
"Ballad Of A Thin Man" Is A Song Written And Recorded By Bob Dylan Released On The Album Highway 61 Revisited In 1965. A Dark And Menacing-Sounding Song "Ballad Of A Thin Man" Addresses A Certain "Mr. Jones" Telling Him Repeatedly That He Simply Doesn't "know What's Happening". The Song's Lyrics Have Mr. Jones Facing A Wild Nonsensical Hallucinatory Carnival-Like World And The Character Is Portrayed As A Clueless Poser Who Cannot Deal With It All. The "identity" Of Mr. Jones Has Long Been In Dispute. When Asked About It In An Interview In 1965 Dylan Responded "He's A Pinboy. He Also Wears Suspenders. He's A Real Person. You Know Him But Not By That Name... I Saw Him Come Into The Room One Night And He Looked Like A Camel. He Proceeded To Put His Eyes In His Pocket. I Asked This Guy Who He Was And He Said "That's Mr. Jones." Then I Asked This Cat "Doesn't He Do Anything But Put His Eyes In His Pocket?" And He Told Me "He Puts His Nose On The Ground." It's All There It's A True Story." The Opening Lines Of The Song "You Walk Into The Room With Your Pencil In Your Hand " Appear To Lend Credence To The Notion That "Mr. Jones" May Have Been A Journalist. In A Mid-1980s Interview With Q Magazine Dylan Appeared To Identify Mr. Jones As Max Jones A Former Melody Maker Critic Supporting The Theory That "Mr. Jones" Was Simply One Of The Many Music Critics Who Didn't "get" Dylan's Songs Especially The More Allegorical Ones He Wrote In The Mid-1960s.Another Theory Is That The Jones In Question Was Jeffrey Owen Jones Later A Film Professor At Rochester Institute Of Technology . As An Intern For Time Magazine Jones Had Inteviewed Dylan Just A Day Before The Musician's Legendary Performance At The 1965 Newport Jazz Festival. In Todd Haynes' 2007 Surrealist Dylan Biopic I'm Not There Actor Bruce Greenwood Plays "Keenan Jones" A Journalist Who Doesn't Understand The Meaning Behind The Dylan-Esque Character Jude Quinn's Songwriting. In The Film Jones Is Sent Through A Hallucinatory Nightmare Sequence While Stephen Malkmus' Cover Of "Ballad Of A Thin Man" Plays In The Background. Greenwood Also Plays Pat Garrett In The Richard Gere Segment Of The Film. It Has Also Been Speculated Citation Needed That The Song Is About Brian Jones Co-Founder And Guitarist Of The Rolling Stones. Dylan Was A Friend Of Jones And Watched His Lengthy Downfall. Apart From All Of These Possible Dylan-Specific References The Term "Mr. Jones" Is In General Broadly Understood As An Allusion To The Phrase "Keeping Up With The Joneses" — A Reference To The Prototypical Materialistic American Family So At Odds With The Outlook On Life Espoused By Dylan And The Counterculture Of The 1960s. Another Possible Interpretation Of The Song Is That It Is About A Man Coming To Grips With His Own Homosexuality. Several Lyrics Appear To Reference Phallic Symbols "He Hands You A Bone" "With Your Pencil In Your Hand" "A One-Eyed Midget" "Sword Swallower" "He Hands You Back Your Throat" And There Are Possible Allusions To Fellatio "Well The Sword Swallower He Comes Up To You / And Then He Kneels" "Here's Your Throat Back Thanks For The Loan" "Give Me Some Milk Or Else Go Home" And Transvestism "He Clicks His High Heels" As Well. In This Interpretation Of The Song Some Of The Lyrics "How Does It Feel To Be Such A Freak" "There Ought To Be A Law / Against You Comin' Around" Could Allude To Society's Intolerance Of Homosexuality. Lyrics You Walk Into The Room With Your Pencil In Your Hand You See Somebody Naked And You Say "Who Is That Man?" You Try So Hard But You Don't Understand Just What You'll Say When You Get Home Because Something Is Happening Here But You Don't Know What It Is Do You Mister Jones? You Raise Up Your Head And You Ask "Is This Where It Is?" And Somebody Points To You And Says "It's His" And You Say "What's Mine?" And Somebody Else Says "Where What Is?" And You Say "Oh My God Am I Here All Alone?" Because Something Is Happening Here But You Don't Know What It Is Do You Mister Jones? You Hand In Your Ticket And You Go Watch The Geek Who Immediately Walks Up To You When He Hears You Speak And Says "How Does It Feel To Be Such A Freak?" And You Say "Impossible" As He Hands You A Bone Because Something Is Happening Here But You Don't Know What It Is Do You Mister Jones? You Have Many Contacts Among The Lumberjacks To Get You Facts When Someone Attacks Your Imagination But Nobody Has Any Respect Anyway They Already Expect You To Just Give A Check To Tax-Deductible Charity Organizations You've Been With The Professors And They've All Liked Your Looks With Great Lawyers You Have Discussed Lepers And Crooks You've Been Through All Of F. Scott Fitzgerald's Books You're Very Well Read It's Well Known Because Something Is Happening Here But You Don't Know What It Is Do You Mister Jones? Well The Sword Swallower He Comes Up To You And Then He Kneels He Crosses Himself And Then He Clicks His High Heels And Without Further Notice He Asks You How It Feels And He Says "Here Is Your Throat Back Thanks For The Loan" Because Something Is Happening Here But You Don't Know What It Is Do You Mister Jones? Now You See This One-Eyed Midget Shouting The Word "NOW" And You Say "For What Reason?" And He Says "How?" And You Say "What Does This Mean?" And He Screams Back "You're A Cow Give Me Some Milk Or Else Go Home" Because Something Is Happening Here But You Don't Know What It Is Do You Mister Jones? Well You Walk Into The Room Like A Camel And Then You Frown You Put Your Eyes In Your Pocket And Your Nose On The Ground There Ought To Be A Law Against You Comin' Around You Should Be Made To Wear Earphones Because Something Is Happening Here But You Don't Know What It Is Do You Mister Jones?