Blood On The Tracks (1975)
Album Info
Musicians:
Tony Brown -- Bass
Buddy Cage -- Steel Guitar
Paul Griffin -- Organ
Eric Weissberg & Deliverance
In the end, the plague touched us all. It was not confined to the Oran of Camus. No. It turned up again in America, breeding in-a-compost of greed and uselessness and murder, in those places where statesmen and generals stash the bodies of the forever young. The plague ran in the blood of men in sharkskin suits, who ran for President promising life and delivering death. The infected young men machine-gunned babies in Asian ditches; they marshalled metal death through the mighty clouds, up above God's green earth, released it in silent streams, and moved on, while the hospitals exploded and green fields were churned to mud.
And here at home, something died. The bacillus moved among us, slaying that old America where the immigrants lit a million dreams in the shadows of the bridges, killing the great brawling country of barnstormers and wobblies and home-run hitters, the place of Betty Grable and Carl Furillo and heavyweight champions of the world. And through the fog of the plague, most art withered into journalism. Painters lift the easel to scrawl their innocence on walls and manifestos. Symphonies died on crowded roads. Novels served as furnished rooms for ideology.
And as the evidence piled up, as the rock was pushed back to reveal the worms, many retreated into that past that never was, the place of balcony dreams in Loew's Met, fair women and honorable men, where we browned ourselves in the Creamsicle summers, only faintly hearing the young men march to the troopships, while Jo Stafford gladly promised her fidelity. Poor America. Tossed on a pilgrim tide. Land where the poets died.
Except for Dylan.
He had remained, in front of us, or writing from the north country, and remained true. He was not the only one, of course; he is not the only one now. But of all the poets, Dylan is the one who has most clearly taken the rolled sea and put it in a glass.
Early on, he warned us, he gave many of us voice, he told us about the hard rain that was going to fall, and how it would carry plague. In the teargas in 1968 Chicago, they hurled Dylan at the walls of the great hotels, where the infected drew the blinds, and their butlers ordered up the bayonets. Most of them are gone now. Dylan remains.
So forget the clenched young scholars who analyze his rhymes into dust. Remember that he gave us voice, When our innocence died forever, Bob Dylan made that moment into art. The wonder is that he survived.
That is no small thing. We live in the smoky landscape now, as the exhausted troops seek the roads home. The signposts have been smashed; the maps are blurred. There is no politician anywhere who can move anyone to hope; the plague recedes, but it is not dead, and the statesmen are as irrelevant as the tarnished statues in the public parks. We live with a callous on the heart. Only the artists can remove it. Only the artists can help the poor land again to feel.
And here is Dylan, bringing feeling back home. In this album, he is as personal and as universal as Yeats or Blake; speaking for himself, risking that dangerous opening of the veins, he speaks for us all. The words, the music, the tones of voice speak of regret, melancholy, a sense of inevitable farewell, mixed with sly humor, some rage, and a sense of simple joy. They are the poems of a survivor. The warning voice of the innocent boy is no longer here, because Dylan has chosen not to remain a boy. It is not his voice that has grown richer, stronger, more certain; it is Dylan himself. And his poetry, his troubadour's traveling art, seems to me to be more meaningful than ever. I thought, listening to these songs, of the words of Yeats, walker of the roads of Ireland: "We make out of the quarrel with others rhetoric, but of the quarrel with ourselves, poetry."
Dylan is now looking at the quarrel of the self. The crowds have moved back off the stage of history; we are left with the solitary human, a single hair on the skin of the earth. Dylan speaks now for that single hair.
If you see her,
Say hello.
She might be in Tangiers...*
So begins one of these poems, as light as a slide on ice, and as dangerous. Dylan doesn't fall in. Instead, he tells us the essentials; a woman once lived, gone off, vanished into the wild places of the earth, still loved.
If you're makin' love to her,
Kiss her for the kid.
Who always has respected her,
for doin' what she did...*
It is a simple love song, of course, which is the proper territory of poets, but is about love filled with honor, and a kind of dignity, the generosity that so few people can summon when another has become a parenthesis in a life. That song, and some of the other love poems in this collection, seem to me absolutely right, in this moment at the end of wars, as all of us, old, young, middle-aged, men and women, are searching for some simple things to believe in. Dylan here tips his hat to Rimbaud and Verlaine, knowing all about the seasons in hell, but he insists on his right to speak of love, that human emotion that still exists, in Faulkner's phrase, in spite of, not because.
And yes, there is humor here too, a small grin pasted over the hurt, delivered almost casually, as if the poet could control the chaos of feeling with a few simply chosen words:
Life is sad
Life is a bust.
All ya can do.
Is do what you must.
You do what you must do,
And ya do it will.
I'll do it for you,
Ah, honey baby, can't ya tell?**
A simple song. Not Dante's Inferno, and not intended to be. But a song which conjures up the American road, all the busted dreams of open places, boxcars, the Big Dipper pricking the velvet night. And it made me think of Ginsberg and Corso and Ferlinghetti, and most of all, Kerouac, racing Deam Mariarty across the country in the Fifties, embracing wind and night, passing Huck Finn on the riverbanks, bouncing against the Coast, and heading back again, with Kerouac dreaming his songs of the railroad earth. Music drove them; they always knew they were near New York when they picked up Symphony Sid on the radio. In San Francisco they declared a Renaissance and read poetry to jazz, trying to make Mallarme's dream flourish in the soil of America. They failed, as artist generally do, but in some ways Dylan has kept their promise.
Now he has moved past them, driving harder into self. Listen to "Idiot Wind." It is a hard, cold-blooded poem about the survivor's anger, as personal as anything ever committed to a record. And yet is can also stand as the anthem for all who feel invaded, handled, bottled, packaged; all who spent themselves in combat with the plague; all who ever walked into the knives of humiliation or hatred. The idiot wind trivialized lives into gossip, celebrates fad and fashion, glorifies the dismal glitter of celebrity. Its products live on the covers of magazines, in all of television, if the poisoned air and dead grey lakes. But most of all, it blows through the human heart. Dylan knows that such a wind is the deadliest enemy of art. And when the artists die, we all die with them.
Or listen to the long narrative poem called "Lily, Rosemary And The Jack of Hearts." It should not be reduced to notes, or taken out of context; it should be experienced in full. The compression of story is masterful, but its real wonder is in the spaces, in what the artist left out of his painting. To me, that has always been the key to Dylan's art. To state things plainly is the function of journalism; but Dylan sings a more fugitive song: allusive, symbolic, full of imagery and ellipses, and by leaving things out, he allows us the grand privilege of creating along with him. His song becomes our song because we live in those spaces. If we listen, if we work at it, we fill up the mystery, we expand and inhabit the work of art. It is the most democratic form of creation.
Totalitarian art tells us what to feel. Dylan's art feels, and invites us to join him.
That quality is in all the work in this collection, the long, major works, the casual drawings and etchings. There are some who attack Dylan because he will not rewrite "Like a Rolling Stone" or "Gates of Eden." They are fools because they are cheating themselves of a shot at wonder. Every artist owns a vision of the world, and he shouts his protest when he sees evil mangling that vision. But he must also tell us the vision. Now we are getting Dylan's vision, rich and loamy, against which the world moved so darkly. To enter that envisioned world, is like plunging deep into a mountain pool, where the rocks are clear and smooth at the bottom.
So forget the Dylan whose image was eaten at by the mongers of the idiot wind. Don't mistake him for Isaiah, or a magazine cover, or a leader of guitar armies. He is only a troubadour, blood brother of Villon, a son of Provence, and he has survived the plague. Look: he has just walked into the courtyard, padding across the flagstones, strumming a guitar. The words are about "flowers on the hillside bloomin' crazy/Crickets talkin' back and forth in rhyme..." A girl, red-haired and melancholy, begins to smile. Listen: the poet sings to all of us:
But I'll see you in the sky above,
In the tall grass,
In the ones I love.
You're gonna make me lonesome when you go.***
-- Pete Hamill, New York, 1974
Cover Photo -- Paul Till
Back Cover Illustration -- David Oppenheim
Art Direction -- Ron Coro
*from "If You See Her, Say Hello," ©1974 Ram's Horn Music. Used by Permission. All rights reserved.
**from "Buckets of Rain," ©1974 Ram's Horn Music. Used by Permission. All rights reserved.
***from "You're Gonna Make Me Lonseome When You Go," ©1974 Ram's Horn Music. Used by Permission. All rights reserved.

Comments
I can relate to almost very song...
Plus it is so raw and heartfelt.
The only song I don't like is "Idiot Wind". No particular reason, it just doesn't do anything for me. But the rest is brilliant, especially "Lily, Rosemary, and the Jack of Hearts". I think that's one of his most underrated songs.
And this is probably just me, but the Jack of Hearts character reminds me of Kerouac's Dr. Sax in a way.
The Brilliance that Heartbreak Produced
"Behind every beautiful thing, there's been some kind of pain."
It is great to listen to the New York Sessions and the Tapes to see how these songs evolved.
I have never thought that Lily flowed with the rest of the songs, but just the same I love it. And Dylan can do whatever he wants so I have to come to accept its placement.
What an album. It's one of those that you listen to and have to really question if it is your favorite if it is not already.
Each song is just incredible. I woud not even know how to distinguish the better from the best.
I know you are only allowed one album in the island scene, however, if I were allowed oh up to five, I think this one would come along.
Back again
Like Blonde on Blonde, most critics and Dylan fans cite this is album as a highlight. Well, it's true. Each track proves that Dylan is still Dylan and one of the greatest songwriters of all time. Essential.
A masterpiece
That's definitely a masterpiece, a great sounding album full of great songs. There's only Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts that I don't like, but Tangled up in blue, Simple twist of fate, You're a big girl now, If you see her say hello, Idiot wind, Meet me in the morning and Shelter from the storm are between my favourites.
couldn't agree less...
No Rating
Idiot Wind - weakest on the collection? Idiot Wind - goes on and on?
Sorry mate (McRamashmawhatever...)but you're very much mistaken, fact.
Maybe you're the type who needs to listen to the Hard Rain version to 'get it', but shouldn't need to as it's undisputedly in his top 3. This album is too good. I don't know how a guy can produce such brilliance all round, it's magic.
Blood On The Tracks
I know it seems like I’m just disagreeing with the commonly held Dylan perceptions on just about everything. But I’m not doing it just to be contrary. Case in point: I, like most everybody else, actually like Blood On The Tracks. I’ve never heard the original New York pressing, but for my money the Minneapolis tracks fit in and work perfectly. In fact, I can’t even tell which ones were re-recorded. I know most people like to look at this album as an emotionally raw and painful, if cathartic, album of heartbreak (much like John Lennon’s Plastic Ono Band.) But if you don’t pay to much attention to the lyrics, it’s a fairly upbeat, up-tempo collection of songs. Particularly bouncy are the two songs with some of the most maudlin words: “You’re Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go” and “If You See Her, Say Hello”. “Meet Me In The Morning” is yet another one of Bob’s re-interpretations of the 12-bar Blues format. In fact, even the lyrics to “Lily Rosemary And The Jack Of Hearts” are light-hearted. Really, only “Idiot Wind” and “You’re A Big Girl Now” are particularly slow, sad, or are in a minor key musically. While “You’re Big Girl Now” is one of my favorite songs on the album, I never quite understood what the big deal about “Idiot Wind” was. It’s a good song, but really the weakest one on this collection. And it does just go on and on. “Tangled Up In Blue”, “Shelter From The Storm”, and “Simple Twist Of Fate” are all bona-fide classics. “Buckets Of Rain” not so much. And while overall this is an unarguably great collection of songs, I don’t find myself listening to it that often. Clearly it’s not because the subject matter strikes a nerve. I don’t know – maybe it’s just too perfect and there are not enough weird fun little flaws to get caught up in. Still I always do enjoy it on those rare occasions when I do play it.