One Word: Dylan At the request of another orger, I've started this thread.
This thread is intended as a place for the uninitiated to begin exploring, and for the true-blue Dylan lovers to share. I know it will attract many Mr. Jones, but I'll do my best to ignore them unless they are adding something useful to the discussion. Those wishing to chime in with the predictable "overrated" rants are encouraged to start a new thread to that effect. I will contribute there as well. (Unlike Jackson, more than one Dylan thread is allowed on the board!) Otherwise either myself or another Dylan lover will label you "Mr. Jones," while having a hearty laugh at your expense, before moving on.
That said...
There are several Bob Dylan's over the course of his long and varied career, and many (if not most) of them spawned entirely new sub-genres of music.
First he took folk music, which up to that point had it's roots in "traditional" music consisting of songs (often by unknown composers) being handed down by word of mouth. The art laid in artist putting their unique spin on well-known material. Dylan took this genre and imbued it with original compositions filled with surrealism, romanticism, humor and introspection. By doing so, this would be the first of several new genres he would single-handedly create: Contemporary Folk Music.
He popularized and defined the modern singer-songwriter. That is, the singer who sang deeply of his own personal fears, pains, anger, etc. While he wasn't the first singer to write or the first writer to sing, he alone elevated it to this new level of realism. Before him, singers and songwriters relied (for the most part) on singing about love or using innuendo or cliche (as Cole Porter did) to mask a deeper meaning. Make no mistake, virtually EVERY popular singer-songwriter who ever employed Pop Music as a means to express himself in a deeply personal, existential or highly introspective way, songs owes more than a little to Bob Dylan.
Dylan never rested on his laurels. Just as the Folk world was elevating him to god-like status within their musical community, he plugged in and went electric, leaving folk behind and singlehandedly, once again creating an entirely new musical genre: Folk Rock. This genre would essentially remain dominant in the charts for the next 20-30 years.
He did this one more time in the 60's with the recording and release of Nashville Skyline, creating the new sub-genre of Country Rock which would spawn countless huge acts in the next decade.
Dylan continued to break new ground throughaout his career, creating at least one more sub-genre, Christian Rock, not to mention inventing the modern "boxed set" (Biograph) as a large-scale career retrospective that combines well-known hits with previously unheard "vault" releases from his past. This practice is so ubiquitous these days, that its completely taken for granted. His unreleased "vault" was so renowned by the end of the 60s that it spawned a new industry of "bootleg" unofficial recordings which didn't exist until the first bootleg ever, "Great White Wonder" hit the shelves. The fact that he didn't even create the bootleg industry intentionally and that the bootleg industry spawned despite his best wishes is besides the point. It was the HUNGER for Dylan's unreleased material that spawned this cottage industry.
He redefined singing as well, for the first time providing an avenue for singers without traditionally "pretty" voices to be heard and express themselves in a way that was still considered to be beautiful without being "pretty." "Beautiful But Not Pretty" was a still a relatively new concept in even the Fine Arts, let alone Pop Music!
All of the above only begins to scratch the surface of Dylan's incomprehensible contribution to music. For the uninitiated, I'm happy to guide you as you begin a lifelong journey... If you can handle it. "There is two kinds of music, the good, and the bad. I play the good kind."
Louis Armstrong |