Bob Dylan
Wins 2016 Nobel Prize in
Literature
Bob Dylan performing at the Hollywood Palladium in
2012.
Credit Christopher Polk/Getty Images
Source: The New York Times
LONDON
— The singer and songwriter Bob Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature on Thursday
for “having created new poetic expressions within the great American song
tradition,” in the words of the Swedish Academy.
He
is the first American to win since the novelist Toni Morrison, in 1993. The announcement, in
Stockholm, came as something of a surprise. Although Mr. Dylan, 75, has been
mentioned often as having an outside shot at the prize, his work does not fit
into the traditional literary canons of novels, poetry and short stories that
the prize has traditionally recognized.
“Mr.
Dylan’s work remains utterly lacking in conventionality, moral sleight of hand,
pop pabulum or sops to his audience,” Bill Wyman wrote in a 2013 Op-Ed essay in The New York Times arguing the
case for Mr. Dylan’s getting the award. “His lyricism is exquisite; his
concerns and subjects are demonstrably timeless; and few poets of any era have
seen their work bear more influence.”
Bấm vào ảnh dưới đây xem Bob Dylan và ca khúc
THINGS HAVE CHANGED
BOB DYLAN
Biography
Bob
Dylan is a folk rock singer-songwriter whose career began in the early 1960s
with songs that chronicled social issues like war and civil rights.
Synopsis
Folk rock singer-songwriter Bob Dylan was born Robert Allen Zimmerman on May 24, 1941, in Duluth, Minnesota. While attending college, he began performing folk and country songs, taking the name "Bob Dylan." In 1961 Dylan signed his first recording contract. Showing no signs of slowing down, Dylan has continued to tour in recent years, with his recent studio albums including Together Through Life (2009) and Tempest (2012). In 2016, the legendary singer-songwriter received the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Early Life
Folk rock singer-songwriter Bob Dylan was born Robert Allen Zimmerman on May 24, 1941, in Duluth, Minnesota. Driven by the influences of early rock stars like Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and Little Richard (whom he used to imitate on the piano at high school dances), the young Dylan formed his own bands, including the Golden Chords, as well as a group he fronted under the pseudonym Elston Gunn. While attending the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, he began performing folk and country songs at local cafés, taking the name "Bob Dillon." (Despite a popular myth to the contrary, the pseudonym was not inspired by Welsh poet Dylan Thomas—who he later professed to dislike—but by the main character from the popular Western television series Gunsmoke.)
Folk Singing
In 1960, Bob dropped out of college and moved to New York, where his idol, the legendary folk singer Woody Guthrie was hospitalized with a rare hereditary disease of the nervous system. He visited with Guthrie regularly in his hospital room; became a regular in the folk clubs and coffeehouses of Greenwich Village; met a host of other musicians; and began writing songs at an astonishing pace, including "Song to Woody," a tribute to his ailing hero. In the fall of 1961, after one of his performances received a rave review in The New York Times, he signed a recording contract with Columbia Records, at which point he legally changed his surname to Dylan. Released early in 1962, Bob Dylan contained only two original songs, but showcased Dylan's gravelly-voiced singing style in a number of traditional folk songs and covers of blues songs.
The 1963 release of The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan
marked Dylan's emergence as one of the most original and poetic voices in the
history of American popular music. The album included two of the most memorable
1960s folk songs, "Blowin' in the Wind" (which later became a huge
hit for the folk trio Peter, Paul, and Mary) and
"A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall." His next album, The Times They Are A-Changin',
firmly established Dylan as the definitive songwriter of the 60s protest
movement, a reputation that only increased after he became involved with one of
the movement's established icons, Joan Baez, in
1963. While his romantic relationship with Baez lasted only two years, it
benefited both performers immensely in terms of their music careers—Dylan wrote
some of Baez's best-known material, and Baez introduced him to thousands of
fans through her concerts. By 1964 Dylan was playing 200 concerts annually, but
had become tired of his role as "the" folk singer-songwriter of the
protest movement. Another
Side of Bob Dylan, recorded in 1964, was a much more personal,
introspective collection of songs, far less politically charged than Dylan's
previous efforts.
Reinventing His Image
In 1965, Dylan scandalized many of his folkie fans by recording the half-acoustic, half-electric album Bringing It All Back Home, backed by a nine-piece band. On July 25, 1965, he was famously booed at the Newport Folk Festival when he performed electrically for the first time. The albums that followed, Highway 61 Revisited (1965)—which included the seminal rock song "Like a Rolling Stone"—and the two-record set Blonde on Blonde (1966) represented Dylan at his most innovative. With his unmistakable voice and unforgettable lyrics, Dylan brought the worlds of music and literature together as no one else had.
Over the course of the next three decades,
Dylan continued to reinvent himself. Following a near-fatal motorcycle accident
in July 1966, Dylan spent almost a year recovering in seclusion. His next two
albums, John Wesley
Harding (1968)—including "All Along the Watchtower,"
later recorded by guitar great Jimi Hendrix—and
the unabashedly country-ish Nashville
Skyline (1969) were far more mellow than his earlier works. Critics
blasted the two-record set Self-Portrait
(1970) and Tarantula,
a long-awaited collection of writings Dylan published in 1971, also met with a
poor reception. In 1973, Dylan appeared in Pat
Garrett and Billy the Kid, a feature film directed by Sam Peckinpah.
He also wrote the film's soundtrack, which became a hit and included the now-classic
song, "Knockin' on Heaven's Door."
Touring and Religion
In 1974, Dylan began his first full-scale tour since his accident, embarking on a sold-out nationwide tour with his longtime backup band, the Band. An album he recorded with the Band, Planet Waves, became his first No. 1 album ever. He followed these successes with the celebrated 1975 album Blood on the Tracks and Desire (1976), each of which hit No. 1 as well. Desire included the song "Hurricane," written by Dylan about the boxer Rubin "Hurricane" Carter, then serving life in prison after what many felt was an wrongful conviction of triple homicide in 1967. Dylan was one of many prominent public figures who helped popularize Carter's cause, leading to a retrial in 1976, when he was again convicted.
After a painful split with his wife, Sara
Lowndes—the song "Sara" on Desire
was Dylan's plaintive but unsuccessful attempt to win Lowndes back—Dylan again
reinvented himself, declaring in 1979 that he was a born-again Christian. The
evangelical Slow Train
Coming was a commercial hit, and won Dylan his first Grammy Award.
The tour and albums that followed were less successful, however, and Dylan's
religious leanings soon became less overt in his music.
Rock Star Status
Beginning in the 1980s, Dylan began touring full time, sometimes with fellow legends Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and the Grateful Dead. Notable albums during this period included Infidels (1983); the five-disc retrospective Biograph (1985); Knocked Out Loaded (1986); and Oh Mercy (1989), which became his best-received album in years. He recorded two albums with the all-star band the Traveling Wilburys, also featuring George Harrison, Roy Orbison, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne. In 1994, Dylan returned to his folk roots, winning the Grammy Award for Best Traditional Folk Album for World Gone Wrong.
In 1989, when Dylan was inducted into the
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Bruce
Springsteen spoke at the ceremony, declaring that "Bob freed the mind
the way Elvis freed the body ... He invented a new way a pop singer could
sound, broke through the limitations of what a recording artist could achieve,
and changed the face of rock and roll forever." In 1997, Dylan became the
first rock star ever to receive Kennedy Center Honors, considered the nation's
highest award for artistic excellence.
Dylan's 1997 album Time Out of Mind
re-established this one-time folk icon as one of the preeminent of rock's wise
men, winning three Grammy Awards. He continued his vigorous touring schedule,
including a memorable performance in 1997 for Pope John Paul II in which he
played "Knockin' on Heaven's Door," and a 1999 tour with Paul Simon. In
2000, he recorded the single "Things Have Changed" for the soundtrack
of the film Wonder Boys,
starring Michael
Douglas. The song won Dylan a Golden Globe and an Academy Award for Best
Original Song.
Dylan then took time out from his music to
tell the story of his life. The singer released Chronicles: Volume One, the first in a
three-book memoir series, in the Fall of 2004. Dylan gave his first full
interview in 20 years for a documentary released in 2005. Entitled No Direction Home: Bob Dylan,
the film was directed by Martin Scorsese.
Recent Work & Honors
In 2006, Dylan released the studio album Modern Times. After hitting stores in late August, it reached the top of the album charts the next month. A mixture of blues, country, and folk, the album was praised for its rich sound and imagery. Several critics also remarked the album had a playful, knowing quality. Showing no signs of slowing down, Dylan continued to tour throughout the first decade of the 21st century, and released the studio album Together Through Life in April 2009.
In 2010, he released a bootleg album called
The Witmark Demos,
followed by a new boxed set entitled Bob
Dylan: The Original Mono Recordings. In addition, he exhibited 40
of his original paintings for a solo show at the National Gallery of Denmark.
In 2011, he released yet another live album, Bob
Dylan in Concert - Brandeis University 1963, and in September 2012,
released his newest studio album, Tempest.
Shadows in the Night,
a cover album of American standards, followed in 2015.
In October 2016, Dylan was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature "for having created new
poetic expressions within the great American song tradition." He became
the first American to receive the honor since novelist Toni Morrison
in 1993.
Personal Life
In addition to Baez, Dylan was at one point romantically linked to another singer, gospel icon Mavis Staples, and wished to marry her, though the two never took the trip down the aisle. Dylan and Lowndes, who married in 1965 and divorced in 1977, had four children together: Jesse, Anna, Samuel and Jakob. Dylan also adopted Lowndes's daughter, Maria, from a previous marriage. Jakob Dylan is now the lead singer of a popular rock band the Wallflowers.
Source: http://www.biography.com