Performed Literature: Words and Music by Bob DylanBob Dylan is not a poet. He is a singer-songwriter, a performing artist. The unit of his art, as collected and documented by his intended audience, is the live performance. Right now, no existing technological tool can give researchers ready access to his entire corpus of work. Revised from the author's Ph.D. dissertation (UC Berkeley, 1978) and again from its first edition (Indiana UP, 1982), Performed Literature develops a methodology for close analysis of verbal art that is heard, not seen, using as comparative examples 24 performances of 11 songs by Bob Dylan. The second edition adds a preface, two major appendices and one minor one, and a detailed index. |
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Page 34
... four measures behind each sung line as regularly as do the snare and cymbals . In addition , the organ divides each stanza into four distinct segments : a four - line unit , then another four lines , then two lines , then three , all ...
... four measures behind each sung line as regularly as do the snare and cymbals . In addition , the organ divides each stanza into four distinct segments : a four - line unit , then another four lines , then two lines , then three , all ...
Page 46
... four evenly spaced syllables that convey most of the verbal meaning . In a line like " So I cut off my hair and I rode straight away " in the first stanza , Dylan's voice and the musical beats ( marked here as = ) pick out the four main ...
... four evenly spaced syllables that convey most of the verbal meaning . In a line like " So I cut off my hair and I rode straight away " in the first stanza , Dylan's voice and the musical beats ( marked here as = ) pick out the four main ...
Page 80
... four four - beat measures behind " Once upon a time you dressed so fine / You threw the bums a dime in your prime , " the opening lines of the song much resemble the " overwhelming majority of English nursery rhymes [ which ] have ...
... four four - beat measures behind " Once upon a time you dressed so fine / You threw the bums a dime in your prime , " the opening lines of the song much resemble the " overwhelming majority of English nursery rhymes [ which ] have ...
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Common terms and phrases
ABCB aesthetic ain't album artistic audience aural Babe Baby Ballad bass Beatles becomes Blonde on Blonde Bob Dylan chord change concert version couplet culture drums Dylan's songs Dylan's voice effect electric guitar emotional feel female Ferry's four fourth stanza Freewheelin Hard Rain harmonica Highway 61 Highway 61 Revisited Idiot Wind Idiot wind Blowing imagery imitate instrumental break Isis Joan Baez John Wesley Harding listener listener's melody meter Miss Lonely musical beat musicians narrative narrator narrator's oral organ chords outtake Oxford Town patterns performance phrase piano pitch plays poetic recorded refrain released rhyme word riff rock Rolling Stone Sad-Eyed Lady scene second stanza sexual Shelter shift singers sings someone song's sound stanza studio version Subterranean Homesick Blues suggests sung lines sweet lady syllables tambourine tape textual third stanza throughout the song Univ unresolved verse vowel woman Woody Woody Guthrie words and music York