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1%%Zero-Context Examples, or examples where you just say the trope applies and don't explain how or why, are useless and will be commented out of the Wiki so no one has to waste their time by reading them.
2
3[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/ef2dcfb9_9eb1_44da_94d0_884f8bdaf5dd.jpeg]]
4[[caption-width-right:350: Bob Dylan at the start of his career.]]
5
6[floatboxright:Influences:
7
8+ Music/ChuckBerry, Martin Carthy, Music/JohnnyCash, Francis James Child, The Clancy Brothers, Music/WoodyGuthrie, Music/JohnLeeHooker, Music/RobertJohnson, Creator/JackKerouac, Music/LittleRichard, Music/ElvisPresley, Ma Rainey, Pete Seeger, Music/HankWilliams
9
10Influenced:
11
12+ Everyone else that came after him
13]
14
15->''"Oh, hear this, Robert Zimmerman, I wrote a song for you''\
16''About a strange young man called Dylan with a voice like sand and glue''\
17''His words of truthful vengeance, they could pin us to the floor''\
18''Brought a few more people on and put the fear in a whole lot more"''
19-->-- '''Music/DavidBowie''', "Song for Bob Dylan", ''Music/HunkyDory''
20
21One of the most influential living songwriters in pop music, and an American cultural icon. Music critics refer to him by [[LastNameBasis last name alone]] (sometimes even just his first name will suffice), and references to his life and career seem to pop up everywhere. Website/{{Wikipedia}} is a great place to [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bob_Dylan learn the particulars]], so we'll stick to the tropetacular.
22
23Robert Dylan[[note]]All evidence suggests that he kept Robert as his legal first name when he officially changed his surname. It's even on his passport, as shown in a pic in the booklet for ''The Bootleg Series Vol, 1-3''. Still, [[DoNotCallMePaul it's probably best not to call him "Robert"]][[/note]] (born Robert Allen Zimmerman; May 24, 1941) was born in Duluth, Minnesota to an electrical-supplies shopkeeper and a homemaker. Growing up in Northern Minnesota's small, tight-knit Jewish community (the Zimmermans moved from Duluth to Hibbing, an hour's drive away, in 1947), young Bobby was a somewhat shy boy who showed interest in literature, art, and music. He dropped out of the University of Minnesota at [[UsefulNotes/TwinCities Minneapolis]] after completing his freshman year in spring 1960, and, at the age of 19, moved to UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity the following January with a guitar, some flannel shirts, [[TheDrifter and not much else]]. Adapting his new surname in homage to Creator/DylanThomas, he performed folk songs in bohemian Greenwich Village coffee shops and bars with an affected accent, inspired by Music/WoodyGuthrie, and became a fixture of the local "folk scene"—which doubled as a leftist political circle deeply interested in the UsefulNotes/CivilRightsMovement. Dylan wrote songs specifically for this group, the most famous being "Blowin' In The Wind" and "The Times They Are A-Changin'". Although these two {{protest song}}s are still his biggest claim to fame today—he's the guy who "brought politics" into music, somehow—[[BrieferThanTheyThink this "topical" phase of his career lasted little more than twelve months]].
24
25In the summer 1965, he took the stage at the Newport Folk Festival with some rock musician buddies and an electric guitar. They plugged in, played very loud rock music with crazy-ass lyrics to some angry college kids, and thereby "[[GenreShift went electric]]." It was not a [[TheyChangedItNowItSucks popular decision]] at the time. His image from this period is the most enduring -- [[SunglassesAtNight dark sunglasses indoors]], [[MessyHair a giant dome of frizzy hair]], [[ScooterRidingMod mod wardrobe]], and [[TheStoner baked as a Belgian waffle]].
26
27His most famous song from this "electric" period is "Like a Rolling Stone". Twice as long or loud as anything else on the radio at the time, with snarling lyrics about chrome horses and cat-loving diplomats, the song somehow rose to number two on the U.S. charts (number one was "Eve of Destruction," now widely seen as a knockoff of Dylan's style whose creator ended up as a OneHitWonder). It's worth noting here that he has ''never had a number one hit on the'' Billboard ''Hot 100'', the chart of record in the United States,[[note]]"Like a Rolling Stone" ''did'' hit the top, for one week, on ''Billboard'''s main rival, the ''Cashbox'' Top Pop Singles chart[[/note]] almost certainly making him the most popular and influential songwriter in the entire English language with that distinction.
28
29After a long world tour backed by what would eventually become Music/TheBand, full of combative press conferences and booing crowds, Dylan dropped off the radar in 1966, one year prior to the [[TheSixties ''Summer of Love"]], in part to recover from injuries sustained during a minor motorcycle accident (debate goes on to this day as to whether Dylan faked, or at least greatly exaggerated these injuries, or even conjured the incident out of whole cloth as an excuse to disappear from the limelight for awhile). He did not perform at Woodstock (despite - or perhaps ''because of'' - the fact that it took place basically down the road from his house), and he did not protest the UsefulNotes/VietnamWar. Bob Dylan closed out the Sixties via duet with Music/JohnnyCash. He nonetheless remains synonymous with said decade's "turbulence".
30
31Besides "going electric", the other major moment where he rebooted his career was the "born again phase", which began with his conversion from Judaism to (Evangelical Protestant) Christianity[[note]]Specifically the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Association_of_Vineyard_Churches Vineyard]] movement[[/note]] in 1979. Attendant to this were some angry, but lyrically intricate, ChristianRock albums, and some audience-baiting tours where he started out only doing his newer material, to reaction that ranged from polite appreciation to outright hostility. He eventually relented and [[PanderingToTheBase started doing a few older songs again]]. After a few years he returned to more secular themes, but has never quite abandoned the doomsaying [[TheEndIsNigh street preacher]] point of view. On the other hand, in his personal life, he's been seen celebrating the [[UsefulNotes/JewishHolidays High Holidays]] at various [[UsefulNotes/{{Judaism}} Chabad Lubavich]] Hasidic congregations; make of that what you will.
32
33Dylan still records music, and is once again sacrosanct among music critics and record store employees. As ever, this is mostly on the strength of his lyrics—Dylan won the UsefulNotes/NobelPrizeInLiterature in 2016, becoming the first songwriter to receive this honor. Nonetheless, his nasal growl of a singing voice remains a point of contention among listeners. The stock Bob Dylan joke is that [[TheUnintelligible nobody can understand a word he says]], and he is usually depicted as talking exactly as he sings.
34
35In December 2020, he sold his entire catalog to Creator/UniversalMusicGroup in a deal that’s estimated to be worth about $300 million, likely the biggest of its kind in history.
36
37In addition to the [[UsefulNotes/NobelPrizeInLiterature Nobel Prize]], he has won a Best Original Song [[UsefulNotes/AcademyAward Oscar]] for "Things Have Changed," the UsefulNotes/PresidentialMedalOfFreedom, and a UsefulNotes/PulitzerPrize Special Award in the Arts. Dylan was inducted into the UsefulNotes/RockAndRollHallOfFame in 1988 and the UsefulNotes/SongwritersHallOfFame in 1982, and received a UsefulNotes/KennedyCenterHonors award in 1997.
38
39Due to being more widely acclaimed for his songwriting than his singing voice, he's often seen as the poster child for the CoveredUp trope, with many of his songs not achieving mainstream popularity until they were covered by other artists. Music/TheByrds had great success covering "Mr. Tambourine Man" and "My Back Pages", and Music/JimiHendrix's cover of "All Along the Watchtower" is considered one of the most iconic rock n' roll recordings of all time (and one of the pieces of music that defined the 1960s). Even Music/GunsNRoses, of all bands, found success covering his 1973 song "Knockin' on Heaven's Door" in the early 1990s.
40
41----
42!!Studio Discography:
43
44[[index]]
45* 1962 — ''Music/BobDylanAlbum''
46* 1963 — ''Music/TheFreewheelinBobDylan''
47* 1964 — ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin''
48* 1964 — ''Music/AnotherSideOfBobDylan''
49* 1965 — ''Music/BringingItAllBackHome''
50* 1965 — ''Music/Highway61Revisited''
51* 1966 — ''Music/BlondeOnBlonde''
52* 1967 — ''Music/JohnWesleyHarding''
53* 1969 — ''Music/NashvilleSkyline''
54* 1970 — ''Music/SelfPortrait''
55* 1970 — ''Music/NewMorning''
56* 1973 — ''Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid''
57* 1973 — ''Dylan''
58* 1974 — ''Music/PlanetWaves'' [[note]]A collaboration with Music/TheBand[[/note]]
59* 1975 — ''Music/BloodOnTheTracks''
60* 1975 — ''Music/TheBasementTapes'' [[note]]Recorded in 1967-1968. A collaboration with Music/TheBand[[/note]]
61* 1976 — ''Music/{{Desire}}''
62* 1978 — ''Music/StreetLegal''
63* 1979 — ''Music/SlowTrainComing''
64* 1980 — ''Saved''
65* 1981 — ''Shot of Love''
66* 1983 — ''Infidels''
67* 1985 — ''Empire Burlesque''
68* 1986 — ''Knocked Out Loaded''
69* 1988 — ''Down in the Groove''
70* 1989 — ''Music/OhMercy''
71* 1990 — ''Under the Red Sky''
72* 1992 — ''Music/GoodAsIBeenToYou''
73* 1993 — ''World Gone Wrong''
74* 1997 — ''Music/TimeOutOfMind''
75* 2001 — ''Love and Theft''
76* 2006 — ''Modern Times''
77* 2009 — ''Together Through Life''
78* 2009 — ''Music/ChristmasInTheHeart''
79* 2012 — ''Tempest''
80* 2015 — ''Shadows in the Night''
81* 2016 — ''Fallen Angels''
82* 2017 — ''Triplicate''
83* 2020 — ''Music/RoughAndRowdyWays''
84
85----
86!!Live Discography:
87
88* 1971 — ''Music/TheConcertForBangladesh''[[note]]as one of the contributing artists, with his concert set as side five[[/note]]
89* 1974 — [[/index]]''Before The Flood''[[note]]A collaboration with Music/TheBand[[/note]]
90* 1976 — ''Hard Rain''
91* 1979 — ''Bob Dylan at Budokan''
92* 1984 — ''Real Live''
93* 1989 — ''Dylan and the Dead''[[note]]A collaboration with Music/TheGratefulDead[[/note]]
94* 1993 — ''The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration''[[note]]A various artists tribute to Bob Dylan, with Dylan himself appearing on it[[/note]]
95* 1995 — ''MTV Unplugged''
96
97----
98!!Archive Releases:
99
100* 1985 — ''Biograph''
101* 1991 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 1–3 - Rare and Unreleased 1961–1991''
102* 1998 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 4 - Bob Dylan Live 1966, The "[[NeverTrustATitle Royal Albert Hall]]" Concert''
103* 2001 — ''Live 1961–2000: Thirty-Nine Years of Great Concert Performances''
104* 2002 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 5 - Bob Dylan Live 1975, The Rolling Thunder Revue''
105* 2004 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 6 - Bob Dylan Live 1964, Concert At Philharmonic Hall''
106* 2005 — ''Live at the Gaslight 1962''
107* 2005 — ''Live at Carnegie Hall 1963''
108* 2005 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 7 - [[{{Rockumentary}} No Direction Home]]: The Soundtrack''
109* 2008 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 8 - Tell Tale Signs: Rare and Unreleased 1989–2006''
110* 2010 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 9 - The Witmark Demos 1962–1964''
111* 2011 — ''In Concert - Brandeis University 1963''
112* 2013 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 10 - Another Music/SelfPortrait (1969–1971)''
113* 2014 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 - Music/TheBasementTapes Complete''
114* 2015 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 12 - The Cutting Edge 1965–1966''
115* 2016 — ''The 1966 Live Recordings''
116* 2017 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 13 - Trouble No More 1979–1981''
117* 2018 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 14 - [[Music/BloodOnTheTracks More Blood, More Tracks]]''
118* 2019 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 15 - Travelin' Thru, 1967–1969'' (featuring Music/JohnnyCash)
119* 2021 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 16 - Springtime in New York 1980–1985''
120* 2023 — ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 17 - Fragments: Time Out of Mind Sessions (1996–1997)''
121
122----
123!!Bob Dylan in film:
124
125* ''[[Film/DontLookBack Dont Look Back]]'' (1967) (documentary of Dylan's 1965 British tour) %% The actual title did not include an apostrophe.
126* ''Film/PatGarrettAndBillyTheKid'' (1973) (Dylan composed the soundtrack and acted in a supporting role)
127* ''Renaldo and Clara'' (1978) (Directed by Dylan himself, this is a combination of a concert movie and a fictional narrative. Dylan and his wife Sara play the title roles.)
128* ''Film/TheLastWaltz'' (1978) (Directed by Creator/MartinScorsese, farewell concert of Music/TheBand; Dylan makes a memorable appearance near the end.)
129* ''No Direction Home'' (2005) (a comprehensive, 3 1/2 hour documentary on Dylan's life and career directed by Creator/MartinScorsese).
130* ''Film/ImNotThere'' (2007) (A very unusual biopic, in which seven different actors play different characters based on Dylan in different parts of his life)
131* ''Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story'': Another documentary also directed by Creator/MartinScorsese, produced by Creator/{{Netflix}}, released in 2019. This one features Scorsese himself interviewing Dylan.
132* ''A Complete Unknown'': An upcoming film directed by Creator/JamesMangold, starring Creator/TimotheeChalamet as Dylan.
133----
134!!Subterranean Homesick Tropes
135
136* AfterTheEnd: "Talkin' WorldWarIII Blues" from ''Music/TheFreewheelinBobDylan'' plays it for BlackComedy.
137* AmbiguouslyChristian: While his "born-again" phase is considered a thing of the past, he has dropped some vague hints in interviews that he is still a practicing Christian. The 2012 album ''Tempest'' notably contains the most references to Christianity since ''Shot of Love'', the album that concluded his born-again trilogy, with many of them surprisingly [[ChristianityIsCatholic Catholic]] in tone ("I can hear a sweet voice gently calling. Must be the Mother of Our Lord"). For the 2018 Christmas season, he briefly displayed [[https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/a3m8qj/a-critical-analysis-of-bob-dylans-2018-xmas-lights a Nativity scene]] (an inflatable one) in front of his house.
138* AppliedMathematics: "Love Minus Zero/No Limit" from ''Music/BringingItAllBackHome'' is an equation. "Love - 0 / ∞"
139* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking: "Shot of Love" from ''Music/ShotOfLove''.
140--> ''Why would I want to, take your life, you've only murdered my father, raped his wife, tattooed my babies with a poisoned pen, mocked my God, humiliated my friend.''
141* ArtistAndTheBand: He has played with Music/TheBand (who served as a backing band) on stage in the mid-sixties and seventies. Their first concerts were billed as Bob Dylan & The Band, and the 1975 album ''Music/TheBasementTapes'' was also credited in that manner (with Dylan writing a majority of the songs though you could also call it an album by The Band).
142* AStormIsComing: So many songs, but most notably "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall", "All Along The Watchtower", "The Times They Are A-Changin'", "Blowin' In The Wind", "Shelter From The Storm", "When The Ship Comes In" and "Subterranean Homesick Blues".
143* AsTheGoodBookSays: There have been ''books'' written about the use of Biblical allusions in his songs. Suffice it to say, between studying with a rabbi for his bar mitzvah when he was 13, to converting to Christianity in his 30s, Dylan knows his Hebrew and Christian Bibles well.
144* BalladOfX: "Ballad of a Thin Man", "Ballad of Hollis Brown", "Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest".
145* TheBandMinusTheFace: Dylan's mid-60's touring band would go on to considerable success in their own right as, well, Music/TheBand.
146* Creator/TheBeatGeneration: Dylan has listed Kerouac among his influences and actually became close friends with Creator/AllenGinsberg.
147* BigNo: PlayedForLaughs (probably) in "In Search Of Little Sadie"
148* {{Blackface}}: He never donned it directly, but rather wore ironic white-face make-up during the Rolling Thunder Revue. He has also been open about the influence of minstrelsy on his music, including naming his album ''Love and Theft'' after Eric Lott's academic book ''Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class.'' A minstrel named Oscar Vogel appears in ''Masked and Anonymous'', and he mentions a "blackface singer"in "Murder Most Foul".
149* BlaseBoast: PlayedForLaughs ([[ShrugOfGod probably]]) by the concert introduction he used for years, starting in 2002. It was adapted from a paragraph in an article about him in a Buffalo, New York newspaper. Dylan apparently either found it flattering or thought it was really corny, and turned it into a RunningGag, with his stage manager Al Santos reciting these lines in a flat, rushed manner:
150--> ''Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome: the poet laureate of rock 'n' roll. The voice of the promise of TheSixties counterculture. [[GenreTurningPoint The guy who forced]] {{folk|Music}} into bed with {{rock|AndRoll}}. Who [[TheRockstar donned make-up]] in TheSeventies and disappeared into [[ArtisticStimulation a haze of substance abuse]]. Who emerged to [[ChristianRock find Jesus]]. Who was written off as [[OldSoldier a has-been]] by the end of TheEighties, and who [[HesBack suddenly shifted gears]] releasing some of the strongest music of his career [[OldMaster beginning in the late]] [[TheNineties Nineties]]. Ladies and gentlemen - Creator/{{Columbia|Records}} [[AllAPartOfTheJob recording artist]] Bob Dylan!''
151* BlowThatHorn: Ram's Horn Music, the name of his publishing company for most of his albums in TheSeventies, seems like an obvious reference to the ''shofar'', which goes along with reports that he was more strongly embracing Judaism at that point in his life.
152* BreakTheHaughty: "Like A Rolling Stone".
153* BreakingTheFourthWall: After a [[ListSong whole long list of song titles]] in its lyrics, "Murder Most Foul" ends by referencing itself.
154-->Play "The Blood-Stained Banner", play "Murder Most Foul"
155* [[BreatherEpisode Breather Song]]: On ''Music/TheFreewheelinBobDylan'', the comical "Bob Dylan's Blues" and "I Shall Be Free" are there to help offset the album's heavier songs. While not quite as comical, the lyrically wry and up-tempo "You're Gonna Make Me Lonesome When You Go" serves a similar role on ''Music/BloodOnTheTracks''.
156* BrickJoke: Responsible for possibly the longest brick joke ever. In 1964, when asked by a reporter what what product might entice him to sell out, Dylan replied, "Ladies' undergarments." Forty years later in 2004, he appeared in a Victoria's Secret ad.
157* BSide: Generally his singles just had album tracks on the flip side, sometimes even tracks from previous albums. But once in a while he'd slip in a rare song on a B-side that wouldn't get released anywhere else, like a version of "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues" recorded live in England (on the flip of "I Want You" in 1966), and a version of the cowboy song "Spanish Is the Loving Tongue", where he accompanied himself on piano (on the flip of "Watching the River Flow" in 1971). "George Jackson" was unique because both sides of the single had the same song, but in different arrangements. There was the "acoustic version" (Dylan with just acoustic guitar and harmonica), and the "big band version" (Dylan again on acoustic guitar and harmonica, along with a bass, a piano, a steel guitar, drums, and backing vocalists).
158* ButtMonkey: The narrator of "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues".
159* CallBack:
160** He quotes the opening line of "Positively 4th Street" ("You've got a lot of nerve to say you are my friend") at the end of its follow-up single, "Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window?"
161** "Stayin' up for days in the Chelsea Hotel/Writing 'Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands' for you" ("Sara")
162** The first track on ''Street Legal'' (1978), "Changing of the Guards", opens with the lines "Sixteen years/Sixteen banners united over the field". The album was his sixteenth studio album[[note]]excepting the outtakes collection ''Dylan'' and the archive release ''Music/TheBasementTapes''[[/note]], released sixteen years after his 1962 debut.
163** During a 1979 concert on his first "Christian" tour:
164--> ''I told you "The Times They Are A-Changin' " and they did! I said the answer was "Blowin’ In the Wind" and it was! And I'm saying to you now, Jesus is coming back.''
165** "Po' Boy" from 2001 may be one to "Motorpsycho Nitemare":
166--> ''My mother was a [[FarmersDaughter daughter of a wealthy farmer]]\
167My father was a TravelingSalesman, I never met him''
168* CanonDiscontinuity: For a while after his conversion to Christianity, he refused to play any of his pre-Gospel songs.
169** The 1973 album ''Dylan'', released by Columbia after he left the label, and filled with questionable-quality outtakes, basically was treated as though it never really existed by both Dylan and the label when he returned to Columbia after two albums.
170* ChekhovsGunman: "Brownsville Girl". The narrator and his girlfriend stop at the house of someone named Henry Porter, only to find out he's gone out for a while. Later in the song [[spoiler:this trope gets thoroughly averted and {{Lampshaded}}: "The only thing we knew for sure about Henry Porter was that his name wasn't Henry Porter", and Porter is never mentioned again.]]
171* ChekhovsVolcano: "Black Diamond Bay".
172* ChristmasSongs: Dylan's 2009 release, ''Music/ChristmasInTheHeart'', consists of various Christmas songs from Dylan's formative years, ''played straight''.
173* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: In interviews he can come off as this, but how much of that is genuine and how much is an elaborate put-on is one of the eternal debates in his career.
174* CoolShades: Was rarely seen without his shades as part of his new rock star image in the mid-60's.
175** Also featured in the cover photo for ''Infidels'' in 1983.
176* {{Corpsing}}: At the start of "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream" because the rest of the band missed their cue.
177** Not to mention ''Music/TheBasementTapes'' out-take "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=726M-ErLYss See You Later, Allen Ginsberg]]."
178** You can hear him chuckle a little on "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" when he sings "''what'' did you meet" instead of "''who'' did you meet" and has to correct himself the second time.
179* CoverAlbum: A bunch. ''Music/GoodAsIBeenToYou'' and ''World Gone Wrong'' consist of solo acoustic performances of old folk standards. ''[[ExecutiveMeddling Dylan]]'' is an album of cover version out-takes. ''Music/ChristmasInTheHeart'' has him covering ChristmasSongs. The late 2010s saw him do three albums in a row (''Shadows In The Night'', ''Fallen Angels'' and ''Triplicate''), of covers of Tin Pan Alley standards (many of which are associated with Music/FrankSinatra). Also, ''Music/BobDylanAlbum'', ''Music/SelfPortrait'' and ''Down In The Groove'' have more covers than original material.
180* TheCoverChangesTheGender: He famously averted this in his take on "The House of the Rising Sun". He also retained the female perspective of the original when he covered the British folk song "Young But Daily Growing" during ''Music/TheBasementTapes'' sessions.
181* TheCoverChangesTheMeaning: Ray Price's 1968 country hit "Take Me As I Am (Or Let Me Go)" is addressed to a lover who the narrator thinks is trying to make him "a stand-in for an old love." When he covered it on ''Music/SelfPortrait'' two years later, the subtext of Dylan sending a message to listeners who believed that [[TheyChangedItNowItSucks He Changed, Now He Sucks]] was glaring almost to the point of {{Anvilicious}}ness:
182--> ''Why must you always try to make me over?''
183--> ''Take me as I am or let me go...''
184--> ''You're trying to reshape me in a mold...''
185--> ''In the image of someone you used to know''
186* CoverVersion: For an artist often praised more for his songwriting than his performances, Dylan loves doing other people's material - ranging from folk and blues songs to Music/FrankSinatra and Music/TheClash. After Music/WarrenZevon announced he had cancer, Dylan started playing 2-3 Warren Zevon covers at every show for an entire tour.
187* CrapsackWorld: Many of his songs, especially from the early 80's onwards. For instance, "Blind Willie [=McTell=]" from "The Bootleg Series".
188--> ''Well, God is in his heaven''
189--> ''And we all want what's His''
190--> ''But power and greed''
191--> ''And corruptible seed''
192--> ''Seems to be all that there is''
193** Pretty much the entirety of 1997's ''Music/TimeOutOfMind'' might be counted under this trope: Dylan sounds so depressed and sick of life on the album that some people expressed mild surprise that after recording it he didn't just go and jump off a bridge somewhere.
194* TheDarknessBeforeDeath: "Knocking on Heaven's Door" is about a man who knows he is about to die ("I feel I'm knocking on Heaven's door"); he also notes ''"it's getting dark, too dark to see"''. The song was written for the soundtrack of ''Film/PatGarrettAndBillyTheKid'' (1973), where it plays while a lawman who has been mortally wounded in a gunfight is dying.
195* DeadpanSnarker: Often in interviews, especially in his younger days.
196-->'''Reporter:''' How many, would you say, could be classified as protest singers today?
197-->'''Bob Dylan:''' Uh... how ''many''?
198-->'''Reporter:''' Yes. Are there many?
199-->'''Bob Dylan:''' I think there's about... 136?
200* TheDissTrack: He specialized in songs that sneeringly excoriate various unnamed individuals. Four particularly memorable examples are listed.
201** "Positively 4th Street" takes pointed potshots at a two-faced "friend."
202--->Yes, I wish that for just one time you could stand inside my shoes,
203--->You'd know what a drag it is to see you.
204** "Like a Rolling Stone" sharply criticizes a former privileged and haughty woman who has fallen down on her luck.
205--->You used to laugh about
206--->Everybody that was hanging out,
207--->Now you don't talk so loud,
208--->Now you don't seem so proud
209--->About having to be scrounging your next meal.
210** "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" is a cutting indictment of a former lover.
211--->Goodbye's too good a word, babe,
212--->So I'll just say fare thee well.
213--->I ain't saying you treated me unkind,
214--->You could have done better but I don't mind,
215--->You just kinda wasted all of my precious time,
216--->But don't think twice, it's all right.
217** "Ballad of a Thin Man" is a snarling indictment of a pseudo-intellectual who dislikes Dylan's music.
218--->Well, you walk into the room like a camel, and then you frown.
219--->You put your eyes in your pocket and your nose on the ground.
220--->There ought to be a law against you comin' around.
221--->You should be made to wear earphones.
222--->'Cause something is happening and you don't know what it is,
223--->Do you, Mr. Jones?
224* DistinctDoubleAlbum: ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biograph_(album) Biograph]]'' was a 5-LP set in its original release, and each side seemed to have a rough theme: 1--SillyLoveSongs; 2--[[ProtestSong Protest Songs]]; 3--RockAndRoll; 4--[[{{Poetry}} Poetic Songs]]; 5--GenreRoulette; 6--Torch Songs; 7--AuthorFilibuster; 8--IntercourseWithYou; 9--[[IWantSong "I Want" Songs]]; 10--ChristianRock.[[note]] 5, 7 and 9 are debatable since they aren't very uniform, but the others seem straightforward enough.[[/note]]
225* DocumentaryOfLies: ''Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story'' gleefully mixes fact, fuzzy memories, and outright fiction. [[https://www.rollingstone.com/movies/movie-news/rolling-thunder-revue-bob-dylan-story-doc-whats-fake-847231/ Here's]] a list of the things that are obviously made up.
226-->'''Old!Dylan:''' If someone's wearing a mask, he's gonna tell you the truth. If he's not wearing a mask, it's highly unlikely.
227* DoNotCallMePaul:
228** You apparently have to get special permission to mention the name "Zimmerman" in his presence.[[note]]He did actually legally change his name from Robert Allen Zimmerman to Bob Dylan in August 1962.[[/note]] Some people (including, if ''Magazine/RollingStone'' is to be believed, UsefulNotes/BarackObama) do get permission.
229** He's never answered to the name "Robert". In youth he was Bobby, and in ''Chronicles'' he admitted that when he adopted Bob Dylan as his StageName it took a while to get used to being called Bob instead of Bobby.
230* DyingTown: "North Country Blues" from ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin''
231* EarlyBirdCameo: The earliest-known mention of him in the national press was, most curiously, [[https://twitter.com/bob_notes/status/992611173072818180 a syndicated 1961 newspaper article]] aimed at parents looking for toys to buy their kids for Christmas, printed a few weeks after he recorded his debut album, but before it was released.
232-->''"Any parent who thinks it's easy to get music out of a harmonica ought to try it himself" says noted harmonica virtuoso Bob Dylan.''
233* EmergencyBroadcast: He mentions CONELRAD in "Talkin' World War III Blues".
234* EpicRocking: He's basically the guy who invented the notion that rock songs could be really long. "Desolation Row", "Highlands", "Sad-Eyed Lady Of The Lowlands", "Joey", "Brownsville Girl" and "Tempest" are all longer than ten minutes!
235** And "Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts" isn't far off at just under nine.
236** 2020's "Murder Most Foul" takes the crown at an impressive '''''16:56'''''.
237* EveryScarHasAStory: "Where Are You Tonight (Journey Through Dark Heat)" from ''Music/StreetLegal''.
238--> ''If you don't believe there's a price for this sweet paradise''
239--> ''Just remind me to show you the scars''
240* EverybodyMustGetStoned: {{Trope Namer|s}}, from the chorus of "Rainy Day Woman # 12 & 35"
241** Which is a non-sexual DoubleEntendre. In the verses, "they'll stone you" refers to the kind of persecution symbolized by Biblical stoning. The chorus plays up the drug associations of the word.
242** "Stoned" was originally a slang term for being drunk on alcohol, only later was it reserved for marijuana intoxication. Ray Charles had a hit that same year with the song "Let's Go Get Stoned".
243* FaceDeathWithDignity: "Let Me Die in My Footsteps".
244* FadingIntoTheNextSong: On ''Music/{{Desire}}'', "Romance In Durango" cross-fades into "Black Diamond Bay".
245** On ''The Bootleg Series: Vol. 3'', "When The Night Comes Falling From The Sky" cross-fades into "Series Of Dreams".
246* LeFilmArtistique: ''Renaldo and Clara''.
247** And ''Masked and Anonymous''.
248** ''Eat the Document''.
249* ForeverYoungSong: The TropeCodifier, featured in two different versions on ''Music/PlanetWaves''.
250* FrameUp: The principle accusation of "Hurricane" - that Rubin Carter was set up for "something that he never done."
251-->To see him obviously framed,
252-->Couldn't help but make me feel ashamed to live in a land
253-->Where justice is a game.
254* FrankensteinsMonster: "My Own Version of You" uses it as a metaphor for... fittingly, quite a few things.
255* FullNameUltimatum: At least two other artists[[note]]Music/JohnLennon in "God" and Music/DavidBowie in "Song For Bob Dylan" from ''Music/HunkyDory''[[/note]] have used the name "Zimmerman" to express their disillusionment with him. Music/TheByrds, on the other hand, used it as a joking retort to Dylan's joking TakeThat in "You Ain't Going Nowhere" ("Zimmerman" fit the melody and rhyme better than "Dylan").
256* GardenOfEden: The singer of "The Gates of Eden" views the concept of Eden very cynically, ironically comparing it to his own life and the state of the world.
257* GayParee: Mentioned in "Not Dark Yet".
258* GeorgeLucasAlteredVersion: Not his music, which he's left alone apart from occasional remixes, but the published lyrics of his songs will sometimes differ from what's heard on the albums. Dylan has final editorial approval over lyrics before they get published, and apparently will decide once in a while to tinker with them if he thinks he can improve on them. Another situation is when the original transcriber isn't sure what Dylan sang, and Dylan is asked to clarify. The ''Mixing Up The Medicine'' photo book has a picture of a typewritten manuscript for "Santa Fe" (recorded during the session for ''Music/TheBasementTapes'') that's literally arranged as a fill-in-the-blank exercise: Dylan finished each line in pen, and in many cases the lyrics were clearly not what was actually being sung on the recording.
259* GratuitousLatin: In the most bizarre moment on ''Music/ChristmasInTheHeart'' (which is saying a lot), he opens "O Come All Ye Faithful" with the original "Adeste Fideles" verse. His pronunciation isn't bad, but it's still Bob Dylan singing Latin.
260* GreatestHitsAlbum: Several, with many of them helping to codify different approaches to this trope. 1967's ''Bob Dylan's Greatest Hits'' is still many listeners' gateway into his work and also gave "Positively 4th Street" its first album appearance. The double album ''Greatest Hits Volume II'' (1971) was probably the TropeMaker for the now-almost universal practice of including newly-recorded bonus songs on a Greatest Hits Album. It's also notable because Dylan chose the songs and did the track sequence. 1985's ''Biograph'' was a 5-record (and 3-CD) mix of hits, studio out-takes and live cuts that helped lay the groundwork for the CD box set boom. For a while those were it, but starting in the mid-90s there have been numerous career-spanning sets released.
261* HangingJudge: In "Seven Curses" and "Lily, Rosemary and the Jack of Hearts".
262* HaveAGayOldTime: "Standing in the Doorway"--"I'm strumming on my gay guitar." But since it was written and recorded in 1997 it's a case of Dylan purposely using the old meaning to convey anachronism.
263** A deliberate DoubleEntendre in "Caribbean Wind", where the line "as the gay night wore on" is immediately followed by "where men bathed in perfume."
264** "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35", noted for its "Everybody must get stoned" chorus, where he decided to write the song about being physically stoned to death, rather than getting high, with such lyrics as "They’ll stone you and then say you are brave, They’ll stone you when you are set down in your grave" and "They'll stone ya when you’re tryin’ to keep your seat". He announced, when performing at the Royal Albert Hall, London: "I never have and never will write a drug song." Nevertheless, some commentators labeled it a drug song due to its "Everybody must get stoned" line.
265* HarshVocals: A trademark, though his voice didn't get really guttural until around ''Under the Red Sky'' in 1990, and it wasn't until ''Music/TimeOutOfMind'' that he went full-Music/TomWaits with it.
266* HeAlsoDid: Dabbled in acting, most notably a supporting part in 1973 film ''Film/PatGarrettAndBillyTheKid'', for which Dylan also composed the soundtrack. (This included BreakawayPopHit "Knockin' on Heaven's Door".) He's also an avid painter with several exhibitions under his belt, though fans' mileage very much varies on whether he's actually any good at it.
267* HeelRealization: "What Good Am I?" from ''Music/OhMercy''
268* HilariousOuttakes:
269** The false start to "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream", complete with producer Tom Wilson's helpless laughter.
270** "Suze (The Cough Song)", an instrumental that ends abruptly when Dylan starts coughing into his harmonica and claims [[BlatantLies it's supposed to fade out right there]].
271* HyperlinkStory: "Lily, Rosemary & The Jack of Hearts", "Black Diamond Bay".
272* IKnowYouKnowIKnow: "Tell Me, Momma".
273* IntercourseWithYou: "Lay Lady Lay".
274** Actually, most of ''Music/NashvilleSkyline'' is made of this. And even before, there was "I'll Be your Baby Tonight" from ''Music/JohnWesleyHarding''.
275** Subverted in the unreleased "If You Gotta Go, Go Now (Or Else You've Got to Stay All Night)".
276-->It ain't that I'm askin' anything you never gave before
277-->It's just that I'll be sleepin' soon, it'll be too dark for you to find the door
278** "On a Night Like This" and "One More Weekend" are about Marital Intercourse With You.
279* IsNothingSacred: "It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)" from ''Music/BringingItAllBackHome''
280--> ''Disillusioned words like bullets bark''
281--> ''As human gods aim for their mark''
282--> ''Make everything from toy guns that spark''
283--> ''To flesh-coloured Christs that glow in the dark''
284--> ''It’s easy to see without looking too far''
285--> ''That not much is really sacred''
286* ItWillNeverCatchOn:
287** After Columbia Records executive John Hammond signed Dylan and produced his debut album, the album only sold 5,000 copies in its initial release. Other Columbia executives started calling Dylan "Hammond's Folly".
288** A 1965 review of "Like a Rolling Stone" in ''Melody Maker'' by Bob Dawbarn was headlined "Thank Goodness We Won't Get This Six-Minute Bob Dylan Single in Britain." In reporting that CBS Records hadn't announced plans to release the song, Dawbarn was merciless in his criticism of it, bemoaning the "monotonous melody" and "Dylan's expressionless intoning", while also noting that "Music/MickJagger fans will also be distressed to learn that the song title refers to a rolling stone and not a [[Music/TheRollingStonesBand Rolling Stone]]," and ultimately dismissing it as "sub-standard Dylan." Not only was the review quickly discredited, but the song did indeed get released in the UK and hit #4 on the charts.
289--->'''Film critic Scott Jordan Harris on Website/{{Twitter}}''': Dawbarn was sad it wasn’t shorter, more upbeat, and about one of the Rolling Stones. So basically he wanted Dylan to release Music/Maroon5’s "Moves Like Jagger".
290** On October 6, 2016, Alex Shephard wrote in ''[[https://newrepublic.com/article/137496/will-win-2016-nobel-prize-literature The New Republic]]'' "Bob Dylan 100 percent is not going to win. Stop saying Bob Dylan should win the Nobel Prize." October 13: he's awarded the Nobel Prize. To his credit, Shephard thinks it's ActuallyPrettyFunny.[[note]]It was easy for Shephard to find it funny because he is in fact a big Dylan fan. He explained later that he thought that the Swedish Academy didn't have that much of a sense of humour.[[/note]]
291* {{Jerkass}}: He comes across as a major one in ''Film/DontLookBack'', as Creator/RogerEbert notes in his [[http://www.rogerebert.com/reviews/dont-look-back-1998 review]] of the film's 20th anniversary reissue (though Ebert made it clear elsewhere that he wasn't much of a fan of Dylan, and the question of whether Dylan took on an exaggerated persona for the cameras has long been a big point of debate regarding the film):
292--> ''What a jerk Bob Dylan was in 1965. What an immature, self-important, inflated, cruel, shallow little creature, lacking in empathy and contemptuous of anyone who was not himself or his lackey. Did we actually once take this twirp as our folk god?''
293* JustLikeRobinHood: The title character in [[Music/JohnWesleyHarding "John Wesley Harding"]], though the real life John Wesley Hardin didn't fit the role at all.
294* KarmaHoudini: "The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll" tells the story of an upper-class white man who kills a poor black woman. This being Baltimore in the 60's, he receives only a six-month sentence.
295** Very much inverted in "Percy's Song" from "Biograph", in which the singer relates the story of a friend who was in a car accident that killed four people, and got a 99-year prison sentence for manslaughter.
296* TheKnightsWhoSaySquee: How a lot of fans, and apparently a lot of other artists tend to react to meeting him in person.
297-->'''[[Music/TheWallflowers Jakob Dylan]]:''' I got to watch my heroes meet him and saw how they reacted, whether it was [[Music/TheClash Joe Strummer]] or Music/TomWaits. It was peculiar. I'm so stoked to meet Tom Waits, and he's so nervous to meet my dad. It's a head spin.
298* KnockKnockJoke: He somehow manages to slip one into "Po' Boy".
299-->Knockin' on the door, I say "Who is it, where you from?"
300-->Man says "Freddie", I say "Freddie who?" He says "Freddie or not, here I come!"
301* LargeHam: On some of his 60's and 70's tours his stage persona leaned in this direction. Even now, he'll ham it up a bit on some songs ("Ballad of a Thin Man" in particular).
302* LeaningOnTheFourthWall:
303** "Hey Music/WoodyGuthrie, I wrote you a song..."
304** "Changing Of The Guards", as noted under CallBack above.
305** "North Country Blues" has the (female) narrator talk of having to "marry John Thomas, a miner." The song is indeed in A minor.
306** The early song "Eternal Circle" is a song about trying to flirt with a girl in the audience while playing a song... which gets so long that by the time he finally stops singing about trying to finish the song so he can talk to her, the girl has left.
307* LoveableRogue: The Jack of Hearts in "Lily, Rosemary And The Jack Of Hearts" from ''Music/BloodOnTheTracks''.
308* LyricalColdOpen: "Mixed-Up Confusion" from "Biograph", "Winterlude" from "New Morning", "Idiot Wind" from ''Music/BloodOnTheTracks''.
309* LyricalDissonance: "Positively 4th Street" and "Like A Rolling Stone" (bright, happy music accompanied by bitter words).
310** "Oxford Town" from ''Music/TheFreewheelinBobDylan'' is a jolly-sounding up-tempo song (in the liner notes Dylan calls it "a banjo tune I play on the guitar") about the riots at the University of Mississippi when [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Meredith James Meredith]] enrolled there.
311** ''Music/TheBasementTapes''-era tune "Get Your Rocks Off" pairs slow, bluesy music with silly, slightly off-colour lyrics. The absurdity of that pairing leads Dylan to start {{corpsing}} midway through the song
312* MadonnaWhoreComplex: "The Groom's Still Waiting at the Altar".
313--> ''What can I say about Claudette?\
314Ain't seen her since January\
315She could be respectably married\
316Or running a whorehouse in Buenos Aires''
317* TheMafia: "Joey" is about gangster Joey "Crazy Joe" Gallo.
318* MessyHair: Especially during the late 60's. He's the page picture.
319* MindScrew: "Desolation Row" from ''Music/Highway61Revisited''
320** Just "Desolation Row"? The same album also has "Tombstone Blues" which averages three mind screws per verse, and "Ballad of a Thin Man" which might as well be the trope namer.
321** The second verse of "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream" from ''Music/BringingItAllBackHome'' especially, where what is believed to be a newly discovered America is revealed to be already populated by its crazier twentieth century inhabitants.
322** His [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarantula_(book) "experimental prose poetry collection"]] ''Tarantula''.
323* MiscarriageOfJustice: "Percy's Song" from ''Music/{{Biograph}}'', "The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll" from ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin'', "Hurricane" from ''Music/{{Desire}}''.
324* MoralityBallad: Too many to list. Most notable are probably "Like A Rolling Stone" from ''Music/Highway61Revisited'' and "Hurricane" from ''Music/{{Desire}}''
325* TheMovieBuff: He's a considerable cinephile, especially of the movies from TheFifties and is surprisingly articulate about [[http://cinemasparagus.blogspot.com/2012/01/bob-dylan-interview-with-john.html cinema about that time]]. His song "The Mighty Quinn" was based on the little-known Creator/NicholasRay film ''The Savage Innocents'' and in ''Chronicles'' he discusses the influences films by Creator/FedericoFellini and others had on him, as well as ''Film/TheGirlCantHelpIt'' (aka every rock musician's favorite film).
326* MultilingualSong: "Romance in Durango" on ''Music/{{Desire}}'' has several untranslated Spanish lines in its chorus.
327-->''No Ilores, mi querida'' (don't cry, my dear)
328-->''Dios nos vigila'' (God watches over us)
329-->''Soon the horse will take us to Durango''
330-->''Agarrame, mi vida'' (grab hold of me, my life)
331-->''Soon the desert will be gone''
332-->''Soon you will be dancing the fandango''
333* MurderBallad:
334** "The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll" from ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin''
335** "Ballad Of Hollis Brown" from ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin'' is an interesting [[SecondPersonNarration second person]] take on the trope.
336* MyFriendsAndZoidberg: "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream" from ''Music/BringingItAllBackHome''
337--> ''Well, by this time I was fed up''
338--> ''At tryin’ to make a stab''
339--> ''At bringin’ back any help''
340--> ''For my friends and Captain Arab''
341* NeverAcceptedInHisHometown: Hibbing, Minnesota, where he spent most of his youth, has had a complicated relationship with him. Locals barely even acknowledged him during his meteoric rise to fame in TheSixties. The attitude softened considerably once the Baby Boom generation rose to leadership positions in the town. They starting holding a Dylan Days festival around his birthday, and renamed the street he grew up on as Bob Dylan Drive. But as the economy in Hibbing started failing, the much larger city of Duluth, where he was born, [[http://www.startribune.com/duluth-rallies-around-bob-dylan-s-75th-birthday-as-hibbing-struggles/380331691/ has taken on a bigger role in honoring him]]. Some recent developments in Hibbing include a proposed monument and a fan who purchased his childhood home, with plans to restore it and turn it into a museum.
342* NeverTrustATitle: ''The Bootleg Series Vol. 4: Bob Dylan Live 1966, The "Royal Albert Hall" Concert'' is a recording of a concert at Free Trade Hall in Manchester, not the Royal Albert Hall in London, which is why "Royal Albert Hall" is in ScareQuotes. This apparently stems from a mistake on the original tape box, which later led to bootleg albums erroneously claiming the show to have been in London. It wasn't until TheNineties when people who attended the Manchester show (unforgettable for them because of the "Judas" incident) set the record straight.
343* NewSoundAlbum: Several.
344** ''Music/AnotherSideOfBobDylan'', while not musically different from his previous albums, marked his transition from protest songs to impressionistic, expressive lyrics (which, as noted above, also pissed off a substantial portion of his fan base).
345** ''Music/BringingItAllBackHome'', the follow-up, brought electric guitars and {{Rock}} elements to the fore.
346** ''Music/JohnWesleyHarding'' took a step back from the heavy pop instrumentation of the previous three albums and went for a much more sparse and acoustic country vibe - followed by ''Music/NashvilleSkyline'', which was pretty much full-on country with very straight-forward, unambiguous lyrics (which didn't as much piss off as mystify a substantial portion of his fan base: the albums were part of Dylan's plan to rid himself of said gigantic fan base, as he was getting quite annoyed with it).
347** ''Music/SlowTrainComing'' marked Dylan's conversion to Christianity and a brief GospelMusic[=/=]ChristianRock phase (which both pissed off ''and'' mystified a substantial portion of his fan base).
348** ''Good As I Been To You'' and ''World Gone Wrong'' were sudden pivots back to acoustic FolkMusic.
349** ''Music/TimeOutOfMind'' laid out the template he's largely followed ever since--growling vocals, reflective (and sometimes cynical) lyrics, and sort of a blended Americana music style that mixes folk, blues, country and traditional pop elements.
350** ''Shadows in the Night'' began a CoverAlbum phase of reverential treatments of Tin Pan Alley pop (which he'd sort of previewed a few years earlier on the CreatorsOddball collection of ChristmasSongs on ''Music/ChristmasInTheHeart'').
351* NoTimeToThink: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin "No Time To Think".]] from ''Music/StreetLegal''
352* NonActorVehicle: His attempts at acting in ''Hearts Of Fire'', ''Flashback'' and ''Masked And Anonymous''.
353* NotStayingForBreakfast: "Simple Twist Of Fate" from ''Music/BloodOnTheTracks''
354* OneManSong: "Blind Willie [=McTell=]", "Don't Ya Tell Henry", "George Jackson", "Joey", "John Wesley Harding", "Lenny Bruce", "Silvio", "Song To Woody", "Temporary Like Achilles", "Mr. Tambourine Man".
355* OneWomanSong: "Absolutely Sweet Marie", "Angelina", "Farewell Angelina", "Hazel", "Isis", "Jolene", "Maggie's Farm", "Nettie Moore", "Peggy Day", "Queen Jane Approximately", "Rita May", "Sara", "To Ramona", "Visions of Johanna", "Winterlude" (yes, that's the name of the woman in the song).
356* OntologicalMystery: Experienced by the title character in "Drifter's Escape".
357* PaterFamilicide: "Ballad Of Hollis Brown" from ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin''
358* PopCulturalOsmosisFailure: He was at the receiving end of this once, as he was almost arrested in 2009 for loitering in New Jersey. At the time he wasn't carrying ID and the officers that accosted him had never heard his name before.
359* PrecisionFStrike: "Hurricane" from ''Music/{{Desire}}'' and the 1971 single "George Jackson" both include "shit" in the lyrics.
360** Also from the live version of "Like a Rolling Stone" in Manchester, 1966. Don't call Dylan "Judas".
361---> ''"I don't believe you... You're a '''liar!''' PLAY IT FUCKING LOUD!"''[[note]]Or maybe "GET FUCKIN' LOUD!" It's hard to tell since he's off-mic when he says it. There was even some doubt that Bob was the one talking, but the film of the incident included in the ''No Direction Home'' documentary confirms that he turned to the band members and said ''something'' at that particular moment[[/note]]
362* PretenderDiss: The {{Rockumentary}} ''[[Film/DontLookBack Dont Look Back]]'' of Dylan making more-or-less friendly fun of Donovan.
363** And Music/JohnLennon was convinced "Fourth Time Around" from ''Music/BlondeOnBlonde'' was one directed at Music/TheBeatles.
364*** It was in effect an answer song to "Norwegian Wood." Lennon later was able to appreciate the humour.
365* PrideBeforeAFall: "Foot of Pride" from "The Bootleg Series".
366* PrincessInRags: "Like a Rolling Stone" from ''Music/Highway61Revisited''. The trope could have almost been named "Napoleon In Rags", this song is one of the most iconic portrayals of that trope.
367* ProductionForeshadowing:
368** In 1963, two years before switching from folk to rock, he released two songs where he was backed by a band: "Corrina Corrina" and "Mixed-Up Confusion".
369** Parts of the Daniel Lanois-produced ''Music/OhMercy'' sound like an early preview of the Daniel Lanois-produced ''Music/TimeOutOfMind''.
370** His cover of "Blue Moon" on ''Self Portrait'' can now be seen as an early precursor to his current standards albums.
371* ProfessionalGambler: The title character of "Ramblin' Gamblin' Willie", who gets killed after he gets the DeadMansHand in a poker game.
372* ProtestSong: Again, too many to list. Though the most famous would have to be "Hurricane", "The Times They Are A-Changin", and "Masters Of War". Many critics believe "Only a Pawn in Their Game" to be this trope's stand-out example. Dylan eventually became disillusioned with protest songs, and distanced himself from them in "My Back Pages":
373--> ''Half-wracked prejudice leaped forth\
374“Rip down all hate,” I screamed\
375Lies that life is black and white\
376Spoke from my skull. I dreamed\
377Romantic facts of musketeers\
378Foundationed deep, somehow\
379Ah, but I was so much older then\
380I’m younger than that now.''
381* RagtagBunchOfMisfits:
382** His band for the Rolling Thunder Revue in 1975-76 had this flavour. There was Music/DavidBowie's ex-guitarist (Mick Ronson), a guitarist who had previously written a couple songs for Music/TheMonkees (Steve Soles), a tall skinny guy from Texas (T-Bone Burnett), the guy who played bass on Music/DonMcLean's "Music/AmericanPie" (Rob Stoner), a boyish-looking guy who'd previously been in a band called Quacky Duck & His Barnyard Friends (David Mansfield), a Latin violinist who Dylan had hired after he saw her walking down the street (Scarlet Rivera), and Andrew Wyeth's nephew (Howie Wyeth) on drums, among others.
383* RaisedLighterTribute: The cover of his 1974 live album ''Before the Flood'' depicts an early example. Dylan later claimed that he didn't understand the significance of it at first and thought the fans were mad at him and were going to set the arena on fire.
384* RearrangeTheSong / EvolvingMusic: Constantly, throughout his entire career. Being a folk musician at heart, Dylan sees every new performance of a song as a new interpretation of it. It's been said that he never plays a song the same way twice; that's a ''slight'' exaggeration, but not by much.
385--> ''This is called "I Don't Believe You." It used to be like that, now it goes like this.''
386** The same applies to lyrics, especially to songs that (presumably) carry a lot of personal meaning for him. For instance, compare "If You See Her, Say Hello" [[http://www.bobdylan.com/us/songs/if-you-see-her-say-hello before]] and [[http://expectingrain.com/dok/div/ifyouseeher.html after]] his divorce. And "Knockin' On Heaven's Door" has at least a few dozen verses by now.
387** As illustrated [[http://dylanchords.info/16_bott/tangled_up_in_blue.htm here]], "Tangled Up In Blue" is probably his most tinkered-with song lyrically.
388* TheReasonYouSuckSpeech: "Positively 4th Street", "Idiot Wind", though it is important to note that the latter of these turns into a "The Reason ''We'' Suck" Speech by the end.
389* RedScare: Satirized in "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues".
390--> ''I discovered - RED STRIPES ON THE AMERICAN FLAG!''
391* ReligionRantSong:
392** "With God On Our Side" condemns the manipulation of religious belief to support warfare.
393** One of the several interpretations of "Jokerman" is that it's a DeconstructiveParody of Literature/TheBible. However, given that the song is coming right off the coattails of Dylan's "born again" phase, there are many who believe that the true meaning of the lyrics is more subtle and nuanced.
394* RippedFromTheHeadlines: "Hurricane" and "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll", most prominently.
395* RockstarSong: "Like A Rolling Stone" from ''Music/Highway61Revisited''.
396* {{Rockumentary}}: D A Pennebaker's ''[[Film/DontLookBack Dont Look Back]]'' [sic] from Dylan's 1965 tour of the UK is one of the [[TropeMakers earliest examples]]. Dylan followed it up with the slightly less coherent ''Eat the Document'', filmed during the 1966 tour, which remains unreleased (though bootleg copies circulate). There's also Creator/MartinScorsese's documentaries ''No Direction Home'' (2005) and ''Rolling Thunder Revue: A Bob Dylan Story'' (2019--which mixes in some {{Mockumentary}} elements).
397* SarcasticTitle: "With God On Our Side" from ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin''.
398* SawStarWarsTwentySevenTimes: "Murder Most Foul"
399-->[[UsefulNotes/ZapruderFilm Zapruder's film]], I've seen that before\
400Seen it thirty-three times, maybe more
401* ScareQuotes: The title of his 2001 album is shown as ''"Love And Theft"'' on the cover, which has led to some confusion over whether the quotes are officially part of the title and, if so, [[EpilepticTrees why they're there]]. (Not exactly WordOfGod, but bobdylan.com includes the quote marks in its listing for the album).
402* SecondPersonNarration: "Like A Rolling Stone", "Ballad Of A Thin Man", and "Queen Jane Approximately", all of them from one album (''Music/Highway61Revisited'').
403** Done to disturbing effect in "Ballad Of Hollis Brown" from ''Music/TheTimesTheyAreAChangin''.
404* SeductionLyric: “Lay, Lady, Lay” is at the romantic end of the "Why wait?" class of seduction.
405-->''Lay, lady, lay''\
406''Lay across my big brass bed''\
407''Whatever colors you have in your mind''\
408''I'll show them to you and you'll see them shine...''
409* SelfBackingVocalist: His cover of Music/SimonAndGarfunkel's "The Boxer" (from the ''Music/SelfPortrait'' album) employs this.
410* SelfParody: His early song "Talkin' Hava Negeilah Blues" from "The Bootleg Series" was a parody of his Music/WoodyGuthrie-influenced style during that phase of his career ''and'' his Jewish background (which he was still covering up). He introduces "Hava Nagila" as "a foreign song I learned in Utah."
411* SelfTitledAlbum: His debut release. ''Music/TheFreewheelinBobDylan'' and ''Music/AnotherSideOfBobDylan'' are semi-examples.
412* ShoutOut: Hundreds, ranging from biblical figures to Music/AliciaKeys. No, she doesn't know why either.
413** Dylan himself has received various shout-outs by other artists too. We've got an entire page for that: ''[[ReferencedBy/BobDylan Referenced By: Bob Dylan]]''
414* [[ShoutOut/ToShakespeare Shout-Out: To Shakespeare]]: Frequently.
415--> ''Theatre/{{Othello}} told Desdemona,''
416--> ''"[[ImColdSoCold I'm cold, cover me with a blanket]]''
417--> ''By the way, what happened to that [[Theatre/{{Hamlet}} poisoned wine]]?"''
418--> ''She said, "[[SubvertedTrope I gave it to you, you drank it...?]]"''
419*** There's also the one from "Desolation Row":
420--> ''Now [[Theatre/{{Hamlet}} Ophelia]], she's 'neath the window''
421--> ''For her I feel so afraid''
422--> ''On her twenty-second birthday''
423--> ''She already is an old maid''
424--> ''To her, death is quite romantic''
425--> ''She wears an iron vest''
426--> ''Her profession's her religion''
427--> ''Her sin is her lifelessness''
428--> ''And though her eyes are fixed upon''
429--> ''[[Literature/TheBible Noah’s great rainbow]]''
430--> ''She spends her time peeking''
431--> ''Into Desolation Row.''
432* SillyLoveSongs: A few scattered here and there throughout his career, especially on ''Music/NashvilleSkyline'', ''New Morning'' and ''Music/PlanetWaves''.
433* SingingVoiceDissonance: He's suprisingly soft-spoken when he talks. His speaking voice is also less throaty.
434* SmokingIsCool: [[http://www.last.fm/music/Bob+Dylan/+images/13979651 Exhibit A]].
435* SomethingBlues: "Subterranean Homesick Blues", "Workingman's Blues # 2", "Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues", "North Country Blues", "Black Crow Blues", "Outlaw Blues", "Tombstone Blues", "Just Like Tom Thumb's Blues"...
436* SpidersAreScary: Probably the effect he was going for in naming his experimental novel ''Tarantula''.
437* TheStarsAreGoingOut: "Brownsville Girl"
438--> ''Seems like a long time ago, long before the stars were torn down''
439* StayInTheKitchen: Hinted rather unsubtly in "Sweetheart Like You."
440* StealthInsult: "Like A Rolling Stone". Don't believe us? Just look [[RichesToRags here]].
441* {{Supergroup}}: Music/TheTravelingWilburys, with Music/GeorgeHarrison, Music/TomPetty, [[Music/ElectricLightOrchestra Jeff Lynne]] and Music/RoyOrbison.
442* SuddenDownerEnding: ''Planet Waves'' and ''Empire Burlesque'' are musically bright albums that are heavy on love songs, but they both end with Dylan, accompanying himself on acoustic guitar and harmonica, performing a personal, serious song ("Wedding Song", "Dark Eyes").
443* TakeThat: "Maggie's Farm" (written long before [[UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher the Iron Lady]]'s time, although the later covers by Music/TheSpecials and Music/RageAgainstTheMachine did not overlook the coincidence)
444** "Positively 4th Street"
445** "Ballad of a Thin Man"
446** "Just Like a Woman"
447** A more light-hearted one occurs in "You Ain't Goin' Nowhere": Music/TheByrds released their cover of the song in 1968, during which Roger [=McGuinn=] accidentally switched one of the original lines around and sang "Pack up your money, pick up your tent". Dylan re-recorded the song in 1971 for a greatest hits compilation, rendering the lyric as "Pack up your money, put up your tent, [=McGuinn=], you ain't goin' nowhere". [=McGuinn=] in turn responded on a 1989 cover of the song with the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, singing "Pack up your money, pick up your tent, Zimmerman".
448** TakeThatCritics: From a 2012 interview, when asked about accusations that he's borrowed lines from others.
449---> ''Wussies and pussies complain about that stuff. It's an old thing – it's part of the tradition. It goes way back. These are the same people that tried to pin the name Judas on me. Judas, the most hated name in human history! If you think you've been called a bad name, try to work your way out from under that. Yeah, and for what? For playing an electric guitar? As if that is in some kind of way equitable to betraying our Lord and delivering him up to be crucified. [[PrecisionFStrike All those evil motherfuckers can rot in hell.]]''
450* TarotMotifs: The card for The Empress is on the back cover of ''Music/{{Desire}}'', and ''Street-Legal'' is loaded with tarot references (''especially'' "Changing of The Guards").
451* TextlessAlbumCover: ''Music/BlondeOnBlonde'', ''Music/NashvilleSkyline'', ''Music/SelfPortrait'', ''New Morning''.
452* TheVillainSucksSong: "Jokerman" (''Infidels'') and "Handy Dandy" (''Under the Red Sky'') are both rather verbose portrayals of powerful, dishonorable men, but in the end the subjects seem more like a MagnificentBastard than anything else. There's lots of WildMassGuessing on who the subjects of the two songs are. Since "Handy Dandy" has a girlfriend named Nancy, some people think it's about UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan.
453* ThreeChordsAndTheTruth: His older songs, especially.
454* TitleOnlyChorus: "Angelina"
455** "I Want You" comes close. The only other words besides the title phrase are "so bad" and "honey".
456* TooManyCooksSpoilTheSoup: His reason for the failure of the album "Under the Red Sky."
457* TruckDriversGearChange: The modulation before the last verse of "When I Paint My Masterpiece" on ''Greatest Hits Volume II'' is a rare example in his catalogue. "In Search of Little Sadie" does it a few times ''per verse'' for no clear reason.
458* TwelveBarBlues: One of the basic ingredients of his song-writing. Many of his songs can be classified as having tweaked blues structures. Probably the straightest examples of Twelve Bar Blues in his work are "Down The Highway", "Outlaw Blues" and "Meet Me In The Morning".
459* TheUnintelligible: Not the songs themselves, for the most part, but guaranteed that any parody of him will be this.
460** Somewhat subverted with "Weird Al" Yankovic's parody "Bob", which features lyrics composed entirely of well-enunciated (if twangy) palindromes.
461** This trope is the reason he was so often Covered -- other artists' versions were just more marketable because they were easier to understand.
462* VocalEvolution: While he has more-or-less always had the famous nasal gruffness, there have been some subtle changes over the years. On his first two albums he has a Music/WoodyGuthrie-influenced drawl. On his other pre-electric albums he almost shouts a lot of the lyrics. On his first two electric albums he went with a plain but forceful way of singing, emphasizing certain syllables. On ''Music/BlondeOnBlonde'' (1966) he exaggerates that style almost to the point of SelfParody. On ''Music/JohnWesleyHarding'' (recorded late 1967) his timbre begins to sound like that which pervaded his 70's work: a sharpness in his louder sections, a hoarseness in quieter ones. A major departure from that was his crooning voice on ''Music/NashvilleSkyline'' from 1969. Bootleg tapes confirm that this was very similar to the voice he used when he first started playing folk clubs in his Minnesota college days, so it was a deliberate change on Dylan's part. Dylan went so far as to hang a {{Lampshade|Hanging}} on this with his version of "[[Music/SimonAndGarfunkel The Boxer]]" on ''Music/SelfPortrait'', done as a duet between Classic Dylan and ''Skyline'' Dylan. The close of the 70's gave us a wavering, sneering quality to his singing voice, raspy as ever. Starting in the late 80s he developed a strange slurring style that led to all the jokes about him needing a translator. Since ''Music/TimeOutOfMind'' in 1997 his voice is more noticeably hoarse, so he's adopted a softer style of singing to compensate.
463* TheVoiceOfAGeneration: Dylan is usually labeled as "the voice of his generation", being his lyrics represented what happened in TheSixties and becoming an inspiration to many people and a major reference for a lot of future artists until today, even having [[https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x2ounfb a documentary of the same name]].
464* WeUsedToBeFriends: He's a notoriously fickle guy, so numerous friendships have waxed and waned over the years, but the major example of this is his manager Albert Grossman. They had a close mentor-protégé relationship up until his 1966 motorcycle crash, when Dylan concluded that Grossman was using him as a {{Cash Cow|Franchise}} and letting him almost kill himself in the process. Within a couple years they weren't even speaking to each other.
465* WhatsAnXLikeYouDoingInAYLikeThis: The refrain of "Sweetheart Like You": "What's a sweetheart like you doing in a dump like this?"
466* WhoShotJFK: "Murder Most Foul" is about the JFK assassination and its place in American culture, with a few allusions to the conspiracy theories, starting with the title, which is a ShoutOut to ''Murder Most Foul!: The Conspiracy That Murdered President Kennedy'', an obscure 1967 self-published tome by Stanley J. Marks (well, and ''Theatre/{{Hamlet}}'' too).
467* WordSaladLyrics: "Desolation Row" is about a lynching. All of it. Really.
468* WhenImGoneSong: ''Knockin' on Heaven's Door'' is a Type 3.
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