LYCOS RETRIEVER Beta Retriever Home  |  What is Lycos Retriever?   
Bob Dylan
built 236 days ago
Retriever  > Arts  > Music
Bob Dylan is considered to be one of the most influential singer/songwriters of all time. With a career that has lasted more than five decades and still goes strong, Bob Dylan has brought to music today a grand lyrical depth to the rock and roll community. Bob Dylan was born Robert Allen Zimmerman, but had his name legally changed his name to Bob Dylan in praise of one of his favorite writers, Dylan Thomas. Dylan learned to play the harmonica and the piano at the age of 10, and he is self taught on the guitar. His musical style is famous for being reminiscent of folk, country/blues, rockabilly, rock n' roll, swing and jazz incorporations. Dylan's lyrics have included politics, social commentary, philosophy, and literary influences.
Source:
Bob Dylan performing at St. Lawrence University in New York, 1963. Bob Dylan (born Robert Allen Zimmerman, May 24, 1941) is an American singer-songwriter, author, musician, poet, and, of late, disc jockey who has been a major figure in popular music for five decades. Much of Dylan's most celebrated work dates from the 1960s, when he became an informal chronicler and a reluctant figurehead of American unrest. A number of his songs, such as "Blowin' in the Wind" and "The Times They Are a-Changin'",[1] became anthems of the anti-war and civil rights movements. His most recent studio album, Modern Times, released on August 29, 2006, entered the U.S. album charts at #1, making him, at age 65, the oldest living person to top those charts.[2] It was later named Album of the Year by Rolling Stone magazine.[3]
Bob Dylan's debut album cover. He thought the juvenile reference to his penis was hilarious Bob Dylan has no neck. He is neck-less. No, not necklace, neckless. Its a huge conspiracy. On the cover of Blonde on Blonde, his scarf covers the lack of a neck. On Blood on the tracks, his head is floating.
When Bob Dylan entered the world, these stories made the front page of the nation's newspapers: In Tokyo, the governments of France and Japan agree to sign trade accords for French Indochina. Joseph Stalin is appointed the Premier of the Soviet Union following the resignation of Vyacheslav Molotov. German dictator Adolf Hitler declares the Red Sea a war zone. In Hanoi, Japanese soldiers seize $10 million worth of American-made products. King George II of Greece flees to Egypt to escape from German troops. In Santiago, the government of Chile seizes the headquarters of the Nazi Socialist Vanguard to protect against a Nazi uprising.
For over 40 years, Bob Dylan has remained the most influential American musician rock has ever produced and unquestionably the most important of the 1960s. Inscrutable and unpredictable, Bob Dylan has been both deified and denounced for every shift of interest, while whole schools of musicians took up his ideas. His lyrics - the first in rock to be seriously regarded as literature - became so well known that politicians from Jimmy Carter to Václav Havel have cited them as an influence. By personalizing folk songs, Dylan reinvented the singer/songwriter genre; by performing his allusive, poetic songs in his nasal, spontaneous vocal style with an electric band, he enlarged pop’s range and vocabulary while creating a widely imitated sound. By recording with Nashville veterans, he reconnected rock and country, hinting at the country rock of the ’70s. In the ’80s and ’90s, although he has at times seemed to flounder, he still has the ability to challenge, infuriate, and surprise listeners.
Robert Allan Zimmerman, better known as Bob Dylan, was born in Duluth, Minnesota on May 24, 1941. He played guitar and harmonica in a high school band, then played folk songs in coffeehouses during his brief time as a college student. Moving to New York in 1960, he became a regular part of the Greenwich Village coffeehouse scene. He began making records in 1962. His original folk and protest songs made him a political figure, and one of the most popular singer/songwriters. Later he embraced pop, blues and rock, demonstrating an incredible range of talent.
Source:
SEARCH
MORE ABOUT
  Bob Dylan