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Fact #39012

When:

Short story:

Bob Dylan releases his fifth album Bringing It All Back Home, in the USA on Columbia Records.

Full article:

BRINGING IT ALL BACK HOME by Johnny Black

A brand new and enduring musical genre, folk-rock, sprang into being as a direct result of Bob Dylan's fifth album, Bringing It All Back Home. As with most such revolutionary moments, of course, there was no master plan. It happened because it had to.

With his early acoustic albums, Dylan had revolutionised the early 60s folk scene simply by writing his own songs. Chart-topping albums and singles by The Kingston Trio, The Highwaymen and The Rooftop Singers testify to the massive popularity of folk music at the time, but all of these acts covered traditional songs. The scene generated very little in the way of original material until Dylan came along, at which point the floodgates opened and every sensitive teenager who could pick three chords on a battered acoustic guitar suddenly became a folksy singer-songwriter.

Dylan was also seen as the inventor of protest music (see entry on Freewheelin'), so the eyes of the music community were firmly fixed on him, watching his every move.

However, when he went into Columbia's New York studios on13 January 1965 to begin recording sessions for Bringing It All Back Home, he was not planning to invent a new electric folk style. One entire side of the album, in fact, remained firmly in his acoustic solo troubadour mode.

There were, however, certain songs which he felt were not going to work without additional instrumentation. "I had this thing called Subterranean Homesick Blues," he explained later. "It just didn't sound right by myself." Maybe that's because its rapid-fire semi-rapped lyric bears more than a passing resemblance to Chuck Berry's Too Much Monkey Business – a rock'n'roll classic that Dylan would have known well.

The popular notion that Dylan was a Greenwich Village folkie who made a shocking volte-face into rock'n'roll is one that has long muddied the waters around his next move. Dylan grew up in the 50s listening to rock'n'roll, particularly enjoying Buddy Holly, The Everly Brothers and Elvis Presley, of whom he has said, "When I first heard Elvis' voice I just knew that I wasn't going to work for anybody; and nobody was going to be my boss..."

On 5 June 1959 when he left Hibbing High School, Minnesota, the school yearbook noted that he intended, "to follow Little Richard", and one of his first paid jobs was a brief stint as pianist in teen idol Bobby Vee's band.

So his decision to bring in rock players for Subterranean Homesick Blues was more a return to his roots than a radical re-structuring of folk idioms. As a guitarist, Dylan chose Bruce Langhorne, who he'd worked with in 1962, during rarely mentioned unreleased electric sessions for the album Freewheelin'.

Dylan's producer, Tom Wilson, chose the rest of the band, including John Sebastian, later to form the Lovin' Spoonful) and John Hammond Jr, who subsequently became a highly-regarded bluesman.

Photographer Daniel Kramer, who attended the sessions, vividly recalls the excitement and elation when Maggie's Farm was first played back. "There was no question about it – it swung, it was happy, it was good music and, most of all, it was Dylan."

The rock instrumentation also worked a treat for another uptempo Chuck Berry-ish workout, Outlaw Blues, and for the hilariously surreal On The Road Again. The guitars are also plugged in, but appropriately more mellow for two of Dylan's most memorable love songs, She Belongs To Me and Love Minus Zero/No Limit

The album gave him his first Top Ten entry, and Subterranean Homesick Blues sneaked into the Top 40 singles chart but, even more significantly, one of the album's acoustic tracks, Mr Tambourine Man, went to No1 in June in an electrified version by The Byrds. Folk rock had arrived and the overwhelming mass of American teens embraced it immediately, soaking up similarly styled hits from Simon And Garfunkel, The Turtles and Barry McGuire to name but a few.

Unfortunately, to the folk fraternity who had previously adored him, amplified folk was a sin against nature. When Dylan debuted his new electric band at the Newport Folk Festival on 25 July he was booed off the stage, and similar demonstrations of dismay and anger greeted him wherever he toured for the rest of the year.
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Bruce Johnston (Beach Boys) : When I heard She Belongs To Me, which is my favourite song from this album, I was struck by the fact that it has such a natural groove to it. To me, a natural groove record would have been something like Little Richard, stuff like that, but suddenly here's this guy from a folk background, who has turned the lyric-writing thought process upside down, and who is making songs with a natural groove. In LA we grew up listening to rhythm'n'blues, because we had black stations with hugely powerful transmitters, KGFJ, playing Etta James singing "You gotta roll with me Henry," and then on the white station you'd hear the sanitised version, 'You got to dance with me, Henry.'

You could finger-pop to this track. It was like, he had this message which was perkin' everybody's ears up, but then here's this really cool song that didn't try.

So I was the guy who brought Dylan to The Beach Boys.