No Direction Home, Dylan documentary by Martin Scorsese.


This afternoon I rewatched this great film, probably the best documentary on a musical figure I've ever seen. It is not only interesting from a historical perspective, but is also very entertaining and funny, particularly Part 2. Methamphetamine really seemed to enhance Bob's sense of humour. ;-)

The movie contains one segment I found particularly relevant in our current state of affairs. In December of 1963 the ACLU presented Dylan with their Tom Paine Award. He accepted it, but not without making the following statement:

"There's no black and white, no left and right to me anymore. There's only up and down, and down is very close to the ground. I'm trying to go up, without thinking about anything as trivial as politics."

Needless to say, the ACLU was not pleased. Dylan obviously had no desire to be the organization's poster boy, so I then wonder why he showed up at the awards ceremony, and accepted the "award"? IMO, Jackson Browne should have followed Dylan's lead; he hasn't been worth sh*t since he started making political statement albums.

Remember the scene in The Last Waltz in which Band bassist Rick Danko says " We're not trying to save the world, only improve the neighborhood"? Speaking of neighborhood, I am reminded of Dylan's song "Neighborhood Bully". Not explicitly political, but mighty close.

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black diamond, I was not trying to be provocative in saying I disagreed with your view, just stating mine,  We can co-exist, as we have here for a long time.  I live in a bubble as much as I can, so tend to avoid conflict.  
It is an interesting tiltle. The line from the song "like a rolling stone". In a 60 minutes interview Bob say's how he "made a bargain a long time ago and I'm holding up my end" - "to get where I am now". A bargain with - "the chief commander from this world and a world we cannot see" so.. No Direction Home (?)