Hip Hop Fan's First Listen and Analysis of Visions of Johanna by Bob Dylan

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  • Опубликовано: 6 авг 2022
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Комментарии • 388

  • @John-ux8zj
    @John-ux8zj 2 года назад +108

    This is in my opinion one of the absolute best ever written songs from a lyrical standpoint, and one of my favorite songs of all time. This reaction made my day. Thank you!

    • @BlandMarkComedy
      @BlandMarkComedy Год назад +5

      Hard to pick a favourite, as these things change depending on current moods. But this one will always be in my top three for sure. What a lyrical masterpiece, as you say.

    • @stevemarks9820
      @stevemarks9820 4 месяца назад

      No better song. Lyrics and music.

    • @fredmcgovern
      @fredmcgovern 3 месяца назад

      My favourite Dylan song by a country mile!

    • @stevebarber8501
      @stevebarber8501 2 месяца назад

      Great song.

  • @kenbellchambers4577
    @kenbellchambers4577 2 года назад +64

    ..'the fish truck that loads while my conscience explodes' is the definitive line that clarifies this song. You can only understand this if you have ever tried taking a psychedelic excursion in the warehouse section of NYC. That is why so many hippies got out of town and never went back. Johanna is the image of what every man looks for in a partner, but never attains, and this insight makes the fish truck ooze and stink even worse. See 'Positively Forth Street.' See 'Corrina, Corrina', and please look at 'Desolation Row' for a good view of the big picture. Dylan is an inspired genius of the highest order and he is the voice of America. The harmonica for Dylan is like the pipes for Pan, every squeak makes the flowers grow.

    • @kenkaplan3654
      @kenkaplan3654 2 года назад +5

      Great insight and eloquent expression on the fish trucks. I feel the same way. They are a seminal city image roaring out of docks and markets to the concrete jungle early in the morning. Whether Johanna is a person (ideal partner) or the "ideals" of" Johanna" (Baez) of a better world that she she never gave up but Dylan here seems to have done is the song's great central ambiguity.

    • @gratefulkm
      @gratefulkm Год назад +1

      Johanna means "Visions of God"
      That have now taken my place :)

    • @waz3128
      @waz3128 Год назад +1

      @@kenkaplan3654 interesting. never thought visions of Johanna could also be Baez's ideals.

    • @kenkaplan3654
      @kenkaplan3654 Год назад +2

      @@waz3128 That's my take but the meaning of the Visions is not absolute. Some say "Johanna" is a word for God. Although it seems as if it's about a relationship, and I do think Baez is Johanna (she thought so too), it is the "Visions" of Johanna that are important. So it could be Visions OF Johanna (longing for the person) or VISIONS of Johanna, what were/are the visions that inspired Johanna a higher ideal. For me the depth of the song, it's profound existential nature, arenas outside relationship (the museum, the fish truck, the empty lot, it's very very "Beat like-Ginsberg, Kerouac) to be just about a lost lover. Also Dylan got married a few months before. Also Blonde on Blonde reeks of existential despair and betrayal-Stuck Inside of Mobile, Just Like a Woman, , Absolutely Sweet Marie, 4th time around. etc so the song is compatible with those and a direct similar expression to the existential bleakness of Stuck Inside of Mobile. VOJ however is at a higher octave of surrealistic and poetic expression. Absolutely One of his greatest works.
      One last thing. there are strong similarities in VOJ to Tambourine Man but in TM, the desire for transcendence is youthful and hopeful where here the singer feels that transcendence is impossible to reach, those hopes have been dashed.
      "An’ here I sit so patiently
      Waiting to find out what price
      You have to pay to get out of
      Going through all these things twice (Just twice????)
      But who really knows?

    • @t.c.bramblett617
      @t.c.bramblett617 2 месяца назад

      This line always reminds me of when we were trying to sleep in on a Sunday morning at our all male dorm in college, and the garbage trucks and delivery trucks would clang outside while we were hung over and trying to sleep!
      Same with the words "the heat pipes just cough".. it was much like living in a flophouse or Lower Manhattan dive lolol

  • @w.geoffreyspaulding6588
    @w.geoffreyspaulding6588 2 года назад +62

    Syed…you have a feel for Dylan, and are probably the best reactor now doing any of his works. I know you have many different artists to explore..but perhaps you might consider doing Dylan once a week? Start with Freewheelin’ and move through five or so albums….I think Dylan would be in good hands with you….and most young reactors just frankly don’t get him.

    • @J-Loe
      @J-Loe Год назад +1

      “Wow I really hear a lot of Coldplay in this!”

  • @RhettAnderson
    @RhettAnderson 2 года назад +31

    Oh my god, I thought no one would ever react to this song. Blonde on Blonde is one of my top 3 albums, and this song has come to me in my head randomly since my dad played it on the stereo when I was a child.

  • @456012
    @456012 2 года назад +79

    You definitely gotta do “It’s alright ma I’m only bleeding” by Dylan next. I personally think it contains his most amazing lyrics and is also an amazing proto rap song. An absolute must listen! Great reaction

    • @kenkaplan3654
      @kenkaplan3654 2 года назад +2

      And "Desolation Row"

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 Год назад +3

      The ignorance of music history.
      There is a long tradition in blues of TALKING BLUES. Dylan got it largely from his folk idol Woodie Guthrie who often used it.
      Screw the prancing ego-tripping ME-ism of "Rap" and "Hip-Hop".

    • @kenkaplan3654
      @kenkaplan3654 Год назад +3

      @@jnagarya519 "The young hip-hop pioneers of the early 80s weren't, by in large, listening to Dylan, however, and certainly not his deeper cuts like "Subterranean Homesick Blues." Instead, they were taking inspiration from the Jamaican tradition of "toasting" over a beat, novelty records like Black comedian Pigmeat Markham's "Here Comes The Judge," and Black spoken word artists like the Last Poets and Gil Scott-Heron. (While Scott-Heron was often compared to Dylan, and was certainly aware of his work, he explicitly denied any direct influence.)
      To put it another way, there's a long line of Black spoken-word with musical accompaniment that predates the talking blues lineage, and doesn't have any traceable debts to it. For that reason, there's no reason to look to the talking blues as anything more than an incidental predecessor to rap. If they have a familial resemblance, it's most likely due to their most recent common ancestor --early twentieth-century Black folk music. But then again, that source was the wellspring for nearly all twentieth-century American popular music styles.

    • @jnagarya519
      @jnagarya519 Год назад +2

      @@kenkaplan3654 Well said.
      The problem is the lack of knowledge of music history, and therefore seeing Dylan as an "originator" as "proto-RAP" (or whatever the nomenclature).
      Dylan was influenced primarily by Woodie Guthrie's talking blues. But that of course, was from Black folk/folk blues tradition.

    • @kenkaplan3654
      @kenkaplan3654 Год назад +2

      @@jnagarya519 Well It wasn't me but as a folklorist who studied for a week with the Georgia Sea Island Singers, whose mother was Bessie Jones, I did a search because I suspected the roots went deeper and were in the black experience. So someone else expressed this but it seems to be the consensus. Rock itself grew out of black rhythm and blues. Nearly all white artists in the 60's were influenced by (one could say stole from) black R and B and blues artists. The whites became millionaires. A lot of this traces back to Africa and in the US the slave tradition.

  • @zenhaelcero8481
    @zenhaelcero8481 2 года назад +11

    "Louise she's alright, she's just near,
    and makes it all too concise and too clear,
    that Johanna's not here."
    Stuff like this is the definition of heartbreak.

  • @vinicius.richter
    @vinicius.richter 2 года назад +48

    I know it does not take as much views as other artists, but personally I would love to see more reactions on Bob Dylan's songs

    • @kenbellchambers4577
      @kenbellchambers4577 2 года назад +5

      His songs will still be sung a million years from now.

    • @thejamspace3052
      @thejamspace3052 Год назад

      @@kenbellchambers4577 only by those who've kept a close watch on their towels.

  • @shocklobster6266
    @shocklobster6266 2 года назад +24

    Dude I think you were made for analyzing Dylan's lyrics. Great stuff

  • @kennethbarber438
    @kennethbarber438 2 года назад +9

    It takes a lot to laugh, It takes a train to cry.

  • @dwhite849
    @dwhite849 2 года назад +15

    this is one of his songs/poems specified by the Nobel Committee Dylan and words can't beat it and the harmonica is a killer.

    • @kenbellchambers4577
      @kenbellchambers4577 2 года назад +3

      The harmonica gives me goose bumps. No one can play that instrument like Bob.

  • @carlburnett5986
    @carlburnett5986 2 года назад +44

    One of his greatest songs. The Live ‘66 recording is the definitive version. You’re gonna have fun discovering more Dylan. Quite simply he’s the best songwriter of all time. My favourite artist.
    Try ‘Just Like A Woman’, ‘Tangled Up In Blue’, ‘Series of Dreams’, ‘A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall’, ‘Gates of Eden’, ‘Most of the Time’ and many others

    • @thebacons5943
      @thebacons5943 2 года назад +4

      With all due respect, the Blonde on Blonde version is the definitive version. It’s one of the greatest studio recordings of all time.

    • @henriklarsson5221
      @henriklarsson5221 2 года назад +4

      ´God on our side´, ´Changing of the guards´, ´Boots of Spanish leather´, ´Chimes of freedom´, `My back Pages´
      To add some more great examples!

    • @carlburnett5986
      @carlburnett5986 2 года назад +2

      @@thebacons5943 we’ll have to agree to differ

    • @mumbles215
      @mumbles215 2 года назад +1

      Agreed.

    • @miserableunoriginal
      @miserableunoriginal Год назад +1

      @@carlburnett5986 love me some live 66 visions of Johanna

  • @timtrotter7007
    @timtrotter7007 2 года назад +15

    This song begs to be listened to alone in a darkened room, one of my all time favorites. Loved your reaction to "the ghost of lectricity howls in the bones of her face." So many lines create almost hallucinatory visuals that can be experienced over n over again finding new meanings with each listen. Thanks for doing this song.

    • @kenbellchambers4577
      @kenbellchambers4577 2 года назад

      They are trip-visions, not exactly hallucinations. Your thoughts made into pictures.

  • @robertdunn5363
    @robertdunn5363 2 года назад +18

    Syed, you are absolutely the best at breaking down these tracks...especially on a first listen. Incredible. I agree, I think it's your hip hop background that has prepared you to really 'listen' to the lyrics, the beat and flow of someone like Bob Dylan. There was a thing called the 'talking blues' that influenced a lot of Dylan's style (see Woody Guthrie, Ramblin' Jack Elliot and older blues singers), often just a three chord progression with vocals in a rhythmic, flat tone sung in almost a speaking voice. Lastly, you called the 'Madonna' before you knew it was coming! The Madonna shows up again in Joan Baez' song to Bob Dylan, 'Diamonds and Rust'..."Temporarily lost at sea, the Madonna was yours for free" 🙂 try out 'It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)'

    • @georgecoventry8441
      @georgecoventry8441 6 месяцев назад +1

      Right! And Joan Baez was commonly referred to by her own fans AS "the Madonna" in the early years of the 1960's, because of her general appearance and because she radiated a kind of purity, dignity, spirituality, and idealism that fit that title. (Completely, utterly different from the style set by Madonna Ciccone in the 80's and since... 😄) The Madonna in music back then was Joan Baez, and it's got to be her that Bob is referring to.

  • @gustafcederborg9744
    @gustafcederborg9744 2 года назад +17

    This is the reason you are my fave Music Reaction Channel
    I love the song picks
    Aswell as the way you paint a living picture of the lyrics with your mind
    Keep it up Syed

  • @gudlisner501
    @gudlisner501 Год назад +6

    This is my all time favourite song, not just by Dylan, but by anyone,
    It’s held my interest for 55 years and each time I hear it I get new insights or “visions”.

  • @alphajava761
    @alphajava761 2 года назад +16

    You'll see Bob is a chameleon from song to song, album to album as you get deeper into his catalog. I absolutely love the guitars in this song, love the whole song. I love the way Dylan delivers words and lines. Try songs Lay Lady Lay and Positively 4th Street among many.

  • @inexplicablyleft2729
    @inexplicablyleft2729 2 года назад +6

    That line "The ghost of 'lectricity howls in the bones of her face" is such a tremendous piece of observation. This and Tangled Up in Blue are my two favorites from Dylan for how great the lyrics are.

  • @mellowthumb14
    @mellowthumb14 2 года назад +17

    Since I discovered dylan's music five years ago, few songs have seemed as beautiful as this one, the lyrics can take on different meanings with each listen and I think that's the magic of this song and the album (Blonde on Blonde) in general.

  • @chrishowell6549
    @chrishowell6549 Год назад +9

    Of course you are correct about Dylan not being for everyone. I want to tell you how much I appreciate how intelligently you react to every reaction I've seen you do. I put you amongst the top of all other reactors for that. Thank you for actually listening and breaking down these reactions with your analysis.

  • @stephenqualtrough7322
    @stephenqualtrough7322 2 года назад +8

    Totally agree about the resonance of Bob Dylan's words and imagery. Half of it sinks into the listener's subconscious mind as the song plays itself out. Brilliant

  • @Code9
    @Code9 2 года назад +11

    "Stream of consciousness".... You hit on the right term to describe a lot of Dylan's lyrical output. I think when listening to several of Dylan's songs it helps to consider them as the musical/poetic versions of Salvadore Dali's paintings. In many ways, a lot of Dylan's stuff is surrealism at its best, often starkly vivid in it's imagery and yet elusive at the same time, much the same way that dreams make sense as they're happening but not so much when you're awake and think back on them.

    • @lizmil
      @lizmil Год назад +1

      Thank you! This is what I want to say to all the people who say his lyrics make “no sense”.

    • @J-Loe
      @J-Loe Год назад

      Yes please but also his contemporaries included Lenny Bruce and mort sahl and the beats.
      All very stream of consciousness
      I’d also say that early American musics lyrical content was highly poetic and evocative
      Both from the African tradition as well as Ireland/Scotland/wales

  • @anoldmannameddave7455
    @anoldmannameddave7455 2 года назад +8

    👍 Syed, you might give a listen to ‘Senor’, off the album, ‘Street Legal’. A real gem!😊✌️

  • @mstakeda
    @mstakeda 2 года назад +10

    He always liked to rhyme, and he did state that he like Rap. He made some verses for a music for Kurtis Blow, "Street Rock" and Public Enemy made a homage to him in the track""The Long and Winding Road". It's alright Ma and Subterranean Homesick Blues has much Rap vibe.

    • @mstakeda
      @mstakeda 2 года назад +1

      The Rolling Stones paid a tribute to the verse"Jewells and binoculars hanging on the head of the mule in the cover of the Get Yer Ya Ya's Out

  • @lextek.
    @lextek. 2 года назад +4

    Fun fact: The picture on the cover of the Stone's second live album (1970) "Get Your Ya Ya's Out" has a mule in it along with Charlie Watts. Guess what's hanging on the neck of the mule? Jewels and binoculars of course!

  • @chaosmos24
    @chaosmos24 2 года назад +2

    "The jewels and binoculars hang from the head of the mule"
    That's so Dylan.

  • @Bekka_Noyb
    @Bekka_Noyb 2 года назад +9

    You gotta do Dylan's Tangled Up In Blue

    • @ThePittsburghToddy
      @ThePittsburghToddy 2 года назад +2

      Seconded! Great track.🖖🏼

    • @bradlymiller4936
      @bradlymiller4936 2 года назад

      I’ve seen Bob Dylan six times. And each time I saw him he played tangled up in blue. And each time he changed some of the words. I know of at least 4 maybe 5 recorded versions of Tangled Up In Blue with different lyrics. Even a Christian version. I love Dylan.

  • @citizenghosttown
    @citizenghosttown 2 года назад +5

    Dylan's captivating lyrics and unique voice get most of the attention. But Dylan is also creating a sound that drives this song along. The Nashville musicians who play on this track are brilliant -- the throbbing bass, the groove, the guitar licks. So underrated!

  • @jbellinger99
    @jbellinger99 2 года назад +5

    A good first listen and analysis of on of my favorite Dylan tracks. Thank you. Try "I Dreamed i saw St Augustine" - a stunning, haunting song.

    • @kenbellchambers4577
      @kenbellchambers4577 2 года назад +1

      There is a town on a river in NSW called Bellingen. The River is called the Bellinger.

  • @timtrotter7007
    @timtrotter7007 2 года назад +4

    Sorry to make another comment, but one line you talked about was "jewels and binoculars hang from the head of the mule." Check the Rolling Stones album cover out for "Get Your Yayas Out." It should bring a smile.

  • @maryrice3760
    @maryrice3760 4 месяца назад +1

    A voice gives your opinions a platform, and gifts you with the opportunity to have perspective and knowledge on things that matter. No two voices are the same, each voice has something different to say. And in a world that needs to represent freedom and democracy, a voice is a powerful symbol of this.

  • @stevewebster973
    @stevewebster973 2 года назад +2

    That last comment here is exactly what I was thinking. It’s Alright Ma is going to blow your mind.
    I was 14 years old first time I heard it.

  • @dleigh112
    @dleigh112 3 месяца назад +1

    You're right about the relationship with the muse. There's a neurological phenomenon sometimes associated with that relationship which is the genesis of this song. When you constantly look at a picture of someone a persistent afterimage remains when you close your eyes. This can also happen with a mental image of someone you have formed from constantly thinking about them. It can be hard to sleep with this persistent afterimage in your head. This is what was driving Dylan's insomnia. He was already well aware of the impact of the muse on the work of an artist or poet. He goes on here to develop the idea that art is not just something found in museums but takes place in the psyche of the artist.

  • @bigneon_glitter
    @bigneon_glitter 2 года назад +5

    Excellent review. More Dylan essentials:
    _Blood On The Tracks_ (1975) - the crown jewel album
    "Subterranean Homesick Alien" _Bringing It All Back Home_
    "4th Time Around" _Blonde On Blonde_
    "Lay Lady Lay" _Nashville Skyline_
    "I Shall Be Released" (1971)
    "Ballad Of A Thin Man" _Highway 61 Revisited_
    For the fan of the 'lyrically dense':
    - Joni Mitchell "Edith & The Kingpin" (1975) / "Marcie" (1968)
    - Leonard Cohen "Stranger Song" / "Master Song" (1968)
    - Scott Walker "Boy Child" (1969) / "Big Louise" (1967)
    - David Bowie "Life On Mars?" / "Quicksand" (1972)
    - Gil Scott-Heron "We Almost Lost Detroit" (1977) / "B Movie" (1982)

  • @johnlambie2369
    @johnlambie2369 2 года назад

    Brillianrt breakdown. This is my all-time favourite song for more than 40 years. Every time I hear it I hear smething new. To hear your immediate reaction (with the background research you've done) have opened my eyes to a brutally honest interpretation - great job, THANK YOU!!!!

  • @jdj830
    @jdj830 2 года назад +6

    The song you really need go hear is A Hard Rain’s a-gonna Fall - preferably the version from the album the Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, since none of his live versions have the same intensity. He wrote it as a response to the Cuban Missile Crisis, a two week period in which the threat of nuclear apocalypse looked very real, and as he put it every line could be the start of an entire song he didn’t have time to write. It might very well be his greatest song or greatest statement- I’m mystified that it’s been ignored by the other people commenting here.

  • @machoward6443
    @machoward6443 2 года назад +8

    If Dylan had written nothing more than this, "Sad Eyed Lady of the Lowlands" and "Desolation Row" then his Nobel prize would still have been years too late. This period with albums "Bringing it all back Home", "Highway 61 Revisited" and "Blonde on Blonde" was the pinnacle of his career. For me, only "Blood on the Tracks" gets near to them.
    Fabulous lines:
    "Name me someone who's not a parasite and I'll go out and say a prayer for him" is a savage truth for us all.
    I've heard that Masters degrees have been given for studies of the songs of the Beatles - there must be a Phd in philosophy for someone in analysing the significance of:
    "Inside the museums infinity goes up on trial
    "Voices echo this is what salvation must be like after a while
    "and the Mona Lisa must have had the highway blues, you can tell by the way she smiles"
    There's much there about the nature of immortality though I've never figured out how that fits in to his lament that Johanna isn't around :)
    In a later interview Dylan has admitted that even he doesn't know where this stuff came from during this period. There is something magical here.

    • @kenkaplan3654
      @kenkaplan3654 2 года назад +2

      "This period with albums "Bringing it all back Home", "Highway 61 Revisited" and "Blonde on Blonde" was the pinnacle of his career. For me, only "Blood on the Tracks" gets near to them" Boy do I agree with you 1000 %. I think Dylan was quite aware of what he wanted to say. Songs like "It's All Right Ma", "Tombstone Blues, "Highway 61", "Stuck Inside of Mobile" and "Desolation Row" are too thematically coherent (within themselves and with other songs). However HOW his process worked to create them is not that definable and mysterious as images probably came to him like waves on the ocean or the string flow of a river.

    • @DanFernandesBenficaSaint
      @DanFernandesBenficaSaint 9 месяцев назад

      Planted into his mind through MKULTRA dreams. It’s the case for nearly all those musicians at the time. And then you find out the music is the exact same as obscure Neapolitan operatic music… 🤔 you’re being lied too and I for one do not like that. Read Dave McGowans book Weird Scenes Inside Laurel Canyon. This will get the ball rolling for you.

  • @davetherave7279
    @davetherave7279 Год назад +1

    I love how a hip hop artist can resonate with Dylans music and lyrics...... once you got down the dylan lyrical rabbit hole you can't escape!
    Great videos bro.

  • @Oh-Mercy
    @Oh-Mercy 4 месяца назад

    “The ghost of ‘lectricity howls in the bones of her face…” one of the best lines ever- think about the lights flickering in the opposite loft- I always see that when I hear the ghost line- 2 lovers lying together, the country music playing, the radiator in the west village flat making noises and the lights flickering and reflected in the woman’s face. Visually Lucious, emotionally poignant. You can feel the intimacy AND the distance at the same time. It’s something Dylan does that is unparalleled.
    This song is often what I say is my favorite- though in reality, I can’t choose just one.
    So glad your channel popped into my algorithm.
    Thanks for the great songs!
    An edit: I have enjoyed your reaction to this track so much- watching someone discover a gem and just be so unabashedly, exuberantly affected is lovely.
    And after listening to this song for 50 plus years I “heard”something I hadn’t thought of before- what if the Visions of Johanna are not his visions of her but Johanna’s visions of him or a situation that he is being affected by. I don’t know why that never occurred to me before- I mean- I have played that song on repeat many times. I have an old CD with about a dozen live versions. And THAT is what Bob Dylan doe with language- layers and layers, hundreds of listens and something new pops up. Mind blown 🤯

    • @AttilatheNun-xv6kc
      @AttilatheNun-xv6kc 4 месяца назад

      @ Oh-Mercy:
      [I “heard”something I hadn’t thought of before- what if the Visions of Johanna are not his visions of her but Johanna’s visions of him]
      That's an interesting idea, but the line "These visions of Johanna, they kept me up past the dawn" point to him having the visions. You never really know with Blonde on Blonde tracks, though.

  • @nicolageddes9799
    @nicolageddes9799 4 месяца назад

    I've loved this song for decades- and I so enjoyed watching you getting into it!

  • @guitgas
    @guitgas 2 года назад +4

    Ithink you'll have a long and fruitful journey listening to Dylan.

  • @t.c.bramblett617
    @t.c.bramblett617 2 месяца назад

    Hey I just wanted to say I really enjoy your reactions, out of all of the ones I follow you dig the deepest and most clearly into the lyrics. Peace!!!! Thanks for the entertainment and insight!

  • @253spkelly253
    @253spkelly253 2 года назад +2

    Wow, great choice, excited to see your reaction and analysis

    • @253spkelly253
      @253spkelly253 2 года назад

      Nice! I’m a weird Dylan fan in that I hear his voice as an instrument and tend to do so with music in general, but when you break it down, I re-appreciate music I already love… that was an organ by the way, was a few years before synthesizers were made… love this whole album…

  • @MrGargle54
    @MrGargle54 2 года назад +2

    Wishing you all the love of your life

  • @dantallman5345
    @dantallman5345 Год назад +1

    Blown away. I thought I had a pretty good grasp of Bob Dylan’s songs but somehow never heard this song until now. WTFf!
    Having your comments on my first listen of Visions of Johanna for the for the first time was awesome.
    The music of Bob Dylan is a great lane for your channel.

  • @jadalan1047
    @jadalan1047 2 года назад

    This is my favorite Dylan song, if not my favorite song, period. Loved your reaction, which shows both an emotional and intellectual connection. You are doing a great job on this channel!

  • @jonathanbrkich1982
    @jonathanbrkich1982 4 месяца назад

    Huge Dylan fan here. You do a great job of reacting to him! Keep up the great work.

  • @TheSixtoo
    @TheSixtoo 2 года назад

    You get Dylan! Love how you analyze it, just Great. Please continue:)

  • @danielcochran6210
    @danielcochran6210 Год назад

    Love your analysis of Dylan songs. I have been listening to Dylan since ‘65 and your posts always give me much to think of. Thank uou

  • @doiminiclynch5208
    @doiminiclynch5208 2 года назад +2

    Loving the dylan reactions cheers

  • @phillipharrison7283
    @phillipharrison7283 2 года назад +2

    Check out 'Subterranean homesick blues' - a masterpiece of lyricism and then, the Weird Al parody of that called 'Bob'. The whole song is loaded with palindromic phrases. Also a masterpiece of lyric writing. Both songs should if possible be watching the videos. Absolute classics. Not forgetting that most artists thought it a great honour to be parodied by Al. Thanks for the analysis Syed.

  • @MartinFGayford
    @MartinFGayford Год назад

    Great. Now I have to watch all your Dylan videos!

  • @rustyherndon5141
    @rustyherndon5141 2 года назад +2

    Dylan. There will never be another

  • @alanbrown8527
    @alanbrown8527 Год назад

    Stunning first reaction to a flat out cold classic by Dylan. I was never much of a hip hop fan (unlike Dylan himself) but, if the lyrical connection that you bring to Dylan’s work goes the other way, I am all in. Thanks for sharing your personal exploration of great music in general and Dylan in particular.

  • @Harvestersz
    @Harvestersz 2 года назад +2

    As always, along with the amazing lyrics and fantastic music, the WAY Dylan sings makes this a great song.
    BTW, the way Dylan sings 'Jewels and binoculars' in the live version released in his first boxed set has been burned deep in my soul since I first heard it.

  • @zanderbealchannel827
    @zanderbealchannel827 2 месяца назад

    The first line always kills me--"Ain't it just like the night to play tricks when you're trying to be so quiet..."

  • @drawdownwind6636
    @drawdownwind6636 Год назад

    Bro, I love the fact you're listening and dissecting these Dylan tracks.. My face looked just like yours the first time..

  • @anotherjoshua
    @anotherjoshua Год назад +2

    Spot on analysis. The song is a masterpiece. And just like tangled up in blue, he drifts from "i" to "he" -- kind of stepping back and writing the song like an observer -- detached, just like he is with the girl. amazing.

  • @roddmcleodable
    @roddmcleodable Год назад

    it's a pleasure to watch you fall in love with dylan's songs.

  • @greghale6272
    @greghale6272 Год назад +2

    Well young man, you have made some astute observations about this magnificent piece of music. Thanks. I'm 72 and I saw Dylan in 1966 on his famous world tour when I was 15. Backed by the Hawks who became the " Band."
    He played this song, but solo. Just his guitar and harp. ( check out the version on Martin Scorsese doco "No Direction Home" from a 1966 UK concert.) Dylan's music is surrealism in words. Check out "What Was It You Wanted" from his " Oh Mercy" album.

  • @KRE808
    @KRE808 2 года назад

    Another excellent reaction, appreciate that you had the lyrics up for this one, and props for the Taxi Driver allusion. Also, can't resist pedantically letting you know it's pronounces "buy-ez" (and as some others have commented, would be interesting for you to react to her Diamonds and Rust at some point). Would love a reaction from you on Dylan's Dirge from his 1974 Planet Waves album.

  • @jamie395
    @jamie395 Год назад

    Really enjoy these takes on Dylan!

  • @billnugent8527
    @billnugent8527 11 месяцев назад

    Sorry for your trouble with RUclips. I hope you can stay "on the air". Your remarks and insights are among the most intelligent and I have encountered. thanks for your efforts thus far and hope you'll be around in the future. GBWY.

  • @admiralbillom7559
    @admiralbillom7559 Год назад +1

    great song and a good attempt at analysis . handful of rain i've always taken to refer to the temptation of smack. curious that you seem not to notice the effect of the hammond organ. i do enjoy your appreciation of a song that i've listened to since it was released.

  • @isaacgraham5727
    @isaacgraham5727 Год назад +1

    It’s interesting, hearing your analysis of this song makes me realize that I listen to Dylan in a very different way from you (or maybe from most people?) in that, despite having listened to this song hundreds of times over the last 30 years or so, I’ve never tried to make any literal or even metaphorical sense of the lyrics - I just let them wash over me and take them as individual images, vignettes.
    Take a line like “Jewels and binoculars hang from the head of the mule” - to me that’s just a gorgeous image that fits the tone of the song like a glove, and it’s never occurred to me even once to look deeper into it as being some sort of comment on materialism.

  • @fredmcgovern
    @fredmcgovern 3 месяца назад

    By far my favourite song... love how you reacted to my favourite line, The ghost of 'lectricity. Thanks for sharing!

  • @rebeccamonks4009
    @rebeccamonks4009 Год назад +1

    Dear Hip Hop fan, it was a delight to see and hear your reaction to this song. I have known it for years and not properly understood the words but I have such a strong feeling about it. It always makes me cry. Johanna means Grace of God or Gracious God in Hebrew so that's where he was going with it. The small city stuff is right there for all to see but it's all in God's perfection. I'm not religious, by the way and i don't think Dylan is but he's an intuitive, a seer, with beautiful messages for us all.

  • @kensilverstone1656
    @kensilverstone1656 2 года назад +2

    Sometimes I feel this is my favorite Dylan song--excessively hard to pick one--so I won't. But this song is fantastic. I also admire and appreciate your attempt at the near impossible--translating Dylan's metaphors.

  • @Beatles4Sale.
    @Beatles4Sale. Год назад +2

    “Dylan first performed "Visions of Johanna" in public on December 4, 1965, at the Berkeley Community Theatre. Present at this concert was Joan Baez, who believed the lyrics referred to her. She said, "He'd just written 'Visions of Johanna', which sounded very suspicious to me...he'd never performed it before and Neuwirth told him I was there that night and he performed it."” Hmm…I always heard it was about Joanie…😍😍😍

    • @MrEdkern
      @MrEdkern Год назад

      I agree but all these people will think different.

  • @jamminme
    @jamminme 2 года назад

    Enjoyed that reaction immensely. Do more Dylan please

  • @aidenferry23
    @aidenferry23 Год назад

    thanks for sharing, I think more hip hop fans would also appreciate Dylan BARZ

  • @joejoe-lb6bw
    @joejoe-lb6bw Год назад

    Once you really hear this song, you can never unhear it! The extraordinary musician’s performances, those drums, guitar, accents! That organ. And, of course Dylan’s poetry and delivery. Great reaction video.

  • @ingekoschmidder6424
    @ingekoschmidder6424 2 года назад +3

    Great analysis, if possible check out Dylan's "Desolation Row".

  • @lizmil
    @lizmil Год назад +2

    This is one of Dylan’s most brilliant songs . It’s great to see someone tacking it, going beyond Like a Rolling Stone and Blowin in the Wind, as great as they are.

  • @kenkaplan3654
    @kenkaplan3654 2 года назад

    On a first listen, your acuity is pretty amazing. It took me years to dope this out.

  • @lawrencebass769
    @lawrencebass769 Год назад

    I really enjoyed your cleaver , insightful analysis , because on my own I would draw a complete blank.

  • @eximusic
    @eximusic 2 года назад +2

    Great reaction for such a profound song. Was it Erik Erickson that said that every character in our dreams is an aspect of ourselves?

  • @alanfenn9820
    @alanfenn9820 27 дней назад

    MUST mention Bob’s amazing and captivating vocalisations that change MID VERSES… quite incredible… you don’t hear that very often with artists 🎼🎸 that’s Dylan 😉

  • @HelterSkelter07
    @HelterSkelter07 Год назад

    Grear reaction. Keep doing Dylan 😊

  • @Richarddraper
    @Richarddraper 2 года назад

    Good to see someone else gets the Dylan hip hop link. I arrived at both seperately, but around the same time and realised that what I liked about both was the same thing. If that makes sense.

  • @steveneardley7541
    @steveneardley7541 Год назад +3

    I'm impressed by how much you understood on first listen with this difficult song, especially about Dylan splitting himself off in the verse "Little Boy Lost." I personally think the "Jewels and binoculars hang from the head of the mule" is just about ugly, nowhere women in a museum, who have no understanding of beauty. I think the main thing you are missing is an understanding of Dylan's relationship with Joan Baez, who is a very pure, idealistic person, and also very beautiful (even now, amazingly enough).

  • @davidobissonette8848
    @davidobissonette8848 Год назад +1

    i love ur indian accent! and impressed u are even reviewing this classic song! kudos.

    • @dago87able
      @dago87able Год назад

      Does he have an Indian accent at all…?

  • @beyeringly
    @beyeringly 3 месяца назад

    I love Dylan. Sometimes I think he just writes for the rhyme. Then we invent a meaning that resonates with us. It’s like a dream.

  • @charsibaba6960
    @charsibaba6960 2 года назад +2

    He's a deep well bro' Try " Desolation Row " another tune with great lyrical imagery .

  • @RIbigDave
    @RIbigDave 19 дней назад

    His body of work is amazing he wrote so many songs that were performed ormed by other artist and he's been covered a number of times in this century. artists. The song book is amazing

  • @lgpsan
    @lgpsan 2 года назад +4

    That’s an organ! Synths were not invented yet. Oh and also my name comes from this song

  • @ptournas
    @ptournas 2 года назад +1

    There were times when he would record these songs and surprise the band by changing things in the middle of a take. If you listen closely, you can hear, at about 14:29, after the line "Where her cape of the stage once had flowed", the band starts to go into the changes in the last two lines of every verse and and quickly returns when they realize he's added extra lines to this verse. I always found that pretty amusing. Of course the band has just played 4 verses with 28 measures of lyrics to a verse and Dylan suddenly surprises them with a last verse containing 34 measures of lyrics!

  • @sueprator9314
    @sueprator9314 2 года назад +1

    Appreciate you do background research. So many reaction hosts do not. It really makes for a more appreciative take on the song from its sociological decade.

  • @tonydiamond1875
    @tonydiamond1875 Год назад

    I played this song to a friend of mine in about 1971. When the line "The ghost of electricity howls in the bones of her face" came up, he fell backwards off the chair. Yeah!

  • @notthebannerboys
    @notthebannerboys 4 месяца назад +1

    Trying to "interpret" this is a fool's errand. Every pleasure this has is right on the surface of the text. Every verse follows a strict 3-4-2 structure and, over the course of the rather long song, even if you're not consciously counting, the rhythm sinks in and you expect it. When he drags out a line, suggesting he's going to abandon the structure, it's downright riveting.

  • @dustinboucher8102
    @dustinboucher8102 Год назад +1

    The Royal Albert Hall live version of this may be Dylan’s best live performance along with Mr Tambourine Man from 1965’s Newport Folk Festival.

  • @telabib
    @telabib Год назад +1

    I saw him play this live in Liverpool in 1966.

  • @zachgates7491
    @zachgates7491 2 года назад +2

    Highway 61 is a good one.

  • @matthewzuckerman6267
    @matthewzuckerman6267 2 года назад +5

    One of my favourite songs, and I love your response to it. One thing to consider: verse three, about Little Boy Lost, may be sung by Louise.

  • @nathanemoore7085
    @nathanemoore7085 Год назад

    Love your reactions- especially the Dylan stuff (I’m a Dylan fanatic). I recommend Lou Reed, specifically “Dirty Blvd”

  • @Rick_Sav_SantaRosa
    @Rick_Sav_SantaRosa 6 месяцев назад

    Syed - The hallway verse, that’s Louise talking. Listening to him, muttering, not focused on her. Little Boy Lost, that’s from her perspective. Well, that’s the way I hear it. 😀. Great take on this one Syed.

  • @seajaytea9340
    @seajaytea9340 2 года назад +1

    Others have already commented on two tracks ("Gates of Eden" & "It's Alright Ma (I'm only Bleeding)") from the Bringing It All back Home album. A very "lyrically dense" outing by Mr. Dylan. I suggest taking a look at the whole album - also, I would particularly recommend the previously mentioned tracks and "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream" (one of my favs!).

  • @filthyphillyboy
    @filthyphillyboy 2 года назад +2

    Another song that deals with the relationship between Dylan and his muse is Mr. Tambourine Man. I would reccomend the studio version off of the album Bringing it all Back Home to be sure you get a version with all 4 verses.
    You take these songs very seriously and are very adept at expressing your opinions on them. Great job!

    • @kenkaplan3654
      @kenkaplan3654 2 года назад +2

      Very few people have seen this connection. I mentioned it in my comments. the difference to me in the two songs is in TM there is hope
      "Yes, to dance beneath the diamond sky
      With one hand waving free
      Silhouetted by the sea
      Circled by the circus sands
      With all memory and fate
      Driven deep beneath the waves
      Let me forget about today until tomorrow"
      In VOJ that hope seems to be gone

    • @filthyphillyboy
      @filthyphillyboy 2 года назад +1

      @@kenkaplan3654 Oh I agree. Visions of Johanna is like a war of attrition. "...and these visions of Johanna are now all that remain..."

    • @gratefulkm
      @gratefulkm Год назад +1

      @@filthyphillyboy More like total submission, " First I was Transparent, then I was effervescent, Finally I was Absent" Paul Katner
      Or "Dark Star Crashes, reason tatters, searchlight casting for faults in the clouds of delusion" Robert hunter

  • @manchasdos
    @manchasdos 2 года назад +1

    It's interesting to hear a real literal reading of these lyrics. To me it's far more impressionistic.

  • @TrekBeatTK
    @TrekBeatTK Год назад +1

    I highly recommend Desolation Row from this period, and Where Are You Tonight? From the late ‘70s.

  • @andrewpereira9271
    @andrewpereira9271 8 месяцев назад

    I'm glad you really liked the line, "The ghosts of electricity howl in the bones of her face." I loved it . . . so much so, it was the main reason I named my daughter "Louise." She's well into adulthood now and knows where her name came from, but I still can't explain to her what the hell it means.