Old Music and Modern Times

I’m glad to see that Bob Dylan’s plagiarism of many sources on his new album Modern Times is becoming something of a major story, although the focus lately has been on the lines and phrases he lifted from the Confederate poet Henry Timrod. I’m more concerned about the theft of songs. Every song on the album is credited to “Bob Dylan,” but two songs are flat-out stolen, almost every other includes lyrical and/or musical elements of other songs.

The most blatant theft on the album is “Rollin’ and Tumblin'”, a thinly disguised rewrite of the Muddy Waters song of the same name. Dylan’s defenders make two points: one, that many others had done the song before Muddy, including Robert Johnson, so he stole it as well; and two, that such actions are “part of the folk tradition.” Neither defense holds any water.

However he got it, and whoever had performed it before, Muddy Waters’ estate holds the copyright on that song. I strongly suspect that if I were to record Dylan’s version of the song, and put my own name on it, Columbia’s lawyers would come down on me like a ton of bricks. They’d also come after me if I downloaded the version of the song recorded for Columbia in 1936 by Robert Johnson, who was paid a flat fee and whose estate had to fight for a share of sales from the boxed set released some years ago. Beyond that, Dylan didn’t just reinterpret the song the way Muddy did, he lifted Muddy’s arrangement wholesale, complete with having his lead guitarist duplicate the notes, the feel and the sound of Muddy’s guitar playing on the original. (And the saddest part is that the riff he stole hasn’t been played with any real energy or excitement since Muddy played it more than fifty years ago, and has since become a tired, boring blues cliche that makes the song worth skipping on Dylan’s album.)

And let’s put the “tradition” crap to rest right now. Bob Dylan is not, I’m sorry to say, “part of the folk tradition.” And not just because he and his record company will make more money from the sales of this album than many of the “folk musicians” he claims to venerate made in their entire lives. The “folk tradition” is about give and take, and while he takes with abandon, neither he nor his record company will give anything. You can’t reinterpret his songs, or re-record them, or pass them on, or even play them live on stage, without owing him money. In the words of an old blues song, he’s got a hand full of gimme and a mouth full of thanks-a-lot. Although there’s not a word of thanks or credit anywhere on the album for the musicians he borrowed from.

And how ludicrously hypocritical is it for a record company to be defending this kind of behavior? Dylan records for Columbia, part of Sony, one of the enormous corporations that have modified and interpreted copyright law so restrictively, and so punitively, that you can be dragged into court for activity that, when I was a teenager, was commonplace and innocuous. They have threatened innumerable artists and musicians, damaged careers and forced the withdrawal of significant new musical works because they sampled other work. But when Bob Dylan does it, it’s OK? (It’s ironic that many of the Dylan fans who defend his actions here are the first ones to dismiss hip-hop as “not being music” or in more blatantly racist ways.)

Modern Times is not a bad album, but it’s nowhere near one of Dylan’s best, and it’s nowhere near as good as the albums by people like Negativland, Eminem and the Beastie Boys that have landed their creators in court. Dylan should be forced to withdraw this album, negotiate agreements with the authors of the works he borrowed from, and reissue it with proper writing credits.

If you want to hear a good example of borrowing from older music, pass on this album, and instead buy Outkast’s Idlewild. It’s a combination of hip-hop and thirties jazz and blues, inventive and fun, bringing in elements of everyone from Cab Calloway to Prince, making a blend that you’ve never really heard before. Modern Times is not only derivative, you have heard it before, on better Dylan albums. Skip it.

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“Ground Zero”

There was a particularly rancorous discussion in newyorkers over tourists’ use of the term “Ground Zero” to refer to the World Trade Center site. A lot of the emotion in that discussion had to do with the disrespectful behavior of tourists at the site, but some people were also expressing surprise that “Ground Zero” was considered an offensive term. Even though I’ve probably used it myself, it does irritate me, and the discussion got me thinking about why. The bottom line is that it’s an inaccurate simplification that seems to indicate that the speaker doesn’t know or care much about what really happened, but rather just wants to see the spectacle.

Definition and discussion

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Back at the Underground Lounge!

Mike Skliar and I will be back at the Underground Lounge on Thursday, September 21. I’ll be starting off with a half-hour solo set of original songs, including some brand-new ones, at 8 pm. Mike will do a solo set of his own and at 9 we’ll do a duo show. It’s our first show there in almost six months, and if we get a good turnout, there’ll be more. So come on down!

I’ll also be at the Parkside Lounge, one of the best homes for bluegrass in New York City, on Monday, September 18, with Fresh Baked. Great bluegrass, great bar. We start at 9.30, following Blue Harvest.

In other news, a Staten Island show has been cancelled: I will not be playing as planned with Caroline Cutroneo this Friday night, but Staten Islanders can look forward to an exciting show with Caroline, Mara Levine, me, and many others, on Saturday, September 23.

Details below

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WTC Memories

Before 9/11, I worked in the World Financial Center, directly across the street from the World Trade Center. My office windows faced the Hudson but the World Trade Center was a big part of my life — my bank and my dentist were there, I shopped there, bought lunch there, saw concerts there and walked through it several times every day.

I was very fortunate — and have not once, ever, ever regretted — that I was not there that Tuesday. I was still in Brooklyn driving down to our office in New Jersey, and I turned around and went home.

On September 12, I took the R train to the Promenade in Brooklyn (the conductor saying, “This train will terminate at Court Street, due to police activity,” as if anyone on the train didn’t know what was going on), and I sat on the Promenade and tried to write down every single thing I remembered about the WTC.

Walking home from work on Monday, September 10, 2001 (very long)

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Difference Engine #2

At dinner the other night with shunn, bobhowe and our friends Colin, Bill and Christopher, I mentioned the version of Charles Babbage’s Difference Engine #2 built at the Science Museum in London. The story of its construction is told in Doron Swade’s The Difference Engine, which discusses the many challenges that probably would have prevented its construction in Babbage’s time.

In actuality, tolerances and machining methods were not exactly the problem, contrary to what I said the other night. It was more the difficulty of producing parts that were exactly identical to each other. (“Computer-controlled machinery produced the hundreds of repeat parts, the manufacture of which had so handicapped Babbage,” says Swade.)

But beyond that, Babbage’s design was unbuildable — he’d never managed to build it all so was unaware of contradictions and problems in his plans. And once built, there was the entirely different problem of getting it to actually work.”Babbage had not had the experience of fault-finding on a complete machine, and had made no provision for easing the setting-up process or dealing with malfunctions,” Swade says. In a modern age of programming it’s difficult to imagine how in-the-dark Babbage was. “Babbage had made no provision for debugging,” Swade continues. “The whole machine is one ‘hard-wired’ unit,” so if it jammed, which it did frequently, finding the problem was a bear.

Photos below.

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Tri-Borough Music

In September, I’ll be playing in Brooklyn, Manhattan and Staten Island. Coming up this week is the Third Annual Brooklyn Country Music Festival, at Park Slope’s legendary Southpaw on Saturday. I’ll be playing with Graveyard Shift in the downstairs lounge (ie, the smaller stage) at 11pm. But the music starts at 4pm, and lots of great bands are playing, including Alex Battles’ Whiskey Rebellion, the
Demolition String Band, and more. It’ll be a great time, with music more country than most things coming out of Nashvegas nowadays.

More September shows…

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Once a copy editor…

So, I’m an English geek, and proud of it. Welcome back shunn and thanks for a solid 15 minutes of rainy Tuesday work avoidance.

Meme below

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