Bob Dylan 2016 Nobel Lecture in Literature

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  • čas přidán 29. 06. 2024
  • Bob Dylan received the 2016 Nobel Prize in Literature "for having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition".

Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @omarflores4736
    @omarflores4736 Před 2 lety +77

    Is there a version of this with no music in the background? I would prefer that a lot more than having something get in the way of his voice.

    • @NobelPrize
      @NobelPrize  Před 2 lety +151

      We have published this recording exactly as we received it from Bob Dylan. The pianist who performed was hand-picked by the laureate himself. Thanks for watching!

    • @kingpetra6886
      @kingpetra6886 Před rokem +25

      Bob Dylan came of age during the Beat generation. For material like this, It was common to have music either in the background or to serve as "punctuation" to what was being read. Additionally, most verbal presentations given by Bob Dylan have been given with music anyway. I seriously doubt the voice would go over any better without the music, it is the words that are the centerpiece of this "essay". He got the Nobel prize for literature, not singing or oratory. Study the transcript.

    • @dylanthompson4836
      @dylanthompson4836 Před rokem +11

      It's there for a reason. It's connecting the written word to song.

    • @LeagueofLightians
      @LeagueofLightians Před rokem

      @@NobelPrize ruined

    • @omarflores4736
      @omarflores4736 Před rokem +4

      @@kingpetra6886 Thanks for the information! I didn't even think about that. It makes sense and sounds a lot better now.

  • @whoislily
    @whoislily Před 7 lety +652

    i wish bob dylan could explain the plot of every book ever for me

  • @BrianDornTFP
    @BrianDornTFP Před 7 lety +1179

    Not too shabby for a song and dance man.

  • @stevenstarr5680
    @stevenstarr5680 Před 7 lety +675

    Noticing how seriously he takes this, what a teacher he is, how lucky we are to have him.

    • @milkcow
      @milkcow Před 7 lety +13

      Steven Starr I laugh every time I read someone say what a teacher he is. Who here remembers cliffs notes or spark notes?

    • @milkcow
      @milkcow Před 7 lety +2

      Someone just replied but I cannot see it here for some reason. Well, all I can say is google whale oil used for anointing kings and see what results are given. Google genesis moby dick. Read sparknotes about whiteness in Moby Dick. I'd post the screen shots, but you can't.

    • @milkcow
      @milkcow Před 7 lety +4

      Also check out the name of the boat, Pequod in sparknotes. He should have said Pequot was an Indian tribe. Pequod was named after the tribe. All in sparknotes!

    • @milkcow
      @milkcow Před 7 lety +6

      Also I never said he recites from cliffsnotes or sparknotes. His insight is from some of these sources instead of from memory. It's not a verbatim copy. His ideas are not original or come from his interpretation or memory. They're from outside sources that he didn't cite.

    • @MartinT50
      @MartinT50 Před 7 lety +6

      Or maybe he just read the book. I just searched the copy I downloaded from Gutenberg and found this:
      "Pequod, you will no doubt remember, was the name of a celebrated tribe of Massachusetts Indians; now extinct as the ancient Medes."

  • @markmiller9579
    @markmiller9579 Před 3 lety +244

    He revealed more of himself in these 27 minutes than he did publicly in the preceding half century of his amazing career.

    • @richardeast3328
      @richardeast3328 Před 2 lety +5

      My thoughts too, he always seemed aloof to me.

    • @alibobo2009
      @alibobo2009 Před 2 lety +6

      Took some reflection for him. Saw a recent interview where he said he couldn't write those songs now.

    • @joycecandido6317
      @joycecandido6317 Před 2 lety +2

      I was completely amazed !!!

    • @MrACangusyoungDC
      @MrACangusyoungDC Před rokem +7

      You need to search "bob dylan goes deep on" here on CZcams if you want a revealed Bob Dylan. It's an uncut hour long interview from 1985. The way he reveals himself makes it such a gem, it's crazy

    • @maryfulham1522
      @maryfulham1522 Před rokem

      👍Someone's 2016 .....
      🎵"B'RINGING IT ALL BACK HOME"🎵 2030
      "Sing in me ol' Muse + Tell the Story." -"No🔔Peace Prize 6/4/2017" ...
      He changes identities.....
      His trickery Will.....
      He disguises himself as a lowly beggar..." .......👨‍🎨🎵"give her a 📯
      4 Halloween🎶🎃🎶 & 🎶 A 🇺🇸 4
      her birthday🎶...🥁...🎵🦉Who' who !!!

  • @slaphappybullet
    @slaphappybullet Před 4 lety +77

    "He looked older than twenty-two. Something about him seemed permanent, and he filled me with conviction."

  • @jeffreyheath8179
    @jeffreyheath8179 Před 4 lety +293

    Hear the rhythms, the cadences, the emphases, the pauses, the unexpected rhymes, the shifts in intonation, elocution, and pace, the unemphatic ending and the unforeseen if "roundabout" way he arrives at his point. See Buddy Holly's unforgettably elegiac look into Bob's eyes, see the brutal images of War. This is Bob Dylan's Song of Himself and ourselves, a brief but epic glimpse into the grammar-school and seed-bed of his poetry.

    • @renatoalcides5104
      @renatoalcides5104 Před 3 lety +9

      "...unemphatic ending..." The marc of a genius, with an artistic honest disregard to the unattentive audience, he trusts that we can always reach their meanings.

    • @sharonrebibo6015
      @sharonrebibo6015 Před 2 lety +9

      I think you are also a writer, Jeffrey.
      You never know, you might make it yourself.

    • @JoePinOrl
      @JoePinOrl Před 2 lety +4

      I will not even attempt to comment risking any harsh criticism and well deserved after reading your comment Jeffrey, you have made my day. You are obviously a brilliant writer.

    • @knockedoutloaded279
      @knockedoutloaded279 Před 2 lety

      Most people just say he can't sing....

    • @chrisandrus689
      @chrisandrus689 Před 2 lety +1

      ...word, JH...

  • @eldaytripper2
    @eldaytripper2 Před 7 lety +674

    Dylan should record an audiobook of Moby Dick.

    • @milkcow
      @milkcow Před 7 lety +44

      eldaytripper2 he just did.

    • @steenseersholm1439
      @steenseersholm1439 Před 7 lety +17

      He should record a GPS audio :)

    • @kissesgriffith
      @kissesgriffith Před 7 lety +32

      He just did..........

    • @michaelavolio
      @michaelavolio Před 7 lety +45

      He was asked about doing one some years ago! He said if it was his voice on the GPS, you'd hear something like, "Take a left at the next street. No, a right. You know what? Just keep going straight." Haha

    • @milkcow
      @milkcow Před 7 lety +1

      kissesgriffith i wrote that too. Haha

  • @grahamjhalpin6152
    @grahamjhalpin6152 Před 4 lety +177

    We have lived in the same era as this man! How lucky are we? Thank you Bob!

  • @AdrianNicholls
    @AdrianNicholls Před 7 lety +460

    Art in itself. Kudos to the Nobel Organisation for making this brave choice.

    • @BeeG758
      @BeeG758 Před 7 lety +26

      that the committee could be so wise amazes me. and although i have loved bob dylan from the first time i heard him i feel part of a long marriage that began as love at first sight and still thrills and deepens. a world with him in it can never be boring.

    • @imannonymous7707
      @imannonymous7707 Před 5 lety +7

      Here here gotta respect their choice

    • @Peacely23
      @Peacely23 Před 5 lety +4

      Now im free and away from it all for who knows how long

    • @garyschultz7768
      @garyschultz7768 Před 3 lety

      the novel prize means no more than a bag of poop...
      the Dylan of old would have rubbed their noses in it....

    • @christiebaker5291
      @christiebaker5291 Před 3 lety +3

      how could they not pick him?

  • @MertonHayford
    @MertonHayford Před 7 lety +130

    Now there's a speech that you can call Bringing It All Back Home.

  • @MarksCoffeeHouse2
    @MarksCoffeeHouse2 Před 7 lety +391

    Wow. I knew this guy was sharp, but what a brilliant mind. The poetic riffing says he's still got it. All of it. Nobody reads Dylan like Dylan.

    • @jamesgraham4235
      @jamesgraham4235 Před 5 lety +6

      So true but hEAR he reads about the ones that have to give him away for looking at life, understanding of human nature & standards to measure themselves. :-)

    • @jitsroller
      @jitsroller Před 3 lety +3

      Dylan recaps three classic books.

    • @jadedragon288
      @jadedragon288 Před 2 lety +2

      @@jitsroller Expect the unexpected from Dylan, a true artistic genius' response to his being awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.

    • @darlenealessio7609
      @darlenealessio7609 Před 2 lety +2

      Dylan reads us all, he has learned well the devouring nature of ego, and has set his bar high and boundaries stead fast, why he has endured..

  • @jamescrane3042
    @jamescrane3042 Před 7 lety +712

    What an absolute treasure this is

  • @bwanna23
    @bwanna23 Před 7 lety +218

    His speech is a performance in itself. A poem. Reminds me of Jack Kerouac.

    • @fennarios
      @fennarios Před 4 lety +8

      Yes! I found you, i smiled and remember kerouac reading on tv

    • @nilesdelta8636
      @nilesdelta8636 Před 4 lety +6

      You should def read chronicles vol1

    • @davihar
      @davihar Před 4 lety +2

      this guy is far beyond Kerouac in every way

    • @gabex9823
      @gabex9823 Před 3 lety +5

      @@davihar Bob Dylan was a beat himself like Kerouac. If you pick up a Beat collection Bob Dylan's poetry and prose and lyrics will probably be in there. You putting down Kerouac doesn't seem fair especially considering how much of an influence he was to Dylan. There's tons of quotes of Dylan affirming Kerouac's influence. “’I read On the Road in maybe 1959. It changed my life like it changed everyone else’s,’” said Bob Dylan (can be found on his official website)

    • @daniellyons914
      @daniellyons914 Před 3 lety +1

      Yes! Very much!

  • @jameskovic7146
    @jameskovic7146 Před 7 lety +229

    As an avid Bob Dylan fan I was thoroughly enraptured by this intimate sharing of his with the world. As I was listening to him give his brief summary of these classic books I could almost hear echoes of some of his great songs. "Oh, that's where the basis for some of those great Dylan tunes come from." I thought to myself. I'm amazed and pleased that Bob Dylan has survived all of these years to receive such a level of recognition. He could very well have died in that motorcycle accident in 1969 and then like Hendrix and Janis Joplin disappeared into Rock & Roll legend. But, he didn't. We should all be grateful that such a one as Bob Dylan has been granted this gift by God to endure so long. He's so deep and a really cool guy.

    • @niallswaine2436
      @niallswaine2436 Před 3 lety +7

      Motorcycle accident was in 1966, everything else 100%

    • @helensolinger8693
      @helensolinger8693 Před 3 lety +13

      And the motorcycle wreck gave us the band and the basement tapes. He kept the boys on salary after the world tour. Thank you Bobm

    • @sharonrebibo6015
      @sharonrebibo6015 Před 2 lety +5

      @@helensolinger8693 Bob Dylan is a true inspiration.

    • @cashattuck
      @cashattuck Před 2 lety +1

      A mixed bag to me. Arrogant and always depressing in his truly brilliant wordsmithing.

    • @LovelyMiss90
      @LovelyMiss90 Před 2 lety

      💜

  • @michaelminx
    @michaelminx Před 7 lety +132

    This speech is a kind of spiritual autobiography - and a major work of literature in its own right!

  • @_fig.8
    @_fig.8 Před 7 lety +139

    this should be released on vinyl.

  • @SPAC3MANxSPL1FF
    @SPAC3MANxSPL1FF Před 5 lety +58

    "And every one of them words rang true, and it glowed like burning coal.
    Pouring off of every page, like it was written in my soul, from me to you...."
    Brilliant as ever, Bob.

  • @Bloodshed-qh8gb
    @Bloodshed-qh8gb Před 7 lety +97

    I've listened to Dylan for about 4 years now (I'm 20 now) and I can honestly say no one has moved and affected me more than him. He has the greatest lyrics I've ever heard in songs (in my opinion anyway) and i'm so proud to call him my biggest inspiration. Forget the mainstream top 40 crap or whatever it's called, THIS is what artists and young people should strive to be

    • @dia9491
      @dia9491 Před 3 lety +1

      Without mainstream people don’t get inspired to make better music though. So it’s a necessary evil.

    • @Clubberoni
      @Clubberoni Před 3 lety +5

      Bob dylan was mainstream

    • @ledsohio
      @ledsohio Před 2 lety +2

      I'm glad you found Bob Dylan and there are a lot more great artists out there unfortunately almost all of them are from the past.

    • @lilylove2021
      @lilylove2021 Před 2 lety +1

      Well done, so much for you to discover - sara

    • @janeteague-urbach3297
      @janeteague-urbach3297 Před 2 lety +4

      @@ledsohio no..they are not. Try you some Jason Isbell, Amanda Price to name but two of a number of fantastic younger artists, musicians and writers out there. Every generation thinks theirs were the best. I'm 74. Dylan was my sound track, my inspiration and hero. But I'm not deaf and i listen to the best of the "kids" and have hope. Ask me what kind of music I like and I'll say "good!".

  • @timothyamaraobrien
    @timothyamaraobrien Před 7 lety +130

    Melville, Remarque, Homer, Dylan. Literature is life! This speech alone illustrates why this award was so sensible.

    • @RexHrothgar1
      @RexHrothgar1 Před 3 lety +2

      Indeed. And yet so many will chase after money instead. Money won’t make you feel alive.

    • @111Benzie
      @111Benzie Před 3 lety +3

      It's blasphemous to mention Dylan in the same sentence as Homer and Melville.
      But --to a dumbed down America it fits.

    • @chrisandrus689
      @chrisandrus689 Před 3 lety +1

      @@RexHrothgar1 ...no thing, nothing will fill that hole....only what is not of 'thingness' can possibly fill/complete you....

    • @lewisc215
      @lewisc215 Před 2 lety +3

      He should have gotten it for poetry, not lit. That year Philip Roth deserved it.

    • @Grace-fh8ec
      @Grace-fh8ec Před rokem

      @@111Benzie????

  • @Dickens20
    @Dickens20 Před 7 lety +133

    Wow. This is so cool. Leave it to Dylan to hit another home run. What a great storyteller. I love the visual imagery created by Bob’s words. His voice is the quintessential storyteller’s song. It’s been some 57 years since I first listened to Dylan, and I never tire of his songs. God bless you, Mr. Dylan, and may you stay, forever young.

  • @Plattown76
    @Plattown76 Před 3 lety +19

    as buddy once looked him in the eyes, Bob stared at me at a recent concert of his i went to. i innocently was laughing while watching him play the piano and he slowly turned his head, stared at me, and laughed. i then pointed at him, and he pointed right back. and as i watched him explain how buddy stared at him accepting his Grammy for Time Out of Mind on youtube a few months after, i was awestruck.... never will forget that moment and what it will mean for me in the future

  • @davidholler1
    @davidholler1 Před 7 lety +344

    Most influential artist of our time. The Beatles wouldn't have gone from 'She Loves You' to 'Norwegian Wood' without Dylan. The most copied vocal style to boot; ELO, Tom Petty, John Lennon, The Byrds and many others. Love listening to Bob read to me. He should do more audio books. What a great storyteller. The world's a wonderful place when you hear Bob's voice. Thank God it will never be silence; even after he's gone.

    • @Theimbennn
      @Theimbennn Před 7 lety +17

      He speaks in a strange and unique way, the way he emphasises words and let's words fade away never mind he's rhyming tempo he keeps and his accent. He did a radio show a few years ago where he'd talk for abit and play some songs set on a certain theme. Just search bob dylan theme time radio hour on CZcams for clips and google it for the full shows there's one clip on youtube of a sketch he did with tom waits which is pretty bonkers

    • @michaelfleming6994
      @michaelfleming6994 Před 7 lety +10

      sunriseRISE you're ripping Bob Dylan apart for discovering his style. He took everything he found and improved it. Any curious mind knows that.

    • @Theimbennn
      @Theimbennn Před 7 lety +12

      +sunriseRISE you are talking about a young Dylan who just moved to New York who was trying to find his place on the world spell bound by woody Guthrie and wanted to be like his hero yes we all know this it's well known and it's a non point. And as for house of the sun it's a old traditional song only thing bob took from van ronk was the arrangement if you know anything about folk music those things are common van ronk wasn't angry he even said and bob did ask. And I don't understand your last part as it's just a bunch of jumbled up BAMs and WHAMS. Anyone who knows music knows Dylan is the single most influential artist in music

    • @nickkautai1660
      @nickkautai1660 Před 7 lety +5

      live that saw so many things in Buddy Holly

    • @nickkautai1660
      @nickkautai1660 Před 7 lety +4

      love xxx that he saw style suave in BH

  • @johncarlson7338
    @johncarlson7338 Před 7 lety +103

    His words regarding War are the most staggering anti war message I have ever heard. It was like being transported into some muddy ditch with blood and gore all around. I will never forget those words and message.

    • @neelylyles1913
      @neelylyles1913 Před 4 lety +19

      You might consider reading that book he's talking about

    • @AnnaLVajda
      @AnnaLVajda Před 3 lety +3

      All Quiet on the Western Front.

    • @mindsigh4
      @mindsigh4 Před 2 lety

      thanks, good movie too, John boy Walton

  • @morgnan7
    @morgnan7 Před 7 lety +62

    I've always loved Bob Dylan but never quite understood his genius;
    couldn't fathom from what hidden place his songs came to him. His Nobel
    Lecture has now re-enforced for me everything I knew and
    didn't know about Dylan. It overwhelmed me.

  • @donnaweaselfat1234
    @donnaweaselfat1234 Před 7 lety +55

    His eloquence and depth is remarkable

    • @FrankieParadiso4evah
      @FrankieParadiso4evah Před 4 lety +1

      I wonder why Joni Mitchell always portrays him as a fraud - she must be bonkers.

    • @Unseen_warfare.
      @Unseen_warfare. Před 4 lety +3

      @@FrankieParadiso4evah she's always been jealous of his impact. Listen to what she said to hurricane carter about prisoners booing her when Bob and Her and a few others played a prison show. You really see her true colors. It grieves her she is always in Dylan's shadow,,,., That her songwriting was never respected as Bob's songwriting. She blamed it on the misogyny of music and that he stole his entire style and wasn't an original. I disagree. I see Dylan as seeing another persons work and putting it through his filter. He makes it his own whatever he is doing because his approach is so different,.. He makes the songs real and you believe what he is saying. He can grab a metaphysical concept and brings them back into a semi-physical place in his music. Literally connecting to the collective unconscious . You feel like you are searching through images in a dream state in certain songs. He thinks in images and you can see his words, paints with them. It's not average. I'd say Joni Mitchell is a good songwriter but she's not one of the greats and it bothers her because she has a large ego.

  • @richardcowan343
    @richardcowan343 Před 7 lety +55

    Dylan's words - accompanied by his voice are electric and moving. This is art history made over a lifetime lived. Beauty that is timeless. Read it, listen to the words, and you will be inspired. You'll want to listen to Buddy Holly, again and again, and read, time and again, over and over, Moby Dick, All Quiet on the Western Front, and Homer's Odyssey. Says Dylan, of his life, quoting Homer, "Sing in me, oh Muse, and through me tell the story." His lecture / essay deserves an award in and of itself. Timeless.

  • @bryantposs8079
    @bryantposs8079 Před 7 lety +49

    I always thought Cormac McCarthy should get it first, but after listening to so many of Dylan's songs now, I can see the justification. Whole songs with no repetition, without one refrain, just an entire story in a song to a few chords. Brilliant.

  • @peege2878
    @peege2878 Před rokem +20

    The background piano track was played by Alan Pasqua, one of the great jazz musicians of our time. He played it in one take, made up the whole thing on the spot. I mean, that's every bit as impressive as Dylan's commentary.

    • @rickyelvis3215
      @rickyelvis3215 Před 4 měsíci

      not even close

    • @harveythompson1756
      @harveythompson1756 Před 2 měsíci +1

      ..however, we could just as well do without it altogether; if anything, it detracts from Bobs voice rather than enhances it; even though Bob himself chose for it to be on there,,,well, nobodies perfect, right Bob?!

  • @VenishaZara
    @VenishaZara Před 7 lety +136

    Beautiful speech! He's done honor to this magnificent award. Bless him!

  • @jdlund
    @jdlund Před 6 lety +88

    I love the lecture. I do enjoy the line "Don Quixote, Ivanhoe, Robinson Crusoe, Gulliver's Travels, Tale of Two Cities...typical grammar school reading." Apparently, Dylan's grammar school had a far more rigorous curriculum than mine.

    • @cruzcontrol1303
      @cruzcontrol1303 Před 4 lety +3

      Jonathan Lund I’m in high school and I’ve read a lot of those books lol

    • @myotherusername9224
      @myotherusername9224 Před 4 lety +5

      ".typical grammar school reading."... and Quinn the Eskimo (Mighty Quinn) was nothing more than a "simple nursery rhyme.".

    • @tenisalot
      @tenisalot Před 3 lety

      @@cruzcontrol1303 Dylan said grammar school, which is grades 1 - 8......grammar school is not high school. Most books he listed are not current grammar school fair, and if they are, abridged versions for children are used.

    • @egodust11
      @egodust11 Před 3 lety +1

      Obviously an exaggeration. If he's lucky he read and moreso remarkably *resonated* with their pathos and metaphysics IN HIGH SCHOOL.
      A far less contrived auto-bio sketch was from an impromptu interview on 60 Minutes in 2003?
      Here he reveals he technically *channeled* his early and best songs, like ALL GREAT ART comes through. "I don't know how I got to write those songs...it's like they were magically written."

    • @sharonrebibo6015
      @sharonrebibo6015 Před 2 lety

      The absolute whole of my class could never get through The Tale of Two Cities. We managed to read the iconic first sentence though.
      As for the rest - we had to get through on the Notes summarising the book which could be purchased for a fairly low price.😅

  • @agunsux
    @agunsux Před 7 lety +26

    He's never this sincere. This is treasure. Should be taught to every kids around the globe.

  • @Telecasterluvr
    @Telecasterluvr Před 7 lety +45

    Hearing him talk about Moby Dick made me think of "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream" such a crazy lyric. Thank you for everything Bob you're music has always been there for me.

    • @Theimbennn
      @Theimbennn Před 7 lety +7

      I've read some comments say "but how does him summarising some classic books influence his songwriting poetry and music" only us who know bobs lyrics now clearly see the influence those books had on him.

    • @kissesgriffith
      @kissesgriffith Před 7 lety

      spiones2 I love 115th Dream. Original and fun!

  • @Averani
    @Averani Před 7 lety +73

    Amazing stuff. I have never heard Bob Dylan speak so clearly!

    • @kevinshaughnessy2528
      @kevinshaughnessy2528 Před 6 lety +5

      For as long as he has been around (my lifetime) he never speaks much

    • @jschuler53
      @jschuler53 Před 6 lety +3

      had he started out as just a poet, he might never have reached the audiences he did, instead he tried something very unique, being a poet and ""song and dance man" a performer, rock and roll, whatever, he defies genres. But not doubt, the gems are the lyrics, still choosing how to perform them are also genius...some times I couldn't hear the lyrics for the voice, but he has/always had a raw, authentic presence, not polished, just like most any of us. Shy, a bit awkward at times, confidence, on fire, all of those emotions....not the mechanical same every night performers we see too much of.

  • @grahamhobbs3501
    @grahamhobbs3501 Před 7 lety +260

    55 years on, sounds like Last Thoughts on Woody Guthrie - classic Bob

    • @tcraigwilson
      @tcraigwilson Před 7 lety +12

      I agree. Recommend listening to Last Thoughts on Woodie Guthrie to anyone and everyone.

    • @tcraigwilson
      @tcraigwilson Před 7 lety +35

      Omega8kilo Troll. Dylan is our modern Homer.

    • @fishdweeb123
      @fishdweeb123 Před 7 lety +27

      complete idiot- Dylan is an original. A gift to humanity.

    • @tommynoble9075
      @tommynoble9075 Před 7 lety +2

      Do you mean his song "Song to Woody"? What is "Last Thoughts on Woody Guthrie"?

    • @tcraigwilson
      @tcraigwilson Před 7 lety +2

      Jon Brown You arent kidding. Those bootleg recordings served as my introduction to Dylan. What an American.

  • @larrypower8659
    @larrypower8659 Před 4 lety +15

    This is unbelievable. It’s like the greatest college lecturer you’ve ever heard, and you just want to hear more. Like
    an educator who has a lifelong love of literature who can draw you into his world and inspire you to reach for
    something that’s always been inside of you and needs to come out. Now.

  • @plmccarty51
    @plmccarty51 Před 7 lety +29

    This is such a treat I have been a Dylan fan for 40+ years. Hearing him speak is so special. He is the greatest living song writer and I hope he keeps writing and singing. Thank Bob my life has been enriched by you.

  • @tygerstripes3752
    @tygerstripes3752 Před 7 lety +48

    Bob, oh Bob, I count myself so lucky to have heard and seen you once live. You are right; songs aren't literature, but both can be stories. And we really need stories. God bless you, Bob.

  • @MrEdkern
    @MrEdkern Před 3 lety +4

    The man is a genius. I met him in clevland,ohio on july 17, 1991. Was walking down on lake erie and I looked up and dylan was walking toward me. I stood still and he came up to me and shook my hand that I extended toward him. He was really nice to me.

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 Před 2 lety

      that's nice that he was friendly to you when he realized you recognized him. I saw Spider John Koerner once as he was walking along river road - and I was on bicycle - and so I sang out one of his Holler songs. Koerner was a big influence on Bob Dylan when he first moved to Minneapolis

  • @kissesgriffith
    @kissesgriffith Před 7 lety +31

    The most beautiful voice - a self made intellectual - his own way - thank you for recognizing he indeed a poet....

  • @fernandovillanueva4952
    @fernandovillanueva4952 Před 7 lety +18

    Bob Dylan Nobel prize is more than an acknowledgment of his work. To me, the level of acknowledgment of the Swedish Academy is a push to the faith of humanity, of all of us, in ourselves.

  • @chriswelch7789
    @chriswelch7789 Před 7 lety +24

    Please put this master work on Spotify.

  • @Rock_Girl_Daze
    @Rock_Girl_Daze Před 3 lety +18

    In true Dylan style, even this speech is poetic. Grateful to have Dylan in my world. An absolute treasure of the times.

  • @mr_camouflage9793
    @mr_camouflage9793 Před 7 lety +130

    Buddy holly has changed both john Lennon and bob Dylan. If buddy holly was still alive he would be pleased

    • @triplucid3563
      @triplucid3563 Před 5 lety +4

      So did muddy waters and also so did Chuck Berry

    • @honeybozo
      @honeybozo Před 4 lety +1

      So you think that just ‘cuz he’s left his body he’s dead?
      Being vibrant for life, is what Bob was sharing...... you just fell asleep....

  • @doncadwallader8813
    @doncadwallader8813 Před 5 lety +8

    I've been listening to Dylan's songs for 50 years. After listening to this, I think I'm finally starting to understand.

  • @MichaelFenichel
    @MichaelFenichel Před 7 lety +50

    Overwhelmingly deep and powerful tribute to words and literature, with his Dylan-esque twist & brilliance. That's my take, FWIW.
    "Plato, Aristotle, Socrates, what happened to this?", Dylan begins, with soft piano in the background. Captain Ahab's mission, from whales to phrenology (in Moby Dick), religious themes and Greek philosophy across time. These and his musical vocabulary pervade "my songs as well", he explains. He quotes from the Odyssey and its theme of the long journey and memorable themes and lines: "Drugs have been dropped into his wine.... it's been a hard road to travel". Dylan explains how he was moved and shaped by things he read or discussed in school. Themes.
    So what does it all mean? "I'm not going to worry about what it all means", scrutinizing every detail. He doubts Melville would have either, with so much going on between mariner terms, Protestant doctrine, and whaling terminology. Sometimes, Dylan shared, "I don't know what it means either, but it sounds good, and you want your songs to sound good."
    The speech goes full circle from song to literature, for which Bob Dylan received a Nobel Prize: "Our songs are alive in the land of the living." But songs are unlike literature, meant to be sung, not read. Lyrics are meant to be sung, as the words in Shakespeare's plays are meant to be acted on a stage, and literature is meant to be read on a page. You can decide for yourself what it "means", but Dylan - who clearly is quite literate - spoke here for 27 minutes about the power of words. He ended by hoping that some who may not be familiar with his own, give a listen (not only read), as that's his "page" and "stage". Dylan ends with a hope that his words may be heard as intended, though clearly this is a masterpiece of "literary review" and a masterful essay on the relationship of literature to other arts. "I hope some of you get the chance to listen to these lyrics the way they were intended to be heard, in concert or on record or however people are listening to songs these days."
    Dylan ends by quoting Homer: "Sing in me own muse through me and through me, tell the story'".
    Dylan's stories, as lyric if not literature or poetry (in terms of Nobel prizes) are clearly a masterpiece. This speech is not only literature (despite a piano background) but it provides historical lessons as well as a look into thematic threads in Dylan's songs. This should be wonderful for existing fans to READ (or hear) and also help with young or unfamiliar audiences the reasons why this "singer" is so acknowledged for his words and stories. Thank you Nobel Org, too! A gift for the ages.

    • @sr4663
      @sr4663 Před 4 lety

      What a great treat. A peek into Bob's influences. Extremely eloquent as always.

  • @alrodzmagicalmusic1269
    @alrodzmagicalmusic1269 Před 4 lety +12

    Dylan's ability to chose the precise word at the precise time is astonishing and amazing .

  • @philipdoherty688
    @philipdoherty688 Před 7 lety +49

    "Transported me into a world I'd never known"

    • @philipdoherty688
      @philipdoherty688 Před 7 lety +4

      Eve No, I'm very familiar with the Kerouac/Steve Allen spoken word jazz recordings and all the writers you just mentioned. I was just quoting one of the lines Dylan said in the lecture in response to the way I felt about it; but yeah, everyone you just mentioned is pretty great and this lecture was excellent!

    • @salamolevin
      @salamolevin Před 7 lety +7

      i actually think that was the trick. an homage to kerouac with the steve allen accompaniment. he was telling you what really influenced him. not these ancient texts but the beat poets

  • @SuperMiley1994
    @SuperMiley1994 Před 5 lety +26

    Hearing this makes me less anxious, Dylan's voice is very calming to listen to.

  • @xkguy
    @xkguy Před 7 lety +15

    Wow, I've never heard Dylan speak. He is a gifted speaker. What a great sharing of personal insights and thoughts.
    I always wondered what his earliest musical exposure was. I pictured him listening to Texas radio in his bedroom in Hibbing. This is a special gift to those of us who have followed him for 50 years and some.

  • @emmywang346
    @emmywang346 Před 3 lety +17

    The fact that this was recorded on my Birthday, June 4th, makes my heart swell.
    Love you, Bob. You’ve transported me to a world I’ve never known

  • @VenishaZara
    @VenishaZara Před 7 lety +166

    Sure was worth the wait! God Bless Bob Dylan!

  • @yforum
    @yforum Před 7 lety +96

    This is pretty amazing. Thank you Bob for the rhyme and the rhythm.

  • @augustinenorte6318
    @augustinenorte6318 Před 3 lety +13

    It’s truly unbelievable how this man creates images. It’s even more unbelievable that I had the opportunity to live and see him touch the heart of knowledge, instead of reading it from a time I couldn’t understand.

  • @tomgeorgearts
    @tomgeorgearts Před 7 lety +16

    I could listen to him talk all day and night... We are still waiting for part 2 of the autobiography Bob!!!

  • @jibtastic4
    @jibtastic4 Před 7 lety +18

    Great to hear Bob voice in modern day. Makes me feel good

  • @adeefeinstein
    @adeefeinstein Před 7 lety +71

    “In a soldier's stance, I aimed my hand at the mongrel dogs who teach
    Fearing not that I'd become my enemy in the instant that I preach
    My existence led by confusion boats, mutiny from stern to bow
    Ah, but I was so much older then, I'm younger than that now”
    Preach on, Bob!

    • @jeffreywebb7932
      @jeffreywebb7932 Před 6 lety

      Adee Feinstein man one of many of my favorite verses

    • @claudiaboudreau5776
      @claudiaboudreau5776 Před 3 lety

      As a young man who had empathy and compassion for the unjust treatment of innocent people and reflected from the mountain so all souls could see it and he knew his song well before he would sing it. He didn't know how deeply he touched our souls he wasn't even trying to do that. But the songs the stories everyone of them words still ring true to this world we live in now and forever. Thank you Bob Dylan you have touched many many generations who get it. Your words will live on and the fight for justice will continue.

    • @randallbeasley3026
      @randallbeasley3026 Před 2 lety

      My back pages ! One my all time favorites.

  • @SparkleBC
    @SparkleBC Před 7 lety +21

    Recorded 4 June, 2017
    Los Angeles, CA
    USA
    I've watched this twice so far, think I'll listen to it now and again. Thank you Nobel Price for posting.

  • @ChrisLupetti
    @ChrisLupetti Před 7 lety +17

    A speech like this can only be heard once in a generation. Mr. Bob Dylan, thank you for your words and your voice.

  • @grantdoyle492
    @grantdoyle492 Před 7 lety +21

    When I first heard Dylans music I was 17. He changed my life literally. I've said that many times to many people but never really understood it. I just turned 69 and now I get it. Bob Dylan is my hero in a world that needs them badly. This is the most moving speech that I have ever listened to. I wish Gregg Allman could have heard it. I think he would feel the same.

  • @sidsingh9387
    @sidsingh9387 Před 7 lety +73

    His last comment was epic though. He implies his songs are indeed not poems, but Shakespeare's plays aren't novels either. Extremely crafty that, subtly filling in the mind of the listener with his likeliness to Shakespeare.

    • @richardvsassoon5144
      @richardvsassoon5144 Před 7 lety +4

      hmmm...my take - he was filling in the gap between classic literature (books)
      and other classics - plays, for example, which were written with the stage as background.

    • @pentelikos
      @pentelikos Před 7 lety +2

      Yes Siddhant Singh, exactly, and quoting John Donne too - now firmly in the literary canon but a poet who broke all the rules in his day. Homer, of course was meant to be recited, not read.

    • @sukipuki1001
      @sukipuki1001 Před 4 lety

      @@richardvsassoon5144 performance is what he's referring to

  • @michaelsciarrillo6153
    @michaelsciarrillo6153 Před 5 lety +14

    Bob Dylan finally put his story together this man is a genius I wish I could see the world through his eyes

  • @margologan6593
    @margologan6593 Před 2 lety +5

    Wow. I never considered Bob Dylan until one year in concert, his opening act was Paul Simon's Graceland tour, it was elaborate & spectacular, but when Bob Dylan came out all alone, a singular figure on that big stage he was LARGER than LIFE. I was blown away and made me want to understand the words. I so respect him.

  • @Zedwoman
    @Zedwoman Před 7 lety +34

    This is a brilliant speech. Thank you, Bob Dylan!!! Again. And Again.

  • @RobertSababady
    @RobertSababady Před 7 lety +16

    Bob Dylan at his best - a narrative of simplicity and honesty. As usual Bob Dylan speaks his mind in a clear manner focusing on what he wants to share and not on what others want him to share.

  • @mare652
    @mare652 Před 7 lety +41

    It seems like he is still trying to answer the questions people have chased after him for during his whole career. I bet he was thinking 'here is the most in depth explanation I can give you people. Thanks for the award, now leave me alone.'

  • @michaelbarnes4899
    @michaelbarnes4899 Před 7 lety +18

    He has been a treasure and important influence in my life since the first time I heard him. He still is. What a gift to all of us.

  • @gustavderkits8433
    @gustavderkits8433 Před 7 lety +11

    No commentary. Just enormous gratitude. Thank you!

  • @markwhittaker6321
    @markwhittaker6321 Před rokem +6

    Bob is still with us. That is beautiful.
    They needed a speech and Bob delivered this. Incredible.

  • @DJrocker8000
    @DJrocker8000 Před 7 lety +19

    this is what deserves to be trending such majestic sophisticated beautiful composer of elegant keen knowledge

  • @AjaySharma-me1sy
    @AjaySharma-me1sy Před 4 lety +8

    This lecture is an international treasure and should be preserved for ages to come! I haven't ever known Bob Dylan talking this long, at least not in the last few decades. He is mostly shy about interviewing or just doesn't like to talk to people who'll only ask questions about himself. But man, this lecture, this lecture is a marvel of his rolling voice. We all know he is an exceptional writer and singer, it was hard to imagine he could be such a great narrator/orator when he starts talking. This made my day! I've almost worshipped Dylan since the first song I heard of him - "A hard rain's gonna fall". It was used in a documentary on Netflix about the Vietnam war. I still remember how his voice moved everything inside me. How I could not stop myself from researching all about the song, it's context, and why Dylan wrote it. In the recent few years, I have discovered that it was just one of the many wonderful songs he has created. Just like a book, his songs send you into a world of their own. I remember an afternoon last year when I kept listening to "Blowin' in the wind" on loop for 5 hours. It just sent me into a different state. When I was reading the biography of Steve Jobs, I came across the Dylan song that most impacted him in his youth - "The Times they are a Changing". Indeed, it fills you with a different energy, one that can make you believe in yourself and understand how every generation can have something revolutionary to offer to humanity. I have only accumulated more stories about the depth and imagery in his music. I am mesmerized!

    • @stephenlee1756
      @stephenlee1756 Před 4 lety +1

      "his voice moved everything inside me" is a wonderful way of saying what so many of us have experienced.

    • @michaelmiller2397
      @michaelmiller2397 Před 10 měsíci

      I loved Bob's Sirius radio series...

  • @asmith9040
    @asmith9040 Před 5 lety +5

    I don’t know what education he had but he is obviously highly intelligent . Eccentric too . What a guy.

  • @r.w.bottorff7735
    @r.w.bottorff7735 Před rokem +3

    I was searching for a biography of the man, and upon listening to this, am satisfied that I found the object of my desire.

  • @Petrolianzoolbar
    @Petrolianzoolbar Před 7 lety +23

    I'd never thought I'd hear these books retold in beat poetry. Hell, I thought beat poetry had gone and even Dylan had stopped using it, but I'm pleasantly surprised to stumble upon it blooming so unexpectedly..

  • @RazorEdgeDF
    @RazorEdgeDF Před 7 lety +15

    He's still far ahead of his time. Refusing to be incorporated he trudges a path by himself, which is inspiring enough.

    • @AnnaLVajda
      @AnnaLVajda Před 3 lety +2

      Yeah he just does his own thing he's not trying to be a leader or follow anyone particularly either he has a meandering way about him. Many don't understand that as they wish to be leaders or followers themselves.

  • @sukipuki1001
    @sukipuki1001 Před 4 lety +6

    I so admire the subtle, honest way he explains his literary roots so specifically without ego and places himself in "literature" so simply. Love ya, Bob.

  • @michaelzemaitis3300
    @michaelzemaitis3300 Před 7 lety +19

    All of those questions that people have been asking Bob for all these years... He just answered everything. Not that he hasn't said this a million times but this is the end all and be all...

  • @nexusanx
    @nexusanx Před 3 lety +4

    I could listen to Dylan talking over Jazz for days...so relaxing

  • @elizabethdjokovic2691
    @elizabethdjokovic2691 Před 3 lety +3

    This is a masterpiece. He really deserved the recognition that came with the Nobel Prize for literature. How many students today are given the foundation's he got from exposure to the classics at school. His response to the musical and literary influences in his early years was profound.
    His longevity as a performer and reverence for life speaks for itself.

  • @marcusbreen
    @marcusbreen Před 7 lety +18

    A roundabout explanation for a wonderful contribution to human life. Worthy of the Nobel!

  • @jeffwells1255
    @jeffwells1255 Před 4 lety +7

    What a privilege to be a contemporary of this incredible genius!

  • @dowunda
    @dowunda Před 7 lety +10

    This is amazing. "I don't know what it means either, but it sounds good, and you want your songs to sound good". Love it!

  • @marygilbertson5347
    @marygilbertson5347 Před 4 lety +19

    2019 ... Good to hear the things that have impressed Him ... Glad He was able to receive credit for His Life's work ... Hearing Him speak is like having Him tell me a Bedtime Story 💖😘❤

  • @jeffreywebb7932
    @jeffreywebb7932 Před 6 lety +8

    I love all his songs,so much.So rich and enduring.How did he do it?His lyrics from 64-66 will never be matched.Too great,to even be imagined.

  • @robinlecky5620
    @robinlecky5620 Před 7 lety +31

    One gets lost in has words ... just like his music. Wonderful.

  • @charmcitybluegrass
    @charmcitybluegrass Před 7 lety +82

    Absolutely brilliant.

    • @Reth_Hard
      @Reth_Hard Před 7 lety +1

      Are you serious or you are joking?

  • @brucetoo3294
    @brucetoo3294 Před 2 lety +3

    Even when Bob is talking, he is delivering it like poetry--the way he delivers the lines.

  • @willilamking9681
    @willilamking9681 Před 7 lety +91

    The content is interesting too. I myself enjoyed Leadbelly and Buddy Holly in the 1950"s but never ranked them up there with, say, Carl Perkins and Chuck Berry (and, of course Bob himself). Like Bob, All Quiet on the Western Front hit me like a ton of bricks when I first encountered it in the 1950"s. Years later, during the Viet Nam war, it was an important part of my decision to leave my home in Georgia and spend the next 50 years of my life here in Canada. I agree that it belongs right up there with Moby Dick and the Odyssey.

    • @chasekemp6642
      @chasekemp6642 Před 7 lety +5

      Wow. You have an interesting narrative yourself, man.

    • @willilamking9681
      @willilamking9681 Před 7 lety +5

      THanks, Every life has a story to tell.

    • @paulrogers569
      @paulrogers569 Před 7 lety +17

      Wow. I went from officer in the USN to war resister during Vietnam. Now I'm 70 and still do not feel the need to explain it. Bob doesn't need to explain a thing to me. I just love to hear him sing.

    • @willilamking9681
      @willilamking9681 Před 7 lety +6

      Yeah.. me too.

  • @benwilliams5492
    @benwilliams5492 Před 7 lety +5

    He's written a large chunk of Chronicles Volume Two here. Thanks for the words Bob.

  • @tedbarret8930
    @tedbarret8930 Před 7 lety +4

    I must've been 17 - 18 when I first heard Dylan...his album Blonde on Blonde changed the world to me...with his lyrics Dylan taught me how to look at the world differently, and to be brave and strong but not in the "traditional" way. To face injustice, to face war, to love wholeheartedly and to be a rebel for the cause of freedom. In 1970 I went to the movies at a theater in Woodstock, NY, and all of the 20 or so spectators were aware he was there watching it too with us. He left a few minutes before the movie ended. Those were the days...

  • @heidig7773
    @heidig7773 Před 3 lety +2

    “I had principles and sensibilities and an informed view of the world...and I’d had that for a while. Learned it all in grammar school.” Brilliant distillation of what our modern world has lost sight of. Love that, Bob.

  • @Samu93c
    @Samu93c Před 7 lety +11

    Thank you so much for this precious piece of art, Bob. Every song, every verse, every word you wrote is pure genius, and so is this Lecture. I'm so glad I can live during these years and share this world with you. To me you are the greatest artist of all time. I've loved your music and lyrics since I was twelve, and I will always do. May God bless and keep you always!

  • @johndempsey8769
    @johndempsey8769 Před 2 lety +3

    It is amazing how powerful one voice, one guitar and a bit of harmonica can get. My favorite song and dance man, by far.

  • @kdemeester5415
    @kdemeester5415 Před 7 lety +57

    A genuine laureate, great.

  • @dice1296
    @dice1296 Před 3 lety +2

    first he was accused of disinterest because he took a while to respond publicly to the award, then he delivers this nearly half hour seemingly stream of conscious lecture. god bless bob dylan

    • @dice1296
      @dice1296 Před 3 lety

      and with the lounge piano backdrop? priceless

  • @helensolinger8693
    @helensolinger8693 Před 3 lety +2

    I once heard someone say that Bob is a "Reciever." It spills out for everyone wanting to listen. Each of us have a unique interpretation totally different from each other. I think I found the key to the poets intention. I realize thats not even scratching the surface. His words are a gift to humanity

  • @geoffreynhill2833
    @geoffreynhill2833 Před rokem +4

    Bob puts three great fellow poets back on the map; an American, a German & a Greek. ✅ (from Green Fire, UK) 🌈🦉

  • @woodfiredjack
    @woodfiredjack Před 7 lety +12

    Congratulations Bob! Thank you for you endless contributions!

  • @mariasoto171
    @mariasoto171 Před 5 lety +1

    Just listen..a life becoming an artist...what joy.. I have read these books and agree..today no one reads the classics or looks inside one’s self..thank you Bob

  • @garethhawkins4710
    @garethhawkins4710 Před 4 lety +2

    When Bob started his song writing career there was no youtube to get references from. He learned everything from books, reading and mopping everything up like a sponge. He spent the following years squeezing out all he had learned, putting it into the words of his songs. Ask him now of something he had read in the '60's and he could relate it all, Listen to that recollection of 'Moby Dick' and 'All quiet.......'' Absolutely amazing. What a command of a language this man has.