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Chronicles: Volume One

Chronicles: Volume One is a memoir written by American musician Bob Dylan. The book was published on October 5, 2004, by Simon & Schuster.

Chronicles, Volume One
Hardcover jacket
AuthorBob Dylan
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SubjectBob Dylan
GenreAutobiography
Music
PublisherSimon & Schuster
Publication date
October 5, 2004
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages304 pp (first edition, hardcover)
ISBN0-7432-2815-4 (first edition, hardcover)
OCLC56634799
782.42164/092 B 22
LC ClassML420.D98 A3 2004

The 304-page book covers three selected points from Dylan's long career: 1961, 1970, and 1989, while he was writing and recording Bob Dylan, New Morning and Oh Mercy, respectively. Chronicles is allegedly the first part of a planned 3-volume collection.

The book spent 19 weeks on The New York Times Best Seller list for hardcover nonfiction books.[1] Chronicles: Volume One was one of five finalists for the National Book Critics Circle Award in the Biography/Autobiography category for the 2004 publishing year.

Background

Chronicles began as Dylan's attempt at writing liner notes for reissues of Bob Dylan, New Morning and Oh Mercy, but expanded into a larger project: "I got completely carried away in the process of... I guess call it, 'novelistic writing'".[2] Dylan claimed to work without an editor or collaborator while creating the book.[3]

Summary

Defying expectations,[4] Dylan wrote three chapters about the year between his arrival in New York City in 1961 and recording his first album, focusing on a brief period of relative obscurity, while virtually ignoring the mid-1960s when his fame was at its height.

He also devoted chapters to two lesser-known albums, New Morning (1970) and Oh Mercy (1989), which contained insights into his collaborations with poet Archibald MacLeish and producer Daniel Lanois. In the New Morning chapter, Dylan expresses distaste for the "spokesman of a generation" label bestowed upon him, and evinces disgust with his more fanatical followers.

At the end of the book, Dylan describes with great passion the moment when he listened to the Brecht/Weill song "Pirate Jenny", and the moment when he first heard Robert Johnson's recordings. In these passages, Dylan suggests that the process ignited his own songwriting.

Reception and legacy

Chronicles received many positive reviews, with The Telegraph remarking that the book had "garnered unanimous critical acclaim in the press".[5] The New York Times said that the book "is lucid without being linear, swirling through time without losing its strong storytelling thread".[6]

A review in New York magazine pointed out that many had speculated Dylan would write a "revenge memoir" and noted that "no doubt such a book would have been darkly fun, but the one Dylan’s written instead is superior—both less palatable and more worthwhile. He’s written a portrait of the artist as a young artist, foregrounding the evolution of his music. In doing so, he’s gone back and reconstructed not what the rest of us have found fascinating about his career but what he found fascinating, so fascinating that he’s been willing for 40-plus years to put up with the frequent and, by his own telling, sometimes nightmarish misfortune of being a cultural icon".[7]

In an interview conducted by Jonathan Lethem, published in Rolling Stone,[8] Dylan said he was very moved by the book's reception. "Most people who write about music, they have no idea what it feels like to play it. But with the book I wrote, I thought, 'The people who are writing reviews of this book, man, they know what the hell they're talking about.' It spoils you … they know more about it than me. The reviews of this book, some of 'em almost made me cry—in a good way. I'd never felt that from a music critic ever".

In 2019, Chronicles was ranked 95th on The Guardian's list of the 100 best books of the 21st century.[9]

A 2020 Rolling Stone list of the "50 Greatest Rock Memoirs of All Time" placed Chronicles first, noting that "[I]t’s safe to say that nobody expected [Dylan's] autobiography to be this intense. He rambles from one fragment of his life to another, with crazed characters and weird scenes in every chapter. It all hangs together, from his Minnesota boyhood (who knew Dylan started out as such a big wrestling fan?) to the 'deserted orchards and dead grass' of his Eighties bottoming-out phase".[10]

Accusations of inaccuracy

Dylan biographer Clinton Heylin has shown skepticism concerning the factualness of the book: "Jesus Christ, as far as I can tell almost everything in the Oh Mercy section of Chronicles is a work of fiction. I enjoy Chronicles as a work of literature, but it has a[s] much basis in reality as Masked And Anonymous, and why shouldn't it? He's not the first guy to write a biography that's a pack of lies".[11] Tom Carson of The New York Times Book Review also called the Oh Mercy chapter "a fairly fishy self-justification, but a good short story", and added: "The book is an act, but a splendid one – his sense of strategy vis-à-vis his audience hasn't been this keen in 30 years -- and it's a zesty, nugget-filled read".[12] Dylan had been upfront, however, about his memoir's tenuous relationship to the truth. He discussed his strategy for writing it in a Time magazine interview in 2001: "I’ll take some of the stuff that people think is true and I’ll build a story around that".[13]

Intertextual Appropriation

Some Dylan fans, like New Mexico disc jockey Scott Warmuth and Catholic University scholar Edward Cook, have deeply researched the unique language used throughout Chronicles: Volume One, and discovered that the book appropriates phrases, anecdotes, and descriptions from numerous authors.[14] Dylan incorporated unique phrases from books by Ernest Hemingway, Jack London, Mezz Mezzrow, Marcel Proust, Henry Rollins and Mark Twain into his narrative. Dylan also cribbed phrases from less-likely sources, such as a TIME article from 1961, and a travel guide to New Orleans.[2]

A number of these instances of intertextual appropriation were detailed in David Kinney's book about hard-core fans of the artist, titled The Dylanologists: Adventures in the Land of Bob, as well as The Daily Beast.[14]

In popular culture

The book contains a passage where the young Dylan meets and receives encouragement from the professional wrestler Gorgeous George. This passage is dramatized in the Marcus Carl Franklin-starring "Woody Guthrie" section of the film I'm Not There, Todd Haynes' unconventional 2007 biopic of Dylan. According to Haynes, it was the last scene he wrote for the film and the only one directly inspired by Chronicles: Volume One.[15]

Sequel

Simon & Schuster have said that Dylan was expected to have begun working on Chronicles Vol. 2 while on a break from the Never Ending Tour in May 2008.[16] According to the book A Simple Twist of Fate, the sequel may feature a section detailing the making of Blood on the Tracks.[17] In August 2010, a source close to Dylan told Rolling Stone that there were no current plans to publish Chronicles Vol. 2: "I hope there's another one. That's all I can say. If it was planned I'd tell you".[18]

In September 2012, Dylan told Rolling Stone that he is working on Volume 2.[3] Dylan was quoted as saying that he had already completed chapters concerning The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan and Another Side of Bob Dylan, and that the book may focus primarily on the early years of his recording career.[3] During the interview, he claimed that the biggest holdup in the process was not the writing itself, but rather the editing: "I don't mind writing it, but it's the rereading it and the time it takes to reread it – that for me is difficult. The last Chronicles I did all myself".[3]

Audiobook and Promotional CD

Simon & Schuster released two audio versions of the book. The abridged version of the book is read by Sean Penn (a performance for which the actor was nominated for a Grammy Award[19]). The unabridged version is read by Nick Landrum.[20]

Columbia Records released a Chronicles promotional CD sampler featuring 6 songs that corresponded to the three main time periods covered in the book: a previously unreleased live 1962 version of "The Cuckoo", the New Morning tracks "New Morning" and "Father of Night", the Oh Mercy tracks "Political World" and "Man in the Long Black Coat" and a previously unreleased demo version of the song "Dignity" from 1989.[21]

References

  1. ^ Barton, Laura (2005-09-26). "All you can eat – guardian.co.uk Arts". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  2. ^ a b Kinney, David (2015). The Dylanologists: Adventures in the Land of Bob. Simon & Schuster. p. 162. ISBN 978-1451626933.
  3. ^ a b c d The Guardian article: "Bob Dylan working on Chronicles sequel."
  4. ^ Maslin, Janet (2004-10-05). "So You Thought You Knew Dylan? Hah!". The New York Times. p. 2. Retrieved 2008-09-07.
  5. ^ The Telegraph article: "Bob Dylan's Chronicles: what the critics said".
  6. ^ The New York Times book review: "So You Thought You Knew Dylan? Hah!"
  7. ^ "Chronicles Volume One - New York Magazine Book Review - Nymag". New York Magazine. 7 October 2004. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  8. ^ . Rolling Stone. 2006-09-07. Archived from the original on September 1, 2006. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  9. ^ "The 100 best books of the 21st century". The Guardian. 21 September 2019. Retrieved 22 September 2019.
  10. ^ Sheffield, Rob (2020-12-19). "Rob Sheffield Picks 25 Greatest Rock Memoirs of All Time". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2021-06-15.
  11. ^ Greene, Andy (May 23, 2011). . Rolling Stone. Archived from the original on February 19, 2018. Retrieved September 26, 2021.
  12. ^ Carson, Tom (October 24, 2004). "'Chronicles': Zimmerman Unbound". The New York Times. Retrieved September 26, 2021.
  13. ^ Farley, Christopher John (2001-09-09). "Legend Of Dylan". Time. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  14. ^ a b Francescani, Chris (18 May 2014). "Bob Dylan's 'Da Vinci Code' Revealed". The Daily Beast. Retrieved 20 May 2014.
  15. ^ "No Matter How Many You See, Only 1 the Real Dylan". Chicago Tribune. 24 November 2007.
  16. ^ . Uncut.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2011-11-26. Retrieved 2013-05-21.
  17. ^ Boudreau, Mark (2008-06-12). . The Rock and Roll Report. Archived from the original on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2013-05-21.
  18. ^ Rolling Stone article: "."
  19. ^ www.grammy.com https://www.grammy.com/artists/sean-penn/11380. Retrieved 2022-02-11. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  20. ^ "CHRONICLES by Bob Dylan Read by Nick Landrum | Audiobook Review". AudioFile Magazine. Retrieved 2022-08-10.
  21. ^ "2004". www.searchingforagem.com. Retrieved 2022-02-11.

External links

chronicles, volume, other, uses, chronicles, disambiguation, memoir, written, american, musician, dylan, book, published, october, 2004, simon, schuster, chronicles, volume, onehardcover, jacketauthorbob, dylancountryunited, stateslanguageenglishsubjectbob, dy. For other uses see Chronicles disambiguation Chronicles Volume One is a memoir written by American musician Bob Dylan The book was published on October 5 2004 by Simon amp Schuster Chronicles Volume OneHardcover jacketAuthorBob DylanCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishSubjectBob DylanGenreAutobiographyMusicPublisherSimon amp SchusterPublication dateOctober 5 2004Media typePrint hardback amp paperback Pages304 pp first edition hardcover ISBN0 7432 2815 4 first edition hardcover OCLC56634799Dewey Decimal782 42164 092 B 22LC ClassML420 D98 A3 2004The 304 page book covers three selected points from Dylan s long career 1961 1970 and 1989 while he was writing and recording Bob Dylan New Morning and Oh Mercy respectively Chronicles is allegedly the first part of a planned 3 volume collection The book spent 19 weeks on The New York Times Best Seller list for hardcover nonfiction books 1 Chronicles Volume One was one of five finalists for the National Book Critics Circle Award in the Biography Autobiography category for the 2004 publishing year Contents 1 Background 2 Summary 3 Reception and legacy 3 1 Accusations of inaccuracy 3 2 Intertextual Appropriation 4 In popular culture 5 Sequel 6 Audiobook and Promotional CD 7 References 8 External linksBackground EditChronicles began as Dylan s attempt at writing liner notes for reissues of Bob Dylan New Morning and Oh Mercy but expanded into a larger project I got completely carried away in the process of I guess call it novelistic writing 2 Dylan claimed to work without an editor or collaborator while creating the book 3 Summary EditDefying expectations 4 Dylan wrote three chapters about the year between his arrival in New York City in 1961 and recording his first album focusing on a brief period of relative obscurity while virtually ignoring the mid 1960s when his fame was at its height He also devoted chapters to two lesser known albums New Morning 1970 and Oh Mercy 1989 which contained insights into his collaborations with poet Archibald MacLeish and producer Daniel Lanois In the New Morning chapter Dylan expresses distaste for the spokesman of a generation label bestowed upon him and evinces disgust with his more fanatical followers At the end of the book Dylan describes with great passion the moment when he listened to the Brecht Weill song Pirate Jenny and the moment when he first heard Robert Johnson s recordings In these passages Dylan suggests that the process ignited his own songwriting Reception and legacy EditChronicles received many positive reviews with The Telegraph remarking that the book had garnered unanimous critical acclaim in the press 5 The New York Times said that the book is lucid without being linear swirling through time without losing its strong storytelling thread 6 A review in New York magazine pointed out that many had speculated Dylan would write a revenge memoir and noted that no doubt such a book would have been darkly fun but the one Dylan s written instead is superior both less palatable and more worthwhile He s written a portrait of the artist as a young artist foregrounding the evolution of his music In doing so he s gone back and reconstructed not what the rest of us have found fascinating about his career but what he found fascinating so fascinating that he s been willing for 40 plus years to put up with the frequent and by his own telling sometimes nightmarish misfortune of being a cultural icon 7 In an interview conducted by Jonathan Lethem published in Rolling Stone 8 Dylan said he was very moved by the book s reception Most people who write about music they have no idea what it feels like to play it But with the book I wrote I thought The people who are writing reviews of this book man they know what the hell they re talking about It spoils you they know more about it than me The reviews of this book some of em almost made me cry in a good way I d never felt that from a music critic ever In 2019 Chronicles was ranked 95th on The Guardian s list of the 100 best books of the 21st century 9 A 2020 Rolling Stone list of the 50 Greatest Rock Memoirs of All Time placed Chronicles first noting that I t s safe to say that nobody expected Dylan s autobiography to be this intense He rambles from one fragment of his life to another with crazed characters and weird scenes in every chapter It all hangs together from his Minnesota boyhood who knew Dylan started out as such a big wrestling fan to the deserted orchards and dead grass of his Eighties bottoming out phase 10 Accusations of inaccuracy Edit Dylan biographer Clinton Heylin has shown skepticism concerning the factualness of the book Jesus Christ as far as I can tell almost everything in the Oh Mercy section of Chronicles is a work of fiction I enjoy Chronicles as a work of literature but it has a s much basis in reality as Masked And Anonymous and why shouldn t it He s not the first guy to write a biography that s a pack of lies 11 Tom Carson of The New York Times Book Review also called the Oh Mercy chapter a fairly fishy self justification but a good short story and added The book is an act but a splendid one his sense of strategy vis a vis his audience hasn t been this keen in 30 years and it s a zesty nugget filled read 12 Dylan had been upfront however about his memoir s tenuous relationship to the truth He discussed his strategy for writing it in a Time magazine interview in 2001 I ll take some of the stuff that people think is true and I ll build a story around that 13 Intertextual Appropriation Edit Some Dylan fans like New Mexico disc jockey Scott Warmuth and Catholic University scholar Edward Cook have deeply researched the unique language used throughout Chronicles Volume One and discovered that the book appropriates phrases anecdotes and descriptions from numerous authors 14 Dylan incorporated unique phrases from books by Ernest Hemingway Jack London Mezz Mezzrow Marcel Proust Henry Rollins and Mark Twain into his narrative Dylan also cribbed phrases from less likely sources such as a TIME article from 1961 and a travel guide to New Orleans 2 A number of these instances of intertextual appropriation were detailed in David Kinney s book about hard core fans of the artist titled The Dylanologists Adventures in the Land of Bob as well as The Daily Beast 14 In popular culture EditThe book contains a passage where the young Dylan meets and receives encouragement from the professional wrestler Gorgeous George This passage is dramatized in the Marcus Carl Franklin starring Woody Guthrie section of the film I m Not There Todd Haynes unconventional 2007 biopic of Dylan According to Haynes it was the last scene he wrote for the film and the only one directly inspired by Chronicles Volume One 15 Sequel EditSimon amp Schuster have said that Dylan was expected to have begun working on Chronicles Vol 2 while on a break from the Never Ending Tour in May 2008 16 According to the book A Simple Twist of Fate the sequel may feature a section detailing the making of Blood on the Tracks 17 In August 2010 a source close to Dylan told Rolling Stone that there were no current plans to publish Chronicles Vol 2 I hope there s another one That s all I can say If it was planned I d tell you 18 In September 2012 Dylan told Rolling Stone that he is working on Volume 2 3 Dylan was quoted as saying that he had already completed chapters concerning The Freewheelin Bob Dylan and Another Side of Bob Dylan and that the book may focus primarily on the early years of his recording career 3 During the interview he claimed that the biggest holdup in the process was not the writing itself but rather the editing I don t mind writing it but it s the rereading it and the time it takes to reread it that for me is difficult The last Chronicles I did all myself 3 Audiobook and Promotional CD EditSimon amp Schuster released two audio versions of the book The abridged version of the book is read by Sean Penn a performance for which the actor was nominated for a Grammy Award 19 The unabridged version is read by Nick Landrum 20 Columbia Records released a Chronicles promotional CD sampler featuring 6 songs that corresponded to the three main time periods covered in the book a previously unreleased live 1962 version of The Cuckoo the New Morning tracks New Morning and Father of Night the Oh Mercy tracks Political World and Man in the Long Black Coat and a previously unreleased demo version of the song Dignity from 1989 21 References Edit Barton Laura 2005 09 26 All you can eat guardian co uk Arts The Guardian London Retrieved 2008 04 01 a b Kinney David 2015 The Dylanologists Adventures in the Land of Bob Simon amp Schuster p 162 ISBN 978 1451626933 a b c d The Guardian article Bob Dylan working on Chronicles sequel Maslin Janet 2004 10 05 So You Thought You Knew Dylan Hah The New York Times p 2 Retrieved 2008 09 07 The Telegraph article Bob Dylan s Chronicles what the critics said The New York Times book review So You Thought You Knew Dylan Hah Chronicles Volume One New York Magazine Book Review Nymag New York Magazine 7 October 2004 Retrieved 2021 04 26 The Modern Times of Bob Dylan A Legend Comes to Grips With His Iconic Status RS 1008 Rolling Stone 2006 09 07 Archived from the original on September 1 2006 Retrieved 2008 04 01 The 100 best books of the 21st century The Guardian 21 September 2019 Retrieved 22 September 2019 Sheffield Rob 2020 12 19 Rob Sheffield Picks 25 Greatest Rock Memoirs of All Time Rolling Stone Retrieved 2021 06 15 Greene Andy May 23 2011 Questions About Bob Dylan s Claim That He was Once a Heroin Addict Rolling Stone Archived from the original on February 19 2018 Retrieved September 26 2021 Carson Tom October 24 2004 Chronicles Zimmerman Unbound The New York Times Retrieved September 26 2021 Farley Christopher John 2001 09 09 Legend Of Dylan Time ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 2021 04 26 a b Francescani Chris 18 May 2014 Bob Dylan s Da Vinci Code Revealed The Daily Beast Retrieved 20 May 2014 No Matter How Many You See Only 1 the Real Dylan Chicago Tribune 24 November 2007 News Uncut co uk Archived from the original on 2011 11 26 Retrieved 2013 05 21 Boudreau Mark 2008 06 12 Cover Story Interview Bob Dylan s Blood on the Tracks with photography by Paul Till The Rock and Roll Report Archived from the original on 2011 07 15 Retrieved 2013 05 21 Rolling Stone article Dylan s New Bootleg to Feature Unearthed Live Show www grammy com https www grammy com artists sean penn 11380 Retrieved 2022 02 11 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help CHRONICLES by Bob Dylan Read by Nick Landrum Audiobook Review AudioFile Magazine Retrieved 2022 08 10 2004 www searchingforagem com Retrieved 2022 02 11 External links EditChronicles Vol 1 permanent dead link at Metacritic Chronicles Vol 1 at Google Books Dylan s Self Portrait Gilmore Mikal Rolling Stone 2004 Retrieved November 2009 Archived at Internet Archive Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chronicles Volume One amp oldid 1159547139, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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