Letter to the Editors, New York Review of Books

John Leonard's "Liaisons Dangereuses"


Letter to the Editors, New York Review of Books, 1        It's not possible to respond to John Leonard's Liaisons Dangereuses, a review of David Hadju's and Howard Sounes' books on the life of Bob Dylan [NYR, July 19] by refuting specific points in intellectual fashion.  That's because his review is utterly anti-intellectual, a mere diatribe cloaked as erudition, a childish tantrum covered with a patina of cultural literacy.  Leonard is at odds with a large portion of his generation.  He fancies that Dylan sold out in 1965 and that his switch to electric guitar led directly to the Reagan era.  He flatters himself that his own partiality for Toni Morrison and James Baldwin automatically qualifies him as an engagé.  For Leonard, Dylan's finding God was simply "a very Seventies thing to do."  We get the message.  All people with religious feeling are reactionaries.  
         Genius invites as much abuse as hagiography.  The greatest geniuses are often those that have been the most thoroughly debunked.  That Dylan reportedly wrote "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" in twenty minutes is passed off by Leonard as some kind of joke.  But is literary or musical inspiration a joke?  "Hard Rain" is one of the great ballads of our, or any, age, and the fact that Dylan was the conduit for its inspired lyrics bestows on him far more than is in Mr. Leonard's power to depreciate.
       The last refuge of the critic desperate to make some kind of mark for himself is character assassination.  Leonard claims that "caring about the music makes our interest in (Dylan's) behavior more than prurient."  But he clearly doesn't care about the music, the lyrics, the message, or anything about the Dylan 'package' that he claims has been so cleverly marketed.  So his interest in Dylan's behavior is just what he tries to deny it is-purely prurient.
         For someone who connects with Dylan's lyrics, vocal style, or attitude, it doesn't matter if he had an alcohol problem, if "I Want You" is about heroin instead of a woman, or any of the other personal horrors with which Mr. Leonard regales us.  Dylan has gone to more pains than any other comparable artist has to distance his life from his work.  That this has only fueled the Dylan research and biography industry can be viewed cynically, as a well-thought out marketing strategy.  But what would Mr. Leonard have liked Dylan to do-mug for the camera?  This is the common problem with debunkers-nothing their subjects might do could possibly please them or atone for their cardinal sin, which is their genius.       
         Dylanology can certainly be seen as a comic phenomenon, but there it is-a voluminous area of investigation spawning an ever-increasing amount of written material, which practically qualifies it as an academic field in and of itself.  We can ridicule the Dylan cult, and Dylanology in particular, but the cult and the pseudo science reflect something real-that Dylan moved people through his lyrics, his vocal style, his musical innovation, and his personality.
         To pick out a single sentence recorded by Joan Baez in conversation with Dylan in 1965, to judge it "a puerile thing to say," is really the lowest form of criticism.  Dylan was only being accurate when he said that the difference between him and Baez was that she thought she could change things and he thought no one could.  Let me ask Mr. Leonard-what did Joan Baez change?  She stuck faithfully to folk music and no one can fault her for it.  But compare Dylan's influence on our music, our culture, even our thinking, with hers.  The rock poet who either self-deprecatingly or self-indulgently refused to believe in his power to change anything changed more than most people would have thought possible.  
         And from a wider philosophical or historical viewpoint, how can we even fault Dylan for his cynicism?  Let's look back on history since ancient times and ask what really has changed.  Have we eliminated war, poverty, disease, racial bigotry, or inequality?  What exactly is Mr. Leonard's quarrel with Dylan's remark that "if somebody really had something to say to help somebody out, just bluntly say the truth, well obviously they're gonna be done away with"?  Is he saying there's something inaccurate in that statement?  What other conclusion could one come to in the summer of 1962, or even today, for that matter?  
         Mr. Leonard's animus toward Dylan springs from the shallowest notion of political engagement.  He has no conception of artistic engagement that might transcend politics, yet still be capable of moving, energizing, or inspiring people.  This is a whole side of life to which Mr. Leonard is simply blind, and it is therefore not surprising that Dylan can mean nothing to him.  Dylan may not have been an activist in Mr. Leonard's sense of the term, but his whole message has been to preach activism to his listeners-if not political activism, then activism of thought, of critical faculties, of sensitivity to life, of rebellion against all forms of tacit acceptance.  
                 The guilty undertaker sighs
               The lonesome organ grinder cries
               The silver saxophones say I
               Should refuse you
               The cracked bells and washed-out horns
               Blow into my face with scorn
               But it's not that way-I wasn't born
               To lose you

       The beauty of lyrics such as these is that they can be about a woman, about a drug, about an ideal, about anything to which we might be attached.  Regardless of what they meant to Dylan, or might mean to us, the imagery of the lyrics is poignant.  Our imagination conjures up the visions of the undertaker, the organ grinder, the brass instruments, and even the urban environment unmentioned in the lyrics themselves.  That Dylan infused this type of poetic ambition into popular music elevated our culture beyond the capability of folk music, no matter how pure the intentions of the prior genre.
       It's true that most of us have listened to Dylan for years without getting the message, without getting off our asses, without becoming poets ourselves, expressing our feelings, or practicing what we preach.  We have substituted Dylan's imagination for our own, deluded ourselves into thinking that just listening to his music gave us the same attitude, convinced ourselves that we were rebels when in fact we were living a cozy middle-class life.  But you can't blame the messenger if his words aren't heeded.  Dylan's perpetual touring in his old age may seem sad, even ludicrous, but this is the one thing he knows, and the one way he has of being true to himself.  How many of us have that clear a notion of our purpose here on this earth that we would stick to it so doggedly, when we could have just retired to drink margaritas and sunbathe by the pool decades ago?
       What I would like to see in the pages of The New York Review of Books at some time in the future is an article that really treats Dylan's work seriously, that really looks at the lyrics, the stylistic innovation, and the attitude, instead of the personality.  My guess is that the reason this has yet to be done is that it is such a massive undertaking, and that we do not yet have the historical distance to furnish us with the unbiased perspective necessary for the task.
 
Date Submitted:
2001-07-17 00:00:00
Review by The Spiritual Traveler