On the Road Again (Bob Dylan song) explained

On the Road Again
Caption:1967 Dutch picture sleeve
Artist:Bob Dylan
Album:Bringing It All Back Home
Recorded:January 15, 1965
Studio:Columbia Recording, New York City
Genre:
Length:2:35
Label:Columbia

"On the Road Again" is a song written and recorded by Bob Dylan for his album Bringing It All Back Home. The song appears on the album's electric A-side, between "Outlaw Blues" and "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream". Like the rest of Bringing It All Back Home, "On the Road Again" was recorded in January, 1965 and produced by Tom Wilson.[1]

Musically, "On the Road Again" is a simple rhythm & blues rock number with a twelve-bar structure. The music is untidy, with a thrusting beat, harmonica breaks, and an opposing riff.[2]

Meaning

The song's lyrics continue to address the myth of sensitive artist versus venal society that informs several other songs from A-side of the album, such as "Maggie's Farm", "Outlaw Blues", and "Bob Dylan's 115th Dream".[3] The song also reflects other songs on the album, such as "Maggie's Farm" in that resistance to society is enacted through self-exile, removal and denial.[4] This is particularly reflected in the lyrics:[4]

The song also previews the comic grotesques that will become more prominent on songs in later albums.[5] [2] The song reflects a paranoid version of dread of dealing with in-laws.[5] The narrator wakes up in the morning and has to face a surreal world where his mother-in-law hides in the refrigerator, his father-in-law wears a mask of Napoleon and the grandfather-in-law's cane turns into a sword, the grandmother-in-law prays to pictures and an uncle-in-law steals from the narrator's pockets, in lyrics such as:[5]

Frogs live in the narrator's socks, his food is covered in dirt, and deliverymen and servants have a sinister presence.[5] [2]

Title inspiration

The song's title echoes the title of Jack Kerouac's novel On the Road, which was a defining work of the Beat Generation.[6] Dylan has acknowledged being influenced by Kerouac.[6] However, it seems more likely that the title, and the song in itself, is a response to the song "On the Road", a traditional blues performed by the Memphis Jug Band with more serious lyrical content concerning an unfaithful woman.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Williams, P.. Bob Dylan Performing Artist. May 1991. Underwood Books. 978-0-88733-131-2. 122.
  2. Book: No Direction Home. Shelton, R.. 273. 1986. 978-0-306-80782-4.
  3. Book: Hinchey, J.. Like a Complete Unknown: The Poetry of Bob Dylan's Songs 1961–1969. 2002. 978-0-9723592-0-7. 78–80.
  4. Book: Brake, E.. Carl J. Porter. Vernezze, P.. Porter, C.. Bob Dylan and Philosophy (Popular Culture and Philosophy). 2006-01-09. Open Court. 978-0-8126-9592-2. 79. 'To Live Outside the Law You Must Be Honest': Freedom in Dylan's Lyrics.
  5. Book: Gill, A.. Don't Think Twice It's All Right. 1998. Da Capo Press. 978-1-56025-185-9. 73.
  6. Book: Cobie, S.. Alias Bob Dylan Revisited. 2003. Red Deer Press. 978-0-88995-227-0. 32.
  7. http://www.taco.com/roots/memphisjug.html Memphis Jug Band