Shooting Star (Bob Dylan song) explained

Shooting Star
Type:song
Artist:Bob Dylan
Album:Oh Mercy
Released:September 18, 1989
Recorded:March/April 1989
Studio:Mobile studio at 1305 Soniat St., New Orleans
Genre:Folk
Length:3:12
Label:Columbia
Producer:Daniel Lanois

"Shooting Star" is a song written and performed by American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, released in 1989 as the tenth and final track on his album Oh Mercy. It was produced by Daniel Lanois.

Composition and recording

In his memoir , Dylan recalls writing the song after taking a long motorcycle ride with his wife, Carolyn Dennis, during a break from recording his album Oh Mercy in New Orleans: "The song came to me complete, full in the eyes like I'd been traveling on the garden pathway of the sun and just found it. It was illuminated. I'd seen a shooting star from the backyard of our house, or maybe it was a meteorite".[1]

Dylan scholar Tony Attwood describes it as an otherwise simple song of lost love ("the traveller moving on is the woman, while the man does the 'you wanted me to be someone I couldn’t be' thing and is seemingly left behind") that is made more complex by an unusual musical and lyrical bridge in which "all hell breaks loose". Attwood describes how Dylan moves down the chromatic scale note by note in this bridge, only the second time in his career for him to do this (following 1967's "Too Much of Nothing"), as he sings about the apocalypse: "You can hear it by playing each note, black or white, that are next to each other on the piano. Dylan does it starting on C sharp, going down to C, B, B flat, A.

(C sharp minor) Listen to the engine, (C) listen to the bell

(B) As the last fire truck (B flat) from hell

(A) Goes rolling by

(B) All good people are (E) praying

The musical sequence is then revisited

It’s the last temptation, the last account

The last time you might hear the sermon on the mount

The last radio is playing".[2]

In their book Bob Dylan All the Songs: The Story Behind Every Track, authors Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon note that, in addition to Dylan on vocals, guitar and harmonica, the song features Daniel Lanois on omnichord ("a plastic instrument that sounds like an autoharp"), Brian Stoltz on guitar, Tony Hall on bass and Willie Green on drums. They also note that Dylan regretted not being able to add a brass section to the track and achieve a more orchestral sound but that his doubts were dispelled when Lanois "hyped the snare and captured the song in its essence" in the final mix.[3]

Critical reception

Rolling Stone magazine included "Shooting Star" on a list of "Bob Dylan's Greatest Songs of the 1980s", noting that it "echoes some of the self-doubt and regret heard earlier on 'Most of the Time'" while also serving as an example of how "Dylan is very good at ending his albums on exactly the right note".[4]

Spectrum Culture included the song on a list of "Bob Dylan's 20 Best Songs of the 1980s". In an article accompanying the list, critic Justin Cober-Lake praises both the lyrics (for the way Dylan establishes "an almost-narrative and an almost-prayer while leaving any final understanding open-ended enough for the listener to glide into") and the music (for the way "Dylan develops a beautiful melody for his reflections, perfectly embraced by Lanois’ production").[5]

Jim Esch at AllMusic called it "a simple three verse plus bridge country ballad that manages to suggest the arc of an affair – balled up in the image of a shooting star" that is "remarkable for its lyrical allusiveness" and leaves "a weary sadness in its wake".

The Big Issue placed it at #16 on a list of the "80 Best Bob Dylan Songs - That Aren't the Greatest Hits" and characterized it as a "hymn to regret and what might have been".[6]

Live performances

According to his official website, Dylan performed the song 126 times in concert on the Never Ending Tour between 1990 and 2013.[7] A live performance from New York City in 1994 was filmed and officially released on the Bob Dylan MTV Unplugged television special and accompanying live album in 1995.[8] The live debut occurred at the Alpine Valley Music Theatre in East Troy, Wisconsin on June 9, 1990 and the last performance (to date) took place at USANA Amphitheatre in Salt Lake City, Utah on August 1, 2013.[9]

In popular culture

The song is prominently featured in Curtis Hanson's Academy Award-winning 2000 film Wonder Boys and on its accompanying soundtrack album.

Notable covers

There have been at least half a dozen studio covers of the song including David Gogo on his 2000 album Bare Bones,[10] Lindsay Evans on her 2006 album Road to Damascus[11] and Laura Pursell on her 2023 album Shooting Star.[12]

Aaron Neville performed the song live at a MusiCares tribute to Dylan in 2015. Dylan praised Neville's performance in an interview shortly after: “I could always hear him singing that song. He’s recorded other songs of mine, all great performances, but for some reason I kept thinking about ‘Shooting Star’, something he’s never recorded but I knew that he could. I could always hear him singing it for some reason, even when I wrote it. I mean, what can you say? He’s the most soulful of singers, maybe in all of recorded history. If angels sing, they must sing in that voice. I just think his gift is so great. The man has no flaws, never has. He’s always been one of my favorite singers right from the beginning”.[13]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Dylan, Bob, 1941-. Chronicles. 2004. Simon & Schuster. 0-7432-2815-4. New York. 56111894.
  2. Web site: 2015-02-18. "Shooting Star" – the meaning of the lyrics and the music Untold Dylan. 2021-05-19. en-GB.
  3. Book: Margotin, Philippe . Bob Dylan : all the songs : the story behind every track. 2015. Jean-Michel Guesdon. 978-1-57912-985-9. First . New York. 869908038.
  4. 2012-08-15. Bob Dylan's Greatest Songs of the 1980s. 2021-05-19. Rolling Stone. en-US.
  5. Web site: 2020-09-04. Bob Dylan's 20 Best Songs of the '80s. 2021-05-19. Spectrum Culture. en-US.
  6. Web site: 2021-05-17. The 80 best Bob Dylan songs – that aren't the greatest hits. 2021-05-19. The Big Issue. en.
  7. Web site: Setlists The Official Bob Dylan Site. 2021-05-19. www.bobdylan.com.
  8. Web site: MTV Unplugged The Official Bob Dylan Site. 2021-05-19. www.bobdylan.com.
  9. Web site: Setlists The Official Bob Dylan Site. 2021-05-30. www.bobdylan.com.
  10. Web site: Cover versions of Shooting Star by David Gogo SecondHandSongs. 2021-05-19. secondhandsongs.com.
  11. Web site: Cover versions of Shooting Star by Lindsay Evans SecondHandSongs . 2021-05-19 . secondhandsongs.com.
  12. Web site: Major . Michael . Video: Laura Pursell Releases Video Covering Bob Dylan Song 'Shooting Star' . 2024-02-03 . BroadwayWorld.com . en.
  13. Web site: Times-Picayune. Keith Spera, NOLA com The. Bob Dylan on 'favorite' singer Aaron Neville: 'The man has no flaws, never has'. 2021-05-20. NOLA.com. 16 February 2015 . en.