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Wicked Messenger Page 37

by Mike Marqusee


  Murray, Charles Shaar. Boogie Man: The Adventures of John Lee Hooker in the American Twentieth Century. London: Viking, 1999.

  Murray, Charles Shaar. Crosstown Traffic: Jimi Hendrix and Post-War Pop. London: Faber and Faber, 2001.

  Neale, Jonathan. The American War: Vietnam, 1960-1975. London: Bookmarks, 2001.

  Peck, Abe. Uncovering the Sixties: The Life and Times of the Underground Press. New York: Citadel Press, 1991.

  Reuss, Richard A. with Joanne C. Reuss. American Folk Music and Left-Wing Politics, 1927-1957. London: Scarecrow Press, 2000.

  Sale, Kirkpatrick. SDS. New York: Vintage, 1974.

  Samuels, Raphael. Theatres of Memory. London: Verso, 1994.

  Seale, Bobby. Seize the Time: The Story of the Black Panther Party and Huey P. Newton. Baltimore: Black Classic Press, 1991 (first edition 1971).

  Shelton, Robert. No Direction Home: The Life and Music of Bob Dylan. London: New English Library, 1986.

  Sloman, Larry “Ratso.” Reefer Madness: A History of Marijuana. New York: St. Martin’s Griffin, 1998 (first edition 1979).

  Sounes, Howard. Down the Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan. New York: Doubleday, 2001.

  Wald, Elijah. Josh White: Society Blues. New York: Routledge, 2002.

  Ward, Brian. Just My Soul Responding: Rhythm and Blues, Black Consciousness and Race Relations. London: UCL Press, 1998.

  Werner, Craig. A Change Is Gonna Come: Music, Race and the Soul of America. Edinburgh: Canongate, 2000.

  Wolff, Daniel. You Send Me: The Life and Times of Sam Cooke. London: Virgin, 1996.

  SELECT WEB SITE LISTING

  About Bob: www.bjorner.com

  Bob Dylan: (official site): www.bobdylan.com

  Bob Dylan Roots: www.bobdylanroots.com

  Bob Links: www.my.execpc.com/~billp61/boblink.html

  Expecting Rain: www.expectingrain.com

  Isis: www.bobdylanisis.com

  SELECT DISCOGRAPHY

  The Band. Music From Big Pink. Capitol, 1968.

  The Band. The Band. Capitol, 1969.

  Bob Dylan. Bob Dylan. Columbia, 1962.

  Bob Dylan. The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan. Columbia, 1963.

  Bob Dylan. The Times They Are A-Changin’. Columbia, 1964.

  Bob Dylan. Another Side of Bob Dylan. Columbia, 1964.

  Bob Dylan. Bringing It All Back Home. Columbia, 1965.

  Bob Dylan. Highway 61 Revisited. Columbia, 1965.

  Bob Dylan. Blonde on Blonde. Columbia, 1966.

  Bob Dylan. John Wesley Harding. Columbia, 1968.

  Bob Dylan. Nashville Skyline. Columbia, 1969.

  Bob Dylan. Self Portrait. Columbia, 1970.

  Bob Dylan. New Morning. Columbia, 1970.

  Bob Dylan and The Band. The Basement Tapes. Columbia, 1975.

  Bob Dylan. Biograph. Columbia, 1985. (Includes Cameron Crowe’s interview with Dylan.)

  Bob Dylan. The Bootleg Series: Volumes 1-3 (rare and unreleased) 1961-1991. Columbia, 1991.

  Bob Dylan. The Bootleg Series: Volume 4. Live 1966. Columbia, 1995.

  Bob Dylan. Love and Theft. Columbia, 2001.

  Bob Dylan. The Bootleg Series: Volume 5. Live 1975. Columbia, 2002.

  Bob Dylan. The Bootleg Series: Volume 6. Live 1964. Columbia, 2004.

  Steve Earle. El Corazon. Artemis, 1997.

  Steve Earle. Sidetracks. Artemis, 2002.

  Steve Earle. Jerusalem. Artemis, 2002.

  Woody Guthrie. Dustbowl Ballads. BMG, 1998.

  Woody Guthrie. This Land Is Your Land: The Asch Recordings. Smithsonian/Folkways, 1997.

  Jimi Hendrix. Experience Hendrix: The Best of Jimi Hendrix. MCA, 1997.

  Jimi Hendrix. Voodoo Child. MCA, 2002.

  The Jimi Hendrix Experience. BBC Sessions. MCA, 1998.

  John Lee Hooker. The Real Folk Blues/More Real Folk Blues. MCA/Chess, 2002.

  The Impressions. Definitive Impressions. Kent, 2002.

  Curtis Mayfield. Soul Legacy. Charly, 2001. (Box set includes notes by Clive Anderson and Lawrence Roker.)

  The Mothers of Invention. We’re Only In It For the Money. Rykodisc, 1968.

  Phil Ochs. All the News That’s Fit To Sing. Elektra, 1964.

  Phil Ochs. Farewells and Fantasies. Elektra, 1997. (Box set includes notes by Michael Ventura, Mark Kemp, Ben Edmonds.)

  Youssou N’Dour. The Guide (Wommat). Columbia, 1994.

  Nina Simone. Essential. Metro, 2001.

  Smithsonian/Folkways reissue, 1997.

  Bruce Springsteen. Chimes of Freedom. Columbia, 1988.

  Bruce Springsteen. The Ghost Of Tom Joad. Columbia, 1994.

  Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band. Live in New York City. Columbia, 2001. Bruce Springsteen. The Rising. Columbia, 2002.

  Dave Van Ronk. Two Sides of Dave Van Ronk. Fantasy, 2002.

  Various Artists. The Anthology of American Folk Music, edited by Harry Smith. Smithsonian/Folkways reissue, 1997.

  Various Artists. Songs for Freedom: The Story of the Civil Rights Movement Through its Songs. Smithsonian/Folkways, 1990.

  Various Artists. A Tribute to Woody Guthrie. Warner, 1972.

  Various Artists. May Your Song Always Be Sung: The Songs of Bob Dylan Vol. 2. BMG, 2001.

  Various Artists. Peace Not War. Shellshock, 2002.

  INDEX

  Abraham

  Abraham Lincoln Brigade

  “Absolutely Free” (Zappa)

  “Absolutely Sweet Marie” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  Adorno, Theodor

  on popular music

  Advertising

  of Columbia Records

  “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me Round,”

  Albany (Georgia)

  protests in

  Albert Hall

  Aldermaston marches

  Ali, Muhammad

  “Alice’s Restaurant” (Guthrie)

  “All Along the Watchtower” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  “All I Really Want to Do” (Dylan)

  All the News That’s Fit to Sing (Dylan)

  “All You Need Is Love” (Beatles)

  the Almanac Singers

  “Alone and Forsaken” (Williams)

  “Alternatives to College” (Dylan)

  “America” (Ginsberg)

  “(American Skin) Forty-One Shot s” (Springsteen)

  Ammons, Albert

  Amnesty International

  androgyny

  the Animals

  Another Side of Bob Dylan (Dylan)

  Anthology of American Folk Music

  Apocalypse

  “Apple Suckling Tree” (Dylan)

  Archive of American Folk Song

  art

  Articolo

  “As I Went Out One Morning” (Dylan)

  Asch, Moe

  Asch, Sholem

  “Ashes to Ashes” (Earle)

  Ashley, Clarence

  Augustine, St.

  Australia

  authenticity

  Dylan and

  etymology of

  race and

  authority, contempt for

  “Automobile Blues” (Hopkins)

  Baez, Joan

  at Woodstock

  Baldwin, James

  “Ballad of a Thin Man” (Dylan)

  “Ballad of Donald White” (Dylan)

  “Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest” (Dylan)

  “Ballad of Hollis Brown” (Dylan)

  “Ballad of the Green Berets” (Sadler)

  Ballads and Blues events

  the Band

  The Band (the Band)

  Ban-the-bomb movement

  Baraka, Amiri

  Barnett, Ross

  Basement Tapes

  Marcus on

  songs on

  Basie, Count

  Baudelaire, Charles

  Baudrillard, Jean

  the Beatles

  beatniks

  bebop

  Bechet, Sidney

  Behan, Dominic


  Belafonte, Harry

  Benjamin, Walter

  Bennett, Tony

  Berkeley (California)

  Berkeley Barb

  Bernstein, Leonard

  the Bible

  Bikel, Theodore

  Biograph

  Birmingham

  Birmingham Six

  Bitter Tears (Cash)

  “Black Cross” (Buckley)

  Black Panther (newspaper)

  Black Panthers

  Black Power

  “Blackwater Blues” (Smith)

  Blake, Peter

  Blake, William

  “Blind Willie McTell” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  Blonde on Blonde (Dylan)

  sales of

  tour after

  Blood on the Tracks (Dylan)

  Bloomfield, Mike

  “Blowin’ in the Wind” (Dylan)

  covers of

  Ginsberg on

  Blues

  history of

  “Bob Dylan’s 115th Dream” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  “Bob Dylan’s Blues” (Dylan)

  “Bob Dylan’s Dream,”

  Boggs, Dock

  Bohemian life

  Bomb shelters

  Bond, Julian

  Bonneville Power Administration

  Bonnie and Clyde (Guthrie)

  Bootleg Series (Dylan)

  “Boots of Spanish Leather” (Dylan)

  “Born in the USA” (Springsteen)

  Born on the Fourth of July (Kovic)

  Born to Run (Springsteen)

  Boston Herald Traveler

  Boulder (Colorado)

  Bound for Glory (Guthrie)

  Bowie, David

  boxing

  Branch, Taylor

  Brand, Oscar

  Brando, Marlon

  Brecht, Bertolt

  Bridges, Jeff

  Bringing It All Back Home (Dylan)

  liner notes of

  sales

  Britain

  Broadside

  Broonzy, Big Bill

  Brown, James

  Brute Force

  Buckley, Lord

  Bush, George

  Bush, George W.

  the Byrds

  Calvert, Greg

  Cambodia

  protests against invasion of

  Camp Unity

  Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament

  “Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window?” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  “Car, Car” (Guthrie)

  Caravaggio

  Carawan, Guy

  Carmichael, Stokely

  arrest of

  Carnegie Hall

  Carroll, Hattie

  Carter Family

  Carthy, Martin

  Cash, Johnny

  Dylan on

  success of

  Catholic Worker

  Chamber Brothers

  Chandler, Len

  Chaney, James

  “A Change is Gonna Come” (Cooke)

  Charles, Ray

  Chicago

  protest in

  Weathermen in

  Child, Francis

  “Chimes of Freedom” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  performances of

  Chomsky, Noam

  “Chords of Fame” (Ochs)

  Christianity

  Dylan and

  “Christmas in Washington” (Earle)

  Chronicles (Dylan)

  Civil rights

  music and

  Civil Rights Act

  Civil War

  Clancy, Liam

  Clay, Cassius. See Ali, Muhammad

  Cleaver, Eldridge

  Clinton, Bill

  “Clothes Line Saga” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  Cocker, Joe

  Cohen, John

  “Cold Irons Bound” (Dylan)

  Cold War

  Collins, Judy

  Coltrane, John

  Columbia Records

  ad campaigns of

  Columbia University

  “Come On In My Kitchen” (Johnson)

  “Coming Into Los Angeles” (Guthrie)

  Communism

  McCarthyism and

  Communist Party

  Concert for Bangladesh

  conformity

  Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)

  consciousness

  Cooke, Sam

  “Copperhead Road” (Earle)

  “Cops of the World” (Ochs)

  Corporate music

  “Corrina, Corrina” (Dylan)

  Corso, Gregory

  counterculture

  Woodstock and

  Country Joe

  at Woodstock

  country music

  “Country Pie” (Dylan)

  Cowley, Malcolm

  Creedence Clearwater Revival

  Crosby, David

  Crosby, Stills, and Nash

  Crosstown Traffic

  Crowe, Cameron

  Crudup, Arthur Big Boy

  Cuba

  Cuban missile crisis

  cummings, e.e.

  Cunningham, Sis

  Curtis (Curtis Mayfield)

  Daily Worker

  Daley, Mayor

  “Dancing in the Street” (Martha and the Vandellas)

  Danko, Rick

  Darin, Bobby

  Day, Dorothy

  “Day of the Locusts,”

  Days of Rage

  De Quincey, Thomas

  Dean, James

  “Dear Landlord” (Dylan)

  “Dear Mrs. Roosevelt” (Guthrie)

  “Death of Emmett Till” (Dylan)

  Declaration of Human Rights

  Dellinger, Dave

  Democratic National Convention

  Democratic Party

  Denver, John

  “Deportees” (Guthrie)

  “Desolation Row” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  Diallo, Amadou

  Do It! (Rubin)

  Dohrn, Bernadine

  “Donald White” (Dylan)

  Donegan, Lonnie

  Donovan

  Don’t Look Back (Pennebaker)

  “Don’t Think Twice” (Dylan)

  “Down in the Flood” (Dylan)

  “Down on Penny’s Farm,”

  “Drifter’s Escape” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  Drugs

  Dunbar, Paul Laurence

  Dust Bowl Ballads (Guthrie)

  Dylan, Bob

  appearance of

  on art

  artistic sensibilities of

  authenticity and

  authority and

  Blonde on Blonde tour

  at Carnegie Hall

  on Cash, Johnny

  Christianity and

  Chronicles of

  on Columbia occupation

  drugs and

  Earle and

  on fame

  folk and

  in Greenwich Village

  Guthrie’s influence on

  on Hammond

  honorary doctorate of

  impact of

  on late-sixties

  at Live Aid

  in London

  love songs of

  lyrics of

  at March on Washington

  in Masked and Anonymous

  motorcycle accident of

  on mysticism

  at Newport Festival

  political disillusionment of

  popular culture and

  protest songs of

  on race issue

  sales of

  as storyteller

  style of

  teen years of

  verse structures of

  on Vietnam War

  voice of

  on Williams

  women and

  on Woodstock Festival

  Earle, Steve

  on America

  attitude
of

  career of

  Dylan and

  on Guthrie

  East Village Other

  Eastman, Max

  elections

  “11 Outlined Epitaphs,”

  Eliot, T.S.

  Ellington, Dick

  Ellington, Duke

  Elliot, Ramblin’ Jack

  Emergency Civil Liberties Committee

  Bill of Rights dinner of

  Emmett, Daniel Decatur

  Emshwiller, Ed

  Encounter

  “Eve of Destruction” (McGuire)

  Evers, Medgar

  assassination of

  The Fall of America (Ginsberg)

  “Farewell Angelina” (Dylan)

  Fariña, Richard

  Farm Aid

  Fear and Trembling (Kierkegaard)

  Feminism

  Ferlinghetti, Lawrence

  Flack, Roberta

  Flatt and Scruggs

  Flint (Michigan)

  Flying Burrito Brothers

  folk

  Dylan and

  English

  Lomax and

  in New York

  politics of

  popularity of

  rock ’n’ roll and

  Folklore Center

  Folkways

  Folsom Prison

  Ford, John

  Forman, James

  “4th Time Around” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  Franklin, Aretha

  free association

  Freedom in the Air - Albany, Georgia

  Freedom Singers

  Freewheelin’ (Dylan)

  Friesen, Gordon

  “From a Buick 6” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  From Spirituals to Swing concert

  Fulbright, William

  “Gates of Eden” (Dylan)

  lyrics of

  Gaye, Marvin

  geeks

  Geldof, Bob

  Genesis

  Gentry, Bobbie

  “George Jackson” (Dylan)

  Germany

  Ghost of Tom Joad (Springsteen)

  Gilded Palace of Sin (Flying Burrito Brothers)

  Gilmore, Mikal

  Ginsberg, Allen

  on “Blowin’ in the Wind,”

  on drugs

  on war

  “Girl from the North Country” (Dylan)

  Gitlin, Todd

  “Give Peace a Chance” (Lennon)

  Glaser, Milton

  Globalization

  “God Bless America,”

  Goldman, Emma

  Goldwater, Barry

  Gooding, Cynthia

  Goodman, Andrew

  Goodman, Benny

  Goodman, Paul

  “Goodnight, Irene,”

  “Gospel Plow,”

  Gosza, Barbara

  “Gotta Serve Somebody” (Dylan)

  Gramsci

  “Grand Coulee Dam” (Guthrie)

  Grateful Dead

  Gray, Michael

  Greatest Hits (Och)

  Greensboro sit-ins

  Greenwich Village

 

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