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Zimmerman finds his Messiah (Part 3)

Shot of Love

Well, I was hoping to get to Shot Of Love on Friday, but alas other demands caught up with me. I’ve now had a chance to listen to the album. My chief criticism of Saved was that, after Slow Train Coming, it seemed a bit sloppy. I was worried that perhaps Dylan had acquired Christian zeal but not Protestant Work Ethic. I was wrong. Shot Of Love is quite a slick production.

The major difference is that he’s moved on from the ‘gospel’ vibe. Gone is the Muscle Shoals sound of producer Jerry Wexler who is replaced with studio maven, Chuck Potkin. There was quite a tension between artist and producer apparently, Dylan wanting a dirtier sound. So what we have here is a compromise - a gritty sound, beautifully recorded.  

The core of the band remains the same – bass by Tim Drummond and drums by Jim Keltner, but with a lot of ‘celebrity guests’. Donald ‘Duck’ Dunn of Booker T and the MGs – who I compared Drummond’s playing to in the Part 1- makes an appearance here. So does ex-Beatle Ringo Starr and Rolling Stone Ronnie Wood. Ace LA session guitarist Danny Korchmar helps out, while Fred Tackett handles the main guitar duties again. In other words, the musical pedigree of this album is beyond doubt.

If there is a weak link on a Dylan album, it is usually Dylan himself. I’m happy to report that he is in fine voice. The songs are strong too. Better,  I think than on the previous album, though not quite as ‘classic’ as some of those on Slow Train Coming. Though that’s debatable. There’s some good shit on here.

Wait a mo…

Sorry, I had to get up and dance. I’m dancing around my office to a song called “Property of Jesus”. Ssssh! This is very strange. But man, does this song have a groove!

This is followed by what must be a bona-fide classic – Lenny Bruce. I can’t believe that I’ve had this song sitting on my shelf for years but deprived myself of it because of a silly prejudice. Imagine if I’d never heard Harrison’s What is Life because I’d turned my nose up at My Sweet Lord. “Lenny Bruce is dead but his ghost lives on and on…” says Dylan:

They said that he was sick ’cause he didn’t play by the rules
He just showed the wise men of his day to be nothing more than fools.
They stamped him and they labeled him like they do with pants and shirts,
He fought a war on a battlefield where every victory hurts.
Lenny Bruce was bad, he was the brother that you never had.

Funny thing is, he seems to be treating the foul-mouthed stand-up comic Bruce as a Jesus figure. Am I wrong?

But I’m getting ahead of myself here. Let’s rewind.

The album starts with a song – as per the previous two albums – in which Dylan sets up his stall. Shot Of Love:

I need a shot of love, I need a shot of love.

Don’t need a shot of heroin to kill my disease,
Don’t need a shot of turpentine, only bring me to my knees,
Don’t need a shot of codeine to help me to repent,
Don’t need a shot of whiskey, help me be president.

I need a shot of love, I need a shot of love.

I suppose there is a reason why being filled with the holy spirit is as intoxicating an experience as chugging down the liquid variety. Another of my favourite musicians has gone over to the dark side. Guitar prodigy Jonny Lang is now a reborn Christian with a gospel album out. His reasoning was pretty much along these lines: fame didn’t fill the empty hole. Neither did drugs or booze. Inexplicably, Jesus did. It may be nuts, but I suppose if nothing else, Jesus is better for your liver than Jack – both Daniels and Captain…

But it is with track two – Heart Of Mine – that you know this is going to be a superior Dylan album. The lyrics look merely ‘okay’ on paper…

Heart of mine be still,
You can play with fire but you’ll get the bill.
Don’t let her know
Don’t let her know that you love her.
Don’t be a fool, don’t be blind
Heart of mine.

… but you have to listen to the melody and the phrasing to appreciate just how special this song is. It also has a bass/piano groove infectious enough that you’ll be bouncing around in your chair. Soon your shoulders will join in and… well, by time track three, Property Of Jesus, starts up you’d have to have that heart of stone not to be bopping about the room like a Deadhead in 69. Chilled, you understand, not raving.

Watered-Down Love reminds me a bit of Bill Wither’s Lean On Me. It’s a solid album track from a time when every track on an album counted. And then there’s The Groom’s Still Waiting At The Alter. If anyone can tell me what the hell it’s about, I’ll be intrigued to know. Though it has a fantastic rhyming couplet of the sort only those in Dylan’s league can come up with.

Put your hand on my head, baby, do I have a temperature?
I see people who are supposed to know better standin’ around like furniture.

Dead Man, Dead Man treats us to the kind of reggae he first explored with the Live At Budokan band (immediately preceding these ‘Holy Trinity’ albums.)

In The Summertime could be about his muse, or a woman. But I suspect it’s about Jesus.

Strangers, they meddled in our affairs,
Poverty and shame was theirs.
But all that sufferin’ was not to be compared
With the glory that is to be.
And I’m still carrying the gift you gave,
It’s a part of me now, it’s been cherished and saved,
It’ll be with me unto the grave
And then unto eternity.

In the summertime, ah in the summertime,
In the summertime when you were with me.

I think that’s what ultimately makes this album the most accessible of the three. It’s more, well, metaphorical than the other two. Slow Train Coming succeeded because the religious zeal drew on the apocalyptic imagery of Revelations. Saved was a bit preachy. Shot Of Love brings the poetry back.

And after another song, so to the album closer.

I have gone from rags to riches in the sorrow of the night
In the violence of a summer’s dream, in the chill of a wintry light,
In the bitter dance of loneliness fading into space,
In the broken mirror of innocence on each forgotten face.

I hear the ancient footsteps like the motion of the sea
Sometimes I turn, there’s someone there, other times it’s only me.
I am hanging in the balance of the reality of man
Like every sparrow falling, like every grain of sand.

That’s the poetry. Epic. Biblical. Beauty, in his madness.

Comments

Paul    
  19 October, 2009, 8:13 pm

Great review. You should do more of this kind of thing – re-assessing albums that aren’t considered to be the artist’s best.

I was 12 when Shot of Love came out. I remember it well because at the time my dad was working nights at ASDA – and one of the perks of his job was the cassettes he used to steal for me. This was one of them. It remains one of my favourite Dylan albums.

Norah Jones does a good version of Heart of Mine – singing as a guest for some other bloke whose name I can’t recall.

Brett    
  19 October, 2009, 8:25 pm

“Norah Jones does a good version of Heart of Mine “

I found it here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0aM8EsSaN4

And you’re right, it is superb.

I don’t know who The Peter Malick Group is, but the guitarist has a quality like early Robben Ford or Eric Gale. Classy Stuff.

mullah    
  20 October, 2009, 12:29 am

Yep, I started listening to this album just this year having been put off by the double whammy of it being a Christian album and that album cover.

Paul, if your original experience of the album is the cassette issued in 1981 then you probably didn’t have Groom Still Waiting At the Altar which was criminally, inexplicably left off the album as originally released.

Dylan apparently had a big hand in the designs of all the Christian-era albums and, I guess, which tracks were included so your assertion that Bob can be the weak link on his albums also holds true of this one here where he was his own worst enemy. The next album Infidels was released without Blind Willie Mctell which appears on the Bootlegs Vol.3. The original version did appear on You Tube but there seems to have been a massive culling of Dylan videos from there recently.

Cheers for the review.

Matt Sieger    
  20 October, 2009, 5:07 pm

Brett,
I just want to thank you for three excellent reviews of these Dylan albums. I had the exact feelings as you about all three albums (except that I am a Jewish believer in Jesus, so I can fully embrace Dylan’s message along with the music), but you put my feelings into words extremely well. I also think Shot of Love is the best of the three but again, you actually articulated the reasons for me. Great reviews, great writing. Thanks again!
Matt

Paul    
  20 October, 2009, 8:29 pm

“I am a Jewish believer in Jesus…”

Sigh.

comstock    
  21 October, 2009, 1:31 pm

He fell (really fell) for a Black born again Christian one of his backing singers, he did not convert himself! A great album but the closing track seems like he took the best bits from
his Reader´s Digest, Everyman Library, Shakespeare, Blake and Rimbaud and wove them into Edward Lear.

Luniam    
  22 October, 2009, 1:44 am

Shot Of Love was my very favourite Dylan album in the early eighties. I lost the cassette a few years ago which I had listened to ‘ten thousand’ times. Thanks Brett for writing this excellent review and bring back some of the nostalgia of those times. I have to go buy the CD tomorrow. Can’t wait to hear Every Grain of Sand and the hauntingly beautiful harmonica Dylan played in this number.

BTW, I remember my cassette had a song called Man Gave Name … , but not sure if it had Groom’s Still Waiting at the altaar number.

mullah    
  22 October, 2009, 2:16 am

Luniam, Man Gave Names to the Animals is on Slow Train Coming.

Comstock, he married one of the backing singers and had a child with her. But the conversion seems to have been completely sincere on his part.

comstock    
  22 October, 2009, 9:22 am

Mullah thats exactly the point I am making, he was sincere! Van Morrison´s “She Gave Me Religion”!

mullah    
  22 October, 2009, 1:26 pm

comstock, I misunderstood what you had written. I thought you had meant, he, himself, didn’t convert.

In fact, his relationship with the backing singers is quite complex. It seems he was seeing one of them, Helena Springs – a Christian, from Street Legal onwards, then was introduced to the Evangelists by another singer and later married Carolyn Dennis who was doing backing vocals duty during the same time.

Tangled up in backing vocalists.

comstock    
  23 October, 2009, 10:07 am

Tangled up in backing vocalists, in Frelimo, Mozambique in a de-luxe resort apparently. Anybody fancing doing the same for the Irish Bog Thing who must have a pure heart because he writes terribly intelligent and sensitive songs, most of the time? Van the Man, beats politics and restricted speech on the other channel!

mullah    
  23 October, 2009, 3:37 pm

Tangled up in backing vocalists, in Frelimo, Mozambique in a de-luxe resort apparently. Anybody fancing doing the same for the Irish Bog Thing who must have a pure heart because he writes terribly intelligent and sensitive songs, most of the time? Van the Man, beats politics and restricted speech on the other channel!

James Joyce’ll sue!

mullah    
  31 October, 2009, 9:13 am

I think there’s an out-take of Heart of Mine available here:

http://www.sendspace.com/file/00wkkq

عجائب    
  9 December, 2009, 3:54 am

I’m not arguing. London is a great place if you are young and solvent. But eventually you notice the tramps and the disadvantaged kids and the neurotic driving instructors clamping desperatly to a conspiracy theory in order to make sense of it all (or as we call them “Spiked”)

Fans    
  3 January, 2010, 11:08 am

he was sincere!

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