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Phantom of the Oprah I don't really have a rant for this subject-- I just liked the title. We have been thinking of possible band names for the last few days. How about: The Taliband Like all of the songs on that album, the arrangement is clear, sparse, simple, economical, and crisp: drums, bass, and acoustic guitar, and harmonica. Dylan's nasal voice is confident and nuanced. As I went out one morning
I offered her my hand The girl seems to represent religion. She is enticing, with promises of spiritual reward, and he offers her his hand. But then she demands more. In the economy of this song, we waste no time: he immediately suspects she is up to no good. "Depart from me this moment," Religion? Or utopianism? Does she represent Dylan's brief faith in the idea of human progress? Unfortunately, we're not likely to get a straight answer from Dylan anytime soon, so our only clue is her suggestion they "fly" south. To paradise? I love the amazingly stripped down lines, especially the first four of the verse above, with that inverted "said I". Tom Paine comes to his rescue. The spirit of liberty himself? Or the spirit of "common sense", of a kind of rational agnosticism? Just then Tom Paine himself Why did I think the girl represented religion? I believe it was a review by Greil Marcus that came out shortly after the album did that first made that suggestion. That makes less sense to me now, and given subsequent developments in Dylan's religious views, it does seem more likely, now, that the girl embodies utopianism or socialism. Alluring, but basically a means of enslaving the individual in favor of the collective. On the other hand, "ever did walk in chains", suggests that her true spirit was constrained in some way, shackled by something. That is more suggestive of religion, strait-jacketed by the spirit of conformity and collective ennui. And as she was letting go her grip, It's a strange, very beautiful song. If you've never heard it... you haven't, have you? Copyright © 2006 Bill Van Dyk All rights reserved. |
July 16, 2006 The entire lyric
of "As I Went Out One Morning". Modestly revised Februrary, 2007. |
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