My first time ever listening to this album. Certainly a strange brew of shit stew going on here but like DJ said, fantastically terrible.
I found this article that's a pretty interesting take on it. The guy clearly has Dylan on a pedestal but it does sound like some shenanigans were going on. But, it could just be Dylan fucking with everyone:
Quote:
So…will the real Bob Dylan please stand up?
Or, better yet, sit out.
To understand “Self-Portrait,” you have to understand where Dylan was at this point in his life and career. Having created such an impressive body of work, he was saddled with the baggage that comes with straddling the cusp between man and myth. When people are gaining notoriety for simply rifling through your trash for “clues,” you’ve officially got problems.
Here’s Dylan in 1984 again:
This was just about the time of that Woodstock festival, which was the sum total of all this bullshit. And it seemed to have something to do with me, this Woodstock Nation, and everything it represented. So we couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t get any space for myself and my family, and there was no help, nowhere. I got very resentful about the whole thing…There’d be crowds outside my house. And I said, ‘Well, fuck it. I wish these people would just forget about me. I wanna do something they can’t possibly like, they can’t relate to. They’ll see it, and they’ll listen, and they’ll say, ‘Well, let’s get on to the next person. He ain’t sayin’ it no more.’
Of course, it wouldn’t be Bob Dylan if there weren’t also indications that contradicted the idea as “SP”-as-joke. For example, in Anthony Scaduto’s 1971 bio “Bob Dylan: An Intimate Biography“, Dylan says flat-out: “It’s a great album. There’s a lot of damn good music there. People just didn’t listen at first.”
This kind of kaleidoscopic reasoning may strike some as endlessly aggravating, but back in 1970 Dylan was laying the groundwork for the mercurial, you-can’t-catch-me approach that artists like Eminem later took, defying their audience to peg them down with each turn of phrase. To a true artist, this is a crucial step – not just donning a series of costumes, a la Bowie, but confounding expectations to a point where all that one has worked for is potentially razed to nothing, to be built back up from scratch. Forget aesthetic truth, this seems like an imperative to the maintenance of sanity when a level of fame like Dylan’s is taken into consideration. If he’s not one step ahead, if he just doles out all the answers like a good little monkey, we will swallow him whole, given half a chance.
Thus, ”Self-Portrait” is as crucial and important a record as “Blonde On Blonde.” The latter built the house, and the former knocked it down. And “New Morning” was, well…a new morning. Those with discerning taste know all too well the difference between “good-bad” and “bad-bad.”
In a 2005 interview, Dylan said, “Well my wife and kids and me would sit around after supper on a Saturday night, and we’d all put ideas into a hat. I picked a slip of paper out of the hat, and that would be the week’s activity. One time it might be to get myself photographed at the Western Wall so people would think I was a Zionist. Another time it might be to get a job pumpin’ gas in Paramus, New Jersey, so the press would report I was crazy, or a sicko, or a Mormon.”
On the week of August 31, 1969 , Dylan seems to have pulled a particularly interesting slip of paper out of the hat. I’m guessing it read “Desecrate the classics.” The “Self-Portrait” version of “Like A Rolling Stone,” in particular, truly captures an artist setting fire to his muse. It’s in this deflation of his biggest classic that the album is best captured in miniature. Only three short years after utilizing the provocation of the notorious “Judas!” heckler to reach celestial heights with the same tune, backed by the same Band, Dylan reclaims “Rolling Stone” as his possession fully, to do with what he will. Whether that means bestowing upon us the incendiary fulfillment of rock’s potential, or mischievously scrawling moustaches on his own Mona Lisa, it’s a decision that is only Dylan’s to make. Here, he’s bringing it all back home, all right. He drives the song into the ground, underscoring the valid point that if an artist can create a masterpiece, it should be entirely up to him to fuck it up if he should so desire. What better way for mojo to be recycled back into the canon of artistic creation than to create fertilizer out of it?
P.S. Even stranger than anything involving the actual “Self-Portrait” is the fact that there’s another album called “Dylan” that’s actually partially composed of “Self-Portrait” outtakes! That’s like taking out your trash, deciding it stinks way too bad to be placed with the rest of your garbage, and finding a whole new dumpster in which to throw it away.
The story goes that Columbia released “Dylan” in 1973 as a revenge tactic after Bob changed labels.
But me? I’d like to think it was Dylan’s decision.