dylan mentions lines from ginsberg, frost, and whitman, lines that are still remembered and quoted today. he then says that poets today dont connect to the public concioussness like they used to. is this true? why is it true? dylan then says that its singers now, lyrics are now what are remembered and quoted today. are they worthy of this?
I love Joni so much and I love Ronee. Allen is a little pathetic in the portrayal I pity him but sympathize.
Bob IDK somehow he seems like the least interesting person there, he's a question mark
finally made it to joni. her interrogating this guy about why he distinguishes between male and female songwriters, "am i not in the same conversation as bob and leonard?"
theres a line in there that goes like "When you look at Dylan, it's like looking into a mirror, you either are frightened, or you see what you want to see." or something.... and i think that sums a lot of his deal upBob IDK somehow he seems like the least interesting person there, he's a question mark
not sure about that seems like an angry thing to say
the same point, but the 60s version of this song is remarkably better.
On the other hand I guess this could be more about being too surrounded by foolsnot sure about that seems like an angry thing to say
I was just saying it was Dylan's strategy, to remain silent, to keep the people wonderingnot sure about that seems like an angry thing to say
What I think is interesting is Dylan's systematic rejection of the reporters' language. The system wants you to submit to its terms, its concepts, its carvings, its dichotomies, its triage.