10 May 2011 04:25:10
Because of Bob Dylan's conversion to Christianity, his handlers say, he will no longer play the songs that made him a symbol of 1960s counterculture and are looking to a Broadway musical as a way to keep them alive.
The story that Daniel Mark Epstein pitches is essentially the same story he tells in this book: A young man comes to New York's Greenwich Village from out West, perfects his art against a backdrop of interesting characters and becomes a full-fledged rock 'n' roll star before finding Jesus.
The musical never gets made and Dylan eventually makes a comeback as a secular musician. So the story winds on, but it's clear this is something Epstein's been ruminating over for a while.
Epstein was lucky enough to catch Dylan β and Dylan fever β early on, taking in a 1963 show, at the start of the singer's meteoric rise.
His description of the show is testament to a 15-year-old's memory, packed with minutia β from each song's time signature to the position of Dylan's guitar capo. The reader quickly begins to fear the book is for only the most die-hard fanatics.
But in subsequent chapters, the story picks up speed and as Epstein checks back on Dylan at subsequent concerts during various stages of the artist's career, his focus thankfully widens.
Epstein disputes the perception that Dylan rarely gives interviews, citing and quoting from quite a number of them as well as from Dylan's 2005 autobiographical book, "Chronicles," but he never interviews the man himself. This leaves him to rely on interviews with former band members, friends, acquaintances and secondhand sources.