Music Review: Bob Dylan - Modern Times

Meet the new Bob Dylan, the first and still the best. The latest version is gregarious, user-friendly, comfortable with new formats, and, as usual, iconic and enigmatic. Dylan's giving interviews and embracing new technology; the iTunes spot for Modern Times is hip and sexy and swinging, like the record itself. This fall, he's even going to be featured on Broadway in The Times They Are A-Changin, another Twyla Tharp collaboration (didn't she just do one featuring Billy Joel?).

Dylan countercultural? Hardly. But still intractably trendy and provocative.  Modern Times, his 31st album, is very good. So good, it's a pleasure to spin again and again. It's not as dramatic as Time out of Mind, his 1997 "comeback," or as oracular as Love and Theft, the disk (released 9/11/2001) that cemented his reputation once again. But it's more natural than either.

It's topical and elusive, referencing everything from 9/11 to Tommy Tucker to the Five Satins to Alicia Keys; even the economy comes into Dylan's focus, on "Workingman's Blues," and Katrina rears her horrifying head (obliquely, or course) in "When the Levee Breaks," one of the toughest rockers.

At times, Dylan's in love: "I've been sittin' down studyin' the art of love/ I think it will fit me like a glove," he confesses in "Thunder on the Mountain," the surging rocker that launches the album and sets its multifaceted agenda. At the same time, he can be misogynistic: "Someday Baby," the coiled rocker at the center of the album, features lyrics as spiteful and stinging as its music.

Not only is Dylan's writing sharp, he's singing relatively on key (think Nashville Skyline an octave deeper), and this band may be the best he's ever worked with. Leave it to Dylan to assemble a country-rock combo with brushwork-heavy jazz drumming, so the music swings like mad but is soft; move over, Dire Straits. Dylan says it's the best band he's ever worked with (the groups on Highway 61 Revisited and Bringing It All Back Home weren't bad, and there was that gang he worked with called the Band). It's certainly the most sinuous.

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Article Author: Carlo Wolff

Carlo Wolff is the author of Cleveland Rock & Roll Memories and a long-time book and music critic. He works full-time as a business writer at Penton Media, specializing in articles about the hotel industry.

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  • Modern Times Modern Times

    First new album in 5 years featuring 10 new songs

Article comments

  • 1 - al

    Sep 12, 2006 at 8:20 am

    mr. zimmerman still has it

  • 2 - Connie Phillips

    Sep 12, 2006 at 9:52 pm

    This article has been placed at the Advance.net websites, a site affiliated with about 12 newspapers.

    One such site is here.

  • 3 - Anthony

    Sep 22, 2006 at 1:18 pm

    He still can't sing.

  • 4 - Eliot Kopp

    Sep 22, 2006 at 8:06 pm

    I'm not a Bob Dylan fan per se, but this is a fantastic album. I've listened to "Spirit on the Water", "Rollin' and Tumblin'", "Someday, Baby", and the hauntingly beautiful "Nettie Moore", (which is my favorite song on the album)at least 20 times apiece. Very addictive!

  • 5 - Lee

    Oct 06, 2006 at 7:49 pm

    Some artists actually get a pass on vocals. Bob is one of these

  • 6 - Ignatz

    May 03, 2009 at 10:04 pm

    ""Rollin' and Tumblin'," Dylan's freshly apocalyptic rewrite of the old Muddy Waters tune,"

    If it's a rewrite of a Muddy Waters song, why does it say "Words and Music by Bob Dylan"?

    Bob is stealing songs and not crediting them. And there's no excuse for it.

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