Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj



User Name Thread Name Subject Posted
Steve Shaw Bob Dylan: Nobel laureate (417* d) RE: Bob Dylan: Nobel laureate 23 Oct 16


Bach changed the nature of music. Beethoven changed the nature of music. Wagner tried to but hit a dead end. A good few medieval, renaissance and other baroque chaps had a massive influence. Mozart changed opera forever. Beethoven was influenced by Palestrina and Handel. Haydn was the father of the symphony. One thing about all those guys is that they are all dead this last two hundred years or more (well, a tad less in the case of Wagner and Beethoven) but you've heard of all of 'em. Can probably hum a good few of their tunes, and their stars are not at all fading. I reckon we'll be listening to The Firebird and Daphnis and Rhapsody In Blue in 200 years too. Dylan in 200 years? Well maybe. Like the Beatles. But we have their records. Ludwig never made a single record. Herbert Von Karajan made hundreds of records, lionised at the time, yet almost every single one of them sounds horribly dated already. So, who knows. The Everly Brothers are victims of fashion in a way that Elvis isn't. You never can tell. My kids love the Beatles for their lyricism, though they were both born more then ten years after the split. They've both got tons of Elvis. Love him. But play them a bit of snarlin' Bob and they think you've gone stark staring mad. They're OK with the Byrds doing Mr Tambourine Man but that's about it. He's doomed, Nobel prize notwithstanding.


Post to this Thread -

Back to the Main Forum Page

By clicking on the User Name, you will requery the forum for that user. You will see everything that he or she has posted with that Mudcat name.

By clicking on the Thread Name, you will be sent to the Forum on that thread as if you selected it from the main Mudcat Forum page.
   * Click on the linked number with * to view the thread split into pages (click "d" for chronologically descending).

By clicking on the Subject, you will also go to the thread as if you selected it from the original Forum page, but also go directly to that particular message.

By clicking on the Date (Posted), you will dig out every message posted that day.

Try it all, you will see.