Tempest (Bob Dylan Song)
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"Tempest" is an epic
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song about the sinking of the RMS ''Titanic'' written and performed by American singer-songwriter
Bob Dylan Bob Dylan (legally Robert Dylan, born Robert Allen Zimmerman, May 24, 1941) is an American singer-songwriter. Often regarded as one of the greatest songwriters of all time, Dylan has been a major figure in popular culture during a career sp ...
. It appears as the ninth track on his 2012 studio album of the same title. Like much of Dylan's 21st-century output, he produced the song himself using the pseudonym Jack Frost. "Tempest" is Dylan's third longest song, behind only 2020's " Murder Most Foul" and 1997's " Highlands". It provoked divisive critical reactions upon release, with views ranging from "one of his best songs ever" to "one of his worst songs ever".


Background and composition

Dylan has acknowledged the Carter Family's recording of "The Titanic" (AKA "After the Sinking of the Titanic"), a song believed to have been written by Seth Newton Mize in the early 1920s, as a starting point: In a 2012 interview with ''
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'''s Mikal Gilmore, he stated, "I was just fooling with that one night. I liked that melody — I liked it a lot. ‘Maybe I’m gonna appropriate this melody’. But where would I go with it?" Dylan appropriated some lyrics and part of the melody from the Carter Family's recording, transforming them into a 45-verse epic that freely mixes fact and fiction. When asked by Gilmore about the surprising appearance of ''Titanic'' actor Leonardo DiCaprio as a character on the ship in his song, Dylan responded, "Yeah, Leo, I don’t think the song would be the same without him. Or the movie...People are going to say, ‘Well, it’s not very truthful'. But a songwriter doesn’t care about what’s truthful. What he cares about is what should’ve happened, what could’ve happened. That’s its own kind of truth".
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Classics Professor
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, who considers the song one of Dylan's greatest achievements, researched its composition at
The Bob Dylan Archive The Bob Dylan Archive is a collection of documents and objects relating to American singer Bob Dylan. It was announced on March 2, 2016 that the archive had been acquired by the George Kaiser Family Foundation (GKFF) and The University of Tulsa (TU) ...
in
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. He discovered that Dylan began writing the first draft of the song on hotel stationery during the European leg of the Never Ending Tour in summer 2010 and that the song progressed from "alphabetical wordlists" written in
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in late May to "the almost-finished song" in
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one month later. Thomas defended Dylan's use of appropriation in the song's composition by stating, "We are supposed to recognize the theft — along with the melody — compare the two, and see that Dylan’s song is both in a tradition and surpasses that tradition".


Critical reception and legacy

Most of the negative reviews that appeared at the time of the song's release focused on its length and sprawling character: In the ''
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'', Jim Farber wrote that, "Unfortunately, you'll feel every minute" of the song's 14-minute run time. ''
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'''s Jim Fusilli agreed, writing that ''Tempest'''s title track represents the album "at its worst", calling it "undisciplined and banal". But a ''
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'' article ranking "all of Bob Dylan's songs", where "Tempest" placed 76th (out of 359), suggested that the track benefited from more listens: "It was a song you listened to for the first time and figured, 'that was nice, but I’ll never listen to it again'. Yet every time it pops up, its hypnotic rhyming structure makes you keep listening and 15-minutes later you’re glad you did". Greil Marcus cited the song as one of his favorites on ''Tempest'' and defended it in an interview with ''
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'': "It doesn’t get boring, and that’s because his engagement with the story he’s telling is so complete. It’s a song that’s kind of like the album as a whole: for the first three or four minutes you might think, 'Well, okay, I’ll be back in a minute'. Then it becomes a lot harder, a lot more dangerous, a lot uglier, and you begin to feel a sense of horror and dread at what’s going on. Characters that he’s introduced before are being disposed of, are being wiped out of the song. It becomes like a battle, like a war, rather than a sentimental 'oh, it was sad when the great ship went down'". Among the most positive notices were a ''
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'' review in which critic Randy Lewis cited it as "one of the most extraordinary compositions from the most acclaimed songwriter of the rock era"; a ''Billboard'' review that called the song "Ambitious, successful and absolutely startling"; and a five-star ''
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'' album review where critic Will Hermes named the track one of ''Tempest'''s two "most powerful cuts" (along with " Roll On John") and praised the effectiveness of its "inescapable" central metaphor: "a seemingly unsinkable behemoth going down amid small acts of bravery that change little, rich and poor doomed equally". ''Spectrum Culture'' included the song on a list of "Bob Dylan's 20 Best Songs of the '10s and Beyond". The musician Tim Heidecker released his own 15-minute version of a song about the Titanic in advance of Dylan's, stating: "I wrote this song to see if I could beat the Master to it".


Cultural references

The line "Turned his eyes up to the heavens", describing the action of a Bishop on the ship, is taken from the traditional folk song "
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". In the original song, the line is followed by "Said, ' Nearer, My God, to Thee'", which Dylan omits. Through its absence, Dylan seems to be making a veiled reference to the hymn that the band on the ''Titanic'' allegedly played as the ship sank. The verse beginning with the line "The rich man Mr. Astor / kissed his darling wife" tells the true story of John Jacob Astor IV, a passenger on the ''Titanic'' who indeed perished when the ship sank and was survived by his wife (who made it onto a lifeboat). The line "Davey the brothel keeper / came out, dismissed his girls" is a paraphrase of a sentence in '' Satire VI'' ("Later, when the pimp was already dismissing his girls...") by the Ancient Roman poet
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. The line "The loveliest and the best" is quotation from the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam.Edward FitzGerald
''The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam''
(1859-89)


References


External links


Lyrics
at Bob Dylan's official site
Chords
at Dylanchords {{authority control 2012 songs Bob Dylan songs Songs written by Bob Dylan Song recordings produced by Bob Dylan