
In the autumn of 1975, when "New England is festering with Bicentennial madness," Bob Dylan and his Rolling Thunder Revue-a rag-tag variety show that Dylan envisioned as a traveling gypsy circus-toured twenty-two cities across the Northeast. Swept up in the motley crew, which included Joni Mitchell, Mick Ronson, Allen Ginsberg, Arlo Guthrie, Joan Baez, and Ramblin' Jack Elliot, was playwright Sam Shepard, ostensibly hired to write, on the spot, the script for a Fellini-esque, surreal movie that would come out of the tour. The script never materialized, but throughout the many moods and moments of his travels with Dylan and his troupe, Shepard kept an impressionistic Rolling Thunder Logbook of life on the road. Illuminated by forty candid photographs by official tour photographer Ken Regan, Shepard's mental-snap shots capture the camaraderie, isolation, head games, and pill-popping mayhem of the tour, providing a window into Dylan's singular talent, enigmatic charisma, and vision of America.
This work investigates the chaotic, surreal reality of Bob Dylan's 1975 Rolling Thunder Revue through the lens of a participant observer. Playwright Sam Shepard, hired to draft a screenplay for a film that never materialized, provides a firsthand account of the tour's internal dynamics. By documenting the interactions between iconic musicians and the logistical strain of the traveling troupe, Shepard explores the intersection of artistic vision and the reality of life on the road.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Critics and readers frequently note the impressionistic and fragmented nature of the prose, which mirrors the surreal atmosphere of the tour itself. Experts highlight this work as a significant primary source for understanding the specific cultural climate of the mid-1970s music scene.
Page Count:
184
Publication Date:
1978-02-23
Publisher:
Penguin Books
ISBN-10:
0140047506
ISBN-13:
9780140047509
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