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All along the watchtower

Greil Marcus

Published 08 May 2008

It was a year of horror and bad faith

From the sightlines in Berkeley, California, where I lived then and live now, I recall 1968 as a year of horror and bad faith. The great storm of student protest that would convulse the US and nations well beyond it had begun there in 1964 with the Free Speech Movement. It was three months of daily speeches, marches, building occupations, and finally played out in a Greek open-air theatre as high drama. That drama - a university in convocation with itself, everyone present, the leaders of the institution speaking quieting words, then a single student, standing to speak, immediately seized by police, an act of violence actually revealing the face of power behind the face of reasonableness - brought that moment to a close and opened a field that in the years to come would be crossed by thousands.

But in 1968 the spirit that animated a simple demand for the free exercise of rights students had assumed were theirs - because they had learned such a story in their classrooms and then, as if by instinct, begun to put them into practice - had long since turned cheap and rote. When in May 1968 a rally was held in Berkeley to celebrate the poorly understood but exciting revolt taking place in France, activists distributed leaflets denouncing the police violence that had dispersed the rally before the rally had even gotten under way. When students at Columbia University in New York, protesting at what they saw as the university's colonialist appropriation of property in Harlem, shut the school down - using the novel technique of occupying one building, and then, when the police arrived, filing out, only to seize another building, and then another, and another - Berkeley radicals called on their fellows to "Do a Columbia": not for any reason, not in the face of any injustice or insult, but for lack of anything better to do.

With the Vietnam War all but rolling back across the Pacific to poison the United States itself, it was as if people turned to spectacular lies and glamorous trivialities to hide from themselves the fact that their imaginations had turned to ice. Truly enormous events taking place elsewhere did not travel. Word of the Prague Spring arrived only in fragments, and no speaker stood up to put the pieces together. News of the massacre of scores - no, hundreds - of students in Mexico City was suppressed so profoundly, it would take 40 years for the facts to come out of the ground. But few if any looked; curiosity withered; people were swept up in their own vanity. The faces of those who said no were smug in their automatic righteousness.

It's clear now that the signal song of that year, the song with which Bob Dylan has for years, to this day, closed his concerts, was "All Along the Watchtower" - a song which ended with words that, in any traditional ballad, would have opened it: "Two riders were approaching/ The wind began to howl." Occupying the moral centre of Dylan's album John Wesley Harding, it made its way on to and out of the radio slowly, like a rumour. Too slowly: when Martin Luther King, Jr was assassinated in April, and then Robert F Kennedy, running for president, was shot and killed in June, the song did not play, even in the minds of those who watched the funerals on television. It did not give voice to the awful sense of disease, ruin and damnation that seized the country so fully that it could only be channelled into calls for gun control and a ludicrous riot in Chicago against a presidential nominating convention where, had he lived, Kennedy would have lost.

It was time to face up to, to abandon the mask of purity through which one could see one's enemies as absolutely evil and oneself as absolutely good, but in 1968 the words, "Let us not talk falsely, now/The hour is getting late" of the song were just words. The tone of Dylan's voice - quiet, as if to pass on a secret, whispering in the ear of the nation as a whole - did not register. It would be 25 years before Neil Young took the song and made it clear, rewrote it, through an arrangement that made its apocalypse not a whisper but a desperate shout, a shout that made desperation thrilling, a new way of singing the song so undeniable that, as Young played, it rewrote the past and wrote the future in advance. Young taught the song to Dylan as he taught it to everyone else: from that night in 1993 when Young sang and played as if as an artist he had emerged from the song rather than addressed himself to it, Dylan himself has never played it any other way.

So it is that that song - rushed, moving so fast it outruns itself, so that by the end it is not looking forward to any cataclysm to come, but looking back over its shoulder, running to escape the cataclysm that has already taken place - that, along with a wall writing from Paris in May 1968: "Run, comrades, the old world is behind you!" carries the speech of that time.

Greil Marcus is a journalist and cultural critic. An extended version of this article will be republished in the journal "Common Knowledge" this autumn

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13 comments from readers

Ace
08 May 2008 at 16:51

Bob Dylan performed this song as the third one at every show from 1991 until the first show after his heart trouble in 1997.

It would be 25 years [1993] before Neil Young took the song and made it clear, rewrote it, through an arrangement that made its apocalypse not a whisper but a desperate shout

An article that mentions All Along the Watchtower that does not mention Jimi Hendrix?

petemoss
09 May 2008 at 14:28

What is this shit?

I have less respect for Greil ever since I heard him spout that "Modern Times" isn't a very good record because Dylan's current backing band isn't very good. When he said this at Booksmith in San Francisco I challanged him on it after laughing out loud, and they kicked me out. Greil knows how to write but it's much ado about nothing.

Bob Brodsky
09 May 2008 at 14:48

Neil Young performed "All Along the Watchtower" at the Bob Dylan Tribute Concert in November 1992, not 1993. I agree with the above writers both on Hendrix and Marcus's negative attitude toward MODERN TIMES--a record so good it is apparently beyond his grasp.

woozle
09 May 2008 at 15:44

I completely disagree with this negative view of 1968.To me, it was a time of rising consciousness, and a deep feeling of "we're all one on this blue planet." I was in my second year of the Peace Corps in Ethiopia, and whatever this new vibe was, it hit all over the world..Africa too.

heyyyabbottt
09 May 2008 at 16:25

""Run, comrades, the old world is behind you!" I love listening to this song on my CD player in my 2008 BMW Convertible!! Nothing says Rebel like a 65 year old with a ponytail talking about the 60's.."Senor, Tales of Yankee Power" makes my leg tingle, like Chris Mathews' leg when he hears Obama speak!

raggedclown
09 May 2008 at 20:51

Greil Marcus knows nothing. I am staggered by the depth of his ignorance, but his writing on rock music has always been about himself, i.e. utter solipsistic rubbish. He disappeared up his own bottom 40 years ago, and hasn't emerged since. But there are errors of fact as well as judgement in this article.

a.fritze@hotmail.com
10 May 2008 at 00:38

tch, don't believe that for one moment Bob knew what he was writing about would be misused, abused, strung out & worse by psudeo critics & fans alike.

it may well be that the song meant something to Him then, to us then also & to him & us @ other times in our wretched search for meaning in our lives.

there is no more search for truth, the truth is we only want a little comfort...

Yes, neil young wrung new life out of this song in 1992, as dave warner in 1977, did with like a rolliling stone on the Mugs Game album.

we all like Marcus, have 20/20 vision in hindsight & adapt songs, like the above to fit, but really that is all there is to it.

andre fritze@ ajbfritz@hotmail.com

chillsboro732
10 May 2008 at 02:16

what's the truth that bob took the song from richie havens? in recent concerts, havens opens with the song and a long story about "someone" asking him to write the lyrics down for him in the early village folk scene. next thing havens knew "someone" had recorded it as his own.

majorDilemma
10 May 2008 at 02:44

marcus will go to any length to prove a point, at a talk he gave in nov 06 in nyc, he went as far as saying the song nettie moore basically sucked in a effort to prove his favorite, ain't talkin, was better. when i questioned if i heard him correctly, "did you just bad mouth nettie moore?" he brayed, "WHAT OF IT, PAGAN!"

johannine
10 May 2008 at 16:08

The ''me'' generation is spoiled rotten ,they have taken it all ,then cut out even paying fair taxes for the wealth [common wealth ] they have stolen [stolen via the free university education they recieved ] turned their violent resistance to an evil war into vile proffiteering from ongoing wars.

They have made sure the next generations own nothing [hiding their coluded gain in family trusts and tax havens , or behind multinational firms they hold the shares for

The me generation has no guilt , spoiiled rotten while despoiiling the future , they have become that they reviled [sold out] ,but soon they will be old ,

Soon they may even die in peace-filled bliss in total deliberated ignorance of what the me generation took for their own exclusive use

and find out the me generation is all in the hell they thought their privledge and wealth would protect them from.

They know histry is littered with tin pot dictators who think me me me , that gets followed by the we generation

[that then again becomes the me me me generation

[They deneid a true living god and the common weal thus made themselves the faulse anti gods their works have revealed them to have become [ye who serve yourselves serve evil to pervade ,how vile a life you chose to lead us into].

you who have been given it all

what have you given in return?

realworld2008
10 May 2008 at 18:01

Get a job, join a church and give to charity…

Don123
10 May 2008 at 21:56

As a Dylan fan since I watched him perform as a teenager with The Band I feel completed to respond. I was at the 1992 show during which "Old Neil" performed a just plain fun "Just Like Tom Thumbs Blues" after Sinead O"Conner was allegedly booed off the stage. There was nothing special about "Watchtower". In more then one interview ,Dylan ( to the extend you can understand him anyway), claims he has no recollection of writing the song and performs it as a cover of Jimmy Hendrix. This of course may just be nonsense.

What might be worth thinking about for a minute is that Dylan's songs are often not linear in time or space and I always thought this was true with "Watchtower". I think the moral of this story,the moral this song ( OK that's was pathetically corny) ends and not begins with " There must be some way out of here...said the joker to the thief". Just my opinion, and just where I think we are as Americans.

lonesomecoyote
11 May 2008 at 06:21

Like so much of what Marcus writes, particularly when he writes on Dylan, this is preposterous, delusional, and parasitic drivel. As for where the moral center of the song is, I would suggest that it is found in the last two lines of the first verse -- "None of them along the line/Knows what any of it is worth." Just listen to the way he's performed it for the last five or six years. That Marcus reveals himself as one of "them" every time he commits criticism at least makes his follies amusing to behold; that he is utterly and humorlessly incapable of ever realizing this to even the tiniest degree is what makes him so spectacularly worthless as an observer.

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