"... a digital display lets visitors sift through 10 of the 17 known drafts of Dylan’s cryptic 1983 song 'Jokerman.' The screen highlights typed and handwritten changes Dylan made throughout the manuscripts, showing, for example, how the line 'You a son of the angels/You a man of the clouds' in the song’s earliest iteration was tweaked, little by little, to end up as 'You’re a man of the mountains, you can walk on the clouds.'... In characteristic fashion, Dylan — fully active at 80, with a tour on the road and a new book coming out in the fall — has stubbornly avoided engaging with attempts to examine his own work, and had no involvement in the center that bears his name, aside from contributing one of his ironwork gates for the entryway."
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8 comments:
I really fail to see the point of so many "museums" and "exhibits" today which consist of video clips and displays. Things that you could easily watch from home.
Hi, remember the 60s?
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Oa-50ZYvHPw
Whole lot of hero worship going on...
I don't jump through hoops to read the NYT, but Tulsa, OK?
Why not Fairbanks or Honolulu?
Tulsa, Oklahoma?! Why not Hibbing or Dinkeytown?
Tulsa?? What connection to Tulsa has Bob Dylan??
"Living on Torah Time"?
Zimmerman? Familiar. He was the Hispanic-American... White-Hispanic... Hispanic of White when the mood shot strike them.
I really fail to see the point of so many "museums" and "exhibits" today which consist of video clips and displays. Things that you could easily watch from home.
The internet has already killed off World's Fairs and may take down the Olympics. I'm just glad that something survives and that some people are still willing to take risks.
Why Tulsa?
Woody Guthrie. Bob always wanted to be him.
Also I guess they were more willing to take the initiative than Hibbing or Duluth or anywhere else in Minnesota. And they're more centrally located, just off Route 66.
Highway 61 would have been more appropriate, though.
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