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Long and Wasted Years

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Long and Wasted Years"
Song by Bob Dylan
from the album Tempest
ReleasedSeptember 10, 2012
RecordedJanuary–March 2012
StudioGroove Masters
Genre
Length3:47
LabelColumbia Records
Songwriter(s)Bob Dylan
Producer(s)Jack Frost (Bob Dylan)
Tempest track listing

"Long and Wasted Years" is a song written and performed by Bob Dylan that appears as the fourth track on his 2012 studio album Tempest and was anthologized on the 2016 reissue of The Essential Bob Dylan.[1] Like much of Dylan's 21st-century output, he produced the song himself using the pseudonym Jack Frost.

Composition and recording

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Unusually for a Dylan song, "Long and Wasted Years" has no musical chorus or bridge and there is no lyrical refrain. Dylan recites 10 four-line verses over a "descending chord progression that becomes relentlessly more intense" as it repeats for nearly four minutes.[2] In their book Bob Dylan All the Songs: The Story Behind Every Track, authors Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon synopsize the song as describing the "twilight of a couple's contentious relationship" and raise the possibility that it may be "an allusion to the temptation of Adam and Eve by Satan and their expulsion from the Garden of Eden as described in John Milton's epic poem Paradise Lost". They note that Dylan's "singing is strong, half-sarcastic, half-ferocious".[3]

Musicologist and Dylan scholar Eyolf Ostrem called it Dylan's "craziest song in many years" and compared it to "Idiot Wind" as a "fabulous post-break up song". It is performed in the key of G major.[4]

Critical reception

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Music journalist Patrick Doyle, writing in a 2020 Rolling Stone article where the song ranked 14th on a list of "The 25 Best Bob Dylan Songs of the 21st Century", compared the song's themes to Martin Scorsese's film The Irishman, observing that both feature a narrator looking back and surveying "the wreckage of a messy life".[2] Doyle praised the "small details" that make the song, "like when Dylan says, 'I ain’t seen my family in 20 years/That ain’t easy to understand, they may be dead by now/I lost track of ’em after they lost their land'”.[5]

Greil Marcus has cited "Long and Wasted Years" as the song that got him "into this record [Tempest]", adding: "I just love it. I have to tell you I haven’t listened to the words at all. I have no idea what story is being told. I love the way he speechifies through the song. He sounds like Luke the Drifter, Hank Williams’s religious alter-ego. He sounds like Elmer Gantry. He is a preacher, a con man; he is lying through his teeth. And he believes every word he’s saying. For me this is just a declamatory voice, and it breaks the mold of this record".[6]

Spectrum Culture included the song on a list of "Bob Dylan's 20 Best Songs of the '10s and Beyond". In an article accompanying the list, critic Ian Maxton write that "The song might be seen as an early sketch for 'Murder Most Foul' – the invocation of 'Twist and Shout' stands out in the song’s unraveling of the past".[7]

The Big Issue placed it at #54 on a list of the "80 best Bob Dylan songs - that aren't the greatest hits".[8]

A 2021 WhatCulture article on the "10 Most Underrated Bob Dylan Songs" placed "Long and Wasted Years" at #4, noting that it "doesn’t sound like much if anything else in his canon, and his continued musical invention at the ripe old age of (then) 71 is beyond impressive. It’s a quietly devastating tune in a collection that tends to go for quantity and gusto".[9]

Live performances

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Between 2013 and 2019, Dylan performed the song live 359 times on the Never Ending Tour.[10] The live debut occurred at the Oslo Spektrum in Oslo, Norway on October 10, 2013 and the last performance (to date) took place at the University of California, Irvine in Irvine, California on October 11, 2019.[11]

References

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  1. ^ Bob Dylan – The Essential Bob Dylan (2016, Vinyl), 10 June 2016, retrieved 2021-06-03
  2. ^ a b Vozick-Levinson, Jon Dolan,Patrick Doyle,Andy Greene,Brian Hiatt,Angie Martoccio,Rob Sheffield,Hank Shteamer,Simon; Dolan, Jon; Doyle, Patrick; Greene, Andy; Hiatt, Brian; Martoccio, Angie; Sheffield, Rob; Shteamer, Hank; Vozick-Levinson, Simon (2020-06-18). "The 25 Best Bob Dylan Songs of the 21st Century". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2021-01-01.{{cite magazine}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Margotin, Philippe; Jean-Michel Guesdon (2015). Bob Dylan : all the songs : the story behind every track (First ed.). New York. ISBN 978-1-57912-985-9. OCLC 869908038.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ "Long and Wasted Years". dylanchords.info. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  5. ^ "Long and Wasted Years | The Official Bob Dylan Site". www.bobdylan.com. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  6. ^ Wiener, Jon (2012-10-02). "Bob Dylan's 'Tempest': A Q&A with Greil Marcus". ISSN 0027-8378. Retrieved 2021-02-20.
  7. ^ "Bob Dylan's 20 Best Songs of the '10s and Beyond". Spectrum Culture. 2021-02-19. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
  8. ^ "The 80 best Bob Dylan songs – that aren't the greatest hits". The Big Issue. 2021-05-17. Retrieved 2021-05-18.
  9. ^ Mills, Josh (2021-09-07). "10 Most Underrated Bob Dylan Songs". WhatCulture.com. Retrieved 2021-09-09.
  10. ^ "Bob Dylan Tour Statistics | setlist.fm". www.setlist.fm. Retrieved 2021-01-01.
  11. ^ "Setlists | The Official Bob Dylan Site". www.bobdylan.com. Retrieved 2021-05-28.
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