By Jon Friedman
The Wall Street Journal
http://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/
May 23, 2012
Bob Dylan performs onstage during the 17th Annual Critics' Choice Movie
Awards held at The Hollywood Palladium on January 12, 2012 in Los Angeles,
California.
Not even Bob Dylan, who will receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom on May
29 at the White House, can fully explain why he has been so highly decorated
relatively late in his life.
For instance, Dylan sounded bemused in 2001, as he was turning 60, when a
European journalist asked him whether he was surprised to be winning so many
high-profile awards.
“I’m winning a lot of stuff,” Dylan conceded, bemused by the rush of awards.
Was this a part of a sudden recognition of Dylan a s a cultural force for good
after his decades of important work?
“There may be an element of that,” Dylan shrugged in 2001. Also likely, Dylan
is finally being hailed for both his remarkable and still-evolving body of
memorable songs — Dylan released his first album 50 years ago, in 1962 — and
longevity on the popular-culture scene. Ever industrious, Dylan earlier this
month completed a tour of South America and Central America. In March, he
completed recording his first studio album in three years. Word has it that the
new record will be released this summer.
Dylan, who turns 71 on May 24, will receive the Presidential Medal of
Freedom that same month at the White House along with a host of other
luminaries. Novelist Toni Morrison and former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine
Albright are among the 13 people who will be awarded the country’s highest
civilian honor by President Barack Obama.
You might say that Dylan’s renaissance began at around the time he received
the prestigious Grammy award for Best Album in 1998 for “Time Out of Mind.” A
few years later, he took home the Oscar for Best Song for “Things Have Changed”
from “Wonder Boys.”
Dylan has since been honored by a number of organizations — though, his fans
ruefully note, a Nobel Prize in the category of writing has still eluded his
grasp. They hope that this latest citation will next bring Dylan a Nobel
accolade.
What does Dylan think of this latest honor? Of course, Dylan is notoriously
private when it comes to expressing his thoughts about these kinds of occasions.
When pundits repeatedly ask him to say what his songs mean, he tells them, as he
put it in 1981, “the answers to those questions (are in) the songs
themselves.”
Who knows? If Dylan ever decided to talk about his feelings now, he might
think for a moment, break into a grin and shrug: “I used to care/But things have
changed.”
Jon Friedman is the author of “Forget About Today: Bob Dylan’s Genius for (Re)invention, Shunning
the Naysayers and Creating a Personal Revolution,” which Penguin will be
publishing in August.
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