KICKING UP A STORM: Pauline Fisk on Bob Dylan's 'Tempest', and 'Sparks', the forthcoming Authors Electric anthology
A couple of weeks ago my brother and I got into a heated argument
on the subject of Bob Dylan’s voice. He reckoned Dylan had lost it. I reckoned [and PS. I was right] that
Dylan’s singing better than ever.
Singing differently maybe, but
different in a good way. The
difference of age and experience, and of having lived a life.
Certainly in his latest offering, ‘Tempest’, Dylan has things
to say and he says it in good voice. I came across it recently, and found it to be as powerful as anything he's written for a long, long time – which is saying something because these
last few years Dylan's writing has been good.
The album gets off to an impressive start with 'Duquesne Whistle' and 'Soon After Midnight,' but then Dylan really starts to dig in, dig deep and suddenly he's off like a sky rocket. 'Long and Wasted Years. Oh, my. 'Pay in Blood'. He sings it like he has. ‘Scarlet Town’. Been
there? Recognise anything? ‘Tin Angel’. Dylan at his balladeer best. The songs are getting better all the time. Listen to the
passion and anger in his voice. ‘Tempest’. Dylan’s take on the Titanic, told as
if the entire human race was on that ship. Remind you of anything with its
innocently sweet tune? The writer of ‘Desolation Row’ still knows how to turn
the screw. And then ‘Roll on John’, Dylan’s tribute to John Lennon, growled out
in the sweetest, saddest voice.
Why, you might ask, am I reviewing Bob Dylan here on a web
page dedicated to words, not songs, and e-words in particular? Well, this is
why. We live in a world where the brave, the bold, the new, the young are
always right, and the old are meant [quoting the Rolling Stones this time] to
Just Fade Away. But Dylan’s not fading away. Nor - if it’s the Stones we’re talking about now - is he
making his bucks on stage by regurgitating old music, with nothing new to
say. Dylan’s genius shows through
in that, in youth or age, he still has things to say, and in writing out of a
life lived, and out of long years of experience, he says them as well – if not better – than ever before.
And it’s that word ‘experience’ I want to write about today.
Over the last week or so it’s been my privilege to work on the copy-edit of
‘Sparks’, the first Authors Electric anthology, out soon to a download button
near you. And what a wealth of experience it contains. I knew the twenty-nine of us who comprise Authors Electric were an
interesting bunch, but I didn’t know the half of it. Whether it’s writing for
screen and radio; winning, amongst us, the majority of the UK’s major
children’s book awards; spending a lifetime in journalism; working with
prisoners; performing on stage; working as a television presenter, or as Royal
Literary Fund Writing Fellows; teaching, travelling, sailing [including sailing
Arthur Ransome’s Peter Duck], or spending half a lifetime in the saddle, the
members of Authors Electric have been there, done it and lived to tell the
tale.
And those tales aren’t just virtual, believe me. ‘Sparks’
teems with tales and attitudes about the brave new world of e-publishing, but
its authors have most definitely lived in the real world too. Take Dan Holloway, for example, who has
played his spoken-word show, The New Libertines, to full houses across the UK. Or Mark Chisnell, who may have written
Kindle chart-topping thrillers, but has also hitch-hiked to Mt Everest
base-camp in Tibet in training shoes. Or the playright, poet and award-winning
novelist [as well as a Royal Literary Fund Writing Fellow] Catherine
Czerkawska, who also is a collector of rare, antique vintage textiles.
Then there’s Valerie Law, with degrees in Anglo-Saxon and
Old Icelandic, Theoretical Physics and Creative Writing, who’s been even more
prolific [and not just as a writer] since her life-changing car accident than
she was before. Then, too, Charles Christian, the former practicing barrister
whose accomplishments include freelance journalism, [award-winning], university
lecturing, working as an advisor to the English Law Society, devising the
highly successful poetry webzine Ink Sweat & Tears and sitting on the board of the Poetry Trust.
And it’s not just on the Contributors’ pages that the
experience of the Authors Electric collective shows. When Stephanie Zia writes
about those e-book tools she couldn’t do without, as publishing director of
Blackbird Book she knows what she’s talking about. And ditto Kathleen Jones, of The Book Mill, when it
comes to writing about blogging. And when Andrew Croft writes about the
phenomenon that is wattpad.com, his years as one of the most highly-regarded ghost
writers in the UK shows in not only what he says but every line and comma of
how he chooses to fashion it into such a riveting read.
And so it goes on. When Dennis Hamley writes about his long career in publishing, there’s never a moment when you don’t want to read more. When Cally Philips writes with passion about the future of publishing, you can feel her heart beat. And Susan Price - our formidable leader - when she writes in defence of Amazon against the likes of Terence Blacker, Alan Gibbons and the rest of the panel at this year’s CWIG conference, she takes you with her every inch of the way. Something is definitely Happening Here, she seems to be saying, and all you Mr Joneses better look out.
The names I’ve selected here have been at random. In Authors Electric, everyone’s a star. There’s a richness that comes from experience - and that’s what we have. The publishing world has changed/is changing/will change a whole lot more. ‘Sparks’ is our take on it. It’s also our first year. Look out for it.
What will the new year bring?
Comments
What they all have in common though, is a Spirit that stayed Free.
Kris Kristofferson too...though I heard him joke on stage once in Aberdeen that he never had much voice to start with...
I think it's good when the blogs here take in the other arts which inform and feed into the passion authors here have for their own work.
SPARKS away!...into the ether and the electrons of 2013...