Authors: Andy Gill
The song's essence is contained in its second line, “Nobody said very much”; indeed, âClothes Line Saga' could be read as Dylan celebrating his release from significance, enjoying the opportunity just to write songs
without having to have them mean something. A few months earlier at the Royal Albert Hall concert, he had revealed how tired he was of having to explain his work when he lectured the audience from the stage. “What you're hearing is just songs,” he fretted tetchily. “You're not hearing anything else but words and sounds. You can take it or leave it. If there is something you disagree with, that's great. I'm sick of people asking: âWhat does it mean?' It means nothing!”
Built on the melody of âFroggy Went A-Courting', the nursery rhyme Dylan would cover on his 1992
Good As I Been To You
album, âApple Suckling Tree' opens with the composer's tentative piano figure, feeling its way into the song, before the bass, drums and organ join in, with tambourine lending a touch of gospel revival-tent syncopation. The song's galumphing
feel is due to Robbie Robertson's inexpert hand at the drum kit, one of the frequent occasions on which the musicians switched instruments.
“Everybody would play different instruments,” confirms Robertson. “I'd come down and somebody else would be playing guitar, so I'd pick up the bass or play the drums, something like thatâsomebody would pick up a horn or a fiddle or a mandolin, whatever, and just try their best to handle it! It wasn't like anybody had a real idea for something, they would just look around, see an instrument sitting there, and start doodling around on it until something started to happen.” Since Levon Helm had not yet rejoined after quitting the Hawks before the 1966 World Tour, the drum seat was the one most in need of fillingâusually by pianist Richard Manuel, since with both Garth Hudson and Dylan on hand, there was not such a shortage of keyboard operators as there was of drummers.
Another song whose recorded version bears scant relation to the lyrics as printed in Dylan's
Lyrics 1962â1985
, âApple Suckling Tree' would seem to be a quickly extemporized, oddly light-hearted meditation upon mortality, the singer anticipating that time when it will be “just you and me” buried beneath the tree in question.
“A lot of them were made up as we went along,” agrees Robertson, “a lot were made up a few minutes before laying them down, just writing down an idea and trying it out to see if it's going anywhere. Once you'd got it down, you'd say, âOkay, that's an idea,' and move on to something else. It was a very un-precious attitude.” The result here is one of the album's most un-precious songs, poised in the shadows between celebration and admonition like a good-time ghost.
A drinking song of authentic tipsiness, âPlease, Mrs. Henry' features a drunkard's confused invocations to a barmaid, moving with intemperate randomness through an alcoholic fog of desires. First he thinks he's had enough to drink and wants to be taken to his room; then as he wavers in the hallway, lustfulness overtakes him and he propositions her with a fanciful string of animal metaphors; rejected, he becomes sullen and truculent, waving her away; finally, poised for a piss, he's trying to catch her eye again for another round of drinks, his penniless state notwithstanding. Rolling along on the back of bar-room piano and tiddly organ, it's one of the more simple and good-natured songs in Dylan's entire canon, buoyed
with a light-heartedness that finds the singer corpsing into a chuckle as the final chorus begins.
(Dylan/Manuel)
One of the three or four most completeâand intriguing
âBasement Tapes
songs, âTears Of Rage' is Dylan's equivalent of the blind king's wasteland soliloquy in
King Lear
, applied to his own nation. Wracked with bitterness and regret, its narrator reflects upon promises broken and truths ignored, on how greed has poisoned the well of best intentions, and how even daughters can deny their father's wishes.
In its narrowest and most contemporaneous interpretation, the song could be the first to register the pain of betrayal felt by many of America's Vietnam War veterans, who found their patriotic efforts, carried out with neither question nor compromise, squandered by a country that simply
got fed up with caring about the conflict. As the national mood shifted, these men found their dead friends had effectively laid down their lives for nothing, denied even the dignity of dying for a righteous cause, so tainted had the war in question become. In trying to commemorate their comrades, they were routinely treated as if they were asking for something they didn't deserve; the nation's embarrassment over the matter made them unworthy claimants upon its compassion, always made to feel like thieves.
Certainly, from no other song of that era does one glean the sense of a nation split against itself. In a wider interpretation of âTears Of Rage', this song harks back to what anti-war protesters and critics of American materialism in general felt was a more fundamental betrayal of the spirit of the American Declaration Of Independence and the Bill Of Rights. Having, as one of its founding fathers, helped define the country, the song's narrator watches sadly as his ideals are diluted and cast aside by succeeding generations, who treat them as “nothing more/Than a place for you to stand.” In place of idealism is rampant materialism, with a price placed upon even one's emotions by a society that has come to know the cost of everything, but the value of nothing.
With Dylan's weeping delivery matched by the high, keening harmonies of Rick Danko and Richard Manuel and shaded by the stately tread of Garth Hudson's wistful organ, âTears Of Rage' is the most affecting of the
Basement Tapes
performances. Richard Manuel wrote the music for it, having been handed a typewritten sheet of the lyrics by Dylan one day in the basement. Though he later admitted not fully understanding the song, Manuel instinctively settled upon the highly evocative melody which provides the perfect atmosphere of enduring, irrevocable lamentation. The next year, he would sing lead on the Band's own version of the songâincluded on their
Music From Big Pink
debutâa reading made even more harrowingly funereal by the addition of Garth Hudson's mournful horns.
Ponderous and declamatory in the verses, frail and haunting in the choruses, this offers the earliest indication, with its references to “the day of confession” and everything having “been written in the book,” of the biblical slant which was creeping into Dylan's songs, and which would cast a great shadow over his next album,
John Wesley Harding.
During his retreat up in Woodstock, Dylan was reported to keep a Bible open at a lectern in his study. Its grim parables and sense of moral absolutism deeply inform âToo Much Of Nothing', which serves as both lamentation of spiritual emptiness and warning of its dire consequences. As the melody rises through the latter half of each verse, one can visualize an evangelist berating his congregation, with the high chorus harmonies of Rick Danko and Richard Manuel representing the angelic salvation which the preacher extends as the alternative to a life of sinful pleasure. Deriding the modern world as spiritually bereft, Dylan warns of the societal breakdown and ruthlessness that are bound to follow (which became a familiar theme through his recordings of subsequent decades), and advises seeking redemption through giving away one's money (which, oddly, did not).
Perhaps the most bizarrely inconsequential of the
Basement Tapes
recordings, “Yea! Heavy And A Bottle Of Bread” is pure nonsense, its lines knocked together from offhand, random phrases with an instinct for the enigmatic that rescues the song from being forgettable. Dylan's delivery is deceptively conversational, adding to the illusion of common sense, and though there's something tentative and spontaneous about the recurrent little piano phrase that adds a soupçon of character to the song, the other musicians join in lustily enough on the choruses to dispel suspicions about its ultimate destination (though not, perhaps, in the case of the baritone harmony on the final “bread,” which fluctuates drunkenly before settling on its proper note). Ticking along blithely, as if it knows exactly where it's going, âYea! Heavy And A Bottle Of Bread' winds up as one of the most engaging of the album's songs, its appeal accentuated, if anything, by the fact that its meaning is unfathomable.
(Down In The Flood)
Initially called âCrash On The Levee', but retitled âDown In The Flood' in Dylan's official Lyrics 1962â1985, this, of all the
Basement Tapes
songs, is the one which best carries the authentic spark of real history: a cohesive meld of mood, theme and delivery, it could easily have been written by some wary inhabitant of the Mississippi flood-plain, warning of the impending disaster in apocalyptic terms reminiscent of that earlier biblical flood survived by Noah.
This is due in part to the air of familiarity lent by specific geographical reference (to Williams Point), and in part to the antique mystery of lines like “Well it's sugar for sugar/And salt for salt,” which in this case is indeed authentically antique, the line being adapted from Richard “Rabbit” Brown's 1927 song âJames Alley Blues', a warning about one of New Orleans' more dangerous thoroughfares, in which he sings “I'll match you sugar for sugar, I'll match you salt for salt.” (The song would be familiar to Dylan through its inclusion in Harry Smith's Anthology Of American Folk Music.)
Another trifle with more character than meaning, âTiny Montgomery' has an engaging boozy bonhomie, its eponymous subject sending out greetings to an impressive cast of characters that includes Skinny Moo, Half-track Frank, Lester, Lou, some monks and the entire CIO union organization. Tricked out in short, imponderable phrasesâ“Honk that stink/Take it on down/And watch it grow”âchosen more for sound than sense, it has the weird, hermetic logic of a private language, the kind of thing that members of cults or secret organizations use to communicate with each other.
Given the shady nature of the characters whom Montgomery hails, and the fact that he refers to San Francisco as “ol' Frisco,” a term nobodyâcertainly not the town's residentsâhas used for many a year, I suspect that Tiny has languished long in one of America's jails, and is bidding farewell to a cellmate about to be released, asking him to send regards to his chums back in his old stamping ground.
When The Byrds included âYou Ain't Goin' Nowhere' on their pioneering country-rock album
Sweetheart Of The Rodeo
in the summer of 1968, it provided confirmation of sorts that the country sound revealed at the end of Dylan's
John Wesley Harding
earlier that year was more than just a passing phase, that there was more to his new rural outlook than just âI'll Be Your Baby Tonight'. With âYou Ain't Goin' Nowhere', it seemed that following his years as the quintessential urban hipster, Dylan had followed his own instruction and strapped himself to a tree with roots.
On Dylan's original version, however, the country flavor is somewhat less pronounced, present more as an undercurrent, though there's an irresistible pull in that direction via the lilting chorus melody. Judging by an earlier, unreleased versionâa bootleg version, as it wereâwhose verses are filled up with off-the-cuff nonsense about having to feed the cat, it seems likely that the chorus was the first part of the song devised, with the verses being filled in later.
Mind you, the completed song as it stands makes little more sense than its feline predecessor: while the brisk meteorological detailsâthe frozen railings, rain and cloudsâlend the first verse a stark rural cohesion, subsequent stanzas drift further away from logic until the final verse twists off into a
non sequitur
concerning Genghis Khan's inability to keep his kings supplied with sleep. Not for the first time in the basement, the chorus is what gives drives the song forward, regardless of what's happening in the verses. Robbie Robertson is the drummer.
More rustic shenanigans, with a lady love and a whole barnyard menagerie keen on keeping some secret from the eponymous Henry. Their recurrent rejoinder “Apple's got your fly” sounds like nothing so much as a line from a children's skip-rope rhyme, but the song as a whole plays as cowboy farce.
With Levon Helm taking lead vocals with characteristic Southern
brio
, âDon't Ya Tell Henry' could be viewed almost as a prototype for the
sound the Band would reveal over the next two years on their own highly regarded albums.
Like the other tracks recorded solely by the Hawks without Dylan, âDon't Ya Tell Henry' is more polished than most of the
Basement Tapes
performances, with an arrangement that plays Robbie Robertson's guitar off against Helm's mandolin, while Garth Hudson plays rippling bar-room piano over a rhythm punched along by the dry snap of Richard Manuel's drums.
By the time Levon Helm joined the rest of the group up in Big Pink, he was shockedâand a little worriedâto find out how good a drummer Manuel had become. “Richard was an
incredible
drummer,” Helm acknowledged in his autobiography
This Wheel's On Fire
. “He played loosey-goosey, a little behind the beat, and it really swung⦠Without any training, he'd do these hard left-handed moves and piano-wise licks, priceless shitâvery unusual⦠I just realized that my mandolin playing was going to have to improve if I was to have anything to do onstage while Richard played drums.”
Roughly based on Fats Domino's âBlueberry Hill', this is a pedestrian, mournful blues pushed along by Richard Manuel's piano triplets (there are no drums on the track). Dylan's vocal and Robbie Robertson's guitar are of a piece, dramatic but intimate, as if sharing confidences about the flunked deal covered in the song. It's one of the most direct stories on the entire
Basement Tapes
album, with somebody being held to account for non-delivery; but it's flexible enough to accommodate a number of interpretations, from a simple drug-deal gone wrong to more serious political deceit.