So That’s What Bob Dylan Covering Frank Sinatra Sounds Like

dylan_sinatra

(c) Drew Friedman

I’ll come right out and say it – I don’t like Bob Dylan very much. Aside from his few, obvious hits, I’m hard pressed to think of another artist as lauded and revered as Dylan who has the same abysmally lopsided track record (“But what about ‘Blowing In The Wind‘?? And ‘All Along The Watchtower‘??” – blah blah blah, Have you actually listened to more than just a “greatest hits” album?) For every genuinely great song Bob’s penned, he’s also responsible for entire albums of cruel and unusual garbage, mumbly wanking, and self-absorbed snooze-fests. Just because a guy writes “Like A Rolling Stone” doesn’t mean he should be able to coast on reputation alone for the rest of a five-plus decade career.

So, after hearing that Dylan planned to record an entire album of just Frank Sinatra covers, I was, let’s say, “cautiously pessimistic.” Someone not known for having the smoothest vocal stylings tackling a track list made famous by one of the most talented crooners of all time is a high wire act, to say the least. Still, if Johnny Cash can take the “unexpected covers” route, and make that work, maybe ol’ Bobby Z can squeak out something interesting? Right?

This morning, National Public Radio gave us our first taste of Dylan-Does-Frank with Bob’s version of “Stay With Me” and…well… it’s certainly different. Lush orchestral swells: Out. Raspy talk-singing: In. But, as NPR’s Bob Boilen rightly points outHere’s a man clearly in love with the Great American Songbook and despite his restricted vocal he’s brave enough to tackle it” which is, I suppose, a good reason to listen to the track at least once. For me, that was enough.

For reference, here’s Mr. Francis A’s original:

So, what do you think? Good? Bad? Or somewhere uncomfortably in between?

What do you think?

One Response

  1. BruceG

    What’s the sense in a reviewer reviewing an artist he/she says they don’t like? OH – so they can be free to snark out and criticize. This writer doesn’t even know his subject’s work very well, so he’s not even qualified to write this obvious hatchet job. Tell you what – Mr Dylan’s name, music and entire body of work will long be remembered, appreciated and enjoyed…while this bozo of a reviewer will remain unknown and bitter.

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