
On Dylanesque, Ferry isn’t trying to compete with, or be like, Dylan. Rather than reinvent or replicate, he simply looks under the bonnet of each selection to see what makes it go and then takes it for a spin. The virtue of this even-handed approach is that it serves to isolate the marriage of melody and language at the root of any song – not unlike Ella Fitzgerald in her Songbook series. For example, merely by slowing down the great kiss-off anthem “Positively 4th Street” and having a piano set the scene, Ferry is able to sail past Dylan’s vitriol to a latitude of loss and regret, thus locating the pain that led to the lashing out. Similarly, he underscores the poetic beauty of “Gates Of Eden” by giving equal weight to each enchanted line. On this lyric especially, one can understand why he has compared singing Dylan to “an actor tackling Shakespeare.”
Ferry’s systematic methodology reveals the flaws as well as the qualities of the chosen material, exposing Eric Von Schmidt’s “Baby Let Me Follow You Down” as the trifle it was before being transformed by the 21-year-old Dylan, and finding a sticky wad of sentiment within the late-period ballad “Make You Feel My Love”. Only on “All Along The Watchtower” does Ferry turn up the thermostat, leading the band through a raging performance that caps the album on an overtly dramatic note, understanding that this song’s brutal heart must be approached with commensurate intensity.
It’s impossible to listen to Dylanesque without thinking of the Byrds’ seminal Mr Tambourine Man. They make fitting book-ends for four decades of forays into the Dylan canon, but the difference between the two records is profound: the difference, perhaps, between first love and an enduring relationship,.
BUD SCOPPA







yorkshire
The red printed Bryan Ferry on the sleeve and the ferris wheel blue behind hint I suppose at the prime colours of Oh Mercy, Dylan's late 80s (magnificent) record. And your own thoughts on Ferry? Those other sleeve covers of Roxy Music are barely surpassed. And whilst the others went on to various nice things, I haven't really caught the voice of Bryan Ferry over the years since.
Then, just this weekend, sort of cosy on the sofa, I saw him on the Culture Show sing that great song Positively 4th Street. Tears in the eyes at the end, I was faced with the simple truth that I had (apart from Hendrix on Watchtower) never heard Dylan sung as good (better?) than Dylan. And I have been devoted to his songs since the 60s. This is curious. I suspect this record has been in gestation for a very long time. Ferry clearly loves these songs.
Just back from pressing play again. My third time through these songs. "Just like Tom Thumb's Blues" is starting up. The band are painting a languishing picture, with (Ferry?) really nice harmonica.
This isn't supposed to be a big essay. So, before this song finishes, what is going on? Bryan Ferry is touching the essence of the song, gently, not tempted much to extend those last lines into an excursion of vowels on, "Simple Twist of Fate" (the way weaker interpreters always do). It is the way he sings "old canal, so confused I remember well" - and hauntingly "brought on by a simple twist of fate". Lovely. He sort of drives down the centre of the road and just gently pulls up where you expect (from all those exaggerated Dylan covers) a press down on the accelerator.
I note that Robin Trower plays some acoustic on track 11, but I couldn't quite hear that.
I could go on and on. But this is not simply a good review, it is a recommendation to buy this record, and listen for years to come (like Oh Mercy in that respect).
I do know this is the product of love of these songs. And I can only say, these interpretations have allowed me to love the songs even more.

















