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Bob Dylan Rings in His Ears » PopMatters
Music

Bob Dylan Rings in His Ears » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

W

What did you hear? Really. Blonde on Blonde’s nasally whine or Nashville Skyline’s country croon? Which one is Bob Dylan’s real voice? Despite, or perhaps because of, Dylan’s vocal masks, his voice rings true. Or, according to Steven Rings, author of What Did You Hear? The Music of Bob Dylan, you believe it does. Yes, Dylan is an impersonator, weaving lies to tell truths, bolstered through imperfections, changing from nothing to one—a prestidigitator. You’re believing his every word.

Steven Rings, an Associate Professor of Music and the Humanities at the University of Chicago, has written a highly engaging and accessible book in What Did You Hear?, without compromising depth and theory. Its main proposal is that Dylan’s sonic imperfections are key to understanding his songs and their impact, offering a refreshing and new framework through which to view Dylan’s music.

Also, it is a framework that is seemingly close to Bob Dylan’s modus operandi, in which the emotional weight of a song—for example, “No More Auction Block”, where Dylan’s pathos-laden moans and cyclical guitar strumming contain the cruel fate that awaited thousands of American slaves—matters more than technical perfection. Additionally, in 1979, Dylan saw humanity’s imperfection revealed through God’s light. “Talk about perfection, I ain’t never seen none,” Dylan fulminates in “Ain’t No Man Righteous, No Not One”.

The Carver-esque book title playfully asks, “What Did You Hear?” It seems simple. Obvious. Intrusive. Once you read What Did You Hear?, though, you realize that it is a question with a purpose: to investigate what we are hearing. With an adept ear and an in-depth understanding of music theory, Rings helps readers understand Dylan the performer, rather than the lyricist or songwriter. In other words, it isn’t about Dylan’s compositions but rather a breakdown of how he performs them, live or in the studio.

Bob Dylan’s Perfect Imperfection

Have you ever wondered about Dylan’s upsinging in the wee small hours? How does the music inform the pronunciation of a lyric? No? I understand—you have a life. However, for those of us who don’t, music theorist Rings provides these answers. Furthermore, Rings showcases Dylan’s multifaceted techniques on various instruments, including voice, guitar, harmonica, and piano, all of which are explained without being overly saturated with music theory, and thus potentially denuding Dylan’s music of its poetic appeal.

Helpfully, especially for a book concerned with sound, Rings has a website, which includes all of the book’s audio and video examples. For certain, this is useful, though the book works just as well without referring to the audio examples.

What Did You Hear? is a welcome and indispensable addition to Dylan scholarship—not an easy task, due to the abundance of books written on the elusive subject. What makes this different, though, is that it puts Dylan as a performer first and foremost, with a particular emphasis on his live performances.

In the introduction, Rings postulates that there has been little written about Bob Dylan’s music; instead, the focus has either been on Dylan’s lyrics or him as a cultural/political figure. However, when Rings creates an inventory of books, with its focus primarily on Dylan’s music, it does not cite Todd Harvey’s 2001 book, The Formative Dylan: Transmission and Stylistic Influences, 1961-1963, which seems worthy of inclusion (Harvey is cited on p. 267 and in the references).

Further in the introduction, Rings posits that, in the early 1960s, Bob Dylan blended African American influences with white folk musicians, such as Woody Guthrie, which is, of course, correct. However, what is incorrect, as Rings implies, is that the two sources of Dylan’s influences were separate. Although influenced by white musicians, such as the Carter Family and Jimmie Rodgers, Guthrie was also influenced by African American musicians: Blind Lemon Jefferson and T-Bone Walker; the latter inspired Guthrie’s vocal phrasing.

Apart from the above-mentioned oversights, What Did You Hear? is scrupulously detailed and exhaustively researched. One of the central premises of What Did You Hear? is that, despite many vocal and musical changes, as well as various personae, Dylan always sounds like himself. To a certain extent, this is a novel idea, as Dylan is often portrayed as a shapeshifting figure with each iteration a stranger to the last.

Yet, it makes sense that there would be distinguishable characteristics of Bob Dylan in each of his transformations; this is not unlike what Dylan writes about Dion DiMucci in his 2022 book The Philosophy of Modern Song (a text filled with self-referential remarks), “Dion DiMucci evolved throughout his career, changing outwardly but maintaining recognizable characteristics across every iteration.”

As Rings writes, “…the critical commonplace that Dylan’s voice is merely a series of ‘masks,’ with no persisting core voice. But any fan also knows that one can always perceive Dylan within or behind the mask.” Also, Rings establishes that the quiddity of Bob Dylan is best personified when the singer-songwriter imitates other singers. Put differently, Dylan, paradoxically, becomes more identifiable himself when adopting different personae and masks. This is just one of the numerous astute observations Rings makes in What Did You Hear?

The most interesting section of What Did You Hear? is Part 1: Voicing, especially chapter four. There Rings delineates a spectrum between speech and song, in which he lists five different nodal points: metered speech (e.g., “Frankie Lee and Judas Priest”); syllable-emphatic style (e.g., “Memphis Blues Again”); chant (e.g., “Subterranean Homesick Blues”); contour-inventive style (e.g., “Jokerman”); conventional melody (e.g., “Make You Feel My Love”). In his syllable-emphatic (Rings’ coinage) delivery, Dylan seizes on syllables that we would typically accent, but exaggerates the contrast to the point of mannerism. As Rings writes, “we hear the contours of everyday speech, but in a funhouse mirror.”

Rings addresses another misconception that Dylan’s “true” voice is raspy. As stated by Rings and others, Dylan’s “Nashville Country voice” can be heard in the bootleg recorded at the apartment of Karen Wallace in St. Paul, Minnesota, in May 1960, which, obviously, precedes his rough-hewn folk voice. Thus, what is Dylan’s true voice?

As it is known, Bob Dylan was a rock ‘n’ roller before he became a folk artist, but the two are not mutually exclusive, as Rings points out. The influence of rock ‘n’ roll can be found in his folk period, and vice versa.

As Rings suggests, Dylan’s pedal-to-the-metal acoustic guitar strumming during his folk period was like Buddy Holly, while he was strumming like a folkie when he played the electric guitar in live performances in 1966, which Robbie Robertson disliked. At the Newport Folk Festival, when Dylan went electric, he barely played the electric guitar; it was a symbolic move. Instead, it was Mike Bloomfield, the primary guitarist of Howlin’ Wolf, who made his guitar bleed and scream like Willie Johnson. 

One of the main ideas in What Did You Hear is “flaw imperfection” and “change imperfection”. Essentially, the former refers to an imperfection as a flaw, although it can be purposefully incorporated in old-time music and bluegrass. In contrast, the latter is the difference that arises from repetition, such as when Dylan performs live. Or, as Rings put simply, “he repeats and he differs”.

What Did You Hear? is the musical and vocally equivalent of Christopher Ricks’ book Dylan’s Visions of Sin (2004). Whereas Ricks gave a close reading of Dylan’s lyrics and contextualized them in a literary tradition, mostly in Elizabethan and Romanticism literature, and modernism (cue, T. S. Eliot), Rings exemplifies how Dylan’s music and vocals work in the context of predecessors within different genres: folk, blues, and rock ‘n’ roll.

There has been a paradigm shift in Dylan scholarship aimed at bridging the gap between academia and popular writing, as seen in historian Timothy Hampton’s Bob Dylan: How the Songs Work (2019), one of the best books ever written on Dylan. Indeed, What Did You Hear? showcases that Rings has a sharp mind, abetted by his generosity of spirit. He never overexplains or treats the reader like a fool; he makes his points with a deftness.

There are moments in What Did You Hear? when Rings lets go of formality and becomes a writer with a gut-punch swagger. For example: “There is still some wobble in the voice, but the overall tone is one of fuck-you confidence, of definitely claiming an identity in the face of bourgeois reproach. Instead of balled fists, a middle finger.”

These sections are surprising as they are refreshing; they punctuate the text with a humanity, and display a writer who takes his ideas—not himself—seriously. (For What Did You Hear?, Rings hasn’t thankfully adopted academic writing, which is often as lifeless as a mortuary, leaving you feel as dead as the body of the text, and wishing that you were dead, as at least then you wouldn’t have to read desiccated prose.)

There is a scintillating idea on p.186, where Rings links Dylan’s harmonica playing to the accordion, after reading a quote by Dylan, in which he said he plays the harmonica like an accordion. Rings traces it to Robert Zimmerman’s childhood in Hibbing, when, in the 1950s, polka bands performed in taverns on Saturday nights. However, I wished Rings had expanded on the point (I like the idea; I’m already half-convinced), and listed examples of polka artists/bands Zimmerman would have heard—Six Fat Dutchmen, Whoopee John Wilfahrt, and Harold Loeffelmacher—and linked them to his harmonica playing, if, of course, the theory holds up.

In the postscript, Rings interestingly states that Bob Dylan’s sounds approach a second-order perfection in their fidelity to imperfect life, an emotional truth which is perhaps a kind of perfection. Indeed, What Did You Hear? carries a lot of emotional truth. Is What Did You Hear a perfect book? I‘ve never read one, and, like listening to Bob Dylan’s imperfect voice, I don’t expect that I ever will.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Upasana Ram Charan
Bollywood

The RajaSaab Team Rings in Prabhas’ Birthday With a New, Vibrant Poster of The Film

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

The makers of The RajaSaab have dropped the much-awaited poster of Prabhas’ film on the occasion of his birthday. Helmed by Maruthi, this horror fantasy has already created enough buzz. The film’s social media handle unveiled the poster with a caption that read, “There’s style. There’s swagger. And there’s that Rebel Madness that lights up everything. Nothing can ever match the high and celebration you bring #TheRajaSaab First Single will be a limitless wave of celebration for every fan #Prabhas #TheRajaSaabOnJan9th #HappyBirthdayPrabhas”
The poster features Prabhas standing atop a car with his arms stretched wide. He is draped in a riot of colours, sporting a floral jacket, dark shades, and carrying an unmistakable rebel grin. Behind him, a temple is decked in vibrant decoration, and we can see a jubilant crowd adding to the vibrant celebration.

The RajaSaab is being touted as a genre-blending entertainer that fuses horror, romance, and humour in equal measure. Earlier, the trailer gave audiences a taste of its eccentric world with Sanjay Dutt in a mysterious role as an “exorcist, psychiatrist, and hypnotist,” alongside Boman Irani and Zarina Wahab, hinting at an irresistible mix of laughs, scares, and nostalgia.

Now, with just the final schedule remaining, The RajaSaab is gearing up for a grand finish.


Directed and written by Maruthi, The RajaSaab is produced by People Media Factory and IVY Entertainment. The film features an ensemble cast including Prabhas, Malavika Mohanan, Nidhhi Agerwal, Riddhi Kumar, Sanjay Dutt, and Boman Irani, and is slated to hit theatres worldwide 

on January 9 2026, releasing in Hindi, Telugu, Tamil, Kannada, and Malayalam.

Besides The RajaSaab, Prabhas has an exciting lineup of films. These include Salaar: Part 2 – Shouryaanga, Parvam, Spirit, Kalki 2898 AD: Part 2 and Fauzi.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Orlando Bloom says he would "hate to see" another actor play Legolas in new 'Lord Of The Rings' film
Music

Orlando Bloom says he would “hate to see” another actor play Legolas in new ‘Lord Of The Rings’ film

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Orlando Bloom has said he would “hate” to see another actor play Legolas in The Lord Of The Rings: The Hunt For Gollum.

The upcoming film was provisionally announced in 2023, with Andy Serkis, who portrayed Gollum in the original Peter Jackson film trilogy, returning to the role and also directing the film.

In May, Deadline reported that the film would be released into cinemas on December 17, 2027, following on in the mid-to-late December release window that proved successful for the Jackson trilogy from 2001 to 2003 and his subsequent Hobbit trilogy from 2012 to 2014.

Further casting has not been confirmed, although Sir Ian McKellen said last year that he would consider returning to the role of Gandalf for the film if he is “still alive” when it is being made.

Now, Orlando Bloom, who played Legolas in the original trilogy as well as The Desolation Of Smaug (2013) and The Battle Of The Five Armies (2014), has had his say on the future of his character.

Appearing on the Today show, he said he had “not heard a peep” about who would be playing Legolas in The Hunt For Gollum, adding: “It’s such an amazing part. I’m so grateful to have been a part of those movies. But I haven’t heard.”

“Listen, I’d hate to see anyone else play Legolas, you know what I mean?” he added. “What are they going to do? Are they going to put somebody else in as Legolas? With AI, they can do anything these days!”

Viggo Mortensen has also weighed in on the possibility of returning to the franchise to reprise his role of Aragorn. “I like playing that character. I learned a lot playing the character. I enjoyed it a lot. I would only do it if I was right for it in terms of, you know, the age I am now and so forth. It would be silly to do it otherwise,” he said.

Meanwhile, the prequel TV series The Rings Of Power will definitely return for a third season, Amazon Prime Video confirmed earlier this year. The second season ran from August to October 2024, with new episodes expected to start shooting imminently.

September 7, 2025 0 comments
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