Bob Dylan Reads “‘Twas the Night time Earlier than Christmas” On His Vacation Radio Present (2006)


Permit me to title only a few of the peo­ple I need to hear host­ing and curat­ing radio reveals—former Intercourse Pis­tols’ singer John Lydon, for­mer Conflict entrance­man Joe Strum­mer, for­mer Woody Guthrie imper­son­ator Bob Dylan.…

Luck­i­ly for me, this ain’t simply fan­ta­sy base­ball; at var­i­ous occasions, and with differ­ing lev­els of com­mit­ment, every of those tastemak­ers has host­ed a professional­gram present­cas­ing their very own favourite artists. In Dylan’s case, the com­mit­ment was pret­ty sub­stan­tial. His present, Theme Time Radio Hour, ran for nearly three years—as soon as per week from 2006 to 2009—on satel­lite radio.

Every episode cen­tered on a gen­er­al theme, therefore the title, however the selec­tions have been in every single place—kind of what you’d anticipate from Dylan: an eclec­tic col­lec­tion of folks, blues, gospel, soul, coun­attempt, mod­ern pop, and rock ‘n’ roll blended with old-time radio jin­gles, nov­el­ties, and professional­mos, and the host’s odd­ball com­males­tary and hokey humor. File­ed whereas Dylan was on the street, then edit­ed togeth­er with pho­ny “lis­ten­er calls” and emails, Theme Time Radio Hour aimed, Dylan stated, “to develop the musi­cal style” of his lis­ten­ers. That it did, even in its most tra­di­tion­al episode, title­ly the hol­i­day spe­cial on Christ­mas and New Yr’s, or as Dylan calls it, “a Xmas­tide extrav­a­gan­za.”

In his 2006 Christ­mas broad­solid, above, Dylan bounces from Bob Seger to the Sta­ples Singers to Lord Nel­son, “uncrowned king of Soca,” and Mabel Mafuya, who performs “a Mara­bi type, type of like South African rag­time.” The huge vari­ety of well- and fewer­er-known artists—all play­ing Christ­mas music—mixed with Dylan’s wry inter­jec­tions, makes for delight­ful­ly bizarre lis­ten­ing. However when it comes time for his personal con­tri­bu­tion, he goes for the obvi­ous and recites Clement Clarke Moore’s “‘Twas the Night time Earlier than Christ­mas.” You could not have thought a lot of this the primary time you heard it, a lot much less the mil­lionth. However in Dylan’s learn­ing, the inventory­ings sound like they have been hung with care in some dim, smoky beat­nik cof­price­home and the sug­ar plums dance to the fin­ger-snap­ping bop rhythms of jazz poet­ry whereas a harp­si­chord performs “O Tan­nen­baum” within the again­floor.

It’s a really cool ren­di­tion, in oth­er phrases, of a really corny piece of writ­ing. Via­out the spe­cial, Dylan dis­performs an actual knack for suss­ing new sounds and angles from previous, drained hol­i­day clich­es. His exten­sive knowl­fringe of hol­i­day tunes might place him within the com­pa­ny of John Waters and the various oth­er “males who love Christ­mas music” professional­filed within the doc­u­males­tary Jin­gle Bell Rocks! Whether or not he’s a col­lec­tor or simply an avid lis­ten­er, I have no idea, however by the point you’ve fin­ished lis­ten­ing to his 2006 Theme Time Radio Hour Christ­mas spe­cial, you will see your appre­ci­a­tion for the hol­i­day style thor­ough­ly develop­ed.

Word: An ear­li­er ver­sion of this publish appeared on our web site in 2014.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

Bob Dylan’s Thanks­giv­ing Radio Present: A Playlist of 18 Delec­desk Songs

The High 10 New Yr’s Res­o­lu­tions Learn by Bob Dylan

Bob Dylan Reads From T.S. Eliot’s Nice Mod­ernist Poem The Waste Land

Josh Jones is a author and musi­cian primarily based in Durham, NC. Fol­low him at @jdmagness



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