Feb 20, 1966 – Bob Dylan: Martin Bronstein Interview, Montreal (audio)

MB: Do you consider yourself a poet or a songwriter?
BD: I don’t consider myself either one of those two things. I did when I first heard the words, you know, of course – “songwriter” – you hear that when you’re very young. “Poet,” I never heard that word really. I never really could think of myself as such until I came to New York and then for a while I did think I was a poet, but I don’t consider myself anymore from seeing all the rest of the people who’re called poets too and I just don’t like to refer to myself as a poet because it puts you in a category with a lot of funny people, you know

Place Des Arts
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
20 February 1966

  • Released in the UK on ON THE CREST OF THE AIRWAVES VOLUME ONE, Music Melon MMLTDBOX12, 13 February 2012.
  • Released on The Classic Interviews 1965-1966, Chrome Dreams CIS2003, 19 May 2003.

MB: When did you first find yourself writing poetry or verse, or writing?
BD: When I was about eight or nine I wrote; I’ve been writing for a very long time, I mean, if you can say that. I mean, I’m not… I don’t know if other – if most people write when they’re eight – or eight or nine, you know, but I actually did write poems at that age, poems, rhymes, you know, for… you know, about the flowers and my mother and stuff like that but… so I’ve been writing for a while.

MB: What made you start singing?
BD: Er, well, er, I just did it, you know. It was a natural thing to do. I started a long time or two – I started singing after I started writing. I started that when I was about ten – ten or eleven – and started out just country and western – Hank Williams, Lefty Frizzell kind of things. Hank Williams I think was just about… had just died, and I started playing some time around there.

MB: Was he one of your first influences?
BD: Yeah. I sang… I tried to sing everything he would sing.

MB: What other influences have you had?
BD: Oh! I’ve had a lot of people that I tried to do things the way they did. As it stands now there’s no influence that maybe I’ve taken. Ah, I don’t really know the extent of their influence that they have on what I do. I’ve had… Hank Williams was the first influence I would think, I guess, for a longer period of time than anybody else. Er, he influenced … nobody influenced what I wrote at that age, because I didn’t really see anything that anybody wrote… er…

 

Check out:

-Egil

Egil

Recent Posts

“All Dylan” Blog will merge with “Born To Listen” Blog

alldylan.com will merge with borntolisten.com. Please check out borntolisten.com & subscribe.

4 years ago

Bob Dylan – Mutineer (Warren Zevon) @ Hartford, Connecticut 2002

Bob Dylan performing Warren Zevon's wonderful "Mutineer".

4 years ago

January 21: Bob Dylan Recorded One Of His Best Songs “She’s Your Lover Now” in 1966

On January 21, 1966 Bob Dylan recorded one of his best songs "She's Your Lover…

4 years ago

November 30: Bob Dylan recorded “Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window?” in 1965

Bob Dylan recorded "Can You Please Crawl Out Your Window?" on November 30, 1965. Here…

4 years ago

Bob Dylan Sings Gordon Lightfoot – Happy Birthday Gordon Lightfoot

Happy 81st Birthday Gordon Lightfoot (November 17, 1938). This post includes audio of Bob Dylan…

4 years ago

Bob Dylan Sings Neil Young’s Old Man (3 versions)

Bob Dylan covers Neil Young's "Old Man" - 3 versions from 2002.

4 years ago