Blowin' in the Wind

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"Blowin' in the Wind"
"Blowin' in the Wind" cover
Song by Bob Dylan
Album The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan
Released May 27, 1963
Recorded July 9, 1962April 24, 1963 at Columbia Studios, New York City
Genre Folk
Length 2:48
Label Columbia Records
Writer Bob Dylan
Composer Bob Dylan
Producer John H. Hammond and Tom Wilson
The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan track listing
  1. "Blowin' in the Wind"
  2. "Girl from the North Country"
  3. "Masters of War"
  4. "Down the Highway"
  5. "Bob Dylan's Blues"
  6. "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall"
  7. "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right"
  8. "Bob Dylan's Dream"
  9. "Oxford Town"
  10. "Talkin' World War III Blues"
  11. "Corrina, Corrina"
  12. "Honey, Just Allow Me One More Chance"
  13. "I Shall Be Free"

"Blowin' in the Wind" is a song written by Bob Dylan, and released on his 1963 album The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan. It is an example of the protest song, posing philosophical questions about peace, war, and freedom. The song does not refer specifically to any particular event, which has kept its popularity enduring.

In 1999, the song was inducted into the Grammy Hall Of Fame and in 2004, this song was #14 on Rolling Stone's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

Contents

Dylan originally wrote and performed a two-verse version of the song; his first public performance of it, at Gerde's Folk City on April 16, 1962, was recorded and circulates among Dylan collectors. Shortly after this performance, he added the middle verse to the song. Some published versions of the lyrics reverse the order of the second and third verses, apparently because Dylan simply appended the middle verse to his original manuscript, rather than writing out a new copy with the verses in proper order.

In interviews Dylan has never reported holding as high an opinion of the song as its popular acclaim would suggest - he has said he wrote the song in ten minutes. He has called it a work song, perhaps in reference to its derivative, rather than inspired, nature of its composition, the melody being derived from the old slave song "No More Auction Block", and some of its lyrical structure from the 1953 song "I Really Don't Want to Know".

In 1963, Dylan performed the song for the first time on television in the UK, when he appeared in the BBC television play Madhouse On Castle Street.

  • The song became one of the most popular anti-war songs during the 1960's and the Vietnam War. During the Iraq War protests, some commentators noted that protestors were still resurrecting songs like Blowin the Wind rather than creating new ones [1].
  • The song has been embraced by many liberal churches and in the 1960's and 1970's it was sung both in Catholic Church "folk masses" and as a hymn in Protestant ones. In 1997, Bob Dylan performed the song at a Catholic Church congress and Pope John Paul II, who was in attendance, commented on the song's message [2]. In 2007, however, the current pope Benedict XVI, who was also in attendance, expressed that he was and still is skeptical of Dylan performing the song in a church environment [3].

  • It has been covered by hundreds of artists. Probably the most famous cover version is the one by folk music trio Peter, Paul and Mary (who actually released their version — which lacks the harmonica solos after each verse — a few months before Dylan's).
  • Most recently, in 2005 Dolly Parton recorded the song with the bluegrass trio Nickel Creek. (Parton subsequently stated in a CNN interview that she'd initially tried to get Dylan himself to appear on her recording of the song, but that Dylan turned her down. [4])
  • A travelling exhibition called Bob Dylan's American Journey, 1956–1966 which was featured at the Experience Music Project in Seattle contains an audio display with samples of dozens of different cover versions of the song, sung in numerous languages and from a variety of musical genres.
  • The song has also been sung and recorded in German. It is often known as Wieviele Strassen (How Many Roads) in the German language.
  • In Bengali there has been a translation of the song recorded by popular Bengali blues singer Suman Chatterjee. It goes "Kotota Path" ("How Many Roads") in Bengali.
Music sample:

Bob Dylan - "Blowin' in the Wind"

17 seconds (of 2:48)

Problems listening to the file? See media help.

  • In an episode of The Simpsons, Homer's mother sings the line "How many roads must a man walk down..." Homer interrupts "seven!"
  • There is a reference of this song in the Macross universe. Presented on the disc TV drama called "The Super Dimension Fortress Macross Vol. III Miss DJ" contains a short version of "Blowin 'in the wind" which it is interpreted in English to duet by Mari Iijima and Akihiro Hase (voice of Minmay and Hikaru Ichijyo respectively).
  • In 1999, National Public Radio included this song in the "NPR 100," in which NPR's music editors sought to compile the one hundred most important American musical works of the 20th century.
  • The character Rat from the comic strip Pearls Before Swine made up a version of "Blowin' in the Wind" for the "rich and uptrodden," called "My Capital Gains are Blowin' Away in the Wind."
  • In the 1998 film Dr. Dolittle, a guinea pig sings this song while riding on top of the title character's car.
  • In an episode of Ed, Edd, n' Eddy, when Jonny asks Eddy what the future would be like, Eddy responds "The answer, my friend, is blowin' in the wind."
  • One of the "morals" on the "Wheel of Morality" in the cartoon Animaniacs was "the answer, my friend, is blowing in the wind". Wakko Warner adds "except in New Jersey, where what's blowing in the wind smells funny".
  • In the movie Forrest Gump, Jenny sings this song for a show in a strip club, and is introduced as "Bobbie Dylan".
  • On the television show Sesame Street, the title character of the "Number Guy" segments asks musical questions to the tune of this song; his answer is always the featured number (of animals).
  • During the Global Grover segment about Puerto Rico, Grover tries several ways to play a watermelon as a musical instrument (all of which fail). His remark after one attempt: "The answer is not blowing in the wind instrument..."
  • In the last chapter of the Japanese Manga Battle Royale, the lyrics of music are displayed as a poetry in Japanese style as a tribute for all the dead students in "Battle Royale - Survival Program".

An urban legend still circulates that the song was actually written by a high-school student named Lorre Wyatt and subsequently purchased or stolen by Dylan before he gained fame.

The legend was made famous when it was published in a Newsweek article in 1963; while the story left the claims unconfirmed, it prompted plenty of speculation. Several members of Wyatt's school and community reported having heard him singing the song and claiming authorship a full year before it was released by Dylan, or made famous by Peter, Paul and Mary. Wyatt even told his teacher that he'd sold the song for $1,000 and donated the money to charity, when asked why he had suddenly stopped performing it.

It turned out that the plagiarism claims were completely false. Wyatt had performed the song around Millburn, New Jersey, months before it was made famous, but not before it had been published and credited to Dylan in Broadside Magazine and Sing Out!. Wyatt finally explained his part in the situation to New Times magazine in 1974. He credited the initial lie to panic that he wasn't pulling his weight as a songwriter in a local band. [5]

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