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North Country Blues

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"North Country Blues"
Song by Bob Dylan
from the album The Times They Are a-Changin'
ReleasedJanuary 13, 1964
RecordedAugust 6, 1963
GenreFolk
Length4:35
LabelColumbia
Songwriter(s)Bob Dylan
Producer(s)Tom Wilson

"North Country Blues" is a song by Bob Dylan, released on his third studio album The Times They Are a-Changin' in 1964. He also performed it at the 1963 Newport Folk Festival.

Its apparently simple format (ten verses of ABCB rhyme scheme), accompanied by only two chords (Cm & Bb) and subject matter (the perils of life in a mining community and its ultimate demise) appears to have been influenced by Woody Guthrie.

The specific location of the town is never stated. Daniel Epstein[1] recalled hearing Dylan introduce the song, in a performance in Washington D.C. in 1963, with the note that it was about the mining towns of Virginia. However, the title and references to "iron ore", "red iron", and "red iron pits" strongly suggests the location is on the Mesabi Range, a portion of the Iron Range where open-pit mining has predominated,[2] and where Dylan's childhood residence in Hibbing, Minnesota is situated. Virginia, Minnesota is a town near Hibbing, that, along with Hibbing, has shared boom and bust cycles due to changes in the mining industry, and may be the town that Dylan was talking about in the Washington concert.

The song opens with a deliberately conventional opening (Come gather round friends and I'll tell you a tale...). However, the darkness of the tale soon becomes apparent. Each verse contains at least one tragic situation or event:

  1. For starters, speaking of the current day, "the whole town is empty."
  2. When the narrator was young, her mother "took sick" and obviously died, as she was "brought up by my brother."
  3. One day her brother "failed to come home, the same as my father before him." (The implication is that they failed to come home from the mine, suggesting repeated mining tragedies.)
  4. Her schooling was cut short "to marry John Thomas, a miner."
  5. With three children, her husband's work was cut to a one-half shift "for no reason."
  6. "The man" came to town and announced that mine #11 was closing.
  7. The price of the mined ore is too high and not worth digging, because it's cheaper from South America where miners work "almost for nothing."
  8. Total desolation, hours last "twice as long . . . as I waited for the sun to go sinking."
  9. Her husband is talking only to himself now, and one morning he up and left her "alone with three children."
  10. The stores have all closed and her children "will go, as soon as they grow," because "there ain't nothing here now to hold them."

Dylan hides the fact that the narrator is a woman to the end of verse four. The song ends bleakly, as by this time the woman has lost her husband, mother, father and brother; the mine is closed and the town is virtually abandoned; and soon her children will leave her in complete isolation and desolation.

Within this apparently restricting and morose format, referred to as a "formally conservative exercise in first-person narrative"[3] Dylan manages to achieve significant tonal and expressive variation, and the song is considered by some [who?] to be one of his most effective in the 'folk-song' genre.

In 1968, Joan Baez included a cover of "North Country Blues" on her Dylan tribute album Any Day Now.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Epstein, Daniel Mark (2011) The Ballad of Bob Dylan: A Portrait. Harper
  2. ^ Mesabi Range#Mining operations
  3. ^ Marqusee, M (2003). Chimes of Freedom: The Politics of Bob Dylan's Art. The New Press.