| "Narrow Way" | |
|---|---|
| Song byBob Dylan | |
| from the albumTempest | |
| Released | September 10, 2012 |
| Recorded | January–March 2012 |
| Studio | Groove Masters |
| Genre | |
| Length | 7:28 |
| Label | Columbia Records |
| Songwriter | Bob Dylan |
| Producer | Jack Frost (Bob Dylan) |
| Tempest track listing | |
10 tracks | |
"Narrow Way" is ablues rock song written and performed by American singer-songwriterBob Dylan that appears as the third track on his 2012 studio albumTempest. Like much of Dylan's 21st-century output, he produced the song using the pseudonymJack Frost.
"Narrow Way" is unusual in that it was written in the unorthodox 15-bar blues format. Dylan scholar Tony Attwood sees it as a "tribute to the music of the black musicians of the first half of the 20th century" with lyrics that condemnAmerican imperialism and inequality ("We looted and we plundered on distant shores / Why is my share not equal to yours?").[1] In their bookBob Dylan All the Songs: The Story Behind Every Track, authors Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon note that "Dylan still shows the same enthusiasm for this music that he discovered withRobert Johnson earlier in his career" and praise the "excellent groove" provided by the rhythm section of drummer George Receli ("probably playing with brushes") andTony Garnier on upright bass.[2] The song is performed in the key ofB major.[3]
Music journalistRob Sheffield, writing in a 2020Rolling Stone article where the song ranked 12th on a list of "The 25 Best Bob Dylan Songs of the 21st Century", called it "a highlight fromTempest", noting that it "has the edge of his most caustic Sixties putdowns, back when his idea of a good time was sneering 'She's Your Lover Now' or 'Ballad of a Thin Man' or 'Positively 4th Street', Except 'Narrow Way' has an extra 50 years’ worth of venom in it".[4]
Tony Attwood considers it Dylan's "most brilliant blues ever", claiming that if it "had been included onHighway 61 Revisited it would be known world-wide as a Dylan masterpiece".[5]
Spectrum Culture included the song on a list of "Bob Dylan's 20 Best Songs of the '10s and Beyond". In an article accompanying the list, critic Kevin Korber calls it "political in the historical sense; its allusions to American history and Christianity serve to portray an idea of the American experience that is all too familiar now. In 'Narrow Way', Dylan is portraying the warts-and-all lifespan of America and framing it as a struggle between enshrining lofty ideals and consistently failing to live up to them".[6]
The first line of the chorus ("It's a long road, it's a long and narrow way"[7]) is a reference to a passage in theGospel of Matthew that Dylan had previously quoted in his 1979 song "When He Returns" ("But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it").[8]
The second line of the chorus ("If I can’t work up to you / You’ll have to work down to me someday") is a reference to theMississippi Sheiks' 1934 song "You'll Have to Work Down to Me Someday".[9]
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