Levon helm 'one of the last true great spirits,' writes bob dylan

Levon helm 'one of the last true great spirits,' writes bob dylan


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_This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts._ Bob Dylan, who asked multi-instrumentalist Levon Helm and


his band, the Hawks, to join him when he decided to “go electric” in the mid-’60s, has posted a short note on his website about Helm, who died after a long struggle with throat cancer on


Thursday. Together with guitarist Robbie Robertson, bassist Rick Danko, pianist Richard Manuel and organist Garth Hudson, the band once known as Levon and the Hawks became Dylan’s backing


band and recorded with him very intensively during a formative period when the formerly acoustic-only folk singer was making a transition in his sound. Those recording sessions were widely


bootlegged and some of them were later released in 1975 as “The Basement Tapes.” A note on Dylan’s website states simply: ‘In response to Levon’s passing ‘He was my bosom buddy friend to the


end, one of the last true great spirits of my or any other generation. This is just so sad to talk about. I still can remember the first day I met him and the last day I saw him. We go back


pretty far and had been through some trials together. I’m going to miss him, as I’m sure a whole lot of others will too.’ In the late 1960s, the backing band became its own recording


entity, called the Band, and recorded its own albums, including the debut “Music From Big Pink,” which included the Levon Helm-sung hit “The Weight.” The Band also played with Dylan on


albums including 1974’s ‘Planet Waves,’ and finally disbanded with a final 1976 performance — which included Dylan — called “The Last Waltz,” which was recorded in a documentary film made by


Martin Scorsese. Earlier on Pop & Hiss, singer-songwriter and producer Joe Henry spoke of his love for Helm, and drew comparisons to Dylan. Wrote Henry, ‘In the same way that his great


friend and sometimes-boss Bob Dylan connected the dots between Jimmy Reed, Arthur Rimbaud and Muhammad Ali, so Levon drew the second line that had Howlin’ Wolf, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Marvin


Gaye and Hank Williams all dancing out in front of the same New Orleans funeral parade. (They all walked liked Bo Diddley and didn’t need no crutch.) He brought soul and an open heart to


the darkest corners of rock music -- in a troubled era he helped shape and define -- and a rural humility to the grandest stages.’ RELATED: PHOTOS: Levon Helm Levon Helm of the Band dies at


71 Dick Clark remembered: He made kids, their music ‘stars of the show’ — Dean Kuipers