• Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
My Art Investor
  • Home
  • Art Investing
  • Art Investments
  • Art Investor
  • Artists
  • Artwork
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Fine Art
  • Home
  • Art Investing
  • Art Investments
  • Art Investor
  • Artists
  • Artwork
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Fine Art
Artists

The artists Roger McGuinn always wanted to be

November 5, 2025 2 Mins Read


Roger McGuinn - Musician - 1970

(Credits: Far Out / Fotoburo De Boer / Noord-Hollands Archief)

Wed 5 November 2025 22:00, UK

There are a number of musical moments that will be remembered for the rest of time, and one of these came in the form of folk rock, when the Americans took back the charts. 

For context, prior to the rise of folk rock, the British invasion was in full swing. America was enamoured by the work of The Beatles, and once they performed on The Ed Sullivan Show, every wannabe musician in the country endeavoured to start a band with names that made them sound British. 

“It transformed America,” said E Street Band guitarist Steve Van Zandt when discussing the impact of the Fab Four, noting, “On February 8th, there were no bands in America; on February 9th, we had Ed Sullivan, and on February 10th, everybody had a band in their garage. It was literally overnight.”

Of the artists in America, Bob Dylan was playing the acoustic guitar and singing heartfelt ballads, making a name for himself as a classic folk artist, and he would have continued on this path were it not for Roger McGuinn and The Byrds, who were going to release a cover of ‘Mr Tambourine Man’ before Dylan’s version, but with a twist. They added some electric guitars to give it more of a rock-infused feel, overhearing which was arguably Dylan’s eureka moment as he thought the arrangement sounded good enough for him to eventually embrace the electric way. 

“He came to hear us in the studio when we were building The Byrds,” recalled David Crosby, “After the word got out that we gonna do ‘Mr. Tambourine Man‘, and we were probably gonna be good, he came there and he heard us playing his song electric, and you could see the gears grinding in his head. It was plain as day. It was like watching a slow-motion lightning bolt.”

While Dylan’s controversial shift to electric, inspired by The Byrds, was seen as a betrayal of his roots and loyal fanbase that made his name, McGuinn, interestingly, thought that his career would mimic the stripped-back folk singer style of early Dylan and other artists such as Pete Seeger, so much so that they were his inspiration for some time. 

“I thought the Byrds were a good nine-year detour from my dream of becoming like Pete Seeger, a folk singer or a storyteller like Will Rogers or somebody,” said McGuinn when discussing the trajectory he thought that his career would take, “I really always wanted to be a real folk singer and I was always in the peripheral part of folk music as a sideman […] I was always not considered a real folk singer. So it’s like wanting to be a real boy.” 

Related Topics

The Far Out Bob Dylan Newsletter

All the latest stories about Bob Dylan from the independent voice of culture.
Straight to your inbox.



Source link

Share Article

Other Articles

Previous

The artists Eric Clapton thought were “impossible” to replicate

Next

Winning artwork selected for ODFW’s annual Stamp Art Contests 

Next
November 5, 2025

Winning artwork selected for ODFW’s annual Stamp Art Contests 

Previous
November 5, 2025

The artists Eric Clapton thought were “impossible” to replicate

No Comment! Be the first one.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

Artist Wallace Woo Formally Defines "Geological Abstractionism" and "Stalactite Aesthetics" Through New Global Manifesto #WallaceWoo #StalactiteAesthetics #GeologicalAbstractionism #innerGeology #ContemporaryArt #AbstractExpressionism #ISBN9789 – Media OutReach Newswire
April 10, 2026

Artist Wallace Woo Formally Defines “Geological Abstractionism” and “Stalactite...

The true cost of owning a priceless painting- The Week
April 10, 2026

More than a decade ago, in my first full-time role working on an exhibition dedicated to Raja Ravi...

“The story he’s never told — the band, the fame, the heartbreak, the healing. And yes, the astrology”: Tears For Fears’ Roland Orzabal writes his first-ever autobiography and it's an astrological memoir – MusicRadar
April 9, 2026

“The story he’s never told — the band, the fame, the heartbreak, the healing. And yes, the...

"There was an old fella who screamed that we'd been sent by Oliver Cromwell. He jumped on the bonnet of the car and tried to boot the windscreen to pieces." Not everyone was pleased to see The Rolling Stones on their first Irish tour – Louder
April 9, 2026

“There was an old fella who screamed that we’d been sent by Oliver Cromwell. He jumped...

“He struck it big, and we were all green with envy. It was terrible: we fell out for about six months. It was ‘He’s doing much better than I am.’”: When T. Rex opened the floodgates of glam rock with the riff-driven groove of Get It On – MusicRadar
April 9, 2026

“He struck it big, and we were all green with envy. It was terrible: we fell out for about six...

Related Posts

“The story he’s never told — the band, the fame, the heartbreak, the healing. And yes, the astrology”: Tears For Fears’ Roland Orzabal writes his first-ever autobiography and it's an astrological memoir – MusicRadar

April 9, 2026

“The story he’s never told — the band, the fame, the heartbreak, the healing. And yes, the...

"There was an old fella who screamed that we'd been sent by Oliver Cromwell. He jumped on the bonnet of the car and tried to boot the windscreen to pieces." Not everyone was pleased to see The Rolling Stones on their first Irish tour – Louder

April 9, 2026

“There was an old fella who screamed that we’d been sent by Oliver Cromwell. He jumped...

“He struck it big, and we were all green with envy. It was terrible: we fell out for about six months. It was ‘He’s doing much better than I am.’”: When T. Rex opened the floodgates of glam rock with the riff-driven groove of Get It On – MusicRadar

April 9, 2026

“He struck it big, and we were all green with envy. It was terrible: we fell out for about six...

15 Questions We Get Asked As Tattoo Artists, And Why They Keep Coming Up

April 9, 2026

Tattoo artists spend hours turning ideas into permanent art, but they also spend a surprising...

© 2024, My Art Investor, All Rights Reserved.

  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Home
  • Art Investing
  • Art Investments
  • Art Investor
  • Artists
  • Artwork
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Fine Art