By the time the 1970s dawned, Bob Dylan was tired of being the voice of a generation. It came with baggage, and besides, it seemed like a bygone virtue anyhow. Dylan was always ahead of the curve, and he wanted to shed the weight of his reverence in favour of artistic freedom, and he also wanted to ditch politics to pursue a rather more spiritually open venture. The shift surprised many observers who had spent the previous decade projecting thei…
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