About nine years ago, folk legend Ramblin’ Jack Elliott (who turns 91 on Aug. 1 and continues to perform live) and Bob Dylan crossed paths after Dylan performed a show in Oakland. Before that, Elliott couldn’t remember the last time he had spoken to him.
“When [Dylan] was heading for the bus after the show, I said, ‘Good set, Bob,’” Elliott recalls. “Bob says, ‘Hi Jack.’ I said, ‘I love you, Bob.’ He said, ‘I love you, Jack.’ That was fantastic—we had never declared our love verbally.”
Before Dylan disappeared into his tour bus, he stopped and looked at Elliott.
“He said, ‘912,’” Elliott says. “I’ve only written about two songs, and ‘912 Greens’ is one of them. I said, ‘You know, Billy Faier [a banjo picker referenced in the song] is alive and has a house in West Texas?’ Bob says, ‘What do you know?’ Then he got on the bus, and that was the end of that. Pretty long conversation for Bob. You don’t know what to expect with him.”
Elliott and Dylan first met in 1961, visiting the hospital where Woody Guthrie was being treated for pneumonia—the shy teenager had just arrived in New York City from Minnesota on a mission to become a folk musician and learn from the master. Meanwhile, Elliott had just returned from Europe, where he had spent several years busking, traveling and recording several albums. He discovered that Dylan owned his first record, Woody Guthrie’s Blues. With Guthrie held up most of the time in the hospital until his 1967 death, Dylan latched onto Elliott, who had essentially learned most of his chops from Guthrie.
Dylan moved into the Hotel Earle in Washington Square, just down the hall from Elliott. Folk musician Peter La Farge also lived on the same floor. Elliott took Dylan under his wing, as Guthrie had for him. He took Dylan to get his union card so he could perform at “legitimate” venues, including Gerde’s Folk City, the neighborhood bar—with a notoriously tough audience—where Dylan played his first show.
Dylan skyrocketed to international superstardom, and Elliott rarely saw him. But once in a while, Dylan would reappear. One of those occasions was in the early ’70s, while Elliott was performing regularly at the Other End (formerly and currently called the Bitter End) in Greenwich Village.
“Bob showed up one night and brought along his date, Patti Smith,” Elliott says. “I had never heard of her. The evening came to a close, and I was in the office getting paid, and Bob walked in, handed me a glass of wine, and said, ‘Hey Jack, we’ve been talking about an idea, and wonder if you’d be interested. We’d like to do a tour with a van and play little churches, theaters and stuff—maybe you, me, Bobby Neuwirth and Joan Baez [luminaries including Allen Ginsberg and Joni Mitchell also jumped on board].’ I said, ‘Count me in.’”
Six months later, Neuwirth showed up to Elliott’s regular gig at the Other End. Afterward, they headed to Neuwirth’s apartment, where he called Dylan.
“They talked for a long time, and then he put me on,” Elliott says. “‘You remember that thing we talked about in New York?’ Bob says. I said, ‘Yeah, the van trip?’ ‘Yeah,’ he said. ‘It’s on. We’re gonna do it in November.’ I said, ‘Okay, November.’ Bang! That was all.”
The storied Rolling Thunder Revue—a freewheeling countercultural cavalcade unlike anything else—kicked off in 1975. They played 31 shows in 35 days.
“Nobody knew what they were getting themselves into,” Elliott says. “We were just happy to be there.”
Between the drugs and freak flag-flying gimmickry, Elliott highlights some of the decisive moments, including an invitation to an Indian reservation in upstate New York, where the rowdy troubadours were treated to a dinner with the tribe.
“Bob suddenly stood up [during dinner] and started playing, first like he was fishing for the words, and then it came, it all came out, and he walked up and down the aisle in the dining room with tables, singing [Peter La Farge’s] ‘The Ballad of Ira Hayes,’” Elliott recalls. “Everybody was very moved. I was thrilled.”
In addition to Dylan’s earnest delivery of the La Farge classic, inspired by the story of the Native American who helped raise the flag on Iwo Jima, other moments were equally unexpected and equally emotionally charged. The day before a benefit concert for Rubin “Hurricane” Carter at Madison Square Garden, Dylan, Baez, Mitchell, Roberta Flack, Roger McGuinn and Elliott performed a hush-hush show at the medium-security prison in New Jersey where Carter was serving time. The MSG show raised $100K for the prize fighter who was falsely charged and subsequently found guilty of murder he didn’t commit.
Following Rolling Thunder, Elliot’s and Dylan’s paths crossed less frequently. Of course, whenever Dylan performs close by and Elliott is in town, he tries to meet up, but their schedules rarely align.
Over the years, Elliott has incorporated about six Dylan songs into his repertoire. Three of those six touch him most profoundly: “Don’t Think Twice It’s Alright,” “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight” and “God on Our Side.”
Elliott recently made it to two of Dylan’s shows at the Fox Theatre in Oakland. On the second night, Dylan played “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight.” He growled the line, “bring that bottle over here,” as Elliott does when he performs it. After the performance, Elliott had a chance to visit with Dylan for a couple of minutes.
A close friend of Elliott says it was a magical, joyous reconnection between the two. A new dimension in their long relationship.
“I was thrilled to see Bob, and Bob was happy to see me,” Elliott says.
Bob Dylan plays Thursday, June 23, at 8pm at the Santa Cruz Civic Auditorium, 307 Church St., Santa Cruz. The show is sold out.
Nice story, Jack is a treasure! Please note the spelling is La Farge, not Le Farge. I run the website and wrote the biography on him.
I lived on W Spring St. (SOHO) EARLY 70’S and would see JACK ELLIOT
And Bob play at those Village clubs.
I meet Bob in CT. In 1967 at Powder HILL SKI MT.
He love to discuss history
And motorcycles
Ramblin’ Jack has been my favorite performer since 1967. I have gotten to see him in person twice. Although I don’t expect to get to see him again, I sure would like to.
I saw Jack Elliot, Cisco Houston, Jean Richie, etc. at a Hazard, Kentucky coal minor benefit at the vanguard in the village 1963. Then met Jacks wife in Ben Lomand and then Jack also in Santa Cruz through a mutual girl friend named Lynn. Definite high point of my life.
Met Ramblin’ Jack Elliott a few years back up close and personal! Myself and others shared a train ride from Salinas to Union Station in Los Angeles with him in the Amtrak observation car. What a “trip!!” He regaled us with his outlook on life, his travels and philosophy of life.
A fascinating conversation that I will always cherish! He was particularly interested in my Indian heritage which he wanted to know about and asked me again about before he got off the train.
What a troubadour. He wore his guitar on the train a la his buddy Johnny Cash!! He’s still performing at age 91!
I saw Jack perform in Christchurch New Zealand, I’m guessing, maybe about 25yrs ago? It was great, never expected I’d get the chance to see him live. I’m of course a huge Dylan fan as well and we had a talk after his show and he told me some story’s of his younger days with Bob
I met Jack I guess it’s been almost 10 years now at a show at Ashland Coffee and Tea in Ashland, Va. I still working in the Trucking industry then and was hiring drivers. I pitched the idea to Jack about driving a Truck again and he was all for it. We had a great laugh. He signed a couple of CD’s for me. Posed for a picture of him and my brother Gerry. A great night all around. I told some neat stories from back in the day.
We just went sailing with Ramblin Jack yesterday 3/23/23 here in Maui and later we bbq’d, drank some wine and traded a few songs…I have great pics and a few vids…he even jammed on Railroad Bill for a bit…a legendary hang…he busted out all kinds of great stories for hours with us…it turns out he enjoys talking about the ocean and sailboats as much as music…Rock on you legend…Ramblin Jack is the best!
While I’m a huge Dylan fan, I believe time and evidence presented at trials has proven that there are numerous factual errors in the Dylan song about Hurricane Carter, which Dylan based entirely on Carter’s version of events. I’ve seen Dylan interviews where he basically acknowledges this. Thus, though the song makes it seem like Carter didn’t commit the murders, the objective evidence is strong that he did. After Carter had served many years, his sentence was finally overturned on appeal based on (from memory) jury selection, but that certainly is not the same as proving his innocence. The prosecutor decided not the retry the case yet again (what would have been like the 3rd or 4th time from memory) given the difficulty in that after so many years and since Carter had served much of his term. The statement in the article – “murder he didn’t commit” – has no factual basis. One could say “murder many, including Dylan, believed he didn’t commit.”
In 2006 I was sitting in the waiting room at UCSF dermatology office in SF.I brought my guitar and case with me because I planned on performing at a open mike afterwards.Across from me was a elderly lady sitting in a wheel chair.A tall lady with short brown hair standing next to her.Asked me if I knew who Ramblin Jack was? I said I did because his influence is far reaching.She said Ramblin was a relative of theres.Also that everyone she asks does not know who Ramblin Jack is.At that moment I was called into the doctor and nodded farewell to these 2 nice ladies.