Bob Dylan's Visionary Views on Creativity

Written on 05/29/2026
Poetic Outlaws

“I change during the course of a day. I wake and I’m one person, and when I go to sleep I know for certain I’m somebody else.”

— Bob Dylan

Folk legend Bob Dylan celebrated his 85th birthday this week, so I just wanted to reflect a bit on his visionary views on creativity that have profoundly shaped modern art and songwriting.

For Dylan, creativity was almost a mystical force—an act of deep vulnerability in which “eating and sleeping mean nothing,” demanding that one remain unsociable, self-sufficient, and tightly focused amid the chaos.

He has described songs as existing independently, born unconsciously from a potent mix of lived experience, keen observation, and boundless imagination. “If any one of those key elements is missing,” he once said, “it doesn’t work.”

Dylan understood, as Jean Cocteau once observed, “Art is a marriage of the conscious and the unconscious.”

Dylan, like many great artists, embraced the night as a fertile realm where preconceptions dissolve, and true invention comes alive. That’s the time his imagination flourished.

"Well, I sing by night, wander by day. 
I'm on the road and it looks 
like I'm here to stay." 

Ultimately, he urges artists to stay restless and vulnerable, never fully “arriving” at any fixed point.

In honoring the Bard of Hibbing, we celebrate not just his catalog of timeless anthems but a philosophy that creativity thrives on surrender to the unknown, dismantling old forms, and emerging with something raw, transcendent, and utterly alive.

Happy 85th, Bob. The times, as ever, are still a-changin’.


“An artist has got to be careful never really to arrive at a place where he thinks he’s AT somewhere. You always have to realize that you’re constantly in a state of becoming. And, as long as you can stay in that realm you’ll sort of be alright.”

— Bob Dylan

“Creativity is a funny thing. When we’re inventing something, we’re more vulnerable than we’ll ever be. Eating and sleeping mean nothing. We’re in “Splendid Isolation,” like in the Warren Zevon song, “The world of self,” Georgia O’Keeffe alone in the desert. To be creative you’ve got to be unsociable and tight-assed. Not necessarily violent and ugly, just unfriendly and distracted. You’re self-sufficient and you stay focused.”

- Bob Dylan

In a 1966 Playboy interview, addressing the negative initial reaction to “going electric” (Like A Rolling Stone, now regarded by some as the greatest rock and roll song ever written) Dylan said:

“I was doing fine, you know, singing and playing my guitar. It was a sure thing, don’t you understand, it was a sure thing. I was getting very bored with that. I couldn’t go out and play like that. I was thinking of quitting. Out front it was a sure thing. I knew what the audience was gonna do, how they would react. It was very automatic. Your mind just drifts unless you can find some way to get in there and remain totally there. It’s so much of a fight remaining totally there all by yourself. It takes too much. I’m not ready to cut that much out of my life. You can’t have nobody around. You can’t be bothered with anybody else’s world. . . They can boo till the end of time. I know that the music is real, more real than the boos.”

“You can write a song anywhere, in a railroad compartment, on a boat, on horseback — it helps to be moving. Sometimes people who have the greatest talent for writing songs never write any because they are not moving.”

“Life is a struggle. If you want to do business and create work, then you struggle; if your struggle shows, then you make it. It’s all about hard work, plough sharing.”

— Bob Dylan

I had no songs in my repertoire for commercial radio anyway. Songs about debauched bootleggers, mothers that drowned their own children, Cadillacs that only got five miles to the gallon, floods, union hall fires, darkness and cadavers at the bottom of rivers weren’t for radiophiles. There was nothing easygoing about the folk songs I sang. They weren’t friendly or ripe with mellowness. They didn’t come gently to the shore. I guess you could say they weren’t commercial.”

“Things grow at night. My imagination is available to me at night. All my preconceptions of things go away. Sometimes you could be looking for heaven in the wrong places. Sometimes it could be under your feet. Or in your bed.”

“It’s nice to be able to put yourself in an environment where you can completely accept all the unconscious stuff that comes to you from your inner workings of your mind. And block yourself off to where you can control it all, take it down…

The best songs to me — my best songs — are songs which were written very quickly. Yeah, very, very quickly. Just about as much time as it takes to write it down is about as long as it takes to write it.”

“What’s a writer gonna write about? … We’re living in a science-fiction world. We’re living in a world that Disney has conquered. Disney’s science fiction. Theme parks, trendy streets, it’s all science fiction. So I would say, if a writer has got something to say, he’ll have to do it in that. [….] There is a real world. Science fiction has become the real world. Whether we realize it or not, it has.”

— Bob Dylan

“Poets live on the land. They behave in a gentlemanly way. And live by their own gentlemanly code.

And die broke. Or drown in lakes. Poets usually have very unhappy endings…”

— Bob Dylan

“My songs aren’t dreams. They’re more of a responsive nature…

To me, when you need them, they appear. Your life doesn’t have to be in turmoil to write a song like that but you need to be outside of it. That’s why a lot of people, me myself included, write songs when one form or another of society has rejected you. So that you can truly write about it from the outside. Someone who’s never been out there can only imagine it as anything, really.”

— Bob Dylan


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