Background and recording Following a motorcycle accident in July 1966, Dylan spent the next 18 months recuperating at his home in
Woodstock and writing songs. According to Dylan biographer
Clinton Heylin, all the songs for
John Wesley Harding, Dylan's eighth studio album, were written and recorded during a six-week period at the end of 1967. Dylan has claimed that he thought of the song during a thunderstorm. He recorded "All Along the Watchtower" on November 6, 1967, at Columbia Studio A in
Nashville, Tennessee, Accompanying Dylan, who played
acoustic guitar and
harmonica, were two Nashville veterans from the
Blonde on Blonde sessions:
Charlie McCoy on bass guitar and
Kenneth Buttrey on drums. The producer was
Bob Johnston, who produced Dylan's two previous albums,
Highway 61 Revisited in 1965 and
Blonde on Blonde in 1966, and the sound engineer was Charlie Bragg. The final version of "All Along the Watchtower" resulted from two different takes during the second of three
John Wesley Harding sessions. The session opened with five takes of the song, the third and fifth of which were spliced to create the album track. According to Gray, as with most of the album's selections, the song is a dark, sparse work that stands in stark contrast with Dylan's previous recordings of the mid-1960s.
Composition and lyrical interpretation Music Musicologist
Wilfrid Mellers, noting the biblical references in "All Along the Watchtower", wrote that the song "heroically confronts, in grandly swinging
Aeolian melody, deeply oscillating bass and thrusting rhythm, the chaos of fallen man". Mellers considered that the sense of threat expressed in the lyrics was "not exterior to the tune which remains, in its noble arches over its gravely descending bass, unruffled". Musicology scholar Albin Zak finds a strong
blues influence in the song which Dylan developed from his affinity for the blues of
Robert Johnson and quotes Dylan's dedication in
Writings and Drawings by Bob Dylan: "To the magnificent Woody Guthrie and Robert Johnson who sparked it off and to the great wondrous melodies spirit which covereth the oneness of us all." Zak sees "All Along the Watchtower" as showing a combination of the influences of Guthrie's ballad writing and Johnson's blues influences on Dylan. Zak compares Dylan's lyrics in the song directly to Johnson's "
Me and the Devil Blues" (1938), stating that: "Dylan probes such fearful fatalism (of Johnson's lyrics) by grafting a narrative of alienation and apprehension onto a musical frame of implacable stability." The music of the song has been described by Zak, who wrote, "The song's entire harmonic substance consists of three chords repeated in an unchanging cyclic pattern over the course of its three verses and instrumental interludes. The melodic pitch collection, shared by voice and harmonica, consists almost entirely of the pentatonic C#, E, F#, G#, B, though each part is restricted to a four-note subset. And the declamatory vocal melody gravitates throughout to one of two pitches." Zak then summarizes the entire song as: "The song's musical elements, extraordinarily delimited in number and function, combine to create an impression of unrelenting circularity, which accumulates, in turn, to impart a sense not of musical progression, but of a hovering atmosphere."
Lyrics The original lyrics are in twelve lines, which the
Financial Times writer Dan Einac commented, make it "akin to a truncated sonnet". The lyrics feature a conversation between a joker and a thief, whilst they ride towards a watchtower. Reviewers have pointed out that the lyrics in "All Along the Watchtower" echo lines in the
Book of Isaiah, Chapter 21, verses 5–9: Other writers such as Keith Negus have indicated that Dylan also drew on verses from the
Book of Revelation to write the song. Elliot Wolfson found that Dylan's lyrics also reflected his own response to a melancholy reading of his own approach to Jewish gnosis. The general theme of
justice is commented upon by Lisa O'Neill-Sanders, who states that Watchtower presents a "thief in the song... who consoles the victimized and exploited joker. The thief sympathizes but urges the joker to 'not talk falsely'". Journalist David Stubbs interpreted the song as "obliquely allud[ing] to Bob Dylan's frustrations with his management and with
CBS, whom he felt were offering him a royalty rate that was far from commensurate with his status". For Stubbs, the song "features a stand-off between the 'joker' and the 'thief', with the joker complaining of businessmen who drink his wine, feeding off him but refusing to give him his due". Hampton also wrote that the song can be viewed as an "allegory of the entertainment business, with artists exploited by managers". Heylin described Dylan's narrative technique in the song as setting the listener up for an epic ballad with the first two verses, but then, after a brief instrumental passage, the singer cuts "to the end of the song, leaving the listener to fill in his or her own (doom-laden) blanks". Andy Gill commented that "In Dylan's version of the song, it's the barrenness of the scenario which grips, the high haunting harmonica and simple forward motion of the riff carrying understated implications of cataclysm; as subsequently recorded by Jimi Hendrix... that cataclysm is rendered scarily palpable through the dervish whirls of guitar."
Dave Van Ronk, an early supporter and mentor of Dylan, made the following criticism: Songwriter
Eric Bogle said he was envious of Dylan's ability to write a song that is open to several interpretations.
Michael Gray wrote that, unlike on
Blonde on Blonde, "Dylan's surrealism is stripped down to a chilly minimum on
John Wesley Harding", and described Dylan's use of language in songs like "All Along the Watchtower" as "impressionism revisited... reflecting wintertime in the psyche".
Release and reception John Wesley Harding was released on December 27, 1967, less than two months after the recording sessions. Peter Johnson of the
Los Angeles Times wrote that the track "brings out Dylan's talent for imagery", but felt the recording seems "fragmented and unfinished". It was regarded as the best track on the album by the reviewer for the
Bucks Examiner. This sentiment was shared by Troy Irvine of
The Arizona Republic, who felt that
John Wesley Harding was better than any of Dylan's earlier albums. Journalist
Paul Williams regarded the song as "an extraordinarily successful interaction" between Dylan, McCoy, and Buttrey, featuring "some of the best cinematography in modern song-writing". In 2013, Jim Beviglia rated it as the 92nd-best of Dylan's songs, writing that Dylan "creates a stifling air of portent and tension with his three succinct verses". Author
Nigel Williamson, in 2021, listed the song 31st in Dylan's oeuvre. The following year,
The Guardian included the song on a list of "80 Bob Dylan songs everyone should know". Rapper
Kanye West identified it as his "favorite song of all time" in a 2022 interview in which he also expressed a desire to work with and write with Dylan. The track was released as the
B-side to "
Drifter's Escape" in Italy on March 1, 1968, and as an A-side, backed with "
I'll Be Your Baby Tonight", in the Netherlands and Germany on November 22, 1968. In January 1969, the song was one of four
John Wesley Harding songs included on an
extended play release in Australia. ==The Jimi Hendrix Experience version==