Dylan biographer
Robert Shelton writes that he was told by
Phil Spector that the inspiration for the song came when Spector and Dylan heard
Ray Charles on a Los Angeles jukebox sing "
Let's Go Get Stoned", written by husband and wife songwriting team
Ashford & Simpson. Spector said "they were surprised to hear a song that free, that explicit", referring to its chorus of "getting stoned" as an invitation to indulge in alcohol or narcotics. In fact, the Charles song was released in April 1966, after "Rainy Day Women" was recorded. Both
the Coasters and
Ronnie Milsap released versions in 1965; the Coasters version was a
B-side and commercially unsuccessful, and journalist Daryl Sanders suggested that it may have been Milsap's version, the B-side of "Never Had It So Good", which Dylan heard. The song is recorded as a
twelve-bar blues, although the lyrics are not typical of the
blues genre. However, the pattern of a repeated introduction (i.e. "They'll stone ya when they say that it’s the end...") and conclusion "I would not feel so all alone / Everybody must get stoned") to each
stanza recalls a blues format. According to music scholar Timothy Koozin, Dylan "exaggerates the musical vulgarity with a descending chromatic figure" that is out of place in a twelve-bar blues, and serves to "form a mimetic representation of sinking into a 'stoned' stupor". After recording
Blonde on Blonde, Dylan embarked on his
1966 world tour. At a press conference in Stockholm on April 28, 1966, Dylan was asked about the meaning of his new hit single, "Rainy Day Women". Dylan replied the song was about "cripples and orientals and the world in which they live... It's a sort of Mexican thing, very protest... and one of the protestiest of all things I've protested against in my protest years." Shelton states that, as the song rose up the charts, it became controversial as a "drug song"; consequently the song was banned by some American and British radio stations. He mentions that
Time magazine, on July 1, 1966, wrote: "In the shifting multi-level jargon of teenagers, 'to get stoned' does not mean to get drunk but to get high on drugs... a 'rainy-day woman', as any junkie [sic] knows, is a marijuana cigarette." Dylan responded to the controversy by announcing, during his May 27, 1966, performance at the
Royal Albert Hall, London, "I never have and never will write a drug song." According to Dylan critic
Clinton Heylin, Dylan was determined to use a "fairly lame pun"—the idea of being
physically stoned for committing a sin, as opposed to being stoned on "powerful medicine"—to avoid being banned on the radio. Given its
Old Testament connotations, Heylin argued that the Salvation Army band backing becomes more appropriate. Heylin further suggested that the song's title is a Biblical reference, taken from the
Book of Proverbs, "which contains a huge number of edicts for which one could genuinely get stoned". He suggested that the title "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35" refers to Proverbs chapter 27, verse 15 (in the
King James Bible): "A continual dropping in a very rainy day and a contentious woman are alike." Koozin interprets the song as aimed at the media and "every other authoritative force in society that oppresses and clouds the individual's mind with untruths". He comments that there is a disconnect between the jovial atmosphere of the track and the "seriousness of the subject matter". Writer and musician
Mike Edison called the song "Bob Dylan's stoner anthem". According to Heylin, Dylan "finally explained" the song when speaking to New York radio host
Bob Fass in 1986: "'Everybody must get stoned' is like when you go against the tide... you might in different times find yourself in an unfortunate situation and so to do what you believe in sometimes... some people they just take offence to that. You can look through history and find that people have taken offence to people who come out with a different viewpoint on things." In a 2012 interview in
Rolling Stone,
Mikal Gilmore asked Dylan if he worried about "misguided" interpretations of his songs, adding: "For example, some people still see 'Rainy Day Women' as coded about getting high." Dylan responded: "It doesn't surprise me that some people would see it that way. But these are people that aren't familiar with the
Book of Acts." ==Releases==