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Keyboardist Alan Pasqua Discusses Playing With Bob Dylan

What is it like for a keyboard player to work with Bob Dylan?

 That opportunity is a dream for many musicians, and one that only a select group of players can claim on their musical resume. Alan Pasqua is one of those few, and he recounts his time in an engrossing, wide-ranging interview which you can read at Ray Padgettโ€™s excellent Flagging Down The Double Eโ€™s blog (available on Substack here).

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But even Pasqua never quite knows when Dylan might call again, or if he even remembers him. But remember him he did, albeit nearly 39 years later when Dylanโ€™s team called him to perform piano as an underbed for (unbeknownst to Pasqua) Dylanโ€™s Nobel Prize in Literature acceptance speech. A one-off cover of โ€œSheโ€™s Funny That Wayโ€ followed, and then another phone call a year later to lay down parts for the epic โ€œMurder Most Foul,โ€ released one year ago this month in advance of Dylanโ€™s most recent full-length, Rough And Rowdy Ways.

Pasqua first performed with Dylan in 1978 during the Street Legal era, getting the gig through casual connections with engineer Bruce Botnick and Dylan bassist Rob Stoner that link back to Eddie Money.

A versatile player with roots in jazz who performed with Tony Williams Lifetime in the 1970โ€™s and Allan Holdsworth in the 1980โ€™s, Pasquaโ€™s knowledge of Dylanโ€™s catalog going into the 1978 audition and rehearsals was, admittedly, lacking.

โ€œHe asked me one day if I knew โ€˜Positively 4th Street.โ€™ I freaked, because I didn’t know it. I just looked at him and said, โ€˜No, man, but I’ll learn.โ€™ He just looked at me and started laughing. He turned to one of the other guys and said, โ€˜He said he’ll learn it!โ€™ I thought, โ€˜I’m gone, I’m fired, that’s it.โ€™ [laughs]

Pasqua wasnโ€™t fired and a 115-date concert tour across the world followed. The young wide-eyed virtuoso took it all in.

โ€œI was a young guy, 26, so I’m seeing the world for the first time. Every day is just like, โ€˜Wow, where are we going today? Far out!โ€™ It was incredible. I was so grateful to be there.โ€

โ€œEvery night for that better part of that year, he and I played two duets [โ€œI Want Youโ€ and โ€œGirl from the North Countryโ€]. I looked forward to those two duets every night so much because it was a moment just for me to be alone and play with him and get to do a little bit more than I would normally do as a keyboardist in the structure of the band. It was never a burnout thing for me.โ€

When it was over, the mystery began. Pasqua says, โ€œThere was no finality. It wasn’t like, โ€˜Thank you, guys. It’s been a great year. I’m going to move on.โ€™ It was just like, โ€˜We’re done with the US. Thanks.’ There could’ve been a phone call to come back or there could not have been.”

The next call didnโ€™t happen until 2017 when Pasqua received a call and was instructed to submit 30 minutes of โ€˜piano musings that are slightly bluesy, but not really. They’re not necessarily connected, but they’re not terribly random either.โ€ This formed the underbed for Dylanโ€™s Nobel Prize speech, which was delivered over the internet and not, as is custom, in person in Stockholm.

The 17-minute โ€œMurder Most Foulโ€ followed soon after was recorded live in the studio.

โ€œThey were playing a demo. I heard it and I just couldn’t believe it. In rock music, things usually have a specific beat and pulse. This was free. The time was free. It was elastic. It wasn’t specific to a certain time, feel or tempo. It just moved and flowed.โ€

โ€œWhen I was done listening to the track, I turned to Bob and I said, โ€˜My god, Bob, this sounds to me like โ€˜A Love Supreme.โ€™ He just stopped and he looked at me. I thought, โ€˜Oh, I’m going to get firedโ€™ again. [laughs]โ€

โ€œThen we went into the studio and two or three hours later, we had just a bunch of different takes and it was like, โ€˜Okay, fellas. Thanks. We got it.โ€™ I left going, โ€˜What an amazing night. I hope that what I played makes the record.โ€™ You never know, you know? I was thrilled to find out that it did.โ€

โ€œMurder Most Foulโ€ features Pasqua, who joined Benmont Tench (keyboards) and Blake Mills (guitar) in the recording session. Fiona Apple also plays keyboards on the song, though she wasnโ€™t on the same session. โ€œBenmont’s on the left, Alan’s on the right, Fiona’s in the middle. It’s like the early days of stereo. It’s a really cool collaboration. She sounded beautiful too.โ€

Padgettโ€™s Flagging Down The Double E blog is an excellent deep-dive for all Dylan obsessives, as he focuses on the live concerts Dylan has performed throughout his career. Padgett tracks down the many notable side players, tour personnel and creatives, from Ronee Blakley to David Mansfield and early Dylan /Gaslight taper Richard Alderson. There is a free signup as well as a paid subscription. Info here.