1964Released
5:02

Did You Know?

Interesting facts and trivia about Ballad of Hollis Brown. By Songfacts®.

This song was based on an old English folk song named "Pretty Polly" that made its way into the Appalachian Mountains and became a folk standard in the United States as well. The connections between "Pretty Polly" and "Hollis Brown" are not merely musical but also thematic. "Pretty Polly" is about a young woman murdered in a forest and buried; Dylan took that dark narrative to a new level in "Hollis Brown." In the newer song, the protagonist becomes a struggling farmer in South Dakota trying to survive with his wife and five children. Brown eventually snaps from despair and kills his family and then himself. Brown is not presented in a negative light in the song, though, and we're led to pity the man rather than despise him. He seems driven mad not so much by his own physical suffering but by watching the suffering of his family. Dylan achieves this empathic effect by writing the song in second person, which means he's addressing Brown as "you." This places us, the listeners, in Hollis Brown's persona.

The song has some of Dylan's darkest, most evocative lyrics. The rats have got your flour Bad blood it got your mare The rats have got your flour Bad blood it got your mare If there's anyone that knows Is there anyone who cares? While singing these lines, his voice seems possessed with tormented restraint, just as we imagine Brown must feel watching his family suffer in this way. By the end, we're left with a haunting, understated conclusion that finally delivers us the cold distance from the subject that's been denied for most of the song. There's seven people dead On a South Dakota farm Perhaps even more haunting in its strangeness, though, are the lines following the image of the dead—the final lines of the song, which go: Somewhere in the distance There's seven new people born Is this a reference to a reincarnation? A sign of hope? A declaration of the bleak hopelessness of the continual cycle of human suffering? There's no way to know. It's another example of Dylan's genius in always leaving an air of mystery if all his songs, forcing us to wonder.

At the end of the song, Dylan repeats the number seven: There's seven breezes a-blowin' All around the cabin door There's seven breezes a-blowin' All around the cabin door Seven shots ring out Like the ocean's pounding roar There's seven people dead On a South Dakota farm There's seven people dead On a South Dakota farm Somewhere in the distance There's seven new people born Some have suggested this could be a reference to the seven deadly sins of the Bible. It could also hark to the old myth that you get seven years of bad luck for breaking a mirror.

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Song Analysis

Key, BPM (tempo) and time signature of Ballad of Hollis Brown.
D♯Key
MajorMode
4/4Time Signature
111BPM

Album

The album Ballad of Hollis Brown is released on.

Released By

The record label that has released Ballad of Hollis Brown.
Columbia
Originally released 1964. All rights reserved by Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music Entertainment

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