Bob Dylan wins 2016 Nobel Prize in literature

STOCKHOLM -- American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan won the 2016 Nobel Prize in literature on Thursday, a stunning announcement that for the first time bestowed the prestigious award on a musician.

The Swedish Academy cited Dylan for “having created new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition.”

Bob Dylan awarded Nobel Literature Prize

Reporters and others gathered for the announcement at the academy’s headquarters in Stockholm’s Old Town reacted with a loud cheer as his name was read out.

Dylan, who turned 75 in May, had been mentioned in the Nobel speculation for years, but few experts expected the academy to extend the prestigious award to a genre such as popular music.

The academy’s permanent secretary, Sara Danius, said that while Dylan performs his poetry in the form of songs, that’s no different from the ancient Greeks, whose works were often performed to music.

“Bob Dylan writes poetry for the ear,” she said. “But it’s perfectly fine to read his works as poetry.”

Dylan is not the first songwriter to be honored with the Nobel Prize, notes CBS News’ David Morgan. The committee has awarded playwrights and poets, some of whom -- like Frederic Mistral (1904) and William Butler Yeats (1923) -- also wrote song lyrics. The Bengali poet Rabindranath Tagore, the first non-European laureate (Nobel in Literature 1913), wrote about two thousand songs, music dramas, and the national anthems of India and Bangladesh.

But certainly no literature laureate is known as both a songwriter and a performer. Dylan’s recognition is a huge first on the Nobel Committee’s part in recognizing the performance of songs -- words meant to be sung, not just read -- as literature.

Dylan was born on May 24, 1941, in Duluth, Minnesota. He grew up in a Jewish middle-class family. He’s the first American winner of the Nobel literature prize since Toni Morrison in 1992.

By his early 20s, he had taken the folk music world by storm. “Blowin’ in the Wind” and “The Times They Are A-Changin” became anthems for the anti-war and civil rights movements of the 1960s. Dylan was also awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 2008 for his contributions to music and American culture.

The literature award was the last of this year’s Nobel Prizes to be announced. The six awards will be handed out on Dec. 10, the anniversary of prize founder Alfred Nobel’s death in 1896.

A listing of Dylan recordings (as noted on his website):

“Bob Dylan,” 1962
“The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan,” 1963
“The Times They are A-Changin’,” 1964
“Another Side of Bob Dylan,” 1964
“Bringing It All Back Home,” 1965
“Highway 61 Revisited,” 1965
“Blonde on Blonde,” 1966
“Bob Dylan’s Greatest Hits,” 1967
“John Wesley Harding,” 1967
“Nashville Skyline,” 1969
“Self Portrait,” 1970
“New Morning,” 1970
“Bob Dylan’s Greatest Hits, Vol. 2,” 1971
“Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid” (soundtrack), 1973
“Dylan,” 1973
“Planet Waves,” 1974
“Before the Flood,” 1974
“Blood on the Tracks,” 1975
“The Basement Tapes,” 1975
“Desire,” 1976
“Hard Rain,” 1976
“Street Legal,” 1978
“At Budokan,” 1979
“Slow Train Coming,” 1979
“Saved,” 1980
“Shot of Love,” 1981
“Infidels,” 1983
“Real Live,” 1985
“Empire Burlesque,” 1985
“Biograph,” 1985
“Knocked Out Loaded,” 1986
“Dylan & the Dead” (with the Grateful Dead), 1988
“Down in the Groove,” 1988
“Oh Mercy,” 1989
“Under the Red Sky,” 1990
“The Bootleg Series, Vol 1-3,” 1991
“Good as I Been to You,” 1992
“The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration, 1992
“World Gone Wrong,” 1993
“Greatest Hits, Vol. III,” 1994
“MTV Unplugged,” 1995
“Time Out of Mind,” 1997
“Live 1996,” 1998
“The Essential Bob Dylan,” 2000
“Love and Theft,” 2001
“Bob Dylan Live 1975,” 2002
“Bob Dylan Live 1964,” 2004
“No Direction Home,” 2006
“The Best of Bob Dylan,” 2006
“Modern Times,” 2006
“Dylan,” 2007
“Tell Tale Signs,” 2008
“Together Through Life,” 2009
“Christmas in the Heart,” 2009
“The Collection,” 2009
“The Original Mono Recordings,” 2010
“The Witmark Demos,” 2010
“The Best of the Original Mono Recordings,” 2010
“All Time Best: Dylan,” 2011
“The Best of Original Mono Recordings,” 2010
“Bob Dylan in Concert: Brandeis University,” 2011
“Tempest,” 2012
“Another Self-Portrait”
“The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration,” 2012
“The Basement Tapes Complete”
“The Basement Tapes Raw”
“Shadows in the Night,” 2015
“The Best of the Cutting Edge”
“The Cutting Edge”
“Fallen Angels,” 2016

Earlier this year, renowned photographer Ken Regan released a limited edition book capturing rare, intimate images of Dylan on tour.

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