
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode of Hitchhiking Highway 61, we explore “When the Ship Comes In” from The Times They Are a-Changin' by Bob Dylan. First performed with Joan Baez at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963, the song sounds like a sweeping civil-rights anthem—but it was actually inspired by Dylan being denied a hotel room because of his appearance.
We unpack how Dylan turned a petty personal slight into a biblical vision of justice, and how that reflects the spirit of 1960s protest music. Along the way, we contrast it with the inward-looking anger of 1990s rock—from Nirvana and Pearl Jam to Rage Against the Machine and their anthem Killing in the Name.
From the Civil Rights Movement to a wrongly getting grounded for a suspicious reason, this episode looks at how songs transform personal grievance into something that can feel like prophecy—and why listeners sometimes hear something entirely different.
By Kevin Fallon4.2
55 ratings
In this episode of Hitchhiking Highway 61, we explore “When the Ship Comes In” from The Times They Are a-Changin' by Bob Dylan. First performed with Joan Baez at the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963, the song sounds like a sweeping civil-rights anthem—but it was actually inspired by Dylan being denied a hotel room because of his appearance.
We unpack how Dylan turned a petty personal slight into a biblical vision of justice, and how that reflects the spirit of 1960s protest music. Along the way, we contrast it with the inward-looking anger of 1990s rock—from Nirvana and Pearl Jam to Rage Against the Machine and their anthem Killing in the Name.
From the Civil Rights Movement to a wrongly getting grounded for a suspicious reason, this episode looks at how songs transform personal grievance into something that can feel like prophecy—and why listeners sometimes hear something entirely different.

6 Listeners