"Percy's Song" is a song written by Bob Dylan. It was recorded during the October 1963 sessions for Dylan's third album, The Times They Are A-Changin', but ultimately not included on that album. Dylan performed the song on stage at his Carnegie Hall concert on October 26, 1963. [1]
Dylan's recording was not officially released until 1985 when it appeared in the Biograph box set. In the notes to that collection, Dylan credits Paul Clayton for the song's "beautiful melody line."[3][4][5] Clayton had played "The Wind and the Rain" to him, a variant of "The Twa Sisters", Child ballad 10.[6]
Dylan wrote the song from the point of view of a narrating character.[3] The song relates the story of a fatal car crash and a subsequent manslaughter conviction and 99-year sentence in Joliet Prison that is handed down to the driver (a friend of the first-person narrator). The narrator goes to ask the sentencing judge to commute his friend's sentence which he considers too harsh, but the sentence stands. The story of the hard-hearted judge is reminiscent of the Child ballad "Geordie".[7]
References
^"Bob Dylan: All The Songs", Phillipe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon, Black Dog & Levanthal, 2015.
^Bob Dylan: a descriptive, critical discography and filmography, 1961-1993, John Nogowski, McFarland, 1994 ISBN978-0-89950-785-9
^ abBob Dylan, quoted by in the note on "Percy's Song", liner notes to Biograph, Columbia Records, 1985.
^Keys to the rain: the definitive Bob Dylan encyclopedia, Oliver Trager, Billboard Books, 2004, ISBN978-0-8230-7974-2