News & Updates

Hear Bob Dylan’s Absolutely Mind-Blowing New Song ‘Murder Most Foul’

Dylan’s first original song in eight years is about JFK’s assassination – but it’s really about so much more

Published by

Bob Dylan, who hasn’t released an original song since 2012’s Tempest yet released albums of standards in the intervening years, unexpectedly dropped a previously unheard, nearly seventeen-minute-long new track, “Murder Most Foul,” late Thursday night. Dylan didn’t say exactly when the song was recorded, but his delicate vocal delivery resembles the way he’s been singing in his live shows in the last couple years. “Greetings to my fans and followers with gratitude for all your support and loyalty over the years,” Dylan said in a statement. “This is an unreleased song we recorded a while back that you might find interesting. Stay safe, stay observant, and may God be with you.”

This dizzying, utterly extraordinary song – as allusive as it is elusive – starts off seeming like it might be a straightforward recounting of the assassination of John F. Kennedy, but expands into an impressionistic, elegiac, increasingly apocalyptic journey through what feels like the entire 1960s (complete with references to the Who’s Tommy, Woodstock and Altamont) and then perhaps all of 20th century America, especially its music.

The song’s structural freedom and mesmerizing arrangement  – a dusting of piano, a lilting violin, distant percussion  – feel like fresh territory for Dylan, occasionally evoking Van Morrison at his most mystical. Its themes of doom – and possible redemption – feel alarmingly in tune with our current moment, which may have prompted Dylan to choose it for release.

“The day they killed him, someone said to me, son, the age of the Antichrist has just only begun,” Dylan sings. “The soul of a nation’s been torn away, and it’s beginning to go into a slow decay… It’s 36 hours past judgement day.”

In its prayer-like final passages (the song is so structurally daunting that it’s hard to think in terms of verses), Dylan invokes the DJ Wolfman Jack before dropping a long list of songs and musicians, from John Lee Hooker to Guitar Slim to Bud Powell to Stevie Nicks to Don Henley to Dickey Betts to Thelonious Monk, and even mentions Billy Joel’s “Only the Good Die Young.” Oh, and somewhere in there, he nods to Nightmare on Elm Street.

It’s unclear if the song is connected to a new album, though there were murmurs of such a project earlier this year.

Recent Posts

Catherine O’Hara, a Comedy Great from ‘SCTV’ to ‘Schitt’s Creek,’ Dead at 71

The celebrated actress was also known for her appearances in the Home Alone movies and…

January 31, 2026

What Does Creative Burnout Look Like in an Industry That Thrives on Productivity?

More artists are prioritizing their pace and approach to working at a time when the…

January 30, 2026

More Than a Comeback, It’s a Homecoming: The Heart of BTS’s ‘Arirang’ Era

The 'Arirang' era is here, and it’s probably going to be BTS’s most heartfelt, raw,…

January 30, 2026

How the Dalai Lama Got Nominated for His First Grammy

Producer Kabir Sehgal and musician Ayaan Ali Bangash talk about the spiritual leader's meditation album,…

January 30, 2026

Shakira Is Officially the Latin Artist With the Highest Grossing Tour of All Time

The superstar has taken her Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran tour across the world for…

January 30, 2026

Travis Scott Reveals His Life in 10 Songs: Björk’s ‘Wanderlust’ ‘Ruined My Day in a Good Way’

The Houston rapper shares the stories behind songs from Bon Iver, Kid Cudi, and more…

January 30, 2026