Six more reviews of Dylan’s Rough and Rowdy Ways tour… the reason we keep sharing them is because these are the voices of real people saying what they really think about Bob at 80.
Yep, he spends a lot of time behind the piano now and hangs on to it when he steps out to do his famous elegant – but definitely Chuck Berry influenced – knee bends. And his almost balletic dances amongst the stage wires have become more of a health-and-safety feature.
But he is an old blues man now, the thing he always wanted to be. He’s made it.
Read the reviews and enjoy … keep scrolling down, there are many, many more and some comments and observations.
Susan Laing writes:
“Extended fingers pointing in the air for emphasis, for me this was reminiscent of his masterful stand confronting the ‘Judas’ heckler in Manchester May 16 1966. Saturday night, Charleston W.V. - 13th November 2021 and the defiant stand was a confrontation with the universal truth time delivers. Again he was masterful. Smooth and memorable like the best whiskey complete with telltale aftertaste… a complex blend indeed. The entire concert was my personal highlight. Friends’ comments: Dan (travelled from Superior W.I.) “This is my first time seeing Dylan and I REALLY enjoyed the strong voice, he’s been an icon my whole life and it was great to knock this off my bucket list” Isaac (travelled from Houston TX - listened to Dylan from birth) “ This time period of Dylan’s performance just keeps getting better in every way “ PS Bob moves in mysterious ways - Isaac finally decided to get THE vaccine the day NYC tickets went on sale and is heading to 2 more shows there. Rich (travelled from Duluth MN … Isaac’s dad) “ I’ve followed Dylan since 1980 and tonight’s show was great, strong as ever” Lauren (Charleston) “I’ve always wanted to see Dylan and he was different to what I expected…I studied him in music theory and live he is just so different… ‘Key West’ was my favorite!”
Brien Lewis writes:
“This was my 3rd show on this tour following Cincinnati and Louisville earlier this week. Compared to the new and impressive Aronoff Center in Cincinnati and the spectacular, ornate Palace in Louisville, the Charleston Municipal Auditorium was a bit of an ancient, Brutalist architecture barn. Its breadth made it felt much less intimate, a feeling compounded by the fact that there were several seats in the rear, sides and balcony left unsold. They were an enthusiastic audience though, with loud and heartfelt applause and cheers at certain lines or moments as well as at the end of each song. Bob's only chat came during the band introductions, and as he was highlighting Tony Garnier he made a reference to the songwriter of "Giddy Up Go" as being from "this place". "Key West" which improves with each performance. "Goodbye Jimmy Reed" seemed to start off a little slow and ragged but smoothed out even though it didn't seem to have the same punch as prior nights. "Gotta Serve Somebody" continues to be the standout rocker with a driving arrangement that really gets the crowd up and moving. For me the highlights continue to be the moments (and sometimes they are only moments) when Bob comes out from behind the piano, gets into a little crouch, and really *delivers* the lyrics from the new material from "Rough and Rowdy Ways". The standout continues to be the mesmerizing "I Contain Multitudes" but "Black Rider" gets more interesting with each rendition as well.” Brien Lewis Lexington, KY
Laurette muses over Bob’s ‘mother’
of a show in the city of Muhammed Ali
Bob hit the home of Muhammed Ali and fried chicken – and while reviews had been thin on the ground from his performance in Johnnie’s Knoxville, Laurette Maillet made a circuitous and frustrating journey – caused mainly by Greyhound bus delays – to end up in Louisville for his November 11 show.
Laurette, on her journey around Dylan’s shows, writes in Bob Links:
“The theater is gorgeous, a museum in itself. Bob Dylan decides - after 15 minutes and so pass show time - to appear all in black. Immediately the public are up and will stay up until the 7th or 8th song. Good for me. My seat is on the isle and I can...dance! Bob is picking up on the good vibes and delivers a remarkable show. I will not pick a highlight as ALL the songs were perfectly executed. At least I enjoyed all of them.Just, for me, a minus on "Mother of muses". There is something in that song I quite can't connect with! A sort of borring prayer? But nothing to complain about the perfect diction. Bob cracks a joke I don't get and presents the Band.The entire theater is on its feet for the final. Bob spends, it seems, few more seconds facing the crowd before disappearing. Excellent communication tonight on both sides.Louisville is a great city!”
Knacksville in Knoxsville! Well, who said ol’ Bob doesn’t talk to his audience … he’s got the knack!
And now he can out rock the mountains and out croon the moon
It looks like the reviewers are having a bit of a rest, which is sad really. It’s been fab keeping up with Bob’s shows, his performances, what he’s wearing, how he’s singing and what songs he has been choosing.
More than anything though it’s been good to read the authentic voices of real concert goers saying what they think.
And the one thing that comes across is that Bob Dylan at 80 is still one of the best and most transcendent acts in the world today… he’s not a dinosaur, not an old crock living off past successes. And he’s not churning out geriatric songs to satisfy his own ego and the nostalgia of a bunch of middle-aged, middle-class, middle-income grandmas and grandpas who still want to be thought of as sageness hippies!
Nope, the voice of so many generations is managing to stay forever young and has remained the alchemist of vocals, stage presence and performance. Fifteen years ago he was croaking like a battered old frog and not even I knew exactly what he was trying to achieve – although I respected him enough to assume he was trying to achieve something.
And what was up-singing all about? And that clunky flat piano? It was like listening to Victor Borge in a drunken church choir.
Now he can out rock the mountains and out croon the moon.
So, until the reviews start rolling in again we’d like to leave you with a short vid from Knoxville where Bob has a chat with the audience and introduces his new and very able band… I’m sure Painted Passport won’t mind us sharing it although his camera-pointing could do with a bit of polishing!
Bob Dylan in Knoxville (Nov. 10, 2021) – “Don’t forget to go to Dollywood” – YouTube
And an audio vid of Bob performing Every Grain of Sand at Bloomington a few days ago.
Bob Dylan – Every Grain Of Sand (Bloomington 2021) – YouTube
Below are a few thoughts about Bob and his Rough and Rowdy Ways tour and the many reviews we’ve picked up along the way… have a scroll through, meander, have a listen, spend some time with some ordinary people who, like me, just want to take in the artistic genius of an extraordinary man.
As soon as the reviews start appearing again, we’ll start sharing them! In the meantime send us your thoughts, reviews etc.
Anyway, have you ever been to Milwaukee?
Have you ever been to Cleveland?
Have you ever been to Chicago, Cincinnati or Bloomington?
Well, you can go there (below) – when you want to go…
Cheers Leigh
BOB, THE MAN IN BLACK, SUITS THEM PERFECTLY DOWN IN CINCINNATI
More thoughts and insights into Bob on his almost-never ending tour – and this time, what does Dylan wear boys, what does Dylan wear?
Ol’ Bob has had some sartorial disasters over the years – his almost Elvis-style suits in the late 70s should have been made street-illegal.
In the 60s though he was a style icon with his Cubans, shades and polka dot shirts. And in the 70s he was the hippest of hippies and for the first time donned his now trade-mark Fedora with aplomb. He apparently bought it for a couple of dollars from a thrift shop.
In the 60s he went for the working man’s dirt road look, in the 70s waistcoat and leather jackets, in the 1980s he was more often than not suited and booted, sometimes animal print shirts, in the 90s cowboy-cut waist jackets and latterly the river boat captain and gambler in many guises.
At the beginning of the Rough and Rowdy Ways tour, some say he made a mistake by wearing his big creamy David Byrne-style jacket. It just makes him look on the portly side, particularly in poor quality bootleg recordings. Dare I say it looks like a very big covid mask!
Anyway, now Bob has gone back to black and some of the reviews from the Cincinnati show have taken this into consideration… see what you think and share your comments.
Cincinnati reviews etc below this preamble:
REVIEWING THE REVIEWS:
We are still reviewing the reviews as Dylan, at 80, gets ‘rough and rowdy’ on the road … but we are still mystified as to why so few appearing in the traditional media.
Its like local journalists and editors are treating Dylan’s new tour as a bit of a clod-hopping dinosaur outing or a day out from the rest home of elderly rockers!
But Ol’ Bob is once again working his magic across the world, singing – most say – better than ever, entertaining, chatting, inventing, stylising, reworking and setting new standards for himself and his audiences.
Confounding and wrecking expectations…
Here are some of the first audience recordings we’ve seen and heard that have survived the robots of internet control.
The first one is It Takes a Lot to Laugh – from Chicago and Every Grain from Cleveland… keep reading and scrolling, there are quite a few reviews now from each venue.
Should we used the videos?
Well, there is a dichotomy of attitude towards copyright and sharing on the internet in 2021 … the spiders might as well be from Mars and the robots wield a sword of control as draconian as Damocles.
It could be Bob’s people of course throwing a cloak over the stolen moments of his concerts – and quite right they should too.
But bootlegging has been a major part of Ol’ Bob’s career, it gave him an underground reputation, made people hungry for his work and helped us feel that we were part of something special.
And we were – we were a part of the confusing, passionate world of imagery, angst and fabulousness that Bob had created.
We felt closer to him because we’d become the elite, the fans who got the latest from his world first.
So, from being stuck inside a mobile with the Chicago blues again, we’re sharing this video.
Below are a selection of the first reviews as Bob Dylan hits the road again on his Never Ending Tour … if you’ve managed to see him over the last week or so, share your thoughts here.
Cincinnati November 9, 2021
Laurette Maillet writes:
I have a vivid memory of that show. Not the best ever for me. But I, somehow by impulse, gave a sweet kiss to Barron (Bob's bodyguard) who had always been kind to me. Fans , they don't pay too much attention to the 'entourage', or never heard about the name of Bob Dylan's bodyguard, and his devoted career of 30 years. Nothing I knew, then, about what would be a world disaster. And that “Times would be changed forever”. The virus pushed people inside their home and inside their mind, aging before time. I aged! So, let's start a'new. Cincinnati , here I am. All dressed in Black; musiciens and Bob. Bobby wears regularly now a black pants with whites stripes on the side (adjusted with a blak/white belt). A black shirt (with or without embroidery) a white or black jacket with embroidery. His shoes are no longer the cowboy many years boots but flat black or white 'boat' shoes? Bobby looks like a ghost. No kidding! As for Bob? Only the piano was his instrument. No guitar, no harmonica :( He rapidly disappeared after “Every grain of sand”. Escaping the final crowd photos from the past when he and his Band used to bow. Smart!
E.B writes:
The Bob Dylan Concert poster proclaims “Rough and Rowdy Ways” but for the standing ovations our crowd at the Aronoff Center in Cincinnati were not rowdy. Yes, it is still Pandemic O’Clock in the Queen City (and the home of the old King Records as Bob so well noted in his brief remarks later in the evening) Bob performed standing up behind his upright piano to the right of the stage surrounded by his band. Sometimes Bob retreated to the safety of the piano after coming center stage to sing every now and again - doing some impressively deep sideways knee bends and dance moves and proving his bell still rings - but what stood out for me this night was his impressive vocal performance, strong and commanding and telling tales warningly, emphatically and enigmatically but oh so compellingly. As the old poster used to proclaim: “In Show and Concert…. Don’t You Dare Miss it!”) *****
Tom Burke writes:
Bob Dylan brought his "Rough and Rowdy Ways'' tour to Cincinnati on Tuesday night. The promotional poster proclaims, "things aren't what they were", but thankfully, somethings never change, as Dylan and his band provided a great night of music and entertainment. The band wore black, as did Dylan, though his outfit was embellished with subtle white embroidery. The stage was framed with black side and back curtains with the band set up in a compact arrangement with Dylan slightly stage right at the piano. The setting and effect may have been austere, but the music was more often true to the tour's rough and rowdy ways moniker. The show kicked off with a rollicking, high energy, Watching the River Flow, which was followed by a driving jaunty Most Likely You Go Your Way (and I'll Go Mine) both songs featuring Bob at the piano playing with great spirit and vigor. Several of the songs from Rough and Rowdy Ways, including, I Contain Multitudes, False Prophet, Black Rider, Key West, I've Made up My Mind to Give Myself to You, and Goodbye Jimmy Reed were delivered with Dylan starting at center stage using a hand held mic and mid song returning to the piano for the finish. All of those selections, though sounding great on the record, performed live were imbued with much greater depth, effect and resonance, thanks to Dylan's facial expressions, body language, and unparalleled vocal stylings. The show closed with Dylan performing the beautiful , Every Grain of Sand.
Bloomington, Indiana, November 7, 2021
“This was probably my ninth show in a 25 year period. The stage had a raised platform that was floor for the band. Think of a giant light box. The arrangement of musicians was closer together than I’ve seen in the past.
The show started at about 8:03pm and what followed was one of the most interactive Bob Dylan concerts I've seen. He came out strong and seemed very energized. A slight stoop I noticed two years ago was all but gone. He seemed proud to stand straight and tall, even striking a number of Elvis-like poses and making moves evocative of the King. At one point he ran quickly backwards about half the width of the stage, a stunt people half his age would think twice about. Any rumors of his demise are grossly exaggerated. I counted four times between songs that he took time to thank the audience and sometimes made other comments. I think it was after To Be Alone With You, he heartily thanked us and said he about forgot the words to that one. It struck me as a genuine confession. The performances were amazing. Words were clear and strong (except at the start of a few verses). The sound mix and overall volume in the auditorium was excellent, nearly ideal. Great, great care was given to the execution of these songs, with extreme vocal control demonstrated. His piano work mostly filled in gaps, sometimes quite effectively with only a single note played at important junctures. Other times, some deft playing was high in the mix. He played harmonica just a few times. The vocals were front and center, which gave clear access to some deeply emotional performances. Most of the show, Bob Dylan was a shadow. You could not make out his face. However, with I've Made Up My Mind To Give Myself To You, this changed. With this song, his face was illuminated, and it remained so, or at least visible, during all the songs that followed.”
John Haas writes:
“Bob Dylan's still on the road. Still heading to another joint. And then another. And eventually, one near you. Amazing, isn't it? And what a strange set-list it is! The older songs are known to Bobists of course--all the songs are known to Bobists--but they aren't his huge hits, by any means. One only released as a single. One from the gospel period (but yeah, he won a Grammy for it). A couple country romps from '67 and '69, one of those entirely--and I mean entirely!--rewritten (and each "deep cuts" from their albums). A song from Tempest, but none from TOOM, L&T, the Oscar winner of yore, and nothing from H61R, FWBD, or most of his back catalog in fact. All of which is so, so great, I could hug him. It was all good. All of it. Bob's piano playing is outstanding at times, especially False Prophet. His singing kills it, as everyone says. Could hear every word. The songs I was expecting to just endure from R&RW shined. Those I expected to love--Key West, eg--I loved (thanks, Donnie, for that accordion). All the playing was stellar. Great concert. Moody, intricate, precise, beautiful.”
CLEVELAND, OHIO, Nov 3, 2021
Timothy Burns wrote: “The under the floor lighting was good, Bob and the band were better lit than the overly dark former time in Cleveland, especially in 2017. “If you saw Shadow Kingdom the sound and feel was quite like that obviously with the choices of the non-Rough and Rowdy Ways songs and the approach to the songs. I was completely fine with that, it was great. What I did not expect was that I completely enjoyed the new songs more than almost any of the other songs. Even though When I Paint My Masterpiece was quite amazing. Dressed in all black, Bob would go back and forth at times singing with a separate microphone in hand, then setting it down on the upright piano (with a slight clunk which was awesome) My main takeaway was two-fold. Firstly, the band and the arrangements, while similar at times to Shadow Kingdom, it allowed Bob himself to be the most central at every moment for every song. I do not ever recall where I left at the end with the feeling that this concert was 100% about Bob and not somewhat about how great the band was. The second main takeaway was perhaps the best. I did not come in with expectations of "How good are his vocals going to be?" Although I did wonder if he would sound similar to Shadow Kingdom in which he sounded absolutely amazing. Partway through song #1 (watching the river flow) I detected (or I think I did) a noticeable change in the audio mix where they brought Bob's voice up and just be above everything else. The rest of the concert had his voice amazingly loud and so clear. I cannot believe how good he sounded.”
Billy Cardina:
Awesome show! Great sound and “Every Grain of Sand” a first for this tour was amazing. Crowd was subdued and this was Bob’s first Ohio Show since he played beautiful Akron in November 2019. Old songs integrated well with Rough and a Rowdy Ways. LOVED Key West God Bless Bob!
Preamble – followed by Milwaukee and Chicago reviews:
Bob Dylan stepped back onto the stage after two years of ‘incarceration’ and gave a Cheshire Cat-grinning, ear churning, heartbreakingly beautiful two hour performance down at the Riverside in Milwaukee…
Andrea and I were still on the road highway in Spain as O’ Bob took to the stage. It was 10am where we were in the blustery Autumn heat and 8pm in a Milwaukee chill as he walked out to meet his audience again.
He was dodging wires and speakers and posing hand on hip in his oversize David Byrne-style white jacket like a good’n.
Yep, he’s 80 and sometimes he can look doddery and as fragile as his famous wet-fish handshake … but he’s still going, still creating, still confounding, still writing, still rocking and still finding new ways to be Bob Dylan.
And this time he is the poet of Rough and Rowdy Ways.
And then there is of course his new voice. It’s new but it’s been everywhere, told a million stories and hung out so many brilliant lines to dry.
No, nobody can ever take that away from him … and in Milwaukee he made his voice famous again.
Next he joined the other legends in Chicago …
After we unpacked our dusty old car at the castle in Lorca where we were staying, I trawled around the net for reviews.
I didn’t find one dissenting voice… just fans who confirmed that Bob is back – looking a little bit older it has to be said – but performing brilliantly, singing like a dream and rocking the world’s expectations.
Let’s begin with Chicago as he finds his feet
On Bill Pagel’s Bob Links, Adam Selzer wrote:
CHICAGO: “I’m amazed at how clear his vocals are; all traces of the wolfman growl of a few years back are gone, except when he needs them. “I Contain Multitudes” was the highlight of the night for me. Instead of spending most of it at the piano, consulting the lyric sheets, Bob was center stage the whole song, clearly enjoying himself and really acting the song out, prowling around at a crouch like a cartoon character. “When I Paint My Masterpiece,” the first surprise of the night, was bouncy and loose. “Bob tried to do “Black Rider” from center as well, but forgot a couple of lines in the first verse and moved back to piano for most of it. The flub seemed to cost him some confidence, though the rest of the lines were well delivered. This show really does sleep with life and death in the same bed.” Mark S wrote: “I saw Bob Dylan in 2021 and it was like seeing your grandpa, who you love very much, walking a tight rope. It was captivating, I was rooting for him, and it was extremely entertaining to see him succeed.!
Bob Shiel:
“Bob Dylan came to Chicago tonight, perfectly timing his customary week-within-Halloween appearance in the Windy City, historically one of his most visited venues in his illustrious career as a live performer. But this wasn't any ole Bob Dylan show. This tour is all about Rough and Rowdy Ways. Although all these songs sound good live, I Contain Multitudes and Key West stand out as stellar melodic arrangements with mesmerizing lyrics, which Bob is delivering quite intelligibly. I saw no evidence of the lyric or sheet music reliance reported in Milwaukee on night 1 of the tour. The overall sound of the band is similar to that fantastic Fall 2019 tour, and new drummer Charlie Drayton almost imperceptibly follows Bob and the rest of the band, allowing Bob, at 80, to not have to strain to be heard over the other 5 members of the band. The magic of Bob's veteran multi-instrumentalist Donnie Herron was evident on When I Paint My Masterpiece when his fiddle played off Bob's piano beautifully. Bob Britt is back. As for the new guitarist, Doug Flavio, who is technically filling the legendary shoes of Charlie Sexton, although that ain't happening, one gets the feeling he will play a more and more prominent role as his first tour progresses. After introducing the band, something he hasn't done for what seems like forever, Bob said something like, "We love Chicago, just like you do." Well, the feeling goes for you, too, Bob. We really do love you and wish you all health and happiness in this world so lucky to still have you in its midst.”
FROM MILWAUKEE:
Isabel Infantes said: “There’s no doubt that Tuesday show at Milwaukee’s Riverside Theater was the start of something very new, very different, and very bold.”
Tom Wilmeth, on the same site, said: “Nobody seemed happier about thingsthan Bob himself, with facial expressions that were frequently joyous. Dylan was in good voice, and the sound mix was excellent – both Dylan’s lyrics and his piano were
clearly heard. “The night began with “Watching the River Flow,” a minor radio hit in 1971. Maybe Bob was using this number to tell us what he had been doing during his time off – nothing. “Most Likely You Go Your Way and I’ll Go Mine” followed. . “Bob interspersed tunes recognizable to even casual fans. He played “Simple Twist of Fate” and “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight,” as well as a rocking version of “Gotta Serve Somebody.” Dylan touched on his later catalog with “Early Roman Kings” and “Soon After Midnight,” “When Bob made his way from piano to center stage – he looked fragile, and at times unsteady on his feet butwe still have Bob with us; let’s enjoy him today. We may not see him tomorrow” Don Romundson wrote: “The show at the Riverside was unbelievable. It was clear from the start that this was going to be a very special show. In fact, Bob did a sort of a bow to the crowd, in Bob's own way, after each song, an acknowledgment if you will, his stand at center stage gazing out, very appreciative of the crowd...”
Adam Selzer had this to say: “Bob seemed a bit nervous as he began “I Contain Multitudes”. I don’t know that I’ve ever seen him look nervous before. But the performance was solid, and on “False Prophet” he was grinning, pointing, and seeming as though he was having a blast. Like he couldn’t wait for us to hear what line he’d sing next.”Me, well I’m just glad to say that we’ve not seen the last of Bob’s winks and feints and his stunning panache. And the old man is back again, taking all the indefinable qualities that make him the true genius of this and the last century around the world again.
Good on ya Bob!
Bob’s band line-up is now –guitarists Doug Lancio and Bob Britt, multi-instrumentalist Donnie Herron, bassist Tony Garnier, and drummer Charley Drayton.
One of the few traditional media reviews:
Well, we found one … by Curtis Schieber who is described as Special to The Columbus Dispatch. I’m sure he is very special to them! |He has also has a very ‘special’ and successful music show, the Invisible Hits Hour, for 30 years.
Anyway, Curtis has also made a ‘special’ point in his review: The underfloor lighting Dylan is using on the Rough and Rowdy Ways tour serves to light up the band and Bob in an equal, almost democratic, way.
And, as Curtis says, it helps the focus of the concert to be on the songs … which is a good thing as a large part of the concert is made up of the songs from RaRW, perhaps one of Bob’s most perfect albums.
But is the lighting also being used to take attention away from Bob himself who, at 80, can look a bit creaky as he makes his trademark stately bows and bends?
Anyway, we are all agreed that Bob can still bend them notes and ring them bells as he sings better than he has done for decades.
What do you think?
Curtis wrote in the Columbus Dispatch:“Rough and Rowdy Ways” was clearly the focus of the set. An album containing all the mystery, in-jokes, casually cast-off name checks, and philosophical dead ends of Dylan’s best, it provided perfect fodder for the aging, Nobel Prize-winning author to have his way with both a lot of confessions and some pretty tall tales. In a deftly controlled mix of croon, croak and declaration, he brought them all to life. The band created a loose combination of blues, swing, and rock ‘n’ roll that nonetheless was always on point.
There were no spotlights focused on the stage last night. The six musicians were lit — equally — from the floor. It was clear that Dylan intended the songs to take center stage and that they did.”
The Dispatch is a daily newspaper in, yep, you guessed it, Columbus, Ohio. Its first issue was published on July 1, 1871 and it is still going strong and publishing the stories and reviews that matter. Curtis is a freelance journalist.
But, as far as we at The Society have seen, Dispatch is only the third daily to bother to take a look at the ‘new’ Bob Dylan.
#cincinnati #milwaukee #chicago #bloomington #bobdylan #neverendingtour #reviews #roughandrowdyways #charleston
Brian Sergent
Thank you so much for posting these sir. All we kiwis hope he includes Aotearoa on the tour, and you never know…
Wayne Berry
“Sometimes I think there are no words but these to tell what’s true…” (B.D.)
DISCLAIMER: The following data doesn’t address the individual songs as such. Neither does it critic the performances, Dylan’s stage presence, or his personal mannerisms. Rather, it offers an overviewing of the concert. Consider it a sort of first-person real-time documentary of the event itself.
Leigh, your comment about Dylan having finally achieved “old bluesman” status is spot on. I sensed the very same thing last week at his concert in Knoxville, Tn. It was as if a collective gaggle of sonic sojourners had somehow or other been transported – or perhaps transcended – into a space where we witnessed this elderly non-descript singer/musician rendering an extended set of songs —- all original compositions, penned by him. The players in his backing band were younger, but themselves seasoned musicians. They were each well gifted and well prepared for wherever the old troubadour decided to lead them.
The range of styles, musical genres, and grooves kept shapeshifting from one form to another. Their narrative content offered word-work that was a mixture of poetry, prose, and extended prophetic postulations. It was clear that something was happening, but, none of us knew exactly what it was.
The atmosphere we were held suspended in was filled with “otherness”. A type of “invisibalatashisness” (as Kurt Elling might say). We had entered a moment in time that was timeless in terms of discerning its dimension and its destination. We all knew it had something to do with Key West, so we were all willing to cross the Rubicon to wherever. I’ll be processing that experience for daze to come.