Author: Leigh Banks

I am a journalist, writer and broadcaster ... lately I've been concentrating on music, I spent many years as a music critic and a travel writer ... I gave up my last editorship a while ago and started concentrating on my blog. I was also asked to join AirTV International as a co host of a new show called Postcard ...
Alan still hopeful as new law bid to reveal Brady’s evil secrets rumbles on

Alan still hopeful as new law bid to reveal Brady’s evil secrets rumbles on

Alan Bennett says he still thinks the controversial parliamentary Bill which might ultimately reveal where the body of his brother, murdered by monsters Ian Brady and Myra Hindley more than 60 years ago, is buried.

Brady, the madman who harvested and murdered children with his evil girlfriend Hindley, played a heart-breaking game of cat-and-mouse with the families of their victims, taunting and tantalising them from behind bars.

None more so than Alan Bennett, the brother Keith who was spirited away, abused, murdered and buried in a howling make-shift grave on the Moors above Manchester.

Last year Alan met with the Home Secretary, Priti Patel, to discuss the new Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Bill. Part of it is designed to force people and organisations to reveal all relevant information to police.

He and many others have been battling for years to get Liverpool solicitor Robin Makin to open two briefcases entrusted to him by Moors murderer Ian Brady just before he died.

It is possible the briefcases, kept securely in storage, could contain clues to where Brady and his Hindley buried the body of Keith, who was 12 when he was snatched by the pair in Ashton-u-Lyne.

He wrote of social media: “My latest contact with the Policing Powers part of the Home Office brought the encouraging news that the part of the bill regarding the power of access to possible withheld information by people, in the case of murder and location of a body in Keith’s case, has given us every confidence it will be passed despite other parts of the bill failing to get passed in the House Of Lords.

“Of course it is our never ending hope that something may be found that could give us the final piece of information needed to bring Keith home but it will also be a legacy from Keith that others in a situation such as our family will find some answers as well.”

Alan also said recently: “I am really confident that the part of the Bill that is of specific interest to me – and will be to other victims and their families in the future – regarding the case of Keith will not be challenged.”

Relatives have demanded that the cases should be opened and access to the hidden papers given.

The truth about what Brady and Hindley horrify did way back in the Sixties still horrifies the world.

And still today the families of victims are haunted by the secrets the evil pair of child killers have kept and the twisted games played from beyond the grave.

Not least of course is the continuing search for Keith Bennett’s body on the bleak moors above Manchester.

Surely, this must be Brady and Hindley’s most prolonged and agonising legacy?

But we must not forget the agonies of the family of Pauline Reade who was 16 when she disappeared on her way to a disco.

Think of it, she disappeared on July 12, 1963. And only now her family might be finding some kind of peace.

Let’s be honest, the true horror of having parts of your daughter’s body found in a dusty storage room at a university more than half a century after her murder is unimaginable.

Alan Bennett had this to say about Pauline. In so many ways it is a message of positivity.

I have been in contact with Alan for a long time now, and I have no doubt Alan is a good and caring man despite the traumas the evil monsters left behind for him.

Alan wrote: “On this day ( July 1st ) in 1987 the body of Pauline Reade was discovered and brought off Saddleworth Moor, 24 years after Pauline had been murdered and buried on the moor by Brady and Hindley.

“After being returned to her family Pauline’s mum, Joan, told us that ‘It was like a big dark cloud had been lifted off my shoulders.’ Joan found some small peace of mind eventually and the change in her life after Pauline was found was so very good to see.

“I met Pauline’s immediate family and I can honestly say that Pauline’s mum, Joan, who I met and got hugs from on quite a few occasions, was one of the nicest, gentle and sincere people I have ever met.”

The brother of ‘lost boy’ Keith Bennett has posed the question – how can police be denied access to secret documents about a murder case?

Alan Bennett said: “How can any information be seen as anything other than essential to an investigation?”

It is possible the briefcases, kept securely in storage, could contain clues to where Brady and his monstrous lover Myra Hindley buried the body of Keith, who was 12 when he was snatched by the pair in Ashton-u-Lyne,

Backing the move, Alan said: “I am really confident that the part of the Bill that is of specific interest to me – and will be to other victims and their families in the future – regarding the case of Keith will not be challenged.”

Relatives have demanded that the cases should be opened and access to the hidden papers given.

Police say they want access to the Samsonite briefcases which Brady kept locked in the bedroom at high security hospital Ashworth Prison in Maghull.

He spent most of his life locked up.

Solicitor Mr Makin rarely comments on the cases.

But a district judge sitting at Manchester Magistrates’ Court had refused a police appeal to access the cases because Brady and Hindley are dead so there is no chance of a prosecution.

I have an update after contacting the Home Office again today for answers as to what happens next after the Police, Crime, Sentencing And Courts Bill was passed after the second reading yesterday.

Alan said: “The Bill will move on for more detailed scrutiny and MP’s will be able to propose amendments and some may be voted on in later debates.

“It is hoped the Bill will receive Royal Assent by the end of the year.

“I have to admit that the timescale is longer than I expected/hoped for but at least things are in motion and moving in the right direction after years of arguing for justice for victims and families as opposed to the perpetrators and their representatives having more rights than the victims and families.”

Alan said: “Keith’s story will be known to many, but what may not be known is the struggle which our family has gone through to try and seek closure.

“I have fought long and hard on behalf of my brother to bring about the necessary changes and to ensure his case is not forgotten.

“I want to ensure a positive legacy for Keith, so I was pleased to meet with the Home Secretary and to hear about the work being done to support my endeavours.”

Priti Patel said: “I can only imagine the years of pain and turmoil that the Bennett family have faced following Keith’s tragic murder – no family should have to suffer the heartache of not knowing where their loved ones are buried.

“I am determined to give police the powers they need to access all available evidence and hopefully bring some closure to families in cases like these.”

We should never forget these names, names forever linked with true horror:

Pauline Reade

John Kilbride

Keith Bennett

Lesley Ann Downey

Edward Evans

#murdermostfoul #hindleyandbrady #myraian #saddleworthmoor #lostboy #keithbennett #moorsmurders #pritipatel #Pauline Reade #John Kilbride #Keith Bennett #Lesley Ann Downey #Edward Evans #ianbrady #myrahindley #moorsmurders #saddleworth

THE YAWNING CHASM!

THE YAWNING CHASM!

Simpering Starmer said SORRY over Savile more than a decade ago… so is Boris really so bad to mention it?

There is no evidence to suggested that Keir Starmer was involved, as Director of Public Prosecutions between 2008 and 2013, in the baffling decision not to bring charges against the sick paedophile Savile.

Yet, in an angry session in the House of Commons, Boris Johnson screamed across the dispatch box that Starmer spent most of his time as DPP ‘prosecuting journalists and failing to prosecute Jimmy Savile.

Boris was absolutely right in his first claim – a matter of record that Starmer was in charge of the arrests of dozens of journalists as part of Operation Elveden, which investigated payments made by a small numbr number of reporters to police and public officials.

I’m not sure what happened to the police and public officials who made a few quid on the side…

But the suggestion that Starmer, by being head of the CPS, missed an opportunity to prosecute Savile for his crimes had the House in uproar and earned a rebuke from Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle. Boris’s own backbenchers were a bit shocked too.

Former Tory chief whip Julian Smith declared that the ‘false and baseless personal slur . . . cannot be defended’, while others accused the Prime Minister of peddling a lurid far-Right conspiracy theory.

But are they right?

The ‘conspiracy theory’ says that, as head of the CPS, Starmer personally blocked Savile from being charged for child sex offences.

But that is not what Boris said.

Instead, he said that Starmer ‘failed to prosecute’ Savile. And since Starmer ultimately ran the public body that made the decision not to charge Savile, the Prime Minister’s claim seems hard to dispute.

However, Starmer himself was not the CPS’s ‘reviewing lawyer’ or directly involved in Savile’s case.

In 2011, two years after those police interviews, Savile died, aged 84. In 2013, the true scale of his depravity came to light: he had raped at least 34 women and girls and sexually assaulted up to 450, including children as young as eight.

Starmer, then still DPP, set up an inquiry chaired by Alison Levitt QC. This concluded that at least three prosecutions against Savile would have been possible in 2009 if ‘police and the prosecutors’ had taken a different approach. (Levitt also blasted the CPS for deleting all records of the Savile case from its systems in 2010.) The report did not indicate that the DPP himself had been involved but Starmer, deeply contrite, said: ‘I would like to take the opportunity to apologise for the shortcomings in the part played by the CPS in these cases.’

#starmer #boris #savile

Like Nero, is Boris fiddling while the virus is still burning all around us?

Like Nero, is Boris fiddling while the virus is still burning all around us?

One thing you can still say about Boris, is that despite his podginess and pomp he can still come out packing a punch, low blows, below the belt so to speak.

A belt in the bollox for all his gathering enemies.

A growing number of us are seeing him squirming circling and snapping like a bad dog, barking and yelping to get out of trouble as trash cans are hurled down the dark, slimy, sticky alleys of power.

It’s all such a mess down in the political world of London, parties and lies, booze and politics, an impending fixed penalty notice for the prime minister – and a flabby fatty future for all the little piggy politicians who still want to go market but refuse to decide who will poke them in the Ayes and No’s and squeeze their trembling voting ham-fisted hands.

It’s all diseased and dodgy and scary and insecure – the world has given us what was once a man of power, a leader called Blondie, a man who shot lies from the hip and told us all to stay home, got rid of Cummings because he took a drive ‘to check his eyesight’.

And then Blondie went on the piss with the lads and lasses!

Now his is the fiddler on the roof of the British parliament, the Nero of ne’er do well, broken strings and sour notes all over the show.

Some people stand up and be counted though, former minister Tobias Ellwood is to send a letter to 1922 committee chair Sir Graham Brady.

That’s a real threat to Boris, but they need 54 Ministerial letters for a full vote. The pledge came at the same time as he was apparently seen arriving at the ‘Winner Takes It All’ Abba party in his Downing Street flat to celebrate the fall of vindictive Dominic.

And now, out of the blue, Brits are told to get on with life, time to look after yourselves everybody!

It’s like we beat Covid overnight! How did we do that?

Anyway, now I’m free to roam – a bit – I don’t have to wear a mask, well not everywhere anyway – I can go to the pub! I can go on a bus! I can go back to my office!

I am a free man! Thank you Boris.

But Boris, you big podgy Blondie bad-ass … are we really safe? Or are you sending us into a spin again?

One so that you personally can get on with barking and squirming and snarling and attacking. And surviving.

Most of us trusted you once Boris, but the question has to be can we trust you now?

Let’s take a quick trip around the world eh and look at some facts!

Beijing has reported the highest number of Covid-19 cases in 18 months, days ahead of the start of the Winter Olympics in the Chinese capital.

After 20 more cases were reported in the capital, officials announced that some local areas had been locked down with residents being tested.

Separately, organisers of the Olympics reported 34 new infections within the event’s “closed-loop” bubble.

Officials said it included 13 athletes.

A sub-variant of Omicron, known as BA.2, has been detected in 57 countries, the World Health Organization says.

The first versions of Omicron – BA.1 and BA.1.1 – still account for over 96% of all cases of Omicron that have been sequenced, the WHO says in its weekly epidemiological update.

But there has been an increase in cases involving the BA.2 subvariant, which has several different mutations from the original including in the spike protein.

In some countries, the subvariant now accounts for over half of all Omicron sequences gathered, the WHO says.

The number of daily coronavirus infections in the Czech Republic has reached a new high.

Czech authorities registered almost 60,000 infections on Tuesday, with almost 10,000 suspected to be reinfections.

Coronavirus cases have reached a new all-time high in Germany too, with 208,498 more reported within 24 hours.

This has taken it over the 10-million mark for total infections.

The seven-day incidence rate also hit an all-time high of 1,227.5 cases per 100,000 residents.

The death toll rose by 196 on Wednesday, bringing the total to 118,170, the Robert Koch Institute reports.

Meanwhile, France has become the latest European country to start relaxing Covid restrictions amid signs that the Omicron wave has peaked.

The number of Omicron infections in France is still very high – around a third of a million a day – but because the strain is proving less harmful than previous variants, the pressure on hospitals has been contained.

From today, on the street in big towns and cities you no longer have to wear a mask.

Another focus has to be the fact it has just been revealed that the government has wrote off £8.7bn it spent on protective equipment during the pandemic.

Items costing £673m were unusable, while £750m of equipment was not used before its expiry date.

Shoppers have been hit by the highest price rises in nearly 10 years after shop inflation almost doubled over the past month.

Shop price inflation jumped from 0.8% in December to 1.5% in January, the BRC-NielsenIQ price index indicated.

The pandemic, as well as Brexit, have made staff shortages a particular problem in the UK, prompting some employers to raise wages, which can contribute to inflation.

SHAME YOURSELF AND TELL US THE TRUTH BORIS!

#boris #parties #tories #starmer #cummings #no10 #parliament

Bless them all, the long and the short and the tall …a game of moans

Bless them all, the long and the short and the tall …a game of moans

Ectomorphs of the world unite – we need leg room more than anyone else!

Quite rightly in this world, we cannot discriminate against people on the basis of race, creed, religion, disability, sex, age etc etc… but do you know who we can discriminate against with impunity?

Tall people that’s who!

And do you know why? Because being tall isn’t a disability or indeed a religion – it’s just a fact of life.

I started thinking about this when ‘dwarf’ actors reacted furiously to Disney cancelling the seven dwarves from its Snow White remake after Game of Thrones star Peter Dinklage called the characters offensive.

Speaking about Disney’s decision to ‘rethink’ the characters, actors and agents said there are plenty who would have taken on the parts that Dinklage – a Golden Globe winner paid $1.2million per episode of Game of Thrones – said were ‘backwards’.   

They said Dinklage is not the authority on what short people find offensive and that by cancelling the roles, Disney has done far more damage than good. 

Well, that’s the short version of a very human, but Woke, story.

So, what about the long version?

Well, this is what keeps happening to me because I’m six feet five inches and 17 stone …

We went to book a trip to New York and decided the best deal was with Thomas Cook Signature – good flights and a hotel on the edge of Central Park, or so it appeared on the surface. Sounds good we thought and said we’d book it but first could the travel agent – yep, we still use one because of problems like this! – find out about extra leg room for me?
No problem … the agent phones TCS and asks them, the reply comes: “They say they can’t give details of extra leg room until you’ve completed the booking.”
That struck me as being a bit like buying a car and being told you can’t hear it running until you’ve paid for it.
So, we pushed it, saying that if they wanted us to book then they would have to tell us about the availability of extra leg room. They went away sulking a bit before ultimately coming back and saying that there were exit isle seats available, yes. However, they couldn’t say how much it would cost as the cost of EACH LEG-ROOM SEAT varied.
So, we pushed it again!

It turned out that they actually wanted just about £400 return – FOUR HUNDRED POUNDS! – for two exit seats where we would have to vouch for our health so that in the event of a crash we would be able to open the emergency exit on behalf of the airline. £400 is the equivalent to another return flight to New York!

Yeh, right Thomas Cook – We didn’t book obviously, but whatever happened to care, comfort, concern and consideration?
All you ectomorphs let’s unite to get the room we need – they don’t have to jump on the plane and build extra legroom for you – it’s just there!
Do you know that flight companies regularly help out obese people who can’t fit into the plane seats comfortably – that’s because, according to the aviation bosses, obesity is seen as a disability … well, I tell you what! When you are an ectomorph who’s just been forced to spend hours with your knees around your ears in a 30 inch cell the back problems you can face are very debilitating indeed!

#Tall #short #longtheshortandthetall #ectomorphs #dwarf #littlepeople #showwhite

Thank you Barry for all that Cryer-therapy over the telly-laughter years

Thank you Barry for all that Cryer-therapy over the telly-laughter years

Barry Cryer, the legend of British comedy, has died aged 86.

His family said he “died peacefully, in good spirits”.

Tributes on social media flooded in. Stephen Fry wrote: “Such sad news, one of the absolute greats of British comedy, Barry Cryer, is no more. A glorious, gorgeous, hilarious and gifted writer and performer who straddled all the comic traditions. Universally beloved … farewell, Baz.”

Barry worked with other stars of British entertainment including Spike Milligan, Tommy Cooper, Les Dawson, the Two Ronnies and Morecambe and Wise.

Born in Yorkshire in 1935, his career started as the bottom billing act at the Windmill theatre in London’s West End.

#barrycryer #comedian #tommycooper #morcambeandwise #bbc #davidfrost

The Omi-Con, Boris the bounder and a world reset while we were kept in the dark

The Omi-Con, Boris the bounder and a world reset while we were kept in the dark

Our discredited nation… Boris is investigated by Ms Dick’s tecs, terror virus gives us a cough … so, is there nobody left in the world we can trust?

Today we got a modicum of our freedoms back. Not many and certainly no enhancements to those we already had way back in 2020.

Today we have a right to show our faces in public again…

Today we can go to watch football without a passport..

Today we can go on holiday, if anybody wants us in their country.

And yet, the giant machine of control remains Boris is refusing to quit over the Partygate storm. And his simpering nemisis Sir Keir Starmer is coming across more and more as a lightweight — and less and less as a leader.

And Omicron … well, it gives you a cough and makes you feel sh*t. So do Benson and Hedges but nobody shut the world down over fags, no matter how many people sucked themselves to death.

Oh, and the flu-death figures are coming out again … we at The Society spent more than a year digging for them. But it was an almost impossible task.

However, these figures are real …

TOBACCO RELATED DEATHS WORLDWIDE EVERY YEAR … 8 million

THIS YEAR ALREADY, THERE HAVE BEEN 35,000 FLU DEATHSACCCORDING TO Worldometer – real time world statistics (worldometers.info)

Do the sums … IN TWO YEARS COVID IS SAID TO HAVE KILLED MORE THAN 5 MILLION, AND THESE FIGURES HAVE ALWAYS BEEN SUSPECT

So, what freedoms have been afforded us TODAY?

Freedom from lies, tyranny, fear-mongering, control of the news media, vast increases in the cost of living … ARE WE FREE OF THEM NOW?

It does leave the nagging question though, are these figures the truth behind why our politicians went partying while we thought we might die?

Are we now living in Dystopia?

The new freedoms:

FACE MASKS

People had to cover up on public transport and in shops, post offices, banks, beauty salons, hairdressers, theatres and cinemas.

Brits are once again allowed to pop into any of these places without a face mask.

However Brits are still advised to continue wearing them in busy areas or on public transport.

VACCINE PASSPORTS

Brits will no longer have to show proof of vaccination or a negative test to enter large venues like football grounds and nightclubs.

All domestic use of vaccine passports was dropped.

TRAVEL

All Covid tests for vaccinated holidaymakers scrapped.

Grant Shapps said that arrivals will only need to fill in a Passenger Locator Form when entering the UK, as long as they have had both jabs.

CARE HOMES

Sajid Javid said that limits on the number of visitors allowed in care homes will be scrapped from Monday, January 31.

Meanwhile, self-isolation periods will be cut from 15 days to 10 days for those who test positive – with further reductions if they test negative on days five and six.

Isolation periods for those in care following an emergency hospital visit are also being reduced from 14 to 10 days.

In addition, workers will be asked to start using lateral flow tests before their shifts instead of weekly PCR tests from February 16.

ISOLATION

Isolation rules are set to expire on March 24 – or sooner – meaning people who test positive for Covid are not legally obliged to isolate.

Currently everyone who tests positive for the virus must quarantine at home for at least five full days – and this is NOT changing.

RETURN TO THE OFFICE

We were told to flock back to offices on Friday January 21 in a major boost to the economy. Cabinet ministers had been pushing the PM hard to ditch the home working rules.

They say life is getting back to normal. Do you believe it?

You searched for covid – The Leigh G Banks Preservation Society

#starmer #boris #dick #cressida #lies #freedom #covid #flu #smoking #deaths

The way things were a few Covid weeks ago …now the shape of things to come as Bob hits the road again…

The way things were a few Covid weeks ago …now the shape of things to come as Bob hits the road again…

At end of last year Dylan came across as the ol’ blues man with the voice of a cracked god … he rocked, dipped, quipped and rolled on down the road.

And now he is back again … let’s read some of the fan reviews from last year as Dylan’s world has gone right!

Seven more Ordinary Joe reviews as Dylan gets better and better – dozens of thoughts about his Rough and Rowdy tour lower down

LINK TO TOUR DATES: Make a date as Bob stands on the highway again for 2022! – The Leigh G Banks Preservation Society

Ron Radosh writes:

Bob was in great shape yesterday. What struck me were two things---this
was definitely a complete rock and roll show; no slow ballads or folk
style singing on any of the songs. I haven't heard him give such a strong
performance in a very long time. Not only could you hear every word he
sang---due to the great acoustics of The Anthem. His voice was powerful
and he gave himself completely to each song he performed. The highlight
for me was his rendition of "Gotta Serve Somebody." He sang it with
passion and he emphasized the refrain each time he got to it.  It was the
most powerful rendition I've ever heard him do. I can't single out the
others that stood out to me, because they were all so good.

In addition to his quip about Foggy Bottom (A D.C. neighborhood where the
State Dept. is)and the hotel in Pentagon City- where I think he said they
were being put up at- he told the crowd that he used to come to D.C. to
see The Country Gentleman, after which he named all the musicians in the
famed bluegrass group that formed in 1957 and existed  through the early
60s. There was a very small scattering of applause for the group; very
very small. (including me) Bob then said "You don't know the Country
Gentleman?" seeming quite surprised. I guess the crowd, especially younger
folks-I'm three and a half years older than Bob, and knew him well in
Madison, Wisconsin-aren't into or aware of the D.C. bluegrass scene, which
once was the center of bluegrass. (it wasn't Nashville or W.Virginia or
Virginia) Now NYC has become the main place for bluegrass musicians.

 

A.M.L. writes:

The Anthem is a stunner of a venue, an awakening in and of itself in the
wharf area of DC, walking distance from the home of the 2019 World Series
champs. I 

Our hero was in rare form tonight. Calling out The
Mayflower Hotel, where Hoover had his meals EVERY day, back in the good
ole days. There was also a shout out to Pentagon City and Foggy Bottom,
the latter of which I believe was a reference to the abundance of smoke
coming from the incense / stage grills, as the band members all had a good
laugh at the reference. 

False Prophet was one of the best performances I’ve ever seen our hero
deliver.  Key West and Jimmy Reed, generally my benchmarks for
judging shows on this tour, were both better than Philly. Whatever
tinkering they were doing with Key West in Philly seems to have been
sorted out for the final night. And is Donnie’s accordion really a
Mexican flag design? 

Professor Finstick writes:

I want to read the lyrics to the songs again!
His growling delivery of the lyrics, sometimes moving, sometimes harsh and
sometimes funny - almost at the same time.
Key West, Black Rider and I Pledge Myself stood out to me as the most
memorable. So strong.

The rhythms may make some people want to dance but they should 
stand up at the back and not block my view of the stage… they are not 
at home in their living rooms! And as for people who cannot leave their 
cell phones alone they should ‘fuck this shit’ - to quote my therapist’s
socks!

He was so accessible and connected to the audience coming out from behind
the piano. I enjoyed this show, definitely better than I expected. He’s amazing, I
can’t believe he’s 80! 80 must be the new 50?
 

John Frisch writes:

A gorgeous warm evening in the nation’s capital greeted a sold out crowd
as they filed into a fantastic venue. The Anthem is a special place with
superb acoustics. All the better to show off a completely committed Dylan
who was in fine voice. Bob is justifiably proud of his new material, and
fully? inhabited each of his new songs. Standouts were a gorgeous I
Contain Multitudes, a hard rocking False Prophet and a totally
transcendent Key West (my favorite song of the night). Serve Somebody
positively exploded, and you could hear a pin drop during Every Grain of
Sand. Bob left the piano often to stand, crouch, and gesticulate as he
offered his heart and soul to the crowd. We were in the presence of a
master totally on top of his game. I left incredulous, thinking we have no
right to expect this kind of performance or an album as powerful as Rough
and Rowdy Ways at this stage of his remarkable life and career. Wow. 

 
 Mitchell writes: 

About two weeks ago, I wrote a review of the show in Moon Township, PA
(November 15, 2021). I was enthusiastic about the set list,  Bob’s voice
and his mental sharpness. But I was very, very upset and sad about his
physical pain and decline.  

What a difference two weeks makes- his voice and articulation are even
better and the band has clearly coalesced. But my main concern about his
physical health was no longer in evidence. Bob sang from center stage much
more, squatted, danced and hardly sat down, and was clearly having a great
time playing his music.  I can only wish that everyone would have as much
stamina, clarity of mind and enthusiasm at 80 years of age as Bob showed
tonight.
 
 John Frish write:

Superb acoustics. All the better to show off a completely committed 
Dylan who was in fine voice. Bob is justifiably proud of his new material, 
and fully? inhabited each of his new songs. Standouts were a gorgeous 
I Contain Multitudes, a hard rocking False Prophet and a totally
transcendent Key West (my favorite song of the night). Serve Somebody
positively exploded, and you could hear a pin drop during Every Grain of
Sand. Bob left the piano often to stand, crouch, and gesticulate as he
offered his heart and soul to the crowd. We were in the presence of a
master totally on top of his game. I left incredulous, thinking we have no
right to expect this kind of performance or an album as powerful as Rough
and Rowdy Ways at this stage of his remarkable life and career. Wow. "
Agree. Bob was the most dynamic of all his shows on that Tour . Even 
"Mother of muses" sounds good. Makes me feel regret the Tour is over :)

I say bye again to Jason, say we'll meet again on the next tour. He says 
yes but doesn't know where the next tour will be.
I walk back to my Hostel.
This is it for the Bob Dylan adventure.
See you all on the road somewhere, someday !

Nancy Cobb writes:

Our last opportunity to see Bob Dylan in concert got off to an odd
beginning.  We were in an Uber and all of a sudden in the middle of
Pennsylvania Avenue the car stopped and died.  No warning at all.  It was
rush hour and everyone was honking.  The poor driver couldn't  do
anything.  When the drivers behind us calmed down we got out, alerted some
nearby police and got another Uber.  We got to the wharf area early and
saw that people were already inspecting proof of covid vaccination and
government issued id's and attaching red armbands to those who were ok'd
to enter the Anthem.  We were there for a meetup with fans and showed our
vax cards again to enter the restaurant for a tasty dinner.  I was with a
new friend whom I had met in New York and to my amazement the seats we had
were in the first row!  After a fun get-together with about 20 veteran
fans and several new young ones we entered the airy and comfortable
relatively new venue.  It felt safe even though it was sold out  The
concert started right on time and the band members were spaced in a
straight row about 6 feet apart with Charley on the left with his
blue-green drums and Donnie on the right with his various instruments.  A
democratic setup with Bob migrating from his piano to an open mike moving
purposely with assurance during the set.  The sound was great - one could
hear each instrument and Bob's strong vocals.  I had been to the first
show at the Beacon and loved the setlist but found the way the songs were
performed at the Anthem even better.  I was ready to hear something else
besides Masterpiece and I know others wanted ERK rotated out, but Bob must
have subliminally known this because the arrangements of both these songs
were substantially changed for the better.  He was not tentative at all
and absolutely nailed Key West and the other Rough and Rowdy Ways songs. 
It was like he now had full confidence in his new band.  Melancholy Mood
was magical and I danced in my seat.  The piano did not stand out as much
in the mix and some of the earlier piano riffs were now being played by
the guitars especially on Every Grain of Sand.  Bob seemed quite happy
either because of his loving audience or maybe he was like a horse coming
back to the stable after doing a fantastic job and being proud to have
taken the risk of venturing into a dangerous world and achieving more than
he or anyone else could have hoped or expected.

Bob through the looking glass … the age-old master forever young in wander land

A while ago we met up with friends from Spain in Bratislava … we’d been doing it for a while, meeting up in different cities in different parts of the world to see old rockers perform.

This time we were about to witness Alice Cooper’s bizarre theatre of rock and the macabre.

After all the prempatory pomp and circumstance of a rock show that had become so polished it should have been on the skids Alice rattled old bones on to stage … his hair was lank, his make-up looked sweaty, his knees were creaky and his voice was pretty weak.

But worst of all he was using a walking stick.

There’s a reason for telling you this about Alice in a compendium dedicated to Bob |Dylan. And this is it…

Just at the right moment when his old man act was beginning to wear and his big scary dolls were fed-up of bouncing off the scenery, Alice transformed … he became a young man. He posed, he threatened, he screamed, his trashed his air guitar and strutted like the madman he has always been.

And surely, this is exactly what Dylan’s been doing! It is a simple fact that he is finally the Ol’ Blues Man, who’s been singing the blues since time began ,,, but is he geriatric, like so many have been saying?

No! Of course he’s not!

He is made of smoke and mirrors and since the rough and rowdy tour began he might have appeared to be badly built and walk on stilts … but look hard in to his shadowy kingdom.

Like Alice, Bob is doing it through a looking glass, a whole mirror of art, invention, thought, brilliance and power.

Bob is still on his feet, bending the knee, glowering, using his joker smile and tripping lightly over the snake-pit tangle of stage wires, he just kept it all hidden for a while..

Yep, sure there is the Ol’ Blues Man, the elderly man, the grandad of music, but there is also the young man who never went away. The performer and the artist.

Look at the Mephistophelian grin, the lighting from the bowels of the stage, the tall red curtain and the men in black with lyrics like “Twelve years old, they put me in a suitForced me to marry a prostitute

Just like Alice the fire is still there in his heart and his eyes. And his soul is dancing in the stars…

Four new reviews below, this time from Philadelphia

Alexander Leik writes:

There are no changes to the set list. This is the direction in which our
hero has been headed for some time now. A show, performance, theatre of
sorts. It’s no longer about “what song is next, can I surprise the
stalwarts?” But it has become “I’m playing to the multitudes that I
contain, F the stalwarts!” And it is brilliantly done. The 8 new songs
(out of 10 possible) that are the foundation of this show are delivered to
near perfection nightly. When is the last time our hero played 80% of a
new album for us on tour?! 

The show will continue, I hope our international friends are able to
indulge in early 2022. I’ll sign off after The Anthem in DC. Very
curious to hear what our hero has to say about “the swamp”  . And
the cheesesteaks … well you don’t have to eat for the rest of the
year, no doubt! Yummy indeed!”

Laurette Maillet again!

Bob is right on time. Dressed the same as last night but with the red shirt.
The few first words of "watching the river flow" are lost in the air. But the 
sound will improve for the best.  

The ambiance is festive. The public reacts to the songs. 

Some fans are dancing on " You've gotta serve somebody " and the entire 
right section of the floor is dancing on " Good bye Jimmy Reed ".
I have the feeling Bob is looking in that direction and he is impressed.

Joking about the Philadelphia cheese-steak (Something like 'if you eat one , 
you don't have to eat for the rest of the year!') before introducing the Band.

Great show. Close to the second one at the Beacon.”
 
David Mendick writes: 

“Dylan says “yummy” for the first time on stage ! Nobody was enjoying
this show more than Dylan himself. From beginning to the very end he was
in as good a mood as I’ve ever seen. It’s strange cos I felt this was
going to be a disappointing audience - it was a little slow to fill and
seemed somewhat quiet until the lights went down. And then - oh boy - the
place was brilliant all night long and Dylan fed off the superb
atmosphere. For instance Serve Somebody has been ok for most of the tour
but tonight was a highlight. As for Dylan stuck behind the piano and all
the talk of he can’t walk and can barely move - well he’s heard the
talk. I Contain Multitudes he’s center stage with his arms outstretched
telling all the world “here I am” And he kept coming back for more. I
wouldn’t dare say “like Rocky” - there, I just did.

Barry Gloffke writes:

It was a crowd pleaser. Bob looked good, sounded good, seemed happy and the
audience responded in kind. We cheered, yelled, danced and sometimes stood
awestruck at the sheer sincerity in Bob’s singing/playing. The Band was
muscular and tight tonight when necessary, light and airy when needed.

Thanks Bob for a string of excellent shows and a lifetime of memories and
lessons. Hope to see all you Bobcats on the next tour!”

Stephen Goldberg writes:

Last night was our third for this tour after Hershey and one night st the
Beacon. Surprisingly, many unsold seats in the Loge. I guess Philly
isn’t his town. I mean the side sections except for the first few rows
were completely empty. Dylan stood at the mic center stage for the entire
I Contain Multitudes. I have to admit I prefer it when he doesn’t play
piano. To me his piano playing muddies the mix ( not counting the
clunkers). False Prophet as usual was a standout as was My Own Version If
You. The crowd really responded to Serve Somebody. Bob flubbed part of Key
West and you could see him turning the pages on his piano. Key West seems
to be getting faster and harder each time he plays it.”

A tough crowd in New York… but Bob is still standing. They won’t get him beat

You can step on my name, you can try and get me beat, when I leave New York, I’ll be standing on my feetBob Dylan

It’s always been seen as a fair game to boo, lampoon, insult, attack, complain about and scoff at Bob Dylan.

This attitude has made me furious over the years … of course he can sing, he is probably one of the most inventive singers since the beginning of popular music and has influenced the whole inflection and style of rock music.

Bob is a writer of stunning prose too of course, but he is first and foremost a musical poet, a bard, a troubadour, an unfinished work of art.

We’ve been sharing rave reviews here at The Society since the beginning of November when Dylan finally got the chance to take his strolling bones back on the road again after Covid, the tragic hint of a sex scandal and the release of the stunning beautiful Rough and Rowdy Ways.

And the reviews, mainly, have been written by the man-and-woman on the street who’ve got other things to do with their lives but took the trouble to jot down notes and thoughts and their enthusiasms for Bob and his band landed in places like Milwaukee, Bloomington, Hershey and Moon Township.

And then he arrived in New York and he got ignored and insulted.

No New York Times review (if I’ve missed this please send me a link, I’d love to be wrong) and a handful of bad reviews from the Mr Jones’s on the street. We share them here:

Dave & Molly from Montreal, Quebec

EXPECTED SO MUCH, RECEIVED SO LITTLE

Dylan has always been one of my favorites. This was the 3rd time seeing him in Montreal, I was ready for another treat. Had fabulous $$$ seats 100 feet from Bob. The lights came up and there was Bob dressed in white, standing in front of the black, grand piano banging out his first tune in a surprisingly low pitch, gravely voice. His guitar lay across a chair a few feet away with his white brimmed hat atop, We would never hear that guitar or see him with hat on. Instead he alternated playing old and new songs either sitting or standing at the piano then grabbing a mic stand at the back wall of the stage as far from his audience as possible as he crooned old American standards. I came to see Dylan play guitar and sing like he meant it. Not a single word was uttered to his fans, not a smile, not a nod. Between songs he shuffled to a table to get a drink, hanging on to equipment as he walked. He looked old and disinterested. What an utter disappointment for me and my girlfriend.

P. A. C. from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

SELFISH, DISENGAGED & UNDECIPHERABLE DYLAN AT THE MET PHILA.

When the best part of your concert event is the newly renovated Met and the outstanding food at Osteria, you know it’s going to be a bad night. A 60th birthday present from my daughter who is a singer and astute listener of all music. She knows how much I love Dylan’s music and wanted to take me to see him for the first time. It was an utter embarrassment. Dylan voice itself was as good and raw it’s always been but we couldn’t understand a word as he mumbled and garbled every word. His arrangement changes on some songs such as Like a Rolling Stone, were shockingly discordant to the essence of the song. And for 1 hour and 30 minutes, as we sat hoping things would get better, he didn’t muster one single word of welcome, thanks, or appreciation to his audience of 3,500. As we walked out on Bob 30 minutes early, he had me feeling badly for my daughter who certainly lost some respect for one of the musical heroes I spent years extolling. Bob my friend, it’s time to retire.

Sarah from Columbus, Ohio

GROSSLY INACCURATE VISIONS OF BOB DYLAN

If you attended Bob Dylan’s concert last night at the Palace Theatre expecting to see a lounge act and almost unrecognizable versions of Desolation Row and Tangled Up in Blue then you got what you paid for. If, like me, you were hoping to see Bob with his harmonica and guitar playing Just Like a Woman, Don’t think Twice it’s Alright, Like a Rolling Stone, Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door…ANY of his songs – in their original arrangements – that define him as one of the best poets/storytellers/lyricists to ever live, then you were left absolutely heartbroken like me. Before going to the show, I had heard that for years Dylan hasn’t been great live, that he doesn’t acknowledge or interact with the audience, that he doesn’t play many of his classics, so I guess I’m the fool for not listening to those comments and thinking my experience would be different. As I sit here today listening to live Dylan albums from ’67, I can’t help but cry for the artist I never got to see live.

And yet Allison Rapp, a professional writer, had this to say: Dylan, perhaps more so than any singer-songwriter of his generation, has continuously asked his listeners to, in essence, think again. Newly arranged versions of old songs were peppered throughout the evening, including completely reimagined versions of Tempest‘s “Early Roman Kings,” Slow Train Coming‘s “Gotta Serve Somebody,” “To Be Alone With You” a track from 1969’s Nashville Skyline which Dylan has not performed live since 2005 and the also recently reintroduced “Every Grain of Sand” from Shot of Love. A Frank Sinatra cover, “Melancholy Mood,” which Dylan performed on his 2016 album, Fallen Angels, also appeared.

Dylan did not come back for an encore, perhaps choosing to save his energy for the next two nights of shows at the Beacon, plus the string of East Coast dates he has planned for the rest of this month and the beginning of next. But at 80, the legendary musician seems energized by simply being back on a stage, surrounded by a supportive band, performing new compositions that most Dylan fans have spent months listening to in the confines of quarantine and now get to hear in their full live glory.

As his Rough and Rowdy Ways Tour moves on, ticket holders can expect a wonderfully rested and still remarkably enigmatic Dylan to greet them, even if it is with only a few words in between songs. As he sang in 1961, “You can step on my name, you can try and get me beat, when I leave New York, I’ll be standing on my feet.”

Meanwhile, here are four professional reviews by newspapers along the way. Let’s see what they are having to say compared to the fans who have become writers and critics for their love of Bob.

Reviews rocketas Ol’ Bob lands on Moon Township…but is age beginning to tell?

The first review to mention Dylan and the rigours of age…

Mitchell writes:

I feel that the reworking of the set list was more than just publicity
for the new album. All of the song selections were clearly pointing to
the past (high points and regrets) and looking to the future-a future
not in this world. It is contemplative and other worldly.  And like it
or not, I do feel he is trying to bring a message with the two gospel
songs he brought back. 
 As to individual songs, “Mother
of Muses” is even more hymn-like than on the album. Clearly a prayer
and an offer of thanks. Sent chills up my spine. 
The thing that made me sad about the show was the clear physical pain Bob is in. He is clearly still very sharp mentally, he was great with the lyrics, his voice was
fantastic and he looked to be enjoying himself.  But, in contrast to
his standing center stage pre COVID, he just couldn’t do it now. He
had to hold onto the piano and even then, retreated behind the piano
mid most songs. He sat down behind the piano a lot. He doesn’t stand
straight. He got help going down the steps from the back of the stage.
Clearly his back/hips are hurting.  I think we have to face it- as much
as he has, does and always will mean to us, his body is that of an 80
year old man.

I don’t know why he continues to do show after show when it is so
difficult physically. Maybe it is part of a “deal” he made many years ago as he once said.  

Daniel Chester writes:

Watching: a rollicking tribute to Pittsburgh and its rivers

Most Likely: good energy and crisp and friendly and faithful and pretty
well-delivered

Multitudes: great feel/sound for a great song and sung well...how amazing
is it that this same guy wrote Song to Woody 60 years ago and is still on
the road heading for another joint

False Prophet: dull approaching OK (bluezzzzzzz)

Masterpiece: wonderful (violin and piano and  acoustic guitar interwoven),
lucky to hear this again

Black Rider: nice atmosphere but nothing special...would rather hear
something off of New Morning or Infidels

I'll Be Your Baby: completely different version, had a nice little drive
to it (as opposed to the leisure pace of original)

My Own Version: another cool atmosphere and some very cool lines sung
well...maybe a performance where a tight little guitar solo would have
elevated it

To Be Alone: the acoustic guitar and violin and standup bass make a potent
combination...fun choice

Early Roman: pretty much a slog lacking necessary stomp...not a huge fan
of this tune but not sure any tune could have survived this treatment

Key West: piano picked some nice notes and accordian worked and some swell
lyrics ('if you lost your mind you'll find it there')

Serve Somebody: almost a different tune yet it grabbed the attention,
particularly with the new lyrics, and made its own way and was quite
enjoyable

I've Made Up My Mind: well-conceived and delivered and completely fit the
evening with certain lines grabbing the attention again

Melancholy: short and sweet (and sad) and totally fit this show

Mother of Muses: tender and well-wrought and sung well...piano and guitar
on the breaks were nice together...didn't really know this one yet really,
really good...'I've already outlived my life by far'...could have closed
with this one

Jimmy Reed: not bad...way better choices for this valuable slot

Every Grain: one of his all-timers and perfect choice to send people home
with...blessed to hear again

 

Laurette Maillet is back:

 
 The venue is a stadium, maybe 5000 seats. I've been here few years ago. I
don't like stadium anymore. I prefer the cosy atmosphere of the theater.

I believe Bob will start late as it takes time for the audience to fill up
the venue. But...

He is right on time.

Dressed in black.

“Watching the river flow” is a bit confused at the start. The
Musiciens are not in tune!

Bob, as usual, is moving from the center mike to the piano, most often at
the piano, except for “I contain multitudes” where he is bending on
his knees... 

“When I paint my masterpiece” is a wonder! I feel like dancing 

Bob seems to be happy to be here. I am too far to see if he is smiling but
I can believe he did.

Again 'Mother of muses' is not my cup of tea but I close my eyes and focus
on Bob's voice and it does the trick. I feel transported in another
universe with Bob Dylan 'chantin' to me.

Great show.

 
 

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.

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 thatTimes 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


Luke M. Jacobus writes on Bill Pagel’s Bob Links:

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” andSoon 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 #

Make a date as Bob stands on the highway again for 2022!

Make a date as Bob stands on the highway again for 2022!

Ol’ Bob’s is getting back on the road this spring.

The tour kicks off on March 3 in Phoenix, Arizona, and parks up again on April 14 in Oklahoma City.

Apparently the tour ‘map’ has been focussed on fans, towns and cities the stop-starting Never Ending Tour missed late last year.

And he is heading South to Texas, Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina.

Yep, the river boat captain knows the names of the places to go.

The big question is though – what shape will his show take?

Last year it was all about  Rough and Rowdy Ways  backed up with material from his back pages, like I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight, To Be Alone With You, Watching The River Flow and “Every Grain of Sand.”

And he was singing magnificently.

Bob also introduced drummer Charlie Drayton and guitarist Doug Lancio in to the band. But of course good ol’ Tony Garnier was still around., So was guitarist Bob Britt, and multi-instrumentalist Donnie Herron.

But you never know, things could have changed!

After all the travelling troubadour had headed in to the Eighties with The Bootleg Series Vol. 16: Springtime in New York 1980–1985 with out-takes from hot of LoveInfidels, and Empire Burlesque. 

And it is a quarter of a century ago since he is made his so-called comeback with the uncompromising  Time Out of Mind.

Tour Dates

March 3 – Phoenix, Arizona Arizona Federal Theatre
March 4 – Tucson, Arizona Tucson Music Hall
March 6 – Albuquerque, New Mexico Kiva Auditorium
March 8 – Lubbock, Texas Buddy Holly Hall of Performing Arts & Sciences
March 10 – Irving, Texas Toyota Music Factory
March 11 – Sugar Land, Texas Smart Financial Centre
March 13 – San Antonio, Texas Majestic Theatre
March 14 – San Antonio, Texas Majestic Theatre
March 16 – Austin, Texas Bass Hall
March 18 – Shreveport, Louisiana Municipal Auditorium
March 19 – New Orleans, Louisiana Saenger Theatre
March 21 – Montgomery, Alabama Montgomery PAC
March 23 – Nashville, Tennessee Ryman Auditorium
March 24 – Atlanta, Georgia Fox Theatre
March 26 – Savannah, Georgia Johnny Mercer Theatre
March 27 – North Charleston, South Carolina North Charleston PAC
March 29 – Columbia, South Carolina Township Auditorium
March 30 – Charlotte, North Carolina Ovens Auditorium
April 1 – Greensboro, North Carolina Steven Tanger Center
April 2 – Asheville, North Carolina Thomas Wolfe Auditorium
April 4 – Chattanooga, Tennessee Tivoli Theatre
April 5 – Birmingham, Alabama BJCC Concert Hall
April 7 – Mobile, Alabama Saenger Theatre
April 9 – Memphis, Tennessee Orpheum Theatre
April 11 – Little Rock, Arkansas Robinson Center
April 13 – Tulsa, Oklahoma Brady Theatre
April 14 – Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Thelma Gaylord Performing Arts Theatre

LINKS:

Bob is bringing it all back home to SONY – for £200m – The Leigh G Banks Preservation Society

A compendium of reality and fantasy as Dylan continues his never-ending tour through our lives – The Leigh G Banks Preservation Society

The answer my friend is ‘blowing in the cringe’ as Levy camp crashes on the facts – Dylan responds – The Leigh G Banks Preservation Society

#bobdylan #newtour #neverendingtour #newdates #bobcovid

Bob is bringing it all back home to SONY – for £200m

Bob is bringing it all back home to SONY – for £200m

Bob once wrote ‘money doesn’t talk it swears’ – but right now he’s laughing all

the way to the bank!

And good on him!

More than half a century of writing and performing some of the best and most blistering songs the world has ever heard or seen, he deserves every penny.

Your dotage – and that can fall at any age – is when, after a lifetime of working hard for your living you reap the rewards. And Bob has dedicated his life to bringing joy and thought-extending poetry, music, laughter, surreal entertainment and spectacular celebrity to the world.

This isn’t to say that Bob hasn’t reaped the whirlwind too since his music began paying him back for its life – sadly the Levy estate decided to try and cash in and so did a ‘flying saucer’ navigating child of the Sixties who claims Bob molested her.

There but for fortune eh!

Bob has broken all records by selling his entire back catalog of recorded music along with ‘the rights to multiple future new releases’ to Sony.

In late 2020 Bob, aged 80, sold his songwriting rights – separate from recording rights, which govern reproduction and distribution – to Universal, in a deal estimated to be worth more than $300 million.

Bob said: ‘Columbia Records and Rob Stringer have been nothing but good to me for many, many years and a whole lot of records. I’m glad that all my recordings can stay where they belong.’

The deal with Sony is separate from his blockbuster publishing sale to Universal.

The holders of recording rights can dictate future reissues, while publishing rights owners receive a cut in a number of scenarios, including radio play and streaming, album sales, and use in advertising and movies.

Dylan’s publishing deal with Universal was one of the higher profile sales that preceded a flurry of music catalog transactions over the past year or so, as financial markets are increasingly drawn to music portfolios as an asset class.

#dylan #sony #songrights #backcatalogue #universal

A compendium of reality and fantasy as Dylan continues his never-ending tour through our lives

A compendium of reality and fantasy as Dylan continues his never-ending tour through our lives

Looking back at Bob’s Covid tour …. It all really began on Sunday, November 2, 2021 in Milwaukee, and it was nothing like we’d expected.

Bob Dylan had done it again. He’d shape-shifted, he’d re-organised, re-built, re-presented, re-thought, re-analysed and re-created himself, his music, his songs, his dips and bows. And his age.

And what I personally saw right away was that this was a complete work or art.

Bob Dylan at 80 had confounded, confused and captivated his audience.

Let me say right away, I think Dylan’s singing has always been something beyond human comprehension, a voice that the world had never heard the likes of before or ever will again. Yep, we can all quote knowingly about the influences we hear in that coruscating, gentle, heartbreaking, funny noise that comes from that Chaplinesque riverboat captain figure hiding behind a battered-looking upright piano on a stage lit today from beneath like a Mephistophelian cauldron of white disfiguring heat.

Blind Willie, John Jacob Niles, Woody, Elvis and Sinatra. And ten thousand more. They all helped create that voice that Dylan quite rightly calls his own.

And in Milwaukee at the beginning of November when he walked out on to the stage in his big David Byrne cream-ish jacket, walking like every bit of him hurt, looking hunched and a little overweight – going down the road that Jerry Lee had gone down – it looked like it could all be over for the enfant terrible, our baby of the blues.

Then he sang. It was like a ring in a bell. The cry of the prairie dog, the croak of the crow and the howl of the moon were still in there but it was a grand almost perfect soliloquy. A totally confounding insight into the mysterious soul of a man who had always kept it well hid.

People say this new Dylan comes out of the Shadow Kingdom. And it does. But it also comes out of a decade at least of finding new ways of presenting his art and his life to us all.

Since November The Society has built a rough compendium of ‘Ordinary Joe’ reviews and stories and thoughts about Bob’s new tour. It has been read by thousands in the past few weeks.

So, now as the Rough And Rowdy tour is parked for a while (we have no new dates to share unfortunately and Covid is obviously casting its awful shadow again) we thought we’d rerun it all again.

Treat it as an early Christmas present from us all here, if you would like to. Dip in to it and out again.

But it is a true and solid account of Bob Dylan’s never ending tour through our lives.

The shape of things to come as Bob rocks, dips, quips and rolls on down the road – The Leigh G Banks Preservation Society

Bob through the looking glass … the age-old master forever young in wander land – The Leigh G Banks Preservation Society

Jabbed and anonymous … how Bob predicted it all again – The Leigh G Banks Preservation Society

Forever young and old, you can see it in his smile… – The Leigh G Banks Preservation Society

A tough crowd in New York… but Bob is still standing. They won’t get him beat

You can step on my name, you can try and get me beat, when I leave New York, I’ll be standing on my feetBob Dylan

It’s always been seen as a fair game to boo, lampoon, insult, attack, complain about and scoff at Bob Dylan.

This attitude has made me furious over the years … of course he can sing, he is probably one of the most inventive singers since the beginning of popular music and has influenced the whole inflection and style of rock music.

Bob is a writer of stunning prose too of course, but he is first and foremost a musical poet, a bard, a troubadour, an unfinished work of art.

We’ve been sharing rave reviews here at The Society since the beginning of November when Dylan finally got the chance to take his strolling bones back on the road again after Covid, the tragic hint of a sex scandal and the release of the stunning beautiful Rough and Rowdy Ways.

And the reviews, mainly, have been written by the man-and-woman on the street who’ve got other things to do with their lives but took the trouble to jot down notes and thoughts and their enthusiasms for Bob and his band landed in places like Milwaukee, Bloomington, Hershey and Moon Township.

And then he arrived in New York and he got ignored and insulted.

No New York Times review (if I’ve missed this please send me a link, I’d love to be wrong) and a handful of bad reviews from the Mr Jones’s on the street. We share them here:

Dave & Molly from Montreal, Quebec

EXPECTED SO MUCH, RECEIVED SO LITTLE

Dylan has always been one of my favorites. This was the 3rd time seeing him in Montreal, I was ready for another treat. Had fabulous $$$ seats 100 feet from Bob. The lights came up and there was Bob dressed in white, standing in front of the black, grand piano banging out his first tune in a surprisingly low pitch, gravely voice. His guitar lay across a chair a few feet away with his white brimmed hat atop, We would never hear that guitar or see him with hat on. Instead he alternated playing old and new songs either sitting or standing at the piano then grabbing a mic stand at the back wall of the stage as far from his audience as possible as he crooned old American standards. I came to see Dylan play guitar and sing like he meant it. Not a single word was uttered to his fans, not a smile, not a nod. Between songs he shuffled to a table to get a drink, hanging on to equipment as he walked. He looked old and disinterested. What an utter disappointment for me and my girlfriend.

P. A. C. from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

SELFISH, DISENGAGED & UNDECIPHERABLE DYLAN AT THE MET PHILA.

When the best part of your concert event is the newly renovated Met and the outstanding food at Osteria, you know it’s going to be a bad night. A 60th birthday present from my daughter who is a singer and astute listener of all music. She knows how much I love Dylan’s music and wanted to take me to see him for the first time. It was an utter embarrassment. Dylan voice itself was as good and raw it’s always been but we couldn’t understand a word as he mumbled and garbled every word. His arrangement changes on some songs such as Like a Rolling Stone, were shockingly discordant to the essence of the song. And for 1 hour and 30 minutes, as we sat hoping things would get better, he didn’t muster one single word of welcome, thanks, or appreciation to his audience of 3,500. As we walked out on Bob 30 minutes early, he had me feeling badly for my daughter who certainly lost some respect for one of the musical heroes I spent years extolling. Bob my friend, it’s time to retire.

Sarah from Columbus, Ohio

GROSSLY INACCURATE VISIONS OF BOB DYLAN

If you attended Bob Dylan’s concert last night at the Palace Theatre expecting to see a lounge act and almost unrecognizable versions of Desolation Row and Tangled Up in Blue then you got what you paid for. If, like me, you were hoping to see Bob with his harmonica and guitar playing Just Like a Woman, Don’t think Twice it’s Alright, Like a Rolling Stone, Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door…ANY of his songs – in their original arrangements – that define him as one of the best poets/storytellers/lyricists to ever live, then you were left absolutely heartbroken like me. Before going to the show, I had heard that for years Dylan hasn’t been great live, that he doesn’t acknowledge or interact with the audience, that he doesn’t play many of his classics, so I guess I’m the fool for not listening to those comments and thinking my experience would be different. As I sit here today listening to live Dylan albums from ’67, I can’t help but cry for the artist I never got to see live.

And yet Allison Rapp, a professional writer, had this to say: Dylan, perhaps more so than any singer-songwriter of his generation, has continuously asked his listeners to, in essence, think again. Newly arranged versions of old songs were peppered throughout the evening, including completely reimagined versions of Tempest‘s “Early Roman Kings,” Slow Train Coming‘s “Gotta Serve Somebody,” “To Be Alone With You” a track from 1969’s Nashville Skyline which Dylan has not performed live since 2005 and the also recently reintroduced “Every Grain of Sand” from Shot of Love. A Frank Sinatra cover, “Melancholy Mood,” which Dylan performed on his 2016 album, Fallen Angels, also appeared.

Dylan did not come back for an encore, perhaps choosing to save his energy for the next two nights of shows at the Beacon, plus the string of East Coast dates he has planned for the rest of this month and the beginning of next. But at 80, the legendary musician seems energized by simply being back on a stage, surrounded by a supportive band, performing new compositions that most Dylan fans have spent months listening to in the confines of quarantine and now get to hear in their full live glory.

As his Rough and Rowdy Ways Tour moves on, ticket holders can expect a wonderfully rested and still remarkably enigmatic Dylan to greet them, even if it is with only a few words in between songs. As he sang in 1961, “You can step on my name, you can try and get me beat, when I leave New York, I’ll be standing on my feet.”

Meanwhile, here are four professional reviews by newspapers along the way. Let’s see what they are having to say compared to the fans who have become writers and critics for their love of Bob.

Reviews rocketas Ol’ Bob lands on Moon Township…but is age beginning to tell?

The first review to mention Dylan and the rigours of age…

Mitchell writes:

I feel that the reworking of the set list was more than just publicity
for the new album. All of the song selections were clearly pointing to
the past (high points and regrets) and looking to the future-a future
not in this world. It is contemplative and other worldly.  And like it
or not, I do feel he is trying to bring a message with the two gospel
songs he brought back. 
 As to individual songs, “Mother
of Muses” is even more hymn-like than on the album. Clearly a prayer
and an offer of thanks. Sent chills up my spine. 
The thing that made me sad about the show was the clear physical pain Bob is in. He is clearly still very sharp mentally, he was great with the lyrics, his voice was
fantastic and he looked to be enjoying himself.  But, in contrast to
his standing center stage pre COVID, he just couldn’t do it now. He
had to hold onto the piano and even then, retreated behind the piano
mid most songs. He sat down behind the piano a lot. He doesn’t stand
straight. He got help going down the steps from the back of the stage.
Clearly his back/hips are hurting.  I think we have to face it- as much
as he has, does and always will mean to us, his body is that of an 80
year old man.

I don’t know why he continues to do show after show when it is so
difficult physically. Maybe it is part of a “deal” he made many years ago as he once said.  

Daniel Chester writes:

Watching: a rollicking tribute to Pittsburgh and its rivers

Most Likely: good energy and crisp and friendly and faithful and pretty
well-delivered

Multitudes: great feel/sound for a great song and sung well...how amazing
is it that this same guy wrote Song to Woody 60 years ago and is still on
the road heading for another joint

False Prophet: dull approaching OK (bluezzzzzzz)

Masterpiece: wonderful (violin and piano and  acoustic guitar interwoven),
lucky to hear this again

Black Rider: nice atmosphere but nothing special...would rather hear
something off of New Morning or Infidels

I'll Be Your Baby: completely different version, had a nice little drive
to it (as opposed to the leisure pace of original)

My Own Version: another cool atmosphere and some very cool lines sung
well...maybe a performance where a tight little guitar solo would have
elevated it

To Be Alone: the acoustic guitar and violin and standup bass make a potent
combination...fun choice

Early Roman: pretty much a slog lacking necessary stomp...not a huge fan
of this tune but not sure any tune could have survived this treatment

Key West: piano picked some nice notes and accordian worked and some swell
lyrics ('if you lost your mind you'll find it there')

Serve Somebody: almost a different tune yet it grabbed the attention,
particularly with the new lyrics, and made its own way and was quite
enjoyable

I've Made Up My Mind: well-conceived and delivered and completely fit the
evening with certain lines grabbing the attention again

Melancholy: short and sweet (and sad) and totally fit this show

Mother of Muses: tender and well-wrought and sung well...piano and guitar
on the breaks were nice together...didn't really know this one yet really,
really good...'I've already outlived my life by far'...could have closed
with this one

Jimmy Reed: not bad...way better choices for this valuable slot

Every Grain: one of his all-timers and perfect choice to send people home
with...blessed to hear again

 

Laurette Maillet is back:

 
 The venue is a stadium, maybe 5000 seats. I've been here few years ago. I
don't like stadium anymore. I prefer the cosy atmosphere of the theater.

I believe Bob will start late as it takes time for the audience to fill up
the venue. But...

He is right on time.

Dressed in black.

“Watching the river flow” is a bit confused at the start. The
Musiciens are not in tune!

Bob, as usual, is moving from the center mike to the piano, most often at
the piano, except for “I contain multitudes” where he is bending on
his knees... 

“When I paint my masterpiece” is a wonder! I feel like dancing 

Bob seems to be happy to be here. I am too far to see if he is smiling but
I can believe he did.

Again 'Mother of muses' is not my cup of tea but I close my eyes and focus
on Bob's voice and it does the trick. I feel transported in another
universe with Bob Dylan 'chantin' to me.

Great show.





 
 

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.

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 thatTimes 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


Luke M. Jacobus writes on Bill Pagel’s Bob Links:

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” andSoon 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 #