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Rougher and rowdier (take 1)

Almost as soon as Bob Dylan and his musicians emerged on to the half-darkened stage of the Motorpoint Arena last night, a jangle of discordant electric guitars made me uneasy. It turned out that the discordance was chiefly coming from the guitar of Dylan himself, who was already sitting at his piano bench, with his back turned to the audience. Within a few seconds that jangle had somehow formed itself into the opening of “All Along the Watchtower”, the first of the 17 songs — nine of them from Rough and Rowdy Ways — he’d give us.

For me, it was a strange concert from several perspectives. It was certainly far from the poised, concentrated, finely detailed performance he’d presented at the same venue in Nottingham two years earlier, which had been a measurable level up even from the two fine shows I’d seen him give at the London Palladium a week before that. Quite often I found myself thinking we were back in the ’90s, when the thing I seemed to say most frequently after one of his concerts, while defending him to sceptics, was, “Well, they’re his songs, he can do what he likes with them.”

Another early warning sign: he repeated the first verse of “Watchtower”, meaning that the song no longer ended with “Two riders were approaching / The wind began to howl” — among the most effective closing lines in popular music — but with “None of us along the line / Know what any of it is worth.” I have no better idea of why he’d choose to do that than of why he’d rearrange a full-band version of “Desolation Row” to the galloping tom-tom beat of “Johnny, Remember Me” or decide to extend the same song with a meaningless piano solo.

The sound was much worse than two years earlier in the same hall. It was louder and harsher, and yet somehow less powerful, and with a much more distracting echo on the voice. Sometimes I flinched involuntarily when he put exaggerated emphasis on a particular syllable, as he so often does. The harmonica, which appeared on several songs, had mislaid its customary poignancy and what he played on it was, unusually, not particularly interesting, even on the closing “Every Grain of Sand”.

His current modus operandi is to start many songs — “I’ve Made Up My Mind to Give Myself to You”, for instance — standing near the back of the stage, singing into a handheld microphone. After a verse or two he advances to the baby grand piano, leans over it, and sings another verse or two, reading from the book of lyrics resting on top of the instrument. So far, so good. But then he sits down and clogs up the music by adding his wilful and often wayward piano-playing to the guitar interplay of Bob Britt and Doug Lancio. There’s no finesse in his keyboard contribution this time round, which is another contrast with 2022. It’s a form of interference, which of course may be what he’s after.

“My Own Version of You” closed with a chaotic ending that suggested that this was the first time they’d played it, rather than the two-hundred-and-twenty-somethingth. “To Be Alone With You” was such a mess that I couldn’t help thinking, “What on earth does he imagine he’s doing?” The drumming of “the great Jim Keltner” — as Dylan quite justifiably introduced him — never seemed as well integrated into the band as that of his precedessor in 2022, Charley Drayton, or George Receli from further back.

During the boogie of “Watching the River Flow” it was tempting to conclude rather irritably that the Shadow Blasters, Dylan’s first band, probably sounded better doing something similar at the Hibbing High School talent contest in 1957. For the first time in 59 years of going to see him on a fairly regular basis, I felt that I could have left my seat, gone to buy a beer, and returned without having missed anything important.

Of course that’s not true. There were moments of grace, mostly when the instrumentation was reduced to voice and piano, as in “Key West”, or voice and guitars, as in “Mother of Muses”. The first two verses of “Made Up My Mind” were lovely, as were the out of tempo bits of “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue”, delivered against Tony Garnier’s bowed bass. By the time Dylan got to “Goodbye Jimmy Reed”, the penultimate item on the set list, he was singing beautifully, with clarity and marvellous timing.

Every time you see him now, you think it might be the last. So this one wasn’t great. But that doesn’t really matter, even if there aren’t any more. Time past, time present: lucky to have it at all, all of it.

11 Comments Post a comment
  1. Simon Scott's avatar
    Simon Scott #

    My fingers are firmly crossed for Sunday night in Wolverhampton!

    November 9, 2024
  2. nlebrecht's avatar
  3. Adam Glasser's avatar
    Adam Glasser #

    Fascinating, compassionate, honest detail – loved this review.

    November 9, 2024
  4. Chris Gregory's avatar

    What concert were you at Richard? Obviously not the same one as me. This revue contained a lot of nitpicking. Keltners drumming on DEsolation Row was awesome. Dylans performance was more assured than 2 years ago. His singing is at an absolute peak

    November 9, 2024
    • Richard Williams's avatar

      Since Bob only played one night in Nottingham we were obviously at the same concert — and I’m glad you enjoyed it so much. I wasn’t criticising Keltner’s drumming — I didn’t like the arrangement, which he executed perfectly.

      November 10, 2024
  5. Diana's avatar
    Diana #

    Didn’t George Harrison once say, when asked if another Traveling Wilbury’s album was planned, that he couldn’t tell because ” Bob is always on the road.”

    Ramblin’ Man indeed.”

    November 10, 2024
  6. Peter Lyons's avatar
    Peter Lyons #

    Went to see Bob Dylan on Friday in Nottingham. Can honestly say this is the worst concert I have ever been to. I usually went to gigs to enjoy myself, not come out feeling suicidal! Absolute rubbish gig. Would have enjoyed myself more having teeth pulled.

    November 11, 2024
    • josephcotter2005's avatar

      Dylan will continue to receive a pass for these terrible performances. Emperor’s New Clothes.

      November 11, 2024
      • Peter Lyons's avatar
        Peter Lyons #

        Definitely Emperor’s new clothes!

        November 11, 2024
  7. Brian Botcherby's avatar
    Brian Botcherby #

    Richard,

    I’m very pleased you managed to return to your home city to see Dylan last week, scene of his magnificent concert in 2022, although I think that comparisons with that memorable night are looking at a very high bar.

    I agree with you that the vocals were a little echoey this time and the sound wasn’t as clear. Two years ago the sound was superb and that quality enhanced his performances of the subtlety of the R&RW songs. But I liked his guitar work on Watchtower on Friday and it reminded me somewhat of Keith Richards and now he wasn’t playing his Hendrix version as he used to in earlier years. His piano, too, was “interesting” throughout the concert although a little inconsistent.
    “It ain’t me babe”, “Baby blue” and Desolation Row, elderly classics, were all very fine for me and I enjoyed the latter’s arrangement.

    Gone are his Sinatra songs for the moment, for many a blessing, but I believe his arrangement, phrasing and full interpretation of Autumn Leaves is magnificent, as illustrated when he played at Nottingham in 2017. Brilliant.

    So yes, perhaps not his greatest night, but for god’s sake, it was Bob Dylan up on that stage and we are privileged to have been in his presence. See you later, Bob? I hope so.

    Keep up your great work and I’m looking forward to both your follow up to Alias and to seeing at Mr Cooder’s next visit to these shores!

    November 13, 2024

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