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Just Call Me Angel

BOB DYLAN

Outlaw Blues (first live concert performance) !!

Nashville, Tennessee

September 20, 2007

 

 

1.Cat's In The Well (Bob on electric guitar)
2.Lay, Lady, Lay (Bob on electric guitar)
3.I'll Be Your Baby Tonight (Bob on electric guitar)
4.Rollin' And Tumblin' (Bob on electric guitar, Donnie on electric mandolin)
5.Workingman's Blues #2 (Bob on electric keyboard)
6.High Water (For Charlie Patton)
(Bob on electric keyboard, Donnie on banjo)
7.Spirit On The Water (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
8.Tangled Up In Blue (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
9.One More Cup Of Coffee (Valley Below)
(Bob on electric keyboard and vocals, Jack White on electric guitar and vocals)
10.Outlaw Blues (first live concert performance)
(Bob on electric keyboard and harp, Jack White on electric guitar did vocals)
11.'Til I Fell In Love With You (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
12.When The Deal Goes Down (Bob on electric keyboard)
13.Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again
(Bob on electric keyboard)
14.Ain't Talkin' (Bob on electric keyboard, Donnie on violin)
15.Summer Days (Bob on electric keyboard)
16.Ballad Of A Thin Man (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
  
 (encore)
17. Thunder On The Mountain (Bob on electric keyboard)
18. I Shall Be Released (Bob on electric keyboard)
  

Meet Me In The Morning (first live concert performance) !!

Meet Me In The Morning (first live concert performance) !!

September 19, 2007

Nashville, Tennessee

1.Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat (Bob on electric guitar)
2.Don't Think Twice, It's All Right (Bob on electric guitar)
3.Watching The River Flow (Bob on electric guitar)
4.You're A Big Girl Now (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
5.The Levee's Gonna Break
(Bob on electric keyboard, Donnie on electric mandolin)
6.Spirit On The Water (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
7.Desolation Row (Bob on electric keyboard and harp, Donnie on electric mandolin)
8.Workingman's Blues #2 (Bob on electric keyboard)
9.Things Have Changed (Bob on electric keyboard, Donnie on violin)
10.Most Likely You Go Your Way (And I'll Go Mine)
(Bob on electric keyboard)
11.Meet Me In The Morning (first live concert performance)
(Bob on electric guitar and vocals, Jack White on electric guitar and vocals)
12.Highway 61 Revisited (Bob on electric keyboard)
13.Nettie Moore (Bob on electric keyboard, Donnie on violin)
14.Summer Days (Bob on electric keyboard)
15.Masters Of War (Bob on electric keyboard)
  
 (encore)
16. Thunder On The Mountain (Bob on electric keyboard)
17. Blowin' In The Wind (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
  

FOREVER YOUNG BOB

FOREVER YOUNG BOB

Live Shots: Bob Dylan at Austin City Limits Music Festival

Mon Sep 17, 2007 at 01:00:25 PM

The artwork for Bob Dylan’s album The Basement Tapes, recorded in 1967 but not officially released until 1975, features Dylan and the members of The Band playing in a basement surrounded by circus entertainers – belly dancers, fire-eaters, midgets, etc. Just as the album’s music found Dylan rejecting The Voice of a Generation mantle that had been bestowed upon him in favor of an older and more elemental approach, so did the art work symbolize the beginning of a new phase of Dylan’s career – that of the traveling entertainer, the minstrel, the road-show trooper.

Dylan is now nearing 2000 performances on the never-ending tour that supposedly began in 1988. But it is hard to imagine that he’s played to many crowds larger than the one that awaited him Sunday night at the Austin City Limits festival. As the other stages shut down – Wilco, the Decemberists, Ziggy Marley – everyone from high school kids with their cell phones to grandparents with their lawn chairs flocked toward the far end of Zilker Park where Dylan was set to perform.

Driving over that morning, I listened to classic Dylan and recent Dylan to prepare myself for what has become of his voice. The young Dylan was a master of pre-rap rhythm and hillbilly melodic nuance with punk attitude to burn – a truly great rock and roll singer. The old Dylan croaks along like a frog bumping his ass on the ground, which makes it all the remarkable that he is still releasing cool and essential albums like last year’s Modern Times.

But it was no less a shock when Dylan launched into the first tune, “Rainy Day Woman,” and out came a strange and painful sound. This was way beyond the proverbial frog in the throat – more like an old Delta blues singer who’d just gargled with Sterno. The band, anchored by Austinites Tony Garnier on bass and Denny Freeman on guitar, began to find its groove on the blues “Watchin’ the River Flow.” The set list alternated old favorites – “It Ain’t Me, Babe,” “Tangled Up In Blue” -- with songs from the new album, “Spirit On the Water,” “The Levee’s Gonna Break.”

By the time they got to “Highway 61,” another blues, the band was really locked in the groove and Dylan’s voice seemed to be loosening up. Laying on my back on the grass about 300 yards from the stage, I convinced myself that it didn’t matter if this was a great show or not. What mattered is that he is still out there doing it, and all these kids will be able to tell their grandchildren that they saw the legendary Bob Dylan in his white straw hat and white striped trousers – the stage uniform of a trooper.

But then Dylan pulled a surprise; on “Nettie Moore,” a folksy ballad from Modern Times, he put his voice way up front in the mix, reveling in its wrecked glory, as a violin cooed gently in the background The result somehow sounded both timeless and brand new, an instant classic. “Ballad of a Thin Man” found Dylan snarling with renewed vigor from behind the keyboard. The first encore, the Chuck Berryish “Thunder on the Mountain,” had the college girls up and swirling like their mothers at a rock festival from way back in the day.

“Like a Rolling Stone” came next, of course. Forty years ago, this song asked a generation that imagined it was breaking loose from all the old rules, “How does it feel?” Now it could be the medical question one hears at one’s 40th high school reunion. “How does it feel?” Well, it hurts. And not just my aching back. My soul hurts, because the world is as fucked up as it ever was and our country is stuck in another war that should never have been started. It’s like we – our generation -- never learned a goddamn thing. Walking toward the exit, I thought that Dylan, the history buff, might have predicted as much. Human nature does not change. What matters is that the show must go on.

But then Dylan pulled another surprise: For the first time in the night, he spoke, introducing the members of the band in his antiquated, carnival-showman’s accent. And then he sang one of the most beautiful songs he’s ever written, “I Shall Be Released,” a prayer for spiritual and psychological liberation from the inevitable suffering that living brings. And suddenly, Dylan’s voice didn’t sound wrecked anymore – it sounded, well, hopeful. Even more than that, it sounded human; not the voice of a generation, the voice of one man. And I walked out smiling into the night. – Rick Mitchell

Austin, Texas

September 16, 2007

1.Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 (Bob on electric guitar)
2.It Ain't Me, Babe (Bob on electric guitar)
3.Watching The River Flow (Bob on electric guitar)
4.Spirit On The Water (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
5.The Levee's Gonna Break
(Bob on electric keyboard, Donnie on electric mandolin)
6.Tangled Up In Blue (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
7.Things Have Changed (Bob on electric keyboard)
8.Workingman's Blues #2 (Bob on electric keyboard)
9.Highway 61 Revisited (Bob on electric keyboard)
10.Nettie Moore (Bob on electric keyboard and harp, Donnie on violin)
11.Summer Days (Bob on electric keyboard)
12.Ballad Of A Thin Man (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
  
 (encore)
13. Thunder On The Mountain (Bob on electric keyboard)
14. Like A Rolling Stone (Bob on electric keyboard)
15.I Shall Be Released (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
  

The Bob Dylan Show, 2007 Fall Tour

The Bob  Dylan Show, 2007 Fall Tour

The Bob Dylan Show:


---- September 2007 -


 Austin, Texas

September 15, 2007

1.Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat (Bob on electric guitar)
2.It Ain't Me, Babe (Bob on electric guitar)
3.Watching The River Flow (Bob on electric guitar)
4.You're A Big Girl Now (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
5.The Levee's Gonna Break (Bob on electric keyboard)
6.Spirit On The Water (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
7.Cry A While (Bob on electric keyboard, Donnie on banjo)
8.Tangled Up In Blue (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
9.Workingman's Blues #2 (Bob on electric keyboard)
10.Honest With Me (Bob on electric keyboard)
11.Beyond The Horizon (Bob on electric keyboard and harp, Tony on standup bass)
12.Most Likely You Go Your Way (And I'll Go Mine)
(Bob on electric keyboard)
13.Nettie Moore (Bob on electric keyboard, Donnie on violin)
14.Summer Days (Bob on electric keyboard)
15.Ballad Of A Thin Man (Bob on electric keyboard and harp)
  
 (encore)
16. Thunder On The Mountain (Bob on electric keyboard)
17. All Along The Watchtower (Bob on electric keyboard)
  


 

 

I`m Not There -Review by John Hume

I`m Not There -Review by John Hume

I saw the movie when it opened here a few days ago (Friday 7th Sept), so a few brief comments....

We had arranged to meet some friends in a wine bar about an hour from Catania on friday evening, so we had to catch an early showing on friday afternoon...
We went to a new multiplex cinema which just opened a few weeks ago, not far from where we live, so with 9 or 10 movies to choose from, I wasn't expecting there to be many/any people in the theatre with us...
A total of 5 showed up, including Valeria and myself.... a couple in their 70's and another guy in his 70's... maybe pensioners got in free that afternoon, and they had nothing else to do, but get inside out of the heat!?

I hadn't read many of the articles on the web beforehand, so I didn't have any idea what to expect, other than a strange movie, which turned out to be true.
I had seen a few brief clips on local TV, as it had been getting some coverage on Italian TV because it was showing at the venice film Festival....

Visually it is excellent!!! lots of recreations of well known images and photos from the 60's, and scenes from DLB and ETD and NDH, and a few in jokes for the hardcore fans....
A couple of laugh out loud moments which I won't spoil for you if they haven't been shown in clips already.

I'd read a few reviews commenting on Cate Blanchett, varying from 'wonderful, and she deserves an oscar' and more recently, that she was the worst thing in the movie and her performance was terrible. This latter reviewer obviously wasn't a dylan fan... her hand gestures and movements are captivating!!! you end up watching her hands in each scene, as she has captured Dylan perfectly.... spookily even!!! you'll see what I mean when you view the movie.

I didn't like some of the other artistes cover versions, with the exception of Antony singing 'Goin to Acapulco'.... one of my favourite moments in the movie actually. He had previously done a stunning version of 'Hallelujah' on the Leonard Cohen tribute documentary/Cd and has a brilliant voice.

I can't comment extensively on the dialogue, as they had dubbed the movie in Italian here, a common occurrence, rather than show the original with subtitles, and my Itlaian isn't fluent enough to grasp the whole text..
Even the poster has the title 'Io Non Sono Qui', which would translate as I am not here..... instead of there

Overall I enjoyed the first hour or more much more than the latter part of the movie.... for me, it tended to drag in the second half, but you may disagree.

So, a must see for any Dylan fans, but of little or no interest to anyone else I would think.

John Hume

Esteemed Dylan photograper

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZGseissqX8

In Reason And In Rhyme - Con Rima Y Sentido

To celebrate the election of Bob Dylan for The 2007  Prince Of Asturias Award of The Arts An Illustrated Anthology of Bob DYlan Songs in Spanish will be published.

I encourage all of you artists out there to send your drawings or paintings of any of the songs listed. Send medium size  - up to 300 KB scans of your works for a first review.The illustrations chosen will later be required in a bigger size.Send your files under JPG,TIF or GIF format to : plotino_cat@yahoo.es

Artists selected will be contacted with details of the copyright rights.

 

PLEASE SEND ILLUSTRATIONS OF ANY OF THE SONGS LISTED BELOW:

1. SONG TO WOODY

2. BLOWING IN THE WIND

3.EVERYTHING IS BROKEN

4. SLOW TRAIN COMING

5. STANDING IN THE DOORWAY

6. WHERE ARE YOU TONIGHT ( JOURNEY THROUGH DARK HEAT )

7. UNDER THE RED SKY

more songs will be added

 

HIBBING BOB HOUSE

HIBBING BOB HOUSE Ante la noticia de que Bob ha sido nominado para el premio Principe de Asturias de las Artes, voy a intentar acelerar el proyecto de una Antologia rimada e ilustrada para ver si podria verse para esas fechas.Solo una cancion sera seleccionada de cada album oficial.No se incluiran los bootlegs ni las canciones de bandas sonoras.Iran apareciendo en el blog bajo el tema POETRY.

Bob Dylan, Premio Príncipe de Asturias de Las Artes

Bob Dylan, Premio Príncipe de Asturias de Las Artes

"Dylan es el número uno y está presente en la memoria de varias

generaciones, .."

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PnC6B1AgMyw