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Bob Dylan, Glasgow Barrowlands 24th June 2004: Bob Be Praised

Jun 28 '04 (Updated Aug 08 '05)

The Bottom Line Bob Dylan's most intimate venue in over a decade results in a truly mesmerising concert. You really should have been there.

The "historic gig" is one of the cornerstones of popular music mythology. Time and again, we hear the tale of Jimi Hendrix's Isle of Wight show, where his black Stratocaster was sacrificed to the flames. There's The Beatles' final gig on the rooftop of their Apple headquarters. Oasis at Knebworth Park, Pink Floyd in Pompeii, The Stone Roses at Spike Island, U2 in Sarajevo, The Stones at Altamont, Nirvana's 1992 Reading Festival appearance - The list goes on, but it must be said that the vast majority of these shows have taken place in the fairly distant past, during what some would call rock's glory years. Popular music just doesn't seem to inspire the same levels of legendary performances these days. We hear the stories of its golden era, listen to the misty-eyed ruminations of those who managed to attend some of these occasions, but its so rare for one of these gigs to take place now, in our era of Britneys, Didos and Justins. But if you're lucky, and choose your gigs wisely, you will find one that is genuinely good enough to be described as classic.

On Thursday 24th June, Bob Dylan was set to play his smallest venue in over 15 years, at the legendary Glasgow Barrowlands. An ex-ballroom which holds about 1900 people, it’s located in the Gallowgate region of the city, an area that could be described as “full of character” by some and “a bit dodgy” by others. The gig was a last-minute addition to the UK leg of his current tour, and the chance to see Dylan up close in such a small venue ensured that the tickets sold out within about seven minutes of going on sale. As a committed Dylan fan, I wasn’t to be dissuaded, and ended up paying rather handsomely through that wonderful thing called Ebay for 2 tickets for my Dad and myself. This, quite simply, was a gig not to be missed.

But the omens weren’t good. The previous day, Dylan had picked up an honorary doctorate in music from St Andrew’s University, the oldest in Scotland, only the second time he has ever accepted one. The news footage showed Dr. Dylan looking thoroughly bored and tired throughout the ceremony, and the following day one tabloid newspaper, apparently irked at his refusal to give an interview, headlined with “Hey Mr. Damn Boring Man” ( Geddit? ). So one might be forgiven for thinking that Dylan might not be in the best of spirits. And few performers swing between such wild extremes in concert as Dylan - One night he’ll be life-affirmingly brilliant, and the next, crap.

On the Wednesday night I attended his show at the cavernous steel and concrete box of the SECC centre, a sit-down gig with as much atmosphere as a punctured lung, and though the show was solid, I was simply too far away to be truly moved, the sound scattered by the dismal acoustics, his voice seeming to veer between a disinterested honk and a bronchial splutter due to the distance. So, would the Barrowlands gig be the legendary occasion we all hoped it would be, or a disappointing anti-climax in the style of his Live Aid appearance?

The answer, my friends, is that Bob Dylan’s show on Thursday 24th June is without question the greatest concert I have ever attended. The audience is so close to Dylan, so near to the flesh of the myth, that as one journalist put it the next day in his gushing review, its like having Picasso paint your living room. As he strolls out to rapturous applause, we see that Bob Dylan is actually a man, a human being of surprisingly short stature, with a deeply lined but wise face, narrowed eyes and a fetching gold cowboy hat. He stands stage right , plays electric keyboards and harmonica, and radiates musical genius. Sometime in the nineties his voice finally waved a white flag and collapsed from 30 years worth of touring, wine and weed. Many performers would have thrown in the towel at that point, their primary instrument broken, but not so Dylan.

The voice first introduced on “Time Out Of Mind”, a husky lived-in rasp, now tackles the verbal landscapes of his incomparable back catalogue with an entirely different method of phrasing, timing and inflection, and is marinaded with pathos and wisdom. No other voice would sound right singing the semi-comical backwoods shuffle of “Floater” the way he does tonight, or rattling through the chicken-wire sharp slide fest of “Honest With Me”. It’s a voice which has earned its right to sing of the entire range of human emotional experience, contained in his lyrics and his mountainous songbook, and tonight, it’s a riveting instrument.

He and his band launch into “Drifter’s Escape”, and we’re off: Two hours of sheer genius and magnificent music. We get the country swing of “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight”, the nursery rhyme absurdism of “Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee”, a beautifully rearranged and fragile “Boots Of Spanish Leather”, and a drop-dead stunning stomp through the 50’s rockabilly of “Summer Days”. The band is tighter than a tightly tightened tight thing, with multi-instrumentalist Larry Campbell adding every shade of colour by switching between acoustic and electric guitar, pedal steel, mandolin and violin throughout. There’s a passionate version of “I Believe In You”, his committed statement to God from the “Slow Train Coming” album - Not my favourite, but the level of his sincerity can’t be doubted.

“It’s Alright Ma” is a scorched-earth blues hymn, driven by guitarist Stuart Kimball’s molten guitar riffs, and there is a paralysingly beautiful rendering of “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright”, more lovelorn resignation than the defiant sneer of the original. The Scottish crowd shout their approval with shouts of “Gaun yersel’ Bobby!!” ( Translation: “Go on yourself Bob!”, meaning, “Go Bob!” ).

So what is it about this particular concert that etches it so indelibly on my consciousness? I’ve been to a fair few gigs in my life, but this is the one I will rank and remember above all others. Firstly, the sheer awestruck thrill of seeing Dylan perform in such a small atmospheric venue will ensure that the Barrowlands gig will go down in Dylan annals as one of his finest and most memorable. Secondly, there is the realisation that Dylan, despite any talk to the contrary, is an utterly committed live performer, never trotting out a workhorse soundalike version of a song. He bends, shapes, moulds and recasts his works with stunning invention and, occasionally, bizarre but always compelling audacity, making him a unique stage artist.

But here’s the main reason. To appreciate it, you really would have needed to be there, but I’ll describe it anyway. A Glasgow crowd is always a good one, and a Barrowlands crowd is as good as it gets. It’s been named by many bands as their favourite British venue due the bonhomie and good-time charge the place generates, and its hard not to suspect this is why Dylan added the gig at the eleventh hour. The third song in is “Just Like A Woman”, and Bob, as ever, sings it entirely differently to the recorded version, meaning the crowd can’t sing along, but they decide collectively to fix that. As Dylan reaches the chorus, he starts to sing, “She takes…”, and the crowd, as one, holler “Juuuust Liiike A Woman!!” They completely drown out the band and his Bobness, who can’t help letting his stoic demeanour crack and grinning from ear to ear, as the entire band laugh. But it gets better.

“Like A Rolling Stone” is the penultimate song of the evening, and Dylan is again trying to ensure no one can sing along by reinventing the melody as he goes. And the crowd, determined to outfox him, simply take over the chorus. A truly colossal roar of “HOW DOES IT FEEL??” flattens the band across the back of the stage, and Dylan is laughing fit to burst, shaking his head in wonder, letting the crowd own the song. He is visibly delighted and thrilled, singing along with the audience rather than the other way around. It’s a magical, transcendent moment, and at the song’s climax he actually talks to us, quipping: "I must say, you're the best singing audience we've ever had! We musta played that a thousand times, and nobody could ever sing along. Nobody!”

The crowd bellows its approval, and Dylan goes on to deliver an incandescent, remodelled version of “All Along The Watchtower”. At the end, to ear-shattering applause, he stands stage centre, bows, and exits, pursued by the admiration, adulation and foot-stomping of 2000 Scottish souls who’ve seen a brilliant representation of all that popular music was and is supposed to be.

The success of the gig, for me, lies in the fact that Dylan was playing the kind of venue that all bands and performers should play - Atmospheric, small and intimate enough to communicate. Dylan doesn’t want to play vast barns filled with beard-stroking trainspotters noting down how many times this tour he’s played “Ballad Of A Thin Man”. He wants to see the crowd enjoying themselves, to see young faces as well as old, to see them jump up and down. This was the kind of show that all musicians should aspire to. And he’s probably coming to a town near you soon.

Set List:

Drifter's Escape
I'll Be Your Baby Tonight
Tweedle Dee & Tweedle Dum
Just Like A Woman
It's Alright, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)
Girl Of The North Country
Most Likely You Go Your Way (And I'll Go Mine)
Ballad Of A Thin Man
Floater (Too Much To Ask)
Highway 61 Revisited
It Ain't Me, Babe
Honest With Me
I Believe In You
Summer Days
(encore)
Don't Think Twice, It's All Right
Like A Rolling Stone
All Along The Watchtower

A review from the Glasgow Sunday Herald:

http://www.sundayherald.com/42920

Dylan's honorary degree in pictures:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/in_depth/photo_gallery/3834273.stm

Related:

Down The Highway: The Life of Bob Dylan by Howard Sounes - Book review

Hearts of Fire – Movie review

Chronicles Volume 1, book review



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