Dylan as ever full of surprises

Bob Dylan

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Bill Graham Civic, San Francisco

Tuesday, October 17 2006

Dylan starts with โ€œMaggieโ€™s Farmโ€, follows it with โ€œShe Belongs To Meโ€, โ€œLonesome Day Bluesโ€, โ€œSimple Twist Of Fateโ€ and โ€œRollinโ€™ And Tumblinโ€™โ€ and your first thought is that as brilliant as these songs are being played, tonightโ€™s set is going to be a shuffling of the pack. Songs youโ€™ve heard, that is, over the last four shows, simply played in another order, the tour repertoire pretty much whatโ€™s been performed so far.

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Which is when, of course, Dylan starts lobbing in even more surprises.

Like a fantastic version of โ€œBoots Of Spanish Leatherโ€ almost too beautiful for words, with Donnie Herronโ€™s violin to the fore and a guitar solo from Donny Freeman that sounds like something made of crystal cracking in slow motion. Dylanโ€™s voice, meanwhile, fully recovered and showing none of the occasional fatigue of last nightโ€™s show, is a vehicle of profound and wavering loss, a postcard home from some outpost of love and longing thatโ€™s way off the map, too much aching grief in what heโ€™s singing to easily accommodate, tears in the eyes of many.

Next is a brusing bluesy โ€œTill I Fell In Love With Youโ€, a blistering thing. Itโ€™s hotly pursued by a radiant โ€œI Shall Be Releasedโ€ โ€“ the audience finding a voice of its own. Bob giving it everything, which is a lot, and then some more.

Then thereโ€™s the best version yet on this tour of โ€œHighway 61 Revisitedโ€ โ€“ played for five shows straight, but more searing tonight than ever, with a Doug Sahm-style keyboard solo from Dylan I swear wasnโ€™t there the last time I looked.

The venerable anti-war lament โ€œJohn Brownโ€ is next โ€“ as scarily appropriate as the version of โ€œMasters Of Warโ€ played in Portland, Dylan finding another way of reminding us of the dismaying repetition of history, a fuming anger burning within it at what continues to happen to too many people in too many places, bullets flying everywhere and bombs going off in every direction. Donnie Herronโ€™s stirring mandolin and George Recelliโ€™s military drums make you want to march down the nearest street under a banner or blow up the White House and whoeverโ€™s in it.

This is followed by a chiming โ€œMost Likely You Go Youโ€™re Way (And Iโ€™ll Go Mine)โ€, keening pedal steel giving it a driving edge.

From here, weโ€™re into another tremendous reading of โ€œWorkingmanโ€™s Bluesโ€, Dylan finding new ways to sing a song that like โ€œHighway 61โ€ weโ€™ve heard at five consecutive shows, but which Dylan continues to invest with subtle new shadings.

The closing jamboree of โ€œSummer Daysโ€ and the three-song encore are the only things that are predictable, but when those three songs are โ€œThunder On The Mountainโ€, โ€œLike A Rolling Stoneโ€ and โ€œAll Along The Watchtowerโ€, hell, whoโ€™s complaining?

Set list:

San Francisco, California Bill Graham Civic Auditorium October 17, 2006

1. Maggieโ€™s Farm

2. She Belongs To Me

3. Lonesome Day Blues

4. Simple Twist Of Fate

5. Rollinโ€™ And Tumblinโ€™

6. Boots Of Spanish Leather

7. โ€˜Til I Fell In Love With You

8. I Shall Be Released

9. Highway 61 Revisited

10. John Brown

11. Most Likely You Go Your Way (And Iโ€™ll Go Mine)

12. Workingmanโ€™s Blues #2

13. Summer Days

(encore)

14. Thunder On The Mountain

15. Like A Rolling Stone

16. All Along The Watchtower