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Who expects an Icon, a Legend and a Voice of His Generation™ to be punctual? Not I. Which is why my 9:15 arrival at Pacific Amphitheatre enabled me to catch only the last 40 minutes of Bob Dylan's Orange County Fair performance last night. Turns out that was quite enough, really.
The 66-year-old lyrical genius and his five nattily attired old pros had the largely Baby Boomer crowd in the palms of their hands. After each number, some people actually bowed while howling their appreciation. I, however, was less impressed.
I'm no Dylan hater, but neither am I a rabid fan. I think he had a devastatingly great run of albums from the 1962-67 (Bob Dylan through John Wesley Harding), and then put out a few very good records in the '70s and '80s, amid a lot of mediocre output. I stopped following the man after 1989's Oh Mercy, though consensus opinion says his latest full-length, Modern Times, is yet another Return to Form.
Be that as it may, the Dylan before us in 2007 is difficult to embrace wholeheartedly. Wearing a boater and a black suit that made me think "maître d' of a classy hotel," Dylan played keyboards, electric guitar, occasionally blew into a harmonica and “sang.” I use scare quotes because what comes out of Robert Zimmerman's mouth in 2007 cannot properly be called singing, no matter how loosely one defines the term. Rather, it is a homunculoid growl, cured by several thousand cigarettes and hindered by substantial quantities of phlegm. One can imagine the mics he uses being sterilized post-show to eliminate the possibility of other vocalists getting cancer from them. Of course, Dylan never had much range and his voice always has been an acquired taste many never acquire, but now it's just downright unpleasant and it does his monumental canon of songs no favors.
I arrive as Dylan & co. are tearing through the jaunty R&B romp “Nettie Moore” off Modern Times. It sounded utterly functional. “Ballad of a Thin Man” follows, with Dylan's phrasing deviating drastically from the recorded version of one of his most beloved songs as heard on the all-time classic Highway 61 Revisited. This way doesn't improve the original, but rather makes a mockery of it. Dylan also radically rearranged “Blowin' in the Wind” to deleterious effect, again coming off like his worst enemy spoofing a chestnut dear to many old folkies. You have to respect an established artist treating his own revered oeuvre with so much irreverence and refusing to stagnate in his dotage. Still, this rendition was grating to the ears, sounding ridiculously awkward and inelegant. Nevertheless, the crowd cheered itself hoarse at its conclusion.
The other songs I caught (“Summer Days,” “Thunder on a Mountain”) rolled by with workmanlike competence. There was an “another day at the office” aura about the whole endeavor. Dylan's Never Ending Tour, by necessity, would appear to wipe out any extreme highs or lows. One expects cruise-control coasting for long stretches, and that's mostly what one gets.
After the Dylan sextet took their final bow, grumbles among audience members could be heard about the absence of “Like a Rolling Stone” (set list and band lineup can be viewed here; looks like I missed the best part of the show, damn it; “It's Alright, Ma [I'm Only Bleeding]” is probably my fave Dylan track), but overall, people seemed quite pleased with Bob Dylan ca. 2007. You have to admire their loyalty, if not their discernment.
July 27, 2007 13:48
Although I disagrew with you about last night's renditions of "Ballad of a Thin Man" (which sounded pretty good) and "Blowin' in the Wind" (odd at first, then it grew on me) -- and about your assertion that his 1980s albums were largely mediocre ("Infidels" and "Empire Burlesque," e.g., were great) -- you are spot on about Dylan's voice. It's completely shot, and I suspect that he has had to radically rework many of his songs simply in order to be able to "sing" them. Or, more accurately, talk them, because he pretty much can't sing anymore.
July 28, 2007 23:46
ITA, could hardly understand Lay Lady Lay which I looked so forward to hearing. We were so disappointed but remained loyal fans and clapped along with everyone else. No hoots or hollers though, nor bows. Enjoyed his band, the music kept us there for as long as possible, which means we left early. The money spent on 3 tickets was a big loss to the wind in my opinion. I think it's time for good ole' Bob to hang up that adorable hat he wore that night. G'night Bob.
July 30, 2007 11:55
Excellent concert for reasons more relevant to nostalgia and musicianship than to Dylan's voice. He now sounds like the illegitimate son of Popeye the Sailor and Macy Gray -- on crack.
Maybe it's time for him to go the Milli Vanilli route -- at least vocally.
August 7, 2007 21:19
You missed the opening song..."Rainy Day Women # 12 and 35" which I believe was played for a reason. You must be stoned to enjoy him. I was and it was one of the best concerts I've ever been to, I danced (alone) for almost the entire show and it was incredible.
August 10, 2007 08:50
I got owned without the voice of yesteryear...
8th row center & he was all I hoped he'd be.
I was motivated to motor up to Paso Robles to
be near him one more night.
Sort of tired of his 60's stuff, but other stuff, I wait for one of those. Have seen Dylan about 30 times since 1976. Not much written word that moves me & the stuff that does, the authors are dead or not showing up at Pac Amp in OC so I get it while I can, because he is That Man. Sure can't get it in ocweakly, unfortunately.
sure don't get much dissent in the usa anymore anywhere...our own little tianamen square & they
didn't even use any tanks to shut us up completely.
....Open up & swallow....