Tuesday, November 06, 2001
New material makes for classic Dylan
By Chris Varias
Enquirer contributor
Bob Dylan's perpetual tour over the past several years yields concerts that get a little better each time. The lineup of his backup band hasn't changed, thus producing musical ESP among the players and heightening the nuances of each performance.
Now, as proved by Mr. Dylan's Sunday night stop at Xavier University's Cintas Center, the quality has taken a more dramatic leap, thanks to Love and Theft, his terrific new album. It's not Highway 61 Revisited or Blonde on Blonde or John Wesley Harding terrific nothing is but it ranks with his second-tier work, and it provides Mr. Dylan good new material to inject into his shows.
As part of his two-hour-plus set he did five Love and Theft tunes, the performances of which ranked with those of any of the several classic songs he played.
Much has been made of the singer's new happy-go-lucky disposition shining through on the album. The Big Joe Turner-style jump-blues homage Summer Days, one of the night's highlights, paints that picture. But the other new tunes he played the dreamy Floater, the ornery Honest with Me and the plaintive Mississippi and Sugar Baby sounded like good old good Bob Dylan.
His stage act was as irreverent as ever. He opened with the Fred Rose-penned Wait for the Light to Shine, fueled by Larry Campbell's mandolin leads. After hitting the last note, Mr. Dylan did one of his Chaplinesque backward stumbles, as if the crowd's applause was a fist nailing him on the chin.
Next came Mr. Tambourine Man, during which he duck-walked forward and back in his white cowboy boots and matching suit as he soloed on an acoustic guitar. Later in the song he slung the guitar behind his back and picked up a harmonica, striking several different action-figure poses as he blew away.
The most rocking moments were Gotta Serve Somebody and Country Pie, with Mr. Dylan, Mr. Campbell and Charlie Sexton each playing electric guitar and swapping turns soloing. They've become the best guitar trio on the road, although there might not be any others out there anymore.
The crowd's vote went for the classics. The room was on its feet for Like a Rolling Stone, All Along the Watchtower and Rainy Day Women #12 & 35. There's nothing like the chorus of everybody must get stoned to move an audience to an even higher state of enjoyment.
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