Dylan comes through clearly

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 22 November 2012 | 20.49

A modern day Bob Dylan concert is a curious thing, best approached with tempered expectations.

The cantankerous 71-year old legend's live m.o. has been well documented and exhaustively discussed — the classics rendered name that tune unrecognizable by garbled vocals and bludgeoned melodies, the oddball reworkings of old numbers that seem motivated by caprice as much as inspiration, and, to varying degrees, a casual approach to matters like enunciation and pitch that can smack of contempt.

Given all that, the real surprise of Dylan's 90-minute set at Barclays Center last night is how fierce and invigorated the old man sounded. From the opening number, "You Ain't Going Nowhere," Dylan threw himself into the set with a commitment that was occasionally startling.

AP

An invigorated Bob Dylan, and not the mumbling folk master we're accustomed to hearing, captivated the Barclays Center crowd last night.

Take the fourth number, "Tangled Up in Blue," reworked with the vocal lines delivered in halftime—his gravelly, blunt instrument bark didn't carry a lot of melodic nuance, but there was real passion in the delivery.

Broadly speaking, the tightly paced set alternated more delicate, elegiac numbers—"Soon After Midnight," "Visions of Johanna" (which justifiably drew a big ovation), "Chimes of Freedom"—with hard-swinging bluesy shuffles. His five-piece band excels at the latter. The apocalyptic stomp of "Highway 61" was a high point, as was "The Levee's Gonna Break," from "Modern Times" — a jagged shuffle over which Dylan riffed with loose, jazzy phrasing.

As is his current habit, Dylan never got near a guitar, and focused on the piano instead. Even there he sounded focused and swinging. And his harmonica playing was terrific, though it would be nice to see him throw a few more bones to guitarist Charlie Sexton or steel guitarist/fiddler Donnie Herron.

Even Mark Knopfler—who opened the showwith an excellent set of stately, evocative Americana—blended into the background when he sat in for a few numbers early in Dylan's set, without somuch as a solo.

Truth be told, two of the three classics that closed out the show made for the weakest points.

"All Along the Watchtower" was charged-up and suitably apocalyptic, but "Ballad of a Thin Man" sounded a bit flat and rote. And "Blowing in the Wind" got a jaunty lilt that sounded out of place.

But those are minor quibbles about a vital, hardswinging set —one that offered undeniable proof that Dylan can still bring it when he wants to.


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