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Bob Dylan

Dylan at Prospect Park: The Bobhead Comes To Brooklyn

By Jesse Jarnow, Wednesday, Aug. 13 2008 @ 10:44AM
Comments (11)
Categories: Featured

Bob Dylan
Prospect Park Bandshell
August 12th

There was definitely something sparkling around Bob Dylan's neck when he took the stage at Prospect Park's Bandshell. It might've just been his ascot, but it was hard to tell. The lights were low, and Dylan's wide-brimmed hat shaded his face, but his sartorial choices resonated loudly: a refugee from Gilligan's Island. Somewhere between a seaworthy Thurston Howell III and Bob Denver himself, who might've played the 67-year old singer in a parallel section in I'm Not There, Dylan settled behind his keyboard in a double-breasted suit jacket adorned with medallions, his matador pants had a red racing stripe down the sides.

Shuffling lyric sheets in the dark like a man afraid to admit he's dying his hair, Dylan fronted a quintet so anonymous in character and tone that Dylan's Oscar for "Things Have Changed" actually had a more prominent stage position than at least one member. Opening with "Rainy Day Women #12 & 35," the pleasantly inscrutable Bobhead faced the many of the same inquiries he's faced since he began imploding his catalogue with questionable arrangements on 1978's Alimony Tour: Will the songs be recognizable? Will they suck something fierce? Do questions about the meaning of Dylan singing "Masters of War" or "Like A Rolling Stone" or "Blowin' In the Wind" even matter in these present shark-jumped/fridge-nuked/post-novelty times? Will he bother to pick up a guitar?

To paraphrase Dylan himself, we all have our own definition of those words. Except (maybe) guitar. And Dylan didn't play one anyway, despite the unused vocal mic and amp set up in front of the drums, where a frontman might stand, as if waiting for a never-to-come Elijah-Bob at a Passover seder. Instead, in the 21st summer of the so-called Never-Ending Tour, Dylan finally found himself playing meaningful keyboards behind his own music. His synth switched from electric piano to Hammond, Dylan-the-organist proved surprisingly able—finding a sonic bridge between his current band, the Al Kooper/Garth Hudson bounces of mercurial '60s jams, and the swampier terrain of Daniel Lanois's recent productions. He fit right in.

Unfortunately, despite sounding more comfortable than ever with his band— demonstrating swinging litheness on "Spirit on the Water" and sinewy tangle on a revamped "Honest With Me"—Dylan-the-vocalist was just as frustrating as ever. Emphasizing the latter half of his sing-speak formula, Dylan has seemed increasingly unable to locate satisfying melodic reconstructions for his tunes. Since the departure of drummer David Kemper (the mega-laidback former Jerry Garcia Band skinsman) in 2001 and Americana genius guitarist Larry Campbell in 2004, Dylan's outfit has likewise lost much of its sensitivity. With Don Herron's pedal steel disappeared in the mix, the group was rarely graceful enough to be stately, a vibe Dylan both needs and deserves.

But every now and then it worked, especially on the pair of tunes where Herron picked up a banjo, cutting through the muck on "John Brown" and "It's Alright Ma, I'm Only Bleeding" with high, lonesome patterns. On the former, Dylan singing in a crisp growl, his words were suddenly crystalline, the '60s obscurity earning a big cheer on the rightful strength of its words—"the thing that scared me most was when my enemy came close/and I saw that his face looked just like mine"—instead of the pure boomer nostalgia that dripped from the Park's trees when the crowd tried to sing along to the perfunctory "Like A Rolling Stone" encore. He even got excited enough to take a four-bar solo. But, give or take a few nice inventions in "Highway 61 Revisited," it was frequently too silly for comfort, like the Disney-like schmaltz/waltz retake on "Beyond the Horizon" (itself probably one Larry Campbell guitar part removed from transcendence).

In the end, the hopefully-prodigal Elijah-Bob never showed, though the word "Brooklyn" did escape the Bobhead's lips ("man, I wish the Dodgers hadn't left Brooklyn"). And, in the very end, even after a gospel-lite "Blowin' in the Wind," Bob Dylan was still a bad-ass, standing at the front of the stage, finger-gunning the crowd, maybe inwardly grinning under his hat, and still not giving a flying fuck.

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More About:

  • Bob Dylan
  • Prospect Park
  • Don Herron
  • Brooklyn
  • Folk Music

Comments (11)

buck says:

Sounds like a different concert!

Posted On: Thursday, Aug. 14 2008 @ 1:28AM
Irish Ryan says:

I saw Bob last night in Asbury Park. I thought the band sounded great and Bob was Bob. His singing has never been his strong point but his lyrical poetry will live on eons longer than any thing this reviewer ever writes!

I suggest you stop looking for the second coming and enjoy Dylan as the Lion in Winter!

Posted On: Thursday, Aug. 14 2008 @ 8:32AM
Patrick in Los Angeles says:

What an ugly review. No wonder Dylan distrusts "journalists" so much. This thing is all about the guy writing it, and not at all about Bob Dylan or his performance in Brooklyn. Smarm and cheap shots does not a good review make.

Posted On: Thursday, Aug. 14 2008 @ 2:34PM
gatorbites2002 says:

Despite his gravel voice and straining your ear to here him sing, Dylan was still at his best and his band was superb. To be able to here him play at Brooklyn's Prospect Park was a once in a life time event for its residents.

Posted On: Thursday, Aug. 14 2008 @ 8:18PM
Lyds says:

You mustve been at a Different Venue!!!
Actually, the first song was everyone must get stoned !!! Not Rainy Day women ... which was crystal clear & i was on the lawn... i Loved everymin of the Show, the fact he's still gettin up there is amazing & yeah he probably Doesnt give a Fuck what critics or anyone thinks.. The fact i saw him after years of growing up in Dublin when my Da would come home with a few heavy Drinks on himsmelling of Whiskey & waken me & my brother up to listen to Bob Dylan was torture, ironic now i LOVE Dylan & Whiskey :)
L

Posted On: Friday, Aug. 15 2008 @ 10:42AM
Joanne Pacicca says:

Your review of Dylan in Brooklyn was genius. However, you missed the point, whether he "sucks" or is "relevent" in this ear doesn't matter. He perpetuates his legend past and present, as well aptly told in your final line: "...maybe inwardly grinning under his hat, and still not giving a flying fuck."

Posted On: Friday, Aug. 15 2008 @ 12:23PM
LP says:

I appreciate an honest review, and that's what this is. Just b/c Dylan wasn't transcendent does not mean he's not a legend or the reviewer doesn't respect him. Even Dylan ages, Jordan sure isn't the ballplayer he was at 32 and or even 41 for that matter.

Posted On: Friday, Aug. 15 2008 @ 5:39PM
MK says:

Psst, Lyds, "everybody must get stoned" is Rainy Day Women.

Posted On: Friday, Aug. 15 2008 @ 9:55PM
Gummo says:

We were close to the stage where the sound was fine - well-balanced and clean. Though I last saw Bob 2 years ago and while it was essentially the same band, I found them quite a bit sloppier this night than I did in a giant arena back in '06. The standout for me was multi-instrumentalist Herron, who added so much between his violin on "Nettie Moore" to the banjo parts you mentioned.

The most frustrating thing for me these days is that Bob sings just enough good notes to make you wonder why he can't or doesn't sing more good notes. The piano thing I can understand - the rumor has long been that arthritis prevents him from playing guitar comfortably. But when he lets loose from the growl to hit and hold a real tone, it just makes me want more.

In any case, to see Dylan essentially a stroll away from my house, in the familiar trappings of Propsect Park, was a real pleasure. As another reviewer put it, there were a few too many fast boogie-blues tunes, but the highlights - John Brown, Masters of War, Nettie Moore - were high indeed.

Posted On: Sunday, Aug. 17 2008 @ 10:05AM
Alfie says:

That's a damn good review of a show. Writer knows his Bob, backwards and forwards.

Posted On: Sunday, Aug. 17 2008 @ 9:55PM
larry says:

Your idiotic review of Bob Dylan's concert is straight out of writers central casting,where you take "Dylan 101"on how his voice sounds. big deal. It's as old as dylan himself.Hey,jackass,Fred Astare just walked in the room. His dancing has slowed. Can't wait for your review!

Posted On: Monday, Sep. 22 2008 @ 6:43AM

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