Bill Pagel http://www.boblinks.com/111719r.html Bob Links Reviews Ithaca, New York Ithaca College Athletics and Events Center (A&E Center) November 17, 2019 [Chris Lyons], [Bill White] Review by Chris Lyons Superb show. The band is hotter than ever and Bob seems focused on honing each song to its best possible (current) iteration. The venue for the show, the Ithaca College Athletics and Events Center, is a relatively new facility and some rough edges showed despite the many friendly students assisting the crowd. The sound quality was not up to the level of most modern venues, with too-frequent distortion and a mix that was all over the place with vocals up vocals down, inaudible Donnie at times etc. That said, the show was great. The song list of this leg of he tour seems chosen in part to emphasize Dylan’s voice - which was flexible, strong and powerful throughout. Tunes like Lenny Bruce and To Make You Feel My Love could not have been as effective if sung with the hoarse growl of some previous tours. I even heard some nice vibrato at the end of long-held notes! The band was outstanding, even compared to most recent Dylan outings. New drummer Matt Chamberlain had a great night, bringing delicacy and fiery rock and roll dynamics in turn to the songs. Not since the Winston Watson days has a drummer brought so much infectious energy to the Bob Band arrangements. But the concert’s true MVP has to be Charlie Sexton. He offered a master level course in guitar, a seemingly effortless melding of blues, surf, British rock and country styles into perfect accompaniment to each song. Notes on the overall effect of the performances: Things Have Changed starts the show with a perfect example of what to expect: A surprising re-arrangement of a familiar song, making you hear it in a completely fresh way but with beautiful echoes of the original. Dylan throws away with a shrug the tag at the end of each verse: “But… ThingsHaveChanged”. It Ain’t Me Babe is similarly musically disorientating, but as with the opener maintains a strong link to the original, making it easy to follow and appreciate the changes. Just lovely. Bob plays maybe his best piano of the night. Highway 61 tears the roof off the sucker, brings me back to the end-of-the-world blues Bob might have had in mind when he first performed the song, while being in 2019 totally new. Twist of Fate brings things down, as with most of the songs tonight the clearly audible lyrics were amended and improved in these versions. Bob plays a brief, disciplined harmonica solo, the first of only three tonight. Can’t Wait was another standout, a song that seemed like a placeholder on Time Out Of Mind, opened up on Tell Tale Signs, here exploded to a searing intensity. Best vocal of the night. At this point the energy of the show flagged a bit, to be picked up again as the night moved on. Masterpiece was not one of my favorites on this night, maybe the jumpy rocking rhythms of the rest of the show making the groove in this case somewhat clunky. Wonderful lyric rewrites. Honest With Me offered another great rearrangement, but the music may have been too similar in feel to the earlier Highway 61 (and suffered in comparison). Tryin to Get To Heaven featured a fast shuffle rhythm and a very good vocal. Seemed more direct and like a love song compared to the wistful tone of the original. Make You Feel My Love seemed truly heartfelt, redeeming a song that I tend to skip over. Excellent, dynamic arrangement and beautiful vocal. Pay In Blood rolled out with the power and the balls it somewhat lacked on Tempest - and brought the intensity of the show back up, way up. Lenny Bruce maintained the intensity, but with a quieter song. It has always been a favorite of mine. I never thought I would hear it live, and Bob performed it with a loving grace - not oversinging or melodramatic but simple and moving. More great lyric revision. Early Roman Kings was another hair raising performance, astonishing guitar, Bob center stage making karate slashes to the crowd as he sang with vicious precision. Girl From The North Country featured a piano arrangement much like Spanish Is the Loving Tongue from the 70’s and was charming in its rueful reflection of lost love. Not Dark Yet rocked out, replacing the slow paced drama of the recorded version with a jump beat; again a huge departure that offered new insights into the meaning of the song. Keeping the uptempo vibe going, Thunder On The Mountain was to me a strong improvement over the Modern Times rendition, replacing the original’s steam locomotive with a 200 mph maglev bullet train. Hot 60’s British Rock sound. I do hope this arrangement gets a release some day. Soon After Midnight swung as it does on Tempest, a nice tempo change that fit well into the flow. Nice piano and vocal. Gotta Serve Somebody has an almost completely new lyric - to me a massive improvement over the original. More hot rock sounds and great great guitar to bring the main show to a close. A long pause before returning for the encore. Was the crowd not enthusiastic enough? Bob strapped on his guitar for Thin Man. Grinning and addressing the audience head on with “You don’t know what it is, Do ya?” Were we supposed to be in on the joke or was it directed at us? As always with Bob a mystery. Takes A Lot To Laugh hews close the original, but again with steaming rock intensity. A great finish to a wonderful night. Bob appears to be stronger than ever on this set of shows, and I hope he keeps going forever. I also hope that at some point this show or one like it becomes available. The performances here taken together would be my Bob’s Greatest Hits Vol 4. [TOP] Review by Bill White On Monday, I drove home to Aylmer, Quebec, after a phenomenal concert in New York State. Thanks and praise to Paul Bagnell, who quarterbacked all the arrangements and gave me glowing reports of the shows he went to see in East Lansing and Ann Arbor. It was an honour to see Dylan and hang out with Paul again! The last time I saw Dylan (probably the last time he gigged in Canada) was at Montreal’s Bell Centre in November 2012. It was a letdown. Bob should have opened for Mark Knopfler because Knopfler and his band were incredible. Clearly, Dylan was just not excited to be in a room with 16,000 people. Now, the evidence points to greater comfort at smaller venues. Mosquito net curtains ringed the ceiling of Ithaca College’s cavernous indoor track-meet arena to dampen the echo. I suspect it also helped that the sound technicians had the volume down a bit. As a result, for us, up front and off to the left, the sound was crystal clear. A bit distant at the back of the hall (see below) but no echo. From our vantage point, Paul and I couldn’t see Charlie Sexton much but we sure could see Bob. From the get-go, this was no ordinary concert. Bob heaved every ounce of his being into the performance. The only possible down side was his harmonica, which has always been simple; some might even describe it as lame. Certainly, his skill with that instrument doesn’t hold a candle to Mick Jagger’s stupendous harp on Blue and Lonesome. But Dylan he made up for it with great piano work and above all, his staggeringly pointed vocals. Trilling. Desperate. His last breath. Sharp. More persuasively rhythmic and yet offbeat with the lyrics than ever before – and I’ve been lucky enough to have seen this guy almost 20 times since 1978. By contrast, Paul has seen Dylan more than 60 times. I have only twice been brought to the brink of tears by a song in concert. The first time was Tuesday Afternoon by the Moody Blues in 1992 at Ottawa’s National Arts Centre. I put my reaction down to the virtually note-perfect rendition and the astonishing million-miles-away sound of the drums when they turned off the PA… the total effect was a sea of emotional nostalgia. The second time my eyes welled up was on Sunday night in Ithaca, during Not Dark Yet. The new arrangement is akin to a cinematic requiem. The dull, burnt orange glow basking down behind the band from the huge Hollywood spotlights evoked the last sunset you’ll ever see. The band fades out as Bob sings “It’s not dark yet…” and they stop completely to let him fill the auditorium with “but it’s getting there”. Then Charlie Sexton steps in with stunning bluesy sighs leading back to the melancholy melody. This arrangement cracks the emotion of the song wide open. For me, it was the absolute peak of the show. Suffice to say that the band, with the new drummer and guitarist must rate as one of the best Bob has ever assembled. Sexton is the star but he’s just a neck ahead of the other incredible musicians and they are locked down tight: for example, Highway 61 rocked out better than Lake Placid in ’99. The song selections provide a unique précis of Dylan’s recording career. New arrangements could be traced back to the stylings of Blonde on Blonde or Nashville Skyline – though none of the songs from those records were featured. Lenny Bruce was fantastic – a sublime addition to the show. So was the piano version of Girl From the North Country. I went searching for beer during Make You Feel My Love, which I’ve always loathed, despite its apparent popularity. The song ended and the beer line hadn’t moved more than a foot, so I went back to my seat to enjoy the rest of a perfectly thrilling concert experience. Thunder On the Mountain rocked the place to bits but when it was over I had to ask Paul “What was that?!” The new version was unrecognizable to me. Catch this tour if you can: the show is unbelievably good. Bob’s BACK…! Here’s hoping Canada beckons. Bill White Aylmer, Quebec