- Sep 15
The September 22 issue of The New Yorker features two poems by Bob Dylan:
These poems will be published in November in a new book, Hollywood Foto-Rhetoric:The Lost Manuscript, with text by Bob Dylan and photographs by Barry Feinstein.
- comments[12]
- Sep 08
Visit Amazon.com to watch the new video for Bob Dylan's "Dreamin' Of You", featuring the legendary Harry Dean Stanton.
- comments[31]
- Aug 27
Bob Dylan and his band have been mixing up the set lists quite a bit on their U.S. tour.
In Snowmass tonight, the exquisite Simple Twist of Fate. A few nights ago in Tulsa, the always devastating Positively 4th Street. In Little Rock, they played Shooting Star and This Wheel's On Fire, and this tour's powerful pair, John Brown and Masters of War. A couple of nights earlier in Evansville, Not Dark Yet and It's All Over Now, Baby Blue were performed.
At this point, it's hard to predict what will happen when the band hits the stage!
Follow the tour's set lists on the bobdylan.com Tour page and click on the set list links to see the set lists and to read comments on the shows by genuine eyewitnesses.
Were you at the show? Please write a review and click the "I WAS THERE" button.
- comments[2]
- Aug 22
Bob Dylan and his band played Cincinnati Friday, Elizabeth Saturday, and Sunday in Evansville, Indiana.
Cincinnati was treated to old favorites like The Times They Are A-Changin' and Just Like A Woman and some modern classics from "Time Out of Mind" and "Love and Theft": Love Sick, High Water, and Honest With Me.
Elizabeth's Caesars hit the jackpot with Visions of Johanna and The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll, always highlights for dedicated listeners.
Marty Rosen's Elizabeth review from the Courier-Journal.
Evansville fans have already submitted some very favorable comments. Here's what fpontin had to say:
"It was an outstanding concert, in a great venue. The band was in top-form, the live versions of Stuck Inside a Mobile, I believe in you, Thunder on the mountain and Not Dark Yet were highlights of the concert, and the encore with a very loud version of All Along the Watchtower was something else.
It was totally worth it to travel some 400 miles to watch Dylan, and though his voice is really low in this tour, I don't think it compromised the quality of the show at all - actually, I believe it added a more bluesy feeling to most of the songs; at times it reminded me of John Lee Hooker or Wolf."- comments[2]
- Aug 21
The Hohner company and Bob Dylan are proud to announce the Bob Dylan Collection of hand-signed harmonicas, celebrating the accomplishments and legacy of both Bob Dylan and Hohner. Hohner has manufactured and distributed musical instruments since 1857, making it one of the world’s oldest musical instrument makers.
- comments[3]