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OCTOBER 28, 2005 AHOY ROTTERDAM THE NETHERLANDS 1. Maggie's Farm 2. Tonight I'll Be Staying Here With You (Bob on harp) 3. Watching The River Flow 4. Lay, Lady, Lay 5. Stuck Inside Of Mobile With The Memphis Blues Again 6. Blind Willie McTell (Donnie on banjo) 7. I'll Be Your Baby Tonight (Bob on harp) 8. Ballad Of A Thin Man (Bob on harp) 9. I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met) 10. Love Sick (Donnie on electric mandolin) 11. Tangled Up In Blue (acoustic) 12. Down Along The Cove 13. Chimes Of Freedom 14. Highway 61 Revisited 15. Like A Rolling Stone 16. All Along The Watchtower There we were, my wife and I, for the first time at the Ahoy, to see the first of three shows during one fine October weekend. It was our first Dylan show since Belfast and Galway, the only two we saw in 2004. We flew in from Cork a day early, to spend some time in Rotterdam, and even got to take a nice harbour cruise through earth's largest port a few hours before the Ahoy show, which was our first Dutch concert since Kerkrade 1995. Concerning the song selection, with an average change of more than ten songs from one show to the next during this tour so far, it is hard to guess what Dylan will pull out, so I expected a mix of regulars and rarer songs, and this is what I got. But no reason to complain, as the performance was better than the set list might suggest, and the band members sure know how to play. Especially the two new guys, Donnie and Denny, impressed me not a little. I think they add some maturity to Bob's band. As it was our first of six shows during this tour, we stayed a little in the back on the floor to test the waters, walking around sometimes between songs to try different vantage points. "Maggie" was an intense opener, and pulled me right into the concert experience, which I came to enjoy. Already the second song, "Tonight I'll be Staying Here With You", was the first new one for me, having never seen it live in 47 previous shows since 1981. It featured the first center stage harp solo of the night. Another very nice center stage harp solo followed later on during "Baby Tonite", which I had not seen live since Portsmouth 2000. Actually there were some other regular songs for this year, which I had not seen for some time, "Lay Lady Lay" I had not seen since the above mentioned Kerkrade show in 1995, and both "Blind Willie Mc Tell" and "I Don't Believe You" not since May 2002. "Blind Willie" was the first peak of the show for me, well sung by Bob, and nicely accompanied on banjo by Donnie. In a world where levees are not fortified to stand hurricanes, because funds are channelled elsewhere to fight wars, it is very fitting to hear Bob Dylan sing: "… this land is condemned all the way from New Orleans to New Jerusalem … God is in heaven, and we all want what's his, but power and greed and corruptible seed seem to be all that there is …". To end the first half Bob pulled out a very intense and enjoyable "Ballad Of A Thin Man" (which was my first one since Kilkenny 2001), featuring another nice harp solo by Bob. My 31st "Tangled" of course couldn't match up to my 30th, in Galway last year, which will probably stay forever as the finest rendition I have ever heard; but it is always nice to hear a new song for a certain tour. And "Down Along The Cove" is always welcome in my book; I simply love these live versions ever since I witnessed the first two comeback versions of this song in Frankfurt and Düsseldorf in 2003 (with mighty Koella on guitar), and then the fine Galway version last year. Just as I was pondering the fact that so many songs from the 60s were performed in Rotterdam, and already expecting three more of those 60s regulars as the last three songs, Bob threw me a curve ball in spot number thirteen, surprising me with the oldest song on my top five wish list of all the songs in his current repertoire which I had never seen before; a sublimely beautiful "Chimes Of Freedom", for me the high point of the show, worth the price of admission, the plane ticket and the hotel. This song was the first European appearance in 18 years (since the nine "Temples In Flames" performances of this gem in the fall of 1987, the first of which had actually been the European debut of "Chimes Of Freedom", which also was pulled out in the Ahoy in Rotterdam). All I can say is I sure was glad to witness Bob Dylan sing this great new version of "Chimes Of Freedom", "… flashing for the warriors, whose strength is not to fight, flashing for the refugees on the unarmed road of flight …". |
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