Rank #5. Live Aid, July 13, 1985. JFK Stadium, Philadelphia.

Bob Dylan’s brief but transcendent performance at Live Aid in 1985 has generally been overlooked amidst the hype over Phil Collins playing on both sides of the Atlantic, Mick Jagger and Tina Turner’s “wardrobe malfunction” and the Led Zeppelin reunion.

But sandwiched in between the bombast of the Mick & Tina show — which concluded with Mick ripping off Tina’s skirt — and the all-star conclusion of “We Are The World,” Dylan emerged from the catacombs of the stage, introduced by Jack Nicholson, and brought along two friends, Ron Wood and Keith Richards of the Rolling Stones.

At this point in their career, the Stones were on hiatus, and Keith and Mick were bad-mouthing each other in the press. So I’m sure it wasn’t coincidental that Keith and Ron would just happen to come along for the ride.

My Live Aid T-shirt, a bit tattered after all these years.

The main story though was Dylan’s total disregard of the 100,000 people in the stadium and millions watching worldwide, most of whom were only familiar with his “hits,” and doing what he felt were the most poignant songs he could imagine for the global hunger-relief event.

He opened with the rarely played “Ballad of Hollis Brown,” which recounts the story of a South Dakota farmer who, overwhelmed by the desperation of poverty, kills his wife, children and then himself. He then went on to perform “When the Ship Comes In,” inspired by a personal tale about Dylan being denied hotel lodging due to his appearance, with a more universal appeal for people down on their luck hoping for a better future.

Dylan then finished off with “Blowin’ in the Wind,” something everyone could relate to and a fitting finale to his short set.

Reverse side of my Live Aid short with artist lineup.

I had been at Live Aid since it started some 12 hours earlier, through the heat and the cool of night, and I felt Dylan’s performance was perfect for that point in the show. Peforming in a ragged manner on accoustic guitar with his Rolling Stone friends strumming along, at one point Dylan’s guitar string broke so Ron Wood gave him his guitar, and the show went on uninterrupted.

The Live Aid performance was also the start of a new movement as well, with Dylan saying “Maybe we could give a little bit of the money to the farmers.” Inspired by his remarks, John Cougar Mellencamp and Willie Neslon went on to start Farm Aid later that summer to benefit family farmers having trouble making ends meet, and has been held most years since.

Live Aid will be remembered for many things, but for me Dylan’s set was one of the highlights. Since Joan Baez had opened the show, I thought that maybe she would stick around and duet with Bob, but even without her it was a great, albeit short set.

Below are some YouTube clips of his performance. The complete set is audio-only, the videos are individual songs.

Audio-only complete set.
When the Ship Comes In Video
Blowin’ in the Wind video (but includes Jack Nicholson’s introduction)

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Rank #4. Dylan & The Dead July 10, 1987 J.F.K. Stadium, Philadelphia

Many people panned the short Dylan/Dead tour of summer 1987, particularly this performance, but for one brief glorious hour, we got a total summation of Dylan’s career, including old classics and rarely played songs, all with the good ole’ Grateful Dead as his backing band.

My Dylan and the Dead Ticket

The show was billed as Dylan & The Dead, Alone and Together, so I thought the Dead would play, Dylan would play solo, and then they would all play together. That wasn’t quite how it worked out.

On an overcast day in the middle of a typically hot, humid summer at Philadelphia’s dilapidated JFK Stadium, the Dead took the stage by themselves in the early evening, and put on a two-hour, 18 song set, opening with “Iko Iko,” a great version of “Terrapin Station” and concluding with “Another Saturday Night” (even though it was a Friday).

I kind of expected Dylan to come out next by himself, based on the advertising, but after a lengthy intermission, both artists returned together and launched into “Tangled Up In Blue.”

Dylan proceeded to visit various eras of his career up, including the then-recent “Man of Peace” and the country-blues of “I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight” with Jerry Garcia on peddle steel guitar.

Since the Dead often performed Dylan songs in their sets, it didn’t seem like either side rehearsed much, and you often saw the Dead playing Dylan songs the way they usually played them and Dylan playing the song the way he often played it.

Bordering along a train-wreck and sheer brilliance, the show was a fascinating live performance of two American musical icons. One side note: John Hammond, who took a chance with Dylan in 1962 when others passed, and signed him to Columbia Records, died earlier in the day. A rumor has it that Dylan had to be coaxed onstage to even do the show.

One of the more interesting twists of the night was “John Brown,” an early anti-war song by Dylan that was never officially released,which was preceded by the first live version of “The Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest” from the John Wesley Harding album.

Another surprise was “Joey,” one of my favorite songs from the classic Desire album about New York gangster Joe Gallo. Even though the song has about 10 different verses, culminating in Gallo’s murder, Dylan sang the verses out of order and had Joey killed off in the second verse, then continued along as if nothing happened.

After finishing up with “All Along the Watchtower” with Garcia taking the Hendrix solos, the ensemble left the stage after about an hour or so, and I thought maybe this was where Dylan would perform “alone.”

But only the Dead returned, did “Touch of Grey,” lights went up, and that was it! A somewhat curious ending. But after my initial disappointment, I began to realize what I had just seen, and it was a uniquely crazy, sloppy, incredible performance. A live album taken from different spots along the tour — but not this one — was later released, Dylan and the Dead, but it didn’t really capture the essence of the show I saw.

Below you’ll find the setlists, some treats from YouTube, including a good audio-only recording, a poor video recording, and a high-quality video recording of the Dead’s set.

I’ve also included a fairly lame review of the show from the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Audio-only recording of the Dylan/Dead set.

Poor quality video of the the Dylan/Dead set.

Setlist for Dylan/Dead:
Tangled Up in Blue
I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight
Man of Peace
The Ballad of Frankie Lee and Judas Priest
John Brown
Simple Twist of Fate
Ballad of a Thin Man
Stuck Inside of Mobile With the Memphis Blues Again
Chimes of Freedom
Queen Jane Approximately
Gotta Serve Somebody
Joey
All Along the Watchtower

High-Quality video of the Dead’s set

Grateful Dead-only Setlist:

Iko Iko
Jack Straw
Sugaree
Minglewood Blues
Althea
My Brother Esau
When Push Comes to Shove
Cassidy
China Cat Sunflower(>)I Know You Rider
Looks Like Rain
Terrapin Station
Drums
Space
I Need a Miracle
Black Peter
Around and Around
One More Saturday Night
Encore:
Touch of Grey
(performed after the Dylan set)

The Philadelphia Inquirer’s review of the show.

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My Live Dylan Shows Ranked!

Bob Dylan studio albums are often masterpieces, but his live shows are an entity unto themselves. Classic recorded songs you know from the first note are often nothing like that live. And that changes from tour to tour. Many people don’t like Dylan live, but for me it is a chance to get insight into what he might be thinking, and from time to time you are rewarded with an amazing performance.

I’ve gone through all my ticket stubs and have put together my favorite Dylan shows, along with memorabilia, setlists, bootleg recordings, pictures, reviews and anything else I can find to document these events.

Where you at any of these shows? If so, please leave your comments as well. I hope you enjoy this stroll through my memory lane.

BEGIN

Rank # 3 True Confessions Tour

Bob Dylan, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers
July 6, RFK Stadium, Washington DC (With The Grateful Dead)
July 19 & July 20, 1986, The Spectrum, Philadelphia

Following his Christian trilogy in the late 1970s-early 1980s, Dylan returned to more secular music, with the excellent Infidels and Empire Burlesque albums in his recent past and the quirky Knocked Out Loaded released in the middle of this tour.

T-Shirt for the Dylan, Petty and Grateful Dead show in Washington, D.C.
T-Shirt for the Dylan, Petty and Grateful Dead show in Washington, D.C.

Reminiscent of his shows with the Band some 12 years earlier, Dylan utilized Petty and his crew as his backing band, which forced him to focus on his live performances and the full breadth of his career..

I lumped these three shows together because they were similar in performance and repertoire, although the setlists varied slightly from show to show.

Dylan-Dead-RFK
Ticket stub for the Dylan, Petty and Grateful Dead show in Washington, D.C.

My first encounter with the “True Confessions Tour” as it was dubbed was on a stiflingly hot July 4th weekend in Washington DC at RFK Stadium, where the metal bleachers out in the sun may have brought up images of “Highway 61 Revisited” but also required newspapers to sit on to keep from burning up.

Despite the 97-degree heat, Dylan took the stage in the mid-afternoon dressed in black leather but cooly opened the show with the unfamiliar Joe Morris song “Shake a Hand,” which morphed into the universally loved “All Along the Watchtower,” with Petty and Mike Campbell soaring on the Hendrix guitar solo.

The Grateful Dead were also on the bill following Dylan and Petty, and the many Deadheads in the audience were very receptive to Dylan and the Heartbreakers’ loose, jammy style. The show alternated between newer songs and older classics, along with an acoustic set featuring “It Ain’t Me Babe.” Dylan took a quick break for a four-song set by Petty and The Heartbreakers, (and on later shows would give Petty a second set as well during the 3 1/2 hour show.)

true-confessions-shirt
The True Confessions Tour Shirt

The homestretch of the performances featured Dylan and the Heartbreakers heating things up even more with “Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 (a favorite among the Deadheads), “Like a Rolling Stone,” and “In The Garden.” The encore included “Blowin’ In the Wind” and a concluding, “Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door,” with the whole audience swaying along as one.

After a short break, the Dead followed, with a typical Dead setlist from the era, although on the next night, which I did not attend, Dylan joined the Dead for “Desolation Row” and “It’s All Over Now Baby Blue.”

These Dead shows are memorable because after the shows, Jerry Garcia went into a diabetic coma, and was near death for a period of time. I can’t help but think the heat he encountered during those two days led to his illness. Fortunately Garcia recovered following physical rehabilitation, and was back on the road six months later. If only he had stuck with his diet and exercise regime!

A few weeks later Dylan, Petty and the Heartbreakers (sans the Dead) came to Philly at the more “intimate” Spectrum, where the full nature of the show could be understood without the distractions of heat, Deadheads, and the whole stadium vibe.

It was here that the show really came together for me, as Petty was able to push Dylan in ways that his typical backup bands would not be able to do.
This show was a real-cross section of most of Dylan’s career (although nothing from the landmark 1970s albums Blood on the Tracks or Desire.)

7-19-86-ticket
Ticket Stub from July 19, 1986, Spectrum, Philadelphia

Nonetheless the mixture of accoustic and electric sets, the rock ‘n’ roll energy of the Heartbreakers, the inclusion of cover songs, some of which would show up years later on Dylan’s “Sinatra” albums, and an unreleased song provided a challenge for band and audience alike, and the entire trek was one of the touring highlights of Dylan’s career.

Here are the setlists (Petty’s and the Dead’s sets are excluded)

July 6, 1986
Shake a Hand
All Along the Watchtower
Clean Cut Kid
I’ll Remember You
Shot of Love
We Had It All (Dobie Gray cover)
Brownsville Girl
Masters of War
It Ain’t Me, Babe
One Too Many Mornings
Mr. Tambourine Man
I Forgot More Than You’ll Ever Know (The Davis Sisters cover)
Band of the Hand
When the Night Comes Falling From the Sky
Lonesome Town (Ricky Nelson cover)
Ballad of a Thin Man
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35
Gotta Serve Somebody
Seeing the Real You at Last
Across the Borderline (Ry Cooder cover)
I and I
Like a Rolling Stone
In the Garden
Blowin’ in the Wind
Rock ‘Em Dead (unreleased Dylan song)
Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door

dylan-7-20-86
Ticket Stub from July 20, 1986, Spectrum, Philadelphia

July 19, 1986
Shake a Hand (Joe Morris cover)
All Along the Watchtower
Clean Cut Kid
I’ll Remember You
Shot of Love
We Had It All (Dobie Gray cover)
Masters of War
The Times They Are A-Changin’
One Too Many Mornings
It Ain’t Me, Babe
I Forgot More Than You’ll Ever Know (The Davis Sisters cover)
Band of the Hand
When the Night Comes Falling From the Sky
Lonesome Town (Ricky Nelson cover)
Ballad of a Thin Man
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35
I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine
Seeing the Real You at Last
Across the Borderline (Ry Cooder cover)
I and I
Like a Rolling Stone
In the Garden
Blowin’ in the Wind
Let The Good Times Roll
Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door

July 20, 1986
Shake a Hand (Joe Morris cover)
All Along the Watchtower
Clean Cut Kid
Emotionally Yours
Shot of Love
We Had It All (Dobie Gray cover)
Masters of War
To Ramona
One Too Many Mornings
A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall
I Forgot More Than You’ll Ever Know (The Davis Sisters cover)
Band of the Hand
When the Night Comes Falling From the Sky
Lonesome Town (Ricky Nelson cover)
Ballad of a Thin Man
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35
I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine
Seeing the Real You at Last
Across the Borderline (Ry Cooder cover)
I and I
Like a Rolling Stone
In the Garden
Blowin’ in the Wind
Rock ‘Em Dead (unreleased)
Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door

Videos

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Rank # 2. Electric Factory, Philadelphia, Dec. 17, 1995.

The third night of a three-show run at Philadelphia’s warehouse of music, the Electric Factory, brought a packed, general admission show with special guest Patti Smith opening the evening. This 10-show outing was dubbed “The Paradise Lost Tour,” and this was the first night I had been out since the birth of my first son 5 months prior, so it made it extra special.

Paradise Lost Tour
The poster for this 10-night tour.

Patti’s eight-song set was short but blistering, and featured Dylan’s “The Wicked Messenger.” It would have been nice had Bob come out to join her , but that was not the case.

When Dylan took the stage, he launched into an eclectic set that touched on many eras of his career. Opening with “Crash On The Levee (Down in the Flood)” from his days with the Band, he then played a number of songs I’d never expect, including “Every Grain of Sand” from Shot of Love, an accoustic “Desolation Row,” and one of the killer tracks of the night, the quiet “Dark Eyes,” which ends the bombastic Empire Burlesque album. And what made this extra special is Pati Smith came out and joined him in a duet on the song, and it was just goosebumps. After that it was pure rock, as Dylan and the band stormed through the classics, including a revved up “Maggie’s Farm.”

For the encore, Dylan started with the Grateful Dead tune “West L.A. Fadeaway,” which led into “Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door,” no doubt in honor of Jerry Garcia, who had died a few months prior. Patti Smith returned for “Knockin'” and the two voices were beautiful as they intertwined together. Add in a raucous “Rainy Day Women” closer for good measure and it was just a tremendous evening, much different from what had been happening on stage during prior tours from this era.

Below is a setlist.

Down in the Flood
Señor (Tales of Yankee Power)
All Along the Watchtower
Every Grain of Sand
Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat
Silvio
Tangled Up in Blue (acoustic)
Desolation Row (acoustic)
It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue (acoustic)
Dark Eyes (with Patti Smith) (acoustic)
Maggie’s Farm
She Belongs to Me
Encore:
West L.A. Fadeaway
Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door (with Patti Smith)
Rainy Day Women #12 & 35 (With Cesar Diaz on guitar from Patti Smth’s band)

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Rank #1. October 24, 1981 Recreation Hall, Penn State University, State College, PA.

This was my first Dylan concert, and still the best (but I’m always hoping for a new one to top it). The album Shot of Love was out at the time, and Dylan was starting to emerge from his so-called “Born Again” phase and mixing up his setlist to include songs from all eras.

dylan ticket stub penn state
My ticket stub from the Penn State show.

I was in college at Shippensburg, PA, and friends of mine were on the concert committee at Penn State, so we were able to score second-row tickets for the event. Certainly the first time you see your hero it can be either thrilling or a let-down, but Dylan did not disappoint.

I was well aware going into the show that every tour had a unique sound, and that his older material would be rearranged to fit the feel of the newer album, and I had no problem with that. Shortly after 8 p.m., Dylan took the stage in his traditional sunglasses, was dressed in black, and opened with “Gotta Serve Somebody” from the 1978 Slow Train Coming album. From the very start he was mesmerizing, and being so close made it even more so. He alternated back and forth between old classics and his current material, with a musical continuity between them. The only downside was nothing from Desire or Blood on the Tracks was played, but that was a minor complaint.

His band, featuring stellar musicians such as Al Kooper on keyboards and Jim Keltner on drums, along with his female back-up singers was electric, his vocals were clear and sharp, and the setlist was superb. You couldn’t ask for a better first show.

Below is the setlist and a review published in the Penn State Newspaper, along with a general article on the 1981 tour from Rolling Stone.

Setlist:
Gotta Serve Somebody
I Believe in You
Like a Rolling Stone
I Want You
Man Gave Names to All the Animals
Maggie’s Farm
Girl From the North Country
Ballad of a Thin Man
In the Summertime
All Along the Watchtower
Forever Young
Gamblin’ Man
The Times They Are A-Changin’
A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall
It’s All in the Game
Slow Train
Solid Rock
Just Like a Woman
Heart of Mine
When You Gonna Wake Up?
In the Garden
Encore:
Blowin’ in the Wind
It Ain’t Me, Babe
Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door

Reviews:

Daily Collegian Dylan Review
Concert review in the Daily Collegian, Penn State’s daily newspaper.

A general review of the tour from Rolling Stone

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Rank #1. Highway 61 Revisited

(*****) August 30, 1965. Sixth Studio Album.

The amount of creativity flowing from Dylan over six albums in six years in the early to mid-1960s is staggering, but on Highway 61 Revisited just about every song can be considered among his best, and those that aren’t  provide cohesion to an album that mixes bluesy electric and acoustic gems, from the rollicking title track to the ethereal ending number “Desolation Row.” Dylan’s  writing has now moved beyond the topical to a poetic stream of consciousness that may not make sense by merely reading the words, but paints a hypnotic picture after hearing the music. So many of my favorite Dylan songs are on this record, it’s hardly worth pointing all of  them out,  but “Like a Rolling Stone,” “Ballad of a Thin Man,” and “Queen Jane Approximately”  help form the apex of his early output and have stayed a part of his live repertoire in some form or another for the rest of his life.

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Rank #2. Blood on the Tracks

(*****) January 17, 1975

After a series of average or even throwaway albums, and a brief two-album stint on Asylum, Dylan returned to Columbia Records in 1975 and the label is rewarded with one of his best releases ever.  Classics such as “Tangled Up In Blue,” “Shelter from the Storm” and one of my all-time favorites, the epic “Idiot Wind,” intermingle with essential deep cuts in a mostly acoustic setting that harkens back  to his earlier years but also redefines him for the future. His vocals are vital, the lyrics essential, and the stories they create bring the listener  on a journey from start to finish.

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Rank #3. Desire

Desire,  (*****) January 5, 1976. 17th Studio Album.

Desire brings an exotic, world music sound to Dylan’s repertoire, even as he returns to more topical songwriting. Scarlet Rivera, a violin player he found while waiting at a stop light, is all over this record, and Emmylou Harris is a perfect vocal foil for Dylan’s voice.  For the first time Dylan employs a co-writer — experimental theater director Jaques Levy — who collaborates on half the songs, including a Billy the Kid-reverence for a New York gangster (“Joey”) and the adventure-seeking epic “Isis,” another of my all-time favorite songs. The album begins with “Hurricane,” the story of boxer Rubin “Hurricane” Carter, who was eventually cleared after being wrongly convicted of a triple murder. And the album ends with “Sarah,” a final paeen to Dylan’s marriage, which ended in divorce a year later.

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