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BOB DYLAN : BEHIND THE SUN |
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Disc One (55:56)
Disc Two (47:18)
Label : Tambourine Man Records Venue : Malmö Arena, Malmö, Sweden Recording Date : March 28th, 2009 Quality : Audience recording (A-) Review (Collector's Music Reviews) : Tambourine Man Records has released Dylan's 5th live show from 2009 in excellent audience fidelity. One local concert attendee articulated the following in her review of the 3-28-09 performance: "The concert made a strong start with "Maggie's Farm", a start that showed us from the first minute a band and a singer in focused form. Very good sound. Everybody knew the song, there was no doubt this was going to be a good evening. "The Man In Me" as number 2 was unexpected. I always enjoyed the song and this was no exception. The voice was loud and clear. Well, maybe not exactly clear, but somewhat hoarse and growling. Bob on a semi-acoustic guitar, I never understood if he played the riff himself though. "Watching The River Flow" is an ok-ish song, but not so much more, but a nice country rocker if you don't scrutinize it too much. The harmonic changes were a bit diffuse though, especially on the bass side. "When The Deal Goes Down" is also a beautiful song that deserves a sensitive treatment, but, done a bit too fast this time and Bob didn't seem to be able to decide if he was going to go above or below the rooster inside his throat. So we had some muffled vocals there. However, that was the calm before the storm and when "High Water" started rolling with Donnie Herron on banjo, we knew the waters of energy were rising again. An intense performance. From then on he definitely had brought it all back home. "Memphis Blues" got a new and fresh treatment with Bob indulging in a short little organ phrase he played throughout the song making it a pillar of the whole arrangement. Then we were in for a real surprise when he started on a semi-acoustic version of the "Ballad Of Hollis Brown", a strong and expressive version where the singing couldn't have been better giving new maturity to the song. "Just Like A Woman" was next. The lighting of the stage changed and the song came out perfectly with Bob changing and underlining the meaning in the lyrics by delaying the last words time and again. During the refrain the audience sang the chorus and Bob soloed on the words and this time it was really nice and emotional, yet not banal at all. ("Sing along with Bob Dylan", I'd never thought I'd see the day!) After a rolling walking bass that was grooving insanely for a swinging "Summer Days", maybe the strongest performance of the evening for me was "The Lonesome Death Of Hattie Carroll" done in a feather light 3/4 time with beautiful brush drumming by George Recile (who by the way played masterly throughout the set) and a vocal that certainly rearranged the melody and juxtaposed notes, but still kept its beauty alive and was sung with thoughtful and tender voice. Bob at his best. Then the program draws toward its rather predictable close with "Like A Rolling Stone", "All Along The Watchtower", "Spirit On The Water" and "Blowin" In The Wind'. After all it was a great and, in many ways, satisfying concert and everybody seemed happy, although, as I hinted in the beginning, I couldn't help feeling a tiny bit of emptiness somewhere inside." TMR 168/169 is packaged in a double slimline jewel case with the label using, for the 3rd time, an obi strip and, although only clocking in at a collective 103:18, is an enjoyable release from the ever steady Tambourine Man Records label. Review (Bob's Boots) : A few short months after the show, came this sweet TMR release. It's a great sounding recording that well represents the first week of the 2009 tour. This is Bob's first performance in the newly constructed arena. The Label has been experimenting a bit with OBI strips. As far as we know, this is a first in the boot CD world. Obi is a Japanese word. It's the sash that ties a kimono. When the western world first started seeing these strips on LP albums in the middle of the previous century, they referred to them by this misnomer. The Japanese market picked up on the word and began using it as well. These paper ribbons were originally issued with Japanese pressings of foreign artists. They allowed for a variety of extra information to be included in phonetic Japanese (katakana) and Kanji, without changing the cover. The biggest advantage they have for CD packages is to allow the spine to be presented in katakana for the retailer's shelf. The Japanese throw them away just as the West throws away shrink wrap stickers. Westerners tend to save obis, however, as a collectible part of the package. As they are merely wrapped around the outside of the jewel case, they become difficult to store alongside the CD. Western collectors of legitimate Japanese pressed discs usually leave the package unopened. As the boot market has a different criteria and market base, the obi will not add value to a boot release, but it is a neat little addition to a Label that needed the extra boost to help its releases stand out. |