Live 1975:
The Rolling Thunder Revue
Bob Dylan

If you ever attempt to watch Renaldo & Clara, Bob Dylan's unfathomable,
four-hour film that lacks any real plot or direction, you might wonder if the
music was deliberately meant to take a backseat to reinstated paramours like
Joan Baez and Allen Ginsberg fluttering in a spotlight marred by cigarette smoke
and wretched decadence. Such were the deceptive tactics the star and director
so coyly ingested to liberate himself from actually being Bob Dylan (in the
movie, Ronnie Hawkins partly assumes the role). Then again, a motorcycle accident
and less-than-satisfactory tour with the Band might well have led to some cataclysmic
desire for reinvention. Riding high with Blood On The Tracks
and banking tracks for Desire, Dylan assembled a montage of
musicians and cronies for a whirlwind tour of New England. Even though performance
snippets run amok throughout Renaldo & Clara, Bob Dylan's time
with the first edition of the Rolling Thunder Revue has never been properly
documented until now. Live 1975: The Rolling Thunder Revue, Volume 5
of the ongoing Bootleg Series, is taken from five shows that accurately depict
this legendary tour.
The first thing you notice about Live 1975 in comparison to other Dylan live
offerings is its unbridled tightness and energy. While guests like Baez, Roger
McGuinn, and Ramblin' Jack Eliot, as well as walk-ons like Joni Mitchell and
Gordon Lightfoot, certainly gave the shows a varied cornucopia of musical flourishes
— the core band of Bobby Neuwirth (guitar, vocal), Scarlet Rivera (violin),
T-Bone Burnett (guitar), Steven Soles (guitar, vocal), Mick Ronson (guitar),
David Mansfield (steel-guitar, mandolin, violin, dobro), Rob Stoner (bass),
Howie Wyeth (piano, drams), Luther Rix (drums, percussion, congas) and Ronee
Blakely (vocal) capably fill in the gaps and then some. Add to the fact that
Dylan himself belts out each lyric with pure ferocity and steady cadence, and
hard-bitten classics like "Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" and "The
Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll" burn with vitality and drive. "Romance
In Durango," "Isis," "Oh, Sister," "Hurricane,"
"One More Cup Of Coffee (Valley Below)" and "Sara" —
all unreleased at the time — simply catapult the whole ensemble beyond
the threshold, and, for the most part, surpass their studio counterparts.
If duets with Baez on "Blowin' In The Wind," "Mama, You Been
On My Mind," "I Shall Be Released" and "The Water Is Wide"
show Dylan's propensity for appropriately aligning his wheeze with a more congenial
voice, then his solo turns on "Simple Twist of Fate, "It's All Over
Now, Baby Blue" and "Tangled Up In Blue" call attention to an
ability to sound just as essential unaccompanied. There's no mistaking that
alone or in combination, Dylan is the consummate bard, minstrel and white-faced
"tornado" of this traveling circus. In the clean and crisp Renaldo
& Clara clips of "Tangled Up In Blue" and "Isis"
that comprise the bonus DVD, Dylan commandeers the proceedings with unrefined
authority. The never-ending tour continues to roll on unabated with the sixty
something Dylan at the helm. But it's unlikely the will and intensity that filled
the clubs, gymnasiums and small halls in 1975 with Dylan and the Rolling Thunder
Revue will ever be replicated. This 22-track, 2-CD set does a damn respectable
job of keeping the memory alive.
~ Shawn Perry
Homeward
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