World Tour - 1966
A CS production, April 2015
Disc One:
1. She Belongs To Me - Sheffield , May 16, 1966
2. Fourth Time Around - London, May 27, 1966
3. Monologue On ‘Drug Songs’ - London, May 27, 1966
4. Visions Of Johanna - Melbourne , April 20, 1966
5. It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue - Melbourne, April 20, 1966
6. Desolation Row - London, May 27, 1966
7. Just Like A Woman - Sheffield, May 16, 1966
8. Mr. Tambourine Man - Sheffield, May 16, 1966
Disc Two:
1. Tell Me Mama - Liverpool, May 14, 1966
2. I Don’t Believe You - Liverpool May 14, 1966
3. Baby, Let Me Follow You Down - Liverpool, May 14, 1966
4. Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat - Sheffield, May 16, 1966
5. Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues - Melbourne, April 20, 1966
6. One Too Many Mornings - Sheffield, May 16, 1966
7. Ballad Of A Thin Man - Birmingham, May 12, 1966
8. Like A Rolling Stone - London, May 26, 1966
Though the most notable 1966 concert, performed in Manchester, was released to great acclaim in the 1990s, and a few other incredible performances were released over the years (“Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues” from Liverpool on Masterpieces and “I Don’t Believe You” from Belfast on Biograph), many other recordings have circulated among collectors over the past half century. The acoustic sets are, overall, better represented. Many of the electric sets suffer from extreme distortion or truncated run times. Still, one is able to piece together a ‘full show’ from circulating unreleased recordings. Concerning lineage, the recordings that make up this compilation are drawn entirely from the unparallelled “Genuine Live 1966” box set.
The concert setlists remained static from the start of the tour to its conclusion, excepting some early performances of “To Ramona” and “Love Minus Zero/No Limit” in the United States and “Positively 4th Street” in Sydney (found on The Thousand Highways Collection Shades of Blue). No good recordings of the American shows are extant as of early 2015.
One of the most interesting aspects of the songs above are the between song commentary. “Visions of Johanna” is introduced as ‘not a drug song,’ and its author asserts his disdain for British music journalism. “Just Like Tom Thumb’s Blues” is explained as a tale of Tom Thumb, a 125 year old Mexican painter. Dylan reminds his audience ahead of “One Too Many Mornings” that he, too, was just a baby once. Finally, he gives his only band introductions of the tour before the final, caustic “Like A Rolling Stone,” assuring the audience sarcastically that he and The Hawks have enjoyed every minute of playing for them.
This is a deeply confrontational series of songs. Though the acoustic songs manage to express a kind of delicate beauty rarely found outside of classical music, the electric songs hurl every ounce of raw sound at the audience. At times, the quality suffers, as “I Don’t Believe You” gets a bit distorted and “Like A Rolling Stone” threatens to fall apart throughout its ten minutes, but you just can’t turn away. It’s really fascinating, and sounds no less alive and moving than the day it was recorded. In particular, “Just Like A Woman” is utterly heartbreaking, “Mr. Tambourine Man” is spellbinding, and “Ballad Of A Thin Man” is a truly definitive performance.
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