Subject: DEEP BENEATH THE WAVES vol 63 From: xyx Date: Sat, 4 Oct 1997 18:55:08 -0400 There's plenty of grapevine activity 'round these parts, with talk of the hearing-impaired WolfTraps, redone Basement's, Hurricane Knights and even some PureHeat from the Spring, not to mention one to give the legendary SOUL a scare as best of '96............... that would be the astounding Magdeburg performance, supposedly gearing up to hit the streets very soon as "Eyes of the Idol." With some inspired violin-backed tracks as filler, could SOUL be supplanted from its long-time perch atop the 96's? Stay tuned............. LUCKY NOT TO BE DESTROYED 2CD (Lucky LR 005/6) Antibes, France (Pinede de Juan-Les-Pins), 12 July 1992 Tracks: 18 Times: 55/55 Source: Audience Quality: Very Good Hmmmmm, where to start. An interesting show, to say the least, made more interesting as it's the last one of the Euro summer tour and they sound like they're playing together for the first time! Bob bobs and weaves his way through an 18 song set with much difficulty, his raspy growl worse for wear as he navigates through an oft-times out of tune and off-key performance by the band. I'm sure he's as guilty as them but thank god for guilty pleasures. I can't help but wonder while listening to this for the 4th time through whether or not these guys were rousted from a night of drunken debauchery, dragged to the stage and forced to play w/out a tune-up. Maybe they thought the previous gig was the last of the tour and celebrated a bit prematurely. Anyway, they got through it (with much difficulty) and Lucky gives us a nice quality peek at went went down. JJ does his best Hendrix impression on the exclusive "Hey Joe" opener, and he and Bucky virtually hold things together during those parts of the show that seemed destined to fall apart. I'llBeYourBaby is done w/bravado in a rollicking country style, DRow is a charming but organized mess, and Bob butchers many a line throughout the show. The acoustic sets fare a bit better than the electric portions of the show, with Bob's "To Ramona" and "It Ain't Me Babe" the clear standouts. Let me say that the performance of "...Tom Thumb's Blues" is easily the worst I've heard and perhaps has the worst drumming of all time. I won't mention names but the drummer was gone soon after. Bob sings like he's running out of breath and the harmonica, around his neck, he blows it a little TOO free. Skeleton keys FULL of rain, it seems. Still, for all the negatives, I'm cuing it up another time. It's got a certain charm, a sweetness, it's got life to it. It breathes, raspy and phlegmy and inconsistently, but it hacks on nonetheless. "Goin' down the road feelin' bad" is an apt line for this gig. It was'nt dark yet but it was getting there. Five years (and then some) down the line since this show..........listening to it and hearing him now makes you realize how far he's come back. Maybe that's why I like it, for the perspective it provides. WASHINGTON 1994 2CD (Amsterdam AMS 729) Warner Theater, Washington, DC 30 Oct 1994 + filler 31 Oct 1994 Tracks: 20 Time: 74/78 Source: Audience Quality: Very Good I can still remember Bob's lips folded back throughout this show, baring those incisors like a wild dog ready to pounce on some unsuspecting prey. What a performance!! Hearing it again in better quality than my average tape brings the memories flooding back. Three songs in particular standout above the rest as supreme renditions: 4th Street, Desolation Row & Every Grain of Sand. I can't recall a show where Bob's phrasing was so varied and pronounced, so playful and yet so biting. He bullies through 4th St. like a runaway freight train rolling through the hills, emphasizing the last words of lines like "I know you're dissatisfied with your position and your playeeeeaaaaace...." so effectively, until the last 2 lines where he slows things down to a crawl, which gives even more venom to "...what a drag it is to see you." So different than the slower, classic Europe '96 versions but almost as pleasing. The vocal on DRow is just as good, with Bob stretching the vowels and kicking up his voice a notch, singing high and singing low, just a wonderfully playful performance with great accompaniment by all. The killer, though, is Every Grain, a roller coaster rendition with the vocal done softly one moment and exuding strength and volume the next, "...like every leaf that trembles, like every grain of saaaaaaaaa aaaand." I can still see his choppers from the 2nd row, fully exposed as he sings out "...in the hour of my deepest need" Wow! Everything meshed that night and it comes through loud and clear on this nice Japanese set. From start to finish, an inspired performance by all, particularly Mr. Dylan, who's singing was sublime THROUGHOUT! October 94 was a great month, no?? Setlist: Jokerman/JustLike/Watchtower/RedSky/Tangled/4thSt/TMan/ DRow/Think2x/GodKnows/EveryGrain/Maggie's/ThinMan/AintMebabe/ filler 10/31:ManInMe/Hattie/Masters/H61/phenomenal DiseaseOf Conceit/LARS. xyx