I Was There When Bob Dylan Visited UVM’s Patrick Gymnasium on The Rolling Thunder Revue ’75

You know you got a good friend when he knows you so well he does on instinct what you would do yourself under similar circumstances. I was lucky enough to have such a friend in the fall of 1975 when my former classsmate saw a crowd gathered at the University of Vermont’s Patrick Gym and inquiring accordingly, was told tickets were being sold for an upcoming Bob Dylan concert. Impulse buying ruled the day and to great effect in both short term and long.

The day in question was obviously past the point of only vague rumors circulating on what would come to be known as ‘The Rolling Thunder Revue.’ But given that Dylan had only just toured for the first time in eight years since his reunion with the Band early in 1974 (and my buddy having been awestruck with that show at the Montreal Forum that January), buying a pair of tix was as much of a no-brainer for him as it would’ve been for me.

The look of envy on the faces of those who I advised about having those tickets was almost worth the price of admission (which I forget at this point but reckon were in the $12-15 ranges as designated for Dylan/Band shows). The experience of the concert itself, in a sweltering gymnasium in early November, was absolutely priceless. Not that there weren’t some down times during the course of the two hours, but those were certainly relative and hardly the fault of the other artists on the roster with Dylan.

Striking enough in white face and feathered hat, Bob became all the more so as the concert ensued, displaying a startling level of engagement in his performance whenever he was on stage. There had been a certain disconnect between Bob and his former accompanists when they got back together the previous year, so much so the most memorable segments of the show, as accurately documented on the live double album, Before the Flood, were those when the two were playing apart. But Dylan meshed with the Rolling Thunder band and they in turn aligned behind him, if a bit sloppily, winging it much of the way as their charismatic leader as always been wont to do, here though to unusually theatrical effect.

The audience and the performers seemed equally excited, all the more so because, in addition to new material like “Isis” and “One More Cup of Coffee (Valley Below)” (from album Desire yet to be released in the first month of 1976),  the setlist included songs that, only a decade or so prior, Bob Dylan had deemed obsolete. The socially-relevant likes of “The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll” rang true in the context of Rubin “Hurricane” Carter’s jailing (more on that later), while “A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall” and “Blowin’ in the Wind” vividly evoked the author’s days as conscience of the folk music protest movement.

Accordingly, while that particular aspect of the concert echoed in the familiar personage of Joan Baez, the presence of  Byrds’ founder Roger McGuinn reminded of the breadth of Dylan’s influence on popular culture. Such figures got their due acclamation, but it was nothing compared to the electricity in the air when Dylan took the stage, commanding it with perhaps the most authority he ever had to this point in his career because there were no naysayers, as on the raucous tour that yielded The Real Royal Albert Hall Concert 1966 and no unwieldy expectations as in 1974.

Unusual for the time, the format of the show in two sets made practical sense, giving the performers as well as the audience a break, not just from the heat in the college venue, but a respite from the intensity of the show itself. Baez’s appearance for a protracted segment was as comparable a nod to her roots as Dylan’s and it also offered a fitting nod the folk tradition represented by Ramblin’ Jack Elliott(and the homage to same and its author Woody Guthrie with the ensemble encore of “This Land Is Your Land”). The fact the tour was turning into a campaign on behalf of the (seemingly) wrongly imprisoned boxer Carter, lent a weight of righteous social justice to the proceedings.

But there were even greater dynamics involved in this ‘Rolling Thunder’ presentation, such as the quick interludes with figures such as the embodiment of a non-sequitur in the form of Bowie sideman/guitarist Mick Ronson or front man’s comrade-in-arms Bob Neuwirth. The latter Greenwich Village contemporary of Dylan’s and  who may have been no more recognizable than violinist Scarlet Rivera, he was hardly the wraith-like enigma of this itinerant musician. Reportedly encountered by Dylan on the streets of New York, the violinist added as much exotic mystery to the proceedings with decidedly gypsy-styled accouterments  as the sound of her instrument on songs including “Oh Sister.”

Nothing seemed exactly rushed during the course of this extended performance, but there was nevertheless a sense of the troupe as a whole riding the crest of a wave of inspiration. On a more broad scale, that sensation furthered the idea of  Rolling Thunder as an impromptu sequence of events, an extended immersion in the moment on behalf of all involved, including the audience; as the tour extended into the fall then early winter, the swift turnaround of show announcements, ticket sales, and appearances was expert execution of the practical aspect of this dynamic, proportionately applied.

The spontaneous tone set by Bob Dylan’s own unself-conscious approach to performing–in contrast to his often stilted approach in 1974 and notwithstanding his film-making of Renaldo & Clara during the tour–was a rare commodity indeed. The massive administration of roadworks we know today wasn’t yet common even though the Rolling Stones’ Exile on Main Street tour three years prior inaugurated the concept and the Dylan/Band reunion in 1974 had furthered it.

And, as on so many fronts (with many such instances in his past and yet to come), here was Bob Dylan going against the grain of expectations to great effect, on what turned out to be history-making even before (and arguably to greater degree than) the appearance at Madison Square Garden on behalf  Hurricane Carter later in the year. Often overlooked in the historical arc of ‘Rolling Thunde’r is the evolution of the band down to the core personnel that appeared with Dylan for the Hard Rain television concert of September 1976, much of which was released on the eponymous album and constitutes to many one of the highlights of the man’s live releases.

Yet it’s the early days of the tour by The Rolling Thunder Revue, like this unheralded stop in the Green Mountains, that, even more so that the 1966 with The Hawks near twenty years before, that, as represented on The Bootleg Series Vol. 5, posits the most indelibly memorable example of how deeply Bob Dylan enjoys performing his music live on stage.

 

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10 Responses

  1. Nicely done Doug. I saw the same tour in Toronto (December 2nd), and you captured the looseness of the show that I saw, and also how engaged Bob was. Watching him prowl around the stage like a tiger during “Isis” (which was a new song, not yet released) is something I will never forget. It was very intense. And while he did mesh with the band, I found that they kind of sped through a lot of the songs very aggressively, almost violently at times. With guests spots from both Joni Mitchell and Gordon Lightfoot, the entire show was over 4 hours long, and we all left the place totally exhausted but fully aware that we witnessed something truly special. Thanks for dredging up those memories of 40+ years ago my friend.

  2. There is a reason why Dylan never played “Hurricane” ever again…including when the Denzel Washington sanitized version came out…

    the release of the court transcripts.

    Peter Hyatt

  3. Enjoyed reading your insights on the Rolling Thunder revue….Yes that Gym was sweltering Hot. I was in school at Binghamton, NY and visiting friends in Albany NY (also aware of the ongoing Dylan tour through the Northeast). In Albany I called either the Massachusetts chamber of commerce or the venue where the last show was at and found out that he was heading to Vermont ( I then maybe called somewhere in Vermont to learn it was going to be in Patrick Gymnasium). I took Greyhound from Albany, got to the Gym and somehow bought a ticket from someone and got to sit around 18th row.

    Best Concert I ever saw……Dylan’s singing and phrasing that night and on that tour was incredible…he was on fire with the new Desire songs and blistering versions of his older stuff. It also happened to be the first time in concert that he played Simple Twist of Fate (although he did play it live for a John Hammond Tribute—-taped in September 1975).

    Amazing to have had Joan Baez and Dylan sharing a mike, also great to hear Roger McGuinn and Ramblin Jack Elliot.

    I do remember upset fans throwing bottles right outside the doors of the Gym….maybe because they did not get in…….do you remember that? I think there was an announcement that if that continued the show would be canceled. ..

    I kind of remember the Gym being down a sloped hill—–is this correct?

    After the concert, I took a bus back to Albany and the new songs “Oh Sister” One More Cup of Coffee” “Sara” “Romance in Durango” “Isis” and “Hurricane” were dancing in my head—–and still are to this day.

  4. I was at the concert. Tickets were $8.25 which was – if you believe it – more than twice the cost of concert tickets back then. I saw Springsteen in Burlington in 1974 for $3.50

  5. At the risk of being yelled at for reviving an old post I’ll through my 2cents in. We hung around all day for tickets. The concert was originally slated for Memorial Auditorium which was a smaller venue. As I recall the show did not sell out. Patrick Gym was hot as hell. I’ve seen tons of shows including Woodstock and Watkin Glen. RTR was better, maybe the best? Certainly way up at the top. I still my ticket stub from that one. Thanks for the excellent article and memories.

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