logo
Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson Charm Hollywood Bowl With Favorites, Deep Cuts at Outlaw Music Festival Tour Stop

Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson Charm Hollywood Bowl With Favorites, Deep Cuts at Outlaw Music Festival Tour Stop

Yahoo18-05-2025

Bob Dylan and Willie Nelson turned the Hollywood Bowl into a haven for Americana and country on Friday night, as the two legends brought the Outlaw Music Festival back to the storied venue for the second year in a row.
Dylan went on just as dusk settled, and the stage lit up like a noir rodeo, revealing Dylan's signature piano. He and his band — dressed in black like outlaw undertakers — opened with a swaggering 'Things Have Changed.'
More from The Hollywood Reporter
John Mellencamp Honors Republic Records at Grammy Hall of Fame Gala
U2 Legend Bono on Why the World Has Forgotten What Freedom and Democracy Mean
Jewish Rapper and Comedian Kosha Dillz Says His Film's Canceled Screening Has Been Reinstated
The stage setup was simple: An image of a peaceful mountain lake backdrop that resembled a fancy water bottle label, blending well with the surrounding Hollywood Hills, and a crowd full of cowboy hats and rhinestones.
Opening for Dylan and Nelson Friday night were bluegrass stars Sierra Hull and Billy Strings, while upcoming Outlaw Fest 2025 tour stops will rotate in acts like Sheryl Crow, Wilco, Lucinda Williams, and Nathaniel Rateliff. Outlaw lineups in previous years have included Neil Young, Brandi Carlile, and Chris Stapleton.
At 83, Dylan is still assertive, quirks and all. His piano was mixed unusually loudly, highlighting both rhythmic drive and occasional missed notes. It was a forgiving audience, many of whom were probably teens when Dylan released his first albums.
Dylan's set was the most unpredictable going in. On this tour's opening nights, he shook up his recent Rough and Rowdy Ways tour material and instead pulled out deep cuts, first-time covers, and completely reimagined versions of beloved songs. To superfans, this evening might've felt like a rerun — nearly identical to his set the night before in Chula Vista — but to most, it was refreshingly strange, especially for the younger attendees seeing him for the first time after catching last year's A Complete Unknown but not realizing how much Dylan has transformed his live sound from the past few decades of touring.
Tracks like 'Simple Twist of Fate,' 'Desolation Row,' and 'To Ramona' were reshaped with shuffling grooves and Dylan's honky-tonk piano. 'All Along the Watchtower' felt like a dare if Dylan could make one of his songs sound like Sade — a sentence this writer never expected to write. 'Blind Willie McTell' wore a Dire Straits combover. Even 'Under the Red Sky,' the title track from what was long considered one of Dylan's lesser albums, shed its early '90s sheen and was allowed to breathe, sounding especially spacious and pretty.
Other Dylan gems — 'Forgetful Heart,' 'Love Sick,' 'Early Roman Kings' — remained close to their original recordings while he performed new-to-this-tour covers like George 'Wild Child' Butler's 'Axe and the Wind,' Charlie Rich's 'I'll Make It All Up to You,' and 'Share Your Love With Me' by Alfred Braggs and Deadric Malone.
In typical Dylan fashion, he said little between songs, aside from a funny moment asking an audience member what they were eating. For the first several songs, the Bowl's monitors stayed off, as if Dylan didn't want to be seen. When they did come on a few songs in, to the audience's cheers, they only showed a far wide shot, still keeping the forever recluse mostly hidden.
Every time Dylan picked up a harmonica, the crowd roared. The biggest applause came for the closer, 'Don't Think Twice, It's All Right,' reimagined with jangly piano and harmonica.
If Dylan was the dusky preacher Friday, Nelson was the campfire light. At 92, he's still quintessentially American, our real-life bald eagle. After seeing him live in the tenth year of what has become outlaw music's most beloved festival, it's hard to argue with that.
Billed as 'Willie Nelson & Family,' the stage lit up in red and orange glow, an enormous American flag hanging behind them. Nelson, seated with Trigger — his trusty, long worn-in acoustic guitar — was surrounded by his literal family. He opened with 'Whiskey River' and the Bowl erupted. Nelson didn't pull any tricks, just classic after classic, performed with joy and clarity.
His set included hits he wrote or popularized with friends: 'Workin' Man Blues' (Merle Haggard), 'Good Hearted Woman' (Waylon Jennings), and 'Help Me Make It Through the Night' (Kris Kristofferson). Unlike Dylan, Nelson occasionally chatted with the crowd, giving intros to songs and memories of old friends.
Standouts included a rollicking 'Bloody Mary Morning' (with the audience cheering for its LA name-drop), a crowd singalong to 'Mammas Don't Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Cowboys,' and tender and funny renditions of '(Die When I'm High) Halfway to Heaven' and 'Everything is Bullshit,' both written by Nelson's youngest son Micah, who performs under the moniker Particle Kid. The latter was especially entertaining, with the younger Nelson, who does a near perfect impression of his dad's voice, injecting cat meows while the older Nelson scatted 'bullshit' throughout the choruses—smiling like your grandpa who knows that he's in trouble for saying something naughty.
Starting just before 10 p.m., Nelson never seemed tired. He smiled, nodded, and sang like he still meant every word. The evening ended with most of the Outlaw Fest crew coming back on stage together (except Dylan, who was maybe asleep), performing with Nelson to close the night by covering the timeless 'Will the Circle Be Unbroken?' and 'I'll Fly Away.'
Nelson then gave his farewells and exited stage right as the rest of the gang played him off with Hank Williams's 'I Saw the Light.'
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More
Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025
Hollywood's Highest-Profile Harris Endorsements: Taylor Swift, George Clooney, Bruce Springsteen and More

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gibson is searching for an iconic movie guitar
Gibson is searching for an iconic movie guitar

Digital Trends

timean hour ago

  • Digital Trends

Gibson is searching for an iconic movie guitar

Lost to the Future - The Search for Marty McFly's Back to the Future Guitar Gibson is on the hunt for one very special guitar: The cherry red Gibson ES-345 used by Marty McFly to play Chuck Berry's Johnny B Goode in the 1985 hit movie Back to the Future. Remember it? Course you do. To mark the movie's 40th anniversary, the legendary guitar maker has decided it wants to track down the whereabouts of the iconic instrument, and it's even called on those connected to the movie to help it in its quest. In a star-filled video (top) released on Tuesday, Back to the Future lead Michael J. Fox says: 'We need your help. We're trying to find the guitar I played in Back of the Future. It's somewhere lost in the space-time continuum … or it's in some Teamster's garage.' The actor adds: ' If you know where it is, if you know who has it, call us, text us.' Christopher Lloyd, who played the mad scientist Dr. Emmett Brown in the movie, also chimes in, saying: 'Somehow, it's vanished … This guitar has been lost to the future.' Ah, lost to the future, that's catchy. Well, it turns out that the search for the Gibson ES-345 will form the basis of a documentary called just that: Lost to the Future. The project appears designed to engage fans of both the movie and the guitar, while also documenting the guitar's impact and its mysterious disappearance. On the YouTube page featuring Fox et al, Gibson elaborates: 'When it comes to guitars in movies, no guitar was more iconic or more influential than the cherry red Gibson ES-345 used by Marty McFly to play Johnny B Goode in the movie Back to the Future. That scene has been cited by countless artists as the moment they knew they wanted to play guitar.' It adds: 'One problem: the guitar has been missing since 1985, and no one knows its whereabouts.' The documentary team will apparently 'search the globe' for what Gibson insists is 'the most important guitar in cinema history.' Guess Spinal Tap's 'never played' guitar doesn't quite cut it. So, Back to the Future's Gibson ES-345. Do you know where it is?

Alex Cora takes ownership after another Red Sox loss: ‘At one point, it has to be on me'
Alex Cora takes ownership after another Red Sox loss: ‘At one point, it has to be on me'

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Alex Cora takes ownership after another Red Sox loss: ‘At one point, it has to be on me'

BOSTON — Boston Red Sox manager Alex Cora usually keeps the same steady tone after wins and after losses. To him, it's necessary throughout a long season not to read too much into one game. Not Tuesday. After the team's major-league leading 17th one-run loss this season, a 4-3 defeat to the Los Angeles Angels in 10 innings, Cora didn't hold back his frustration. Advertisement 'We keep making the same mistakes, we're not getting better,' Cora said. 'At one point, it has to be on me, I guess, right? I'm the manager. I got to keep pushing them to get better. They're not getting better. They're not. We keep making the same mistakes. 'I'm being very honest about it. Very open about it,' he continued. 'You get frustrated, but at one point it's like, 'OK, what are we going to do? What's going to change?' Because we keep doing the same thing, same thing. We can keep talking about one-run losses, we have what, 17? It's the same thing. Is it effort? Preparation? Attention to detail? I have no idea, man. I watched that game tonight and was like, 'Wow this is real.' It's frustrating.' The visceral emotion from Cora was rare for the manager in his seventh season at the helm, a manager who just signed a three-year contract extension last summer. But the brutal nature of the way the team has lost so often this season has compounded the frustrations. The team's defense, which had been better of late, regressed on Tuesday with three errors. It marked their 16th multi-error game of the season and 10th such game at Fenway Park. With 53 errors, they surpassed Colorado for the most in the majors. Ceddanne Rafaela's wild throw home in the third inning moved runners into scoring position, allowing two extra runs to score. Kristian Campbell botched a grounder later in the game and reliever Zack Kelly couldn't field a ball cleanly off the mound in extra innings. 'What you saw today, routine groundballs for double plays we don't turn, we throw to the wrong bases, we miss cutoff guys, PFPs (pitcher fielding plays) were horrible,' Cora said. 'So there's a lot of bad right now.' Starter Brayan Bello pitched six innings for the first time since May 2 after a month of awful starts. He allowed three runs, but the offense couldn't bail him out. Advertisement Jarren Duran hit an RBI double in the third and Rafaela's two-run homer in the sixth tied the score 3-3, but there was little else to show from there. In the 10th, Kelly, who was recalled earlier in the day as reliever Nick Burdi went on the injury list with a foot contusion, was ineffective. Kelly loaded the bases, and the Angels scored the go-ahead run on a ground-ball double play. Despite 10 hits on the night, Cora lamented the chances the Red Sox gave the Angels. 'Missed the cutoff guy, they score two, we hit the eighth hitter, we walk the ninth hitter, we didn't execute a bunt play, we didn't advance when we needed to,' the manager said. 'You can talk about chances. I can tell you the chances we gave the opposition. We were lucky to be in that game at the end, to be honest with you.' The Red Sox now sit at 29-34, their most games below .500 on the season. They're 10 games back of first place in the American League East. Asked where the team could go from here, a listless Cora didn't have many answers. 'Show up tomorrow. Show up tomorrow, that's all we can do,' he said.

A leaping catch, happy tears, and a win: How TJ Friedl saved the Reds
A leaping catch, happy tears, and a win: How TJ Friedl saved the Reds

Associated Press

timean hour ago

  • Associated Press

A leaping catch, happy tears, and a win: How TJ Friedl saved the Reds

CINCINNATI (AP) — In what has been a frustrating first season with the Cincinnati Reds, manager Terry Francona was able to shed some happy tears Tuesday night courtesy of a game-saving catch. TJ Friedl made a leaping grab in center field for the final out to rob pinch-hitter Jake Bauers of a tying home run in the Reds' 4-2 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers. 'We couldn't tell if Friedl caught it. We were just kinda goin' on his body language,' Francona said. 'That was certainly a nice feeling. You may have seen a grown man cry.' The Reds appeared to lock up the win when Caleb Durbin hit a grounder to Elly De La Cruz, but the shortstop's throw to first base was high and sailed into the camera well for an error, allowing Durbin to reach second base. Bauers got ahead in the count 2-1 before he got the barrel on a fastball by Emilio Pagán. According to MLB's Statcast, the ball had a 95% hit probability, but Friedl did a nice job of tracking it and timed his jump perfectly to help the Reds snap a three-game losing streak. 'I knew it was hit well off the bat. I think it was probably when I was coming close to the warning track that I thought, I could have a chance at this,' Friedl said. Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy brought in Bauers because of his experience in late-game situations. It almost resulted in the third pinch-hit homer of his career. 'It's hard to get it out of here in center when it gets later in the evening. It was such a line drive I knew it was going to be close,' Murphy said after the Brewers had their eight-game winning streak snapped. 'It was a great play by Friedl. You play to the last pitch and he made it.' It was the second time in three years Friedl made a homer-saving catch in center at Great American Ball Park. The previous time came against the club Francona managed for 11 seasons, when Friedl robbed Cleveland's Ramón Laureano of a two-run shot during the third inning on Aug. 16, 2023. Friedl and the other Reds outfielders worked on making plays at the wall before Monday's series opener against Milwaukee. When he robbed Laureano, they practiced it before that game, too. 'Maybe we should work on it a lot,' Friedl said. Francona wasn't the only one relieved. Pagán thought he made a great pitch to Bauers. 'I didn't realize he hit it so well. I turned around and saw that TJ was making a sprint. The way this game works, you prepare and do the right things,' Pagán said. The win improved the Reds' record to 30-32 with a chance to snap a string of 11 consecutive series losses to the Brewers. Cincinnati is nine games behind the first-place Chicago Cubs in the NL Central and four back in the wild-card race. Whether Friedl's heroics can serve as a catalyst for a win streak remains to be seen. 'Your guess is as good as mine. We're just going to continue to go out every day and control what we can control and play our game. And then we'll see what ends up,' Friedl said. 'It's a long season, so we're going to continue to go out there and play the best baseball.' ___ AP MLB:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store