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The Bob Dylan concert for just one person

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100 points by NaOH a month ago · 27 comments

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vilius a month ago

My GF was a photographer at a Secret Cinema event with Laura Marling that took place in London. She had to take some promo pictures, so they met in one of the event rooms [1] for the photoshoot. After just a few pictures they were done and instead of wrapping up, Laura started to perform one of her songs.

Not the same scale as Bob Dylan concert, but still a concert for one. A kind gesture, unconditional, free, ephemeral, but leaving a life lasting memory.

[1] https://everybody-s.com/laura-marling-the-grand-eagle-ball-s...

TylerE a month ago

I've gotten to watch a fair number of soundchecks as the only civilian in the room - it really is a magical experience. I've become friends with the guys in my favorite band and it's lead to some really magical experiences, like the time I got to play guitar for the last minute or so of a sold out show at the Ryman in Nashville (See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tCrreXh0Pg&list=RD8tCrreXh0... starting at about the 6 minute mark)

cyanmagenta a month ago

Reminds me of that Wu-Tang album [1] that only sold one copy (to Martin Shkreli).

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Once_Upon_a_Time_in_Shaolin

Oarch a month ago

Bob Dylan used to regularly play a small annual festival (Hop Farm) near me in Kent, England.

Growing up, I always found it slight strange that this big global name was playing down the road.

  • IAmBroom a month ago

    James Corden pulled a stunt in a small pub where, if you picked a Beatles song on the jukebox, instead of the record playing a curtain would open, and Sir Paul McCartney and his band would play the song. Then the curtain would close.

    Then ensuing mob of (well-behaved, deliriously happy) fans rushing to the pub was videotaped as well.

    All in all a very cute stunt.

emsign a month ago

This isn't that unusual at all. Many pop stars make a lot of money with private concerts for very rich individuals or companies. Even actors like Leonardo DiCaprio get paid to vacate on the super yachts of rich people from gulf states who then show off the celeb and get attention for themselves.

My personal hypothesis for why pop music seems so odd, BORING and promoting luxury life instead of dealing with people's every day problems and heart aches. The Spotify users don't pay their bills, it's the high profile fans among the billionaires who do. Also their parties are fancier I guess.

lwansbrough a month ago

Reminds me of The Lonely Island doing a song about being in Japan so that the record label would fly them out to Japan to record the music video.

  • IAmBroom a month ago

    Kinda the opposite - rapper Little Dicky went door-to-door in a rich neighborhood, asking if he could borrow their house for a music video.

    Eventually someone agreed.

Mikhail_Edoshin a month ago

In 1921 in Soviet Petrograd (St. Petersburg, then Leningrad, then St. Petersburg again) there was a society called "A house of arts". It was formed by artists, who, among other things, gave lectures on various topics. One of lecturers was a famous Russian poet Alexander Blok. It was a very cold winter and, since the country just underwent a revolution and a civil war, the heating in the lecture hall did not work. The students' headman had to keep the ink bottle on his body so that the ink did not freeze: after the lecture the lecturer had to write down the number of hours in a journal.

On a particularly cold day Blok arrived to the hall and found just a single student, the headman. He very politely asked if the student has the time to listen to the lecture. The student (who later became a writer) assured Blok that indeed he does. And Blok talked for two hours, then made a small break for ten minutes, and talked for two more hours. He then jotted down "History of Western literature, 1 hour", put on his hat and left.

The lecture topic was Servantes and Don Quixote.

somat a month ago

I was reading the superdome wikipedia page(as one does) and there is this amazing blurb on how in 1987 the jets once played to to an empty stadium due to a scheduling mix up. The idea was so compelling I spent a little time trying to find contemporary articles about the event (or non-event if you will). Unfortunately wikipedia's source is not readily available and I was not able to place the jets at the superdome in 1987. So just another unconfirmed weird factoid taking it's place among all the other unconfirmed weird factoids my brain likes to keep track of instead of actually remembering something useful.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caesars_Superdome#Concerts

In retrospect this falls into that gray zone There are vast quantities of information that are not on the web, There were probably articles written about this. but I am only willing to put the bare minimum effort into researching it, If I can't find it with a 10 minute web search it might as well not exist and the web search engines are getting dumber at an alarming rate.

  • ralphc a month ago

    Due to the nature of the sport (one person in a metal box, pit crews distanced from each other), after an adjustment period NASCAR races happened during the pandemic. To empty stands. The winner would get out of the car and instead of thunderous applause, or boos depending on the driver, there would be absolute silence. The word surreal is overused but it was that kind of experience for the driver and people watching at home.

takira a month ago

Legendary -- "I used them as frisbees in the Philadelphia night, ceremoniously chucking them as far as I possibly could"

  • divbzero a month ago

    That just seems like a different way of “pissing on Sinatra’s grave”.

bobsmooth a month ago

I'm glad the one person is a huge Bob Dylan fan.

  • RamRodification a month ago

    I agree. It would have been tempting to send someone who doesn't listen to Dylan at all, but what a waste that would have been. This guy deserved it.

sebmellen a month ago

Is the full concert available somewhere?

uxp100 a month ago

> Not only that, but Dylan did not perform his usual fare. Instead, he performed four 1950s covers, several of which he’s never sung before or since: Buddy Holly’s “Heartbeat,” Fats Domino’s “Blueberry Hill,” Lefty Frizzell’s “You’re Too Late,” and Big Bill Broonzy’s “Key to the Highway.”

songs like those ARE his usual fare these days. Apparently not exactly those tunes, but covers like those are typical

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