Recommendations of the Editorial team

When artists of a certain age come to town, it is often said that it could be the last chance to see them live. Many people then buy a card to pay their last respects to the legend.

In the case of Bob Dylan, of course, this is complete nonsense. Because even though he calls his concert tour since the end of the pandemic the “Rough And Rowdy Ways” tour since his most recent album from 2020, we all know that he has been on a non-stop tour since July 7, 1988 – except for the forced Covid break – which includes well over 3,000 concerts in total.

In the fall he also toured Germany and played some concerts in Hamburg, Lingen and Cologne that were almost unanimously celebrated by critics and fans. Somehow Dylan’s attitude and method seem to fit well into the present. “Never completing the songs and allowing all expectations to come to nothing contradicts the principles of homogenization, classification and optimization underlying AI, and sets something human against them – that is, on the one hand fallible, on the other hand truthful,” it recently said in the annual review edition of our “ROLLING STONE Living Room” newsletter.

Dylan as an antidote to digital perfection

“The unfinished (that which is in the making, not completed) and the imperfect (cracks, scratches, dents, irregularities, grains) create a poetics of the open that seeks the truth in the crack, in the roughness, in the trace. In a culture that values ​​efficiency and flawlessness above all else, these aesthetics act like an antidote: they give the world back its fragility – and with it its depth.”

Like he did recently announced personally on Xhe will be back on the world’s stages in 2026. In the spring, it has now been announced, he will be on tour with his band in the Midwest and South of the USA. The 27-date leg of the “Rough And Rowdy Ways” tour begins March 21st in Omaha, Nebraska and ends May 1st in the Texas town of Abilene.

The “Rough And Rowdy Ways” Tour 2026

  1. March Omaha United States Orpheum Theater
  2. March Sioux Falls Mary W. Sommervold Hall
  3. March Rochester Mayo Civic Center
  4. March Iowa City Hancher Auditorium
  5. March La Crosse La Crosse Center
  6. March Rockford Coronado Theater
  7. March Waukegan Genesee Theater
  8. March Muncie Emens Auditorum
  9. April Grand Rapids DeVos Performance Hall
  10. April Saginaw The Theater
  11. April Detroit Detroit Masonic Temple
  12. April Louisville The Louisville Palace
  13. April Columbus Palace Theater
  14. April Cleveland KeyBank State Theater
  15. April Dayton Winsupply Theater
  16. April Knoxville Knoxville Civic Auditorum
  17. April Bowling Green Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center
  18. April Chattanooga Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Auditorium
  19. April Asheville Thomas Wolfe Auditorium
  20. April Spartanburg Spartanburg Memorial Auditorium
  21. April Macon Macon City Auditorium
  22. April Dothan Dothan Civic Center
  23. April Jackson Thalia Mara Hall
  24. April Baton Rouge Raising Cane’s Theater for the Performing Arts
  25. April Shreveport Shreveport Municipal Memorial Auditorium
  26. April Tyler Cowan Center
  27. May Abilene Abilene Auditorium

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