Saturday, October 18, 2025

Robyn Hitchcock - Dylan's Royal Albert Hall 1966 Concert, The Borderline, London, Britain, 5-25-1996

On May 26, 1966, Bob Dylan gave a concert at the Royal Albert Hall in London that became legendary. (Mostly that was due to a popular bootleg that actually turned out to be from a concert in Manchester a few days earlier, but the set list was the same.) Thirty years to the day (well, one day off), Robyn Hitchcock gave a concert in London with the exact same set list. So it was all Dylan covers. He later released much of this concert as the official album "Robyn Sings," but that had some problems I will explain shortly. This, in my opinion, is much better than the official album.

Before I go any further, I want to say this album posting wouldn't have happened without the editing work of musical associate Lil Panda. A couple of weeks ago, he emailed me and told me he'd made a bunch of improvements to this concert. Then I got his permission to post it here. I asked him to summarize what he did, and this was his response: "I separated the ambient audience from the music, left only the applause. Then did azimuth, phase correction, voice de-click, and a slight EQ boost." So kudos to him, because he's far better at that stuff than I am. Hell, I barely even know what azimuth is, much less how to fix it.

Now, let me explain how this compares to the official live album "Robyn Sings." In fact, only half of that album was taken from this concert at the Borderline, specifically, the second half. The first half was taken from a variety of concerts in 1999 and 2000, and consisted of all Dylan covers. In terms of exact overlap, the songs on both "Robyn Sings" and this album are tracks 12 to 24. That makes up about half of the total run time.

As I've said before, I much prefer full concerts to those taken from lots of different sources. I think that's a more honest live album. So just having the full concert here is a big improvement over the official album, in my opinion. But it also turns out the official album had numerous problems. Oddly for an official release, it clearly was taken from an audience bootleg type source. One can tell because of a constant background noise of the crowd all through the songs, as well as other problems. Lil Panda fixed most of those, as mentioned above. I also took the extra step of running all the songs through the UVR5 editing program, to get rid of the lingering ambient crowd noise that Lil Panda missed. So, in addition to this being more complete than the official album, it also sounds better. 

To quote Wikipedia, Dylan's 1966 Royal Albert Hall concert (which, as mentioned above, actually took place in Manchester) "is famous for Dylan's confrontational stance against a heckling audience who objected to his electric instrumentation." Hitchcock didn't talk much during this concert, as he usually does, to stick closer to the original comment. But some of his banter between songs actually repeat what Dylan said in the 1966 concert. For instance, at one point Dylan muttered incoherently until the unruly crowd quieted enough to try to make out what he was saying, and Hitchcock repeated that exactly.

Let's just say Hitchcock is an extremely big Dylan fan!

Oh, by the way, the last two songs, "Dignity" and "Queen Jane Approximately," are the only two songs not played in Dylan's 1966 concert, though they are Dylan covers as well. "Queen Jane Approximately" had been written at the time and could have been performed, but "Dignity" is a song Dylan wrote in the late 1980s.

Anyway, thanks again to Lil Panda for his work on this. Enjoy.  

This album is an hour and 30 minutes long. 

01 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
02 She Belongs to Me (Robyn Hitchcock)
03 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
04 Visions of Johanna (Robyn Hitchcock)
05 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
06 4th Time Around (Robyn Hitchcock)
07 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
08 It's All Over Now, Baby Blue (Robyn Hitchcock)
09 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
10 Desolation Row (Robyn Hitchcock)
11 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
12 Tell Me, Momma (Robyn Hitchcock)
13 I Don't Believe You [She Acts like We Never Have Met] (Robyn Hitchcock)
14 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
15 Baby, Let Me Follow You Down (Robyn Hitchcock)
16 Just like Tom Thumb's Blues (Robyn Hitchcock)
17 Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat (Robyn Hitchcock)
18 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
19 One Too Many Mornings (Robyn Hitchcock)
20 Ballad of a Thin Man (Robyn Hitchcock)
21 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
22 Like a Rolling Stone (Robyn Hitchcock)
23 talk (Robyn Hitchcock)
24 Dignity (Robyn Hitchcock)
25 Queen Jane Approximately (Robyn Hitchcock)

https://pixeldrain.com/u/57SVUW36

alternate:

https://bestfile.io/en/6NXYau3lI9pt6uV/file

The cover photo is a still taken from the movie "Storefront Hitchcock," which was recorded in 1996. 

3 comments:

  1. Thanks very much for this. I only had a low-bitrate version, minus the banter, so this is a nice upgrade.

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  2. another Great post
    Thanks
    but what happened to Just Like A Woman and Mr Tambourine Man from the acoustic set ??

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It looks like he didn't play those, or if he did, they weren't recorded. See for instance here:

      https://www.setlist.fm/setlist/robyn-hitchcock/1996/the-borderline-london-england-73e0aa65.html

      and here:
      https://archive.org/details/robynhitchcock1996-05-25

      But if you have those from that concert, I'd love if you could pass them on to me so I can add them in.

      Delete