ROYAL ALBERT HALL CONCERT
Last November in London, Cat Power took the stage at Royal Albert Hall
and delivered a song-for-song recreation of one of the most fabled and
transformative live sets of all time.
Held at the Manchester Free Trade Hall in May 1966—but long known as the
“Royal Albert Hall Concert” due to a mislabeled bootleg—the original
performance saw Bob Dylan switching from acoustic to electric midway
through the show, drawing ire from an audience of folk purists and
forever altering the course of rock-and-roll. In her own rendition of
that historic night, the artist otherwise known as Chan Marshall
inhabited each song with equal parts conviction and grace and a palpable
sense of protectiveness, ultimately transposing the anarchic tension of
Dylan’s set with a warm and luminous joy.
Now captured on the live album Cat Power Sings Dylan: The 1966 Royal
Albert Hall Concert, Marshall’s spellbinding performance both lovingly
honours her hero’s imprint on history and brings a stunning new vitality
to many of his most revered songs.
Tekst: Mania