The tour’s first show featured a major rarity and the live debut of an Eddie Cochran song, signaling a setlist shift for the new leg.
Bob Dylan’s 2026 tour began not with a greatest hit, but with a deliberate turn toward the obscure and the unexpected. The opening night in Tulsa, Oklahoma, was defined by two specific choices: the first performance of “Man in the Long Black Coat” in over a decade, and the live debut of a frantic Eddie Cochran rockabilly number from 1958.
The return of “Man in the Long Black Coat,” a haunting centerpiece from 1989’s “Oh Mercy,” is a significant archival move. Dylan had not played the song since 2013, making its re-emission a notable event for chroniclers of his vast live catalogue. Its reappearance suggests a renewed focus on the atmospheric, narrative-driven material from that late-80s period.
More surprising was the inclusion of Eddie Cochran’s “Nervous Breakdown.” Dylan’s engagement with early rock and roll foundations is well documented, but pulling a deep-cut rockabilly raver into the set is a sharp left turn. The choice reframes the tour’s musical palette, connecting his current sound—often described as a hybrid of blues, standards, and modern Americana—back to the frantic, youthful energy of the genre’s pioneers. It is a cover that feels less like nostalgia and more like a reclamation of a specific, raw lineage.
These selections provide the editorial frame for the new tour. Dylan has long used his concert setlists as a living, mutable document, often frustrating casual fans in favor of a curatorial approach to his own songbook and influences. The Tulsa opener reinforces that principle. It signals a show built on deliberate excavation and stylistic juxtaposition, rather than a retrospective victory lap.
The 2026 tour is slated to cover North America and Europe through the summer. If the opening night is a template, audiences can expect a continued emphasis on rarity and reinterpretation, with Dylan’s ever-evolving band arrangements serving as the vehicle. The setlist remains a primary text for understanding his current artistic preoccupations, and the reintroduction of “Man in the Long Black Coat” alongside “Nervous Breakdown” establishes a compelling, dissonant new chapter.
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