Scroll down for the performance list. Members get instant access to all presale codes. Click a yellow Subscribe link to join.
Plus: 1 more password coming soon - select an event to be notified.
|
Bob Dylan
Forum Horsens
Oct 21, 2026 • 7:30pm
Horsens, DK
|
|
Bob Dylan
Synovus Bank Amphitheater at Chastain Park
Jul 31, 2026 • 7:00pm
Atlanta, GA
|
|
Bob Dylan
Live Oak Bank Pavilion
Jul 29, 2026 • 7:00pm
Wilmington, NC
|
|
Bob Dylan
Red Hat Amphitheater
Jul 28, 2026 • 6:30pm
Raleigh, NC
|
|
Bob Dylan
Allianz Amphitheater at Riverfront
Jul 23, 2026 • 7:00pm
Richmond, VA
|
|
Bob Dylan - Live on Stage
Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater
Jul 19, 2026 • 7:00pm
Bridgeport, CT
|
|
Bob Dylan
BankNH Pavilion
Jul 18, 2026 • 7:00pm
Gilford, NH
|
|
Bob Dylan
Leader Bank Pavilion
Jul 16, 2026 • 7:00pm
Boston, MA
|
|
Bob Dylan - Live on Stage
TD Pavilion at Highmark Mann
Jul 14, 2026 • 7:00pm
Philadelphia, PA
|
|
Bob Dylan
Santa Barbara Bowl
Jun 17, 2026 • 6:30pm
Santa Barbara, CA
|
|
Outlaw - Willie Nelson, Bob Dylan, Nathaniel Rateliff & More
Thunder Ridge Nature Arena
Jun 29, 2025 • 3:45pm
Ridgedale, MO
|
|
Bob Dylan
Sonnentag Event Center
Apr 5, 2025 • 8:00pm
Eau Claire, WI
|
|
Bob Dylan
Juanita K. Hammons Hall For The Performing Arts
Mar 28, 2025 • 9:00pm
Springfield, MI
|
|
Bob Dylan
Tulsa Theater
Mar 25, 2025 • 8:00pm
Tulsa, OK
|
How to find Bob Dylan presale codes
If you're hunting for tickets, knowing where to look is half the battle. Promoters, venues, and artists often release promotional words just hours before a ticket presale begins. To get reliable presale password info manually, your best bet is to closely monitor Bob Dylan across their official social media platforms (as well as checking Spotify). Be prepared to refresh those pages constantly as the onsale time approaches.
The Ultimate Presale Code Finder
Why waste time jumping between Live Nation, Ticketmaster, local venue releases, and scattered fan club emails? Let us do the heavy lifting. Set an SMS alert on your specific performance above, and our automated presale code finder will instantly notify you the second a working Bob Dylan password is found.
Tangled Up in Bob Dylan
Bob Dylan came up in the Greenwich Village folk scene, went electric in the 60s, and now leads a reserved, piano-centered show. After the pandemic pause, his focus has been on Rough and Rowdy Ways, with him at the piano rather than a guitar.
New Era, New Posture
Expect a focused set with songs like I Contain Multitudes, False Prophet, When I Paint My Masterpiece, and Goodbye Jimmy Reed, all reshaped for his voice and band. The crowd skews intergenerational, with longtime fans listening closely and younger listeners chasing the storytelling, and the room usually stays seated until the end.Small Details, Big Clues
He is known to ban phones, and he often introduces tiny lyrical shifts that only appear for a few nights. A neat tidbit: he largely stopped playing guitar live in recent years to anchor the band from the piano, and his bassist has been with him longer than most bands last. Another nugget: early in his career he wrote Blowin' in the Wind quickly after hearing a spiritual, but he now favors slow-bloom narratives. Fair warning: the setlist picks and production notes here are inferred from recent dates and could differ at your show.Quiet Thunder in the Crowd
The room is notably quiet, in part because phones are sealed in pouches and in part because people lean in to catch the phrasing. You will see denim jackets, beat-up boots, and thrift blazers alongside tour tees from deep cuts, plus a few well-loved tote bags quoting lines.
Rituals Without Fuss
Cheers often arrive after a sly lyric lands rather than at the start of a song, and a few good-natured requests pop up between numbers. Merch trends toward understated posters, city-specific lithos, and simple shirts that nod to Rough and Rowdy Ways themes.Conversations in the Aisles
Before and after the show, fans compare notes on which lines he shifted, what key a classic moved to, and whether he touched the harmonica that night. The vibe blends patience and curiosity, more like a listening session than a shout-along. When the band walks off, the standing rise feels like thanks for craft, not a chase for one more chorus.Piano, Grit, and the Slow Burn
Bob Dylan now sings with a weathered hush, leaning on phrasing and rhymes for rhythm instead of high notes. His right-hand piano lines jab little chords while the left hand sets a steady thump, giving the band a pocket to tuck into.
Arrangements That Breathe
Guitars favor clean tremolo and short fills, pedal steel often doubles a melody, and the drums use brushes or soft mallets to keep room for words. Tempos sit in a slow to mid range, which lets him stretch lines and land a punchy consonant where a drum hit might be on the record. A small but telling habit: he will start songs cold from the piano with no count-off, and the band locks to his first chord and eye contact.Subtle Color, Strong Spine
Keys tend to settle around piano-friendly shapes like F and Bb, a shift that darkens older songs without losing their bite. Solos are brief and melodic, often acting like second voices more than spotlights, and codas end on a quick cue rather than a long vamp. Lights are warm and low, framing the music rather than competing with it.Kindred Spirits on the Road
If you like narrative songs delivered with swing and grit, Van Morrison scratches a similar itch, with jazz-blues grooves and vocal phrasing that bends time. Fans who chase dark ballads and intense story-songs often cross over to Nick Cave, whose shows ride quiet-loud drama and close audience focus. Wilco appeals to listeners who want Americana roots updated with texture, and their live sets also reshape familiar tunes night to night.