Tour Schedule

(Updated 03/25/24)

  • 1 - Lisbon, Portugal (Coliseu dos Recreios)
  • 3 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 5 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 6 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 8 - Amsterdam, Holland (Royal Theatre Carre)
  • 9 - Antwerp, Belgium (Queen Elizabeth Hall)
  • 12 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 13 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 15 - Strasbourg, France (Salle Erasme)
  • 16 - Munich, Germany (Philharmonie am Gasteig)
  • 18 - Hamburg, Germany (Mehr! Theater)
  • 19 - Frankfurt, Germany (Alte Oper)
  • 22 - Brighton, United Kingdom (Brighton Dome)
  • 23 - Cardiff, United Kingdom (St. David's Hall)
  • 25 - Manchester, United Kingdom (Bridgewater Hall)
  • 26 - Glasgow, United Kingdom (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 28 - London, United Kingdom (Palladium)
  • 1 - London, United Kingdom (Palladium)
  • 9 - Selma, Alabama (Walton Theater)
  • 10 - Birmingham, Alabama (Alys Stephens PAC)
  • 12 - Atlanta, Georgia (Symphony Hall)
  • 13 - Mobile, Alabama (Saenger Theatre)
  • 16 - San Antonio, Texas (Tobin Center)
  • 17 - Austin, Texas (Paramount Theatre)
  • 19 - Dallas, Texas (Strauss Square)
  • 20 - Fayetteville, Arkansas (Baum Walker Hall)
  • 22 - St. Louis, Missouri (The Pageant)
  • 23 - Knoxville, Tennessee (Tennessee Theatre)
  • 25 - Newport News, Virginia (Ferguson Concert Hall)
  • 26 - Washington, D.C. (Warner Theatre)
  • 28 - Northampton, Massachusetts (John M. Greene Hall)
  • 30 - Princeton, New Jersey (McCarter Theatre Center)
  • 1 - New York, New York (Beacon Theatre)
  • 3 - Port Chester, New York (Capitol Theater)
  • 5 - Port Chester, New York (Capitol Theater)
  • 3 - Montreux, Switzerland (Montreux Jazz Festival)
  • 4 - Ghent, Belgium (Gent Jazz Festival)
  • 6 - Bad Honnef, Germany (Insel Grafenwerth)
  • 9 - Saint-Malo-du-Bois, France (Festival de Poupet - Theatre de Verdure)
  • 13 - Saint-Julien-en-Genevois, France (Festival Guitare en Scene)
  • 15 - Carcassone, France (Theatre Jean Deschamps)
  • 16 - Vichy, France (Opera de Vichy)
  • 18 - Fessun, Germany (Barockgarten am Festspielhaus)
  • 19 - Turin, Italy (Flower Festival)
  • 21 - Vienne, France (Theatre Antique)
  • 22 - Perpignan, France (Live au Campo)
  • 24 - San Sebastian, Spain (Jazzaldia - San Sebastian Jazz Festival)
  • 25 - Sitges, Spain (Festival Jardins Terrama)
  • 27 - Sant Feliu de Guixols, Spain (Festival de Porta Ferrada)
  • 28 - Madrid, Spain (Teatro Real - Universal Music Festival)

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  • 2 - Stockholm, Sweden (Waterfront)
  • 3 - Malmo, Sweden (Malmo Live)
  • 5 - Oslo, Norway (Konserthus)
  • 7 - Copenhagen, Denmark (Koncerthuset)
  • 10 - Gothenburg, Sweden (Koncerthuset)
  • 13 - York, United Kingdom (Barbican Centre)
  • 14 - Birmingham, United Kingdom (Symphony Hall)
  • 16 - Glasgow, United Kingdom (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 17 - Edinburgh, United Kingdom (Usher Hall)
  • 19 - Belfast, United Kingdom (Waterfront Hall)
  • 21 - Dublin, Ireland (Bord Gais Energy Theatre)
  • 22 - Dublin, Ireland (Bord Gais Energy Theatre)
  • 25 - Frankfurt, Germany (Alte Oper)
  • 26 - Munich, Germany (Philharmonie)
  • 28 - Prague, Czech Republic (Kongresove Centrum)
  • 29 - Bratislava, Slovakia (Market Hall)
  • 31 - Sarajevo, Bosnia-Herzegovina (Bosnian Cultural Center BKC)
  • 21 - Brussels, Belgium (Henry Leboeuf Hall)
  • 23 - Bristol, England, United Kingdom (Colston Hall)
  • 24 - Manchester, England, United Kingdom (Bridgewater Hall)
  • 26 - Gateshead, England, United Kingdom (The Sage)
  • 28 - London, England, United Kingdom (Royal Albert Hall)
  • 29 - London, England, United Kingdom (Royal Albert Hall)
  • 31 - Hamburg, Germany (Mehr! Theater)
  • 1 - Amsterdam, The Netherlands (Koninklijk Theater Carre)
  • 4 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 7 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 8 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 10 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 11 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 14 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 16 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 17 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 22 - Istanbul, Turkey (Cemil Topuzlu Open Air Theatre)
  • 25 - Vienna, Austria (Konzerthaus Vienna)
  • 26 - Vienna, Austria (Konzerthaus Vienna)
  • 28 - Halle, Germany (Freilichtbuhne Peissnitz)
  • 29 - Berlin, Germany (Zitadelle Spandau)
  • 31 - Ludwigsburg, Germany (Residenzchloss Ludwigsburg)
  • 1 - Schwetzingen, Germany (Schlossgarten Schwetzingen)
  • 3 - Cologne, Germany (Roncalliplatz)
  • 5 - Verona, Italy (Teatro Romano)
  • 6 - Rome, Italy (Terme di Carcacalla)
  • 8 - Udine, Italy (Castello di Udine)
  • 9 - Bra, Cuneo, Italy (Cortile dell'Agenzia di Pollenzo)
  • 12 - Marciac, France (Jazz in Marciac)
  • 14 - Arles, France (Festival du Cargo)
  • 15 - Girona, Spain (Jardins de Cap Roig)
  • 11 - Ithaca, New York (State Theatre)
  • 12 - New Haven, Connecticut (Shubert Theatre)
  • 14 - Boston, Massachusetts (Wang Theatre)
  • 15 - Boston, Massachusetts (Wang Theatre)
  • 17 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada (Place des Arts Maison Symphonique)
  • 18 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada (Roy Thomson Hall)
  • 21 - New York, New York (Beacon Theatre)
  • 22 - New York, New York (Beacon Theatre)
  • 25 - Red Bank, New Jersey (Count Basie Theatre)
  • 26 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Verizon Hall at Kimmel Center)
  • 28 - Washington, D.C. (Warner Theatre)
  • 29 - Durham, North Carolina (Durham PAC)
  • 30 - Nashville, Tennessee (Ryman Auditorium)
  • 2 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Michigan Theater)
  • 3 - Cleveland, Ohio (Keybank State Theatre)
  • 5 - Chicago, Illinois (Chicago Theatre)
  • 6 - Minneapolis, Minnesota (State Theatre)
  • 24 - Denver, Colorado (Paramount Theatre)
  • 25 - Santa Fe, New Mexico (Lensic PAC)
  • 27 - Phoenix, Arizona (Celebrity Theatre)
  • 28 - Tucson, Arizona (Fox Theatre)
  • 30 - San Diego, California (Humphrey's)
  • 1 - Santa Barbara, California (Arlington Theatre)
  • 2 - Chico, California (Laxon Auditorium)
  • 4 - Seattle, Washington (Benaroya Hall)
  • 5 - Portland, Oregon (Revolution Hall)
  • 7 - Redding, California (Cascade Theatre)
  • 8 - Eureka, California (Arkley Center for the Arts)
  • 10 - Los Angeles, California (Royce Hall at UCLA)
  • 11 - Rohnert Park, California (Weill Hall at Green Music Center)
  • 14 - Davis, California (Mondavi Center)
  • 15 - San Francisco, California (The Masonic)
  • 17 - Oakland, California (Fox Theater)
  • 18 - Oakland, California (Fox Theater)
  • 2 - Nashville, Tennessee (Ryman Auditorium) (Four Voices)
  • 3 - Nashville, Tennessee (Ryman Auditorium) (Four Voices)
  • 6 - Charlottesville, Virginia (Sprint Pavilion) (Four Voices)
  • 7 - Raleigh, North Carolina (NC Museum of Art) (Four Voices)
  • 8 - Kettering, Ohio (Fraze Pavilion) (Four Voices)
  • 9 - Rochester Hills, Michigan (Meadow Brook Amphitheatre) (Four Voices)
  • 11 - Chicago, Illinois (Chicago Theatre) (Four Voices)
  • 12 - Grand Rapids, Michigan (Meijer Gardens) (Four Voices)
  • 14 - Toronto, Ontario, CANADA (Massey Hall) (Four Voices)
  • 16 - Gilford, New Hampshire (Bank of NH Pavilion) (Four Voices)
  • 17 - Lenox, Massachusetts (Tanglewood) (Four Voices)
  • 30 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Hill Auditorium - Ann Arbor Folk Festival)
  • 27 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada (Koerner Hall)
  • 28 - Ithaca, New York (State Theater)
  • 1 - Concord, New Hampshire (Capitol Center for the Arts)
  • 3 - New Haven, Connecticut (Shubert Theatre)
  • 5 - Burlington, Vermont (Flynn Center for the Performing Arts)
  • 6 - Englewood, New Jersey (Bergen Performing Arts Center)
  • 8 - Red Bank, New Jersey (Count Basie Theatre)
  • 9 - Frederick, Maryland (Weinberg Center for the Arts)
  • 11 - Charlottesville, Virginia (Paramount Theatre)
  • 12 - Lexington, Kentucky (Lexington Opera House)
  • 16 - Charleston, South Carolina (Charleston Music Hall)
  • 17 - Atlanta, Georgia (Atlanta Symphony Hall)
  • 19 - Birmingham, Alabama (Alys Stephens Performing Arts Center)
  • 20 - Durham, North Carolina (Page Auditorium at Duke University)
  • 22 - Greenville, South Carolina (Peace Center for the Performing Arts)
  • 23 - Wilmington, Delaware (Grand Opera House)
  • 25 - Albany, New York (Hart Theatre at The Egg)
  • 26 - Buffalo, New York (Asbury Hall)
  • 9 - Albi, France (Festival Pause Guitare)
  • 10 - Barcelona, Spain (Festival de Pedralbes)
  • 13 - Ravenna, Italy (Ravenna Festival)
  • 14 - Gardone Riviera, Italy (Vittoriale Festival)
  • 16 - Recanati, Italy (Festival Lunaria)
  • 18 - Rome, Italy (Auditorium Parco della Musica)
  • 19 - Milan, Italy (Villa Arconati)
  • 22 - Regensburg, Germany (Schlossfestspiele)
  • 23 - Bad Bruckenau, Germany (Schlosspark)
  • 25 - Salem, Germany (Schloss Salem Open Air)
  • 26 - Hanau, Germany (Schloss Philippsruhe)
  • 29 - Trondheim, Norway (St. Olav Festival)
  • 31 - Stockholm, Sweden (Stockholm Music and Arts)
  • 3 - Schwetzingen, Germany (SchlossGarden)
  • 5 - Lessines, Belgium (Cour de L'Hospital Notre Dame a la Rose)
  • 6 - Lorient, France (Espace Marine)
  • 4 - Portland, Maine (Merrill Auditorium)
  • 6 - Hartford, Connecticut (Mortensen Hall at Bushnell)
  • 8 - Boston, Massachusetts (Wang Theatre) (with Mary Chapin Carpenter)
  • 9 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Kimmel Center) (with Mary Chapin Carpenter)
  • 12 - Westbury, New York (NYCB Theatre at Westbury)
  • 13 - Port Chester, New York (Capitol Theatre)
  • 15 - Montclair, New Jersey (Wellmont Theatre)
  • 16 - Washington, D.C. (Lisner Auditorium at GW University)
  • 19 - Cleveland, Ohio (State Theatre)
  • 20 - Carmel, Indiana (The Palladium)
  • 22 - Madison, Wisconsin (Capitol Theatre at the Overture)
  • 23 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Pabst Theatre)
  • 25 - Chicago, Illinois (Orchestra Hall)
  • 26 - Minneapolis, Minnesota (State Theatre)
  • 29 - Denver, Colorado (Paramount Theatre)
  • 30 - Santa Fe, New Mexico (Lensic Performing Arts Center)
  • 1 - Phoenix, Arizona (Celebrity Theatre)
  • 3 - Santa Barbara, California (Arlington Theatre)
  • 5 - Los Angeles, California (Disney Hall)
  • 6 - Oakland, California (Fox Theater)
  • 7 - Oakland, California (Fox Theater)
  • 7 - Bologna, Italy (Teatro Auditorium Manzoni)
  • 8 - Udine, Italy (Teatro Nuovo Giovanni da Udine)
  • 10 - Rome, Italy (Sala Santa Cecilia)
  • 12 - Milan, Italy (Teatro Degli Arcimboldi)
  • 15 - Pamplona, Spain (Auditorio Baluarte)
  • 17 - Bilbao, Spain (Palacio Euskalduna)
  • 19 - Barcelona, Spain (Palau de la Musica)
  • 20 - Barcelona, Spain (Palau de la Musica)
  • 23 - Madrid, Spain (Teatro Nuevo Apolo)
  • 24 - Madrid, Spain (Teatro Neuvo Apolo)
  • 27 - Gijon, Spain (Teatro de la Laboral)
  • 28 - Santiago de Compostela, Spain (Palacio Congresos)
  • 31 - Porto, Portugal (Coliseum)
  • 1 - Lisbon, Portugal (Coliseum)
  • 1 - Istanbul, Turkey (Cemil Topuzlu Open Air Theatre)
  • 4 - Linz, Austria (Domplatz)
  • 5 - Vienna, Austria (Open Air Arena)
  • 8 - Bonn, Germany (Kunst Rasen Gronau)
  • 9 - Oostende, Belgium (Casino Kursaal)
  • 11 - Munich, Germany (Tollwood)
  • 12 - Wiblingen, Germany (Klosterhof)
  • 14 - Freiburg, Germany (Zelt Musik Festival)
  • 16 - Lyon, France (Les Nuits de Fourviere)
  • 19 - Carhaix, France (Festival des Vieilles Charrues)
  • 22 - Nimes, France (Festival de Nimes)
  • 23 - Vence, France (Nuits du Sud Festival)
  • 25 - Nyon, Switzerland (Paleo Festival)
  • 27 - Wiltz, Luxembourg (Wiltz Castle)
  • 29 - Hamburg, Germany (Stadtpark Freilichtbuhne)
  • 1 - Cambridge, United Kingdom (Cambridge Folk Festival)
  • 17 - Canberra, Australia (Royal Theatre)
  • 20 - Sydney, Australia (Opera House)
  • 21 - Sydney, Australia (Opera House)
  • 24 - Melbourne, Australia (Hamer Hall)
  • 25 - Melbourne, Australia (Hamer Hall)
  • 27 - Hobart, Australia (Theatre Royal)
  • 30 - Perth, Australia (Perth Concert Hall)
  • 1 - Bunbury, Australia (Entertainment Centre)
  • 4 - Darwin, Australia (Entertainment Centre)
  • 7 - Brisbane, Australia (PAC)
  • 10 - Cairns, Australia (Convention Centre)
  • 12 - Adelaide, Australia (Festival Theatre)
  • 15 - Christchurch, New Zealand (Isaac Theatre Royal)
  • 16 - Christchurch, New Zealand (Isaac Theatre Royal)
  • 17 - Wellington, New Zealand (Michael Fowler Centre)
  • 20 - Auckland, New Zealand (ASB Theatre)
  • 6 - Buenos Aires, Argentina (Teatro Gran Rex)
  • 7 - Buenos Aires, Argentina (Teatro Gran Rex)
  • 11 - Montevideo, Uruguay (Teatro Nacional Adela Reta)
  • 14 - Santiago, Chile (Teatro Caupolican)
  • 15 - Santiago, Chile (Teatro Caupolican)
  • 19 - Porto Alegre, Brazil (Oi Araujo Vianna)
  • 21 - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (Teatro Bradesco)
  • 23 - Sao Paulo, Brazil (Teatro Bradesco)
  • 24 - Sao Paulo, Brazil (Teatro Bradesco)
  • 28 - Recife, Brazil (Teatro RioMar)
  • 1 - Mexico City, Mexico (Teatro Metropolitan)

9 - Santa Cruz, California (Rio Theatre) (benefit for Resource Center for Nonviolence)

11 - San Rafael, California (Angelico Hall) (benefit for Cascade Canyon School)

  • 25 - Eugene, Oregon (Cuthbert Amphitheatre) (w/Indigo Girls)
  • 26 - Troutdale, Oregon (Edgefield) (w/Indigo Girls)
  • 28 - Jacksonville, Oregon (Britt Festival Pavilion)
  • 29 - Laytonville, California (Kate Wolf Music Festival at Black Oak Ranch)
  • 1 - Saratoga, California (Mountain Winery) (w/Indigo Girls)
  • 2 - Santa Barbara, California (Santa Barbara Bowl( (w/Indigo Girls)
  • 3 - Los Angeles, California (Greek Theatre) (w/Indigo Girls)
  • 6 - Kensington, California (Coventry Grove) (benefit for Camp Winnarainbow)
  • 8 - Boise, Idaho (Egyptian Theatre)
  • 10 - Denver, Colorado (Denver Botanic Gardens)
  • 11 - Bellvue, Colorado (Mishawaka Amphitheatre)
  • 13 - Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada (Winnipeg Folk Festival)
  • 15 - Fargo, North Dakota (Fargo Theatre)
  • 22 - Olympia, Washington (Washington Center for the Performing Arts)
  • 23 - Edmonds, Washington (Edmonds Center for the Arts)
  • 25 - Grass Valley, California (Veterans Memorial Auditorium)
  • 13 - Groningen, Holland (De Oosterpoort)
  • 14 - Brussels, Belgium (Royal Circus)
  • 17 - London, England (Royal Festival Hall)
  • 18 - London, England (Royal Festival Hall)
  • 20 - London, England (Royal Festival Hall)
  • 21 - London, England (Royal Festival Hall)
  • 24 - Dublin, Ireland (Vicar Street)
  • 25 - Dublin, Ireland (Vicar Street)
  • 27 - Dublin, Ireland (Vicar Street)
  • 30 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 1 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 11 - Bratislava, Slovakia (Aegon Arena)
  • 13 - Ljubljana, Slovenia (Cankarjev Dom)
  • 16 - Prague, Czech Republic (Lucerna Grand Hall)
  • 18 - Belgrade, Serbia (Dom Sindikata)
  • 19 - Zagreb, Croatia (Studenski Centar)
  • 11 - Missoula, Montana (Dennison Theatre)
  • 13 - Bellingham, Washington (Mount Baker Theatre)
  • 14 - Seattle, Washington (Moore Theatre)
  • 16 - Vancouver, British Columbia, CANADA (Vogue Theatre)
  • 2 - Atherton, California (Sacred Heart School, benefit for Peninsula College Fund)
  • 1 - Boulder, Colorado (Chautauqua Auditorium)
  • 2 - Arvada, Colorado (Arvada Center)
  • 4 - Salina, Kansas (Stiefel Theatre for Performing Arts)
  • 6 - Apple Valley, Minnesota (Weesner Zoo Amphitheater)
  • 7 - Madison, Wisconsin (Capitol Theater)
  • 9 - Highland Park, Illinois (Ravinia Festival, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 11 - Charlottesville, Virginia (nTelos Wireless Pavilion, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 12 - Vienna, Virginia (Wolf Trap, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 14 - Atlanta, Georgia (Chastain Park Amphitheatre, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 15 - Atlanta, Georgia (Chastain Park Amphitheatre, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 17 - New York, New York (Summerstage at Central Park, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 19 - Newark, New Jersey (New Jersey Performing Arts Center, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 20 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Mann Center, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 22 - Bethel, New York (Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 23 - Lenox, Massachusetts (Tanglewood, w/Indigo Girls)
  • 25 - Rutland, Vermont (Paramount Theatre)
  • 26 - Portland, Maine (State Theatre)
  • 28 - Lowell, Massachusetts (Boarding House Park/Lowell High School)
  • 29 - New Bedford, Massachusetts (Zeiterion Performing Arts Center)
  • 27 - San Jose, California (Civic Auditorium, benefit for Downtown Streets Team w/Emmylou Harris and Jackson Browne)
  • 6 - Adelaide, Australia (Festival Theatre)
  • 8 - Melbourne, Australia (Hamer Hall at the Arts Centre)
  • 9 - Melbourne, Australia (Hamer Hall at the Arts Centre)
  • 12 - Brisbane, Australia (Concert Hall at Queensland Performing Arts Centre)
  • 16 - Perth, Australia (Concert Hall)
  • 17 - Perth, Australia (Concert Hall)
  • 20 - Sydney, Australia (Sydney Opera House)
  • 21 - Sydney, Australia (Sydney Opera House)
  • 24 - Canberra, Australia (Royal Theatre)
  • 26 - Brisbane, Australia (Concert Hall at Queensland Performing Arts Centre)
  • 29 - Auckland, New Zealand (The Civic/The Edge)
  • 31 - Wellington, New Zealand (Michael Fowler Centre)
  • 29 - New York, New York (Town Hall, Another Day/Another Time concert for "Inside Llewyn Davis" film)
  • 22 - Lafayette, Louisiana (The Feed & Seed)
  • 23 - Baton Rouge, Louisiana (Red Dragon)
  • 24 - New Orleans, Louisiana (One Eyed Jack's)
  • 23 - Tunbridge Wells, United Kingdom (Assembly Hall)
  • 24 - Cambridge, United Kingdom (Corn Exchange)
  • 26 - York, United Kingdom (Barbican Centre)
  • 28 - Gateshead, United Kingdom (The Sage)
  • 29 - Glasgow, United Kingdom (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 2 - Liverpool, United Kingdom (Philharmonic Hall)
  • 4 - Manchester, United Kingdom (Bridgewater Hall)
  • 5 - Sheffield, United Kingdom (City Hall)
  • 7 - Bristol, United Kingdom (Colston Hall)
  • 9 - Salisbury, United Kingdom (City Hall)
  • 10 - Basingstoke, United Kingdom (The Anvil)
  • 12 - Ipswich, United Kingdom (Regent Theatre)
  • 13 - Birmingham, United Kingdom (Symphony Hall)
  • 16 - London, United Kingdom (Royal Festival Hall)
  • 17 - London, United Kingdom (Royal Festival Hall)
  • 19 - Oxford, United Kingdom (New Theatre)
  • 20 - Nottingham, United Kingdom (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 22 - Cardiff, United Kingdom (Millenium Centre)
  • 23 - Plymouth, United Kingdom (Pavillions)
  • 25 - Poole, United Kingdom (Lighthouse)
  • 26 - Brighton, United Kingdom (Dome)
  • 31 - Fulda, Germany (Esperanthalle)
  • 2 - Cologne, Germany (Philharmonie)
  • 3 - Frankfurt, Germany (Jahrhunderthalle)
  • 5 - Salem, Germany (Schloss)
  • 7 - Dresden, Germany (Junge Garde)
  • 8 - Benediktbeuern, Germany (Kloster)
  • 10 - Stuttgart, Germany (Freilichtbuhne)
  • 11 - Munich, Germany (Philharmonie)
  • 13 - Reims, France (Parc des Expositions)
  • 16 - Fes, Morocco (Sacred Music Festival)
  • 19 - Le Havre, France (Docks Oceane)
  • 20 - Caen, France (Zenith)
  • 22 - Brest, France (Le Quartz)
  • 23 - Trelaze, France (Parc du Vissoir)
  • 25 - Metz, France (Arenes)
  • 26 - Vienne, France (Theatre Antique)
  • 28 - Aurillac, France (Le Prisme)
  • 29 - Montpellier, France (Zenith)
  • 3 - Milan, Italy (Ippodromo del Galoppo di Milano)
  • 4 - Padova (Piazolla sul Brenta, Italy (Villa Contarini)
  • 6 - Rome, Italy (Auditorium Parco della Musica)
  • 7 - Trento, Italy (Piazza Fiera)
  • 9 - Finkenstein, Austria (Burgarena)
  • 10 - Vienna, Austria (Stadthalle F)
  • 12 - Nurnberg, Germany (Park Bayrischer Rundfunk)
  • 13 - Mannheim, Germany (Mozartsaal im Rosengarten)
  • 28 - Quito, Ecuador (Festival Todas las Voces Todas, La Vicentina)
  • 25 - Strasbourg, France (Zenith)
  • 26 - Lille, France (Nouveau Siecle)
  • 28 - Paris, France (Le Grand Rex)
  • 29 - Paris, France (Le Grand Rex)
  • 31 - Rennes, France (Le Liberte)
  • 1 - Bordeaux, France (Le Femina)
  • 3 - Biarritz, France (La Gare du Lidi)
  • 5 - Toulouse, France (Zenith)
  • 6 - Marseille, France (Le Dome)
  • 8 - Grenoble, France (Le Summum)
  • 9 - Clermont-Ferrand, France (Zenith d'Auvergne)
  • 13 - Eindhoven, Holland (Muziekgebouw Frits Philips)
  • 15 - Randers, Denmark (Vaerket)
  • 16 - Malmo, Sweden (Konserthus)
  • 17 - Gothenburg, Sweden (Konserthus)
  • 19 - Stockholm, Sweden (Cirkus)
  • 21 - Linkoping, Sweden (Konserthus)
  • 27 - Bergen, Norway (Grieghallen)
  • 29 - Oslo, Norway (Sentrum Scene)
  • 1 - Randers, Denmark (Vaerket)
  • 17 - La Courneuve, France (Fete de l'Humanite)
  • 24 - Lanester, France (Parc des Expo Hall, Lorient)
  • 25 - Orleans, France (Zenith)
  • 27 - Rouen, France (Zenith)
  • 28 - Maxeville, France (Zenith de Nancy)
  • 30 - Dijon, France (Zenith)
  • 1 - Annecy, France (L'Arcadium)
  • 4 - Monte Carlo, Monaco (Grimaldi Forum)
  • 6 - Beziers, France (Zinga Zanga)
  • 7 - Pau, France (Zenith)
  • 9 - Bordeaux, France (Theatre Femina)
  • 11 - Paris, France (Le Grand Rex)
  • 12 - Paris, France (Le Grand Rex)
  • 14 - Limoges, France (Zenith)
  • 15 - Troyes, France (Parc Expo - Le Cube)
  • 30 - Chicago, Illinois (Symphony Center)
  • 1 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Michigan Theater)
  • 2 - Toronto, Ontario, CANADA (Roy Thomson Hall)
  • 4 - Buffalo, New York (Kleinhans Music Hall)
  • 5 - Ithaca, New York (State Theatre) (w/Kris Kristofferson)
  • 6 - Boston, Massachusetts (Symphony Hall) (w/Kris Kristofferson)
  • 8 - New York, New York (Beacon Theatre) (w/Kris Kristofferson)
  • 9 - Northampton, Massachusetts (Calvin Theatre)
  • 11 - Princeton, New Jersey (McCarter Theatre)
  • 12 - Glenside, Pennsylvania (Keswick Theatre)
  • 15 - Stamford, Connecticut (Palace Theatre)
  • 16 - Morristown, New Jersey (Community Theatre)
  • 18 - Richmond, Virginia (Carpenter Center for the Arts)
  • 19 - Wingate, North Carolina (Batte Fine Arts Center)
  • 19 - Vienna, Austria (Stadthalle)
  • 20 - Salzburg, Austria (Kongresshaus)
  • 22 - Augsburg, Germany (Sporthalle)
  • 23 - Nurnberg, Germany (Meistersingerhalle)
  • 25 - Zwickau, Germany (Stadhalle)
  • 26 - Mannheim, Germany (Mozartsaal)
  • 28 - Lyon, France (Amphitheatre)
  • 2 - Barcelona, Spain (Palau de la Musica)
  • 3 - Burgos, Spain (Cultural Caja de Burgos)
  • 5 - Vigo, Spain (Centro Cultural Caixa Nova)
  • 7 - Gijon, Spain (Teatro Jovellanos)
  • 8 - Porto, Portugal (Casa da Musica)
  • 10 - Lisbon, Portugal (Coliseum)
  • 12 - Madrid, Spain (Palacio de Congresos)
  • 14 - Toulon, France (Zenith)
  • 15 - Besancon, France (Micropolis)
  • 18 - Baden-Baden, Germany (Festspielhaus)
  • 19 - Regensburg, Germany (Donau Arena)
  • 21 - Heilbronn, Germany (Harmonie)
  • 22 - Dusseldorf, Germany (Philipshalle)
  • 24 - Ravensburg, Germany (Oberschwabenhalle)
  • 25 - Mainz, Germany (Rheingoldhalle)
  • 27 - Munster, Germany (Halle Munsterland)
  • 28 - Braunschweig, Germany (Stadhalle)
  • 6 - Reno, Nevada (Hawkins Amphitheatre)
  • 7 - Salt Lake City, Utah (Red Butte Garden Amphitheatre)
  • 9 - Arvada, Colorado (Arvada Center)
  • 10 - Boulder, Colorado (Chautauqua Auditorium)
  • 13 - Apple Valley, Minnesota (Weesner Amphitheater at the Zoo)
  • 15 - Bayfield, Wisconsin (Big Top Chautauqua)
  • 16 - Fish Creek, Wisconsin (Door Community Auditorium)
  • 17 - St. Cloud, Minnesota (Paramount Theater)
  • 19 - Arlington Heights, Illinois (Metropolis PAC)
  • 20 - Lexington, Kentucky (Lexington Opera House)
  • 22 - Torrington, Connecticut (Warner Theater)
  • 23 - Portsmouth, New Hampshire (The Music Hall)
  • 25 - Gettysburg, Pennsylvania (Majestic Theatre)
  • 26 - Red Bank, New Jersey (Count Basie Theater)
  • 29 - Nashville, Tennessee (Cheekwood Botanical Garden)
  • 30 - Atlanta, Georgia (Atlanta Botanical Garden)
  • 1 - Raleigh, North Carolina (North Carolina Museum of Art)
  • 3 - Germantown, Tennessee (Germantown PAC)
  • 5 - Baton Rouge, Louisiana (The River Center)
  • 8 - Santa Fe, New Mexico (Lensic PAC)
  • 11 - San Diego, California (Humphrey's by the Bay)
  • 12 - Saratoga, California (Villa Montalvo)
  • 13 - Long Beach, California (Queen Mary Park)
  • 28 - Napa, California (Napa Valley Opera House)
  • 30 - Solvang, California (Festival Theater)
  • 2 - San Francisco, California (Golden Gate Park/Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival)
  • 5 - Kansas City, Missouri (Unity Temple)
  • 6 - Iowa City, Iowa (The Englert Theater)
  • 8 - Madison, Wisconsin (Union Theater)
  • 9 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Pitman Theatre at Alverno College)
  • 12 - Saugatuck, Michigan (Center for the Arts)
  • 13 - Kitchener, Ontario, Canada (Centre in the Square)
  • 15 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada (Theatre St.-Denis)
  • 16 - Ottawa, Ontario, Canada (Southam Hall)
  • 18 - Clinton, New York (Central School Auditorium)
  • 20 - Newark Ohio (Midland Theater)
  • 21 - Reading, Pennsylvania (Sovereign Center)
  • 23 - Rochester, New York (Auditorium Theater)
  • 24 - Poughkeepsie, New York (Bardavon 1869 Opera House)
  • 26 - Troy, New York (Troy Savings Bank Music Hall)
  • 27 - North Bethesda, Maryland (Music Center at Strathmore)
  • 29 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Academy of Music)
  • 30 - Newark, New Jersey (NJ Performing Arts Center)
  • 1 - Brownfield, Massachusetts (Stone Mountain Arts Center)
  • 2 - Burlington, Vermont (Flynn Theater)
  • 4 - Concord, New Hampshire (Capitol Center)
  • 5 - New Haven, Connecticut (Shubert Theatre)
  • 16 - Monterey, California (Golden State Theater)
  • 17 - Santa Barbara, California (Lobero Theater)
  • 19 - Los Angeles, California (Royce Hall/UCLA)
  • 21 - Mesa, Arizona (Ikeda Theatre)
  • 22 - Albuquerque, New Mexico (Disney Theater)
  • 24 - Dallas, Texas (Lakewood Theater)
  • 25 - Austin, Texas (Paramount Theater)
  • 2 - Charlotte, North Carolina (McGlohon Theatre at Spirit Square)
  • 3 - Charlottesville, Virginia (Paramount Theatre)
  • 5 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Byham Theatre)
  • 6 - Ithaca, New York (State Theater)
  • 7 - Cleveland, Ohio (Ohio Theater)
  • 9 - Columbus, Ohio (Southern Theatre)
  • 10 - Louisville, Kentucky (Brown Theatre)
  • 13 - Bloomington, Indiana (Buskirk-Chumley Theater)
  • 14 - Madison, Wisconsin (Barrymore Theatre)
  • 16 - Columbia, Missouri (Missouri Theatre)
  • 17 - Lawrence, Kansas (Liberty Hall)
  • 19 - Beaver Creek, Colorado (Vilar Center for the Arts)
  • 21 - Boise, Idaho (Egyptian Theatre)
  • 22 - Sandpoint, Idaho (Panida Theater)
  • 24 - Missoula, Montana (University Theatre)
  • 25 - Bozeman, Montana (Emerson Cultural Center)
  • 27 - Calgary, Alberta, Canada (Jack Singer Hall)
  • 29 - Edmonton, Alberta, Canada (Winspear)
  • 31 - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (Vogue Theater)
  • 6 - Napa, California (Napa Valley Opera House)
  • 7 - Arroyo Grande, California (Clark Center)
  • 9 - Santa Monica, California (Santa Monica Pier)
  • 10 - San Diego, California (Humphrey's)
  • 12 - San Francisco, California (Stern Grove)
  • 13 - Layton, Utah (Kenley Amphitheatre)
  • 15 - Boulder, Colorado (Chautauqua Auditorium)
  • 16 - Denver, Colorado (Botanic Gardens)
  • 19 - St. Louis, Missouri (The Pageant)
  • 20 - Knoxville, Tennessee (Bijou Theatre)
  • 22 - Atlanta, Georgia (Botanical Garden)
  • 23 - Boone, North Carolina (Farthing Auditorium)
  • 25 - Dallas, Pennsylvania (Wachovia Amphitheatre)
  • 26 - Westhampton Beach, New York (Performing Arts Center)
  • 28 - Florence, Massachusetts (The Pines Theater)
  • 30 - Lowell, Massachusetts (Boarding House Park)
  • 31 - Portland, Maine (Merrill Auditorium)
  • 2 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival
  • 4 - Kettering, Ohio (Fraze Pavilion)
  • 6 - Interlochen, Michigan (Kresge Auditorium)
  • 7 - Washburn, Wisconsin (Big Top Chautauqua)
  • 9 - Bismarck, North Dakota (Belle Mehus Auditorium)
  • 11 - Idaho Falls, Idaho (Colonial Theatre)
  • 13 - Seattle, Washington (Woodland Park Zoo Amphitheatre)
  • 14 - Portland, Oregon (Oregon Zoo Amphitheatre)
  • 16 - Bend, Oregon (The Courtyard)
  • 17 - Arcata, California (Van Duzer Theater)
  • 25 - San Jose, California (Center for Performing Arts)
  • 1 - Birmingham, United Kingdom (Symphony Hall)
  • 2 - Cambridge, United Kingdom (Corn Exchange)
  • 4 - Oxford, United Kingdom (New Theatre)
  • 5 - Brighton, United Kingdom (Dome)
  • 8 - Cardiff, United Kingdom (St. David's Hall)
  • 10 - Gateshead, United Kingdom (Sage Center)
  • 12 - Edinburgh, United Kingdom (Usher Hall)
  • 13 - Liverpool, United Kingdom (Philharmonic Hall)
  • 15 - Nottingham, United Kingdom (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 17 - Bruges, Belgium (Royal City Theatre)
  • 20 - Amsterdam, Holland (Carre)
  • 21 - Amiens, France (Zenith)
  • 23 - Rodez, France (Amphitheater)
  • 24 - Montpellier, France (Place Peyrou)
  • 26 - Nantes, France (Zenith)
  • 27 - Tours, France (Le Vinci)
  • 31 - Gothenberg, Sweden (Storan Theatre)
  • 1 - Oslo, Norway (Sentrum Scene)
  • 3 - Stockholm, Sweden (Cirkus)
  • 4 - Copenhagen, Denmark (Falconer Theater)
  • 7 - Groningen, Holland (De Oosterpoort)
  • 8 - Antwerp, Belgium (Arenberg Theater)
  • 10 - Reading, United Kingdom (The Hexagon)
  • 11 - Salisbury, United Kingdom (City Hall)
  • 21 - Albany, New York (The Egg)
  • 22 - New Bedford, Massachusetts (Zeiterion PAC)
  • 24 - Waterville, Maine (Opera House)
  • 25 - Lebanon, New Hampshire (Opera House)
  • 28 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Sanders Theatre)
  • 29 - Englewood, New Jersey (Bergen County PAC)
  • 3 - Wilmington, Delaware (Grand Opera House)
  • 4 - Easton, Maryland (Avalon Theatre)
  • 6 - Charleston, South Carolina (Music Hall)
  • 7 - Jacksonville, Florida (Florida Theatre)
  • 9 - Tampa, Florida (Tampa Theatre)
  • 11 - Tuscaloose, Alabama (Bama Theatre)
  • 12 - Oxford, Mississippi (Gertrude C. Ford Center)
  • 14 - Peekskill, New York (Paramount Center for the Arts)
  • 15 - New Brunswick, New Jersey (State Theatre)
  • 29 - Glastonbury, United Kingdom (Acoustic Tent)
  • 2 - Bochum, Germany (Freilichtbuhne Wattenscheid)
  • 4 - Dresden, Germany (Junge Garde)
  • 5 - Stuttgart, Germany (Freilichtbuhen Killesberg)
  • 6 - Montreux, Switzerland (Jazz Festival)
  • 10 - Trier, Germany (Europhalle Trier)
  • 11 - Amneville, France (Galaxie)
  • 13 - Magdeburg, Germany (Festung Mark)
  • 15 - Zagreb, Croatia (Gradec)
  • 16 - Sarajevo, Bosnia (Nights of Bascarsija)
  • 19 - Trencin, Slovakia (Pohoda Festival)
  • 21 - Arezzo, Italy (Piazza della Liberta)
  • 22 - Venice, Italy (Piazza San Marco)
  • 25 - Cognac, France (Blues Passion)
  • 26 - Nice, France (Jazz Festival)
  • 28 - Barcelona, Spain (Palau de la Musica)
  • 29 - Segovia, Spain (Alcazar de Segovia)
  • 20 - Boulder, Colorado (Chautauqua Auditorium-ETown)
  • 26 - Dublin, Ireland (Vicar Street)
  • 1 - Manchester, United Kingdom (Bridgewater Hall)
  • 2 - London, United Kingdom (Royal Albert Hall)
  • 5 - Utrecht, Holland (Vredenburg Leidsche Rijn)
  • 7 - Berlin, Germany (Tempodrom)
  • 8 - Hamburg, Germany (Laeizhalle)
  • 11 - Milan, Italy (Milan Smeraldo)
  • 13 - Paris, France (Palais des Congres)
  • 26 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Kimmel Center)
  • 28 - New York, New York (Town Hall)
  • 29 - New York, New York (Town Hall)
  • 1 - Boston, Massachusetts (Berklee Performance Center)
  • 2 - Boston, Massachusetts (Berklee Performance Center)
  • 5 - Alexandria, Virginia (The Birchmere)
  • 6 - Alexandria, Virginia (The Birchmere)
  • 8 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada (Massey Hall)
  • 10 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Michigan Theater)
  • 11 - Chicago, Illinois (Symphony Center)
  • 13 - Minneapolis, Minnesota (State Theatre)
  • 15 - Santa Rosa, California (Wells Fargo Center for the Arts)
  • 18 - San Francisco, California (Herbst Theatre)
  • 19 - San Francisco, California (Herbst Theatre)
  • 21 - Eugene, Oregon (The Shedd Institute)
  • 23 - Portland, Oregon (Aladdin Theater)
  • 24 - Seattle, Washington (Moore Theatre)
  • 29 - Santa Monica, California (Civic Auditorium) w/Jackson Browne
  • 27 - Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom (Usher Hall)
  • 3 - Coventry, United Kingdom (Warwick Arts Centre)
  • 4 - Cambridge, United Kingdom (Corn Exchange)
  • 6 - Oxford, United Kingdom (New Theatre)
  • 7 - Nottingham, United Kingdom (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 8 - Cardiff, Wales, United Kingdom (St. David's Hall)
  • 11 - Mannheim, Germany (Mozartsaal Rosengarten)
  • 12 - Karlsruhe, Germany (Schwarzwaldhalle)
  • 13 - Erfurt, Germany (Messehalle)
  • 16 - Dijon, France (Zenith)
  • 17 - Strasbourg, France (Salle Erasme)
  • 18 - Ludres (Nancy), France (Espace Chaudeau)
  • 20 - Bielfeld, Germany (Stadthalle)
  • 22 - Hannover, Germany (Kuppelsaal)
  • 24 - Bonn, Germany (Beethovenhalle)
  • 26 - Verona, Italy (Teatro Filarmonico)
  • 27 - Florence, Italy (Saschall)
  • 28 - Rome, Italy (Auditorium Roma)
  • 30 - Llubljana, Slovenia (Hala Tivoli)
  • 31 - Vienna, Austria (Stadthalle F)
  • 2 - Prague, Czech Republic (Lucerna)
  • 28 - Munich, Germany (Olympiapark Sud)
  • 30 - Bamberg, Germany (Jako Arena)
  • 1 - Berlin, Germany (Zitadelle)
  • 3 - Mainz, Germany (Zeltfestival)
  • 6 - Basingstoke, United Kingdom (The Anvil)
  • 7 - Wolverhampton, United Kingdom (Civic Hall)
  • 9 - Harrogate, United Kingdom (International Centre)
  • 10 - Llangollen, Wales, United Kingdom (Royal International Pavilion)
  • 13 - Meersburg, Germany (Schlossplatz)
  • 14 - Abenburg, Germany (Burg)
  • 15 - Freiburg, Germany (ZMF)
  • 18 - Perpignan, France (Les Estivales)
  • 19 - Toulouse, France (Halle Aux Grains)
  • 21 - St. Malo de Bois, France (Poupet Festival)
  • 22 - Quimper, France (Festival de Cournaouaille)
  • 24 - Lyon, France (Festival les Nuits de Fourvieres)
  • 26 - Girona, Spain (Festival Cap Roig)
  • 28 - Cambridge, United Kingdom (Cambridge Folk Festival)
  • 6 - Brighton, United Kingdom (The Dome)
  • 8 - London, United Kingdom (Barbican)
  • 10 - Birmingham, United Kingdom (Symphony Hall)
  • 12 - Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 13 - Manchester, United Kingdom (Bridgewater Hall)
  • 14 - Sheffield, United Kingdom (City Hall)
  • 17 - Grenoble, France (Grand Theatre)
  • 18 - Marseille, France (Palais de Congres)
  • 19 - Albi (Toulouse), France (Festival "un Weekend ave Elles")
  • 21 - Paris, France (Le Grand Rex)
  • 23 - Munich, Germany (Philharmonie)
  • 24 - Frankfurt, Germany (Jahrhunderhalle)
  • 25 - Hamburg, Germany (Musikhalle)
  • 27 - Dresden, Germany (Kulturpalast-Festsaal)
  • 30 - Stuttgart, Germany (Hanns-Martin Schleyerhalle)
  • 1 - Padova, Italy (Palasport San Lazzaro)
  • 3 - Torino, Italy (Teatro Regio)
  • 4 - Milan, Italy (Teatro degli Arcimboldi)
  • 5 - Trento, Italy (PalaTrento)
  • 7 - Dusseldorf, Germany (Phillippshalle)
  • 8 - Berlin, Germany (Tempodrom)
  • 17 - Lancaster, California (Performing Arts Center)
  • 18 - San Diego, California (Humphrey's)
  • 20 - Tucson, Arizona (Fox Theater)
  • 21 - Scottsdale, Arizona (Performing Arts Center)
  • 22 - Santa Fe, New Mexico (Lensic PAC)
  • 24 - Albuquerque, New Mexico (KiMo Theatre)
  • 26 - Dallas, Texas (Lakewood Theater)
  • 27 - Austin, Texas (Hogg Memorial Auditorium/University of Texas)
  • 29 - Birmingham, Alabama (Alys Robinson Stephens PAC/University of Alabama)
  • 31 - Nashville, Tennessee (Belcourt Theater)
  • 1 - Columbus, Ohio (Southern Theatre)
  • 3 - St. Louis, Missouri (The Pageant)
  • 4 - Lincoln, Nebraska (Rococo Theatre)
  • 6 - Grinnell, Iowa (Grinnell College)
  • 7 - Chicago, Illinois (Harris Theater)
  • 9 - Omaha, Nebraska (Orpheum Theater)
  • 10 - Cedar Falls, Iowa (Gallagher Bluedorn PAC/University of No. Iowa)
  • 13 - Boulder, Colorado (Boulder Theatre)
  • 14 - Boulder, Colorado (Boulder Theatre)
  • 17 - Boise, Idaho (Egyptian Theater)
  • 18 - Tacoma, Washington (Broadway Center for Performing Arts)
  • 20 - Portland, Oregon (Aladdin Theater)
  • 21 - Portland, Oregon (Aladdin Theater)
  • 30 - Santa Cruz, California (Rio Theatre)
  • 1 - San Francisco, California (Golden Gate Park)
  • 5 - Lawrence, Kansas (Liberty Hall)
  • 6 - Omaha, Nebraska (Witherspoon Concert Hall)
  • 8 - St. Paul, Minnesota (O'Shaughnessy Auditorium)
  • 9 - Rochester, Minnesota (Mayo Civic Center)
  • 13 - Madison, Wisconsin (Barrymore Theatre)
  • 14 - Chicago, Illinois (Vic Theater)
  • 15 - Edwardsville, Illinois (Meridian Ballroom/Southern Illinois University)
  • 17 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (The Ark)
  • 18 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (The Ark)
  • 20 - Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (Whitaker Center)
  • 21 - Glenside, Pennsylvania (Keswick Theater)
  • 22 - Northampton, Massachusetts (Calvin Theater)
  • 25 - Somerville, Massachusetts (Somerville Theater)
  • 26 - Somerville, Massachusetts (Somerville Theater)
  • 28 - Newark, New Jersey (Performing Arts Center)
  • 30 - Albany, New York (The Egg)
  • 1 - Princeton, New Jersey (McCarter Theatre)
  • 2 - Alexandria, Virginia (Birchmere)
  • 3 - Alexandria, Virginia (Birchmere)
  • 5 - Durham, North Carolina (Carolina Theatre)
  • 6 - Atlanta, Georgia (Variety Playhouse)
  • 1 - Santa Barbara, California (Lobero Theatre)
  • 3 - Redwood City, California (Fox Theatre)
  • 4 - Santa Rosa, California (Luther Burbank Center)
  • 6 - Arcata, California (Van Duzer Theater/Humboldt State University)
  • 7 - Chico, California (Laxson Auditorium/California State University at Chico)
  • 15 - Glasgow, Scotland (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 16 - Liverpool, England (Philharmonic Hall)
  • 17 - Nottingham, England (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 19 - Cambridge, England (Corn Exchange)
  • 21 - Sheffield, England (City Hall)
  • 22 - York, England (Barbican Centre)
  • 23 - Birmingham, England (Symphony Hall)
  • 25 - Belfast, Northern Ireland (Waterfront Hall)
  • 30 - Brighton, England (Dome)
  • 31 - Bristol, England (Colston Hall)
  • 1 - London (Carling Apollo/Hammersmith)
  • 4 - Southend, England (Cliffs Pavilion)
  • 5 - Oxford, England (New Theatre)
  • 7 - Manchester, England (Bridgewater Hall)
  • 8 - Cardiff, Wales (St. David's Hall)
  • 3 - Eugene, Oregon (John G. Shedd Institute for the Arts)
  • 5 - Seattle, Washington (Moore Theater)
  • 6 - Portland, Oregon (Aladdin Theater)
  • 7 - Portland, Oregon (Aladdin Theater)
  • 9 - Spokane, Washington (Met Theater)
  • 10 - Portland, Oregon (Aladdin Theater)
  • 12 - San Francisco, California (The Fillmore)
  • 13 - San Francisco, California (The Fillmore)
  • 14 - Anaheim, California (The Grove Theater)
  • 16 - Santa Fe, New Mexico (Lensic Performing Arts Center)
  • 17 - Boulder, Colorado (Boulder Theater)
  • 19 - Dallas, Texas (Granada Theater)
  • 21 - New Orleans, Louisiana (Tipitina's)
  • 24 - Nashville, Tennessee (Belcourt Theater)
  • 25 - Knoxville, Tennessee (Bijou Theatre)
  • 27 - Lakewood, Ohio (Civic Auditorium)
  • 28 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (The Ark)
  • 30 - Lexington, Kentucky (Kentucky Theatre)
  • 31 - Indianapolis, Indiana (Egyptian Room at Murat Center)
  • 2 - Evanston, Illinois (Pick-Staiger Hall)
  • 3 - Green Bay, Wisconsin (Meyer Theatre)
  • 4 - Des Moines, Iowa (Hoyt Sherman Theatre)
  • 22 - San Diego, California (Humphrey's by the Bay) (w/Steve Earle)
  • 23 - Saratoga, California (Mountain Winery) (w/Steve Earle)
  • 25 - Reno, Nevada (Robert Z. Hawkins Amphitheater) (w/Steve Earle)
  • 26 - Laytonville, California (Kate Wolf Memorial Festival)
  • 9 - Istanbul, Turkey (Cemil Topuslu Open Air Theatre)
  • 11 - Bucharest, Romania (Sala Palatului)
  • 14 - Fulda, Germany (Schlosshof)
  • 16 - Bad Reichenhall, Germany (Alte Saline)
  • 17 - Graz, Austria (KasemattenBuehne)
  • 19 - Dresden, Germany (Freilichtgelande Elbufer)
  • 20 - Munich, Germany (Philharmonie)
  • 22 - St. Vincent (Aosta), Italy (Teatro Tenda)
  • 23 - Genova, Italy (Arena del Mare)
  • 25 - Andria, Italy (Castello Federiciano)
  • 28 - Rome, Italy (Cavea Auditorium Parco della Musica)
  • 30 - Trieste, Italy (Teatro Romano)
  • 1 - Bonn, Germany (Museumplatz)
  • 2 - Stuttgart, Germany (Killesberg Freilichtbuhne)
  • 3 - Hamburg, Germany (Stadtpark)
  • 5 - Lille, France (Salle Vauban)
  • 7 - Crozon, France (Festival du Bout du Monde)
  • 13 - Denver, Colorado (Botanic Gardens)
  • 14 - Lyons, Colorado (Rocky Mountain Folk Festival)
  • 16 - University Park, Illinois (Center for Performing Arts/Governors State University)
  • 17 - Glen Ellyn, Illinois (McAninch Arts Center/College of DuPage)
  • 19 - Cleveland, Ohio (Waetjen Auditorium/Cleveland State University)
  • 22 - New London, Connecticut (Garde Arts Center)
  • 23 - Plymouth, Massachusetts (Plymouth Memorial Hall)
  • 24 - Albany, New York (The Egg)
  • 26 - Lebanon, New Hampshire (Opera House)
  • 28 - Alexandria, Virginia (Birchmere)
  • 29 - Alexandria, Virginia (Birchmere)
  • 30 - Poughkeepsie, New York (Bardavon 1869 Opera House)
  • 1 - Chapel Hill, North Carolina (Hill Hall/Chapel Hill University)
  • 3 - Charlottesville, Virginia (Performing Arts Center)
  • 5 - New York, New York (Bowery Ballroom)
  • 6 - New York, New York (Bowery Ballroom)
  • 26 - Redwood City, California (Fox Theater)
  • 27 - Los Angeles, California (Royce Hall/UCLA)
  • 1 - Scottsdale, Arizona (Center for the Arts)
  • 2 - Tucson, Arizona (Tucson High School Auditorium)
  • 3 - Santa Fe, New Mexico (Lensic Performing Arts Center)
  • 6 - Austin, Texas (Paramount Theatre)
  • 7 - Tulsa, Oklahoma (Brady Theater)
  • 8 - Wichita, Kansas (Orpheum Theater)
  • 11 - Sioux Falls, South Dakota (Washington Pavilion)
  • 12 - St. Paul, Minnesota (O'Shaughnessy Auditorium)
  • 14 - Madison, Wisconsin (Barrymore Theater)
  • 15 - Benton Harbor, Michigan (The Mendel Center/Lake Michigan College)
  • 16 - Chicago, Illinois (Symphony Center)
  • 18 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Pabst Theater)
  • 19 - Kalamazoo, Michigan (State Theatre)
  • 21 - Columbus, Ohio (Southern Theatre)
  • 22 - Kent, Ohio (Kent Stage)
  • 23 - Tiffin, Ohio (Ritz Theatre)
  • 25 - Ithaca, New York (State Theatre)
  • 26 - Portsmouth, New Hampshire (Music Hall)
  • 28 - Keene, New Hampshire (Colonial Theatre)
  • 29 - Collingswood, New Jersey (Scottish Rite Auditorium)
  • 30 - Stamford, Connecticut (Center for the Arts)
  • 1 - North Tonowanda, New York (Riviera Theatre)
  • 3 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Michigan Theater)
  • 5 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada (Convocation Hall)
  • 6 - Charleston, West Virginia (Mountain Stage)
  • 3 - Charlotte, North Carolina (Neighborhood Theatre)
  • 4 - Atlanta, Georgia (Variety Playhouse)
  • 5 - Greenville, South Carolina (The Handlebar)
  • 7 - Carrboro, North Carolina (Cat's Cradle)
  • 8 - Roanoke, Virginia (Shaftman Hall/Jefferson Center)
  • 10 - Peekskill, New York (Paramount Center for the Arts)
  • 11 - Boston, Massachusetts (Berklee Performance Center)
  • 12 - Burlington, Vermont (Flynn Theater of Performing Arts)
  • 14 - Wilmington, Delaware (Grand Opera House)
  • 15 - Glenside, Pennyslvania (Keswick Theater)
  • 17 - New York, New York (Town Hall)
  • 18 - North Adams, Massachusetts (MASS MoCA)
  • 19 - Northampton, Massachusetts (Calvin Theatre)
  • 24 - Fairfield, Connecticut (Quick Center/Fairfield University)
  • 25 - Washington, D.C. (Lisner Auditorium)
  • 27 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Byham Theatre)
  • 29 - Cincinnati, Ohio (20th Century Theater)
  • 30 - St. Louis, Missouri (Sheldon Concert Hall)
  • 1 - Chicago, Illinois (Old Town School of Folk)
  • 2 - Chicago, Illinois (Old Town School of Folk)
  • 4 - Chicago, Illinois (Soundstage)
  • 6 - Lawrence, Kansas (Liberty Hall)
  • 7 - Lincoln, Nebraska (Lied Center for the Performing Arts)
  • 8 - Columbia, Missouri (The Blue Note)
  • 12 - Syracuse, New York (Landmark Theatre)
  • 13 - Concord, New Hampshire (Chubb Theatre)
  • 15 - Albany, New York (The Egg/Empire Center)
  • 16 - New London, Connecticut (Garde Arts Center)
  • 17 - Portland, Maine (Merrill Auditorium)
  • 19 - Boston, Massachusetts (Berklee Performance Center)
  • 20 - Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania (Kirby Center)
  • 22 - New Haven, Connecticut (Palace Theatre)
  • 23 - Staten Island, New York (Center for the Arts/Staten Island College)
  • 24 - Northampton, Massachusetts (Calvin Theatre)
  • 26 - Burlington, Vermont (Flynn Theatre)
  • 28 - Morristown, New Jersey (Community Theatre)
  • 1 - New Brunswick, New Jersey (State Theatre)
  • 2 - Glenside, Pennsylvania (Keswick Theatre)
  • 4 - Ridgefield, Connecticut (Ridgefield Playhouse)
  • 5 - New York, New York (Town Hall)
  • 6 - Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (Whitaker Center)
  • 8 - Greensburg, Pennsylvania (Palace Theatre)
  • 9 - Alexandria, Virginia (The Birchmere)
  • 10 - Alexandria, Virginia (The Birchmere)
  • 12 - Asheville, North Carolina (Thomas Wolfe Auditorium)
  • 13 - Knoxville, Tennessee (Tennessee Theatre)
  • 15 - Atlanta, Georgia (Variety Playhouse)
  • 16 - Savannah, Georgia (Johnny Mercer Theatre)
  • 19 - Lake Buena Vista, Florida (House of Blues)
  • 20 - Jacksonville, Florida (Florida Theater)
  • 22 - West Palm Beach, Florida (Carefree Theater)
  • 23 - Tampa, Florida (Tampa Theater)
  • 8 - Santa Cruz, California (Rio Theatre)
  • 10 - Portland, Oregon (Oregon Zoo Amphitheatre)
  • 11 - Bend, Oregon (Athletic Club)
  • 13 - Roseburg, Oregon (Stewart Park)
  • 14 - Seattle, Washington (Woodland Park Zoo)
  • 15 - Bellingham, Washington (Mt. Baker Theater)
  • 17 - Albany, Oregon (Timber Linn Park)
  • 18 - Arcata, California (Van Duzer Theater/Humboldt State University)
  • 19 - Arcata, California (Van Duzer Theater/Humboldt State University)
  • 22 - Chico, California (Laxson Auditorium/Chico State University)
  • 23 - Saratoga, California (Villa Montalvo)
  • 24 - Sebastopol, California (Analy Union High School)
  • 26 - Reno, Nevada (Hawkins Amphitheatre)
  • 27 - Livermore, California (Wente Brothers Winery)
  • 28 - San Diego, California (Humphrey's)
  • 30 - Albuquerque, New Mexico (Hiland Theater)
  • 31 - Boulder, Colorado (Chautauqua Park Auditorium)
  • 1 - Beaver Creek, Colorado (Vilar Center for the Arts)
  • 3 - Salt Lake City, Utah (Red Butte Garden)
  • 4 - Boise, Idaho (The Big Easy)
  • 6 - Victoria, British Columbia, Canada (McPherson Playhouse)
  • 7 - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (Malkin Bowl/Stanley Park)
  • 16 - San Francisco, California (War Memorial Opera House) (Benefit for the American Himalayan Foundation)
  • 2 - Chicago, Illinois (Schuba's)
  • 3 - Chicago, Illinois (Old Town School of Folk Music)
  • 4 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Pabst Theater)
  • 7 - Lawrence, Kansas (Liberty Hall)
  • 8 - Springfield, Missouri (Juanita K. Hammons Hall/SW Missouri State University)
  • 10 - Grand Rapids, Michigan (Fine Arts Center/Calvin College)
  • 11 - Morgantown, West Virginia (Creative Arts Center/West Virginia University)
  • 12 - Alexandria, Virginia (Birchmere)
  • 13 - Alexandria, Virginia (Birchmere)
  • 16 - Rhinelander, Wisconsin (Nicolet Theater/Nicolet College)
  • 17 - Rhinelander, Wisconsin (Nicolet Theater/Nicolet College)
  • 18 - Elgin, Illinois (Hemmens Cultural Center)
  • 20 - San Francisco, California (Opera House - benefit for Bread & Roses)
  • 23 - New York, New York (Bowery Ballroom)
  • 24 - New York, New York (Bowery Ballroom)
  • 25 - New York, New York (Bowery Ballroom)
  • 27 - Somerville, Massachusetts (Somerville Theater)
  • 28 - Somerville, Massachusetts (Somerville Theater)
  • 29 - Orono, Maine (Maine Center for Performing Arts/University of Maine)
  • 31 - Northampton, Massachusetts (Calvin Theater)
  • 1 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Theatre of the Living Arts)
  • 2 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Theatre of the Living Arts)
  • 4 - Knoxville, Tennessee (Bijou Theater)
  • 6 - Newberry, South Carolina (Newberry Opera House)
  • 7 - Atlanta, Georgia (Variety Playhouse)
  • 8 - Lake Buena Vista, Florida (House of Blues)
  • 10 - Coral Springs, Florida (City Center Theater)
  • 11 - Naples, Florida (Philharmonic Center for the Arts)
  • 12 - Sarasota, Florida (Sarasota Opera House)
  • 15 - Memphis, Tennessee (New Daisy Theater)
  • 16 - New Orleans, Louisiana (House of Blues)
  • 15 - Chateau Arnoux, France (Ferme de Font Robert)
  • 18 - Pescara, Italy (Teatro D'annunzio
  • 20 - Udine, Italy (Folkes)
  • 21 - Lucca, Italy (Piazza Anfiteatro)
  • 23 - Carhaix, France (Festival Vieille Charrues)
  • 26 - Deauville, France (C.I.D.)
  • 29 - Cambridge, England (Cambridge Folk Festival)
  • 30 - Billings, Montana (Shrine Auditorium) (Honor The Earth show with The Indigo Girls, Bonnie Raitt and Indigenous)
  • 1 - Browning, Montana (Black Feet Reservation) (Honor the Earth show with The Indigo Girls, Bonnie Raitt, Indigenous and Ed Juneau)
  • 2 - Great Falls, Montana (Civic Center) (Honor the Earth show with The Indigo Girls, Bonnie Raitt and Ed Juneau)
  • 3 - Bozeman, Montana (Montana State University) (Honor The Earth show with Emily Saliers, Bonnie Raitt, and Dar Williams)
  • 5 - Lincoln, Nebraska (Lied Center/University of Nebraska)
  • 6 - St. Louis, Missouri (Sheldon Concert Hall)
  • 7 - Fish Creek, Wisconsin (Door Community Auditorium)
  • 9 - Marquette, Michigan (Kaufman Auditorium/Northern Michigan University)
  • 10- Kalamazoo, Michigan (State Theater)
  • 12 - Torrington, Connecticut (Warner Theater)
  • 13 - Purchase, New York (Performance Arts Center)
  • 16 - Wilmington, Delaware (Grand Opera House)
  • 17 - Morristown, New Jersey (Community Theatre)
  • 19 - York, Pennsylvania (Strand Theatre)
  • 20 - Lakewood, Ohio (Civic Auditorium)
  • 21 - Ada, Ohio (Freed Center/Ohio Northern University)
  • 24 - Oshkosh, Wisconsin (Grand Opera House)
  • 25 - Des Moines, Iowa (Hoyt Sherman Auditorium)
  • 27 - St. Paul, Minnesota (O'Shaughnessy Auditorium)
  • 28 - Madison, Wisconsin (Barrymore Theater)
  • 29 - Duluth, Minnesota (Duluth Entertainment Convention Center)
  • 1 - Columbia, Missouri (Jesse Auditorium/University of Missouri)
  • 2 - Wichita, Kansas (Orpheum)
  • 3 - Kansas City, Missouri (Uptown Theater)
  • 5 - Boulder, Colorado (Boulder Theater)
  • 8 - Salt Lake City, Utah (Kingsbury Hall)
  • 10 - San Francisco, California (Fillmore)
  • 11 - Santa Rosa, California (Luther Burbank Center)
  • 12 - San Luis Obispo, California (Performing Arts Center/Cal Poly)
  • 10 - Thousand Oaks, California (Performing Arts Center)
  • 11 - Las Vegas, Nevada (The Joint/Hard Rock Hotel & Casino)
  • 12 - San Diego, California (4th & B)
  • 13 - Bakersfield, California (Fox Theater)
  • 16 - Albuquerque, New Mexico (Popejoy Hall/UNM)
  • 17 - Phoenix, Arizona (Orpheum Theater)
  • 19 - Fort Worth, Texas (Caravan of Dreams)
  • 20 - Fort Worth, Texas (Caravan of Dreams)
  • 23 - Austin, Texas (Paramount Theater)
  • 24 - New Orleans, Louisiana (House of Blues)
  • 26 - St. Petersburg, Florida (Jannus Landing)
  • 27 - Jacksonville, Florida (Florida Theater)
  • 28 - West Palm Beach, Florida (Carefree Theater)
  • 5 - San Francisco, California (Davies Symphony Hall - Black & White Ball)
  • 19 - Berkeley, California (Berkeley Community Theater - benefit for KPFA-FM Radio)
  • 20 - Santa Rosa, California (Luther Burbank Center)
  • 21 - Medford, Oregon (Ginger Rogers Theater)
  • 23 - Kellogg, Idaho (Silver Mountain Amphitheater)
  • 25 - Calgary, Alberta, Canada (Calgary Folk Music Festival)
  • 27 - Missoula, Montana (University Theater/University of Montana)
  • 28 - Bozeman, Montana (Willson Auditorium)
  • 29 - Boise, Idaho (Sandy Point Beach)
  • 31 - Portland, Oregon (Oregon Zoo Amphitheater)
  • 1 - Seattle, Washington (Marymoore Park/WOMAD Festival)
  • 3 - Billings, Montana (Alberta Bair Theater)
  • 5 - Edmonton, Alberta, Canada (Edmonton Folk Music Festival)
  • 16 - Southend, England (Cliff's Pavilion)
  • 17 - Cardiff, South Wales (St. David's Hall)
  • 19 - Portsmouth, England (Guildhall)
  • 21 - Aberdeen, Scotland (His Majesty's Theatre)
  • 22 - Glasgow, Scotland (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 24 - Oxford, England (Apollo)
  • 25 - Croydon, England (Fairfield Hall)
  • 26 - Nottingham, England (Royal Centre)
  • 28 - Llandudno, North Wales (North Wales Theatre)
  • 29 - Bristol, England (Colston Hall)
  • 30 - Birmingham, England (Symphony Hall)
  • 31 - Cambridge, England (Corn Exchange)
  • 2 - Manchester, England (Bridgewater Hall)
  • 4 - London, England (Lyric Theatre Hammersmith)
  • 20 - Santa Cruz, California (The Catalyst - benefit for Esselen Indian Community)
  • 8 - Redway, California (Mateel Community Center - w/Bonnie Raitt - benefit for Julia Butterfly Hill's Circle of Life Foundation)
  • 17 - Providence, Rhode Island (Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel)
  • 18 - Concord, New Hampshire (Chubb Theatre/Capitol Center for PA)
  • 20 - Northampton, Massachusetts (John M. Greene Hall/Smith College)
  • 21 - Portland, Maine (Merrill Auditorium)
  • 23 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Sanders Theatre)
  • 25 - New York, New York (Carnegie Hall)
  • 27 - Washington, D.C. (Lisner Auditorium/George Washington University)
  • 29 - Tarrytown, New York (Music Hall)
  • 1 - Burlington, Vermont (Flynn Center for the Performing Arts)
  • 2 - New Haven, Connecticut (Woolsey Hall/Yale University)
  • 3 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Bellevue at Park Hyatt)
  • 6 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Rosebud)
  • 7 - Indianapolis, Indiana (Murat Theatre/Egyptian Room)
  • 9 - St. Paul, Minnesota (O'Shaughnessy Auditorium/College of St. Catherine)
  • 10 - Cedar Rapids, Iowa (Paramount Theater)
  • 13 - Madison, Wisconsin (Barrymore Theater)
  • 15 - St. Louis, Missouri (Sheldon Concert Hall)
  • 17 - Springfield, Illinois (Sangamon Auditorium/University of Illinois)
  • 18 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Michigan Theater)
  • 19 - Columbus, Ohio (Palace Theater)
  • 22 - Lexington, Kentucky (Kentucky Theatre)
  • 23 - Ashland, Kentucky (Paramount Theatre)
  • 25 - Charlotte, North Carolina (Center CityFest '98)
  • 1 - Camden, New Jersey (E Center/Newport Tour)
  • 2 - Wantagh, New York (Jones Beach Amphitheater - Newport Tour)
  • 4 - Williamsport, Pennsylvania (Community Arts Center)
  • 7 - Keene, New Hampshire (Colonial Theater)
  • 8 - Lebanon, New Hampshire (Opera House)
  • 9 - Saratoga Springs, New York (Performing Arts Center - Newport Tour)
  • 11 - Hyannis, Massachusetts (Cape Cod Melody Tent)
  • 14 - Charlotte, North Carolina (Blockbuster Pavilion - Newport Tour)
  • 15 - Raleigh, North Carolina (Walnut Creek - Newport Tour)
  • 16 - Columbia, Maryland (Merriweather Post Pavilion - Newport Tour)
  • 18 - Cleveland Heights, Ohio (Cain Park)
  • 20 - Columbus, Ohio (Polaris Amphitheater - Newport Tour)
  • 21 - Tinley Park, Illinois (World Music Theater - Newport Tour)
  • 22 - Clarkston, Michigan (Pine Knob Music Theater - Newport Tour)
  • 23 - Burgettstown, Pennsylvania (Coca-Cola Star Lake Amphitheater - Newport Tour)
  • 25 - Interlochen, Michigan (Kresge Auditorium)
  • 29 - San Luis Obispo, California (Performing Arts Center)
  • 30 - Saratoga, California (Mountain Winery)
  • 1 - Arcata, California (Van Duzer Theater/Humboldt State University)
  • 2 - Arcata, California (Van Duzer Theater/Humboldt State University)
  • 3 - Sacramento, California (Radisson Hotel)
  • 5 - Portland, Oregon (Washington Park Rose Garden)
  • 6 - Seattle, Washington (Opera House)
  • 7 - Seattle, Washington (Opera House)
  • 11 - Iowa City, Iowa (Hancher Auditorium/University of Iowa)
  • 15 - Bellvue, Colorado (Mishawaka Amphitheater)
  • 16 - Denver, Colorado (Paramount Theater)
  • 17 - Salt Lake City, Utah (Kingsbury Hall/University of Utah)
  • 19 - Concord, California (Concord Pavilion - Newport Tour)
  • 20 - Los Angeles, California (Greek Theatre - Newport Tour)
  • 16 - Rabat, Morocco (Palais Tazi)
  • 19 - Burg Clam, Austria (Burg Clam Arena)
  • 20 - Budapest, Hungary (Petofi Csarnok)
  • 22 - Bucharest, Romania (Royal Palace Hall)
  • 25 - Athens, Greece (Likabetous Theater)
  • 27 - Thessaloniki, Greece (Theatro Dassous)
  • 29 - Halkidiki, Greece (Amphitheatre of Siviri)
  • 3 - Rome, Italy (Foro Italico)
  • 4 - Torino, Italy (Caldomania)
  • 5 - Como, Italy (Centro Congressi Villa Erba)
  • 8 - Besancon, France (Place du Theatre)
  • 9 - Clermont-Ferrand, France (Theatre de Verdure)
  • 10 - Toulouse France (Halle Auz Grains)
  • 14 - St. Chartier, France (Parc du Chateau)
  • 18 - Saillans, France (Place de la Republique)
  • 19 - Montpellier, France (Domaine Departemental de Roussieres)
  • 20 - Lyon, France (Theatre Romain)
  • 7 - New Haven, Connecticut (Toad's Place)
  • 9 - Newport, Rhode Island (Fort Adams State Park)
  • 11 - Charleston, West Virginia (Mountain Stage)
  • 12 - New York, New York (Bottom Line)
  • 21 - Offenbach, Germany (Stadthalle)
  • 22 - Dresden, Germany (Kulturpalast)
  • 23 - Prague, Czech Republic (Kongresove Centrum)
  • 25 - Vienna, Austria (Libro Music Hall)
  • 27 - Munich, Germany (Circus Krone)
  • 28 - Zurich, Switzerland (Kongresshaus)
  • 30 - Reims, France (Le Cirque)
  • 31 - Sarreguemines, France (Salle Polyvalente)
  • 2 - Ghent, Belgium (Bijloke Abbey Festival)
  • 3 - Amsterdam, Holland (Paradiso)
  • 5 - Stuttgart, Germany (Liederhalle)
  • 7 - Berlin, Germany (Grosse Sendesaal SFB)
  • 8 - Hamburg, Germany (Audimax)
  • 14 - St. Germain, France (Theatre Alexandre Dumas)
  • 15 - Le Mans, France (Palais des Congres)
  • 17 - Paris, France (Cafe de la Danse)
  • 18 - Amiens, France (Amiens Theatre)
  • 19 - Rouen, France (University Campus)
  • 21 - Crawley, England, United Kingdom (The Hawth)
  • 23 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom (Symphony Hall)
  • 24 - Glasgow, Scotland (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 15 - Manchester, England (Apollo)
  • 27 - Bristol, England, United Kingdom (Colston Hall)
  • 28 - Ipswich, England, United Kingdom (The Regent)
  • 29 - London, England, United Kingdom (Royal Festival Hall)
  • 1 - Belfast, Ireland (Waterfront Hall)
  • 4 - Dublin, Ireland (National Concert Hall)
  • 31 - Palo Alto, California (Spangenberg Theater at Gunn High School)
  • 2 - Olympia, Washington (Washington Center for the Performing Arts)
  • 3 - Seattle, Washington (Moore Theatre)
  • 5 - Portland, Oregon (Civic Auditorium)
  • 6 - Eugene, Oregon (Hult Center)
  • 8 - Berkeley, California (Zellerbach Hall at UC/Berkeley)
  • 9 - Los Angeles, California (Wiltern Theatre)
  • 10 - San Diego, California (4th & B)
  • 12 - Tempe, Arizona (Red River Opry)
  • 13 - Albuquerque, New Mexico (Kiva Auditorium)
  • 14 - Denver, Colorado (Paramount Theater)
  • 17 - Rhinelander, Wisconsin (Nicolet Area Technical College)
  • 18 - St. Paul, Minnesota (O'Shaughnessy Auditorium)
  • 20 - Madison, Wisconsin (Madison Civic Center)
  • 21 - Louisville, Kentucky (Palace Theater)
  • 24 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Michigan Theater)
  • 25 - Columbus, Ohio (Ohio Theater)
  • 27 - Chicago, Illinois (Park West)
  • 12 - Indianapolis, Indiana (Murat Theater)
  • 13 - Cleveland Heights, Ohio (The Civic)
  • 14 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (A.J. Palumbo Theater)
  • 16 - Washington, D.C. (G.W. Lisner Auditorium)
  • 18 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Sanders Theatre)
  • 19 - Northampton, Massachusetts (John M. Green Hall)
  • 20 - Waterville, Maine (Waterville Opera House)
  • 22 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Electric Factory)
  • 23 - New York, New York (Beacon Theater)
  • 24 - Concord, New Hampshire (Capitol CFTA/Chubb Theatre)
  • 26 - Providence, Rhode Island (Lupo's Heartbreak Hotel)
  • 27 - West Long Branch, New Jersey (Pollak Auditorium)
  • 30 - Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania (P.M. Kirby Center)
  • 3 - Carrboro, North Carolina (Arts Center)
  • 4 - Asheville, North Carolina (Thomas Wolfe Auditorium)
  • 5 - Knoxville, Tennessee (Bijou Theater)
  • 20 - Bourges, France (Printemps de Bourges)
  • 3 - Memphis, Tennessee (Beale Street Music Festival)
  • 4 - New Orleans, Louisiana (New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival)
  • 5 - Atlanta, Georgia (Music Midtown Festival)
  • 11 - Lorient, France (Espace Cosmao du Manoir)
  • 12 - Niort, France (Le Moulin de Roc)
  • 13 - Vichy, France (Opera de Vichy)
  • 15 - Talant (Dijon), France (Complexe Marie-Therese Eyquem)
  • 16 - Strasbourg, France (Palais des Congres)
  • 19 - Paris, France (L'Olympia)
  • 21 - Bettembourg, Luxembourg (Hall Omnisport)
  • 23 - Brentwood, England (Brentwood Centre)
  • 24 - Croydon, England (Fairfield Hall)
  • 26 - Cambridge, England (Corn Exchange)
  • 27 - Nottingham, England (Royal Centre)
  • 28 - Birmingham, England (Symphony Hall)
  • 30 - York, England (York Barbican)
  • 2 - Reading, England (The Hexagon)
  • 3 - Chichester, England (Chichester Cathedral)
  • 24 - Palo Alto, California (Mitchell Park)
  • 25 - Saratoga, California (Villa Montalvo)
  • 26 - Arcata, California (Van Duzer Theater at Humboldt State University)
  • 27 - Santa Rosa, California (Luther Burbank Center)
  • 30 - Salt Lake City, Utah (Red Butte Garden and Arboretum)
  • 1 - Santa Fe, New Mexico (Paolo Soleri Amphitheatre)
  • 2 - Bellvue, Colorado (Mishawaka Amphitheatre)
  • 3 - Denver, Colorado (Lo Do Festival)
  • 7 - Seattle, Washington (Pier 62-63)
  • 8 - St. Paul, Oregon (Champoeg State Park Amphitheatre)
  • 9 - Boise, Idaho (Morrison Center at Boise State University)
  • 11 - Spokane, Washington (Masonic Temple)
  • 12 - Bellingham, Washington (Mt. Baker Theater)
  • 13 - Eugene, Oregon (Cuthbert Amphitheatre)
  • 19 - San Francisco, California (Alcatraz Island - benefit for Bread & Roses - with Dar Williams and Indigo Girls)
  • 10 - New York, New York (Bottom Line)
  • 11 - New York, New York (Bottom Line)
  • 16 - New York, New York (Bottom Line)
  • 17 - New York, New York (Bottom Line)
  • 23 - Fulda, Germany (Museumshof)
  • 24 - Werneck, Germany (Schlosspark)
  • 25 - St. Gallen, Switzerland (Open Air)
  • 27 - Linz, Austria (Kulturzentrum)
  • 29 - Graz, Austria (Schlossberg)
  • 30 - Basel, Switzerland (Park im Grunen)
  • 1 - Tambach, Germany (Schloss Wildpark)
  • 2 - Northeim, Germany (Waldbuhne)
  • 6 - Bayreuth, Germany (Eremitage)
  • 8 - Kamenz, Germany (Hutbergbuhne)
  • 10 - Fougeres, France (Chateau Fougeres)
  • 11 - Caen, France (Zenith)
  • 13 - Brest, France (Port de Commerce)
  • 15 - Vittel, France (Palais de Congres)
  • 16 - Regensburg, Germany (Stadtpark)
  • 17 - Capodistria, Slovenia (Piazza Tito)
  • 6 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 7 - Alexandria, Virginia (Birchmere)
  • 9 - Glenside, Pennsylvania (Keswick Theatre)
  • 10 - Wilmington, Delaware (Grand Opera House)
  • 12 - Staten Island, New York (Snug Harbor)
  • 13 - Keene, New Hampshire (Colonial Theatre)
  • 15 - Nantucket, Massachusetts (High School Auditorium)
  • 16 - New Haven, Connecticut (Toad's Place)
  • 18 - Burlington, Vermont (Memorial Auditorium)
  • 19 - Lewiston, New York (Art Park)
  • 20 - Brecksville, Ohio (Cuyahoga Festival)
  • 22 - Charlotte, North Carolina (Spirit Square)
  • 24 - Atlanta, Georgia (Roxy Theatre)
  • 25 - Nashville, Tennessee (T-PAC)
  • 26 - Cincinnati, Ohio (Cincinnati Zoo)
  • 28 - Bloomington, Indiana (Mars)
  • 29 - Columbia, Missouri (The Blue Note)
  • 31 - Springfield, Missouri (Hammons Hall)
  • 1 - Highland Park, Illinois (Ravinia Festival)
  • 2 - Rochester, Michigan (Meadowbrook)
  • 8 - Brussels, Belgium (Passage 44)
  • 9 - Amsterdam, Holland (Paradiso)
  • 11 - Zurich, Switzerland (Kongresshaus)
  • 12 - Stuttgart, Germany (Liederhalle)
  • 13 - Aschaffenburg, Germany (Stadthalle)
  • 15 - Hamburg, Germany (Park im Grunen)
  • 16 - Leipzig, Germany (Schloss Wildpark)
  • 17 - Nuremburg, Germany (Meistersingerhalle)
  • 19 - Vienna, Austria (Konzerhaus)
  • 22 - Manchester, England (Labatts Apollo)
  • 24 - London, England (Shepherds Bush)
  • 25 - London, England (Shepherds Bush)
  • 26 - Liverpool, England (Philharmonic Hall)
  • 28 - Warwick, England (Arts Centre)
  • 29 - York, England (Barbican Centre)
  • 30 - Glasgow, Scotland (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 2 - Paris, France (Bataclan)
  • 3 - Paris, France (Bataclan)
  • 6 - Lyon, France (Le Transbordeur)
  • 7 - Grenoble, France (Theatre de Grenoble)
  • 9 - Rouen, France (Theatre de la Ville)
  • 10 - Nantes, France (Espace Capellia)
  • 11 - Saint-Brieuc, France (La Passarelle)
  • 13 - Belfast, Northern Ireland (Ulster Hall)
  • 14 - Limerick, Ireland (University Hall)
  • 15 - Dublin, Ireland (RDS Concert Hall)
  • 28 - Cleveland, Ohio (Palace Theatre)
  • 29 - Cincinnati, Ohio (Bogarts)
  • 30 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada (Roy Thomson Hall)
  • 2 - Eau Claire, Wisconsin (Regional Arts Center)
  • 3 - St. Paul, Minnesota (O'Shaughnessy Auditorium)
  • 4 - Bloomington, Indiana (Indiana University)
  • 6 - Carbondale, Illinois (Shryock Auditorium)
  • 8 - Louisville, Kentucky (Macauley Theatre)
  • 10 - West Long Branch, New Jersey (Monmouth College)
  • 12 - Syracuse, New York (Symphony Hall)
  • 13 - Torrington, Connecticut (Warner Theatre)
  • 30 - St. Petersburg, Florida (Jannus Landing)
  • 1 - West Palm Beach, Florida (Sunfest)
  • 2 - Tallahassee, Florida (The Moon)
  • 4 - Durham, North Carolina (Carolina Theatre)
  • 6 - Ashland, Kentucky (Paramount Theatre)
  • 7 - Asheville, North Carolina (Thomas Wolfe Auditorium)
  • 8 - Memphis, Tennessee (Beale Street Festival)
  • 10 - Lexington, Kentucky (Kentucky Theatre)
  • 11 - Lexington, Kentucky (Kentucky Theatre)
  • 13 - Atlanta, Georgia (Midtown Festival)
  • 14 - Pensacola, Florida (Springfest)
  • 15 - New Orleans, Louisiana (House of Blues)
  • 19 - Nyon, Switzerland (Paleo Festival)
  • 20 - Viareggio, Italy (La Bussola)
  • 22 - Torino, Italy (Parco Pellerino)
  • 24 - Nuoro, Sardinia (Anfiteatro Comunale)
  • 26 - San Remo, Italy (Auditorium)
  • 27 - Brescia, Italy (Piazza Loggia)
  • 28 - Udine, Italy (Piazza Duomo Fest)
  • 30 - Cambridge, England (Cambridge Folk Festival)
  • 1 - Nuremburg, Germany (Seranadenhof)
  • 2 - Frankfurt, Germany (Freilichtbuhne)
  • 3 - Glauchau, Germany (Freilichtbuhne)
  • 5 - Dranouter, Belgium (Folk Festival)
  • 6 - Lorrach, Germany (Marktplatz)
  • 24 - San Diego, California (Humphrey's)
  • 26 - Santa Ynez, California (Gainey Vineyard)
  • 27 - Santa Cruz, California (Civic Auditorium)
  • 28 - Saratoga, California (Villa Montalvo)
  • 30 - Arcata, California (Humboldt State University)
  • 1 - Jacksonville, Oregon (Britt Festival)
  • 2 - Dundee, Oregon (Sokol-Blosser)
  • 3 - Seattle, Washington (Opera House)
  • 5 - Bellingham, Washington (Mt. Baker Theatre)
  • 7 - Yakima, Washington (Capitol Theatre)
  • 9 - Billings, Montana (Alberta Bair)
  • 10 - Helena, Montana (Civic Center)
  • 11 - Missoula, Montana (University Theatre)
  • 13 - Boise, Idaho (Morrison Center)
  • 14 - Salt Lake City, Utah (Abravanel Hall)
  • 15 - Denver, Colorado (Paramount Theatre)
  • 16 - Boulder, Colorado (ETown)
  • 10 - Munich, Germany (Philharmonie)
  • 13 - Hannover, Germany (Capitol)
  • 14 - Cologne, Germany (Philharmonie)
  • 15 - Nurnberg, Germany (Meistersingerhalle)
  • 17 - Mannheim, Germany (Mozartsaal)
  • 19 - Wurzburg, Germany (Congress Centrum)
  • 21 - Stuttgart, Germany (Kongresszentrum B)
  • 22 - Frankfurt, Germany (Jahrhunderthalle)
  • 24 - Berlin, Germany (School of Art)
  • 25 - Leipzig, Germany (Haus Auensee)
  • 27 - Bielefeld, Germany (Oetkerhalle)
  • 28 - Dusseldorf, Germany (Tonnhalle)
  • 1 - Hamburg, Germany (Congress Centrum)
  • 3 - London, England (Jongleurs)
  • 23 - Knoxville, Tennessee (Bijou Theatre)
  • 24 - Nashville, Tennessee (328 Hall)
  • 26 - St. Louis, Missouri (Missouri Nights)
  • 27 - Columbia, Missouri (City Hall Auditorium)
  • 28 - Little Rock, Arkansas (Juanita's)
  • 30 - Austin, Texas (La Zona Rosa)
  • 31 - Dallas, Texas (Deep Ellum Live)
  • 2 - Albuquerque, New Mexico (Kiva Auditorium)
  • 3 - Tempe, Arizona (Valley Art Theatre)
  • 4 - Tucson, Arizona (Leo Rich Theatre)
  • 6 - El Cajon, California (East County Performing Arts Center)
  • 7 - Los Angeles, California (Wiltern Theatre)
  • 2 - Brussels, Belgium (Escape 44)
  • 6 - Paris, France (Casino de Paris)
  • 7 - Paris, France (Casino de Paris)
  • 9 - Lille, France (Theatre Sebastopol)
  • 10 - Nancy, France (Salle Poirel)
  • 11 - Strasbourg, France (Alais de Congres)
  • 13 - Marseille, France (Odeon)
  • 14 - Toulouse, France (Odyssud)
  • 15 - Bordeaux, France (Theatre Femina)
  • 17 - Lyon, France (Transbordeaur)
  • 19 - Glasgow, Scotland (Royal Concert Hall)
  • 21 - London, England, United Kingdom (Dominion)
  • 22 - London, England, United Kingdom (Dominion)
  • 26 - Midtfyn, Denmark (Midtfyn Festival)
  • 28 - Berlin, Germany (Tempodrom)
  • 29 - Cologne, Germany (Tansbrunnen)
  • 30 - Madrid, Spain (Antenna 3 TV)
  • 2 - Belfast, Ireland (Queen's Hall)
  • 3 - Dublin, Ireland (National Theatre)
  • 4 - Tramore, Ireland (Fleadh Tramore)
  • 7 - Istanbul, Turkey (Istanbul Festival)
  • 8 - Istanbul, Turkey (Istanbul Festival)
  • 10 - Etaples, France (Salle des Oyats)
  • 12 - Leipzig, Germany (Uni-Innenhof)
  • 13 - Prague, Czech Republic (Lucerna Theatre)
  • 14 - Vienna, Austria (Arena)
  • 17 - Kempten, Germany (Open Air Theatre)
  • 18 - Zurich, Switzerland (Gurtenfestival)
  • 30 - Lenox, Massachusetts (Berkshire Performing Arts Center)
  • 31 - Stratton Mountain, Vermont (Stratton Mountain)
  • 1 - Hampton, New Hampshire (Hampton Casino)
  • 3 - Westbury, New York (Westbury Music Fair)
  • 6 - Wallingford, Connecticut (Oakdale Theatre)
  • 7 - New York, New York (Central Park)
  • 8 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 10 - Latham, New York (Starlite Theatre)
  • 12 - Baltimore, Maryland (Pier 6 Pavilion)
  • 13 - Virginia Beach, Virginia (Pavilion)
  • 15 - Charlotte, North Carolina (Spirit Square)
  • 18 - West Palm Beach, Florida (Carefree Theater)
  • 20 - Miami, Florida (Stephen Talkhouse)
  • 21 - Jacksonville, Florida (Florida Performing Arts Center)
  • 22 - St. Petersburg, Florida (Bayfront Center)
  • 24 - Austin, Texas (The Backyard)
  • 27 - Eugene, Oregon (Cuthbert Center)
  • 28 - Portland, Oregon (Fox Theatre)
  • 29 - Seattle, Washinton (Paramount Theatre)
  • 30 - San Francisco, California (Alcatraz Island - Benefit for Bread & Roses)
  • 25 - Foxborough, Massachusetts (Earth Day) (with Mary Chapin Carpenter and Indigo Girls)
  • 9 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival) (with Mary Chapin Carpenter and Indigo Girls)
  • 19 - Jacksonville, Oregon (Britt Festival)
  • 20 - Jacksonville, Oregon (Britt Festival)
  • 22 - Saratoga, California (Paul Masson Mountain Winery)
  • 23 - Saratoga, California (Paul Masson Mountain Winery)
  • 24 - San Francisco, California (Great American Music Hall) (with Indigo Girls)
  • 10 - Big Sur, California (Esalen Institute)
  • 16 - San Francisco, California (Noe Valley)
  • 17 - San Francisco, California (Noe Valley)
  • 20 - Los Angeles, California (Troubadour)
  • 22 - New York, New York (Bitter End)
  • 28 - Munich, Germany (Kaffe Giesing)
  • 3 - Paris, France (Passage du Nord Ouest)
  • 17 - Poughkeepsie, New York (The Chance)
  • 18 - Albany, New York (Empire Center)
  • 20 - Springfield, Massachusetts (Paramount)
  • 21 - Portland, Maine (City Hall Auditorium)
  • 24 - Burlington, Vermont (Flynn Theater)
  • 25 - Stamford, Connecticut (Palace Theatre)
  • 27 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Keswick Theatre)
  • 28 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Fulton Theatre)
  • 29 - Charleston, West Virginia (Mountain Stage)
  • 1 - Columbus, Ohio (Newport Hall)
  • 2 - Detroit, Michigan (Music Hall)
  • 3 - Chicago, Illinois (Park West)
  • 5 - Madison, Wisconsin (Union Theater)
  • 6 - Minneapolis, Minnesota (Guthrie Theater)
  • 8 - San Juan Capistrano, California
  • 9 - Santa Rose, California
  • 3 - Claremont, California
  • 4 - Palm Desert, California
  • 10 - Scottsdale, Arizona
  • 12 - San Diego, California
  • 30 - Nelson, British Columbia, Canada
  • 27 - Seattle, Washington
  • 5 - Saratoga, California (Paul Masson Mountain Winery)
  • 6 - Saratoga, California (Paul Masson Mountain Winery)
  • 25 - Berkeley, California (Berkeley Community Theater w/Indigo Girls and Mary Chapin Carpenter - Humanitas Benefit)
  • 3 - San Francisco, California (Golden Gate Park - Bill Graham Memorial)
  • 8 - Stuttgart, West Germany
  • 10 - Berlin, West Germany
  • 11 - Nurnberg, West Germany
  • 12 - Frankfurt, West Germany
  • 17 - Bern, Switzerland
  • 18 - Lausanne, Switzerland
  • 20 - Toulouse, France
  • 21 - Montpelier, France
  • 24 - Besancon, France
  • 26 - Paris, France
  • 27 - Charleville, France
  • 28 - Strasbourg, France
  • 30 - Bettembourg, Luxembourg
  • 2 - Le Mans, France
  • 4 - Vitrolle, France
  • 8 - Cologne, West Germany
  • 10 - Hanover, West Germany
  • 11 - Bremerhaven, West Germany
  • 13 - Ludwigshafen, West Germany
  • 14 - Munich, West Germany
  • 16 - Madrid, Spain
  • 17 - Barcelona, Spain
  • 19 - Turino, Italy
  • 21 - Milan, Italy
  • 22 - Florence, Italy
  • 24 - Rome, Italy
  • 25 - Bolzano, Italy
  • 26 - Brescia, Italy
  • 31 - Bratislava, Czechoslovakia
  • 3 - East Berlin, East Germany
  • 5 - Prague, Czechoslovakia
  • 7 - Vienna, Austria
  • 8 - Graz, Austria
  • 10 - Palermo, Sicily
  • 11 - Acireale, Sicily
  • 12 - Milazzo, Sicily
  • 4 - Orono, Maine
  • 5 - Beverly, Massachusetts
  • 11 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 12 - Cohasset, Massachusetts
  • 14 - Hyannis, Massachusetts
  • 15 - Wallingford, Connecticut
  • 16 - Devon, Pennsylvania
  • 18 - Lansing, Michigan
  • 20 - Indianapolis, Indiana
  • 22 - Highland Park, Illinois
  • 24 - Canandaigua, New York
  • 26 - Manchester, New Hampshire
  • 28 - Holmdel, New Jersey (Garden State Arts Center)
  • 29 - Oyster Bay, New York
  • 30 - Lenox, Massachusetts
  • 31 - Lewiston, New York
  • 1 - Belgrade, Yugoslavia
  • 2 - Ljubljana, Yugoslavia
  • 3 - Zagreb, Yugoslavia
  • 5 - Budapest, Hungary (Sportcsarnok)
  • 6 - Warsaw, Poland (DK "Arsus" Dzielnicy Ursus)
  • 10 - Bratislava, Slovakia (Sportova Pasienky)
  • 13 - Bilbao, Spain
  • 20 - Istanbul, Turkey
  • 21 - Istanbul, Turkey
  • 23 - Izmir, Turkey
  • 25 - Ankara, Turkey
  • 27 - Modena, Italy
  • 28 - Sarnano, Italy
  • 29 - Parma, Italy
  • 2 - Novara, Italy (Piazza Martiri)
  • 5 - Patras, Greece
  • 6 - Sallonica, Greece
  • 10 - Sint-Joost-ten-node, Belgium (Espace 2500 Botanique)
  • 14 - Montreux, Switzerland (Casino de Montreux)
  • 18 - Birmingham, England, United Kingdom (NEC Arena - Prince's Trust)
  • 15 - Stanford, California (Frost Amphitheatre)
  • 17 - Olympia, Washington
  • 18 - Seattle, Washington
  • 20 - Portland, Oregon
  • 22 - Eugene, Oregon
  • 24 - Boise, Idaho
  • 25 - Salt Lake City, Utah
  • 27 - Helena, Montana
  • 29 - Boulder, Colorado
  • 30 - Fort Collins, Colorado
  • 1 - St. Paul, Minnesota
  • 3 - Madison, Wisconsin
  • 5 - Columbus, Ohio
  • 8 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • 10 - Chicago, Illinois
  • 11 - Cleveland, Ohio
  • 14 - Boston, Massachusetts
  • 16 - Stamford, Connecticut
  • 18 - Washington, D.C.
  • 19 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • 22 - Norfolk, Virginia
  • 24 - Durham, North Carolina
  • 25 - Charlotte, North Carolina
  • 28 - Atlanta, Georgia
  • 30 - Sarasota, Florida
  • 2 - Miami, Florida
  • 5 - Tampa Bay, Florida
  • 8 - New York, New York
  • 10 - New York, New York
  • 11 - New York, New York
  • 16 - Los Angeles, California
  • 19 - Ventura, California (with Jackson Browne)
  • 22 - San Luis Obispo, California
  • 13 - Stamford, Connecticut
  • 29 - Laval, France
  • 5 - Toulouse, France
  • 7 - Paris, France
  • 9 - St. Etienne, France
  • 11 - Soisson, France
  • 12 - Verdun, France
  • 14 - Lille, France
  • 16 - London, England, United Kingdom (Hammersmith Odeon)
  • 14 - Caesarea, Israel
  • 15 - Tel Aviv, Israel
  • 21 - Wurzburg, West Germany (w/Konstantin Wecker and Mercedes Sosa)
  • 22 - Heidelburg, West Germany (Thingstatte)
  • 23 - Frankfurt, West Germany (Festhalle)
  • 25 - Zurich, Switzerland
  • 26 - Munich, West Germany
  • 28 - Stuttgart, West Germany (Reitstadion)
  • 29 - Berlin, West Germany (Waldbuhne)
  • 3 - Hamburg, West Germany (Stadtpark Open Air)
  • 4 - Braunschweig, West Germany
  • 5 - Xanten, West Germany (Amphitheater)
  • 9 - Vienna, Austria (Wiener Stadthalle)
  • 13 - Paris, France (SOS Racisme)
  • 15 - Montpellier, France
  • 17 - Toulon, France
  • 18 - Poitiers, France
  • 20 - Loriente, France
  • 1 - Bilbao, Spain
  • 4 - Nantes, France
  • 6 - Bolene, France
  • 9 - Antibes, France
  • 13 - Istanbul, Turkey (Harbiye Cemil Topuzlu Acikhava Tiyatrosu)
  • 14 - Istanbul, Turkey (Harbiye Cemil Topuzlu Acikhava Tiyatrosu)
  • 15 - Ankara, Turkey (Eski Hipodrom)
  • 17 - Izmir, Turkey (Great Amphitheatre)
  • 21 - Florence, Italy
  • 22 - Treviso, Italy
  • 24 - Nyon, Switzerland (Paleo Festival)
  • 25 - Milan, Italy (Piazzetta Reale)
  • 26 - Rome, Italy
  • 19 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (JFK Stadium - Human Rights Now!)
  • 21 - Los Angeles, California (LA Memorial Coliseum - Human Rights Now!)
  • 23 - Oakland, California (Coliseum - Human Rights Now!)
  • 21 - Freiburg, West Germany
  • 23 - Hannover, West Germany
  • 24 - Berlin, West Germany
  • 27 - Vienna, Austria
  • 1 - Regensburg, West Germany
  • 3 - Brussels, Belgium
  • 6 - Essen, West Germany (Grugahalle)
  • 7 - Saarbrucken, West Germany
  • 10 - Stuttgart, West Germany
  • 11 - Luxembourg, Belgium
  • 12 - Oldenburg, West Germany
  • 21 - Saratoga, California (Paul Masson Mountain Winery)
  • 4 - Chicago, Illinois
  • 23 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • 25 - Kansas City, Missouri
  • 26 - Houston, Texas
  • 1 - Clearwater, Florida
  • 3 - Vienna, Virginia
  • 7 - Atlanta, Georgia
  • 13 - Oak Bluffs (Martha's Vineyard), Massachusetts
  • 15 - Staten Island, New York
  • 18 - Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
  • 21 - Lydonville, Vermont
  • 22 - Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
  • 25 - San Diego, California
  • 27 - Los Angeles, California
  • 29 - Concord, California (Concord Pavilion)
  • 7 - New York, New York
  • 9 - Denver, Colorado
  • 11 - Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • 14 - Salt Lake City, Utah
  • 16 - Coeur D'Alene, Idaho
  • 18 - Walla Walla, Washington
  • 21 - Boise, Idaho
  • 23 - Seattle, Washington (Paramount Theatre)
  • 24 - Portland, Oregon
  • 27 - Olympia, Washington
  • 28 - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • 30 - Eugene, Oregon
  • 17 - San Francisco, California (The Warfield)
  • 21 - Northampton, Massachusetts
  • 23 - Boston, Massachusetts
  • 24 - Devon, Pennsylvania
  • 28 - Concord, New Hampshire
  • 29 - Concord, New Hampshire
  • 31 - Westbury, New York
  • 1 - Westbury, New York
  • 2 - Worcester, Massachusetts
  • 5 - Ann Arbor, Michigan
  • 6 - Grand Rapids, Michigan
  • 8 - Indianapolis, Indiana
  • 11 - Denver, Colorado
  • 13 - Albuquerque, New Mexico
  • 18 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • 20 - Dallas, Texas
  • 23 - Austin, Texas
  • 26 - New Orleans, Louisiana (Fair Grounds & Racetrack - New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival)
  • 4 - Daly City, California (Cow Palace - Conspiracy of Hope)
  • 6 - Inglewood, California (The Forum - Conspiracy of Hope)
  • 8 - Denver, Colorado (McNichols Sports Arena - Conspiracy of Hope)
  • 11 - Atlanta, Georgia (Omni Coliseum - Conspiracy of Hope)
  • 13 - Rosemont, Illinois (Rosemont Horizon - Conspiracy of Hope)
  • 15 - East Rutherford, New Jersey (Giants Stadium - Conspiracy of Hope)
  • 19 - Genoa, Italy
  • 12 - Chicago, Illinois
  • 13 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • 15 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • 17 - Mansfield, Massachusetts
  • 18 - Holmdel, New Jersey
  • 20 - Baltimore, Maryland
  • 23 - Vienna, Virginia
  • 24 - New Haven, Connecticut
  • 26 - Tampa, Florida
  • 27 - Pembroke Pines, Florida
  • 1 - San Diego, California
  • 2 - Phoenix, Arizona
  • 6 - Los Angeles, California
  • 7 - Concord, California (Concord Pavilion)
  • 9 - Portland, Oregon
  • 10 - Seattle, Washington
  • 15 - Calgary, Alberta, Canada
  • 16 - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • 30 - Saratoga, California (Paul Masson Mountain Winery)
  • 31 - Saratoga, California (Paul Masson Mountain Winery)
  • 5 - Boston, Massachusetts
  • 7 - Stanhope, New Jersey
  • 10 - Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
  • 13 - Syracuse, New York
  • 23 - San Francisco, California
  • 14 - Santa Barbara, California
  • 13 - Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
  • 14 - Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
  • 17 - Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
  • 18 - Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
  • 20 - Calgary, Alberta, Canada
  • 23 - Washington, D.C.
  • 24 - Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
  • 27 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • 1 - Kitchener, Ontario, Canada
  • 2 - Rochester, New York
  • 3 - Montpelier, Vermont
  • 9 - New York, New York
  • 11 - Boston, Massachusetts
  • 13 - Madison, Wisconsin
  • 16 - Merrillville, Indiana
  • 17 - Chicago, Illinois
  • 20 - Omaha, Nebraska
  • 23 - Boise, Idaho
  • 26 - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • 31 - Spokane, Washington
  • 23 - Atlanta, Georgia
  • 26 - Austin, Texas
  • 29 - Fort Lauderdale, Florida
  • 30 - Clearwater, Florida
  • 2 - Norfolk, Virginia (Chrysler Hall)
  • 5 - Portland, Maine
  • 6 - Artpark, New York
  • 9 - Andover, Massachusetts
  • 11 - Hyannis, Massachusetts
  • 12 - Chautauqua, New York
  • 13 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (John F. Kennedy Stadium - Live Aid)
  • 17 - St. Paul, Minnesota
  • 19 - Peoria, Illinois
  • 20 - Columbus, Ohio
  • 22 - Dallas, Texas
  • 24 - Houston, Texas
  • 26 - Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
  • 27 - Tulsa, Oklahoma
  • 31 - Highland Heights, Ohio
  • 2 - Stowe, Vermont
  • 3 - Newport, Rhode Island (Fort Adams State Park - Newport Folk Festival)
  • 14 - New York, New York (Pier 84 - Folk City 25th Anniversary)
  • 17 - Washington, D.C.
  • 30 - Sydney, Australia
  • 2 - Adelaide, Australia
  • 4 - Perth, Australia
  • 6 - Perth, Australia
  • 8 - Melbourne, Australia
  • 9 - Melbourne, Australia
  • 14 - Syracuse, New York
  • 16 - Cleveland, Ohio
  • 19 - San Diego, California
  • 10 - Genoa, Italy
  • 12 - Viareggio, Italy
  • 16 - Rome, Italy
  • 18 - Verona, Italy
  • 20 - Seville, Spain
  • 22 - Barcelona, Spain
  • 25 - Pamplona, Spain
  • 29 - Milan, Italy
  • 31 - Hamburg, Germany
  • 2 - Ludwigshafen, West Germany
  • 3 - Munich, West Germany
  • 10 - Copenhagen, Denmark
  • 11 - Offenbach, West Germany
  • 13 - Berlin, West Germany
  • 16 - Cologne, West Germany
  • 17 - Nice, France
  • 20 - London, England, United Kingdom (Eventim Apollo)
  • 22 - Shepton Mallet, England, United Kingdom (Glastonbury Festival)
  • 24 - Rimini, Italy
  • 28 - Millan, Italy
  • 30 - Nantes, France
  • 4 - Venice, Italy
  • 5 - Pordenone, Italy
  • 1 - Phoenix, Arizona
  • 4 - Denver, Colorado
  • 5 - Santa Fe, New Mexico
  • 7 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin
  • 8 - Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • 11 - Poughkeepsie, New York
  • 13 - Devon, Pennsylvania
  • 15 - Baltimore, Maryland
  • 17 - Canandaigua, New York
  • 18 - Caldwell, New Jersey
  • 20 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • 22 - Westbury, New York
  • 26 - Wallingford, Connecticut
  • 27 - Cohasset, Massachusetts
  • 30 - Los Angeles, California
  • 1 - Des Moines, Iowa
  • 3 - St. Louis, Missouri
  • 30 - Palo Alto, California (Stanford University Frost Amphitheatre)
  • 3 - Santa Cruz, California
  • 22 - Clermont-Ferrand, France
  • 23 - Limoges, France
  • 25 - Toulouse, France
  • 26 - Lyon, France
  • 27 - Bordeaux, France
  • 30 - LeMans, France
  • 2 - Dijon, France
  • 7 - Vigo, Spain
  • 9 - Madrid, Spain
  • 12 - Lisbon, Portugal
  • 17 - Marseilles, France
  • 18 - Nice, France
  • 22 - Berlin, Germany
  • 24 - Brussels, Belgium
  • 27 - Strasbourg, France
  • 28 - Metz, France
  • 18 - Caen, France
  • 20 - Lille, France
  • 22 - Münster, Germany
  • 24 - Freiburg, Germany
  • 25 - Saarbrücken, Germany
  • 26 - Vienna, Austria
  • 29 - Paris, France
  • 30 - Paris, France
  • 3 - Athens, Greece
  • 15 - Paris, France (Place de la Concorde)
  • 4 - Hamburg, Germany
  • 5 - Bremen, Germany
  • 8 - Hannover, Germany
  • 9 - Bad Segeberg, Germany
  • 11 - Kempten, Germany
  • 13 - Essen, Germany
  • 14 - Mannheim, Germany
  • 17 - Würzburg, Germany
  • 18 - Lorelei, Germany
  • 6 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  • 7 - Burlington, Vermont
  • 9 - Hartford, Connecticut
  • 12 - New Orleans, Louisiana
  • 14 - St. Petersburg, Florida
  • 16 - Boston, Massachusetts
  • 18 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
  • 20 - Ann Arbor, Michigan
  • 23 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada
  • 26 - Washington, D.C.
  • 27 - Portland, Maine (Cumberland Civic Center)
  • 28 - Los Angeles, California
  • 31 - Portland, Oregon
  • 2 - Seattle, Washington
  • 4 - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • 6 - Spokane, Washington
  • 7 - Eugene, Oregon
  • 11 - Madison, Wisconsin
  • 13 - Chicago, Illinois
  • 18 - New York, New York
  • 19 - New York, New York
  • 23 - San Francisco, California (Warfield Theatre)
  • 6 - Pasadena, California (Rose Bowl - Peace Sunday)
  • 12 - New York, New York (Central Park) (Nuclear Disarmament Rally)
  • 16 - Santiago, Chile (Parroquia Santa Gemita)
  • 31 - Oakland, California (Oakland Civic Auditorium)
  • 13 - Oakland, California (Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum)(Benefit for Cambodian Emergency Relief Fund)
  • 30 - Boblingen, Germany (Sporthalle)
  • 24 - Paris, France (Parvis Notre Dame)
  • 24 - Caesarea Maritima, Israel (Old Roman Amphitheatre)
  • 25 - Saratoga Springs, New York (Saratoga Performing Arts Center)
  • 27 - Stockbridge, Massachusetts (Tanglewood)
  • 7 - London, United Kingdom (Hammersmith Odeon)
  • 26 - Ulm, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany (Friedrichsau Festplatz)
  • 27 - Kalvoya, Norway (Festivalplassen)
  • 3 - Saarbrucken, Germany (Ludwigsparkstadion)
  • 24 - San Francisco, California (City Hall)
  • 21 - Boston, Massachusetts (Orpheum Theatre)
  • 25 - New York, New York (The Palladium)
  • 1 - New York, New York (The Palladium)
  • 18 - Barcelona, Spain (Palau des Esports)
  • 29 - Brussels, Belgium (Cirque Royal)
  • 30 - Dusseldorf, Germany (Philipshalle)
  • 23 - London, United Kingdom (Hammersmith Odeon)
  • 30 - Cannes, France (Palais des Festivals)
  • 18 - Lakeland, Florida (Civic Center - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 20 - St. Petersburg, Florida (Bayfront Arena - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 21 - Tampa, Florida (Curtis Hixon Hall - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 22 - Bellair, Florida (Starlight Ballroom - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 23 - Orlando, Florida (Sports Stadium - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 25 - Gainesville, Florida (Florida Field - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 27 - Tallahassee, Florida (Tully Gymnasium - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 28 - Pensacola, Florida (UWF Field House - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 29 - Mobile, Alabama (Expo Hall - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 1 - Hattiesburg, Mississippi (Reed Green Coliseum - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 3 - New Orleans, Louisiana (The Warehouse - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 4 - Baton Rouge, Louisiana (LSU Assembly Center - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 8 - Houston, Texas (Hofheinz Pavilion - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 10 - Corpus Christi, Texas (Memorial Coliseum - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 11 - San Antonio, Texas (Municipal Auditorium - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 12 - Austin, Texas (Municipal Auditorium - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 15 - Gatesville, Texas (State School for Boys - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 16 - Fort Worth, Texas (Tarrant County Convention Center - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 18 - Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (Jim Norick Arena - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 19 - Wichita, Kansas (Henry Levitt Arena - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 23 - Fort Collins, Colorado (Hughes Stadium - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 25 - Salt Lake City, Utah (Salt Palace - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 23 - San Francisco, California (Kezar Stadium - SNACK Benefit)
  • 11 - New York, New York (Central Park)
  • 19 - Stockbridge, Massachusetts (Music Inn)
  • 25 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (The Spectrum) (w/Hoyt Axton)
  • 30 - Edwardsville, Illinois (Southern Illinois University)
  • 2 - Atlanta, Georgia (Alexander Memorial Coliseum)
  • 30 - Plymouth, Massachusetts (Memorial Hall - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 31 - Plymouth, Massachusetts (Memorial Hall - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 1 - North Dartmouth, Massachusetts (Southeastern Massachusetts University - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 2 - Lowell, Massachusetts (University of Lowell - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 4 - Providence, Rhode Island (Civic Center - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 6 - Springfield, Massachusetts (Civic Center - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 8 - Burlington, Vermont (Patrick Gymnasium - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 9 - Durham, North Carolina (Lundholm Gym - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 11 - Waterbury, Connecticut (Palace Theater - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 13 - New Haven, Connecticut (Veterans Memorial Coliseum - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 15 - Niagara Falls, New York (Convention Center - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 17 - Rochester, New York (Community War Memorial - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 19 - Worcester, Massachusetts (Memorial Auditorium - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 20 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Harvard Square Theater - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 21 - Boston, Massachusetts (Music Hall - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 22 - Waltham, Massachusetts (Brandeis University - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 24 - Hartford, Connecticut (Civic Center - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 26 - Augusta, Maine (Civic Center - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 27 - Bangor, Maine (Bangor Auditorium - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 29 - Quebec City, Quebec, Canada (Colisee de Quebec - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 1 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada - (Maple Leaf Gardens - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 2 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada - (Maple Leaf Gardens - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 4 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada - (Forum - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 7 - Clinton, New Jersey - (Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 8 - New York, New York (Madison Square Garden - Rolling Thunder Revue)
  • 4 - London, England, United Kingdom (Wembley Empire Pool)
  • 27 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Crisler Arena)
  • 2 - Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (War Memorial Gymnasium)
  • 4 - Gainesville, Florida (University of Florida Gymnasium)
  • 17 - Essen, Germany (Grugahalle)
  • 26 - Los Angeles, California (Midnight Special taping)
  • 25 - Montreux, Switzerland (Maison des Congres)
  • 2 - Vienna, Austria (Wiener Stadthalle - Halle D)
  • 9 - Columbus, Ohio (St. John Arena)
  • 19 - Universal City, California (Universal Amphitheatre)
  • 2 - Stockbridge, Massachusetts (Lenox Arts Center)
  • 3 - Stockbridge, Massachusetts (Lenox Arts Center)
  • 6 - Los Angeles, California (Hollywood Bowl)
  • 19 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (The Spectrum))
  • 1 - Los Angeles, California (Hollywood Bowl)(benefit for Free Clinics)
  • 21 - Glastonbury, England, United Kingdom (Glastonbury Fair)
  • 14 - Stockbridge, Massachusetts (Lenox Arts Center)
  • 23 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Crisler Arena)
  • 12 - Copenhagen, Denmark (Tivoli Gardens)
  • 30 - Freshwater, Isle of Wight, United Kingdom (Afton Down - Isle of Wight)
  • 12 - Los Angeles, California (Hollywood Bowl)
  • 3 - Big Sur, California (Big Sur Folk Festival)
  • 12 - Davis, California (Freeborn Hall @ UC Davis)
  • 17 - Durham, North Carolina (Baldwin Auditorium)
  • 12 - Santa Clara, California (Buck Shaw Stadium)
  • 29 - San Francisco, California (Longshoremen's Hall)
  • 28 - Anaheim, California (Convention Center)
  • 19 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada (Place des Nations)
  • 23 - Edwardsville, Illinois (Southern Illinois University)
  • 27 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada (Mariposa Folk Festival)
  • 28 - Chelsea, Quebec, Canada (Camp Fortune)
  • 5 - Devon, Pennsylvania (Valley Forge Music Fair
  • 8 - New York, New York (Madison Square Garden)
  • 12 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (University Events Building)
  • 15 - Bethel, New York (Woodstock @ Max Yasgur's Farm)
  • 19 - Boston, Massachusetts (Harvard Stadium)
  • 27 - Chicago, Illinois (Aragon Ballroom)
  • 1 - Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio (Blossom Music Center)
  • 13 - Big Sur, California (Esalen Institute)
  • 14 - Big Sur, California (Esalen Institute)
  • 9 - Madison, Wisconsin (Stock Pavilion)
  • 15 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada (Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier)
  • 16 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada (Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier)
  • 18 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada (Massey Hall)
  • 20 - Brooklyn, New York (Brooklyn College)
  • 30 - New York, New York (Carnegie Hall)
  • 5 - Ithaca, New York (Barton Hall, Cornell University)
  • 10 - Columbia, South Carolina (Township Auditorium)
  • 13 - St. Louis, Missouri (Washington University)
  • 26 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 9 - New York, New York (Fillmore East)
  • 10 - New York, New York (Fillmore East)
  • 25 - Schwenksville, Pennsylvania (Old Pool Farm)
  • 7 - Big Sur, California (Esalen Institute)
  • 8 - Big Sur, California (Esalen Institute)
  • 15 - Pasadena, California (Rose Bowl) (Free Clinic show)
  • 25 - Berkeley, California (Greek Theatre)
  • 16 - Inglewood, California (The Forum)
  • 1 - Hilversum, The Netherlands (Filmtheater)
  • 13 - Tokyo, Japan (Kousei Nenkin Kaikan)
  • 17 - Hiroshima, Japan (Hiroshima-shi Koukaidou)
  • 18 - Osaka, Japan (Festival Hall)
  • 21 - Nagoya, Japan (Aichi-ken Taiikukan)
  • 24 - Tokyo, Japan (Kousei Nenkin Kaikan)
  • 26 - Tokyo, Japan (Kousei Nenkin Kaikan)
  • 27 - Tokyo, Japan (Kousei Nenkin Kaikan)
  • 28 - Tokyo, Japan (Kousei Nenkin Kaikan)
  • 31 - Osaka, Japan (Furitsu Taiikukan)
  • 1 - Tokyo, Japan (Kousei Nenkin Kaikan)
  • 13 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada (Salle Wilfrid-Pelletier)
  • 16 - Berkeley, California (Berkeley Community Theatre)
  • 21 - Paris, France (Theatre National de Chaillot)
  • 15 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 16 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 3 - Queens, New York (Forest Hills Tennis Stadium)
  • 5 - Queens, New York (Forest Hills Tennis Stadium)
  • 7 - Saratoga, New York (Performing Arts Center)
  • 9 - Chicago, Illinois (Civic Opera House)
  • 10 - Chicago, Illinois (Civic Opera House)
  • 12 - Cleveland, Ohio (Music Hall)
  • 14 - Washington, DC (National Sylvan Theater)
  • 17 - Haddonfield, New Jersey (Camden County Music Fair)
  • 2 - Monterey, California (County Fairgrounds)
  • 17 - Houston, Texas (Sam Houston Coliseum)
  • 3 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Palestra)
  • 5 - Boston, Massachusetts (Back Bay Theatre)
  • 17 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Loew's Penn Theatre)
  • 19 - Detroit, Michigan (Masonic Temple)
  • 30 - San Diego, California (Peterson Gymnasium, San Diego State)
  • 2 - Los Angeles, California (Pauley Pavilion)
  • 13 - New York, New York (Philharmonic Hall)
  • 9 - Essen, Germany (Grugahalle)
  • 19 - Paris, France (Theatre de la Mutualite)
  • 27 - Hilversum, Netherlands (Expo Hall)
  • 16 - Santa Monica, California (Civic Auditorium)
  • 19 - San Jose, California (San Jose State)
  • 26 - West Hempstead, New York (Island Garden Arena)
  • 3 - Burlington, Vermont (University of Vermont)
  • 5 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Convention Hall) (with Bob Dylan)
  • 6 - New Haven, Connecticut (New Haven Arena)
  • 12 - Winston-Salem, North Carolina (Wake Forest College)
  • 13 - Washington, D.C. (DAR Constitution Hall)
  • 18 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Syria Mosque)
  • 26 - Princeton, New Jersey (McCarter Theatre)
  • 2 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada (La Grande Salle)
  • 4 - Worcester, Massachusetts (Memorial Auditorium)
  • 24 - Seattle, Washington (Seattle Center Arena)
  • 5 - London, England (BBC Television Theatre)
  • 23 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 29 - Croydon, England (Fairfield Hall)
  • 30 - Liverpool, England (Philharmonic Hall)
  • 1 - Manchester, England (Free Trade Hall)
  • 2 - Edinburgh, Scotland (Usher Hall)
  • 6 - Glasgow, Scotland (Concert Hall)
  • 12 - Sheffield, England (City Hall)
  • 14 - Bristol, England (Colston Hall)
  • 15 - Birmingham, England (Town Hall)
  • 16 - London, England (Royal Festival Hall)
  • 7 - San Francisco, California (Civic Auditorium)
  • 13 - San Diego, California (Civic Theatre)
  • 26 - San Diego, California (San Diego State College)
  • 29 - San Diego, California (San Diego State College)
  • 26 - Tucson, Arizona (Centennial Hall, University of Arizona)
  • 10 - Buffalo, New York (Kleinhan's Music Hall)
  • 12 - Detroit, Michigan (Masonic Temple Theatre)
  • 15 - Boston, Massachusetts (Symphony Hall)
  • 16 - Boston, Massachusetts (Jordan Hall)
  • 19 - White Plains, New York (Westchester County Center)
  • 26 - Lansing, Michigan (Civic Center)
  • 28 - Purchase, New York (Manhattanville College)
  • 1 - Minneapolis, Minnesota (Northrop Auditorium)
  • 28 - New York, New York (Madison Square Garden)
  • 1 - Los Angeles, California (Vanguard)
  • 27 - Berkeley, California (Berkeley Folk Festival, Greek Theatre)
  • 28 - Berkeley, California (Berkeley Folk Festival, Greek Theatre)
  • 20 - Woodstock, New York (Cafe Espresso)
  • 24 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 29 - New Brunwsick, New Jersey (Rutgers University)
  • 1 - Boston, Massachusetts (Public Garden)
  • 8 - Queens, New York (Forest Hills Tennis Stadium)
  • 14 - Ipswich, Massachusetts (Castle Hill on Crane Estate)
  • 16 - Boston, Massachusetts (Boston Arts Festival)
  • 22 - Middlefield, Connecticut (Powder Hill)
  • 27 - Atlantic City, New Jersey (Convention Hall)
  • 4 - Monterey, California (Monterey Fairgrounds) (with Bob Dylan)
  • 23 - Los Angeles, California (Hollywood Bowl)
  • 7 - Princeton, New Jersey (McCarter Theatre)
  • 12 - Pasadena, California (Civic Auditorium)
  • 26 - Santa Monica, California (Civic Auditorium)
  • 4 - Stanford, California (Memorial Auditorium)
  • 8 - San Diego, California (SDSU Open Air Theatre)
  • 20 - Pasadena, California (Civic Auditorium)
  • 29 - Sacramento, California (Memorial Auditorium)
  • 19 - New York, New York (Philharmonic Hall)
  • 20 - Boston, Massachusetts (Donnelly Memorial Theater)
  • 21 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Charles River)
  • 23 - Rochester, New York (Eastman Theatre)
  • 24 - Syracuse, New York (Onondaga War Memorial Auditorium)
  • 26 - University Park, Pennsylvania (Schwab Auditorium)
  • 10 - Memphis, Tennessee (Ellis Memorial Auditorium)
  • 15 - Durham, North Carolina (B.N. Duke Auditorium)
  • 18 - Monterey, California (Monterey Folk Festival, Fairgrounds)
  • 24 - Highland Park, Illinois (Pavilion)
  • 28 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 3 - Cherry Hill, New Jersey (Camden County Music Fair)
  • 10 - Asbury Park, New Jersey (Convention Hall)
  • 11 - Wallingford, Connecticut (Oakdale Theatre)
  • 14 - Pittsfield, Massachusetts (Boys' Club of America) (with Bob Dylan)
  • 17 - Queens, New York (Forest Hills Tennis Stadium) (with Bob Dylan)
  • 28 - Washington, D.C. (March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, Lincoln Memorial)
  • 6 - San Francisco, California (University of San Francisco)
  • 9 - Stanford, California (Memorial Auditorium)
  • 14 - Santa Monica, California (Civic Auditorium)
  • 21 - Oberlin, Ohio (Finney Chapel)
  • 27 - Washington, DC (Lisner Auditorium)
  • 4 - Columbus, Ohio (Mershon Auditorium)
  • 5 - Ithaca, New York (Bailey Hall/Cornell University)
  • 11 - Durham, North Carolina (Page Auditorium)
  • 12 - Princeton, New Jersey (McCarter Theatre)
  • 17 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Sanders Theatre)
  • 18 - New York, New York (Carnegie Hall)
  • 21 - Davis, California (Freeborn Hall)
  • 30 - Seattle, Washington (Opera House)
  • 9 - El Paso, Texas (Magoffin Auditorium)
  • 2 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (Carnegie Music Hall)
  • 7 - Detroit, Michigan (Ford Auditorium)
  • 9 - Toronto, Ontario, Canada (Massey Hall)
  • 11 - Montreal, Quebec, Canada (Her Majesty)
  • 16 - Hartford, Connecticut (Bushnell Memorial Hall)
  • 17 - New Haven, Connecticut (Woolsey Hall)
  • 21 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Town Hall)
  • 23 - Newark, New Jersey (Mosque Theatre)
  • 29 - Urbana, Illinois (Foellinger Auditorium)
  • 30 - Chicago, Illinois (Orchestra Hall)
  • 14 - Boston, Massachusetts (Jordan Hall)
  • 11 - Williamstown, Massachusetts (Chapin Hall at Williams College)
  • 18 - Poughkeepsie, New York (Vassar College)
  • 24 - Los Angeles, California (Royce Hall)
  • 25 - Berkeley, California (Florence Schwimley Little Theater)
  • 1 - Palo Alto, California (Palo Alto High School)
  • 2 - Palo Alto, California (Palo Alto High School)
  • 27 - Ann Arbor, Michigan (Ann Arbor High School)
  • 31 - New Haven, Connecticut (Woolsey Hall)
  • 4 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Kresge Auditorium)
  • 9 - Boston, Massachusetts (Jordan Hall)
  • 10 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (Town Hall)
  • 11 - New York, New York (Town Hall)
  • 12 - Davis, California (Freeborn Hall)
  • 8 - Boston, Massachusetts (Copley Square Hotel)
  • 15 - Boston, Massachusetts (Copley Square Hotel)
  • 16 - Boston, Massachusetts (Copley Square Hotel)
  • 12 - Boston, Massachusetts (Copley Square Hotel)
  • 27 - Branford, Connecticut (Indian Neck Folk Festival)
  • 4 - Boston, Massachusetts (Copley Square Hotel)
  • 5 - Boston, Massachusetts (Copley Square Hotel)
  • 11 - Boston, Massachusetts (Copley Square Hotel)
  • 18 - Boston, Massachusetts (Copley Square Hotel)
  • 6 - Branford, Connecticut (Indian Neck Folk Festival)
  • 7 - Branford, Connecticut (Indian Neck Folk Festival)
  • 8 - Branford, Connecticut (Indian Neck Folk Festival)
  • 25 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)
  • 4 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Sanders Theatre)
  • 7 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Agassiz Theatre)
  • 14 - New York, New York (Hootenanny at Carnegie Hall)
  • 15 - Princeton, New Jersey (Hamilton Murray Theater)
  • 29 - New Haven, Connecticut (Woolsey Hall)
  • 16 - North Bennington, Vermont (Bennington College)
  • 15 - Cambridge, Massachusetts (Club Mount Auburn 47)
  • 16 - Chicago, Illinois (Gate of Horn)
  • 20 - Chicago, Illinois (Gate of Horn)
  • 12 - Newport, Rhode Island (Newport Folk Festival)

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Joan Baez Tour 2024

Joan Baez is a folk singer and songwriter known for her powerful and emotive voice, her socially conscious lyrics, and her activism. She began her career in the late 1950s and has released numerous concerts, songs, albums, and received numerous awards throughout her long and successful career. Some of Joan Baez's most popular concerts include her performances at the Newport Folk Festival in the 1960s, where she famously sang with Bob Dylan, and her world tours in the 1970s and 1980s.

Some of Joan Baez's most popular songs include "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down," "We Shall Overcome," "Love Is Just a Four-Letter Word," and "Diamonds & Rust." Joan Baez has released numerous albums throughout her career, including her self-titled debut album in 1960, "Joan Baez, Vol. 2" in 1961, and "Diamonds & Rust" in 1975. Joan Baez has received numerous awards and honors for her music and activism, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the National Medal of Arts, and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

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Joan Baez is an American folk singer musician, and activist whose contemporary folk music often includes themes of protest or social justice.

Joan was introduced to the musical world by friend of Joan's father, who gave her a ukulele. She learned simple chords which enabled her to play rhythm and blues, which were the styles of music she enjoyed at that age. Her parents were less encouraging in the beginning however as they were concerned that the music would lead her into a life of drug addiction. When Baez was 13, her aunt took her to a concert by folk musician Pete Seeger, and Baez found herself strongly moved and soon began teaching herself his music and performing them publicly. One of her very first public performances was at a retreat in Saratoga, California, for a youth group. A few years later in 1957, Baez bought her first Gibson acoustic guitar.

Joan released her first debut LP in October, 1960. Baez is not known for her commercial success, despite a large number of her albums now being certified in the States. It is more about the political activism that she intelligently wove into her lyrics and delivered in a distinctive vocal, wrapping the whole package in a refreshing alt folk decoration. Critics have been constantly supportive, her first release received five stars from the music reviewer AllMusic. One of her highest charting singles is the 1971 release 'The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down' which peaked at #3 in the US and #6 in the UK, its subject matter describes the last days of the American Civil War.

Joan was constantly involved in social and political movements during her career, she could count Martin Luther King as a friend after hearing him speak about nonviolence, civil rights and social change which brought tears to her eyes. Years later they became friends and Baez participated in many of the Civil Rights Movement demonstrations that Dr. King helped organise. She has campaigned against the Vietnam war, the death penalty and supported gay & lesbian rights to name a few. In 2011 Amnesty International introduced the Joan Baez Award for Outstanding Inspirational Service in the Global Fight for Human Rights.

Live reviews

Joan Baez’s music is just as inspirational and relevant as it was during the counterculture movement of the 1960’s. She is a true folk troubadour whose songs cover controversial topics and take strong moral grounds. Her music has aged well and her performances are still emotionally captivating. Although Joan Baez has written many original songs, she is generally looked at as an interpreter of other people’s work. She has good taste in finding songs that are politically relevant and inspirational, and putting her own spin on the song to make it resonate with her audience. She has covered songs by such artists as Bob Dylan, The Beatles, Leonard Cohen, Paul Simon, and Woody Guthrie. She has recently modified her sound by covering more relevant artists such as Ryan Adams and Josh Ritter.

During Joan Baez’s performances it is usually just herself and her acoustic guitar. She gently strums and plucks her guitar while she pours much enthusiasm and inspiration into her singing. The whole audience is still and quiet during the performance with all eyes fixed on her and all ears honed in to her beautiful angelic voice. Her setlist is very diverse and the songs she plays cover many political and social issues. She will play several songs by her close friend, Bob Dylan, such as “Seven Curses” and “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright”. She has also been known to play traditional songs such as “Lily of the West” and “The Water is Wide”. However, the audience is most fixated and in awe when Joan Baez plays her folk-anthem, “Diamonds and Rust”. Joan Baez’s live performances prove that her voice is just as angelic as it always has been and that the material she covers is just as important and relevant for today’s generation.

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wjmcc’s profile image

Joan Baez has been performing publicly for over 55 years, an incredible fact to match an incredible woman who's music has inspired countless modern contemporaries and has given voice to minorities through her political and social commentary. Her music resonates with fans through a number of decades so therefore the crowd gathered this evening is expectedly varied, aged patrons come along with their offspring as Baez's music is exactly the kind of thing you would be proud to offer down to your children.

The lady herself is as warm and personable as ever, greeting the crowds as though they were old friends. She is joined only by a few other musicians and they go about creating the warm, earthy tones of her discography in slick proficiency. The acoustic sounds are glorious and Joan has clearly thought about the kind of music she would include for the setlist, the crowd are responsive and enthusiastic throughout the evening and she looks genuinely overwhelmed by certain reactions. A true voice of power, equality and fairness who is a complete joy to watch perform live.

sean-ward’s profile image

I have followed Joan Baez for at least 55 years, hearing her in all her different manifestations. This is a warm, lovely concert with a small band, as good as I've ever seen her do. She sings many old ballads and some political songs (Joe Hill anybody?) and some new songs, some sounding a bit different because her voice has changed a bit with age, but all wonderful. I especially loved "Jerusalem " and she ended with "Forever Young, " one of the audience's favourites. Her small band includes her son as drummer and percussionist, who does an extraordinarily wonderful stint in one song. Her other band member seems to play everything with strings - violin, piano, guitar, banjo etc. Amazing. Also, her assistant , Grace, joins her in beautiful harmonies, as lovely as I used to hear Joan and her sister, Mimi Farina, sing. Joan clearly has a lot of stamina - two hours without a break, and the audience (and I) could have gone on for another two. If there had been more concerts, I would gladly have gone again.

lauramiller’s profile image

This concert was amazing, Joan Baez' music is just as relevant and beautiful as it was decades ago.

She performed in front of the dome in cologne, which was a breathtaking view as the sun went down. Her voice is so clear and touching and as a 21-year old girl I am mostly used to meaningless songs on the radio that sound the same.

But Joans tells fascinating stories with a deeper meaning which just blew me away.

One of the most beautiful concerts I ever went to, held by a true icon.

The location was seated and we had a great view, but after the concert was "done" she returned for approx. 5-10 more songs, all of them classics, and the crowd stood up and moved closer to the stage and really enjoyed themselves.

It felt like two concerts in one, both amazing, but one very calming and beautiful and the other more personal.

Whoever buys tickets to see this legend live will not regret it!

olimichels’s profile image

The concert in Oslo was very moving. She performed 19 songs and 3 encores.

Jan Baez is a charismatic woman with a charming smile and a voice which is still strong and beautiful. The songs she sings are relevant and appeal strongly to the audience everywhere in the world. Many of us had tears in our eyes and a lump in the throat.

You must go to her concert in Europe during her "Fare Thee Well Tour" in Europe!

Grace Stumberg, her personal assistant and a singer has a beatiful voice and her own band in Buffalo. It may happen that she performs with Grace Lougen from her band in a pub before or after Joan's concert. Who knows ;-)?

LenkaM’s profile image

Excellent last seen over 40yrs ago and has still got that pitch perfect voice and sense of humour took my wife with me who has near seen Joan live and she came away from the show saying how much she enjoyed it and looks forward to seeing her again

nicky-nicholson’s profile image

Yet again Joan never fails to please although she had a bit of a cold she give her all the only disappoint is that this will be her last tour

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Joan Baez announced a new run of concerts in the U.S. and Canada, part of her final round of “formal touring.” The North American trek, which follows a stretch of U.K. and European dates in 2017, launches September 11th in Ithaca, New York and concludes November 17th in Oakland, California.

The live dates will promote Baez’s upcoming studio album, Whistle Down The Wind , set for release on 2 March via Bobolink/Razor & Tie Records. A digital or CD copy of the record is included with every ticket purchased for the US. shows. Tickets go on sale on 2 March, and additional info is available at the venue websites.

The pioneering folk singer-songwriter’s recording career spans six decades. She recorded many of her best-known titles for Vanguard during the 1960s, receiving gold discs for albums such as Joan Baez, Joan Baez 2 and Blessed Are … Baez also enjoyed a fruitful career with A&M during the 1970s, when she released critically-acclaimed albums such as Come From The Shadows and Where Are You Now, My Son?

‘Rumor And Sigh’: The Word About Richard Thompson Gets Ever Louder

‘tim hardin 2’: a beautiful album that stands the test of time, ‘it’s just music, my music’: gordon lightfoot develops his song craft with ‘the way i feel’.

Joan Baez recently spoke to Rolling Stone about her new LP – her first since 2008’s Day After Tomorrow – which she says evokes her emotional mind-set after deciding to retire from the road. “The direction this album went is that [2018] is going to be my last year of formal touring, and so there was a feeling, maybe not even spoken, but there was a strong feeling that it’s time to move on,” she said.

Joan Baez - Whistle Down The Wind (Official Audio)

Whistle Down The Wind features a mixture of cover songs and originals from artists like Tom Waits, Mary Chapin Carpenter, Anohni, Josh Ritter and Eliza Gilkyson. “What’s happened, and I didn’t do it on purpose, but the songs have become mine,” the singer told Rolling Stone . “That’s when I know I’m on the right track.”

Joan Baez plays the following 2018 North American shows:

11 September – Ithaca, New York @ State Theatre 12 September – New Haven, Connecticut @ Shubert Theater 14 September – Boston, MA @ The Wang Theatre 15 September – Boston, MA @ The Wang Theatre 17 September – Montreal, QC @ Place Des Arts Maison Symphonique 18 September – Toronto, ON @ Roy Thomson Hall 21 September – New York, NY @ Beacon Theatre 22 September – New York, NY @ Beacon Theatre 25 September – Red Bank, NJ @ Count Basie Theatre 26 September – Philadelphia, PA @ Verizon Hall @ Kimmel Center 28 September – Washington, DC @ Warner Theatre 29 September – Durham, NC @ Durham Performing Arts Center 30 September – Nashville, TN @ Ryman Auditorium 2 October – Ann Arbor, MI @ Michigan Theater 3 October – Cleveland, OH @ State Theatre 5 October – Chicago, IL @ Chicago Theatre 6 October – Minneapolis, MN @ State Theatre 24 October – Denver, CO @ Paramount Theatre 25 October – Santa Fe, NM @ The Lensic Performing Arts Center 27 October – Phoenix, AZ @ Celebrity Theatre 28 October – Tucson, AZ @ Fox Tucson Theatre 30 October – San Diego, CA @ Humphreys Concerts 4 November – Seattle, WA @ Benaroya Hall 5 November – Portland, OR @ Revolution Hall 8 November – Eureka, CA @ Arkely Center for the Performing Arts 10 November – Los Angeles, CA @ Royce Hall 15 November – San Francisco, CA @ The Masonic 17 November – Oakland, CA @ Fox Theater Oakland.

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Review: Joan Baez Plays Beacon Theatre on Fare Thee Well Tour

  • Last updated: 28 Mar 2020, 17:27:04
  • Published: 2 May 2019, 18:07:31
  • Written by: Hannah Cotter
  • Photography by: Debra L Rothenberg
  • Categories: Reviews Tagged: Joan Baez Fare Thee Well Tour 2018/2019 Joan Baez at Beacon Theatre

Joan Baez played her last New York City show last night, May 1, with an emotional performance at the Beacon Theatre as part of the Tribeca Film Festival.

Since her breakthrough into the music scene in 1959, Baez has become one of folk music's most iconic members. Releasing over 30 albums and performing for over 60 years, her career has had many defining moments, which she encapsulates in her Fare Thee Well farewell tour that kicked off April 9– intentionally– in Selma, Alabama. A prominent advocate for civil rights in the '60s, she continues to this day to stand passionately on behalf of the causes she embraces.

With her retirement on the horizon, I knew if I didn't catch the elusive folk songstress now, I would never have the chance again.

When you think about Baez, one can't help but immediately think about the famous people she's been associated with through the years. She had a fling with Bob Dylan, toured with The Beatles and marched in Selma with Martin Luther King Jr., but the Fare Thee Well Tour encompasses The Queen of Folk in all her glory with a lengthy setlist– which could be dubbed "the '60's Greatest Hits"– filled with the original songs and classic covers.

Opening the show alone on stage illuminated by two single spotlights with her guitar in hand, Baez kicked off the night with a cover of Dylan's "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" before getting into classics "Honest Lullaby," "Lily of the West" and "Whistle Down the Wind."

does joan baez tour

She paused to introduce her bandmates as they trickled on stage: Dirk Powell, who played a whopping six instruments throughout the night including piano, mandolin and banjo, and her son, Gabe, on percussion and drums.

At 78, Baez still knows how to captivate an audience. She stayed rooted at center stage for the majority of the night, but her grace, intelligence and humor kept the entire packed house engaged.

I envision a young Baez singing at the 1959 Newport Folk Festival with her long black hair blowing in the wind and assume that's the person everyone around me still saw: the giant from their adolescence taking shape in front of them with the same sing-songy voice that was simultaneously filled with sweetness and rage, her long black hair now styled in a short, white pixie cut.

She sang Josh Ritter's "Silver Blade," another Dylan cover of "It Ain't Me, Babe" and Woodie Guthrie's "Deportee," the latter a dedication to refugees and immigrants.

"Don't build a wall," she told us, "feed the hungry!" before diving into "Diamonds and Rust" and "Birmingham Sunday," songs written when she was my age that ring true, as she reminded us, "now more than ever."

That's coming from someone whose career outlasted the civil rights movement and the musical explosion of the 1960s.

Baez closed out the 18-song main set with both poignancy and hope, including an older and more mature sounding cover of "A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall" and a jazzy version of "The House of the Rising Sun" before coming back for a four-song encore of Dylan's "Forever Young," Simon and Garfunkel's "The Boxer," John Lennon's "Imagine" and a traditional cover of "Dink's Song: Fare Thee Well."

"Life ain't worth living without the one you love," she sang. "Fare thee well, my honey, fare thee well."

You can check out an entire list of Baez's Fare Thee Well tour dates on her website .

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Concert Review: Joan Baez’s Farewell Tour Leaves ‘Em Wanting More

At Royce Hall, she didn't sound like someone who should be singing "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue" in anything but the figurative sense.

By Chris Willman

Chris Willman

Senior Music Writer and Chief Music Critic

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Joan Baez

Joan Baez has sung a lot of putative protest music, or at least participated in more than her fair share of rallies, over the last six decades. But here’s something to protest, in 2018: the idea of Baez retiring. She’s currently on what’s being billed as her farewell tour, and when someone like Baez or Paul Simon announces that, unlike, say, Cher or KISS, you’re inclined to take them at their word, even if she didn’t say a thing about it when she played what might have been her final L.A. gig at Royce Hall Sunday. At 77, she’s earned the right to leave at her own chosen speed (to quote Joan quoting Bob). But Baez is still very much in fighting trim, and a sold-out crowd that was mostly of an age to see social parallels between then and now did not want to let her go gently into that good backstage.

It was reasonable to expect that Baez would at least briefly address her impending exit from the spotlight — as of now, her Fare Thee Well Tour is scheduled to end in New York in May — the way that Simon did for several minutes at tour stops like his recent Hollywood Bowl show. But the closest she came to acknowledging on stage that this might’ve been the end of the road for L.A. shows was opening with “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue.” Maybe opening with a goodbye song was her sly way of acknowledging the retiring elephant in the room… or maybe she just opened with a Dylan song because there are so many of them in her set that the odds favor it. “I’m throwing in Dylan songs here because they’re the best we’ve got,” she remarked before playing “It Ain’t Me, Babe,” the second of four from his catalog (the remaining two: “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” and “Forever Young”). Let’s hope that Dylan doesn’t look at his ex and get any ideas about ending the Never Ending Tour.

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Dylan also showed up a fifth time, as an unnamed antagonist, of course, in “Diamonds and Rust” — a 1975 adult-contemporary hit still so popular among her fan base that its opening bars elicited some spontaneous “Oohs!” from the Royce audience and the appearance of a few verboten phones for attempted video captures (quickly squashed by attentive ushers). “I figure if I’m going to write one hit in my lifetime, it might as well be that one,” Baez said upon song’s completion. It’s remarkable how much of an outlier it remains in her catalog, which has tended more toward universal anthems than lost-love ballads… but when you’ve written a breakup recollection as sharp as that one, maybe a mic drop is in order.

Five of the songs came from her March release, “Whistle Down the Wind,” recorded with the most sensitive producer a performer of her generation and sensibility could have found, Joe Henry. The fact that it was her first album in 10 years (following a record she’d made with another next-gen kindred spirit, Steve Earle) renders her retirement still more bittersweet, since it was the sort of thing that makes you want to wish someone is about to get back on a roll. Two of those songs are by Tom Waits , who could be her new Dylan, as another bottomless song source, if she were inclined to continue. An early highlight of her 95-minute set was Waits’ “Last Leaf,” an amusingly defiant song about a determination to go on forever… a funny but maybe not wholly inappropriate song to sing on a farewell tour. “Let’s face it,” she told the Royce crowd, “a lot of us here are the last leaves on the tree.” A song from the same recent album that stood in contrast to that was the world-weary, ready-to-split “Another World,” written by Anohni of Antony and the Johnsons, which Baez described as“a dark, dark song, as beautiful as it is dark. And it expresses exactly how I feel.”

Along those same troubled-time lines, probably the most topical song of the night was Stephen Foster’s 165-year-old “Hard Times Come Again No More,” a sort of secular gospel classic that might have put the audience in mind of current politics or just the current fire season. Baez did address the devastating California fires in a sort of essay or poem she said she’d written that afternoon, in which she expressed concern not just for the human toll but also “birds, bugs, insects, the smallest of things.” She added, “We must be the fire brigade now… Now is the time to love.” She and her band and crew appeared between encores to take a knee and lock arms on stage while Jimi Hendrix’s version of “The Star-Spangled Banner” played over the PA. But there was more charity than defiance in her when, at the end of her final encore, “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot,” she sang the wish that a saving chariot would swoop down “for me, for you… even Donald.”

Said band was a tiny but mighty one. “Please welcome my Big Band-mates,” she quipped after playing the first couple of numbers solo, and the ensemble quickly revealed itself as something not too likely to get in her way: just the trio of Dirk Powell on every instrument imaginable from piano to banjo, son Gabriel Harris on beating-on-a-box solos and other percussion, and, occasionally, backup vocalist and duet partner Grace Stumberg. (A woman identified as Grace Jr. was Baez’s constantly acoustic guitar-switching roadie, maintaining the all-in-the-family feel.) Their support made for the loveliest additions to the severe intimacy, whether they were on their feet or on their knees.

When one of popular music’s most famously piercing sopranos is two months shy of 78, maybe the question people want answered in the first paragraph instead of the seventh is: How’d she sound? The short answer is: damn good, if, obviously, not an exact replica of all that vintage Newport Folk Festival footage. The best way of putting it might be that she used to be so otherworldly as to sound like an alien, and now she sounds like an extremely talented and assured mortal human being, which is actually not a bad transition to have made at all. The “Whistle Down the Wind” album emphasized the middle registers that Baez is most comfortable in now. But in concert, although Stumberg’s handful of duet parts were clearly there to help a little with the heavy lifting, Baez does still go into a fair amount of those high parts of yore, and with confidence. Her controlled melisma on the final syllables of “House of the Rising Sun” were a marvel, and she did not resist reprising the parts of Dylan’s “Hard Rain” that unofficially constitute a yodel. And she took on “Darling Corey” with stillhouse-demolishing efficiency.

Was this CAP UCLA presentation really her L.A. swan song, or might she be back for an encore in a venue that doesn’t so easily sell out and leave Woodstock generation types learning how to use StubHub for the first time? Her lack of sentimentality in neglecting to say anything about leaving the stage at all seemed to suggest that maybe this wasn’t really it… or maybe it just suggested, you know, a lack of sentimentality. But if she does add onto the tour with some bigger blowouts, it’s hard to imagine who wouldn’t want to come to that. Even Donald.

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Review: Joan Baez masters the art of the farewell concert

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Joan Baez has commanded stages since 1959, back when she was a raven-haired teenager parting audiences’ hair with her piercing soprano in folk clubs around Boston.

When she announced late last year that she was retiring from touring, she said she got the idea from an unlikely source: her own voice.

“When I asked my first voice teacher… ‘When will I know when to stop singing?’ he said, ‘Your voice will tell you,’” Baez, 77, told The Times in 2017 around the time she was inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame.

When Baez played to a sold-out crowd at UCLA’s Royce Hall on Saturday, it wasn’t obvious why she’s retiring — or why she should. Her guitar prowess was intact, as clean and crystalline as her skyscraping vocals once were. Her voice isn’t exactly shot, but she’s starting to notice its limitations, particularly when she goes long stretches between performances.

“Now it’s really wonderful. It’s a different voice, and I do whatever stuff I can cram into the right range,” Baez said in a phone interview a few hours before the Royce Hall concert. “There are compensating things, and as long as we stay smart about it, this [tour] can go on for a while.” (At the moment, Baez has no tour dates planned beyond next May, and Saturday’s concert was likely her last in Los Angeles.)

Baez treated the performance like any other, devoid of any cheap sentiment. There was no extended bow or teary fare-thee-well speech. Instead, she gave fans what they’ve always expected of her — impassioned performances and politics. (To answer your inevitable question: She kept President Trump out of the mix, save for a humorous aside at the end of “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot.”)

does joan baez tour

Instead, she advocated for the rights of migrant workers [Woody Guthrie’s “Deportee (Plane Crash at Los Gatos)”] and the power of grass-roots organizing (“Joe Hill”). She also read a solemn passage she had written to reflect on the destruction of the deadly Southern California fires that wreaked so much havoc on the area.

The songs, especially a few from her new album, “Whistle Down the Wind,” told the story of her long journey. After a stark, opening rendition of “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue” — one of a handful of Dylan songs she performed, “because they’re the best we’ve got” — Tom Waits’ “Last Leaf” seemed fitting, if a little comical.

“As in, me,” Baez joked with the audience. “OK, let’s face it — a lot of us here are the last leaf on the tree.”

Baez often performed with just her acoustic guitar, the way the world first discovered her, sweetening the melodies with her flamenco-like strum. That iconic voice is still a pleasure to behold, frayed lightly around the edges but resonant and relatable in a way that it wasn’t early on in her career. Now she imbues a chestnut like “House of the Rising Sun” with a bluesy melancholy that suggests a deeper understanding of the material.

Baez is on the road with her leanest but most dexterous band in recent memory. Dirk Powell was a virtuoso on many instruments, veering from subtle flourishes to show-stopping solos on piano, banjo, mandolin, bass, guitar and fiddle.

On understated backing vocals, Grace Stumberg restored some of the high notes Baez used to deploy like missiles, notably on “Forever Young.” And the presence of Gabriel Harris, Baez’s only child, on percussion lent an air of familial intimacy, particularly when she performed “Honest Lullaby,” which Baez penned in the ’70s as a meditation on the bond between mother and son (and her own mother).

Baez is still finding new ways into some of her signature songs. “Diamonds and Rust,” her devastating account of her love affair with Dylan, was luminous with its skeletal guitar accompaniment and the way Baez delivered the story with conversational grace.

Her interpretation of “Another World,” written by Anohni (formerly known as Antony Hegarty of Antony and the Johnsons), showcased a more experimental side of Baez’s craft. She tapped her guitar strings while fretting chords for a staccato rhythm, with Harris adding a vaporous undercurrent with jazz brushes. Baez said the lyrics synthesized her thoughts on the state of affairs: “I need another world / This one’s nearly gone.”

does joan baez tour

Baez is not alone in her conviction to go out on top. We’re saying goodbye to more and more of our icons these days, at least onstage, as Paul Simon , Elton John , Neil Diamond and George Clinton — all in their 70s — announced their retirements this year from decades relentlessly on the road.

Going into a farewell concert, it’s bittersweet to realize that it’s likely your last chance to hear an artist live one last time. Before a note is ever sung, we’re already under the spell of what their music has meant to us, the way it has soundtracked our lives. Some know when to hang it up while they’re ahead, while others — Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones, even 92-year-old Tony Bennett ( coming soon to a California casino near you) — are still making the touring life work for them.

Last week, when the curtain rose to reveal a regal Joni Mitchell at the end of a birthday celebration in her honor , several fans at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion (including this critic) dabbed their misty eyes. Mitchell, clutching a cane and steadied by friends, never said a word, but as the cheers become deafening, it felt like it was our last glimpse of her. Talk about an anvil to the heart.

When asked earlier in the day about the spectrum of emotions she’s feeling on this tour, Baez sounded like the full brunt hadn’t hit her yet.

“I’m sure I will be upset,” she said. “I can’t pretend this is an easy thing to do. I love the shows.” And how are fans treating these farewell performances?

“There’s a lot of crying going on,” Baez said. “I figure I’m doing my job if they’re crying. I think part of it is, ‘Oh, my God. You can’t leave. Keep singing.’ And I get it. There aren’t that many people who do what I do and speak to the conditions of the world.”

[email protected]

Follow me on Twitter @jreedwrites .

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does joan baez tour

James Reed is a former deputy editor of the Fast Break Desk, the Los Angeles Times’ breaking news team. Previously, he served as The Times’ entertainment news editor, overseeing early morning coverage across all genres of the arts. Before joining The Times in 2016, he spent 12 years at the Boston Globe as a pop music critic and assistant arts editor. A Midwestern native, he holds degrees in journalism and Spanish from the University of Missouri-Columbia.

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Entertainment | Joan Baez is back on tour — this time with a…

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Entertainment | warriors’ season ends unceremoniously with blowout loss to kings in play-in, entertainment, entertainment | joan baez is back on tour — this time with a book of her drawings.

does joan baez tour

She may have retired from active performing, but Joan Baez has hardly been out of the spotlight.

Since she stopped touring and recording in 2019, bringing the curtain down on a 60-year singing career, the 82-year-old folk music icon and social justice activist has fashioned a second career as a visual artist.

She’s had two exhibits of “ Mischief Makers, ” acrylic portraits of inspirational figures like Martin Luther King Jr., Greta Thunberg and Nelson Mandela. And last week marked the publication of a new book of her upside-down drawings, “Am I Pretty When I Fly?” (Godine, $45)

She is also the subject of a critically acclaimed new documentary, “Joan Baez I Am a Noise,” which is screening at 5 p.m. Tuesday at San Francisco’s Castro Theatre as part of the San Francisco International Film Festival.

In the interest of full disclosure, I should say that Baez and I have been friends for 25 years, beginning when I was the romantic partner of her younger sister, Mimi Fariña, founder of Marin’s Bread & Roses, who died of cancer in 2001. My wife, Donna Seager Liberatore, co-owner of Seager Gray Gallery in Mill Valley, represents Baez’s work as a fine art portrait painter.

One chilly San Francisco evening last week, I was honored to be part of the launch of her book tour, interviewing her in Jack Kerouac Alley beside City Lights bookstore, the historic North Beach shop founded by the late beat poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti.

does joan baez tour

The alley was packed with what must have been a couple hundred adoring fans, and they weren’t all boomers and ‘60s generation survivors. One 21-year-old college student traveled all the way from Washington state just to see Baez at this event. In a Q&A session after our interview, the young woman was literally quivering with nervous excitement when she asked Baez what life advice she would give someone like her who was just starting out.

“Your heart will tell you, if you listen, where you should go and what you should do and for whom,” Baez told her. “Just be true to yourself.”

“I started drawing when I was little,” she explained in our alley interview. “It was my way to prepare myself before I picked up the guitar and began singing. When I’m painting portraits, I want it to look like the person I’m painting. But this upside-down drawing is so freeing. Sometimes I’ll have an idea of what I’m doing when I start, sometimes I don’t. And the extraordinary thing for me is that I don’t really know what’s happening until I turn the drawing right side up and it tells me something, a joke or a phrase or a pun. Then, I turn the drawing upside-down again and write that out — backwards. It’s as interesting for me as it might be for anybody else. And I don’t take much credit for it. It’s the same as the singing. It’s some kind of gift. It’s channeling from somewhere. I don’t know where.”

does joan baez tour

A type of magic

She acknowledges that there surely is a neurological explanation for this peculiar talent, something to do with the left and right brain. But she couldn’t care less. She compares it to the time a magician friend offered to show her how he did a trick.

“I said, ‘No, I don’t want to know,’” she recalled. “The magic would have been gone.”

When she was growing up, her physicist father moved his family around a lot as he advanced in his career. So Baez was always “the new girl, different, brown, odd,” as she puts it in her introduction. Consequently, she felt like an outsider and hated school. Her favorite drawing, “Middle School,” is of a teenage girl cowering as a bird pecks at her head and her books go flying.

“It’s the chaos of being a certain age and going to a new place, and to me it was terrifying,” she said. “The ‘Middle School’ drawing reflects that shattered, lost, confused, wild, unhappy scene, which is also kind of beautiful to look at.”

Just as the book is divided into categories, our alley conversation was wide ranging, covering various stages in her life and career.

"It's the same as the singing. It's some kind of gift. It's channeling from somewhere. I don't know where," says Joan Baez of her upside-down drawings. (Photo by Dana Tynan)

Her youthful love affair with Bob Dylan came up at one point. It turns out that painting his portrait helped heal the pain and hurt she had long held inside over their public breakup.

“When I was doing the acrylic portraits for ‘Mischief Makers,’ I painted Bob when he was really young,” she said. “He still had baby fat. He was like 20. Both of us were still so young. As I was painting, I put his music on and started to cry. All the resentment and the b.s. that had gone on before was absolutely drained away, so I wrote him and told him so. I didn’t include a return address because I didn’t want or expect something back. I said, ‘I’m sorry I wanted so much of you. I wanted you to be political and you weren’t.’ I was able to say that I’m sorry that I was tugging so hard at you and how grateful and thankful I am that I was there in those years that you wrote those songs and that we were friends.”

Asked by someone in the crowd to name her favorite artists to sing with during her career, she listed her sister, Mimi, first (“We knew each other our whole lives and had the same phrasing”) followed by Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt and Dylan.

“Bob had absolutely impossible phrasing which, he would change every night just to screw you up,” she said and laughed. “It was a challenge but he was brilliant.”

After our interview, Baez left the next day for Nashville, where she was in conversation with her friend Emmylou Harris. From there, it was on to New York for an interview with filmmaker Michael Moore and an appearance this week on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”

On the flight from Nashville to New York, she happened to be on the same plane as Justin Jones, one of the two young Black Democrats expelled from the Tennessee legislature by a Republican super majority for leading a gun violence protest on the house floor.

When you get off the plane with the legendary Joan Baez you know it’s a movement of the spirit. She stands with us in our struggle in Tennessee and said she’s hopeful to see young voices leading. “WE SHALL OVERCOME…” Serendipitous, indeed. pic.twitter.com/f4bj5akUte — Rep. Justin Jones (@brotherjones_) April 9, 2023

A video of Baez and Jones singing “We Shall Overcome” in the Newark Airport had 1.3 million views on Twitter earlier this week. Shortly after that video was posted, Jones was reinstated. He was sworn back into his seat on Monday.

“When you get off the plane with the legendary Joan Baez, you know it’s a movement of the spirit,” he wrote. “She stands with us in our struggle in Tennessee and said she’s hopeful to see young voices leading.”

Contact Paul Liberatore at [email protected]

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Concert Review: Joan Baez’s Farewell Tour Leaves ‘Em Wanting More

Joan Baez has sung a lot of putative protest music, or at least participated in more than her fair share of rallies, over the last six decades. But here’s something to protest, in 2018: the idea of Baez retiring. She’s currently on what’s being billed as her farewell tour, and when someone like Baez or Paul Simon announces that, unlike, say, Cher or KISS, you’re inclined to take them at their word, even if she didn’t say a thing about it when she played what might have been her final L.A. gig at Royce Hall Sunday. At 77, she’s earned the right to leave at her own chosen speed (to quote Joan quoting Bob). But Baez is still very much in fighting trim, and a sold-out crowd that was mostly of an age to see social parallels between then and now did not want to let her go gently into that good backstage.

It was reasonable to expect that Baez would at least briefly address her impending exit from the spotlight — as of now, her Fare Thee Well Tour is scheduled to end in New York in May — the way that Simon did for several minutes at tour stops like his recent Hollywood Bowl show. But the closest she came to acknowledging on stage that this might’ve been the end of the road for L.A. shows was opening with “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue.” Maybe opening with a goodbye song was her sly way of acknowledging the retiring elephant in the room… or maybe she just opened with a Dylan song because there are so many of them in her set that the odds favor it. “I’m throwing in Dylan songs here because they’re the best we’ve got,” she remarked before playing “It Ain’t Me, Babe,” the second of four from his catalog (the remaining two: “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” and “Forever Young”). Let’s hope that Dylan doesn’t look at his ex and get any ideas about ending the Never Ending Tour.

Dylan also showed up a fifth time, as an unnamed antagonist, of course, in “Diamonds and Rust” — a 1975 adult-contemporary hit still so popular among her fan base that its opening bars elicited some spontaneous “Oohs!” from the Royce audience and the appearance of a few verboten phones for attempted video captures (quickly squashed by attentive ushers). “I figure if I’m going to write one hit in my lifetime, it might as well be that one,” Baez said upon song’s completion. It’s remarkable how much of an outlier it remains in her catalog, which has tended more toward universal anthems than lost-love ballads… but when you’ve written a breakup recollection as sharp as that one, maybe a mic drop is in order.

Five of the songs came from her March release, “Whistle Down the Wind,” recorded with the most sensitive producer a performer of her generation and sensibility could have found, Joe Henry. The fact that it was her first album in 10 years (following a record she’d made with another next-gen kindred spirit, Steve Earle) renders her retirement still more bittersweet, since it was the sort of thing that makes you want to wish someone is about to get back on a roll. Two of those songs are by Tom Waits , who could be her new Dylan, as another bottomless song source, if she were inclined to continue. An early highlight of her 95-minute set was Waits’ “Last Leaf,” an amusingly defiant song about a determination to go on forever… a funny but maybe not wholly inappropriate song to sing on a farewell tour. “Let’s face it,” she told the Royce crowd, “a lot of us here are the last leaves on the tree.” A song from the same recent album that stood in contrast to that was the world-weary, ready-to-split “Another World,” written by Anohni of Antony and the Johnsons, which Baez described as“a dark, dark song, as beautiful as it is dark. And it expresses exactly how I feel.”

Along those same troubled-time lines, probably the most topical song of the night was Stephen Foster’s 165-year-old “Hard Times Come Again No More,” a sort of secular gospel classic that might have put the audience in mind of current politics or just the current fire season. Baez did address the devastating California fires in a sort of essay or poem she said she’d written that afternoon, in which she expressed concern not just for the human toll but also “birds, bugs, insects, the smallest of things.” She added, “We must be the fire brigade now… Now is the time to love.” She and her band and crew appeared between encores to take a knee and lock arms on stage while Jimi Hendrix’s version of “The Star-Spangled Banner” played over the PA. But there was more charity than defiance in her when, at the end of her final encore, “Swing Low, Sweet Chariot,” she sang the wish that a saving chariot would swoop down “for me, for you… even Donald.”

Said band was a tiny but mighty one. “Please welcome my Big Band-mates,” she quipped after playing the first couple of numbers solo, and the ensemble quickly revealed itself as something not too likely to get in her way: just the trio of Dirk Powell on every instrument imaginable from piano to banjo, son Gabriel Harris on beating-on-a-box solos and other percussion, and, occasionally, backup vocalist and duet partner Grace Stumberg. (A woman identified as Grace Jr. was Baez’s constantly acoustic guitar-switching roadie, maintaining the all-in-the-family feel.) Their support made for the loveliest additions to the severe intimacy, whether they were on their feet or on their knees.

When one of popular music’s most famously piercing sopranos is two months shy of 78, maybe the question people want answered in the first paragraph instead of the seventh is: How’d she sound? The short answer is: damn good, if, obviously, not an exact replica of all that vintage Newport Folk Festival footage. The best way of putting it might be that she used to be so otherworldly as to sound like an alien, and now she sounds like an extremely talented and assured mortal human being, which is actually not a bad transition to have made at all. The “Whistle Down the Wind” album emphasized the middle registers that Baez is most comfortable in now. But in concert, although Stumberg’s handful of duet parts were clearly there to help a little with the heavy lifting, Baez does still go into a fair amount of those high parts of yore, and with confidence. Her controlled melisma on the final syllables of “House of the Rising Sun” were a marvel, and she did not resist reprising the parts of Dylan’s “Hard Rain” that unofficially constitute a yodel. And she took on “Darling Corey” with stillhouse-demolishing efficiency.

Was this CAP UCLA presentation really her L.A. swan song, or might she be back for an encore in a venue that doesn’t so easily sell out and leave Woodstock generation types learning how to use StubHub for the first time? Her lack of sentimentality in neglecting to say anything about leaving the stage at all seemed to suggest that maybe this wasn’t really it… or maybe it just suggested, you know, a lack of sentimentality. But if she does add onto the tour with some bigger blowouts, it’s hard to imagine who wouldn’t want to come to that. Even Donald.

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does joan baez tour

Folk musician Joan Baez on the new documentary 'Joan Baez I Am A Noise'

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

The opening moments of a new documentary film show an artist with one of the most extraordinary voices of all time working with a vocal coach to get through a farewell tour.

(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "JOAN BAEZ I AM A NOISE")

JOAN BAEZ: (Vocalizing).

UNIDENTIFIED VOCAL COACH: How's that feeling?

BAEZ: I have to just - to - knocking the vibrato out of some of these...

UNIDENTIFIED VOCAL COACH: Yeah.

BAEZ: ...Give me a little longer time with them. (Vocalizing).

SIMON: The film uses that 2018 tour by Joan Baez to also bring us along on a journey through her life in the public eye since she was a teen. Her publicized loves and - what do they call them now? - uncouplings and her uncovering of what she calls a kernel in her childhood that she needed to crack. "Joan Baez I Am A Noise," directed by Karen O'Connor, Miri Navasky and Maeve O'Boyle. Joan Baez herself joins us now from California. Thanks so much for being with us.

BAEZ: It's so my pleasure. Thank you.

SIMON: This film is searingly and, I bet at times, uncomfortably personal. Why did you want to do it?

BAEZ: A number of reasons. I wanted to leave an honest legacy of myself, and I trusted - Karen O'Connor has been a friend of mine for years, so I knew where to put my trust, and I was right in doing so. I think mainly wanting to be honest and straightforward because - you know why? 'Cause I got nothing to lose now.

SIMON: As we noted, you have been famous since you were a teenager.

THEO BIKEL: Very rarely does it happen that a performer emerges...

SIMON: Theo Bikel...

BIKEL: ...That is a beautiful...

SIMON: ...Introduced you.

BIKEL: ...Human being as well as a great singer and musician. Such a one is Joan Baez.

SIMON: Newport Folk Festival.

BAEZ: I just sing when I feel like singing, feels sort of like exploding. So I'll explode. (Singing in French).

SIMON: There's film of you in your childhood, your sisters, Pauline and Mimi. There you are, vibrant young daughters of a distinguished physicist and devoted mother, happy, smiling. What do the films not show?

BAEZ: Well, they show that side that's real as well. But what I uncovered after so many years of this - mysterious interruptions in my life of anxiety, panic attacks, etc. I've been to therapist for years who helped me live with it and get around it and make it a little better. And then I thought, you know, this is something that it's - there's something in there I need to get to. And my sister Mimi just called one day and said, you know, I think something terrible happened in our childhood. Do you want to look into it the way I will in therapy? And eventually I said yes. And we both discovered some very deep trauma from childhood. And we were - our bodies and brains were reacting to that our whole lives without our knowing it because it was all unconscious, subconscious.

SIMON: I don't want to be oblique about this - inappropriate behavior, abuse.

BAEZ: Yeah - abuse, trauma.

SIMON: Your father said it never happened.

BAEZ: Yeah. And I believe with all my heart that he and my mom have no memory of it at all. The mind is an extraordinary thing to have blocking something out if you really don't want to deal with it. I mean, I had blocked it out for 50 years. And then the journey was really quite something. And how do you forgive, and how do you - you know, how much do you believe? How much do you blame other people? And all of this is an attempt to get better so that I'll have a life - you know? - a really whole life rather than fragmented. And the fragments came as - you know, I was diagnosed with multiple personalities. And so through them - as each little entity inside you holds a memory or memories - when they're allowed to come up to consciousness or to come up for air, they really do explain to you what their trauma was, which means it was mine, and they carried it for me.

SIMON: There's a phrase that stayed with me, and forgive me if I get it as a paraphrase, but you say you weren't very good at one-on-one relationships but very good at one on 2,000.

BAEZ: Trying to deal with intimacy and my incapability of really having an intimate relation with somebody for more than a week, you know? And I always thought that I could and I would; and this time it would be better; and this time I would react to somebody positively for a long, long time. And I couldn't. And I mean, it's clearer now that when your trust is blasted apart when you're little, it's very difficult to learn to trust later in life. Safe enough behind the guitar, singing with 2,000 people, very comfortable. I mean, not really intimate, so I'm kind of kidding. But it was way easier for me than it was trying to have something real with another person.

BAEZ: I tell you what I'll do. I'll do Bobby Dylan singing Joan Baez, OK?

BAEZ: OK. (Impersonating Bob Dylan, singing) Word is to the kitchen gone.

SIMON: Can I ask about Bob Dylan? I'm not going to beat around the bush.

BAEZ: Sure you can (laughter).

SIMON: All right.

BAEZ: You ask whatever you want. Yeah. I think probably Dylan broke my heart 'cause it was so shattering and it having been such a huge thing. You know, it was huge. The music was huge, the politics, the - you know, the closeness, when we had it. I think that's fair enough to say.

SIMON: You were both young, early in your careers. I admire, revere Bob Dylan as a genius. But what we see of him with you, it's just hard to like him.

BAEZ: Oh. Yeah. You know, for my own self, when I looked at that footage, the first thing I thought was, we still both had our baby fat when all this stuff was going on. We were really young. I don't know what was going on in his mind. And I spent, you know, many, many years being ticked off and resenting and all that stuff. And then one day I was painting his portrait, Dylan as a young boy, young man, and I put his music on, and I wept for about 24 hours in gratitude that what I did get from him and how extraordinary in those years and the songs. And I have not had one iota of resentment since that little epiphany, happy to say.

BAEZ: (Impersonating Bob Dylan, singing) A lover for your life and nothing more. But it ain't me, babe. No, no, no, it ain't me, babe. It ain't me you're looking for, babe.

SIMON: Joan, may I ask, are you happy now?

BAEZ: You know, somebody said the other day, what's the best decade of your life? And I said, this one, bang, like that. Yes. I have a piece in here that I wouldn't - you know, I couldn't have for decades and has developed over the last few years to be even more so. And with that, this massive creativity since I quit touring has come out in every other way. So, yes, I am quite happy now.

BAEZ: (Singing) Oh, fare thee well. I must be gone and leave you for a while.

SIMON: I have to ask you about one more thing.

BAEZ: Sure.

SIMON: There's an entry you made, I think, in a notebook when you were 13. It says, someday I intend to be like Gandhi.

BAEZ: (Laughter).

SIMON: Gandhi, an important figure to you, given your activism, your commitment in nonviolence. Joan, Mahatma Gandhi, God bless him, couldn't carry a tune.

BAEZ: (Laughter) He carried his own tune, and millions of people heard it.

SIMON: (Laughter) Oh, you one-up me there.

BAEZ: Oh, good.

SIMON: I thought I was being so clever.

BAEZ: Well, you were. I was just more clever than you were in (audible).

SIMON: Joan Baez, though I probably don't need to say that. She is the star of the new documentary, "Joan Baez I Am A Noise." Thank you so much for being with us.

BAEZ: Oh, thank you, Scott. Such a joy to talk to you.

BAEZ: (Singing) And you'll... Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

does joan baez tour

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Joan Baez in 2019

Joan Baez: ‘I talk to trees to get answers. They give it to you cold turkey’

As a documentary of her life is released, the folk singer answers your questions on spirituality, competing with Joni Mitchell and running around naked at Burning Man

I’ve met you lots of times backstage after concerts and have always been struck by how warm, friendly and open you are with your fans. Do you have any stand out memories of meeting fans – either beautiful and moving or funny and bizarre? KevinFillis I’m sure I do. You’ll need to give me a bit to think about it over a 60-year period … I remember the British audiences seemed so restrained. One night in Leeds, I said something awful like: “Is everybody out there alive?” They just couldn’t express themselves. So I didn’t know where to go next, except to be rude, I guess.

Has confidence ever been a problem for you throughout your career ? ToTheIsland The confidence in my own voice has never flagged. I can say that because it’s not of my inventing: it’s of my maintenance and delivery. When I went through periods where the career was really off the rails, I lost confidence and felt confused, I think like anybody.

In my junior high school yearbook, it said: “Joanie Baez, she’s going to be a cartoonist.” I did sketches and caricatures of Jimmy Dean and the opera types that my mom liked – like Jussi Björling, the Swedish opera singer – and of my friends at school, and sold them for $5. So I had other avenues I could have taken, but I don’t think I ever thought: “I better start doing cartoons or selling bathing suits.” The singing part was assumed.

Joan Baez and Bob Dylan performing at the Newport folk festival circa 1964

If you could speak to your younger self, what would you tell her? AbbyDormer Take it easy. Take a break. Relax a little.

Joan, what do you think was the biggest success and failure of the hippy generation? Kieran123 I was thinking the other day about Burning Man . We all make fun of it. Not all, but the outsiders. It’s a community. It can’t be knocked for that. You do go there with something to give somebody else. In some ways, the hippy movement created a community for a lot of lost souls. I think our failures were outstripped by the good stuff. Nobody back then could have possibly written what scenario we’re going through today.

Burning Man is unlike anything I’ve ever seen. I went with a couple of friends, maybe 10, 12 years ago. You have the uptight stuff. It’s boiling out there and you have to bring your own water, so you think: “That’s not going to work for me.” When you get there, everybody is running after the water truck. So I covered my head so nobody could see who it was and ran around with no clothes on, which worked well for me. Glastonbury [Baez played in 2008] was equally wonderful. It’s the same feeling, especially if it’s muddy out. Everybody has to be kind to the tent next to them. Even at Woodstock, I had three meals a day and a comfortable place to stay.

Baez marching with James Baldwin and James Forman, from the documentary Joan Baez I Am a Noise.

Do you believe in God? Arsnotoria I think so. I tend more towards Buddhist and Native American thought. For me, the spirits are quite real. I talk to trees. I haven’t had a therapist now in 20 years. I literally talk to the trees to get answers.

If you’re still and open, this one tree will tell me what I don’t want to hear. You can ask the right person, they’ll tell you exactly what you want to hear. But these trees give it to you cold turkey. My life is out with the trees and the little creek at the bottom of my hill. I spend hours in that place just being with nature. If something blocks my passage and I can’t get a grip, I’ll ask direct questions like: “I want to understand what’s happening, can you help me?” And other times I say: “I don’t care what’s happening, just make me feel better.”

Is it true that you did such a great Dylan impersonation in the 60s that you could fool people over the phone? PeteTheBeat Yes. It was his early voice. I don’t do the older voice.

What are your views on today’s politics? GlenStrc How long have you got? It could be a very long answer. It could just be: we’re fucked. That’s pretty succinct. I don’t know how the Brits will react to that, but it’s so awful. All the bullying and hatred has been spreading like wildfire, and we are the main source here. That, plus global warming, doesn’t look very hopeful. I’ve called myself a pessimist all my life, but recently somebody said they thought pessimism was a waste of time and hope was a practice that doesn’t just happen naturally. If I want to be hopeful, I have to find ways and reasons to be hopeful.

Do you have your own universal recipe for saving the world? Dmitry_S Saving the world? Even when I was really young and sang We Shall Overcome, I wasn’t kidding myself. I didn’t think that was going to happen in my lifetime – little victories, big defeats. Especially now, a little victory means a great deal. Any little group you belong to that takes a step in the direction of decency and organises around it, that’s a big deal.

How did your new documentary come about? Rasbperrypi Two friends of mine are both directors. We’d talked about maybe doing this thing. When I was talking about doing a final tour, we decided we would start filming, not knowing whether it would be the last tour or not. I gave the directors a key to my storage unit. I thought there would probably be old lampshades and stuff, but it was a trove. My mother kept every letter I ever wrote, every letter my sisters wrote. My father filmed us with a Super 8 camera since I was three. I had no idea she had kept all this. It was the directors’ good fortune, but also their curse because it was just too much. But they did an amazing job. I wanted to make an honest legacy. It includes childhood trauma, tapes from sessions with therapists where I was doing a deep dive into how my growing-up process had been altered until I was around 50. I’ve certainly changed physically. I wish I still had eyelashes like that!

Of the competitive nature of women in music in the 60s and 70s, Joni Mitchell once suggested: “ Joan Baez would have broken my leg if she could .” Did you feel this combative tension at the time? McScootikins I’m absolutely delighted that Joni Mitchell is back on stage. I wasn’t close with her. She wasn’t somebody I spent a lot of time with. Did I see her as competition? You know, it’s worse than that. I never thought I had any competition. I knew I wanted to be top of the heap no matter what. I knew nobody else had a voice like mine. But I didn’t write songs. I didn’t do the stuff Joni was doing early on. I’ve been able to call her at least a couple of times to tell her how much I appreciate her paintings. I was looking on an aeroplane at an in-flight magazine. I thought it was an impressionist I’d missed. There were four or five paintings and they were Joni’s. I went home and called her. I said they made me cry.

That smile! It is sheer happiness. How come you look so good, Joan? You are absolutely as beautiful today as you were in the 60s when I saw you. As a creaky 72-year-old woman, I am not looking in the mirror again today! LucyLockett Ha! That’s not fair. Look in the mirror and deal with it! I made a decision not to go with all the facelifting. It was not an easy decision because everybody does it. I get these lines here and here … It’ll just bite you in the ass at some point. However, Mimi, my sister, had a remedy for a facelift. It goes like this … [Gently hits under chin with fingers] “No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no!” What I see when I look in the mirror has changed in the last couple of years at alarming speed. Things start going wrong, going south, you know; the aches and pains. This ageing stuff is not for the faint-hearted, for sure.

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Lifestyle | joan baez is back on tour — this time with a book of her drawings.

Joan Baez speaks about her book of upside-down drawings, "Am I Pretty When I Fly?" at Jack Kerouac Alley beside City Lights bookstore in San Francisco.

She may have retired from active performing, but Joan Baez has hardly been out of the spotlight.

Since she stopped touring and recording in 2019, bringing the curtain down on a 60-year singing career, the 82-year-old folk music icon and social justice activist has fashioned a second career as a visual artist.

She’s had two exhibits of “ Mischief Makers, ” acrylic portraits of inspirational figures like Martin Luther King Jr., Greta Thunberg and Nelson Mandela. And last week marked the publication of a new book of her upside-down drawings, “Am I Pretty When I Fly?” (Godine, $45)

She is also the subject of a critically acclaimed new documentary, “Joan Baez I Am a Noise,” which is screening at 5 p.m. Tuesday at San Francisco’s Castro Theatre as part of the San Francisco International Film Festival.

In the interest of full disclosure, I should say that Baez and I have been friends for 25 years, beginning when I was the romantic partner of her younger sister, Mimi Fariña, founder of Marin’s Bread & Roses, who died of cancer in 2001. My wife, Donna Seager Liberatore, co-owner of Seager Gray Gallery in Mill Valley, represents Baez’s work as a fine art portrait painter.

One chilly San Francisco evening last week, I was honored to be part of the launch of her book tour, interviewing her in Jack Kerouac Alley beside City Lights bookstore, the historic North Beach shop founded by the late beat poet Lawrence Ferlinghetti.

does joan baez tour

The alley was packed with what must have been a couple hundred adoring fans, and they weren’t all boomers and ‘60s generation survivors. One 21-year-old college student traveled all the way from Washington state just to see Baez at this event. In a Q&A session after our interview, the young woman was literally quivering with nervous excitement when she asked Baez what life advice she would give someone like her who was just starting out.

“Your heart will tell you, if you listen, where you should go and what you should do and for whom,” Baez told her. “Just be true to yourself.”

A little explanation of upside-down drawing: I first saw Baez do it years ago when she was still performing. One day, I happened to be there when she pulled out piece of paper and a pen and began drawing a clever, cartoonish image upside-down. She’s right-handed, but in this instance she was drawing with her left hand, making the whole thing even more strange and mysterious to me. For this book, she drew with both her left and right hands, but always upside-down. I’m as astonished by it now as I was then.

“I started drawing when I was little,” she explained in our alley interview. “It was my way to prepare myself before I picked up the guitar and began singing. When I’m painting portraits, I want it to look like the person I’m painting. But this upside-down drawing is so freeing. Sometimes I’ll have an idea of what I’m doing when I start, sometimes I don’t. And the extraordinary thing for me is that I don’t really know what’s happening until I turn the drawing right side up and it tells me something, a joke or a phrase or a pun. Then, I turn the drawing upside-down again and write that out — backwards. It’s as interesting for me as it might be for anybody else. And I don’t take much credit for it. It’s the same as the singing. It’s some kind of gift. It’s channeling from somewhere. I don’t know where.”

does joan baez tour

A type of magic

She acknowledges that there surely is a neurological explanation for this peculiar talent, something to do with the left and right brain. But she couldn’t care less. She compares it to the time a magician friend offered to show her how he did a trick.

“I said, ‘No, I don’t want to know,’” she recalled. “The magic would have been gone.”

When she was growing up, her physicist father moved his family around a lot as he advanced in his career. So Baez was always “the new girl, different, brown, odd,” as she puts it in her introduction. Consequently, she felt like an outsider and hated school. Her favorite drawing, “Middle School,” is of a teenage girl cowering as a bird pecks at her head and her books go flying.

“It’s the chaos of being a certain age and going to a new place, and to me it was terrifying,” she said. “The ‘Middle School’ drawing reflects that shattered, lost, confused, wild, unhappy scene, which is also kind of beautiful to look at.”

Just as the book is divided into categories, our alley conversation was wide ranging, covering various stages in her life and career.

"It's the same as the singing. It's some kind of gift. It's channeling from somewhere. I don't know where," says Joan Baez of her upside-down drawings. (Photo by Dana Tynan)

Her youthful love affair with Bob Dylan came up at one point. It turns out that painting his portrait helped heal the pain and hurt she had long held inside over their public breakup.

“When I was doing the acrylic portraits for ‘Mischief Makers,’ I painted Bob when he was really young,” she said. “He still had baby fat. He was like 20. Both of us were still so young. As I was painting, I put his music on and started to cry. All the resentment and the b.s. that had gone on before was absolutely drained away, so I wrote him and told him so. I didn’t include a return address because I didn’t want or expect something back. I said, ‘I’m sorry I wanted so much of you. I wanted you to be political and you weren’t.’ I was able to say that I’m sorry that I was tugging so hard at you and how grateful and thankful I am that I was there in those years that you wrote those songs and that we were friends.”

Asked by someone in the crowd to name her favorite artists to sing with during her career, she listed her sister, Mimi, first (“We knew each other our whole lives and had the same phrasing”) followed by Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt and Dylan.

“Bob had absolutely impossible phrasing which, he would change every night just to screw you up,” she said and laughed. “It was a challenge but he was brilliant.”

After our interview, Baez left the next day for Nashville, where she was in conversation with her friend Emmylou Harris. From there, it was on to New York for an interview with filmmaker Michael Moore and an appearance this week on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”

On the flight from Nashville to New York, she happened to be on the same plane as Justin Jones, one of the two young Black Democrats expelled from the Tennessee legislature by a Republican super majority for leading a gun violence protest on the house floor.

When you get off the plane with the legendary Joan Baez you know it’s a movement of the spirit. She stands with us in our struggle in Tennessee and said she’s hopeful to see young voices leading. “WE SHALL OVERCOME…” Serendipitous, indeed. pic.twitter.com/f4bj5akUte — Rep. Justin Jones (@brotherjones_) April 9, 2023

A video of Baez and Jones singing “We Shall Overcome” in the Newark Airport had 1.3 million views on Twitter earlier this week. Shortly after that video was posted, Jones was reinstated. He was sworn back into his seat on Monday.

“When you get off the plane with the legendary Joan Baez, you know it’s a movement of the spirit,” he wrote. “She stands with us in our struggle in Tennessee and said she’s hopeful to see young voices leading.”

Contact Paul Liberatore at [email protected]

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Joan Baez Extends Farewell Tour

By Jon Blistein

Jon Blistein

Joan Baez  announced she’s extending her  “Fare Thee Well” tour with an additional North American leg set to launch spring 2019.

The new run starts with a previously-announced show April 10th at the Alys Stephens Performing Arts Center in Birmingham, Alabama, then continues April 12th at Symphony Hall in Atlanta, Georgia. Baez will travel around the South and Midwest, before heading North for a final string of concerts, culminating with two nights at the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, New York, May 3rd and 5th.

Tickets for most of the shows on Baez’s spring trek go on sale July 20th, though complete information is available on her website .

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Baez will launch the first leg of her Fare Thee Well tour September 11th in Ithaca, New York. The trek wraps November 17th in Oakland, California, with a European leg scheduled to start in February 2019.

In March, Baez released a new studio album, Whistle Down the Wind , which marked her first since 2008’s Day After Tomorrow . In an interview with Rolling Stone , the folk legend said the new LP captures her mindset after she decided to retire from the road. “The direction this album went is that [2018] is going to be my last year of formal touring, and so there was a feeling, maybe not even spoken, but there was a strong feeling that it’s time to move on,” she said.

Joan Baez Tour Dates

April 10 – Birmingham, AL @ Alys Stephens Performing Arts Center April 12 – Atlanta, GA @ Atlanta Symphony Hall April 13 – Mobile, AL @ The Saenger Theatre April 16 – San Antonio, TX @ The Tobin Center for the Performing Arts April 17 – Austin, TX @ Paramount Theatre April 19 – Dallas, TX @ Strauss Square April 20 – Fayetteville, AR @ Walton Arts Center April 22 – St Louis, MO @ The Pageant April 23 – Knoxville, TN @ Tennessee Theatre April 25 – Newport News, VA @ Ferguson Concert Hall April 26 – Washington, DC @ Warner Theatre May 1 – New York, NY @ Beacon Theatre May 3 – Port Chester, NY @ Capitol Theater May 5 – Port Chester, NY @ Capitol Theater

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Movie Interviews

Folk musician joan baez on the new documentary 'joan baez i am a noise'.

SSimon

Scott Simon

Folk musician Joan Baez was in the public eye for years, but a new documentary reveals the mental health issues she dealt with privately. NPR's Scott Simon asks Baez about the film.

SCOTT SIMON, HOST:

The opening moments of a new documentary film show an artist with one of the most extraordinary voices of all time working with a vocal coach to get through a farewell tour.

(SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "JOAN BAEZ I AM A NOISE")

JOAN BAEZ: (Vocalizing).

UNIDENTIFIED VOCAL COACH: How's that feeling?

BAEZ: I have to just - to - knocking the vibrato out of some of these...

UNIDENTIFIED VOCAL COACH: Yeah.

BAEZ: ...Give me a little longer time with them. (Vocalizing).

SIMON: The film uses that 2018 tour by Joan Baez to also bring us along on a journey through her life in the public eye since she was a teen. Her publicized loves and - what do they call them now? - uncouplings and her uncovering of what she calls a kernel in her childhood that she needed to crack. "Joan Baez I Am A Noise," directed by Karen O'Connor, Miri Navasky and Maeve O'Boyle. Joan Baez herself joins us now from California. Thanks so much for being with us.

BAEZ: It's so my pleasure. Thank you.

SIMON: This film is searingly and, I bet at times, uncomfortably personal. Why did you want to do it?

BAEZ: A number of reasons. I wanted to leave an honest legacy of myself, and I trusted - Karen O'Connor has been a friend of mine for years, so I knew where to put my trust, and I was right in doing so. I think mainly wanting to be honest and straightforward because - you know why? 'Cause I got nothing to lose now.

SIMON: As we noted, you have been famous since you were a teenager.

THEO BIKEL: Very rarely does it happen that a performer emerges...

SIMON: Theo Bikel...

BIKEL: ...That is a beautiful...

SIMON: ...Introduced you.

BIKEL: ...Human being as well as a great singer and musician. Such a one is Joan Baez.

SIMON: Newport Folk Festival.

BAEZ: I just sing when I feel like singing, feels sort of like exploding. So I'll explode. (Singing in French).

SIMON: There's film of you in your childhood, your sisters, Pauline and Mimi. There you are, vibrant young daughters of a distinguished physicist and devoted mother, happy, smiling. What do the films not show?

BAEZ: Well, they show that side that's real as well. But what I uncovered after so many years of this - mysterious interruptions in my life of anxiety, panic attacks, etc. I've been to therapist for years who helped me live with it and get around it and make it a little better. And then I thought, you know, this is something that it's - there's something in there I need to get to. And my sister Mimi just called one day and said, you know, I think something terrible happened in our childhood. Do you want to look into it the way I will in therapy? And eventually I said yes. And we both discovered some very deep trauma from childhood. And we were - our bodies and brains were reacting to that our whole lives without our knowing it because it was all unconscious, subconscious.

SIMON: I don't want to be oblique about this - inappropriate behavior, abuse.

BAEZ: Yeah - abuse, trauma.

SIMON: Your father said it never happened.

BAEZ: Yeah. And I believe with all my heart that he and my mom have no memory of it at all. The mind is an extraordinary thing to have blocking something out if you really don't want to deal with it. I mean, I had blocked it out for 50 years. And then the journey was really quite something. And how do you forgive, and how do you - you know, how much do you believe? How much do you blame other people? And all of this is an attempt to get better so that I'll have a life - you know? - a really whole life rather than fragmented. And the fragments came as - you know, I was diagnosed with multiple personalities. And so through them - as each little entity inside you holds a memory or memories - when they're allowed to come up to consciousness or to come up for air, they really do explain to you what their trauma was, which means it was mine, and they carried it for me.

SIMON: There's a phrase that stayed with me, and forgive me if I get it as a paraphrase, but you say you weren't very good at one-on-one relationships but very good at one on 2,000.

BAEZ: Trying to deal with intimacy and my incapability of really having an intimate relation with somebody for more than a week, you know? And I always thought that I could and I would; and this time it would be better; and this time I would react to somebody positively for a long, long time. And I couldn't. And I mean, it's clearer now that when your trust is blasted apart when you're little, it's very difficult to learn to trust later in life. Safe enough behind the guitar, singing with 2,000 people, very comfortable. I mean, not really intimate, so I'm kind of kidding. But it was way easier for me than it was trying to have something real with another person.

BAEZ: I tell you what I'll do. I'll do Bobby Dylan singing Joan Baez, OK?

BAEZ: OK. (Impersonating Bob Dylan, singing) Word is to the kitchen gone.

SIMON: Can I ask about Bob Dylan? I'm not going to beat around the bush.

BAEZ: Sure you can (laughter).

SIMON: All right.

BAEZ: You ask whatever you want. Yeah. I think probably Dylan broke my heart 'cause it was so shattering and it having been such a huge thing. You know, it was huge. The music was huge, the politics, the - you know, the closeness, when we had it. I think that's fair enough to say.

SIMON: You were both young, early in your careers. I admire, revere Bob Dylan as a genius. But what we see of him with you, it's just hard to like him.

BAEZ: Oh. Yeah. You know, for my own self, when I looked at that footage, the first thing I thought was, we still both had our baby fat when all this stuff was going on. We were really young. I don't know what was going on in his mind. And I spent, you know, many, many years being ticked off and resenting and all that stuff. And then one day I was painting his portrait, Dylan as a young boy, young man, and I put his music on, and I wept for about 24 hours in gratitude that what I did get from him and how extraordinary in those years and the songs. And I have not had one iota of resentment since that little epiphany, happy to say.

BAEZ: (Impersonating Bob Dylan, singing) A lover for your life and nothing more. But it ain't me, babe. No, no, no, it ain't me, babe. It ain't me you're looking for, babe.

SIMON: Joan, may I ask, are you happy now?

BAEZ: You know, somebody said the other day, what's the best decade of your life? And I said, this one, bang, like that. Yes. I have a piece in here that I wouldn't - you know, I couldn't have for decades and has developed over the last few years to be even more so. And with that, this massive creativity since I quit touring has come out in every other way. So, yes, I am quite happy now.

BAEZ: (Singing) Oh, fare thee well. I must be gone and leave you for a while.

SIMON: I have to ask you about one more thing.

BAEZ: Sure.

SIMON: There's an entry you made, I think, in a notebook when you were 13. It says, someday I intend to be like Gandhi.

BAEZ: (Laughter).

SIMON: Gandhi, an important figure to you, given your activism, your commitment in nonviolence. Joan, Mahatma Gandhi, God bless him, couldn't carry a tune.

BAEZ: (Laughter) He carried his own tune, and millions of people heard it.

SIMON: (Laughter) Oh, you one-up me there.

BAEZ: Oh, good.

SIMON: I thought I was being so clever.

BAEZ: Well, you were. I was just more clever than you were in (audible).

SIMON: Joan Baez, though I probably don't need to say that. She is the star of the new documentary, "Joan Baez I Am A Noise." Thank you so much for being with us.

BAEZ: Oh, thank you, Scott. Such a joy to talk to you.

BAEZ: (Singing) And you'll...

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does joan baez tour

Joan Baez announces title and release date for first poetry collection

Folk singer Joan Baez has confirmed her debut poetry collection’s title and release date. 

“ When You See My Mother, Ask Her to Dance ,” published by Godine, is scheduled to hit shelves on April 30, marking the first time the 83-year-old artist, activist and Rock & Roll Hall of Fame musician has shared her poetry with the public.

Baez, a longtime Woodside resident, has been writing poetry for decades, according to the publication announcement, as “poems about her life, her family, about her passions for nature and art, have piled up in notebooks and on scraps of paper.”

It adds that the book has a diary-like feel, providing Baez’s reflections on her contemporaries, her childhood, family memories, places she has visited, and her younger sister, singer-songwriter Mimi Fariña , who died in 2001.

Among the luminaries whose endorsements will appear on the book jacket is Bernie Taupin, Elton John’s co-songwriter. 

“Her words can be both poignantly executed and captivating in a colorful closeness that pin-points the chinks in our armor that mirror all facets of the world we inhabit,” he wrote. “A national treasure she is indeed.”

In 2023, Baez offered a candid retrospective of her six-decade music career with the documentary “ I Am a Noise, ” released by Magnolia Pictures. The film, which chronicles Baez’s final tour in 2019 , reveals her ongoing struggles with anxiety and stage fright, using archival materials such as home movies, diaries, artwork, therapy tapes and audio recordings to revisit key moments in her life.

Baez also published a book of her drawings, “Am I Pretty When I Fly? : An Album of Upside Down Drawings,” also on Godine. In an interview with the Chronicle, she said her artistic outlets could “calm the buzzing heat of a panic attack.” 

This year, Monica Barbaro , who grew up in Mill Valley, will portray Baez in the new Bob Dylan biopic “ A Complete Unknown ,” which stars Timothée Chalamet as the elusive singer-songwriter and Baez’s onetime romantic partner.

Reach Aidin Vaziri: [email protected]

San Francisco

IMAGES

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  2. Joan Baez takes Fare Thee Well concert tour to S.F. Bay Area

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COMMENTS

  1. Tour Schedule

    15 - Raleigh, North Carolina (Walnut Creek - Newport Tour) 16 - Columbia, Maryland (Merriweather Post Pavilion - Newport Tour) 18 - Cleveland Heights, Ohio (Cain Park) 20 - Columbus, Ohio (Polaris Amphitheater - Newport Tour) 21 - Tinley Park, Illinois (World Music Theater - Newport Tour) 22 - Clarkston, Michigan (Pine Knob Music Theater ...

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    Rating: 5 out of 5 Wonderful concert and so needed these days. Transcendent by Sense Wonder on 4/28/19 Tennessee Theatre - Knoxville. Joan Baez concert April 2019: Every single moment was exquisite. I appreciate Joan's wisdom, experience, love for earth, people, peace, the environment, collaboration among peoples of the world.

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    Joan Baez Tours & Concerts (Updated for 2024) Date. Concert. Venue. Location. Feb 26, 2024. Tibet House 2024. Laurie Anderson / Joan Baez / Gogol Bordello / Maggie Rogers / Maya Hawke / Tenzin Choegyal / Christian Lee Hutson / Bowen Yang / Jlin / Philip Glass Ensemble / The Scorchio Quartet / The Patti Smith Band. Photos Setlists.

  7. Joan Baez Tour Announcements 2023 & 2024, Notifications, Dates

    Find information on all of Joan Baez's upcoming concerts, tour dates and ticket information for 2023-2024. Unfortunately there are no concert dates for Joan Baez scheduled in 2023. Songkick is the first to know of new tour announcements and concert information, so if your favorite artists are not currently on tour, join Songkick to track Joan ...

  8. Joan Baez Announces Her Final North American Tour

    Joan Baez announced a new run of concerts in the U.S. and Canada, part of her final round of "formal touring." The North American trek, which follows a stretch of U.K. and European dates in ...

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    Joan Baez played her last New York City show last night, May 1, with an emotional performance at the Beacon Theatre as part of the Tribeca Film Festival. Since her breakthrough into the music scene in 1959, Baez has become one of folk music's most iconic members. Releasing over 30 albums and performing for over 60 years, her career has had many ...

  10. Concert Review: Joan Baez's Farewell Tour Leaves 'Em Wanting More

    But in concert, although Stumberg's handful of duet parts were clearly there to help a little with the heavy lifting, Baez does still go into a fair amount of those high parts of yore, and with ...

  11. Review: Joan Baez masters the art of the farewell concert

    After nearly 60 years on the frontlines, folk matriarch Joan Baez, 77, is on a farewell tour. At UCLA's Royce Hall on Saturday, Baez said goodbye with a performance that captured her in her prime.

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  16. Folk musician Joan Baez on the new documentary 'Joan Baez I Am A Noise

    Folk musician Joan Baez on the new documentary 'Joan Baez I Am A Noise'. SCOTT SIMON, HOST: The opening moments of a new documentary film show an artist with one of the most extraordinary voices of all time working with a vocal coach to get through a farewell tour. (SOUNDBITE OF FILM, "JOAN BAEZ I AM A NOISE") JOAN BAEZ: (Vocalizing).

  17. Joan Baez: 'I talk to trees to get answers. They give it to you cold

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  19. Joan Baez

    Joan Chandos Baez (/ b aɪ z / BYZE, Spanish:; born January 9, 1941) is an American singer, songwriter, musician, and activist. Her contemporary folk music often includes songs of protest and social justice. Baez has performed publicly for over 60 years, releasing more than 30 albums. Baez is generally regarded as a folk singer, but her music has diversified since the counterculture era of the ...

  20. American folk legend Joan Baez announces farewell tour

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  22. Folk musician Joan Baez on the new documentary 'Joan Baez I Am A ...

    Folk musician Joan Baez was in the public eye for years, but a new documentary reveals the mental health issues she dealt with privately. ... The film uses that 2018 tour by Joan Baez to also ...

  23. Joan Baez announces title and release date for first poetry ...

    Joan Baez announces title and release date for first poetry collection. ... The film, which chronicles Baez's final tour in 2019, reveals her ongoing struggles with anxiety and stage fright, ...