Bob Dylan w/ Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers
Sandstone Amphitheater
Bonner Springs, Kansas
24 July 1986

Musicians: Bob Dylan (vocal, guitar & harmonica), Tom Petty (guitar, bass), Mike Campbell (guitar), Benmont Tench (keyboards), Howie Epstein (bass, slide guitar), Stan Lynch (drums) and The Queens Of Rhythm: Carolyn Dennis, Queen Esther Marrow, Madelyn Quebec, Louise Bethune (backing vocals).
Source/Lineage: sbd (circulates incomplete)>?>CD-R>flac

Note: although the usual sources list "Thin Man" as appearing prior to "Rainy Day Women" on this incomplete sbd, this is the LB-0276 version, which circulates without it (LB-0276 has tracks 7&8 together, though).

1. Tonight Might Be My Night (?)
2. Refugee
3. Rainy Day Women Nos. 12 & 35
4. Seeing The Real You At Last
5. Across The Borderline (Cooder/Hiatt/Dickinson)
6. I And I
7. band intros
8. Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat
9. Like A Rolling Stone
10. In The Garden
11. Blowin' In The Wind
12. Shake A Hand (Joe Morris)
13. Knockin' On Heaven's Door


BobTalk

Ok, all right, we’re still just across that borderline. Cause you’re in the middle of the country here. Oh yeah, somebody asked
me backstage about the remark I said before about people being in prison for doing good things? Well, I don't know how
many people are living in prison for doing good things but ..., I was gonna dedicate that to, I'm sure there's some people in
there who have been put in there unjustly. So I dedicate it to all of them. (before I And I)

All right now, Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers are, on the keyboards, Benmont Tench. He loves it, he wants you to know
that. Mike Campbell on lead guitar. Stan Lynch on the drums. Peter Gabriel, is he sitting in tonight? Is he here tonight? Was
he sitting in tonight, I’m not sure. Was he? All right, on the bass guitar, from Kansas City, Howie Epstein. Ha-ha.
Everybody's got to be someplace. Anyway, standing over here, is the man who wrote Refugee, Tom Petty. Of course I can’t
really go on without introducing my own Heartbreakers. I’m gonna introduce my own Heartbreakers to you. That's Madelyn
Quebec and Louise Bethune. Carolyn Dennis and Queen Esther Marrow. (before Leopard-Skin Pill-Box Hat)

Thank you. Last time I was here, I think I was here about '81, '83. Uptown Theater or wherever it was, I don’t care, yeah,
Uptown Theatre right. Anyway, we played this song last time and nobody had heard it that time, it was the first time. One of
the very few times I played it. Since that time it's been recorded so a lot of people have heard it though. I’m gonna play it
again here. Besides there were some people there that night that are also in this crowd tonight and they asked me to please
play it again. (before In The Garden)

OK. One of our ..., one of America's foremost poets is out in the house tonight, I wanna introduce him, Allen Ginsberg,
wherever you are. Two hundred years from now people are gonna be reading Allen Ginsberg. "Howl". Two hundred, maybe
three hundred, maybe twenty. (after Blowin' In The Wind)

I just wanna say it does not, if, rock music, rock ‘n’ roll music reviewers here from The Kansas City Star, or The Kansas City
Times, whatever. I just wanna ask them would they check with some people on the way out, what they thought, what they saw.
Because I think that's only right now, I think that's only right because these people from the newspapers now, they get in free,
you know. So they ..., it’s ..., there’s nothing wrong with getting in free anywhere but a lot of people don't get in free. So we're
gonna talk about those people tonight. The people who gotta pay a price to get in. I know I’m one. I got to pay a heavy price.
(before Knockin’ On Heaven’s Door)