The final of three Rough and Rowdy Ways tour dates in Brussels, Belgium, saw Bob Dylan play another unchanged setlist.

The veteran performer has kept his seventeen-song set identical across the European tour so far, but swapped out a few of the classic tracks from the Outlaw Music Festival tour. Dylan started off the Rough and Rowdy Ways European tour earlier this month in Helsinki, Finland, and will perform across Europe and the United Kingdom. The tour will conclude in Dublin, Ireland, later next month. Dylan’s previous shows in Europe had him perform almost all of his 2020 album, along with a few reimagined takes on some of his classic songs. All Along the Watchtower, a staple of Dylan’s previous Rough and Rowdy Ways tour, as well as the Outlaw Music Festival, has been dropped from the setlist.

Classics like When I Paint My Masterpiece and It Ain’t Me, Babe remain in the setlist and featured on the setlist at the Palais des Beaux-Arts in Brussels, Belgium. A full setlist for the show can be found below.

I’ll Be Your Baby Tonight

It Ain’t Me, Babe

I Contain Multitudes

False Prophet

When I Paint My Masterpiece

Black Rider

My Own Version of You

To Be Alone With You

Crossing the Rubicon

Desolation Row

Key West (Philosopher Pirate)

Watching the River Flow

It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue

I’ve Made Up My Mind to Give Myself to You

Mother of Muses

Goodbye Jimmy Reed

Every Grain of Sand

The show comes nearly a year after Dylan performed in Europe on the Rough and Rowdy Ways tour. Rough and Rowdy Ways celebrated its fifth anniversary earlier this year. Dylan has performed all songs from the album, except for Murder Most Foul, extensively since 2021. The album was recorded in “last-minute” fashion according to drummer Matt Chamberlain, who explained Dylan’s style when making the album.

Chamberlain said: “Yeah, well the Dylan thing is, the tour was very last-minute. I played for a couple of days, and he wanted me to tour, literally, it was like a three-day window, and he asked me to hop on this tour.

“So we did like six weeks and got back, and then after the first year, we started his record, and that was an education because he’s so last-minute, in-the-moment about the way he makes his records.

“It’s almost like playing with a poet jazz musician because he’s just always changing it up; anything can happen at any time, things can just get trashed, and we’ll do a whole new version of a song. He’s amazing. He’s Bob Dylan, so…”

Though it may seem daunting to play along with Dylan and find the right groove, Chamberlain suggested it was “pretty fun” to experience. Rough and Rowdy Ways would mark another critically acclaimed release from Dylan, and his first release of original music since the release of Tempest.

Chamberlain added: “Pretty much, yeah. He might have like a reference point for a groove or a feel, and then we’ll just kind of jam on that.

“And then he’ll start trying to sing over it, and then he’ll get on the piano and add some extra chords, and we’ll kind of work out the arrangement

Related