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Stockholm, Sweden
59.3247° N · 18.0697° W
Get DirectionsIn late April 1966, Bob Dylan arrived in Stockholm as part of his infamous World Tour — the gruelling, controversial run of concerts where he played acoustic sets in the first half and plugged in with the Hawks for the second, night after night facing audiences who booed the electric music that would soon define rock history. Stockholm was a stop on April 28–29, with a concert at Konserthuset.
During his time in the city, Dylan was photographed wandering the cobblestone streets of Gamla Stan — Stockholm's medieval old town — in the unhurried, slightly detached manner that characterised his public movements during that extraordinary year. He reportedly visited bookshops looking for English translations of Rimbaud, and was captured by photographers in the narrow lanes of the old city, looking both famous and somehow invisible at the same time.
Gamla Stan today is much as it looked in 1966 — the same narrow streets, the same amber-lit storefronts, the same sense of being slightly outside of time. There is no marker for Dylan's visit, but the photographs of him there circulate widely among fans, and the old town's timeless quality makes it easy to imagine him still turning a corner somewhere just ahead of you.
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