Thanks for the various "welcomes"; it is appreciated.
My point on stage-rushing was that, whereas MK fans tend to wait until a particular point is the show before dashing to the front, Dylan fans seek to make the move from the very start of DYlan's performance (and often succeed).
For many of the shows on the coming tour, the GA-standing arrangements will render my comments invalid anyway but, for the seated venues, it will be interesting to see what happens.
I do not wish to foster discord here but please bear with me. By and large, I have preferred the NHB and MK (solo) concerts to the DS concerts that I have attended. Why, I wondered. My conclusion is that I don't much go for what I might call stadium rock. It isn't just Mark for me. I have attended and enjoyed a solo Springsteen concert and one of his Seeger Sessions dates but have never felt impelled to go to one of his "standard" shows. Similarly, I attended several early Pink Floyd shows in the late-1960s (at a college dance, at The Roundouse and "Games For May" at the Queen Elizabeth Hall) but just lost interest in their music thereafter. I suspect that I'm not the only Bob Dylan fan so minded. On the other hand, many Mark Knopfler fans seem to get more animated during the DS material. Certainly, at the MK solo concerts that I have attended, it is the DS material that gets the most immediate crowd response and, at The Straits concert at the Royal Albert Hall earlier this year, audience reaction clearly showed the attraction of the "old-style" DS performance. I should add that I am not entirely against songs from the DS era. For example, I first heard R&J on a folk music radio programme (!), was much struck by it and have rarely not enjoyed it in concert. On the other hand, that long "Calling Elvis" intro to those early 1990s DS shows used to cause me a touch of dread - I couldn't wait for it to finish. And I found the shorter "Speedway" on the last MK tour much more focussed than the longer version on the tour before last. But that's just me. I can't speak for other Dylan fans.