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Bob Dylan “Street Legel” (1978)

“Street Legal” might be the most underrated album I’ve encountered yet. It contains some of the most urgent, artistically triumphant, thoroughly stellar, and endlessly ruminating poetry-music of Bob Dylan’s career. After purchasing this album, I had first considered it a guilty pleasure of mine. This is, of course, because I had read endlessly about how dismal it was. Still, there was a certain unpleasant odor about all of these reviews that had led me to cultivate my own opinions.

To begin with, the album contains perhaps four of Dylan’s major triumphs. These are “Changing of the Guards,” “No Time to Think,” “Senor (Tales of Yankee Power),” and “Where Are You Tonight?.” In my opinion, these compositions stand alongside his better appreciated classics such as “Idiot Wind,” “Desolation Row,” and “Blind Willie McTell.” In these songs, he employs surrealistic, deeply layered, and biblically allusive language to express his exasperated internal state–torn between the deterioration of his spiritualistic love for Sara, a decadent hedonism, and a vision of salvation through god’s mercy. I don’t think that Dylan was ever more mentally agile and artistically focused then on “Street Legal’s” recordings. The rest of the songs, although minor in comparison as poetry, are equally essential parts of this fluid and balanced album. Songs like “Baby Stop Crying,” and “True Love Tends to Forget” take us from the surreal, intellectual landscapes of the major songs directly into the turmoil of the character as he moves closer and closer toward the “Slow Train.” They all play out like scenes from a movie, and are successful in the same way as much of “Blood on the Tracks.”

As for the music, Dylan is performing with one of the finest ensembles of his career. The band captures the spirit of the writing wonderfully and adds to it even more richness and complexity. I also love how the Gospel sound of the background singers seems to capture the religious forces at work, while the sleazy Las Vegas feel of the horns evokes the temptations of lust and hedonism. This is a dense and demanding body of music. —Jeffrey

One comment on “Bob Dylan “Street Legel” (1978)

  1. Marty on

    I couldn’t agree more. The reviews of ‘Street Legal’ were so silly and shallow, it pained me to read them at the time. Luckily, Dylan brushed off the reviews and has kept ‘Senor’ as part of his stage repertoire for the past 30 years. I also agree that ‘No Time to Think’ should be regarded as a Dylan classic and is a woefully neglected near-masterpiece. There is a remixed version of the album that was released several years ago that better captures the dynamics of the band than the original release.

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