
9 Songs, 49 Minutes
EDITORS’ NOTES
The second half of the ‘70s was a renaissance period for Dylan, and Street-Legal is no exception. He brings his poetic majesty to bear for waltz-time epic “No Time to Think,” and evokes the dark underbelly of international intrigue on the moody, mysterious “Señor (Tales of Yankee Power).” But the album expertly balances head and heart—Dylan sounds downright randy on the raw, bluesy “New Pony,” and shuts down a romance with an amiable mix of tenderness and finality on “We Better Talk This Over.”
TITLE | TIME | ||
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Changing of the Guards
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New Pony
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No Time to Think
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Baby, Stop Crying
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Is Your Love In Vain?
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Señor (Tales of Yankee Power)
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True Love Tends to Forget
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We Better Talk This Over
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Where Are You Tonight? (Journey Through Dark Heat)
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Ratings and Reviews
B-list Dylan; maybe C-list
Anyone who gives this album five stars has no sense of proportionality. What would you give “Blood on the Tracks” or “Blonde on Blonde” or “Highway 61 Revisited”? Fifty stars? ‘Cause they’re 10 times better than this set.
The worse thing is the female backing singers. They just get unbearable after a while.
Like a fresh pack of tarot cards
My favorite Dylan album. An underrated classic.
I love this!
One of Bob's Best-Changing of the Guards and Senor are two of his best songs!