It certainly helps a lot that I first listened to this record while driving to the airport for an 11 PM flight, when the roads were quiet and dark. This is record for the quiet and dark, and though quiet, it isn't dark. What distinguishes this from other folk-rock (or whatever you want to call the genre) isn't so much the lyrics/topics, nor even Roy's voice, which has a gentle waver that belies some power and quite a bit of earnest emotion underneath it. It's the beauty of the guitar work -- in some places nearly power chords, in others gentle little riffs. The point is that it's never put second to the vocals nor the lyrics, not once. In every song the underlying MUSIC could nearly stand on its own without the words. This isn't Dylan -- it's middle-career Paul Simon, who had to care about guitar work when he lost Art Garfunkel because Pauls' voice is thin, and without Garfunkel, he lost his harmonic soar. Granted, Paul's (IMO) a better lyricist than Roy, but the idea is the same: guitar has to matter too. Folk's a lot less pretentious and more interesting when guitar matters. Granted, sometimes other instruments add texture in spots (the strings on "Another Day", e.g.), but it's why Roy can put "Hells Angels" on the end of this and while it's quite clearly out of place (and not that interesting, though it's okay), you can see how easy the journey is from what comes before to this point. Or take the quirkiness of the guitar on "Song of the Ages" -- something no mere folk singer who focused only on the declamatory would offer up -- not even one attempting to add a bit of pyschedelic flair to already semi-psychedelic lyrics.
These aren't the high points for me, though. The pinnacle is "How Does It Feel", which has such a tremendously glorious Pete Townshend/Roger Daltrey bridge and chorus that I got literal goosebumps. It's so rousing and beautiful. This song is an absolute triumph. I think played it half a dozen times in succession just so I could enjoy it. In fact, it's so good, I didn't want to listen to much else because even though I very much liked "Don't You Grieve" and "Tom Tiddler's Ground", they hit your ears on a pleasant level . . . but not your soul.
I could have done without the monologue before "I Hate The White Man" but it's not because of the content or even because it interrupts the flow -- it just frankly wasn't very interesting. The interspersed studio chatter that horns in once in awhile I kind of like. Todd Rundgren's "Something/Anything" -- a record I love -- is chock full of it, and I think it takes an air of seriousness out, which with folk music is (for me) always a plus (and why I tend to enjoy Dylan's somewhat more comic turns of phrase more than his more "serious" tunes).
Some of the songs here are fine enough ("Davey" e.g.) but not intriguing the ways others are, and I'm not sure I'll play this whole record much as it's not usually mood-supportive, but when I AM ready to lie quietly in a dark room and just kind of disappear into myself, this is very much a record I'll want to have at my eartips.
I really think 7 is my honest score for the entire work. But I can't get over "How Does It Feel", and I'm not sure I will. As such --
8/10.
Yet another wonderful experience brought about by this thread. Thanks
@denislawsbackheel.