eMusic Review 0
Recorded over the course of a year, Dylan's second album instantly transformed the scruffy young singer-songwriter from a promising young Woody Guthrie fan to the undisputed king of the folk revival, an alpha tiger with his claws bared and a wide, red-fanged grin. "Blowin 'in the Wind" alone would have made his reputation — Peter, Paul and Mary had a gigantic hit with their cover around the same time as Freewheelin 'was released, and all of a sudden, every singer in America wanted an acoustic guitar, a harmonica and an encyclopedic command of poetry and the folk repertoire. (Only two of those were available in stores.) But the album never lets up. It's a virtuosic parade of tender and bitter love songs and political screeds with a thousand years of momentum behind them. "Don't Think Twice, It's All Right" is still a shocking kiss-off, and features impossibly virtuosic guitar picking to boot; "A Hard Rain's a-Gonna Fall" mutates the traditional ballad "Lord Randal" into a poetic, prophetic vision of nuclear apocalypse; "Masters of War" confronts the "big guns" of the military-industrial complex with an unforgettable indictment. "Corrina, Corrina" is the only full-on "folk song" here, but the entire record is… read more »