Writing in
The New York Times, historian
Douglas Brinkley called the song a "high-octane showstopper" that honors Reed with "dragon-fierce harmonica riffs and bawdy lyrics". Critic Ann-Margaret Daniel, in a review of
Rough and Rowdy Ways at
Hot Press, noted that the song is "a romping, glorious, boogying hello, more than it is a fare thee well".
Rolling Stone's
Rob Sheffield called it a "raw blues stomp" in which Dylan proves to be "a master of comic timing". Dylan scholar Stephen Scobie wrote in an online essay that one "could write a whole textbook on sexual pathology" based on three lines from the song (including "I can't play the record 'cause my needle got stuck", which Scobie interprets as an impotence metaphor), and claimed that, of all the songs on the album, "this is the one that most begs to be unleashed in [live] performance". In the 2022 edition of their book
Bob Dylan All the Songs: The Story Behind Every Track, authors Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon call the song "a superb 'blues shuffle'" and claim that it comes close to the "spirit" of Jimmy Reed through "precise guitar playing, a rather clear sound, a rhythm with a communicative groove, and some brief interventions on the harmonica". A 2022 article at
Ultimate Classic Rock identified the song as the best on
Rough and Rowdy Ways: "If you listened to nothing else on the album but 'Goodbye Jimmy Reed', a foot-tapping tribute to the late blues guitarist, you'll come away with inevitable knowledge: Dylan, in his 80th decade of life and 60th of music-making, has still got it". == Accolades ==