Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.
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Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. | ||
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Album by Bruce Springsteen | ||
Released | January 5 1973 | |
Recorded | 1972 (?) | |
Genre | Rock | |
Length | 37 min 08 s | |
Label | Columbia Records | |
Producers | Mike Appel & Jim Cretecos | |
Professional reviews | ||
RollingStone review | 4/5 | link (http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/cd/review.asp?aid=23948) |
ARTISTdirect review | 5/5 | link (http://store.artistdirect.com/store/artist/album/0,,167660,00.html) |
Bruce Springsteen Chronology | ||
Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. (1973) | The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle (1973) |
Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. was the first album recorded by Bruce Springsteen & the E-Street Band, released in 1973 (see 1973 in music), and sold about 25,000 copies in the first year.
Springsteen and his first manager Mike Appel decided to record the album at the low-priced, out of the way 914 Sounds Studios to save as much as possible of the CBS advance and cut the record in a single week.
Both "Blinded by the Light" and "Spirit in the Night" were released as singles by Columbia, but neither made a dent in the US charts.
Ken Emerson wrote in Rolling Stone magazine, "Greetings from Asbury Park, NJ . . . was like "Subterranean Homesick Blues" played at 78 RPM, a typical five-minute track busting with more words than this review. . ."
Contents |
Track listing
- "Blinded by the Light" - 5:04
- "Growin' Up" - 3:05
- "Mary Queen of Arkansas" - 5:21
- "Does this Bus Stop at 82nd Street?" - 2:05
- "Lost in the Flood" - 5:17
- "The Angel" - 3:24
- "For You" - 4:40
- "Spirit in the Night" - 4:59
- "It's Hard to Be a Saint in the City" - 3:13
"Blinded by the Light"
"Blinded by the Light" is a swiftly-paced, lyrically jumbled song, later turned into a #1 hit by Manfred Mann. The lyrics [1] (http://www.xs4all.nl/~maroen/engels/lyrics/blindedb.htm) are a stream of consciousness description of a series of bizarre individuals. Little coherent sense can be made of the characters, united only by the chorus: "Yeah (s)he was blinded by the light/Cut loose like a deuce another runner in the night/Blinded by the light/(S)he got down but (s)he never got tight, but (s)he's gonna make it (allright) tonight." This song was written after most of the others were finished and was intended to be the first single, which it was.
First Line
"Madman drummers bummers and Indians in the summer with a teenage diplomat"
"Growin' Up"
"Growin' Up" is another fast-paced tune, concerning an adolescence as a rebellious New Jersey teen, with lyrics [2] (http://www.xs4all.nl/~maroen/engels/lyrics/growingu.htm) written in the first-person. The chorus in the first verse is "I hid in the clouded wrath of the crowd but when they said 'Sit down' I stood up" and the second verse switches it to "they said 'come down' I threw up" while the third verse finishes the song with "they said 'pull down' I pulled up." It soon became a live favorite for the Springsteen audiences and Springsteen used the song to tell a long history about his problems with his father as an intro to the song. A version of this history can be heard on the live album Live 75-85.
First Line
"I stood stone-like at midnight suspended in my masquerade"
"Mary Queen of Arkansas"
"Mary Queen of Arkansas" is a slow, quiet acoustic song with a faint country feel to it. The lyrics [3] (http://www.xs4all.nl/~maroen/engels/lyrics/maryquee.htm) contain repeated references to the circus (a theme explored in deeper depth on his second album) as in "Well I'm just a lonely acrobat, the live wire is my trade" and "The big top is for dreamers, we can take the circus all the way to the border." It is a love song, devoted to "Mary." Like most of Springsteen's songs, particularly the first album, the lyrics are evocative though not detailed.
First Line
"Mary Queen of Arkansas, it's not too early for dreamin'"
"Does this Bus Stop at 82nd Street?"
"Does this Bus Stop at 82nd Street?" is a wholly incomprehensible song, lyrically [4] (http://www.xs4all.nl/~maroen/engels/lyrics/doesbus.htm). It is fast-paced and has no chorus. The only recognizable theme is a movement towards the sky, as in the lines "drink this and you'll grow wings on your feet", "interstellar mongrel nymphs" and "(Mary Lou) rides to heaven on a gyroscope."
First Line
"Hey bus driver keep the change, bless your children, give them names"
"Lost in the Flood"
"Lost in the Flood" is a sparse, piano-driven song, seemingly about a Vietnam War veteran. The treatment of veterans in the United States has always been a sore spot for Springsteen. The lyrics [5] (http://www.xs4all.nl/~maroen/engels/lyrics/lostfloo.htm) tell a loose story, invoking a series of images that appear to somewhat tell a story or perhaps three different stories for each of the three verses.
The first verse is about "ragamuffin gunner" and has a recurring theme of religion, including references to the "hit-and-run" pleading for "sanctuary" and hiding beneath a "holy stone," while "breakin' beams and crosses with a spastic's reeling perfection" and "nuns run bald through Vatican halls, pregnant, pleading Immaculate Conception." Finally, "everybody's wrecked on Main Street from drinking that holy blood."
The second verse is about a "pure American brother," (aka "Jimmy the Saint") perhaps the same person as the "ragamuffin gunner" from the first verse. This is the beginning of Springsteen's use of automobile themes (along with "The Angel" below), as the pure American brother "races Sundays in Jersey in a Chevy stock Super Eight" and "leans on the hood telling racing stories." Eventually, Jimmy the Saint gets into some sort of accident (described as running "headfirst into a hurricane") and presumably dies since "there was nothing left but some blood where the body fell."
The third verse concerns a series of people on the streets of a city, presumably Asbury Park. They include "Eighth Avenue sailors in satin shirts," "some storefront incarnation of Maria," "Bronx's best apostle," "the cops," "the whiz-bang gang" and "some kid" who gets shot in the ensuing gun fight and holds "his leg, screaming something in Spanish."
First Line
"The ragamuffin gunner is returnin' home like a hungry runaway"
"The Angel"
"The Angel" is a slow, soft acoustic song. The lyrics [6] (http://www.xs4all.nl/~maroen/engels/lyrics/theangel.htm) describe a man referred to as "the angel" and a woman who is "Madison Avenue's claim to fame in a trainer bra with eyes like rain." This song has a fully-developed automobile theme, including some memorable lines such as "The interstate's choked with nomadic hordes/in Volkswagen vans with full running boards dragging great anchors/Followin' dead-end signs into the sores/The angel rides by humpin' his hunk metal whore". Bruce once said he would never play this song live, and he went 23 years keeping that promise. In London in 1996, on his acoustic tour, Bruce played the song. To date, that has been its only live performance.
First Line
"The angel rides with hunch-backed children, poison oozing from his engine"
"For You"
"For You" is a climactic, percussion-driven song. The lyrics [7] (http://www.xs4all.nl/~maroen/engels/lyrics/foryou.htm) are about a woman who does not need the singer's "urgency" even though her life is "one long emergency" as Springsteen sings in the chorus (along with "and your cloud line urges me, and my electric surges free"). Once again, the lyrics are evocative of images and not details, and little can be said in description. The song is often referred to as a song about suicide. Like Blinded by the Light, was covered by Manfred Mann, but to less success.
First Line
"Princess cards she sends me with her regards"
"Spirit in the Night"
"Spirit in the Night" is about a slow but energetic song. The lyrics [8] (http://www.xs4all.nl/~maroen/engels/lyrics/spiritin.htm) are about a group of young people who go out to the woods for a nocturnal tryst with a "bottle of rose" to a spot "on the dark side of route eighty-eight." The people include "Crazy Janey," "her mission man," "Wild Billy," and "his friend, G-Man," "Hazy Davy" and "Killer Joe." The second verse begins with a probable drug reference as "Well now Wild young Billy was a crazy cat and he shook some dust out of his coonskin cap/He said, 'Trust some of this it'll show you where you're at, or at least it'll help you really feel it.'" By the third verse, the young men and women have gotten themselves into some trouble. Billy and Davy dance in the moonlight and then get into a "stone mud fight," while Killer Joe is "passed out on the lawn" and "Me and Crazy Janey were making love in the dirt singing our birthday songs." Like Blinded by the Light, was covered by Manfred Mann, but to less success.
First Line
"Crazy Janey and her mission man were back in the alley tradin' hands"
"It's Hard to Be a Saint in the City"
"It's Hard to Be a Saint in the City" is a fast paced song. The lyrics [9] (http://www.xs4all.nl/~maroen/engels/lyrics/itshard.htm) are about a youth growing up on the streets of a city, and who is trying to stay "good" and do what he believes is right. Unfortunately, "those gasoline boys sure talk pretty" and he is inexorably dragged into some very unsaintly activities. One of the more memorable lines is "The devil appeared like Jesus through the steam in the street/Showin' me a hand I knew even the cops couldn't beat/I felt his hot breath on my neck as I dove into the heat/It's so hard to be a saint when you're just a boy out on the street."
First Line
"I had skin like leather and the diamond-hard look of a cobra"
External link
- Audio & Lyrics (http://www.brucespringsteen.net/albums/greetings.html)