10.22.2017

Blood Brothers, Chimes of Freedom, and the Greatest Hits tracks


Bryan: Tonight let's have a listen to some of his compilations and extras from the mid-90s. First up:
(1995)

Bryan: The big news at the time was he was reuniting with the E Street Band for some new tracks for the collection. Bryant! You're still alive, my old friend!

Bryant: Still! "Old!" "Friend..."

Bryan: What say you on this first (of multiple) greatest hits collection?

Bryant: I’m going to score Greatest Hits from top to bottom, just to see what that’s like.  I’m using my previous scores for the songs from other albums, obviously.

(1)  “Born to Run” – 5/5

(2)  “Thunder Road” – 4.5/5 Did I really not give this a 5?  Well, okay, then.

(3)  “Badlands” – 7/5 Damn right.

(4)  “The River” – 5/5

(5)  “Hungry Heart” – 6.5/5

(6)  “Atlantic City” – 7/5

(7)  “Dancing in the Dark” – 6/5

(8)  “Born in the U.S.A.” – 5/5 

(9)  “My Hometown” – 4/5

(10)  “Glory Days” – 5/5

(11)  “Brilliant Disguise” – 4.25/5

(12)  “Human Touch” – 2.5/5

(13)  “Better Days” – 2.75/5

(14)  “Streets of Philadelphia” – 5/5 This one, for me, is a stone-cold classic. A lot can be said about the sequencing of this album, but I think there was no doubt this song had to be on it. It almost single-handedly put an end to the funk his career had fallen into after the Human Touch / Lucky Town releases. I don’t think the reception those albums got was entirely fair, but it certainly rattled a lot of people. So along comes this song: huge hit, Oscar-winning song to an Oscar-winning movie. Talk about righting the ship!


(15)  “Secret Garden” – 4/5 This sounds like it could have been written for Tunnel of Love, and if it had appeared on that album, it’d be one of its standouts. It’s so commonly identified with Jerry Maguire that I struggle to remember that it was over a year old when it appeared in that movie.

(16)  “Murder Incorporated” – 3/5  I hated this song for a long time, and listening to it now, I have no god DAMN idea why. This song rocks! It’s a little rough around the edges, and feels like it needed a few more passes, which is probably why it didn’t get released for over a decade.  


(17)  “Blood Brothers” – 4/5 An intensely bittersweet song, and obviously one that means something to Bruce, given that he reused that title for the documentary that was made about the reunion of the E Street Band.

(18)  “This Hard Land” – 2.5/5 This one falls a wee bit flat for me. It’s certainly not bad, but – apart from wanting to end on an upbeat number – I don’t know why he album shouldn’t have closed with “Blood Brothers.”

I’m going to do several different overall scores (an oxymoronic activity, I know):

Overall (archival songs only, by which I mean everything previously released) – 69.5 total, 4.96 average. So that’s pretty good for a greatest hits album. The question I have is, is the selection all that it could have been? I say not. As much as I love to have those four “new” songs, that’s space that could have been used for “I’m on Fire” (an unforgivable omission) or “Rosalita” or “One Step Up.” You could even make a case – a quite strong one, in fact – for including some of the original versions of songs that hit big for other artists (“Fire” and “Pink Cadillac” come to mind). So in other words: as great as this is (and that score tops Born in the U.S.A. among my scores), I think it could have been better.

Overall (all tracks) – 83 total, 4.61 average. If you’re keeping track of the scores, that means that this causes this album to dip beneath Nebraska. It’s unfair to judge a greatest hits album against a regular one, of course. Except … IS it?  The math don’t lie.

Overall (new tracks only) – 13.5 total, 3.38 average. Not bad! I’d have suggested they flesh these out with some other unreleased songs and make it a two-disc set. In ’95, it’d still have sold.

Bryan: Regarding the selection, I hear you - it's kind of an arbitrary run of songs. Well, not arbitrary - it's a decent sampling of the big hits and most widely-played material, but compare it to the carefully chosen autobiographical sketch of the Live 75-85 songs, for example, where you can read a chronology/ mythology of Bruce and the E Street Band. I'm not 100% sure what the thinking was here. Compilations like this back in the day were always loath to put too many greatest hits on one record, because people still bought back catalog stuff back then. (Sad state of affairs for rockers in 2017! Hope everyone saved their money.) But even that doesn't account for some of the omissions like "Pink Cadillac" or, as you say, "I'm On Fire" or "One Step Up." I agree, too, that a 2-disc set would have been better. They were probably thinking ahead to Tracks at this point (although I'm not sure that actually was the case. I already forgot from reading the Carlin book.)


Myself, I’ll stick with just the new ones. Thank you for all that, though – sketching out the context is always appreciated.

"Street of Philadelphia" - 4/5 I agree with everything you say here, but it's not quite a 5-er for me personally. Great tune and all. It's aged well, to boot, compared to similar-sounding tunes from this period. I'm thinking of that "Mother Superior joined the mob" song and a couple of others. This has that rainy drive feel to it that was in the air at the time. I'm not suggesting Bruce was a follower here, only that he as always had a pretty good feel for either anticipating or joining in with whatever musical mood was ringing people's bells at the time.
"Secret Garden" - 4/5 Still haven't seen Jerry Maguire and am really in no hurry to. I like this one a little less than you but not by much.
"Murder Inc." - 3.25 / 5 I'm with you - I remembered this as not so much but it's a perfectly fine little bit of rock and roll.
"Blood Brothers" - 4/5 Agree with you that this would have made the better album-ender. More on this momentarily.
"This Hard Land" - 3.25/5 I can't think of anything to say about this one really, except that I look forward to comparing this version to the one originally recorded back in '82 when we get to Tracks.

Total: 18.5 Avg: 3.65 Next up:


(1996)

Bryan: I like what Bruce had to say here: "Blood Brothers was sort of trying to understand the meaning of friendship as you grow older. I guess I wrote it the night before I went in the studio with the band, and I was trying to sort out what I was doing and what those relationships meant to me now and what they mean to you as you move through your life. Basically, I guess I always felt that the friendships, the loyalties and the relationships, those are the bonds that keep you from slipping into the abyss of self-destructiveness. And without those things, that abyss feels a lot closer, on your heels. I think your own nihilism feels a lot closer without someone to grab you by the arm and pull you out of it and say, 'Hey, come on, you're having a bad day.' So with the song I was trying to sort out the place that those deep friendships played in my life, friendships that I had when I was young. We all grew up together, and people got married and divorced and had babies and went through their addictions and out the other side, and we drove each other crazy."

That's a great series of observations. I like Philosopher Bruce.

Bryant: I had never heard this EP before this project. I’d heard of it, but I thought it was basically just a couple of remixes and live versions. No, not really; it’s not that at all.

Bryan: 3/5 Yeah this isn't half-bad at all. Here's one of the 4 outtakes circulating out there - I like it. So you've got three vastly different sonic lenses on the same sentiment. Fascinating.

Bryant: 3/5  It might be called an alternate version, but it’s so vastly different – the lyrics presumably notwithstanding – that this may as well be a different song than the one on Greatest Hits. And while I prefer that slower, more contemplative version, I dig this one quite a bit, too.

“High Hopes”

Bryant: 3.25/5  Did I know this was a cover of somebody else’s song? (Tim Scott McConnell’s, to be specific, whoever he is. [He’s billed merely as Tim Scott on the back cover of the EP.]) Maybe. It – and you may know this by now, if you hadn’t already – later got re-covered by Bruce and the Band and served as the titular song of their most recent album. I think that version is probably superior to this one, but this one is just fine. I don’t think I’d know it wasn’t a Springsteen composition if Wikipedia wasn’t around to tell me things like that.

Bryan: 2.25/5 Quite a different vibe to that Ledfoot version for sure. Springsteen's reminds me more of a Mellencamp tune than an E Street one, though I couldn't exactly tell you where the borders between one camp and the other really lie, or what makes one one and not the other. I picture a sign on or near said border depicting Clarence wailing away on sax, though. Incidentally, I’m listening to Mellencamp right now. I see so many more connections between Mellencamp and Springsteen and Stephen King than I ever did as a youngster. Now they all more or less seem to have come from the same place – not geographically obviously, but culturally/ socio-economically – and address the same concerns in the same populist vein. And achieved mega-success at doing so. 

“Murder Incorporated (Live)” 

Bryant: 2.75/5  Good live version of a song that has really grown on me over the years.

Bryan: 3/5 A solid live version.

 
“Secret Garden (string version)” 

Bryant: 3/5  I’m docking this one a point in comparison to the Greatest Hits version, because it honestly has no reason to exist. But it’s still quite good.

Bryan: 3.25/5 I won't dock it a full point but yeah - not sure if the string arrangement is unique or impactful enough to justify this.
Without You 

Bryant: 2.5/5  The production on this is a bit too rough around the edges to get a higher score from me, but I like the song quite a bit and can’t believe I’ve never heard it until now.  (Although I probably have, given that it’s apparently featured in the Blood Brothers documentary, which I have seen.) I’m too lazy to go digging through YouTube but I bet there’s a kick-ass live version somewhere.

Bryan: 3/5 I'm with you - could use a spiffier version but this sounds like a pretty good tune under there! I have a feeling on a different day I could rate this one much higher. I looked around for a live version but no luck. I could see this having fit in on The River
Bryant: Overall – 14.5 total, 2.90 average. Tracks 3 and 4 are entirely nonessential, and “High Hopes” is rendered unnecessary by the later version. But tracks 1 and 5 really need to be heard by any hardcore fan.

Bryan: Total 14.5 Avg. 2.9 Hey we got the same scores just slightly different routes - I like when that happens.

And hey, we – and by we I mean me - forgot one. Let's circle back to: 

(1989)
"Tougher Than the Rest"
Bryan:  3/5 I like the addition of the E Street Band, but it doesn't add as much as it would to a sped-up version of "When You're Alone," which damn it, give me the phone. Of course, it wouldn't work now. Maybe I can get Phish to do it. Somehow. Anyway, this version is inferior to the studio version even if it sounds pretty good. Bruce sounds kind of sad.
Bryant: 2.75.5  A perfectly good version of the song, but it gives me nothing the studio version doesn't give me more capably.
"Be True"
Bryan: 2/5 Another one I totally forgot about. The melody for the chorus reminds me of something but I can't think of what.
Bryant: 2/5  This castoff from The River sounds like exactly what it is: a song that would have fit right in on The River.  It's a good live version of a good song; nothing special, though, in my opinion.
"Chimes of Freedom"
Bryan: 2/5 "Springsteen's performance is rousing and fervent, transforming the song into a ringing anthem for the full E Street Band, without losing the power of the words evident in Dylan's own solo performance" So says the wiki. Sounds like it’s describing a different song to me. Decent cover but not my favorite song of Dylan's, either, so maybe it’s just falling on deaf ears.
Bryant: I'm with you on this not being a favorite Dylan tune. It's from arguably my favorite era of Dylan, though, and it's a good song. Maybe even a great one -- just one that always hits my ears a little funny. I love Dylan's voice 99 times out of 100, but "Chimes of Freedom" is the 1. So vocally, I kind of prefer Springsteen's take. Only kinda, though; Dylan at least has some ragged passion, whereas Bruce's version sounds a bit rote. So for me, this is a 1.5/5. Not bad, but ... flat.
Bryan: 4.5/5 If Born in the USA made me, like millions of earthlings, a huge Bruce fan, the live '87 set was the high point of my mk1 fandom, and Tunnel of Love began the slow dropping off point. And then this version of "Born to Run" was like the great hook-up you have while the relationship is drifting that makes you wonder if maybe it can't all work out fine. Lurking in the background of these memories is that ex-girlfriend I've mentioned along the way - a silent assassin with a bullet with Bruce's face on it! Happy to be back in the fold, tho, all these years later. I hadn't realized the extent of these sorts of thoughts until doing this listen-through. Which just goes to show you, to paraphrase Robert Anton Wilson, you can end someone's life with an axe to the head (or the snobbery of a girl you're trying to pull), but you cannot end that vector of spacetime of which their life was an expression: that will continue to intersect at will forever, via other dimensions and wormholes we do not as yet understand as anything but sorcery and "memory and association."
Bryant: 4.5/5 from me. This is another one of those where it only works as well as it works if you've got the context of the original already in your brain. If you do, though, this is pretty magical.  So that bit from Wilson works for me in this context!
Bryan: Total: 11.5 Avg: 2.88

Bryant: 10.75 overall, 2.69 average.


UPDATED RANKINGS:

Bryant:

Human Touch 1.7
Lucky Town 2.15
The Ghost of Tom Joad 2.46
Chimes of Freedom 2.69
In Concert / Mtv Plugged 2.75
Greetings from Asbury Park 2.75
Blood Brothers 2.9
Tunnel of Love 3.35
Greatest Hits (New Tracks Only) 3.38
The River 3.39
The Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffle 3.68
Live ’75 - ‘85 3.7
Born to Run 4.35
Darkness on the Edge of Town 4.4
Nebraska 4.63
Born in the USA 4.88

Bryan:

Lucky Town 2.15
Greetings from Asbury Park 2.19
The Ghost of Tom Joad 2.44 
Human Touch 2.84 
In Concert / MTV Plugged 2.85 
Chimes of Freedom 2.88
Blood Brothers 2.9
The Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffl3.43
Greatest Hits (New Tracks Only) 3.65
The River 3.71 
Tunnel of Love 3.8 
Darkness on the Edge of Town 3.82
Live ’75 - ‘85 4
Born to Run 4.41
Nebraska 4.5
Born in the USA 5.44
~
Hey folks - Bryan here. We will resume this journey through the Springsteen catalog after Thanksgiving. The next release (Tracks) is a 4-cd set and is followed by double albums Live in New York City and The Rising, so lots of stuff to get together. Bryant and I already went through everything and made our remarks and scores, but I'll need some extra time to get it all in blogworthy form. (As blogworthy as this blog ever gets, of course - it's all relative! But it'll still take a bit of time.) There'll be other content in the meantime, but we'll pick up the rest of the catalog after Turkey Day. Plenty more Bruce coming down the (Jersey) turnpike!

10.21.2017

I Would Not Do Heaven’s Work Well: The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995)

Tonight:
(1995)

Bryan: Tonight we'll have a look at Bruce's second all-acoustic affair, and his third(ish) album without the E Street Band. And by “we” I mean myself and the Two-Fisted Troubadour of Tuscaloosa, Mr. Bryant Burnette.

Bryant:  So … my first impulse there was to make some sort of joke in which I paraphrase the lyrics of Eddie Money’s “Two Tickets to Paradise.” This is the sort of inanity my brain comes up with.  “Two-fisted in paradise” brings up unwelcome connotations, so I guess we’ll just move on. Let’s get our Joad on!  (*sigh*)

Bryan: A genuine LOL on “Two-fisted in paradise.” I've sat here trying to segue from that to a "The Ghost of Tom Load" porn-parody title but haven't been able to make it work. As I've sat here trying, though, this whole mythology of Bruce porn-parody (thankfully, not the visuals - I'd have cast Bruce in my head as the lead and who wants to see that. Well, plenty of people, I bet, and more power to them, just hey, not me) kept taking shape, though. It all ended with "Bruce Sproingsteen in... The Ghost of Tom Load: Two-Fisted in Paradise." And the fake trailer would have had Eddie Money playing throughout, too, which undoubtedly would have confused people but man. This has been cracking me up unreasonably for the better part of an hour. I had a junior high buddy who would always say "sprrrrrroing!" in imitation of getting a boner, in case that "sproing" thing doesn't translate across state lines. Nothing like footnoting a boner joke.

Bryant: My cats have no idea why I'm laughing instead of feeding them, but that's because they have no sense of humor. I didn't get the "sproing" thing immediately - I was (weird but true) expecting some sort of Australian-accent joke - but as soon as I saw porn-parody titles were in the offing, I grasped it. This is the type of moron humor that directly appeals to me.  Mix in some farts somehow, and I'm in humor heaven.

Bryan: Well, we're off to some kind of start. Let's see where we end up!

"I knew that The Ghost of Tom Joad wouldn't attract my largest audience. But I was sure the songs on it added up to a reaffirmation of the best of what I do. The record was something new, but it was also a reference point to the things I tried to stand for and be about as a songwriter." - Springsteen, Songs 1998.

Bryan: These are admirable thoughts, but I don't think it is a reaffirmation of the best of what he could do.

Bryant: I'm sure that with an artist like Springsteen, his own idea of "his best" may be very different from what outside observers would think. I'm sure that when he thinks of one of his songs, it's in an entirely different way than you or I do. I wonder if he thinks we're all weird for loving Born in the U.S.A. or something like that. I wouldn't be surprised.

Bryan: I don't dislike this album, but this sort of thing is just not for me. The only songs my ear recognizes as actual songs and not just tuneless poetry over indistinct chords are the title track and a couple of others. In theory and sometimes even in practice, I have no qualms with poetry over indistinct chords; like I say, though, it's just not for me. I do like all the lyrics – though I would never have known without looking them up to read along - and I like the idea of the album just fine. It’s a respectable side of Bruce. But between this and its closest kin in the catalog (Nebraska) I view Nebraska as essential and this for completist’s only.

"The Ghost of Tom Joad"

Bryant:  4/5 I wish I had at least a bit of musical-terminology/composition knowledge so I could explain this, but there is (I think) something about the chord structure of this that I really respond to. Performance-wise, I really like the harmonica. The overall sound is just really crisp and inviting. It's not the stark, echoey masterpiece that Nebraska is, but I kind of admire him not trying to replicate that.

Bryan: 3/5 It’s a worthy addition to the catalog. It led to an ongoing association with Tom Morello, so that's cool. Here's one of many versions out there of their performing it.
It’s tough to score some of these – the only real context is Nebraska, but to compare these tunes to that album’s is just unfair and results in my scoring them all “1”s or something, so I’ll go with 3 as my this-is-perfectly-fine-but-not-my-favorite-thing default.

"Straight Time"
Bryant: 2/5 I feel you on the subject of not quite knowing how to score some of these. I've got that same sort of default score, and in my case, it's a 2. It's not a bad song, it doesn't make my ears hurt or anything. But it doesn't move me, either. So, a 2!
Bryan: 2/5 This one might’ve been better served if he gave it to someone else, I think, and allowed to really breathe. I can see it being a big hit, actually. More than the potential for a hit, it just seems like it'd have been a better fit for The Indigo Girls or something, or some harmony-singing duo with multiple acoustics.
"Highway 29"
Bryant: 3.5/5 I like this one a lot. It's brutally sad, and I admire his ability to make me feel that about somebody who is clearly a bad person. I got some of that from “Nebraska,” too, and while this song isn't as great as that one, it's pretty great.
Bryan: 2.5/5 That is definitely one of my favorite aspects of the man’s work. Some good lyrics here. Here's a decent version from 2005.
Bryant: 4.25/5 My favorite song on the album. Another brutally sad song.  I mean, the album is pretty much full of 'em. Fine by me.
Bryan: 4/5 Reminds me of "Turn the Page" and "The Gambler" in spots, but the pedal steel guitar in the background keeps it from sounding redundant of them. This is a good example of that slice of the Boss’ populism - America’s vets return to manufacturing jobs that have made the factory owners wealthy – and even wealthier as they collude with government officials to send the work overseas – which makes his core audience (who decry concern over outsourcing and loss of manufacturing as just more xenophobic / economic ignorance from the great unwashed) worthily uncomfortable. Definitely my favorite on the album.

"Sinaloa Cowboys"
Bryant: 2/5 Rather than say anything about this, let me pose a question in the interest of having some back-n-forth: how would you describe the thematic impact of setting this subject to this music, as opposed to the sort of thing you find with something like "Factory" or "Downbound Train"? The sentiments aren't all that different, but the music clearly makes them feel very different. What do you think Bruce is trying to accomplish by going this route as opposed to that? Do you think it's successful?
Bryan: 2/5 Good question. I bet it's what you say - Bruce trying a different musical mood to mix it up/ explore some other angle on similar material. I don't think it's too successful. Like all the tunes on this, I like the reading of it but not so much the musical listening. I don't know what the musical mood should've been to better convey the lyrical content for "Sinaloa". And I do like some of the prettier parts of the mix (around the 2:50 mark until the verses start up again), but yeah, it's just too hard to pick out without reading along. Not a dealbreaker but not one that wraps me up in the story.
"The Line"
Bryant: 2/5  These 2s tend to fade right out of my brain, boy. This might be because I'm paying insufficient attention; if I'd played this album as many times as I played, say, Tunnel of Love (not to mention Born to Run) back in the day, I might have a more individualized feeling for them. Or maybe not; nothing in most of these ever called out to me to give them that sort of treatment, so maybe it's best viewed as a sort of discographical Darwinism.
Bryan: 2/5 I’m not a huge fan of the tune, but man, reading the lyrics is like reading the synopsis to the greatest TV drama never made. If “Tv Shows That Never Were” was the criteria, I’d score it much higher. But as a song, not so much.
"Balboa Park"
Bryant: 1.75/5 This one doesn't do it for me; the music pushes me away rather than pulling me in.
Bryan: 1.5/5 Another one that’s a great story, though - like I say, I've got zero problems and nothing but admiration for the lyrics/ stories; I wish he'd found a way to turn them into Raymond-Carver-masterpieces and not try to turn them into songs.

"Dry Lightning"
Bryant: 2/5 You can almost hear this one wanting to turn into a more uptempo sort of thing.
Bryan: 2.5/5 I can hear that. I looked around for an uptempo E Street version and didn't find one, but apparently Willie Nelson and Emmylou Harris covered it. Sounds good to me. I kind of like this one, though. It’s my third favorite from the album.
"The New Timer"
Bryant: 2.25/5 Not massively a standout, but I think it's better than much of the album.
Bryan: 2/5 "The New Timer" has a bit of a singalong quality to it (ditto for "Straight Time). Or would if I could understand a damn word to sing along. I've listened to this album 3 times this morning, and it's playing for the 4th, and I still haven't really picked up on practically any lyrics. 

"Across the Border"
Bryant: Hey, was this where Soozie Tyrell joined up?  (Wikipedia says no, it was Lucky Town.) I'm a fan of what she brought to the Band later on in their collaboration. This song is another 2/5, though.
Bryan: 2.75/5 for me. A touch better than most of the songs of the record, I think, but not quite a 3, which is sort of my unofficial threshold for songs-that-‘ll-make-my-post-blog-project Final Playlist.
Bryant: 2/5 I'm forgetting this while I'm listening to it. The lyrics are good, though, and I do like it.
Bryan: 3/5 Galveston Bay is such an evocative name, isn’t it? In any context, really, just captures my imagination the way “Gobbler’s Knob” or “The Hague” does. I bet King likes this one. Was he doing the Pop of King when Tom Joad came out? I looked around for a review but didn’t find one. This whole story reminds me ever so slightly of “A Death.”
"My Best Was Never Good Enough"
Bryant: 1.75/5  Is he consciously channeling Dylan here? That's about all that interests me with this one, which seems like some sort of obscure eff-you to ... who? I don't get it. I guess you CAN end an album this way, but I don't know why you would.
Bryan: 2/5 That’s a wrap. I won’t try to improve on that last sentence of yours as an album sum-up.
FINAL THOUGHTS
Bryant: 29.5 total, 2.46 average. This puts the album above both Human Touch and Lucky Town, but if I'm being honest, I think I'd rather listen to either of those albums. If I were you, I wouldn’t feel bad about this album not being for you, because other than Bruce himself, I really don’t know who this set of songs IS for. With a few tracks excepted, it just lies there, shrugging at you. You want to write some poetry, great, do that. But if you're going to set it to music, try to have some distinct music to go along with it. I don't need every album like this to be as good as Nebraska, but I do need them to be better than this one.
Bryan: Total 29.25, Avg. 2.44 And that’s a wrap on that, too, re: your last sentence. I can understand why they wouldn’t print that on the back of the album, but they should, sort of like a Surgeon General’s Warning.

UPDATED RANKINGS

Bryant:

Human Touch 1.7
Lucky Town 2.15
The Ghost of Tom Joad 2.46
In Concert / Mtv Plugged 2.75
Greetings from Asbury Park 2.75
Tunnel of Love 3.35
The River 3.39
The Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffle 3.68
Live ’75 - ‘85 3.7
Born to Run 4.35
Darkness on the Edge of Town 4.4
Nebraska 4.63
Born in the USA 4.88

Bryan:

Lucky Town 2.15
Greetings from Asbury Park 2.19
The Ghost of Tom Joad 2.44
Human Touch 2.84 
In Concert / MTV Plugged 2.85 
The Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffl3.43
The River 3.71 
Tunnel of Love 3.8 
Darkness on the Edge of Town 3.82
Live ’75 - ‘85 4
Born to Run 4.41
Nebraska 4.5
Born in the USA 5.44