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Too much, too late

Once upon a time there was a phenomenon called the rip-off, a form of commercial exploitation that could be defined as being overcharged for something you really wanted and had to have. I guess that was back in the ’60s. You knew it when you saw it. Now we live in a rip-off culture, where the price of things is calculated not on the cost of the parts plus a bit of profit for the maker and distributor but on what a sufficient number of buyers can be induced to pay.

I’m writing this while wincing from the pain of having parted with £229 for Bruce Springsteen’s Tracks II: The Lost Albums. This, as you may be aware, is a set of seven CDs recorded between 1983 and 2014, six of them conceived and recorded at the same time and one assembled from bits and pieces. I’ve loved Springsteen since reviewing Greetings from Asbury Park, N. J. for the Melody Maker in early 1973, I bought bootlegs like You Can Trust Your Car to the Man With the Star and the Roxy tapes in the early days, and the last of the many times I’ve seen him, at Wembley in the summer of 2024, is a cherished memory. So I was looking forward to hearing these “lost albums” (which, of course, weren’t lost at all, merely filed away in Bruce’s personal tape store).

Their arrival was a bit disconcerting. They came in a container of very large dimensions, carefully packaged up, opening to reveal a box big enough to hold seven 12-inch vinyl albums, never mind seven little silver discs. The reason for the use of the outsized packaging seems to be the inclusion of a large-format 100-page hardback book containing a lot of impressionistic black and white photographs — Fender Esquire headstock, Twin Reverb amp, Bruce on horseback, Bruce on a motorbike, Bruce in the studio — and a series of short essays explaining the making of each of the CDs.

Despite this early evidence of art-director overkill, I was still looking forward to hearing the music. Gradually, though, as I worked my way through the CDs in sequence, it became obvious that their maker had made the right decision to put them on the shelf. There is virtually nothing here that reaches the level of his best officially released music. What it shows most clearly is that he’s written and recorded a lot of songs over the years in his various home studios, and some of them aren’t very good, which is why they were left on the shelf.

That’s most clearly apparent on the first disc, LA Garage Sessions ’83, where he sounds uncomfortably like the guy of limited horizons gently satirised by Prefab Sprout on “Cars and Girls” in 1988. Streets of Philadelphia Sessions is no better: one-paced and somehow enervated. Faithless, commissioned as the soundtrack for an “as-yet unmade” movie, is better: a well-turned essay in Americana with atmospheric instrumentals and lots of acoustic slide guitar and harmonica, a bit like one of Ry Cooder’s soundtracks, or Dylan’s Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid, with a strong song in “My Master’s Hand”, making it an album you can put on and quite enjoy from beginning to end.

Of Somewhere North of Nashville, a quite lavish but ultimately heavy handed production with lots of Soozie Tyrell’s fiddle and Marty Rifkin’s steel guitar, you can only say that if it were a bunch of demos it wouldn’t get him a publishing contract on Music Row, not when the best of the dozen songs is “Poor Side of Town”, written by Johnny Rivers and Lou Adler, here delivered in a version that lacks the charm of Rivers’ original, a No 1 hit on its release in 1966. Bruce’s stab at a Tex-Mex album, titled Inyo, is fresher, but still not really convincing, despite the occasional use of mariachi musicians, the pleasant textures and the attempt to create complex, poetic lyrics; you merely end up wishing he’d make an album with Los Lobos.

The worst, by a distance, is Twilight Hours, his stab at writing and recording a sumptuously upholstered album of saloon songs, laments for lost love glimpsed in the bottom of a whisky glass in a dimly lit cocktail bar while car tyres hiss by in the rain and neon signs glow in the puddles. That sort of thing. When Sinatra patented the genre, he had the benefit of repertoire composed by likes of Sammy Cahn and Jimmy Van Heusen, Harold Arlen and Johnny Mercer, Jerome Kern, Yip Harburg, Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart, Jule Styne and Gordon Jenkins — people who could fit together richly chromatic melodies and highly literate lyrics. And just as none of them could have written “Thunder Road” or “Badlands”, so Springsteen couldn’t write “Angel Eyes” or “Violets for Your Furs”. His decision not to release this album six years ago shows that he knew the results were not satisfactory.

The final album, Perfect Days, although cobbled together from various sessions, is paradoxically quite the most coherent of all the discs, with some songs that would have taken their places happily in second-rank Springsteen albums like Working on a Dream or High Hopes. Big and beefy in an E Street Band way, “Another Thin Line” is a fine take on the “Gloria” template, while “The Great Depression” is a particularly attractive strummed ballad.

If you told me that Dylan often leaves great stuff in the vault until it finds its way into a volume of his Bootleg Series, I’d answer that there’s no “Blind Willie McTell”, “Red River Shore” or “Cross the Green Mountain” here. If you were to say that Dylan often tries on costumes, whether for Nashville Skyline or Shadows in the Night, as Springsteen does here, I’d reply that the older artist made important strategic use of those genre-hopping adventures, allowing them to condition the music that came next. Dylan may have recorded “Autumn Leaves”, but he didn’t make the mistake of thinking he could write something like it; instead he used the experience of delivering it to redirect his approach to singing his own songs.

So I dunno. Previous dives into Springsteen’s vaults have delivered excellent official versions of much loved and often bootlegged songs such as “Santa Ana”, “Thundercrack” and “The Promise”. When it comes to this set, I admire him for exercising good judgment when it came to making an initial assessment of the material. I suppose it ought to be interesting to hear the stuff that didn’t work — but at more than 30 quid a disc? I really don’t think so.

14 Comments Post a comment
  1. AnEarful's avatar
    AnEarful #

    This is what Spotify (or your favorite streaming service) is for. While most Dylan bootleg sets have been revelatory, I was glad to weed out More Blood, More Tracks from the “must-buy” category after listening to the sampling they put on Spotify.

    August 4, 2025
  2. dhvinyl's avatar

    I did without the postman and the book and pressed the ‘play’ button on Apple Music. I soon reached the same conclusion as you but without any extra payment!

    August 5, 2025
  3. kittenmystic769b33fa8f's avatar
    kittenmystic769b33fa8f #

    It’s a little bit bewildering coming from such an ostensibly good guy, I presume he must have had some influence with the pricing. I see there is a single cd of the best of these sessions available though it doesn’t seem to include many of the few highlights you have outlined Richard.

    August 5, 2025
  4. Mick Tarrant's avatar
    Mick Tarrant #

    “Now we live in a rip-off culture, where the price of things is calculated not on the cost of the parts plus a bit of profit for the maker and distributor but on what a sufficient number of buyers can be induced to pay.”

    Perfect defnition of record company greed when it comes to limited/special/deluxe editions.

    August 5, 2025
    • Sedat Nemli's avatar
      Sedat Nemli #

      Agreed. Perhaps Springsteen should have named this release “Greetings from Cashbury Park”.

      August 5, 2025
      • Mick Tarrant's avatar
        Mick Tarrant #

        Hahahha….nice one!

        August 5, 2025
  5. GRAHAM ROBERTS's avatar
    GRAHAM ROBERTS #

    Spot on, Richard. I was in far too much of a hurry to buy this Springsteen box, which I bought immediately on its release in the hope that it would raise my spirits prior to some hospital treatment. It did not have the desired effect! Just about everything is not quite right – the unwieldy and over-sized packaging, the moderate quality of the music (I agree with you that ‘Perfect Days’ is the best of an underwhelming bunch), the price (!!)) – and having listened a couple of times now I doubt that there is much here that I will be returning to for repeat listening.

    I guess I should have been forewarned by the content of an earlier ‘Tracks’ set, the 4xCD collection released in 1998 of previously unheard recordings of mostly unremarkable quality. But that set was redeemed by the inclusion of a handful of prime quality Springsteen tracks, the standards of which are almost completely absent from the new box.

    Never mind – the esteem in which I hold Springsteen will survive my disappointment with this latest release, and my spirits have subsequently been raised anyway by the delivery of a box of Dionne Warwick’s Sceptre recordings; now they are genuinely uplifting!

    Best regards

    Graham.

    Sent from my iPad

    August 5, 2025
  6. martin colyer's avatar

    If I was actually writing about music at the moment, this is the review I would have written (but I wouldn’t have got close to the tone you acheived here, Richard). I listened to it on Apple Music, thus relieving the burden of its price tag, but I could barely find a song that should have made its way onto an album. It’s an issue with legacies. Does anyone buy the shoddily recorded and incontinent Neil Young releases that seem to issue forth every month? Why is this happening?

    I’d take issue about More Blood, More Tracks, AnEarful, where you enter the creative cocoon of Bob’s life for four or five days and are very amply rewarded. It’s almost my favourite Dylan album…

    August 5, 2025
  7. chrischarlesworth165's avatar
    chrischarlesworth165 #

    Thank you for that Richard. I mistrusted the rave review in Mojo and was waiting for a more subjective review before buying this which, of course, I won’t now. I believe huge, expensive box sets tend to be played once out of curiosity and then put on a shelf like an ornament.

    August 5, 2025
  8. martinfoyle's avatar

    Agree with previous comments. This looks more worthwhile

    https://x.com/SpringNuts_/status/1952717685176913953?t=nhSO9cMzq2d5xzFX58qCiA&s=19

    August 5, 2025
  9. Roger S.'s avatar
    Roger S. #

    As you indicated the package sounds like a rip off to fleece Springsteen diehards. I bought ‘Greetings from Asbury Park ‘ on your recommendation ,after reading the review in Melody Maker .Enjoyable though it was Bruce seemed to be struggling with excess verbosity .

    I haven’t really bothered with Bruce since The River ,so no diehard fan. And nowadays ,well,his hair is too tight and so are his clothes.

    August 8, 2025
  10. Colin Harper's avatar
    Colin Harper #

    These sort of prices from wealthy musicians is

    August 8, 2025
  11. Colin Harper's avatar
    Colin Harper #

    Apologies – technical error. As I was saying… these sort of prices from wealthy musicians are disgraceful – be it ridiculous concert ticket prices for arena-level acts or ridiculous per-disc prices for box sets.

    I’ve been involved/am involved in some large sets for Madfish (Horslips 35 disc set, Fairport 12-disc set, forthcoming Martin Carthy 20-disc set etc.) and their ethos is a retail price that equates roughly to £10 per disc – but of course that’s a deceptive measure because often the quality of written and visual print content and (perhaps unappreciated by many) the cost of licensing in rare film/TV material, if that’s a part of the offering, are a significant part of the outlay in creating such sets, and a significant amount of ‘added value’ for the buyer. But generally buyers will use that ‘per disc’ VFM calculation. With the Bruce set you describe, it doesn’t sound like much effort has gone into the book – bulked out with arty recent photos rather than packed with the fruits of painstaking research and licensed-in images etc.

    As an aside, I’m currently creating a multi-licensor 7CD+DVD Dick Gaughan set ‘R/evolution: 1969-83’, around 80% unreleased (including 2 1/2 hours of rare film), funded by Kickstarter back in April, because record labels didn’t believe in it. I priced it at £65 for Kickstarter pledgers (over 1,000) and 500 further copies will likely go to retail at £75. It can be done – and shame on Bruce for not doing it.

    August 8, 2025

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