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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,501 --> 00:00:03,799 All right. Let me think here. 2 00:00:07,773 --> 00:00:09,764 First thing... Everybody, hey. 3 00:01:35,895 --> 00:01:36,884 Stop. 4 00:01:48,741 --> 00:01:50,333 And the bass, like... 5 00:02:07,693 --> 00:02:10,719 You feel real good about the way this one has come out? 6 00:02:10,763 --> 00:02:13,288 Yeah, I like it. You know, I like it. 7 00:02:13,332 --> 00:02:15,527 Which is always a hard thing to do. 8 00:02:16,569 --> 00:02:18,935 There's a lot of things, you know, 9 00:02:18,971 --> 00:02:20,529 that I would do differently, 10 00:02:20,573 --> 00:02:23,007 and I hear differently now. 11 00:02:24,143 --> 00:02:25,906 But in general... 12 00:02:27,380 --> 00:02:31,146 I think it's an honest record, 13 00:02:31,183 --> 00:02:33,617 and that's basically what I was trying to make. 14 00:03:08,621 --> 00:03:10,088 After Born To Run, 15 00:03:10,122 --> 00:03:12,522 I wanted to write about life in the close confines 16 00:03:12,558 --> 00:03:14,822 of the small towns I grew up in. 17 00:03:17,897 --> 00:03:21,799 In 1977, I was living on a farm in Holmdel, New Jersey. 18 00:03:23,169 --> 00:03:26,832 It was there that I wrote most of the songs for Darkness On The Edge Of Town. 19 00:03:35,581 --> 00:03:38,709 I was 27 and the product of Top 40 radio. 20 00:03:39,351 --> 00:03:41,478 Songs like The Animals' It's My Life, 21 00:03:41,520 --> 00:03:43,511 We Gotta Get Out Of This Place, 22 00:03:43,556 --> 00:03:46,889 were infused with an early-pop class consciousness. 23 00:03:49,195 --> 00:03:50,958 That along with my own experience, 24 00:03:50,996 --> 00:03:53,931 the stress and tension of my father's and mother's life 25 00:03:53,966 --> 00:03:56,958 that came with the difficulties of trying to make ends meet, 26 00:03:57,002 --> 00:03:58,833 influenced my writing. 27 00:04:00,306 --> 00:04:02,536 I had a reaction to my own good fortune, 28 00:04:02,575 --> 00:04:04,634 and I asked myself new questions. 29 00:04:07,313 --> 00:04:11,306 I felt a sense of accountability to the people I had grown up alongside. 30 00:04:13,586 --> 00:04:16,248 I began to wonder how to address that feeling. 31 00:04:21,494 --> 00:04:25,897 All of this led to the turn my writing took on Darkness. 32 00:05:04,937 --> 00:05:07,997 That was a sort of a big... 33 00:05:08,040 --> 00:05:11,168 it's a reckoning with the adult world, 34 00:05:11,210 --> 00:05:14,543 with a life of limitations and compromises. 35 00:05:16,582 --> 00:05:18,573 But also... 36 00:05:18,617 --> 00:05:24,522 a life of kind of resilience, and commitment to life. 37 00:05:25,791 --> 00:05:27,884 You know, to... 38 00:05:27,927 --> 00:05:29,485 you know, 39 00:05:29,528 --> 00:05:31,928 to the breath in your lungs. 40 00:05:31,964 --> 00:05:35,525 How do I keep faith with those things? 41 00:05:35,568 --> 00:05:37,559 How do I honor those things? 42 00:05:37,603 --> 00:05:42,336 Darkness was a record where I set out to try to understand 43 00:05:42,374 --> 00:05:43,807 how to do that. 44 00:06:25,017 --> 00:06:28,714 We'd had Born To Run in 1975. 45 00:06:28,754 --> 00:06:30,984 That was the biggest hit... 46 00:06:31,790 --> 00:06:35,055 that any of us had any connection to ever. 47 00:06:35,094 --> 00:06:36,891 The success we had with Born to Run 48 00:06:36,929 --> 00:06:38,396 immediately made me ask, 49 00:06:38,430 --> 00:06:41,024 "Well, what's that all about?" 50 00:06:41,066 --> 00:06:43,500 "What is that..." 51 00:06:43,535 --> 00:06:45,901 "You know, what's that mean for me?" 52 00:06:49,909 --> 00:06:52,139 The success brought me an audience. 53 00:06:53,178 --> 00:06:55,738 It also separated me from all the things 54 00:06:55,781 --> 00:06:59,444 I had been trying to make my connections to my whole life. 55 00:07:00,719 --> 00:07:02,846 And it frightened me because 56 00:07:02,888 --> 00:07:07,484 I understood that what I had of value was at my core, 57 00:07:07,526 --> 00:07:11,121 and that core was rooted into the place I had grown up, 58 00:07:11,163 --> 00:07:13,097 the people I had known, 59 00:07:13,132 --> 00:07:15,032 the experiences I'd had. 60 00:07:15,067 --> 00:07:18,468 If I move away from those things into a sphere of... 61 00:07:18,504 --> 00:07:20,768 of just... 62 00:07:20,806 --> 00:07:22,774 freedom as pure license, 63 00:07:22,808 --> 00:07:27,541 to go about your life as you desire, without connection, 64 00:07:27,579 --> 00:07:29,706 that's where a lot of the people I admire 65 00:07:29,748 --> 00:07:32,080 drifted away from the essential things 66 00:07:32,117 --> 00:07:33,584 that made them great. 67 00:07:33,619 --> 00:07:36,588 And more than rich, and more than famous, 68 00:07:36,622 --> 00:07:40,319 and more than happy, 69 00:07:40,359 --> 00:07:41,724 I wanted to be great. 70 00:07:55,207 --> 00:08:00,304 The success at that particular moment was so dreamlike. 71 00:08:04,316 --> 00:08:08,150 All of the rock-and-roll dreams that I had held as a kid 72 00:08:08,187 --> 00:08:10,178 had finally come true. 73 00:08:11,323 --> 00:08:13,223 All of the sudden the band was noticed 74 00:08:13,258 --> 00:08:16,785 and that's when we really started building a following. 75 00:08:16,829 --> 00:08:19,320 And everything was going good. 76 00:08:19,365 --> 00:08:22,960 We were so excited about that type of success. 77 00:08:24,203 --> 00:08:25,568 We thought we made it. 78 00:08:26,772 --> 00:08:31,368 We were finally in the studio making records. 79 00:08:33,545 --> 00:08:35,945 We got it made now, this is going to happen. 80 00:08:35,981 --> 00:08:37,915 Then all of a sudden things stopped. 81 00:08:47,226 --> 00:08:49,160 There were two clouds that hung over 82 00:08:49,194 --> 00:08:52,391 the writing and recording of Darkness On The Edge Of Town, 83 00:08:52,431 --> 00:08:55,628 and one was just the success that we had. 84 00:08:55,667 --> 00:08:57,635 Let's face it - 85 00:08:57,669 --> 00:09:00,001 you're one thing one day, 86 00:09:00,039 --> 00:09:02,974 and then all of a sudden you're post-Time and Newsweek, 87 00:09:03,008 --> 00:09:04,066 post-Born To Run. 88 00:09:04,109 --> 00:09:06,839 Everyone looks at you different than what you were. 89 00:09:06,879 --> 00:09:10,713 You were a struggling artist one day, now you're a real success story. 90 00:09:14,553 --> 00:09:16,544 I enjoyed it plenty along the way, 91 00:09:16,588 --> 00:09:18,647 tried to accept the things that had happened to me 92 00:09:18,690 --> 00:09:20,214 but not let them distort 93 00:09:20,259 --> 00:09:23,319 my idea about who I was or what I wanted to do. 94 00:09:23,362 --> 00:09:26,627 I had to disregard my own mutation. 95 00:09:27,332 --> 00:09:28,856 That was the cloud of success. 96 00:09:30,335 --> 00:09:33,532 The other was the lawsuit that I ended up in with Mike. 97 00:09:36,775 --> 00:09:41,610 January of 1976, events had occurred 98 00:09:41,647 --> 00:09:44,081 that had led to a fracture in the relationship 99 00:09:44,116 --> 00:09:47,017 between Bruce and his former manager, Mike Appel. 100 00:09:47,052 --> 00:09:51,614 We signed a publishing and production contract, originally. 101 00:09:51,657 --> 00:09:53,648 It was customary 102 00:09:53,692 --> 00:09:56,820 in the business when an artist gets a record deal 103 00:09:56,862 --> 00:09:58,830 to give away half his publishing, 104 00:09:58,864 --> 00:10:02,960 to EMI, Blackwood Music, April-Blackwood Music, 105 00:10:03,001 --> 00:10:04,229 whoever it might be. 106 00:10:04,269 --> 00:10:06,567 He gave it to me and it was a good thing he did 107 00:10:06,605 --> 00:10:08,698 because he ended up getting it all back. 108 00:10:08,740 --> 00:10:11,538 That wouldn't have happened elsewhere. 109 00:10:11,577 --> 00:10:15,274 There was a bit something old-school about what was going on. 110 00:10:15,314 --> 00:10:20,479 The contract that these music moguls would sign with these kids, 111 00:10:20,519 --> 00:10:22,714 you know, Bruce had signed that very contract. 112 00:10:23,822 --> 00:10:27,349 When a law firm represents a Bruce Springsteen, 113 00:10:27,392 --> 00:10:29,553 the only way they can get out of the contracts 114 00:10:29,595 --> 00:10:31,586 is to claim that they're unconscionable. 115 00:10:31,630 --> 00:10:34,565 The whole thing ends up being a lot of stupidity, 116 00:10:34,600 --> 00:10:38,559 there is no unconscionable anything, and everything's just nonsense. 117 00:10:38,604 --> 00:10:42,131 How could you be getting the best deal for Bruce Springsteen 118 00:10:42,174 --> 00:10:45,007 as his manager if you're already his producer and his publisher? 119 00:10:45,043 --> 00:10:49,207 Once you start along that path, it's hard to extricate yourself 120 00:10:49,248 --> 00:10:52,240 from that legal mess that you're now in. 121 00:10:52,284 --> 00:10:54,218 You know, you're being pushed along, 122 00:10:54,253 --> 00:10:56,551 and you may not like where you're being pushed, 123 00:10:56,588 --> 00:10:59,682 but nevertheless you're being pushed. You have to take a stand. 124 00:10:59,725 --> 00:11:02,717 How are you getting out of your contracts if you want to get control? 125 00:11:07,566 --> 00:11:12,731 With regard to the legal situation, the actual initial court order 126 00:11:12,771 --> 00:11:15,968 was that Bruce couldn't go in the studio 127 00:11:16,008 --> 00:11:21,036 with a producer not approved by Mike Appel. 128 00:11:21,079 --> 00:11:24,674 In the early stages of that lawsuit when things didn't go well, 129 00:11:24,716 --> 00:11:28,015 his only form of protest over this 130 00:11:28,053 --> 00:11:30,317 was just not to go in at all. 131 00:11:30,355 --> 00:11:33,347 The main problem we had initially was we couldn't record 132 00:11:33,392 --> 00:11:37,123 and the reason was I was signed to Mike's production company, 133 00:11:37,162 --> 00:11:39,858 and that gave Mike the power to decide 134 00:11:39,898 --> 00:11:41,923 basically all the essentials about 135 00:11:41,967 --> 00:11:44,333 how we recorded, who we recorded with. 136 00:11:44,369 --> 00:11:47,827 I was kind of his property in that area and that's all there was to it, 137 00:11:47,873 --> 00:11:50,364 and I couldn't make those decisions on my own, 138 00:11:50,409 --> 00:11:52,877 so therefore we couldn't go into the studio. 139 00:11:57,049 --> 00:12:02,146 The initial contracts, rather than evil, were naive. 140 00:12:02,187 --> 00:12:05,850 You wouldn't put that kind of stress and tension on a relationship. 141 00:12:05,891 --> 00:12:09,088 It was bound to be destructive, so the contracts were naive. 142 00:12:11,029 --> 00:12:12,724 The litigation that was going on, 143 00:12:12,764 --> 00:12:16,063 we weren't really a part of it, but certainly were affected by it. 144 00:12:16,101 --> 00:12:18,763 We were all broke, nobody had any money. 145 00:12:18,804 --> 00:12:20,772 We were all going day to day. 146 00:12:22,975 --> 00:12:24,704 It wasn't a lawsuit about money, 147 00:12:24,743 --> 00:12:26,768 it was a lawsuit about control, 148 00:12:26,812 --> 00:12:31,272 who was going to be in control of my work and my work life. 149 00:12:31,316 --> 00:12:33,944 Early on I decided that that was going to be me. 150 00:12:37,356 --> 00:12:40,655 The bottom line was it would be my ass on the line, 151 00:12:40,692 --> 00:12:44,753 and I was gonna control where it went and how things went down. 152 00:12:44,796 --> 00:12:48,425 That for me was what the lawsuit was about. 153 00:12:48,467 --> 00:12:51,402 If I don't go in the studio, I don't go in the studio. 154 00:12:51,436 --> 00:12:54,564 I don't go in under somebody else's rules. 155 00:13:22,401 --> 00:13:26,428 If I can't go in the studio and make the music I want to make, I won't make music. 156 00:13:26,471 --> 00:13:29,702 We played live, we survived playing the live shows 157 00:13:29,741 --> 00:13:32,642 as best we could, but things got very, very difficult. 158 00:13:34,946 --> 00:13:39,610 What it came down to is you can lose the rights to your music, the ability to record... 159 00:13:40,986 --> 00:13:43,477 you can lose the ownership of your songs, 160 00:13:43,522 --> 00:13:45,183 but you can't lose... 161 00:13:48,427 --> 00:13:50,258 that thing, that thing that's in you. 162 00:14:08,046 --> 00:14:13,541 Not being able to return to the studio after the Born To Run record, 163 00:14:13,585 --> 00:14:16,315 was just heartbreaking. 164 00:14:19,524 --> 00:14:23,984 You hear a lot of talk about family, bands being family, teams being family. 165 00:14:24,029 --> 00:14:26,395 At that time, it really was that, 166 00:14:26,431 --> 00:14:30,595 because what we had truly were our relationships 167 00:14:30,635 --> 00:14:32,500 and the music that Bruce was writing. 168 00:15:21,386 --> 00:15:23,752 During that time, we rehearsed every day 169 00:15:23,789 --> 00:15:25,689 at Bruce's house in New Jersey. 170 00:15:26,358 --> 00:15:28,292 We could play until all hours of the night. 171 00:15:28,326 --> 00:15:30,988 It was far enough and big enough and away from other houses, 172 00:15:31,029 --> 00:15:33,827 that we could make all the noise we wanted. 173 00:15:36,735 --> 00:15:39,295 When he went through that lawsuit, 174 00:15:39,337 --> 00:15:41,328 those things don't have to be... 175 00:15:42,340 --> 00:15:45,503 They don't have to be horrible things that happen to you, 176 00:15:45,544 --> 00:15:47,205 there's things that happen to you 177 00:15:47,245 --> 00:15:49,270 and then there are catalysts for something else. 178 00:15:52,350 --> 00:15:57,845 My sense of his reaction to this roadblock in his career 179 00:15:57,889 --> 00:16:00,790 was that determination, that will, 180 00:16:00,826 --> 00:16:03,954 that desire to do it his way, 181 00:16:03,995 --> 00:16:05,690 became even greater. 182 00:16:05,730 --> 00:16:09,427 Maybe his way of working it all out was to write songs. 183 00:16:15,607 --> 00:16:18,303 While there was a lot of pain because I was sorting out 184 00:16:18,343 --> 00:16:20,504 what happened between Mike and I, 185 00:16:20,545 --> 00:16:24,948 it was also a time of refinding myself and freedom. 186 00:16:24,983 --> 00:16:26,280 Freedom... 187 00:16:26,318 --> 00:16:30,516 the freedom I found back where I felt like I belonged. 188 00:17:13,899 --> 00:17:15,730 Maybe horns here? 189 00:17:15,767 --> 00:17:19,498 Bruce had been away for a year since he made Born To Run, 190 00:17:19,538 --> 00:17:21,403 a big record to live up to, 191 00:17:21,439 --> 00:17:23,134 it's like the clock was ticking. 192 00:17:23,174 --> 00:17:26,268 I believe the plan was to do Darkness fairly quick. 193 00:17:26,311 --> 00:17:28,871 These days two or three years goes by between records, 194 00:17:28,914 --> 00:17:31,610 and people don't think about it much, but in those days 195 00:17:31,650 --> 00:17:34,744 we had to make two records in the first year that I had a contract, 196 00:17:34,786 --> 00:17:36,913 and another record shortly after that. 197 00:17:36,955 --> 00:17:40,857 Two or three years in between records then, you disappeared. 198 00:17:40,892 --> 00:17:43,918 And I read many, many articles "Whatever happened to?" 199 00:17:43,962 --> 00:17:46,192 You know, you're dead, flash in the pan, 200 00:17:46,231 --> 00:17:48,961 and for all I knew, that might have been true. 201 00:17:52,404 --> 00:17:55,464 The stakes were even higher, in certain respects. 202 00:17:55,507 --> 00:17:56,997 What was this guy gonna do next? 203 00:17:59,878 --> 00:18:02,312 The future was pretty cloudy. 204 00:18:04,049 --> 00:18:06,279 You know, we had one success. 205 00:18:06,318 --> 00:18:08,218 A lot of people, that's all they have. 206 00:18:08,253 --> 00:18:11,347 If I'd had that one success, I'd have went back to Asbury Park 207 00:18:11,389 --> 00:18:15,723 millions of dollars in debt rather than the other way round. 208 00:18:15,760 --> 00:18:16,988 You didn't know... 209 00:18:18,496 --> 00:18:21,260 that this may be the last record you'll ever make. 210 00:18:21,299 --> 00:18:25,895 Everything I'm about, and think about, I gotta get it out now, 211 00:18:25,937 --> 00:18:28,997 on this record, because there's no tomorrow. 212 00:18:29,975 --> 00:18:32,671 There's just this moment. 213 00:18:34,379 --> 00:18:36,347 One, two, three, four! 214 00:18:53,131 --> 00:18:54,996 In June of 1977, 215 00:18:55,033 --> 00:19:01,632 Bruce's situation with his former manager was decided conclusively. 216 00:19:01,673 --> 00:19:05,575 He got control of his music and ultimately his career, 217 00:19:05,610 --> 00:19:07,441 and it was probably, in my view, 218 00:19:07,479 --> 00:19:09,811 the defining moment of his young career, 219 00:19:09,848 --> 00:19:13,409 because he had withstood the rigors of someone 220 00:19:13,451 --> 00:19:16,181 literally trying to take his future away. 221 00:19:17,822 --> 00:19:21,451 These were the things that I would have fought to the death for 222 00:19:21,493 --> 00:19:26,055 because without them, at that time, I felt I had no life. 223 00:19:26,097 --> 00:19:28,122 So I knew I was gonna take... 224 00:19:28,166 --> 00:19:31,465 whatever it was, I was gonna take it the whole way. 225 00:19:31,503 --> 00:19:32,902 And... 226 00:19:33,938 --> 00:19:36,634 And that you're fighting a friend, which is... 227 00:19:37,542 --> 00:19:38,907 I wish it on nobody. 228 00:19:40,178 --> 00:19:43,147 The loss of Mike's friendship was a terrible loss. 229 00:19:44,582 --> 00:19:47,745 I mean, I don't think our working relationship 230 00:19:47,786 --> 00:19:51,222 would have continued the way it had, you know, but... 231 00:19:51,256 --> 00:19:55,056 but the friendship was tremendously enjoyable. 232 00:19:55,093 --> 00:19:57,027 When we see each other now, 233 00:19:57,062 --> 00:19:59,724 I still enjoy being with him very much. 234 00:20:01,266 --> 00:20:05,828 I called Jon Landau and I said, "I feel it's silly, this acrimony" 235 00:20:05,870 --> 00:20:08,100 "that's still lingering in the air." 236 00:20:08,139 --> 00:20:09,800 He said, "Mike, come on up." 237 00:20:09,841 --> 00:20:13,538 I came up and I sat with him for an hour or whatever it was, 238 00:20:13,578 --> 00:20:14,772 chatting and... 239 00:20:14,813 --> 00:20:19,216 He said, "I'll get a hold of Bruce, I'm sure he'll want to get together with you." 240 00:20:19,250 --> 00:20:21,445 And we did. We had a great dinner. 241 00:20:21,486 --> 00:20:24,853 And that's commitment you can't find anywhere. 242 00:20:27,492 --> 00:20:29,926 Had I stayed right to this day, 243 00:20:29,961 --> 00:20:32,623 that would not have been the best thing for Mike Appel 244 00:20:32,664 --> 00:20:36,794 because I have very strong artistic ideas 245 00:20:36,835 --> 00:20:39,861 about songwriting and songs and lyrics and riffs, 246 00:20:39,904 --> 00:20:42,464 and they may have conflicted with Bruce. 247 00:20:42,507 --> 00:20:46,307 And in the end you have to say, "Mike, who's the artist?" 248 00:20:55,086 --> 00:20:57,884 Finally, when we went back into the studio to start recording 249 00:20:57,922 --> 00:21:00,584 what would become the Darkness On The Edge Of Town album, 250 00:21:00,625 --> 00:21:02,286 it was a sense of... 251 00:21:02,327 --> 00:21:05,421 we can finally start working on this thing 252 00:21:05,463 --> 00:21:11,231 with the proper production team of Bruce and Jon Landau. 253 00:21:11,269 --> 00:21:15,672 When we sort of got together and started talking about Darkness, 254 00:21:15,707 --> 00:21:18,267 I had vaguely assumed that we would 255 00:21:18,309 --> 00:21:21,073 in some way pick up from where we left off. 256 00:21:21,112 --> 00:21:24,081 I think even us, as well as the record companies, 257 00:21:24,115 --> 00:21:25,582 after Born To Run... 258 00:21:26,651 --> 00:21:31,452 felt the next record would sort of follow in the same footsteps, 259 00:21:31,489 --> 00:21:34,925 and propel us a little further along. 260 00:21:34,959 --> 00:21:36,722 That would seem like formula to me. 261 00:21:36,761 --> 00:21:40,356 He wasn't planning to write the next Jungleland 262 00:21:40,398 --> 00:21:41,990 or the next Backstreets. 263 00:21:42,033 --> 00:21:45,696 I think that was one moment, he was in another moment. 264 00:21:45,737 --> 00:21:48,865 One, two, three, 265 00:21:48,907 --> 00:21:50,238 four. 266 00:22:03,021 --> 00:22:06,320 One, two, three, 267 00:22:06,357 --> 00:22:07,756 four. 268 00:22:17,035 --> 00:22:19,469 It was quite experimental 269 00:22:19,504 --> 00:22:22,064 that we didn't go into that record 270 00:22:22,106 --> 00:22:26,736 with an absolutely specific idea of... 271 00:22:26,778 --> 00:22:29,110 what we wanted from it, 272 00:22:29,147 --> 00:22:31,877 and how we were gonna get there. 273 00:22:33,151 --> 00:22:34,812 I remember him telling me 274 00:22:34,853 --> 00:22:37,981 he really wanted to downsize the scale, 275 00:22:38,022 --> 00:22:40,889 that big sound of Born To Run. 276 00:22:45,730 --> 00:22:48,392 Suddenly everything got very sparse. 277 00:22:48,433 --> 00:22:52,369 Where the Born To Run album had this sort of... 278 00:22:52,403 --> 00:22:55,998 our take on the quote-unquote "wall of sound", 279 00:22:56,040 --> 00:22:59,874 now you had this vast cinematic landscape. 280 00:23:08,052 --> 00:23:11,488 I love the wily lone wolf image 281 00:23:11,522 --> 00:23:14,047 that I get when I hear that record. 282 00:23:14,092 --> 00:23:16,788 The record maintains that kind of ominous... 283 00:23:18,296 --> 00:23:22,198 potentially hopeful feel throughout, it doesn't break that focus. 284 00:23:22,233 --> 00:23:27,432 One phrase that we would use to discuss 285 00:23:27,472 --> 00:23:30,339 the sound of the record, 286 00:23:30,375 --> 00:23:32,343 as it evolved, 287 00:23:33,711 --> 00:23:36,509 was the sound picture. 288 00:23:39,350 --> 00:23:44,447 What kind of picture was the sound of the record suggesting? 289 00:23:46,724 --> 00:23:49,215 We did want a certain feeling of loneliness, 290 00:23:49,260 --> 00:23:55,324 a certain unglamorized, to mix languages, sound. 291 00:23:56,834 --> 00:23:58,927 There was no "sweetening", 292 00:23:58,970 --> 00:24:03,168 you know, a lot of overdubs, especially strings and horns. 293 00:24:03,207 --> 00:24:07,871 We didn't want any sweetening, we wanted, you know, coffee black. 294 00:24:20,625 --> 00:24:24,152 That was pretty much what I was after, a leaner sound, 295 00:24:24,195 --> 00:24:25,958 an angrier sound, 296 00:24:25,997 --> 00:24:28,431 I wanted to toughen up the songs. 297 00:24:28,466 --> 00:24:30,900 When you're first making records, 298 00:24:30,935 --> 00:24:36,100 you so think that you need this big production, this big sound. 299 00:24:36,140 --> 00:24:38,938 So I think Bruce was a little futuristic 300 00:24:38,977 --> 00:24:41,172 in saying, you know, let's just be simple. 301 00:24:43,147 --> 00:24:46,639 I wanted the record to have a very... 302 00:24:46,684 --> 00:24:48,481 relentless... 303 00:24:49,487 --> 00:24:50,476 feeling. 304 00:24:50,521 --> 00:24:58,521 Nothing is forgotten or forgiven when it's your last time around 305 00:25:03,835 --> 00:25:07,896 I got stuff running 'round my head 306 00:25:08,873 --> 00:25:15,437 that I just can't live down. 307 00:25:28,026 --> 00:25:29,926 We're very preoccupied with parts. 308 00:25:29,961 --> 00:25:32,623 On Born to Run Bruce wrote all those parts, 309 00:25:32,663 --> 00:25:35,063 the way to get it just the way he wanted, 310 00:25:35,099 --> 00:25:37,192 was to focus on each individual part. 311 00:25:44,909 --> 00:25:48,868 We had these very, very set arrangements on Born To Run. 312 00:25:51,349 --> 00:25:53,647 Darkness was a bit more freewheeling. 313 00:26:11,536 --> 00:26:14,300 We just simply didn't rehearse anymore. 314 00:26:14,338 --> 00:26:18,707 I would give the guys the chords, 315 00:26:18,743 --> 00:26:20,608 count into the song, 316 00:26:20,645 --> 00:26:24,979 and before they could come up with parts, they'd have to play. 317 00:26:27,085 --> 00:26:29,076 So the first two or three takes, 318 00:26:29,120 --> 00:26:32,521 you didn't get people recording, you got people playing. 319 00:26:37,295 --> 00:26:39,263 Very often I didn't have the words. 320 00:26:39,297 --> 00:26:41,993 I remember Badlands, I think I had "Badlands". 321 00:26:54,412 --> 00:26:58,280 Bruce was at that time a tremendous rewriter, 322 00:26:58,316 --> 00:27:00,841 alternate verses, alternate endings, 323 00:27:00,885 --> 00:27:03,080 always created choices for himself. 324 00:27:07,792 --> 00:27:08,884 All right. 325 00:27:12,597 --> 00:27:13,996 I had that riff. 326 00:27:14,866 --> 00:27:17,664 So I would count it off. 327 00:27:17,702 --> 00:27:20,034 And then I would sort of imagine... 328 00:27:20,071 --> 00:27:22,039 I'd imagine a verse in a... 329 00:27:24,175 --> 00:27:25,767 you know, A and a B section, 330 00:27:25,810 --> 00:27:27,573 I wouldn't have any lyrics yet. 331 00:27:27,612 --> 00:27:30,706 I was just following whatever worked musically, 332 00:27:30,748 --> 00:27:32,579 whatever felt exciting musically. 333 00:27:38,055 --> 00:27:41,183 Well, it was the first real E Street Band record, 334 00:27:41,225 --> 00:27:43,819 I think in many ways his first two albums 335 00:27:43,861 --> 00:27:46,455 were solo records. 336 00:27:52,870 --> 00:27:54,167 Stop, stop. 337 00:27:54,505 --> 00:27:58,635 How do you capture that great live thing in the studio... 338 00:28:00,077 --> 00:28:01,544 was still a bit of a mystery. 339 00:28:01,579 --> 00:28:07,916 In the '70s, somebody decided that all ambient sound was bad. 340 00:28:07,952 --> 00:28:10,546 Everything was carpeted, everything was dead, 341 00:28:10,588 --> 00:28:13,284 nothing was allowed to breathe, 342 00:28:13,324 --> 00:28:15,485 we wanted to capture the sound of the band live. 343 00:28:15,526 --> 00:28:19,587 But studios created this completely unnatural environment, 344 00:28:19,630 --> 00:28:24,590 with not a hint of any reverberant sound coming off of anything. 345 00:28:24,635 --> 00:28:27,695 And if you listen to a lot of records from the '70s, 346 00:28:27,738 --> 00:28:32,141 the deadness on them, I find it makes my skin crawl. 347 00:28:43,721 --> 00:28:45,586 We didn't know how to get any sounds. 348 00:28:45,623 --> 00:28:48,183 That was our main problem, our problem all along. 349 00:28:51,028 --> 00:28:52,757 This way it maintains... 350 00:28:58,436 --> 00:29:00,063 Nothing seemed to be working. 351 00:29:00,104 --> 00:29:01,731 We were just babes in the woods, 352 00:29:01,772 --> 00:29:04,263 trying to figure out how to make a record 353 00:29:04,308 --> 00:29:09,245 that sounded, you know, like live, like we hear in our heads, 354 00:29:09,280 --> 00:29:13,546 but not really knowing the technology or having the wisdom 355 00:29:13,584 --> 00:29:15,074 to figure it out. 356 00:29:20,958 --> 00:29:24,655 The drum sound on Darkness, that was quite a fiasco. 357 00:29:24,695 --> 00:29:28,358 We literally spent weeks in the studio just trying to get drum sounds. 358 00:29:30,635 --> 00:29:34,298 An incredible amount of discussion and intention 359 00:29:34,338 --> 00:29:37,330 devoted to the subject of Max's snare sound. 360 00:29:49,820 --> 00:29:51,811 He would be sitting next to me. 361 00:29:51,856 --> 00:29:55,690 Max would be out there and he'd say, "Again." 362 00:29:55,726 --> 00:29:58,490 And then Max would hit it and all Bruce would say 363 00:29:58,529 --> 00:30:01,930 over and over and over again, "Stick!" 364 00:30:01,966 --> 00:30:05,026 That means he could hear the stick on the drum. 365 00:30:05,069 --> 00:30:09,233 It got to a place where we were analyzing this so carefully 366 00:30:09,273 --> 00:30:11,605 that everything sounded like... 367 00:30:11,642 --> 00:30:15,339 "Stick!" That just sounds like you're hitting it with a stick. 368 00:30:15,379 --> 00:30:18,405 "Stick!" I mean hours. 369 00:30:19,717 --> 00:30:22,584 We put the drums every place you could put them in that building. 370 00:30:22,620 --> 00:30:25,589 We put the drums in the elevator. 371 00:30:25,623 --> 00:30:29,582 You would hear the whole reverb of this whole big stairwell, 372 00:30:29,627 --> 00:30:30,855 which made no sense at all. 373 00:30:30,895 --> 00:30:33,329 I was waiting for a phone call 374 00:30:33,364 --> 00:30:36,800 to come back to the studio and start work again 375 00:30:36,834 --> 00:30:39,701 while they're ten hours a day hitting a drum 376 00:30:39,737 --> 00:30:41,864 trying to make it sound like a drum. 377 00:30:41,906 --> 00:30:43,874 It was pretty sad, really. 378 00:30:43,908 --> 00:30:49,540 The problem was this, I fantasized these huge sounds. 379 00:30:50,314 --> 00:30:54,751 And so we went to pursue them, but they were always bigger in my head. 380 00:30:55,553 --> 00:30:57,350 And so we constantly were chasing 381 00:30:57,388 --> 00:31:01,791 something that was somewhat unattainable. 382 00:31:01,826 --> 00:31:05,819 The thing that I didn't understand was a fundamental equation at the time, 383 00:31:05,863 --> 00:31:08,127 which was if you get big drums, 384 00:31:08,165 --> 00:31:10,292 the guitars sound smaller. 385 00:31:10,334 --> 00:31:13,326 If you get big guitars, the drums are gonna have... 386 00:31:13,371 --> 00:31:16,966 Something has to give, there's only so much sonic range, 387 00:31:17,007 --> 00:31:18,668 but we didn't know this at the time, 388 00:31:18,709 --> 00:31:22,236 we just assumed everything could sound huge. 389 00:31:42,967 --> 00:31:48,132 Well, in those days, our process was to rehearse a song in the studio, 390 00:31:48,172 --> 00:31:50,402 lay it down - in other words, record it - 391 00:31:50,441 --> 00:31:53,774 and once it became at all coherent, 392 00:31:53,811 --> 00:31:56,177 go back into the control room to listen to it 393 00:31:56,213 --> 00:31:59,478 and to start honing it individually and collectively. 394 00:31:59,517 --> 00:32:04,250 And in those days it was about as much the live performance of the take, 395 00:32:04,288 --> 00:32:05,812 something special about it, 396 00:32:05,856 --> 00:32:08,916 so when you sat down it wasn't just by rote, 397 00:32:08,959 --> 00:32:10,927 you were going out to create magic. 398 00:32:17,268 --> 00:32:20,533 You just interpreted the songs more in your own way 399 00:32:20,571 --> 00:32:26,237 and the sound reflected that because it was much more stark. 400 00:32:26,277 --> 00:32:27,642 There was less saxophone. 401 00:32:37,521 --> 00:32:41,048 The sax became a bit of an issue on that record. 402 00:32:41,859 --> 00:32:44,623 Take Born To Run and say the basis of the record 403 00:32:44,662 --> 00:32:47,563 was Brill Building and Phil Spector 404 00:32:47,598 --> 00:32:50,590 and urban popular music. 405 00:32:50,634 --> 00:32:53,068 When we went to Darkness On The Edge Of Town, 406 00:32:53,103 --> 00:32:56,766 it was a little more heartland, rural. 407 00:32:56,807 --> 00:32:59,901 And so I then said how do I use the sax, 408 00:32:59,944 --> 00:33:01,935 which is a very urban instrument? 409 00:33:01,979 --> 00:33:06,939 How do I integrate what Clarence is doing into this context? 410 00:33:08,519 --> 00:33:13,456 He had definite ideas about certain solos and certain songs. 411 00:33:30,774 --> 00:33:33,299 He would direct me by telling me a story 412 00:33:33,344 --> 00:33:35,642 and then he would hum it or sing it. 413 00:33:35,679 --> 00:33:37,340 "Like this, big man." 414 00:33:51,161 --> 00:33:53,220 I remember we had mastered the record 415 00:33:53,264 --> 00:33:56,791 with no sax solo on Badlands, it was just a guitar solo. 416 00:33:58,869 --> 00:34:02,635 But at the end of the record I didn't think we had enough saxophone, 417 00:34:02,673 --> 00:34:05,870 took the guitar out and Clarence played over that. 418 00:34:05,910 --> 00:34:08,879 It would have been a terrible mistake to leave that sax solo out. 419 00:34:08,913 --> 00:34:12,440 Its presence is so strong in the places where it appears 420 00:34:12,483 --> 00:34:15,452 that it feels like the sax is on much more of the record 421 00:34:15,486 --> 00:34:17,078 than it actually turned out to be. 422 00:34:30,901 --> 00:34:33,392 We recorded a lot of music. 423 00:34:33,437 --> 00:34:36,463 Reels and reels and reels of tapes and songs, 424 00:34:36,507 --> 00:34:40,568 and it went on for days and days and days, just recording songs. 425 00:34:40,611 --> 00:34:43,273 He was very prolific, it was like he exploded. 426 00:34:44,048 --> 00:34:48,883 Born To Run, there were only nine songs. Eight made the album. 427 00:34:48,919 --> 00:34:51,410 On Darkness there were 70 songs. 428 00:34:51,455 --> 00:34:53,582 That was a big difference. 429 00:34:53,624 --> 00:34:58,391 If you think about that, somebody sculpting eight songs, 430 00:34:58,429 --> 00:35:02,456 and then all of a sudden, the next album they're writing 70 songs. 431 00:35:02,499 --> 00:35:04,933 Basically, the first good ten songs you write, 432 00:35:04,969 --> 00:35:07,563 you put them out, that's your record. 433 00:35:07,605 --> 00:35:10,870 That process would end... 434 00:35:10,908 --> 00:35:12,136 forever. 435 00:35:12,176 --> 00:35:13,575 And never came back. 436 00:35:13,611 --> 00:35:16,580 I would say Bruce would write five songs to get one song. 437 00:35:16,614 --> 00:35:20,414 There was a lot of multi-versions of all kinds of things. 438 00:35:20,451 --> 00:35:22,544 We were always pulling things apart. 439 00:35:22,586 --> 00:35:26,022 I had like a big junkyard of stuff as the year went by. 440 00:35:26,056 --> 00:35:27,683 If something wasn't complete, 441 00:35:27,725 --> 00:35:31,718 I just pulled out the parts I liked, like pulling the parts you need from one car, 442 00:35:31,762 --> 00:35:33,992 putting them in the other car so that car runs. 443 00:36:25,082 --> 00:36:27,550 Bruce to this day has notebooks, 444 00:36:27,584 --> 00:36:30,212 and he's always diddling and always writing, 445 00:36:30,254 --> 00:36:32,347 and very aware of things around him. 446 00:36:32,389 --> 00:36:37,156 Magical notebook, an endless stream of songs coming out of it. 447 00:36:38,028 --> 00:36:39,825 What are you looking in this book for? 448 00:36:39,863 --> 00:36:43,264 The only thing that can come out of this book is more work. 449 00:36:53,577 --> 00:36:55,875 After the sessions, you know, 450 00:36:55,913 --> 00:36:58,973 Bruce would say, "Let's go to the book, I got more songs", 451 00:36:59,016 --> 00:37:01,280 "let's go through them." 452 00:37:01,318 --> 00:37:03,513 So we'd sit at the piano, 453 00:37:03,554 --> 00:37:07,547 he'd open up a book of, you know, ideas. 454 00:37:07,591 --> 00:37:10,025 You know? And he'd have... 455 00:37:10,060 --> 00:37:11,925 25 ideas in there. 456 00:37:41,992 --> 00:37:44,426 And you know that's the truth, baby. 457 00:38:12,556 --> 00:38:15,150 You know, you'd go, "Hey, what a great song," 458 00:38:15,192 --> 00:38:17,387 "we're gonna use that, right?" 459 00:38:17,427 --> 00:38:21,727 And then he'd go, "No, I don't know if that's gonna make it." 460 00:38:21,765 --> 00:38:24,996 Ideas that I was interested in concentrating on 461 00:38:25,035 --> 00:38:27,196 would have been diluted at that moment 462 00:38:27,237 --> 00:38:31,697 if I had made more of a miscellaneous grab bag of music, 463 00:38:31,742 --> 00:38:34,233 no matter how entertaining it was at the time. 464 00:38:48,091 --> 00:38:53,324 You realized after a while that the albums were made up of songs 465 00:38:53,363 --> 00:38:55,058 that had an emotional thread, 466 00:38:55,098 --> 00:39:00,001 not a collection of what the artist would think 467 00:39:00,037 --> 00:39:02,005 was gonna play well on the radio. 468 00:39:12,282 --> 00:39:15,547 Those songs wound up being cut later 469 00:39:15,586 --> 00:39:16,917 on The River album. 470 00:39:16,954 --> 00:39:21,084 We went back to those and pulled some of those out. 471 00:39:21,124 --> 00:39:23,649 And some of them had to wait for the Tracks album. 472 00:39:40,577 --> 00:39:43,671 It's really hard to write a really good song. 473 00:39:44,848 --> 00:39:46,645 For him to write good songs, 474 00:39:46,683 --> 00:39:48,583 possibly could have been hit songs, 475 00:39:48,619 --> 00:39:51,247 and to not put them out, put 'em aside, 476 00:39:51,288 --> 00:39:56,817 an enormous amount of discipline and willpower to do that, you know? 477 00:40:00,697 --> 00:40:02,392 It's a bit tragic... 478 00:40:03,533 --> 00:40:04,864 in a way... 479 00:40:04,902 --> 00:40:08,463 'cause he would have been one of the great pop songwriters of all time. 480 00:40:45,642 --> 00:40:49,510 Steve always had a great ear for, and still does, 481 00:40:49,546 --> 00:40:51,138 loves the... 482 00:40:51,181 --> 00:40:53,172 the classic sort of pop, 483 00:40:53,216 --> 00:40:55,810 a lot of the things that ended up on Tracks. 484 00:40:56,720 --> 00:40:59,484 Enormous amount of The River and Darkness outtakes, 485 00:40:59,523 --> 00:41:02,014 were probably some of his favorite things. 486 00:41:02,059 --> 00:41:05,859 And he was a big aficionado... The three-minute pop single for Steve. 487 00:41:17,207 --> 00:41:18,640 I think part of what... 488 00:41:18,675 --> 00:41:20,836 what pop promised and rock promised 489 00:41:20,877 --> 00:41:23,243 was the never-ending now, you know, 490 00:41:23,280 --> 00:41:27,842 the always "No, no, no, it's about living now." 491 00:41:27,884 --> 00:41:31,081 "Right now you need to be alive, right now." 492 00:41:47,871 --> 00:41:51,102 Those three minutes, it was all on, 493 00:41:51,141 --> 00:41:55,168 you know, it was all of a sudden you were lifted up 494 00:41:55,212 --> 00:42:00,013 into a higher place of living and experiencing, 495 00:42:00,050 --> 00:42:04,817 and there was this beautiful ever-present now. 496 00:42:11,695 --> 00:42:13,390 He just can do anything. 497 00:42:13,430 --> 00:42:15,990 He can write anything for anybody. 498 00:42:16,033 --> 00:42:19,491 And he just very much took that for granted. 499 00:42:19,536 --> 00:42:21,936 Which is how a lot of our poppier stuff 500 00:42:21,972 --> 00:42:23,906 ended up not being released. 501 00:42:23,940 --> 00:42:26,204 I mean, one great example which I think 502 00:42:26,243 --> 00:42:28,734 would have fit on Darkness On The Edge Of Town, 503 00:42:28,779 --> 00:42:30,838 was a song called Because The Night. 504 00:42:30,881 --> 00:42:33,145 I was recording Patti Smith at the time 505 00:42:33,183 --> 00:42:36,243 as well as doing Bruce Springsteen because I wanted to be a record producer. 506 00:42:36,286 --> 00:42:40,120 So I started producing the record in between Bruce's stuff. 507 00:42:40,157 --> 00:42:43,217 And one day we were at the Nevada Hotel, me and Bruce, 508 00:42:43,260 --> 00:42:44,454 and he said... 509 00:42:45,662 --> 00:42:48,722 "Hey, man, how are you doing with Patti?" 510 00:42:48,765 --> 00:42:50,460 I said, "I don't have the song" 511 00:42:50,500 --> 00:42:53,298 "that's gonna make everybody listen to the album." 512 00:42:53,336 --> 00:42:55,566 He said, "You mean you don't have the single." 513 00:42:55,605 --> 00:42:58,335 I said, "That's right, I don't have the single." 514 00:42:58,375 --> 00:43:01,242 He said, "Well, what are you gonna do?" 515 00:43:01,278 --> 00:43:06,716 I knew that I wasn't gonna finish the song because it was a love song, 516 00:43:06,750 --> 00:43:11,653 and I really felt like I didn't know how to write them at the time. 517 00:43:11,688 --> 00:43:15,419 There was so many of them out there, I figured I'd do something different. 518 00:43:15,459 --> 00:43:18,895 And also a real love song like Because The Night, 519 00:43:18,929 --> 00:43:20,419 I was reticent to write. 520 00:43:20,464 --> 00:43:25,128 I think I was too cowardly to write it at the time. 521 00:43:26,136 --> 00:43:28,502 But she was very brave, 522 00:43:28,538 --> 00:43:30,870 she had the courage. 523 00:43:31,741 --> 00:43:33,732 I was in my apartment and I was 524 00:43:33,777 --> 00:43:37,645 having a long-distance romance with Fred Sonic Smith, 525 00:43:37,681 --> 00:43:39,342 who later became my husband. 526 00:43:39,382 --> 00:43:43,580 He was supposed to call me and I waited for him to call me for hours. 527 00:43:43,620 --> 00:43:47,056 I thought, "Well, I'll listen to that darn song." 528 00:43:47,924 --> 00:43:50,552 It was so accessible, 529 00:43:50,594 --> 00:43:53,427 it had such an anthemic tone, 530 00:43:53,463 --> 00:43:55,863 it was in my key, 531 00:43:55,899 --> 00:43:58,231 and I kept letting it loop and play. 532 00:43:58,268 --> 00:44:01,396 And I still tried to resist it, but I filled in the blanks, 533 00:44:01,438 --> 00:44:03,963 and in the blanks it tells the story 534 00:44:04,007 --> 00:44:07,670 of me waiting for Fred to call and of my love for Fred. 535 00:44:23,827 --> 00:44:27,524 Fred did call about three in the morning, 536 00:44:27,564 --> 00:44:30,158 and I wasn't mad at him, though, 537 00:44:30,200 --> 00:44:31,997 because by the time he called 538 00:44:32,035 --> 00:44:34,230 I had written my share of the lyrics 539 00:44:34,271 --> 00:44:37,934 of my one and only hit song. 540 00:44:40,277 --> 00:44:44,611 You know, she took it, and she turned it into this really beautiful love song. 541 00:44:44,648 --> 00:44:48,607 I have to thank Jimmy for recognizing what was in the song, 542 00:44:48,652 --> 00:44:52,019 and then for her for the intensity and the personalness, 543 00:44:52,055 --> 00:44:54,751 and the deep love that she put in, you know. 544 00:44:54,791 --> 00:44:57,760 Her working on it has been a tremendous gift to me. 545 00:44:57,794 --> 00:45:02,231 I know that there were a lot of brilliant songs that were written 546 00:45:02,265 --> 00:45:04,028 that just didn't make the album. 547 00:45:04,067 --> 00:45:07,230 They would have altered the picture. When you look at Darkness, 548 00:45:07,270 --> 00:45:10,603 the person's not really attached to anybody else in that record. 549 00:45:10,640 --> 00:45:12,699 There are no love songs on that record. 550 00:45:12,742 --> 00:45:17,042 The two biggest songs that were written for the Darkness album 551 00:45:17,080 --> 00:45:19,071 and recorded by us, 552 00:45:19,115 --> 00:45:22,278 Fire and Because The Night... 553 00:45:24,854 --> 00:45:26,515 didn't make it onto the album. 554 00:45:26,556 --> 00:45:28,251 One thing about Bruce, 555 00:45:28,291 --> 00:45:32,250 is I think if he thought something was going to be a hit, 556 00:45:32,295 --> 00:45:37,323 and he didn't want to be represented by that hit, 557 00:45:37,367 --> 00:45:38,925 he'd just leave 'em off the record. 558 00:45:39,269 --> 00:45:41,169 Bruce was going for something, 559 00:45:41,204 --> 00:45:44,696 and like on Born To Run he had something in his head. 560 00:45:44,741 --> 00:45:48,677 And until he got that thing in his head 561 00:45:48,712 --> 00:45:50,373 on tape, 562 00:45:50,413 --> 00:45:53,780 he'd just keep going and going and going. 563 00:46:12,636 --> 00:46:16,766 Everybody put in their two cents about the music and the production, 564 00:46:16,806 --> 00:46:20,003 and maybe where something should be or shouldn't be. 565 00:46:20,043 --> 00:46:21,567 And there would be a lot of times 566 00:46:21,611 --> 00:46:24,409 where Jon and Bruce and maybe Steven would huddle up. 567 00:46:29,519 --> 00:46:30,577 But it's like... 568 00:46:33,323 --> 00:46:36,053 There were a lot of people in the control room. 569 00:46:36,092 --> 00:46:38,356 You have a producer, Jon Landau, 570 00:46:38,395 --> 00:46:40,522 you had the artist who's also a producer, 571 00:46:40,563 --> 00:46:42,155 Steve Van Zandt... 572 00:46:42,198 --> 00:46:43,722 so I held back. 573 00:46:43,767 --> 00:46:46,998 I'm looking at the piano fader on the console 574 00:46:47,037 --> 00:46:49,904 and Steve was looking at the guitar fader, 575 00:46:49,939 --> 00:46:52,601 everybody kind of wants to lean over the engineer 576 00:46:52,642 --> 00:46:55,202 and push themselves up to hear a little more. 577 00:46:55,245 --> 00:46:58,976 That made for, at times, 578 00:46:59,015 --> 00:47:01,074 some pretty funny discussions. 579 00:47:01,117 --> 00:47:04,280 Sometimes some pretty tense discussions. 580 00:47:04,321 --> 00:47:06,755 Probably more tense discussions than funny. 581 00:47:17,500 --> 00:47:19,092 All right? 582 00:47:39,622 --> 00:47:41,385 Steve is generally... 583 00:47:41,424 --> 00:47:43,790 "It's my way or it sucks!" 584 00:47:45,362 --> 00:47:49,560 It's like "Hey, man, this is a major tragedy. Stop!" 585 00:47:49,599 --> 00:47:53,091 It's like, "We're fucking this whole thing up right now." 586 00:47:53,136 --> 00:47:56,128 A transition was taking place at that point. 587 00:47:56,172 --> 00:48:00,609 And everybody would be finding what role to play. 588 00:48:00,643 --> 00:48:03,305 I was just doing what a friend does. 589 00:48:03,346 --> 00:48:04,506 You know? 590 00:48:04,547 --> 00:48:07,573 I'm just gonna give you my opinion, you know. 591 00:48:07,617 --> 00:48:12,418 And try and discover what it is you wanna do. 592 00:48:18,795 --> 00:48:21,958 The basis for our situation in the studio, 593 00:48:21,998 --> 00:48:26,560 Jon is a formalist for the most part, 594 00:48:26,603 --> 00:48:29,071 he's kind of a pop formalist, 595 00:48:29,105 --> 00:48:31,835 and he is all roots and gospel and soul, 596 00:48:31,875 --> 00:48:36,335 but they were also well-performed, well-sung, 597 00:48:36,379 --> 00:48:37,869 well-played records. 598 00:48:37,914 --> 00:48:41,782 Steve likes things trashier and noisier, 599 00:48:41,818 --> 00:48:45,413 he's the garage guy, you know. 600 00:48:45,455 --> 00:48:50,222 And so I tend to like things in the middle somewhere. 601 00:48:50,260 --> 00:48:52,353 It was just two varying opinions. 602 00:48:52,395 --> 00:48:54,727 I enjoyed them both. 603 00:48:54,764 --> 00:48:59,997 I didn't want any one person having too much control 604 00:49:00,036 --> 00:49:03,267 over the direction the music was taking. 605 00:49:03,306 --> 00:49:05,536 So... 606 00:49:05,575 --> 00:49:08,009 I would Yin-Yang a little bit, you know. 607 00:49:08,912 --> 00:49:11,847 It was just the way that I played it, you know. 608 00:49:11,881 --> 00:49:14,679 So I think Jon probably entered originally 609 00:49:14,717 --> 00:49:19,086 thinking we were gonna work like we worked Born To Run. 610 00:49:19,122 --> 00:49:22,148 And that was already something. I was into trying something else now. 611 00:49:23,359 --> 00:49:24,826 Throughout our work life, 612 00:49:24,861 --> 00:49:28,558 there's been a variety of moments where he goes, "Oh." 613 00:49:28,598 --> 00:49:31,123 He grasps that idea and he shifts, 614 00:49:31,167 --> 00:49:34,830 and he finds some very constructive and helpful way 615 00:49:34,871 --> 00:49:39,501 to help me move on, on what I am doing, what I am trying to do, you know. 616 00:49:39,542 --> 00:49:43,672 It's an amazing... It's been one of his great talents. 617 00:49:43,713 --> 00:49:48,241 And it's probably been an enormous reason why we've been together 618 00:49:48,284 --> 00:49:50,115 and so productive for so long. 619 00:49:51,821 --> 00:49:57,316 I think that a lot of this album had to do, ultimately, 620 00:49:57,360 --> 00:50:00,454 with Bruce's own personal growth 621 00:50:00,497 --> 00:50:07,061 and trying to come to terms with his idea of what it meant 622 00:50:07,103 --> 00:50:08,593 to be a man. 623 00:50:09,472 --> 00:50:13,408 So I was trying to write music that both felt angry 624 00:50:13,443 --> 00:50:15,502 and rebellious, 625 00:50:15,545 --> 00:50:18,241 yet that also felt adult. 626 00:50:18,281 --> 00:50:23,014 That was a big thing that shaped that record. 627 00:50:38,167 --> 00:50:41,432 A couple of different things came together at a certain time 628 00:50:41,471 --> 00:50:45,134 to form my approach towards a record. 629 00:50:45,174 --> 00:50:48,701 The explosion of punk during '77, 630 00:50:48,745 --> 00:50:51,543 which actually I felt quite a bit for, 631 00:50:51,581 --> 00:50:55,745 I felt some similarity in spirit somewhere. 632 00:51:05,628 --> 00:51:10,565 I started to listen to country music, which I hadn't really done before. 633 00:51:10,600 --> 00:51:13,535 For the first time I really connected with Hank Williams. 634 00:51:13,570 --> 00:51:18,735 What I liked about that was country music tackled the... 635 00:51:18,775 --> 00:51:20,709 adult concerns. 636 00:51:22,512 --> 00:51:26,505 One of the elements that was so striking between Born To Run and Darkness, 637 00:51:26,549 --> 00:51:28,847 on Born To Run you had the character saying, 638 00:51:28,885 --> 00:51:31,479 "Baby, we were born to run, we're gonna get out." 639 00:51:31,521 --> 00:51:34,820 In the ensuing three years between Born To Run and Darkness 640 00:51:34,857 --> 00:51:37,792 it was made painfully clear you can't just run away. 641 00:51:38,828 --> 00:51:41,626 He was starting to have some conversations with Jon Landau, 642 00:51:41,664 --> 00:51:44,360 I think helped a great deal. 643 00:51:44,400 --> 00:51:48,530 He kinda was drawn back to a more solid sort of time, 644 00:51:48,571 --> 00:51:52,029 that John Wayne character in The Searchers sort of thing. 645 00:51:52,075 --> 00:51:55,442 "I know who I am, I know right from wrong" 646 00:51:55,478 --> 00:51:57,844 sort of clarity 647 00:51:57,880 --> 00:52:01,577 that I think we all search for. 648 00:52:04,053 --> 00:52:05,714 Darkness On The Edge Of Town, 649 00:52:05,755 --> 00:52:08,849 it's a meditation on where are you going to stand? 650 00:52:08,891 --> 00:52:11,917 With who and where are you going to stand? 651 00:52:13,529 --> 00:52:18,193 Tonight I'll be on that hill 'cause I can't stop 652 00:52:18,234 --> 00:52:23,103 I'll be on that hill with everything I got. 653 00:52:23,139 --> 00:52:28,907 Lives on the line where dreams are found and lost 654 00:52:28,945 --> 00:52:33,905 I'll be there on time and I'll pay the cost. 655 00:52:33,950 --> 00:52:37,215 For wanting things that can only be found. 656 00:52:37,253 --> 00:52:40,654 In the darkness In the darkness on the edge of town. 657 00:52:40,690 --> 00:52:43,158 It builds to that one big moment... 658 00:52:51,834 --> 00:52:53,995 That was the only answer I had at the time. 659 00:52:54,037 --> 00:52:58,599 Not forsaking your own inner life force. 660 00:52:59,242 --> 00:53:01,676 You know, how do you hold on to those things? 661 00:53:01,711 --> 00:53:03,975 How do you hold on to those things? 662 00:53:04,013 --> 00:53:05,844 How do we keep those things? 663 00:53:05,882 --> 00:53:08,510 How do we do justice and honor to those things? 664 00:53:08,551 --> 00:53:14,183 That was the question that that record asked over and over and over again. 665 00:53:15,158 --> 00:53:18,650 Adam Raised A Cain - how do we honor our parents? 666 00:53:18,695 --> 00:53:22,358 Promised Land - how do we honor the community 667 00:53:22,398 --> 00:53:23,729 and where we came from? 668 00:53:23,766 --> 00:53:27,964 Factory - how do we honor the life, you know, 669 00:53:28,004 --> 00:53:31,838 of our brothers or sisters and parents? 670 00:53:31,874 --> 00:53:36,334 For some reason that was something that really mattered to me and... 671 00:53:38,081 --> 00:53:39,378 it mattered to me a lot. 672 00:54:11,314 --> 00:54:13,475 Life is no longer wide open. 673 00:54:13,516 --> 00:54:17,418 Adult life is a life of a lot of compromise. 674 00:54:18,855 --> 00:54:23,292 And that's necessary, there's a lot of things that you should be compromising on. 675 00:54:23,326 --> 00:54:26,727 And there are essential things where you don't want to compromise. 676 00:54:26,763 --> 00:54:29,095 So, figuring those things out. 677 00:54:33,703 --> 00:54:37,161 What's the part of life where you need to compromise to... 678 00:54:37,206 --> 00:54:40,369 whatever, to pay your bills, to get along, 679 00:54:40,409 --> 00:54:45,244 to feed your kids, to make your way through the world? 680 00:54:45,281 --> 00:54:46,748 And what's the part of life 681 00:54:46,783 --> 00:54:50,776 where there's a part of yourself you can't compromise with, 682 00:54:50,820 --> 00:54:52,117 or you lose yourself? 683 00:55:44,407 --> 00:55:45,704 That's it. 684 00:55:45,741 --> 00:55:47,641 Factory... 685 00:55:47,677 --> 00:55:49,474 this was just the... 686 00:55:49,512 --> 00:55:53,312 the paradox of earning your living and... 687 00:55:54,517 --> 00:55:58,544 and getting life from a place that also takes... 688 00:55:58,588 --> 00:56:00,055 takes a lot out of you, 689 00:56:00,089 --> 00:56:04,150 which is just something I saw as a kid when my dad lost his hearing. 690 00:56:04,193 --> 00:56:08,027 As a child, I went in to bring him his lunch, 691 00:56:08,064 --> 00:56:10,498 he was working in a plastics factory at the time. 692 00:56:10,533 --> 00:56:13,263 The machines were whirring and whirring, huge machines, 693 00:56:13,302 --> 00:56:16,032 and he was cutting big, long pieces of plastic. 694 00:56:16,072 --> 00:56:18,802 These days people would be wearing those big headsets, 695 00:56:18,841 --> 00:56:20,706 but in those days, people didn't. 696 00:56:20,743 --> 00:56:25,612 And he didn't even see me for minutes because the noise was so great. 697 00:56:25,648 --> 00:56:30,381 His back was to me and I was saying, "Dad, Dad." 698 00:56:30,419 --> 00:56:32,979 But he couldn't hear me because the machines were so loud. 699 00:56:33,022 --> 00:56:36,822 He stopped for a moment and I walked around the side. 700 00:56:36,859 --> 00:56:39,089 Handed him the lunch bag. 701 00:56:39,128 --> 00:56:40,959 He nodded his head and... 702 00:56:41,964 --> 00:56:44,057 I walked out. 703 00:57:08,224 --> 00:57:11,022 I go back to most of my writing before Greetings 704 00:57:11,060 --> 00:57:14,496 and it all appears simply terrible to me. 705 00:57:14,530 --> 00:57:17,795 You know, you're still writing a lot of bad words. 706 00:57:17,833 --> 00:57:21,360 You know, you're writing a lot of bad verses. 707 00:57:21,404 --> 00:57:24,100 So, try and learn how to write well. 708 00:57:24,140 --> 00:57:28,099 But your artistic instinct 709 00:57:28,144 --> 00:57:31,841 is all you... is what you're going on. 710 00:57:31,881 --> 00:57:35,146 Your artistic intelligence hasn't been developed yet. 711 00:57:35,184 --> 00:57:39,848 Hopefully that increases and develops over a long period of time, 712 00:57:39,889 --> 00:57:44,223 which gives you an ace to play down the road as you get older. 713 00:57:44,260 --> 00:57:47,161 At the time I'm going on artistic instinct. 714 00:57:47,897 --> 00:57:51,333 And that's a wide open game, you know, 715 00:57:51,367 --> 00:57:55,269 so I'm following all kinds of paths, and all kinds of roads, 716 00:57:55,304 --> 00:57:58,637 and all I'm going is, "That doesn't feel right. 717 00:57:58,674 --> 00:58:01,734 "That doesn't feel right." That's how I'm judging. 718 00:58:01,777 --> 00:58:03,301 Lights out tonight. 719 00:58:04,613 --> 00:58:06,205 And you're all alone. 720 00:58:06,248 --> 00:58:08,216 Didn't save that one. 721 00:58:09,051 --> 00:58:11,542 Baby's on the street, you're getting pushed around. 722 00:58:13,723 --> 00:58:16,157 That was my opener for that one. 723 00:58:16,192 --> 00:58:17,989 Lights out tonight, trouble in the heartland. 724 00:58:18,027 --> 00:58:21,019 There it is, finally. I don't know how many pages in. 725 00:58:31,340 --> 00:58:34,673 Racing In The Street, I'm sure there's a million verses on that. 726 00:58:36,379 --> 00:58:39,177 There was one where there was no girl. 727 00:58:39,215 --> 00:58:41,080 There was no girl in it. 728 00:58:46,222 --> 00:58:50,249 The continuance of the story of the two guys in the first verse. 729 00:58:50,292 --> 00:58:53,125 I asked two people what they thought. I asked Obie Dziedzic, 730 00:58:53,162 --> 00:58:57,462 Obie is one of my earliest fans, and she said, "I love the one with the girl." 731 00:58:57,500 --> 00:58:59,024 Right. 732 00:58:59,068 --> 00:59:01,161 And I asked Steve. 733 00:59:01,203 --> 00:59:04,934 Steve says, "Oh, the one with the girl in it." 734 00:59:04,974 --> 00:59:06,464 I said, "Really?" 735 00:59:06,509 --> 00:59:08,977 I thought he was gonna go for the other one. 736 00:59:09,011 --> 00:59:11,411 He said, "Yeah, that's what happens in life." 737 00:59:11,447 --> 00:59:15,178 "Two guys are pals, then the girl comes along," 738 00:59:15,217 --> 00:59:16,912 "and that's it." 739 00:59:22,758 --> 00:59:27,457 When I inserted the relationship in the last verse, 740 00:59:27,496 --> 00:59:32,263 it made sense of the journey that the guy is taking. 741 00:59:34,937 --> 00:59:40,136 A lot of the songs deal with my obsession with the idea of sin. 742 00:59:40,176 --> 00:59:42,542 What is it? What is it in a good life? 743 00:59:42,578 --> 00:59:45,570 'Cause it plays an important place in a good life also. 744 00:59:46,649 --> 00:59:48,378 How do you deal with it? 745 00:59:49,151 --> 00:59:51,051 You don't... you don't get rid of it. 746 00:59:52,154 --> 00:59:54,645 How do you carry your sins? 747 00:59:54,690 --> 00:59:58,626 That's what the people in Racing In The Street are trying to do. 748 01:00:16,779 --> 01:00:19,509 Well, the work ethic that surfaced on Darkness 749 01:00:19,548 --> 01:00:21,243 was actually even more intense 750 01:00:21,283 --> 01:00:24,275 than anything that had gone on before. 751 01:00:24,320 --> 01:00:26,550 This was our lives. 752 01:00:26,589 --> 01:00:29,285 I mean, this was everything to us. 753 01:00:29,325 --> 01:00:33,955 There was no wives, or families or girlfriends that mattered that much. 754 01:00:33,996 --> 01:00:36,487 So we were there all the time. 755 01:00:40,369 --> 01:00:44,328 It was a mission. Better or worse we were messianic in our approach, you know, 756 01:00:44,373 --> 01:00:47,171 it was like, "This music is going to save the world!" 757 01:00:48,978 --> 01:00:52,038 This thing ain't nine to five. This thing is 24/7. 758 01:00:52,081 --> 01:00:55,346 Being that I didn't have a life, that was easy for me. 759 01:00:55,384 --> 01:00:58,182 You know, everybody else had to suffer with me. 760 01:00:59,088 --> 01:01:01,886 It was both self-indulgent 761 01:01:01,924 --> 01:01:05,052 and the only way we knew how to do it. 762 01:01:05,094 --> 01:01:07,187 I can't even tell you 763 01:01:07,229 --> 01:01:09,823 how long we spent 764 01:01:09,865 --> 01:01:11,025 on that record. 765 01:01:11,066 --> 01:01:13,364 Because I don't really know, it's kind of a blur. 766 01:01:13,402 --> 01:01:16,428 But the obsessive-compulsive part of my personality, 767 01:01:16,472 --> 01:01:20,806 was such that I would be driving you crazy just because I could. 768 01:01:20,843 --> 01:01:22,902 I was a dangerous man to be around. 769 01:01:24,980 --> 01:01:29,076 One of those, "You'll look back on this one day and it will all seem funny." 770 01:01:29,118 --> 01:01:32,246 It's starting to seem funny now. At the time... 771 01:01:32,288 --> 01:01:35,883 there was no humor there at all. 772 01:01:49,605 --> 01:01:51,630 There was downtime in the studio. 773 01:01:51,674 --> 01:01:55,110 You'd finish a take and you gotta capture the moment. 774 01:01:55,144 --> 01:01:57,510 Sometimes you gotta break the tension. 775 01:02:01,250 --> 01:02:06,210 Well, the guys would, I suppose in their attempt to ridicule me, 776 01:02:06,255 --> 01:02:09,747 would bet on my whims of the day and where they might go. 777 01:02:09,792 --> 01:02:13,193 What songs are gonna get on, what songs are gonna get thrown out today? 778 01:02:13,229 --> 01:02:15,754 What songs are gonna get brought back in? 779 01:02:15,798 --> 01:02:18,528 How long are the songs gonna be? 780 01:02:27,710 --> 01:02:30,338 They had to find a lot of ways to get out 781 01:02:30,379 --> 01:02:32,313 from underneath my oppressive hand. 782 01:02:45,160 --> 01:02:47,754 Jimmy lovine, when it came time to mix, 783 01:02:47,796 --> 01:02:51,323 he lost his mojo in the middle of Darkness somewhere, 784 01:02:51,367 --> 01:02:54,097 we just couldn't mix the record. 785 01:02:57,673 --> 01:02:59,800 We had nothing but chaos going on. 786 01:03:00,609 --> 01:03:03,840 At some point I got a call from Jon saying, 787 01:03:03,879 --> 01:03:06,871 "Hey, Charlie, we're having a bit of a problem" 788 01:03:06,915 --> 01:03:12,285 "locating anything in between dull and shrill." 789 01:03:13,389 --> 01:03:15,357 I had never mixed anything before. 790 01:03:15,391 --> 01:03:18,519 I wasn't actually a mixer, I was a record producer. 791 01:03:18,560 --> 01:03:22,360 Comes into the studio and he starts listening. 792 01:03:23,365 --> 01:03:26,266 And he has an idea about what we're doing wrong. 793 01:03:26,302 --> 01:03:31,763 He had all these different ideas of how to make everything really... present. 794 01:03:31,807 --> 01:03:35,607 It had a certain rawness to it that I responded to 795 01:03:35,644 --> 01:03:36,906 as a listener. 796 01:03:36,945 --> 01:03:39,709 So Charlie sits down and he starts to mix. 797 01:03:39,748 --> 01:03:41,739 I believe it was Prove It All Night. 798 01:03:41,784 --> 01:03:43,649 Got the drums up, got the bass up. 799 01:03:43,686 --> 01:03:45,051 Bruce listens. 800 01:03:46,755 --> 01:03:47,881 "That's fantastic." 801 01:04:04,139 --> 01:04:08,906 I took Jon aside, I said, "Look, I don't hear any problems with the recordings." 802 01:04:08,944 --> 01:04:12,539 "It doesn't sound to me like there ought to be any problem with the mixes," 803 01:04:12,581 --> 01:04:14,378 "but get yourself a real mixer." 804 01:04:14,416 --> 01:04:16,407 Jon sort of... He didn't... 805 01:04:16,452 --> 01:04:17,885 Not much of a response. 806 01:04:17,920 --> 01:04:20,684 He said, "What are you doing tomorrow night?" 807 01:04:20,723 --> 01:04:24,090 Now, when Chuck comes back, Bruce is sort of ready for him, 808 01:04:24,126 --> 01:04:26,788 and Bruce starts getting more and more particular. 809 01:04:26,829 --> 01:04:28,990 I came back the next night and he says, 810 01:04:29,031 --> 01:04:31,727 "I'll tell you a little something about this song. 811 01:04:31,767 --> 01:04:33,758 "Here's what I want you to do. 812 01:04:33,802 --> 01:04:35,770 "Imagine you're in a movie theater. 813 01:04:35,804 --> 01:04:39,262 "On the screen is the two lovers having a picnic. 814 01:04:39,308 --> 01:04:41,538 "And then the camera... 815 01:04:42,745 --> 01:04:47,682 "shock-cuts to a dead body. 816 01:04:47,716 --> 01:04:51,174 "Every time this song comes up on the album," he says, 817 01:04:51,220 --> 01:04:53,154 "this song is that dead body." 818 01:04:56,992 --> 01:04:59,961 That was an amazing experience in and of itself, 819 01:04:59,995 --> 01:05:04,227 to hear somebody talk about their music in that way. 820 01:05:04,266 --> 01:05:06,427 It was a brilliant set of cues. 821 01:05:06,468 --> 01:05:08,766 He didn't tell me what to do with the music, 822 01:05:08,804 --> 01:05:11,830 he told me what he wanted the thing to feel like. 823 01:05:11,874 --> 01:05:15,640 One of Chuck's specialties and what I always loved him for was... 824 01:05:15,677 --> 01:05:17,668 Chuck was into just the feel. 825 01:05:17,713 --> 01:05:20,648 Does it make you feel what the artist wanted you to feel? 826 01:05:20,682 --> 01:05:25,142 He understood how to build a sound picture. 827 01:05:30,025 --> 01:05:32,118 It's not an ordinary-sounding record. 828 01:05:32,161 --> 01:05:35,153 It captures the band in its leanest. 829 01:05:36,865 --> 01:05:39,356 You hear in the aural environment 830 01:05:39,401 --> 01:05:42,893 things struggling to make a place for themselves. 831 01:05:42,938 --> 01:05:47,272 It's not a grand, smooth open space. 832 01:05:47,309 --> 01:05:50,403 It's a harder and darker space. 833 01:05:55,551 --> 01:05:59,282 You hear the dynamic of the players 834 01:05:59,321 --> 01:06:01,983 fighting for space inside the music. 835 01:06:02,024 --> 01:06:03,821 If you get the voice too high, 836 01:06:03,859 --> 01:06:07,989 it always feels like much ado about nothing. 837 01:06:08,030 --> 01:06:09,725 You can't get it way out in front, 838 01:06:09,765 --> 01:06:14,634 you gotta get it just so that it's some kind of intelligible. 839 01:06:21,076 --> 01:06:23,408 So when all hell is breaking loose, 840 01:06:23,445 --> 01:06:25,276 there's that strain... 841 01:06:25,314 --> 01:06:27,373 as a mixer to keep the... 842 01:06:27,416 --> 01:06:31,284 to keep the voice tucked in. 843 01:06:39,194 --> 01:06:41,594 So that you feel like you could... 844 01:06:43,298 --> 01:06:47,758 understand the words if you wished to try hard enough. 845 01:06:56,678 --> 01:06:59,579 Charlie, essential to the team, 846 01:06:59,615 --> 01:07:01,981 came and saved our asses, 847 01:07:02,017 --> 01:07:04,281 literally was the white knight on that record. 848 01:07:09,291 --> 01:07:12,727 Sometimes you wondered if the end was ever going to actually happen 849 01:07:12,761 --> 01:07:15,389 because you'd record 50 or 60 songs, 850 01:07:15,430 --> 01:07:20,458 and I guess then Bruce would collate all his thoughts, 851 01:07:20,502 --> 01:07:24,461 and try to decide what the story was. 852 01:07:24,506 --> 01:07:28,203 When I did my running order for that album, 853 01:07:28,243 --> 01:07:31,644 I don't know if any of the songs that wound up on the album 854 01:07:31,680 --> 01:07:33,648 were the ones that I would have picked. 855 01:07:33,682 --> 01:07:37,140 Nobody knew until the end, really, how it was gonna turn out. 856 01:07:37,185 --> 01:07:38,982 I don't think Bruce or Jon did. 857 01:07:39,021 --> 01:07:40,886 There was only room for so many. 858 01:07:40,923 --> 01:07:44,882 But there was a couple that you kinda thought at least 859 01:07:44,927 --> 01:07:46,690 that were definitely in there. 860 01:07:59,241 --> 01:08:02,074 The Promise was an amazing song. 861 01:08:02,110 --> 01:08:04,340 And we probably... 862 01:08:04,713 --> 01:08:06,977 spent three months on that song. 863 01:08:10,452 --> 01:08:13,421 Bruce cut that song every way possible. 864 01:08:13,455 --> 01:08:15,286 It just was, you know... 865 01:08:16,692 --> 01:08:19,855 unheard of not to put a song that great on the record. 866 01:08:21,463 --> 01:08:24,557 It's a song about fighting and not winning. 867 01:08:24,600 --> 01:08:27,194 It's just about the disappointments at the time. 868 01:08:27,235 --> 01:08:30,534 It could have went on the record if we'd have finished it, 869 01:08:30,572 --> 01:08:34,474 because it actually fit in the temper of the record 870 01:08:34,509 --> 01:08:36,500 now that I look back on it. 871 01:08:36,545 --> 01:08:39,207 But I felt too close to it, you know, 872 01:08:39,247 --> 01:08:42,944 I felt I didn't have the distance, I couldn't judge it myself at the time. 873 01:08:50,225 --> 01:08:52,716 This was the beginning of. 874 01:08:52,761 --> 01:08:56,219 Bruce being very meticulous about the sequencing as well. 875 01:08:56,264 --> 01:08:58,630 He would have sequences made up. 876 01:08:58,667 --> 01:09:00,794 He would have four or five sequences 877 01:09:00,836 --> 01:09:03,031 and he'd listen to them all the way through. 878 01:09:03,071 --> 01:09:05,062 We always were concerned with our cornerstones, 879 01:09:05,107 --> 01:09:07,337 first and last cut on both sides. 880 01:09:07,376 --> 01:09:09,640 Everything happens between those spaces. 881 01:09:09,678 --> 01:09:12,511 But that was our narrative device. 882 01:09:12,547 --> 01:09:15,175 Gotta remember, Bruce and myself 883 01:09:15,217 --> 01:09:20,018 shared a feeling that we were always making an album. 884 01:09:20,055 --> 01:09:21,613 To me... 885 01:09:28,697 --> 01:09:30,790 There's not any one element that's not a cut. 886 01:09:38,707 --> 01:09:43,770 After the year of recording, listening to all the stuff that we had, 887 01:09:43,812 --> 01:09:46,076 I stripped the record down to its... 888 01:09:46,114 --> 01:09:48,844 really its barest and most austere elements. 889 01:09:49,985 --> 01:09:55,218 And I decided I wanted something that felt like a tone poem. 890 01:09:55,257 --> 01:09:57,987 And I didn't want any distractions from 891 01:09:58,026 --> 01:10:03,225 this is the narrative and the stories that I was telling. 892 01:10:03,265 --> 01:10:06,291 And also I wanted to have a sort of... 893 01:10:06,334 --> 01:10:08,302 apocalyptic grandeur. 894 01:10:08,870 --> 01:10:14,103 In the darkness on the edge of town. 895 01:10:25,620 --> 01:10:30,523 Born To Run and Darkness, they're the beginnings of the story. 896 01:10:30,559 --> 01:10:32,823 I'm beginning to tell the story that I... 897 01:10:33,628 --> 01:10:36,756 that I tell for most of the rest of my work life. 898 01:10:56,785 --> 01:11:00,687 He came down to my house, he said, "What should I bring?" 899 01:11:00,722 --> 01:11:05,421 I said, "Just bring some changes of clothes so we can get several looks." 900 01:11:05,460 --> 01:11:10,193 He came in with a crumpled-up paper supermarket bag. 901 01:11:10,232 --> 01:11:14,635 And it was some flannel shirts and some jeans and some T-shirts, 902 01:11:14,669 --> 01:11:18,435 and, you know, that was his wardrobe for the shoot. 903 01:11:19,141 --> 01:11:23,202 We'd just moved into this house, an old house in Haddonfield, New Jersey, 904 01:11:23,245 --> 01:11:25,679 with that flowered wallpaper and everything, 905 01:11:25,714 --> 01:11:27,841 you know, the cabbage roses. 906 01:11:27,883 --> 01:11:30,477 "Let's just do some test shots." 907 01:11:31,720 --> 01:11:33,688 That very first day, 908 01:11:33,722 --> 01:11:37,283 some of the test shots that we did up in the bedroom 909 01:11:37,325 --> 01:11:39,725 with the cabbage-rose wallpaper 910 01:11:39,761 --> 01:11:43,128 ended up being the cover for Darkness On The Edge Of Town. 911 01:11:43,932 --> 01:11:46,594 Incredibly revealing. 912 01:11:47,335 --> 01:11:48,927 Very revealing. 913 01:11:48,970 --> 01:11:52,736 Very stripped down, kind of like what I thought the record was. 914 01:11:53,542 --> 01:11:55,134 And... 915 01:11:56,778 --> 01:11:59,576 they were also very blue-collar at the time 916 01:11:59,614 --> 01:12:01,707 which is what the record was. 917 01:12:01,750 --> 01:12:03,411 It was just like... 918 01:12:05,253 --> 01:12:10,987 "Yeah, that's my story, that's the character in my story." 919 01:12:32,280 --> 01:12:36,546 When we finally got to perform on the Darkness On The Edge Of Town tour 920 01:12:36,585 --> 01:12:39,247 after the record was finished, 921 01:12:39,287 --> 01:12:41,346 it was almost like a wave of relief 922 01:12:41,389 --> 01:12:44,688 that we had been able to withstand 923 01:12:44,726 --> 01:12:48,287 the pressure of not recording, 924 01:12:48,330 --> 01:12:51,857 of not being able to do what Bruce wanted, 925 01:12:51,900 --> 01:12:55,301 it's amazing to me how he was able to withstand it and never crack 926 01:12:55,337 --> 01:12:57,498 and never really show at all 927 01:12:57,539 --> 01:13:00,269 how disturbing the whole thing must have been. 928 01:13:02,944 --> 01:13:04,912 There's a moment where, like, 929 01:13:04,946 --> 01:13:09,508 I guess I assessed my strengths and my weaknesses, you know? 930 01:13:09,551 --> 01:13:12,543 And I'm glad it happened, you know. 931 01:13:12,587 --> 01:13:15,852 I don't got one regret about... 932 01:13:16,658 --> 01:13:20,992 about one second of the past three years. 933 01:13:21,830 --> 01:13:23,491 Because I learned a lot from it. 934 01:13:24,666 --> 01:13:27,533 You can hear it on the record, I hope. 935 01:13:46,087 --> 01:13:50,353 The Darkness album and tour was such an important part of... 936 01:13:50,392 --> 01:13:53,987 the Bruce Springsteen, E Street Band story, 937 01:13:54,029 --> 01:13:58,489 because in my view it really seemed like the first time that... 938 01:13:58,533 --> 01:14:01,001 it is possible to do it your own way. 939 01:14:01,636 --> 01:14:04,696 And there was a ferocity in the band... 940 01:14:05,607 --> 01:14:08,269 when we finally went out and started playing again, 941 01:14:08,310 --> 01:14:10,744 that perhaps wasn't there earlier. 942 01:14:11,846 --> 01:14:15,976 It was just an absolutely take-no-prisoners approach. 943 01:15:09,237 --> 01:15:12,729 The first time I saw Bruce was in 1978. 944 01:15:14,209 --> 01:15:16,404 I'd never seen anything like that, it was shocking. 945 01:15:16,444 --> 01:15:21,438 I was surprised that you could be in such a large venue 946 01:15:21,483 --> 01:15:24,475 and still feel that you're having a personal experience. 947 01:15:29,457 --> 01:15:33,154 You come out there in that dark and you make that magic, 948 01:15:34,262 --> 01:15:37,527 you pull something that doesn't exist out of the air, 949 01:15:37,565 --> 01:15:40,363 doesn't exist until any given night 950 01:15:40,402 --> 01:15:42,927 when you're standing in front of your audience. 951 01:15:42,971 --> 01:15:45,269 And nothing exists in that space 952 01:15:45,306 --> 01:15:48,332 until you go, "One, two, three, four..." 953 01:15:49,811 --> 01:15:54,339 Then you and the audience together manifest an entire world, 954 01:15:56,451 --> 01:15:58,078 an entire set of values, 955 01:15:58,119 --> 01:16:00,781 an entire way of thinking about your life 956 01:16:00,822 --> 01:16:02,346 and the world around you. 957 01:16:06,094 --> 01:16:08,619 And an entire set of possibilities. 958 01:16:15,236 --> 01:16:16,760 That can never be taken away. 959 01:16:21,342 --> 01:16:24,505 Bruce is a man with a vision 960 01:16:24,546 --> 01:16:28,004 and at the same time he's a person in search of a vision. 961 01:16:30,618 --> 01:16:36,284 And every one of these albums is a search for that vision of now. 962 01:16:36,324 --> 01:16:40,260 That's what ups the ante and makes some of these records... 963 01:16:40,295 --> 01:16:43,731 what made them so difficult 964 01:16:43,765 --> 01:16:48,862 was they weren't done until they had advanced his vision. 965 01:16:56,344 --> 01:16:58,335 First thing... Everybody, hey. 966 01:17:27,609 --> 01:17:29,634 Felt very weak in those days. 967 01:17:29,677 --> 01:17:33,306 You know, couldn't do much of what I wanted to do. 968 01:17:35,216 --> 01:17:38,185 You had your friends depending on you 969 01:17:38,219 --> 01:17:40,744 and you couldn't really take care of them, 970 01:17:40,788 --> 01:17:45,350 I always prided myself as a good bandleader and... 971 01:17:45,393 --> 01:17:48,624 But you were more than that in those days. 972 01:17:48,663 --> 01:17:52,326 The guys were my soldiers, you know, and... 973 01:17:53,801 --> 01:17:59,296 You know, there was a time when I felt like I'd failed them in some way. 974 01:18:17,392 --> 01:18:20,122 So, deep despair... 975 01:18:20,161 --> 01:18:23,289 and yet resilience, you know? 976 01:18:23,331 --> 01:18:26,494 Trying to find something. Deep despair and resilience. 977 01:18:37,011 --> 01:18:38,444 And determination. 978 01:18:39,647 --> 01:18:42,775 I think that's why the song still reaches people, you know. 979 01:18:42,817 --> 01:18:47,686 It's filled with deep despair, resilience, determination, 980 01:18:47,722 --> 01:18:49,747 assessment of limitations, 981 01:18:49,791 --> 01:18:52,555 desire to transcend those limitations 982 01:18:52,594 --> 01:18:55,222 in the way that you can. 983 01:18:55,263 --> 01:18:56,753 And then the last verse is... 984 01:19:09,811 --> 01:19:13,303 So, talking to myself there, obviously, you know. 985 01:19:13,348 --> 01:19:16,146 I had kind of a big fight and... 986 01:19:17,385 --> 01:19:19,046 But... 987 01:19:19,087 --> 01:19:24,787 you know, it was always more than just my own circumstance 988 01:19:24,826 --> 01:19:26,851 at the time of the lawsuit. 989 01:19:26,894 --> 01:19:28,759 It was... 990 01:19:28,796 --> 01:19:32,698 It's was just kind of the fight you have with yourself your whole life. 991 01:19:32,734 --> 01:19:35,862 It was always about the bigger conversation for me. 992 01:19:35,903 --> 01:19:38,497 And that was the important conversation. 993 01:19:38,539 --> 01:19:40,632 And when you get to the end of the song... 994 01:19:46,914 --> 01:19:48,074 You know... 995 01:19:52,920 --> 01:19:58,517 So you had to lose your illusions, you know, lose your illusions. 996 01:19:59,360 --> 01:20:05,526 While at the same time holding on to some sense of possibility. 997 01:20:07,135 --> 01:20:10,161 But, more so, your illusions of adult life 998 01:20:11,139 --> 01:20:13,437 and a life without limitations, 999 01:20:13,474 --> 01:20:16,568 which I think everyone dreams of and imagines at a certain point. 1000 01:20:16,611 --> 01:20:20,843 The song that needs to be sung is the song about, well, 1001 01:20:20,882 --> 01:20:25,478 how do you deal with... deal with those things 1002 01:20:25,520 --> 01:20:28,512 and move on to a creative life, 1003 01:20:29,657 --> 01:20:32,558 a spiritual life, a satisfying life, 1004 01:20:32,593 --> 01:20:34,561 and a life where you can just 1005 01:20:34,595 --> 01:20:37,462 make your way through the day and sleep at night, 1006 01:20:37,498 --> 01:20:40,023 that's what most of those songs were about.82617

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