I leave you with one final thought: I still do not know what a "Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out" is. My whole life I have never known. I still don't.
Mark Saleski:
There are some pieces of music that have been a part of me for so long that it's difficult to remember life before them. I mean, I know that I existed before Born To Run but somehow...it just doesn't seem possible.
As both Lisa McKay and DJ Radiohead have so eloquently illustrated, this record had (and still has) impact. The stories. The narrative. The music. It all fits together so seamlessly that, were it not for the differing tempos and rhythms used, you might perceive the album as one extended song.
Born To Run came into my life a few years after its initial release. It went into heavy rotation toward the end of my high school career (1979) and into ultra-heavy rotation in college. Those stories of hope and escape coupled with the cathartic explosiveness of the music quelled my fears. Fears of the future. Who knows what I thought I was escaping from, but I was deathly afraid of what lie ahead. Born To Run gave me a sense of comaraderie with this great and anonymous mass of searching humanity.
Plus it just plain rocked. Hard.
I listen now and have to agree that it does seem fresh today. Let's face it, despite the album's high level of past radio play, familiarity cannot dull the absolute uniqueness of the record's sound.
But what about nostalgia. C'mon, you knew I'd bring that up. There are many reasons I love this album, not the least of which is that there are so many memoir-bits firmly glued to the songs: The emotional releases felt during past concerts. Car rides with an old buddy, windows rolled down and stereo too loud. Long nights hanging out with friends sharing music and building attachments that felt like forever. The slow fade of a dying relationship. New love almost too intense to bear. A hot summer night. A hot summer night with beer.
All of these thoughts (and more) flash through me as Born To Run plays. There's not a dead spot on the album. "Thunder Road" is my favorite? No, they're all my favorite. In the middle of "Tenth Avenue Freeze Out" I just can't imagine anything better...until "Night". And on and on.
Born To Run, the song, is the obvious emotional heart of the album. Blistering in its intensity, its aural cinema has no equal in rock. For me, the first and last cuts provide comforting bookends. What amazes me are my reactions. I don't know how many times I've listened to this but when the piano gives way to Bruce's first words..."The Screen Door Slams", my eyes well with tears. Every single time. When those big guitar chords explode after "Tonight In Jungleland"...the hair spikes on my neck and arms.








Article comments
1 - Mary K. Williams
Excellent, excellent stuff Lisa/DJ/Mark
I'm sure many will sure in your memories and reactions to these great sounds.
I'm thinking this is one for my Christmas list. Or, next time I'm out at the store - cuz I'm so impatient.
I too - have NO clue what 10th Avenue Freeze Out is. Unless someone shut someone else down on a 10th avenue?
2 - Mary K. Williams
Damn i guess I should preview before I publish. Definitely impatient.
I mean...share not 'sure'. SHeeshh.
3 - Connie Phillips
Mark (and guests to your column)this was just a wonderful read. The memories the three of you tie to the music remind me just how much our favorite music truly does become the soundtrack of our lives.
I too have my own set of memories attached to"Born to Run," and it was a lot of fun to read yours.
There is no denying how much of an impact Bruce and his songs have had on a whole generation. I look forward to reading part two.
4 - Mark Saleski
thanks connie.
you may have to wait 'til the middle of the week because dj radiohead was nearly hospitalized with shock over the intensity of the Live at the Hammersmith DVD.
i haven't heard a complete sentence outa him since!
5 - Connie Phillips
LOL - if it affected him that much, I'm sure it will be WELL worth the wait!
6 - DJRadiohead
Hammersmith.
Thunder.
Die happy. Now.
You. Buy. Will. Now. Go. Yes.
7 - Mark Saleski
i told ya!
8 - DJRadiohead
Getting the opportunity to write about "BTR" had me shuffling through some of the other Springsteen on my iPod (there is a lot).
I rediscovered a few gems I had not listened to in awhile. Do we have any "Missing" fans in here? I love tripping people out with that song because it is so different from most people's image of what Springsteen music sounds like. Plus, the song is sinister all fuck and I love me some sinister.
9 - Mark Saleski
you talking about "You're Missing"?
10 - ClubhouseCancer
Went to across the river to see Bruce last night at the Meadowlands. At one point, sitting at the piano, he said "Happy anniversary... I'm gonna try this one, I don't think I've ever tried it before..." And then...
"Hey, Eddie, can you lend me a few bucks...."
This fresh-as-the-headlines Bruce anecdote is expressly intended to please Mark Saleski. Any other use of this anecdote is prohibited.
11 - Mark Saleski
oooh, that hurts.
here's the setlist from last night:
1. Born In The USA
2. Devils And Dust
3. Atlantic City
4. Long Time Comin'
5. Used Cars
6. Frankie
7. Meeting Across The River
8. Johnny 99
9. Ain't Got You
10. Brilliant Disguise
11. Maria's Bed
12. Cautious Man
13. Reno
14. Two For The Road
15. Drive All Night
16. The Rising
17. Lucky Town
18. Jesus Was An Only Son
19. Leah
20. The New Timer
21. Matamoros Banks
(encore)
22. I Wanna Marry You
23. Thundercrack
24. Born To Run
25. The Promised Land
26. Dream Baby Dream
oh, the pain. i missed this tour. what's the instrumentation? is it just bruce?
12 - DJRadiohead
Nope, "Missing." It's on "The Crossing Guard" soundtrack (and if you got the 3-CD version of "The Essential Bruce Springsteen").
You must hear it if you haven't.
13 - ClubhouseCancer
Yeah, just Bruce, on acoustic guitar, dobro, ukelele, (a lot of) piano, organ,electric piano and boot-stomping.
I wasn't totally pleased with the show, but "Thundercrack," "Johnny 99" (on scratchy dobro and sung through a bullet mike) and "Brilliant Disguise" with Patti were worth the price of admission. I'll do a real review if I have time.
14 - Lisa McKay
oh, the pain. i missed this tour. what's the instrumentation? is it just bruce?
It's just Bruce. He accompanies himself at various times on the guitar, harmonica, piano and electric organ. When we saw him in July, he stomped out a beat to one song on an electric drum pad on the floor. A lot of the stuff on these setlists comes from his quieter solo stuff, but the things you're used to hearing in full E Street mode have an incredible power to them when they're stripped of all the noise - it gives you the opportunity to appreciate how truly meaningful the lyrics are, and the emotion he generates in that setting is quite different.
15 - Aaron, Duke De Mondo
Missing is great! As is this! one of the best Friday Morning Listens ever, up there with the Outsider Music one that introduced me to Jandek!
16 - Joel Hess
First, I'm not prepared to accept that "Born To Run" was released 30 years ago. Didn't I just buy it a couple of months ago?
Wasn't it Time or Newsweek who labeled Springsteen Rock's new troubadour?
All the talk of the cinematic-nature of his music is right on. I have a picture in my mind when I listen to this album (CD?) and I'm in the middle of the movie right there with 'Wendy,' 'Mary,' 'Magic Rat,' 'the Ranger,' or 'the Big Man.'
Thanks Bruce for over 30 years of great stories...er music.
17 - DJRadiohead
Exactly, Duke! Every individual who has not heard "Missing" must acquire a copy. I bought the import single and have the 3-CD 'Essential' package.
It is Bruce like you have never heard him and it defies description.
18 - DJRadiohead
I don't know what took him so long to start playing our new American hymn on this tour, but he's finally playing "Across the Border" on pump organ.
Every church of every faith everywhere in every corner should be singing "Across the Border" until I tell them otherwise. That song and "My City of Ruins" have absolutely ruined my life foreer.
19 - gypsyman
My older brother bought this Born to Run in 75. It was love at first hear for me at 14. The next year we were in Toronto and Bruce showed up to play the old hockey arena.
Here's the hoot, I had won tickets to go see "aack" The Beach Boys who sorry i've never liked, day of the gig I'm so sick I can't get out of bed. My mom feeling sorry for me says I'll buy you a ticket for something else...hot damn says I. The who was sold out, so I picked the next concert..Bruce doing the Born to Run Tour.
January 1977 half the hockey arena so maybe 10,000 people at most...damn neat intimate by todays standards...It was and remains one of the top two rock and roll concerts I've ever seen.
I couldn't remember anything about the set list if you paid me...it was just one long orgasmic experience of what rock and roll should be. The only other band that matched him and E street were the Clash and then it was a toss up.
Really nice memories folks, takes you back to a more innocent time doesn't it. I think Bruce picked up the whole On The Road imagery and carried it into a new generation... Cars and energy and the sexuality of the two fused together is the epitomy of American rock and roll and beat rebellion. Nobody has come close to recapturing that aside from Bruce.
gypsyman