logo
Bruce Springsteen's 83-song ‘Lost Albums' is the greatest musical treasure trove of all time

Bruce Springsteen's 83-song ‘Lost Albums' is the greatest musical treasure trove of all time

Yahoo3 days ago

This is surely the greatest box set of all time. It is what box sets were invented for, an alternative history of one of the great musical artists of our age that is every bit as compelling as his actual history.
Bruce Springsteen, Tracks II: The Lost Albums features seven unreleased albums written and recorded between 1983 and 2018, including 83 original songs, only nine of which have been heard before (and seven of those in completely different versions). These are not sketches, demos or drafts. They are complete albums, finished to the last detail.
It is awe-inspiring to contemplate, like stumbling across a buried treasure trove of one of the greatest talents in his field, created at the peak of his powers, then put aside for mysterious reasons, locked away and forgotten. Or almost. As Springsteen has said of his prolific songwriting, when a song doesn't fit his plans, 'I put them away, but I don't throw them away.'
Tracks II is a companion to 1998's Tracks, a compilation of 66 out-takes and leftovers from 1972 and 1995. But that pales beside what Springsteen has accomplished here. The great singer-songwriter spent the pandemic going through his personal archives, completing albums that in some cases only he knew even existed.
Now, 83 songs is a lot of music for even the most ardent fan to consume in one gulp. It is a testament to the lofty level at which Springsteen operates that this stuff is genuinely good. There's not a single sloppy demo or half-hearted throwaway among them. Which is not to suggest it is better than his official discography of 11 studio albums released during the same period. It is just different – the work of an artist exploring alternative possibilities. 'Many of these records were done on a whim,' he writes in the copious liner notes, 'experimenting with genres out of my wheelhouse.'
Among the revelations here are: a lush, noirish orchestral album in a Burt Bacharach vein (Twilight Hours); a moody soundtrack to a spiritual western (Faithless); a sombre Tex-Mex record about the South American diaspora (Inyo); and an atmospheric trip-hop album of brooding broken love songs (The Streets of Philadelphia Sessions). Exploring the loops and synths of Springsteen's Oscar-winning theme song to the film of the same name, that last's 10 hypnotic, poppy tracks might have set him on an entirely different course had it been released in 1994.
But that seems to have been the problem for a man who thinks deeply about his relationship with his fans. 'It was a really dark album, something I didn't know if the audience was ready for,' he says now, pointing out that it would have followed three albums focused on relationships (Tunnel of Love, Human Touch and Lucky Town).
Instead, in 1994, he reconvened the E Street Band for a Greatest Hits tour, then went on to release a solo acoustic set of political Americana (1995's masterful The Ghost of Tom Joad). Simultaneously, he recorded an album of storming, joyous country rock just to let off some steam, here unveiled as the rousing Somewhere North of Nashville.
Springsteen's work ethic makes most modern music artists look like dilettantes. Songwriting may come easily to him, but he still puts the work in, chases inspiration when it strikes, recording songs to presentable levels rather than leaving unfinished sketches for a later date (which, as every procrastinator knows, will most often never come). In 1982, new home recording technology gave him the freedom to make his simplest, starkest record, Nebraska.
It now turns out there was another homemade album from that period, LA Garage Session '83, recorded in a converted garage in Los Angeles. Lighter and brighter than Nebraska, tinged with now dated synths, it lacks the vision of his finest work and is too modest to have delivered the superstardom affirmed by 1984's Born in the USA.
But the actual songcraft is impeccable. The Klansman offers a spartan folk narrative of evil lurking in America's soul that resonates chillingly today, while Shut Out the Light contrasts an army veteran's junkie nightmare with a soul-lifting chorus that hints at themes more fully explored on Born in the USA.
That is the thing, I think, that elevates Springsteen's archival releases. It is not so much that this box set is crammed with lost masterpieces, but rather that nothing here feels negligible. Much of Springsteen's work follows familiar folk and blues forms with uncomplicated rhythmic and chordal structures. But within such basic frameworks, he crafts vivid character studies and vignettes, heavy with deeper implications and painted with surprising musical flourishes.
Collaborators from the E Street Band and other ensembles colour in the edges. Springsteen's emotionally precise and always commanding vocals tie it all together. There is an abundance of marvels to be found on the mesmerically intense Inyo. The Aztec Dance and Ciudad Juarez might seem minor works on first listen but reveal awe-inspiring depths on closer inspection. Springsteen doesn't really do throwaway.
There are also some absolute belters. Springsteen worried that an album full of sophisticated, romantic, orchestral Broadway show-tune songcraft and smooth crooning might have perplexed fans in the wake of his melancholy country masterpiece of 2019, Western Stars. But the simultaneously recorded Twilight Hours is astonishing in its own right. High Sierra evokes love and tragedy with the grandeur of classic film noir. It conjures the tantalising vision of Springsteen as the musical heir to Frank Sinatra at his most romantically bruised.
All that said, probably my own favourite album here is one he never planned. Perfect World is a compilation of leftovers sequenced into a cohesive set of full-power rock. If I Could Only Be Your Lover was intended for his fantastic 2012 album Wrecking Ball, but 'wasn't political enough.' Its longing narrative of an imagined alternative life could serve as the theme for this entire project, a soaring epic of roads not taken.
The box set is not cheap. It will set you back £295 for a nine-disc vinyl limited edition, or £260 for a seven-disc CD set. For the less committed, there is a compilation titled Lost and Found featuring 20 of the outstanding highlights.
It is a lot of money, but this is not some bonus disc or retrospective elaborating on an all-time great artist's history – it completely rewrites Springsteen's career. A classic discography that previously ran to 21 albums has been expanded to 29. And there is more where this came from. Springsteen has promised Tracks Volume III – but only after he has put out his next (already completed) solo album and a separate album of covers.
Much of the work here was recorded in the 1990s, often regarded as Springsteen's most fallow period, in which he only released three official albums. 'I read about myself having a lost period in the Nineties,' Springsteen has noted, citing the excuse that he had a young family and felt 'burned out' with the demands of touring. 'But I was working on music all the time. I just wasn't releasing it.'
I guess that's one advantage of being your own Boss. This remarkable, belated release reminds us exactly why, of all the rock stars of the modern age, Springsteen remains uniquely deserving of that title.
Track II: The Lost Albums is released on June 27, via Columbia Records
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

True Religion's most popular Y2K jeans are up to 70% off right now 👖
True Religion's most popular Y2K jeans are up to 70% off right now 👖

USA Today

time3 hours ago

  • USA Today

True Religion's most popular Y2K jeans are up to 70% off right now 👖

Throw it back with these trendy summer discounts at True Religion. Nothing feels more quintessentially American than a pair of vintage-wash blue jeans. The laid-back vibe! The timeless look! The Bruce Springsteen of it all! Denim fashion has long been the unofficial uniform for Americans, no matter the generation or current batch of fashion trends. Perhaps that's why it's so fitting that ahead of the Fourth of July, True Religion—aka the premier Y2K brand for cool denim—is hosting a massive 4th of July sale, with discounts of up to 70% off on its most coveted jeans. While these massive 4th of July deals are set to last through Sunday, July 6, the sales event gives shoppers (like myself) the perfect opportunity to restock on their denim inventory and save big while they're at it. Ahead, see the best 4th of July deals worth shopping from True Religion this weekend: Shop True Religion's 4th of July deals Shop True Religion's best 4th of July fashion deals

Bruce Springsteen Says Jeremy Allen White-Led Biopic Covers 'Most Painful Days' of His Life
Bruce Springsteen Says Jeremy Allen White-Led Biopic Covers 'Most Painful Days' of His Life

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

Bruce Springsteen Says Jeremy Allen White-Led Biopic Covers 'Most Painful Days' of His Life

Bruce Springsteen is revealing what it was like to watch Jeremy Allen White portray him in his forthcoming biopic, Deliver Me From Nowhere. The film, hailing from writer-director Scott Cooper, stars White as the legendary artist, centering on the time period when he made his 1982 record Nebraska. The album is deeply personal, and Springsteen told Rolling Stone that there was 'some unusualness' to watching the project be filmed because it touches on 'some of the most painful days of my life.' More from The Hollywood Reporter James Blake Brings 'Sinners' Song to Cannes Lions Will Drake Kill the Diss Track? 'Godfather of Harlem' Maestro Swizz Beatz Shares His Formula 'I mean, there's some unusualness to it because the movie involves, in some ways, some of the most painful days of my life,' he said, adding that he would take time away from set 'if there was a scene coming up that was sometimes really deeply personal.' 'Well, some of the scenes I wasn't at,' he said. 'I wanted the actors to feel completely free, and I didn't want to get in the way, and so I would just stay at home. If Scott Cooper, the director, wanted or needed me there for something, I would try to make it. But I was on tour in Canada for the whole first month or so of the filming, and so I was really out on the road quite a bit and working at that time.' The first footage from Deliver Me From Nowhere debuted earlier this year at CinemaCon, and the official trailer dropped Wednesday, giving audiences a first look at The Bear star's depiction of Springsteen, including his performance of his beloved 1975 single, 'Born to Run.' It's no secret that Springsteen and his longtime manager and record producer Jon Landau (played by Jeremy Strong) were involved in Deliver Me From Nowhere. The 'Dancing in the Dark' singer would often visit the film's set, and when asked what it was like watching White play him, the 20-time Grammy Award winner joked, 'I'm sure it's much worse for the actor than for me.' 'Jeremy Allen White was very, very tolerant of me the days that I would appear on the set. I said to him, 'Look, anytime I'm in the way, just give me the look and I'm on my way home,'' Springsteen added. 'So the days that I got out there, he was wonderfully tolerant with me being there. And it was just fun. It was enjoyable.' The film is adapted from Warren Zanes' 2023 book of the same name and will hit theaters late this year on Oct. 24. Alongside White and Landau, the cast includes Stephen Graham, Odessa Young, Paul Walter Hauser, Gaby Hoffmann, Johnny Cannizzaro, Harrison Gilbertson, Marc Maron, David Krumholtz and Chris Jaymes. Best of The Hollywood Reporter Wes Anderson's Movies Ranked From Worst to Best 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Hollywood Stars Who Are One Award Away From an EGOT

‘The Bear' Review: FX/Hulu's Culinary Dramedy Stalls Out With a Muted Fourth Season
‘The Bear' Review: FX/Hulu's Culinary Dramedy Stalls Out With a Muted Fourth Season

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

‘The Bear' Review: FX/Hulu's Culinary Dramedy Stalls Out With a Muted Fourth Season

Time is a relentless force in FX/Hulu's The Bear, pressing ahead no matter how strenuously our characters try to ignore it or slow it down. Morning alarms drag bleary-eyed employees out of bed. Kitchen timers measure their work to the millisecond. An 'Every Second Counts' sign scans as both inspiration and warning, while nearby, a giant clock ticks down the minutes until the restaurant officially runs out of money; as of the season four premiere, it's set at 1,440 hours, or about two months. But even as time marches on, momentum is under no obligation to follow. Where The Bear once seemed almost too restless — exploding with stress and thriving on turmoil, eager to subvert and surprise — the latest run has the feel of a show burnt out from the effort of trying to outdo itself. Rather than push forward or drill deeper, it retreats into familiar territory as it prepares, maybe, to wind down for good. More from The Hollywood Reporter How to Watch Emmy-Winning Series 'The Bear' Season 4 Online And the Emmy Nominations Should Go to... Bruce Springsteen Says Jeremy Allen White-Led Biopic Covers "Most Painful Days" of His Life To what extent that sense of exhaustion stems from creator Christopher Storer and his team, and to what extent it simply reflects their protagonist, Carmy (Jeremy Allen White, continually excellent), is difficult to say. Perhaps it doesn't matter, when the series has always so closely identified itself with Carmy's psychology, and when we as viewers are inundated by the vibe either way. Having spent much of season three flailing to convince himself he's not stuck in a rut, Carmy begins season four dozing off to Groundhog Day and relating way too hard to lines like, 'What would you do if you were stuck in one place, and every day was exactly the same, and nothing that you did mattered?' He's still angry and grieving, still prone to self-sabotage and self-destruction, and increasingly desperate to break the cycles that have trapped him there. If it's tempting to mutter, 'This again?' when Carmy rehashes once more his feelings of guilt around the death of big brother Mikey (Jon Bernthal), or promises to do better-but-no-really-for-real-this-time — well, one can surely sympathize with how much more exhausted Carmy must be to find himself back in this place, and with how impossible it can seem to grow past our deepest wounds. And one can acknowledge that to some extent, familiarity is to be expected — welcomed, even — from a beloved show in its fourth season. If last year was the equivalent of The Bear's 'chaos menu,' stuffed with flashy ingredients in experimental arrangements, this year is the more streamlined selection Carmy finally agrees to lock in — reliable favorites pared down to their most essential components. It is a comfort to be reunited with the boisterous staff we've logged so many thrilling hours with already, to be enveloped once more by their professional banter and unprofessional screaming matches, to fall into the rhythms of Storer and producer/music supervisor Josh Senior's eclectically cool rock soundtrack. We know by now to look forward to the extra-long episode with All the Guest Stars, longer and starrier than ever this round at 69 minutes including a guest appearance by Oscar winner Brie Larson. And we can eagerly anticipate the one-off detour into a non-Carmy character's life outside the restaurant — in this case a minor gem of a half-hour following Syd (Ayo Edebiri) on her day off as she drops by her cousin Chantel's (Danielle Deadwyler) to get her hair braided and bonds with Chantel's tween daughter TJ (Arion King). But as nice as it is to be back, it's also difficult not to notice a stagnancy setting in — as if Carmy's inability to move on means that no one else is allowed to either. While the peek into Syd's personal life is welcome, she spends the season dithering over the same decision presented to her last season, of whether to accept a job offer from a rival chef (Adam Shapiro). Richie (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) continues to cling to the restaurant as his purpose in life, and to grumble about his ex (Gillian Jacobs) getting remarried. Natalie (Abby Elliott) still alternates between frowning at spreadsheets and willing Carmy to give a shit about her new baby. And Tina (Liza Colón-Zayas) simply makes the same pasta dish over and over and over, attempting to shave seconds off the prep time. Meanwhile, the spark that lit up earlier volumes has dimmed significantly. Though the staff work hard to get the budget back in the black, there's no single interlude as deliciously tense as season one's 'Review' or season two's 'Fishes' or season three's 'Next.' While Richie continues to preach the gospel of unreasonable hospitality (and even follows through with a fake snowstorm conjured for out-of-town visitors), whatever relationship The Bear used to have to its customers, or the Chicago community, or the fine dining scene, has been rendered distant and theoretical as The Bear turns increasingly inward. Even the show's gustatory pleasures are not immune to the creeping anhedonia. 'Every one of our good memories, they happen in restaurants,' Carmy gushes to Mikey in the opening flashback; the key word there is 'memories.' In the present, scenes of characters taking real delight in food — preparing it, consuming it, dreaming up wild new versions of it — have grown rarer. It's still Carmy's primary love language, as seen in the appreciative smile he gives Marcus (Lionel Boyce) for a new dessert or the French Laundry chicken dish he offers his estranged mother (Jamie Lee Curtis) as a gesture of reconciliation. But it's telling that the camera does not linger on the process of Carmy making the latter, nor on her actually eating it. The Bear's ensemble has grown bigger and deeper with each passing year, with the kitchen's latest new hires including food runner Jess (Sarah Ramos) and stage Luca (Will Poulter). And the show's always taken the occasional swerve into other perspectives; for instance, we do still see Syd find quiet satisfaction in whipping up some Hamburger Helper for a hungry TJ, since Syd, unlike Carmy, is not yet dead inside. But it's always been Carmy's moods that primarily set the tone, and his mindset that defines the themes. So many conversations are had this season, by so many different characters, about how we're all secretly anxious or afraid or self-loathing like Carmy, that you start to wonder: Are we, though? Aren't there other obsessions or fears or desires or impulses worth exploring? Must the extreme empathy toward him come at the expense of more fully exploring other promising storylines, like Tina's pursuit of perfection or Marcus' passion for his craft or even the adorable flirty chemistry between Richie and Jess or Syd and Luca? Is there even anywhere deeper for our excavation of Carmy's pain to dig? By season's end, it seems even Carmy's tapped out on Carmy. 'I don't have anything to pull from,' he admits, pleading with Syd to understand. The Carmy who once ruled The Bear with an iron fistful of non-negotiables would like to try relinquishing control. The Carmy who's given his entire life to this art wonders if he's fallen out of love with it. The Carmy so blinkered by his pain that he can't see how it's infected those around him has finally realized that others are hurting too. The Carmy who once trapped himself in the refrigerator seems to believe, at last, that he's found a way to get the door open — to escape or to let others in before the clock runs out and he's frozen in place for good. In a move out of the Ted Lasso playbook, the fourth season ends on a note that could represent the end of everything, or a pivot toward a less Carmy-centric direction, or just a brief pause before business resumes as usual. If it does continue, let's hope the series takes its cue from its protagonist one last time, and considers that The Bear could be so much bigger than just this one guy. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 'The Studio': 30 Famous Faces Who Play (a Version of) Themselves in the Hollywood-Based Series 22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store