As a born and bred New Jerseyan living and breathing rock music in the 70s, I have heralded every Bruce Springsteen album as monumental occurrence in my life. After Springsteenâs success with 1975âs classic Born To Run, everybody I knew were waiting with bated breath for the follow up, which turned out to be 1978âs Darkness On The Edge Of Town.
A big reason for the three-year wait is that Springsteen had to endure a much publicized legal fight with his manager, where he was kept from recording for a time. This fourth album certainly reflects a darkness in its lyrics, with Springsteenâs characters now grown up and in many situations, living deadâend lives. Springsteen has often said he feels Darkness On The Edge Of Town was a little too wordy, that he would have preferred more musical passages. In listening back, it would seem almost every song here works as a rock and roll nugget of perfect production. Perhaps, the Boss simply had lots to say at this point in his life.
From blistering opening of âBadlands,â this album reveals âProfessorâ Roy Bittanâs amazing piano playing, all the way to the somber album-ending title track with its exploding choruses. In many ways, I feel this might be Springsteen and his E Street Bandâs true crowning glory, as The River is too long, Nebraska a stripped down, at times indulgent solo turn, and Born In The USA not very strong at all, even in with its worldwide success. Darkness On The Edge Of Town is also notable in that guitarist Steven Van Zandt is given a co-production credit, and if there was ever anyone who knows horn interplay (he was brought into the Born To Run sessions to help with the horn arrangements), harmony vocals, subtle guitar production and can push Springsteen to his full potential, it is Steven Van Zandt.
âBadlandsâ does snap, but the distorted single-note riffing and pull offs of âAdam Raised A Cainâ make it an even better tune. On the 2010 remaster, we get to hear Garry Tallentâs bass and Danny Federiciâs organ clearly under Springsteenâs screams. The band really is firing on all pistons and this take on a classic phrase and story is turned on its head by the Bossâs eloquent lyric. âSomething In The Nightâ is classic Springsteen, the lyric evoking lonely and windswept Jersey streets, his plaintive wail aligned, and drummer Max Weinberg providing his big snare hits to what is pretty much a stark production. This is one of the albumâs great songs, the one we had all been hoping for, a true successor to âBackstreetsâ from Born To Run.
On the sexual paean âCandyâs Room,â we hear Weinbergâs distinctive high hat opening, the singer taking a breath before he exhales the vocal and the tinkling touch Bittanâs piano following along. âRacing In The Streetsâ is the centerpiece of the album, a story of racing friends at the end of their desperation is painted painstakingly by a simple lyric, akin to Born to Runâs âJunglelandâ with more maturity to the story. I have heard this song hundreds of time and it never fails to evoke chills up and down my spine. The subtle backing âohhsâ near the end, Bittan and Springsteen locked together, and Federiciâs single-note organ solo leaves the listener breathless.
Not all of Darkness On The Edge Of Town works though. âFactory,â despite its catchy chorus and full use of Federici, still plays too stiff for me. Plus, the lyric is too obvious and well below Bruceâs skill. âStreets Of Fireâ is another song that doesnât do much, Iâm afraid. Like âFactory.â the lyrics are trite, Springsteen avoids getting too specific (and his strength as a lyricist is his specificity), and the band is competent, but nothing thatâs outstanding. Redemption is at hand however. âProve It All Nightâ has the Boss name- dropping towns and pushing forward over Tallentâs best bass parts of this album, with a classic harmony vocal and big choruses. Springsteen makes some broad statements, sometimes a little banal, but mostly on course to keep the song personalâŚand rocking. Interestingly enough, Darkness On the Edge Of Town features judicious (some argue too little) use of âBig Manâ Clarence Clemons, although when the sax does appear, it is passionately placed and well played, as it is on âProve It All Night.â
With the title track, we are in and out of Bruce Springsteenâs world view at the time and want back in, as I did playing this album, especially the first side, over and over again when I first bought it. What is now an iconic solo shot of Bruce Springsteen on the front cover truly captures his state of mind and what one finds on Darkness On The Edge Of Town â a great album by a great American musical artist.
~ Ralph Greco, Jr.