Jealous Haters Since 1998!
Home | News | Reviews | Day In Rock | Photos | RockNewsWire | Singled Out | Tour Dates/Tix | Feeds
Bruce Springsteen Month: The Wild, Innocent and the E Street Shuffle

by Anthony Kuzminski

.
Bruce Springsteen - The Wild, Innocent and the E Street Shuffle (1973) Album Reflection

Bruce Springsteen did something in 1973 that he would never accomplish again in his career; release two albums in the same calendar year. His second LP, The Wild, Innocent & The E Street Shuffle, released in November of 1973, and is unlike anything else he has written or recorded since. It's a standalone record in his catalog full of echo-laden riffs, brazen confidence and music that is largely bipolar. Rolling Stone magazine ranked it at number 138 on its "500 Greatest Albums of All Time" and if you ask many Springsteen die-hards, they will name it as their favorite album. While I'm never disappointed in hearing any of these songs in concert I don't feel it is quite the five-star affair everyone thinks that it is. Why? It's actually quite simple as it is the same blemish that hinders Greetings; the production. The first time Jon Landau (who eventually went on to be his producer and manager) met Springsteen he told him "Loved your album…hated the production". Despite the production issues that hinder the album, this is not enough to stop it from it being Springsteen's most fortuitous and ultimately endearing record.

Once you dip your toe into the stream of Springsteen you immediately divulge the 1975-1985 period. However, you are basically digesting five records (six if you count the Live 1975-1985 record) and eventually you look for variation which brings everyone to ground zero in Springsteendom; Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. and The Wild, Innocent and the E Street Shuffle . Greetings is initially underwhelming but turns its charm on over repeated listens. The Wild, Innocent & The E Street Shuffle is initially complex and off-putting, but it immediately stands out from the rest of his catalog regardless of what you think. These songs were recorded before dashed dreams and social issues would infuse his songs. There is a virgin innocence to these first two records and while the production may truly be horrid, the songwriting and performances elevate these songs to a stratosphere where you look past all of its aural issues. You may not fall in love with it upon your first listen, but if there is a romantic inside of you, this album will prove to be classic in your heart and mind.

While the album is forty-six minutes, it houses a mere seven songs further adding to its legacy. If Springsteen had recorded this album mere months later, it probably would have been dramatically different, but once again, this is part of the album's charm. The album is a product of its time and wholly unique in the Springsteen cannon. The spare sonics are endearing, especially on the spastic "The E Street Shuffle" where the band jams relentlessly on the album's shortest track at four-minutes thirty-one seconds. The second shortest song, "Wild Billy's Circus Story" is an insular circus tale (drawn from Springsteen's childhood experiences at fairs) full of wondrous characters that while their appearances are brief, they prove to be unforgettable. There is immense life within this song as the listener paints a vivid picture in their head as the tale unravels. Blues flourishes are abound with the rave-up "Kitty's Back" with a booming backbeat courtesy of original E Street drummer Vini Lopez whose manic and primitive drumming adds colors to the whole record in ways the greatest drum professionals could only dream of. "New York City Serenade" clocks in just under ten-minutes and while the lyrical imagery is stunning, very little of it makes sense. Formed from parts of other songs, "Serenade" is an tour de force epic as the E Street Band takes broad strokes with their instruments and builds a lingering epic that may take a few listens to entrench itself in your mind, but when it does, prepare for it to be one of your favorite Springsteen songs.

The other three songs on this record are five-star classics. "4th of July (Sandy)" may be the most earnest and pure love song Springsteen has ever committed to tape. Infused with specific and dreamlike imagery that defines the Asbury Park Boardwalks, it evokes a strong sense of wistfulness even to those who aren't nostalgic or who haven't even heard of Asbury Park. It stirs up a perfect summer day and bestows the feeling of what it is like to be in love. The late and great Danny Federici (who died this past April) gleams on the accordion and in many ways, this is his most memorable contribution to Springsteen's recorded output. Federici's other standout moment comes on the epic "Incident on 57th Street", which opens side two. The way Federici's organ flourishes on each of the choruses provides an epiphany and makes you believe in the redemption of these characters the same way a hymn may infuse your soul with hope at church. Your ears have never heard a sound as engaging or restrained. The trenchant piano ballad has a touch of guitars that glisten like stars in the sky, highlighted by feverish-dream solos. "Incident" is the song most fans clamor to see in concert as it has the potential to take any show to that next level. In a twenty-year space, the song received one sole performance (brilliantly represented as a live b-side from 1986) and it has been performed occasionally since being resurrected in 1999. As "Incident" reaches it's climax on record, the spiraling instruments swell into a breathy conclusion leads directly into the song that put Springsteen on the rock n' roll map-"Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)". The E Street Band delivers the most raucous love song ever committed to tape by Springsteen with a ferocious and furious energy that would later define his career. The record contains a submerged delicateness after the lead off track and on "Rosalita" the band delivers an unyielding tale of love that proved that any hype surrounding them was warranted.

I initially thought I would award this album a solid but non-classic rating. I'm not sure if it's the 132nd best album ever made (according to Rolling Stone), but it's damn good despite its minimal production. Mixing poetry with a hybrid of soul, R&B, jazz and rock n' roll these tales of dreamers, lovers and street fighters makes this a utterly distinctive record, hence why it's held in such high regard by his legion of fans. Springsteen would never be as romantic or draw from a musical template as complex or as varied as what he utilized on The Wild, The Innocent & The E Street Shuffle. What makes the entire record so magical is the space in which it was created. Greetings From Asbury Park sold only 25,000 copies and it's evident The Wild, Innocent and the E Street Shuffle was written and recorded in a blissful magical state where self-consciousness was absent. With each record, artists drive themselves into a corner where they will always be judged by their best work. At this early state in his career, Bruce Springsteen had nothing to lose and as a result, he created an album unlike any other he would ever create.


Anthony Kuzminski is a Chicago based writer and Special Features Editor for the antiMusic Network and his daily writings can be read at The Screen Door and can be contacted at thescreendoor AT gmail DOT com.


Info and Links

Bruce Springsteen Month: The Wild, Innocent and the E Street Shuffle

Preview and Purchase This CD Online

Visit the official homepage

More articles for this artist

tell a friend about this article

.


...end


.
News Reports
.
• Day in Rock:
Bayside Singer Hospitalized- More Pink Floyd Rarities?- Lost Stone Temple Pilots Clip- Bret Michaels Solo CD Features Def Leppard, Loretta Lynn and Jimmy Buffet- more

• Day in Pop Violent Madonna Stalker Escapes- Suge Knight Arrested- Gorillaz, James Murphy, and Andre 3000 Team Up- House Canceled- Taylor Swift Premiere Next Week- more

• B Sides: Howard Stern Van Halen Special Online- Ozzy Discusses Iommi's Cancer Battle on Radio Station Launch- Q&A With Slash- Lars Explains Metallica Experimenting- more

 Subscribe To Day in Rock

.
 
Reviews
.

• Tony K's Favorite Album's of 2011

• Road Trip: Feel the Magic - Alamos, Mexico's Festival Ortiz Tirado

• Elvis Found Alive

• Rock Reads: Dirty Deeds: My Life Inside/Outside of AC/DC

• Scorpions - Comeblack

• Room Service: Chicago, Ohio, Missouri and Quebec

• MorleyView: Ana Kefr

• A Marriage Between Music and Movies Part III: Cameron Crowe's Top 10 Greatest Hits

• RIP: Etta James - The Dreamer

• The Doors - Mr. Mojo Risin': The Story of L.A. Woman

• Soki2u - Dancing through the Needle's Eye

• Cameron Crowe's Greatest Hits Part II (25-11)

• Howlin' Wolf - Smokestack Lightning: The Complete Chess Masters 1951-1960

• Passport: Forty Winks- Giorgio Tuma- I Build Collapsible Mountains- Spring Offensive


.
.
.

Search for Tickets

Or Browse For Tickets

.
.
Today's Rock News
.

• Bayside Singer Hospitalized- More Pink Floyd Rarities Coming?- Mars Volta Preview- New Ratt This Summer- Dance Gavin Dance Guest Singers- Tommy Bolin and Friends- more

• Lost Stone Temple Pilots Clip Now Online

• Bret Michaels Solo CD Features Def Leppard, Loretta Lynn and Jimmy Buffet

• E Street Band Recruit Clarence Clemons' Nephew

• Ozzy Osbourne May Receive Hometown Honor

• Six Feet Under Lose Member

• Career Spanning Grateful Dead DVD Box Set Coming

• Ringo Starr's 13th All Starr Band Tour Dates

• Keith Richards, Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy To Tribute Hubert Sumlin

• Jack White and Tom Jones Tribute Howlin' Wolf

• Black Sabbath Day Backed By Culture Chief

• Sammy Hagar To Rum America

• Dave Grohl Sings Adele's Praises

• Miracles, Crickets and Other Famed Backing Bands To Rock The Hall

• Prong New Album Details

• Evile To Tribute David Gold This Weekend

• Van Halen Release TV Commercial

• Clutch Releasing Double Vinyl Edition Of Blast Tyrant

• Viral Hardcore Kids Video Battle

• Tombs Expand Tour Plans

• Dio Inspired American Idol's James Durbin

• Maps & Atlases Set New Album Release

• Iwrestledabearonce Get Warped

• We Are Augustines To Rock Letterman

• The Temper Trap Coming To America

• Merrell Fankhauser Releases Best Of The Tiki Lounge DVDs

• Remembering Sweet's Brian Connolly

• Singled Out: Lillian Axe's Caged In

Subscribe to Day in Rock Report by Email

.
.
Today's Pop News
.

• Violent Madonna Stalker Escapes- Gorillaz, James Murphy, and Andre 3000 Team Up- House Canceled- Taylor Swift Premiere Next Week- more

• Suge Knight Arrested

• Special Limited Edition Katy Perry Coming

• Halle Berry Death Threats

• Jersey City Cops Going on Snooki Patrol

• Scotty McCreery Up For Academy of Country Music Award

• Nate Dogg's Rapper Friends Didn't Have His Back?

• Another Chad Ochocinco Name Change Coming

• Remix Beyonce and Win

• Glee Tree Hugger Video Surfaces

• Erasure Fill Us With Fire

• Caveman Set For North American Tour

• Michael Lohan Applied for Job at Burger King

• Home Improvement Star Charged With DUI and Drug Possession

• American Idol Dad Wasn't In Rehab

• Labrinth Teams With Busta Rhymes For US Debut

• $30 Million for Matt Lauer?

More News

.
 
anti Worthy Links
.
• The Screen Door • superLOUD • A Journal of Musical Things • Lloyd Zeffler blog • Demolish Mag • Nightwatcher's House of Rock • CJ Chilvers • Deja Voodoo • The 1st Five • thecopycat.biz • Day in Rock @twitter

.
  .
.

Click Here to Buy T-Shirts!
Click Here to Buy T-Shirts!



 

Tell a Friend about this page - Contact Us - Privacy - antiMusic Email - Job Postings - Advertising - Why we are antiMusic

Copyright© 1998 - 2012 Iconoclast Entertainment Group All rights reserved. antiMusic works on a free link policy for reprinting of our original articles, click here for details. Please click here for legal restrictions and terms of use applicable to this site. Use of this site signifies your agreement to the terms of use.