logo
Bruce Springsteen almost drove his band to quit while making ‘Born to Run'

Bruce Springsteen almost drove his band to quit while making ‘Born to Run'

New York Post3 days ago
The infamous sax solo Clarence Clemons plays on Bruce Springsteen's rock classic 'Born To Run' is so vibrant and exhilarating that it seems like a moment of pure inspiration on Clemons' part.
In truth, as Peter Ames Carlin lays out in his new book, 'Tonight in Jungleland: The Making of Born To Run,' (Doubleday, August 5), it was the exact opposite. I came together note by meticulous note in a studio session that set new records for frustration.
7 'Born To Run' features an iconic Clarence Clemons sax solo that was crafted by Bruce Springsteen singing — and changing — it note by note to Clemons.
Advertisement
Springsteen's songwriting mastery was developed through an obsessive process that found him toiling over ideas, lyrics, and concepts virtually non-stop.
'If you saw Bruce offstage, at home, or on the road in 1973 or 1974, you wouldn't have to look very far to find his songwriting notebook,' Carlin writes. 'He usually kept it within reach and always had a song, or more likely several songs, working at the same time.'
The 1975 album 'Born to Run,' Springsteen's third, came to life over many months of tortured labor by Springsteen, a perfectionist whose process at the time could best be described as demented exhaustion.
Advertisement
To arrive at the familiar version of the title track, Springsteen tried just about every musical idea he had ever heard, played, or thought about including a string section, women singers backing up the chorus, and even a disco portion.
For the song's infamous sax solo, Springsteen worked with Clemons by singing his vision for the solo note by note, having Clemons play it, then changing one note, having Clemons play it again, and so on. This went on for hours, throughout the night.
'He spent ages working on it with Clemons, eight, ten, maybe twelve hours, playing the same notes over and over again, Bruce looking for a slightly different feel, a slightly different tone, a tiny adjustment to the rhythm of this passage, this pair of notes, this portion of that note,' writes Carlin.
Springsteen's obsession with the details in the music, however, was nothing compared to how he labored over the song's lyrics, constantly re-writing, seeking a different tone, a new phrase, anything that would help him make 'Born To Run' as great as he knew it could be.
Advertisement
7 Bruce Springsteen's perfectionism sent his band (above) storming out of the studio as he threatened to scrap 'Born To Run.' Instead it was released and made rock history.
Photograph by Barry Schneier
'Sometimes he'd be in the midst of a take, sing a few lines of a verse, shake it off, then take his notebook to a folding chair,' Carlin writes. 'He'd find a pen, open the book, look at the page, and just…think. He'd be there for a while. An hour, two hours, maybe more.'
That time proved to be worth it, because the song was improving dramatically as it went. Springsteen's longtime fans would hardly recognize the early versions of the song.
At one point, it sounded like a musical salute to 'Mad Max.'
Advertisement
'A song that had started as a nearly surrealistic portrait of a world gone mad — racers run down by their own cars, the highway buckling beneath their mag wheels, the thrill-kill junkies gunning down soldiers 'just for the noise/Not even for the kicks' — had been remade into a vibrant highway saga that, while heavily symbolic, could be recognized as existing on the modern Jersey Shore,' Carlin writes.
7 Both Newsweek (above) and Time put Bruce Springsteen on their covers after the album dropped.
Given all this, the album's recording process almost crumbled under the weight of Springsteen's relentless perfectionism.
Stephen Appel, Springsteen's road manager at the time, describes a scene of pure chaos.
'You're working and it sounds great and so you start to think you have it right, but Bruce says, 'Nope, it's s–t,'' says Appel in the book. 'And then you work for hours to change it. And then that's done, and Bruce says, 'You know what? Maybe it was better before, because now this sounds like s**t.' And you would do that for ten to fifteen hours a day.'
When the album was finally complete, it was played for executives at Columbia, including Walter Yetnikoff, who had just been placed in charge of all of CBS' record labels. (Columbia was owned by CBS at the time.)
7 The record's reception blew everyone away.
After he heard the entire album, Yetnikoff was asked what he thought and replied, 'It's like f—ing.'
Advertisement
Despite this rave review, when Springsteen the perfectionist heard the album's final mix for the first time, he had a very different reaction.
As the music played, Springsteen started adding self-deprecating commentary.
'Oh, well, if I'm going to sing something I guess I should oversing it, that's great,' Springsteen said. 'Oh, and here comes the saxophone, that's gotta be a Bruce Springsteen record, nothing clichéd about that.'
7 'Born To Run' was born at a rented bungalow (above) on West End Court in Long Branch, NJ, where The Boss still visits today.
LoC
Advertisement
When the record was done playing, Springsteen said, 'I dunno, man, maybe we should just scrap it. Toss this s–t and start over.'
Hearing that, Clemons, known as 'The Big Man' at a towering 6'5', stood up and walked out of the room without saying a word. Every member of the band and crew followed.
Of course, the record was not scrapped. Given that Springsteen's first two albums had not sold well, Columbia executives ordered 100,000 copies printed — a number that, at the time, indicated the label had low expectations — and were shocked when pre-orders hit three times that.
7 Despite his initial misgivings, Springsteen says he's 'very, very fond' of the album.
Redferns
Advertisement
The album became a #1 hit, and would dominate American rock radio for decades to come.
Both Time and Newsweek, two of the biggest magazines in the country at a time when that meant something, put him on the cover in the same week.
Interviewing Springsteen in 2024, Carlin found, unsurprisingly, that his view of the album had changed.
'I'm very, very fond of it,' Springsteen, now 75 years old, says in the book. 'And on its anniversaries, I get in a car and I play it from start to finish, right? I just drive around listening.'
Advertisement
7 A new book gives an authorized look at the album's recording.
On these jaunts, Springsteen makes sure he ends up on West End Court in Long Branch, New Jersey, just outside the rented bungalow where he first put thoughts for the song to paper.
'I get there right before the end, right before [the album's last song] 'Jungleland,'' says Springsteen. 'And I park there. I sit by the curb and I let 'Jungleland' play, all the way through.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

High stakes, high anxiety: 5 revelations about the making of ‘Born to Run'
High stakes, high anxiety: 5 revelations about the making of ‘Born to Run'

Los Angeles Times

time2 days ago

  • Los Angeles Times

High stakes, high anxiety: 5 revelations about the making of ‘Born to Run'

Before 'Born to Run,' Bruce Springsteen was in danger of being dropped by his record label. But the landmark album, released 50 years ago this month, changed all that: The New Jersey native vaulted to stardom, becoming the first musician to appear on the cover of Time and Newsweek simultaneously. In the absorbing 'Tonight in Jungleland: The Making of Born to Run,' Peter Ames Carlin details Springsteen's struggles to make the album. Leading up to its release, the musician had lost a champion at Columbia Records with the 1973 exit of president Clive Davis. This decreased support, coupled with poor sales and a lack of radio spins for his second LP, 'The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle,' later that year meant Springsteen's future there was at risk. Even stellar press reviews such as Jon Landau's infamous 1974 critical assessment ('I saw rock 'n' roll future and its name is Bruce Springsteen') didn't necessarily help. Musically, Springsteen was also getting used to musical shifts within his own band. Drummer Vini 'Mad Dog' Lopez and keyboardist David Sancious had departed, with drummer Max Weinberg and pianist Roy Bittan filling their shoes. For 'Tonight in Jungleland,' Carlin drew on research and interviews, including a fresh conversation with Springsteen and others involved with the record, as well as archival chats conducted for his bestselling 2013 Springsteen biography 'Bruce.' What emerges is a fascinating portrait of a talented, ambitious and stubborn young man with strong creative instincts — but who needed to get out of his own way to let the genius shine. Here are five takeaways about the genesis and creation of 'Born to Run' from 'Tonight in Jungleland.' Columbia Records didn't see the potential in the album's title track — at first. Convincing Columbia Records to support his new work was a herculean struggle for Springsteen. Still, he had an ace up his sleeve: a song called 'Born to Run' he had spent months refining. Springsteen's then-manager, Mike Appel, brought a tape of the song to play for Columbia exec Steve Popovich, an early believer in Springsteen's music. The hope was that Popovich would love the song and convince the label's head of A&R, Charles Koppelman, to support the single and Springsteen. Popovich was busy juggling three separate phone calls (on three different phone lines, no less) but played the cassette anyway, absorbing the music while continuing his conversations. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the listening session didn't go as well as Appel hoped, with Popovich telling Appel: 'I liked the riff. It's all right, but I didn't digest the rest.' Carlin quotes Appel responding: 'Why don't I digest some more myself? Like, we just finished it ourselves. And then we'll come back to you with some other suggestions.' But Springsteen's then-manager ended up grabbing the label's attention with guerrilla tactics: He leaked the single to radio stations who had supported Springsteen, drumming up buzz and airplay via DIY (and not-quite-legal) methods. Jon Landau helped shape the album in pivotal ways. Jon Landau, Springsteen's manager and trusted confidant for decades, began collaborating with him during the 'Born to Run' era, after Springsteen hired him to co-produce the LP. 'I don't trust anybody, you know, but Jon and I struck up a relationship, and I said, 'Well, this guy is theoretically going to be our producer,'' Springsteen told Carlin in 2024. Landau suggested that the musician needed to record in a more professional recording studio, the Record Plant in New York City. And he brought a keen editing eye to Springsteen's songs, particularly 'Wings for Wheels.' His advice to trim, cut and rearrange the music led to Springsteen revising the lyrics and emerging with 'Thunder Road.' 'Suddenly we had a very different album,' Springsteen told Carlin. 'We had a very different group sound, and we had streamlined ourselves into not a rock and soul band but into a tight little five-piece streamlined rock 'n' roll band.' Springsteen's perfectionist tendencies made finishing 'Born to Run' a nail-biter. A notorious perfectionist, Springsteen labored for months on the song 'Born to Run.' He was even more fastidious about getting 'Jungleland' right, which was a bigger issue: Springsteen had a strict deadline to finish the 'Born to Run' album on July 20, 1975, as he was kicking off a tour that very night. A few days before the LP was due, he switched up the end of 'Jungleland,' adding more emphasis on the final line as well as anguished, wordless howls. He was even more painstaking about recording Clarence Clemons' epic saxophone solo, staying up all night recording take after take alongside engineer Jimmy Iovine. 'Even after fifty years, the memory of what it took to record the sax solo to 'Jungleland' makes his eyes widen and his mouth drop open,' Carlin writes. Springsteen initially didn't like the finished album. Carlin's description of the moment Springsteen, his managers and the band listened to the final version of the seminal album is the most jaw-dropping passage of 'Tonight in Jungleland.' Carlin writes that he spoke to 'at least ten different people' who were there at the session, and 'no version of events holds from one voice to another.' But in the book, he recounts Springsteen critiquing the final song, 'Jungleland,' and ending his remarks with: 'I dunno, man, maybe we should just scrap it. Toss this s— and start over.' Iovine then arrived with an acetate copy of the album from the master recording. This also didn't go over well: After a listen, Springsteen threw the record into a hotel swimming pool. Explaining his actions today, Springsteen told Carlin: 'I just didn't like it, you know. It was making me, you know, it just made me itchy on the inside and out.' As indelible as the lyrics of 'Born to Run' are, Springsteen shies away from talk of artistry. Today, 'Born to Run' is considered one of the greatest albums of all time. The LP synthesized decades of popular music — soul, jazz, R&B, rock 'n' roll — to create a new musical language, while its depth-filled lyrics are a rich text full of allegories and religious imagery. Surprisingly, Springsteen himself is unpretentious about his creation. Carlin describes a long-ago encounter where then-road manager Stephen Appel (brother of Mike) told Springsteen he didn't understand the lines, 'The poets down here / Don't write nothing at all / They just stand back and let it all be.' In Appel's recollection, Springsteen responded, 'That's because I'm the poet.' Decades later, Springsteen recalls things differently. 'That doesn't sound right,' he told Carlin. 'In those days, I'm 24 years old, I'm really not that analytical, and I'm certainly not that self-analytical as of yet. 'I'm really just writing things and coming up with a line that feels good to me,' he continues. 'Those lyrics were just instinctively written.'

Bruce Springsteen almost drove his band to quit while making ‘Born to Run'
Bruce Springsteen almost drove his band to quit while making ‘Born to Run'

New York Post

time3 days ago

  • New York Post

Bruce Springsteen almost drove his band to quit while making ‘Born to Run'

The infamous sax solo Clarence Clemons plays on Bruce Springsteen's rock classic 'Born To Run' is so vibrant and exhilarating that it seems like a moment of pure inspiration on Clemons' part. In truth, as Peter Ames Carlin lays out in his new book, 'Tonight in Jungleland: The Making of Born To Run,' (Doubleday, August 5), it was the exact opposite. I came together note by meticulous note in a studio session that set new records for frustration. 7 'Born To Run' features an iconic Clarence Clemons sax solo that was crafted by Bruce Springsteen singing — and changing — it note by note to Clemons. Advertisement Springsteen's songwriting mastery was developed through an obsessive process that found him toiling over ideas, lyrics, and concepts virtually non-stop. 'If you saw Bruce offstage, at home, or on the road in 1973 or 1974, you wouldn't have to look very far to find his songwriting notebook,' Carlin writes. 'He usually kept it within reach and always had a song, or more likely several songs, working at the same time.' The 1975 album 'Born to Run,' Springsteen's third, came to life over many months of tortured labor by Springsteen, a perfectionist whose process at the time could best be described as demented exhaustion. Advertisement To arrive at the familiar version of the title track, Springsteen tried just about every musical idea he had ever heard, played, or thought about including a string section, women singers backing up the chorus, and even a disco portion. For the song's infamous sax solo, Springsteen worked with Clemons by singing his vision for the solo note by note, having Clemons play it, then changing one note, having Clemons play it again, and so on. This went on for hours, throughout the night. 'He spent ages working on it with Clemons, eight, ten, maybe twelve hours, playing the same notes over and over again, Bruce looking for a slightly different feel, a slightly different tone, a tiny adjustment to the rhythm of this passage, this pair of notes, this portion of that note,' writes Carlin. Springsteen's obsession with the details in the music, however, was nothing compared to how he labored over the song's lyrics, constantly re-writing, seeking a different tone, a new phrase, anything that would help him make 'Born To Run' as great as he knew it could be. Advertisement 7 Bruce Springsteen's perfectionism sent his band (above) storming out of the studio as he threatened to scrap 'Born To Run.' Instead it was released and made rock history. Photograph by Barry Schneier 'Sometimes he'd be in the midst of a take, sing a few lines of a verse, shake it off, then take his notebook to a folding chair,' Carlin writes. 'He'd find a pen, open the book, look at the page, and just…think. He'd be there for a while. An hour, two hours, maybe more.' That time proved to be worth it, because the song was improving dramatically as it went. Springsteen's longtime fans would hardly recognize the early versions of the song. At one point, it sounded like a musical salute to 'Mad Max.' Advertisement 'A song that had started as a nearly surrealistic portrait of a world gone mad — racers run down by their own cars, the highway buckling beneath their mag wheels, the thrill-kill junkies gunning down soldiers 'just for the noise/Not even for the kicks' — had been remade into a vibrant highway saga that, while heavily symbolic, could be recognized as existing on the modern Jersey Shore,' Carlin writes. 7 Both Newsweek (above) and Time put Bruce Springsteen on their covers after the album dropped. Given all this, the album's recording process almost crumbled under the weight of Springsteen's relentless perfectionism. Stephen Appel, Springsteen's road manager at the time, describes a scene of pure chaos. 'You're working and it sounds great and so you start to think you have it right, but Bruce says, 'Nope, it's s–t,'' says Appel in the book. 'And then you work for hours to change it. And then that's done, and Bruce says, 'You know what? Maybe it was better before, because now this sounds like s**t.' And you would do that for ten to fifteen hours a day.' When the album was finally complete, it was played for executives at Columbia, including Walter Yetnikoff, who had just been placed in charge of all of CBS' record labels. (Columbia was owned by CBS at the time.) 7 The record's reception blew everyone away. After he heard the entire album, Yetnikoff was asked what he thought and replied, 'It's like f—ing.' Advertisement Despite this rave review, when Springsteen the perfectionist heard the album's final mix for the first time, he had a very different reaction. As the music played, Springsteen started adding self-deprecating commentary. 'Oh, well, if I'm going to sing something I guess I should oversing it, that's great,' Springsteen said. 'Oh, and here comes the saxophone, that's gotta be a Bruce Springsteen record, nothing clichéd about that.' 7 'Born To Run' was born at a rented bungalow (above) on West End Court in Long Branch, NJ, where The Boss still visits today. LoC Advertisement When the record was done playing, Springsteen said, 'I dunno, man, maybe we should just scrap it. Toss this s–t and start over.' Hearing that, Clemons, known as 'The Big Man' at a towering 6'5', stood up and walked out of the room without saying a word. Every member of the band and crew followed. Of course, the record was not scrapped. Given that Springsteen's first two albums had not sold well, Columbia executives ordered 100,000 copies printed — a number that, at the time, indicated the label had low expectations — and were shocked when pre-orders hit three times that. 7 Despite his initial misgivings, Springsteen says he's 'very, very fond' of the album. Redferns Advertisement The album became a #1 hit, and would dominate American rock radio for decades to come. Both Time and Newsweek, two of the biggest magazines in the country at a time when that meant something, put him on the cover in the same week. Interviewing Springsteen in 2024, Carlin found, unsurprisingly, that his view of the album had changed. 'I'm very, very fond of it,' Springsteen, now 75 years old, says in the book. 'And on its anniversaries, I get in a car and I play it from start to finish, right? I just drive around listening.' Advertisement 7 A new book gives an authorized look at the album's recording. On these jaunts, Springsteen makes sure he ends up on West End Court in Long Branch, New Jersey, just outside the rented bungalow where he first put thoughts for the song to paper. 'I get there right before the end, right before [the album's last song] 'Jungleland,'' says Springsteen. 'And I park there. I sit by the curb and I let 'Jungleland' play, all the way through.'

From the Archives: Vogue Revisits Jackie Kennedy's Literary Legacy as Doubleday Book Editor
From the Archives: Vogue Revisits Jackie Kennedy's Literary Legacy as Doubleday Book Editor

Vogue

time27-07-2025

  • Vogue

From the Archives: Vogue Revisits Jackie Kennedy's Literary Legacy as Doubleday Book Editor

'The First Lady of Letters,' by Darcey Steinke, was originally published in the February 2005 issue of Vogue. For more of the best from Vogue's archive, sign up for our Nostalgia newsletter here. 'Remember, just like you, Jackie Onassis puts her pants on one leg at a time,' my father reminded me as he helped me into the cab that ferried me up to the Doubleday offices in midtown Manhattan where Jackie was an editor. It was 1987, and I was 25 years old and still in graduate school at the University of Virginia. Dad's advice was meant to bolster my confidence, but it didn't really calm me as I sat under the harsh fluorescent light in Doubleday's waiting room. 'The wrrrrrriter!' Jackie said enthusiastically as she came through the door and took both my hands in hers. In person the tremendous symmetry of her face was startling; her cheekbones protruded, and her eyes were far apart. Jackie's dark hair was pulled back in a low ponytail held with a tortoiseshell clip. There was a skeletal elegance about her; she wore blue slacks, a tailored white shirt, and patent leather pumps. Her office was smaller and shabbier then I'd imagined, her metal desk piled high with white manuscript pages; she was in the process of collaborating on Joseph Campbell's The Power of Myth. She asked me about my trip. I said the flight from Charlottesville had been bumpy and I didn't really like to fly. The corners of her mouth turned down, and she leaned forward. Unlike my mother, or any other older lady I knew, Jackie wasn't cautious or fearful. She thought you should try everything. 'Oh, Darcey,' she said in her lilting voice, which was famously feathery and very feminine, 'can't you have a little white wine on the plane? If you don't fly, you'll miss out on so much.' My cheeks flushed: I said I would try. I felt an odd intimacy with Jackie. She had become my editor after my writing teacher George Garrett, himself a Doubleday author, suggested I send her my first novel. Though we'd never met before and talked on the phone only once, I knew the outer structure of Jackie's life, and I wondered if she didn't feel exposed. Everyone who met her had seen footage of her in Dallas in the rawest moment of her life. We talked about my novel. Like many a young writer, Jackie said, I digressed too often. Flashbacks appeared on almost every page, and I used metaphors like drinking water. Up Through the Water takes place over a single summer on Ocracoke Island, on North Carolina's Outer Banks. I had waitressed there summers while I was in college, so I knew the general rhythms of a beach resort, but I didn't know much about narrative structure or motivation. Jackie was most interested in my character Emily, a promiscuous 35-year-old prep cook. 'She is an undine, who swims with the fish and sleeps with any sailor,' Jackie said. 'How will she deal with aging? Will she be able to be faithful to her boyfriend?' At 25, I'd never thought of promiscuity or taking one's youth for granted as something that might have tragic repercussions. As I listened to her I thought, How can the most elegant woman in America identify with a profligate prep cook? But Jackie found Emily mesmerizing. 'What is wrenching about her is that one of her loveliest facets, her animal nature, carries with it her doom.'

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