'Darkness on the Edge of Town' vs. 'Candy-O'

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I don't actually know 'Candy-O'. I think I might know 'Candy's Room' - if it's the one before 'Racing In The Street'. If so, it's ace.

Q - don't you think 'Racing In The Street' trashes most other early Boss - it's that good?

the pinefox, Monday, 15 July 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

PF - agreed re "Racing in the Street". Altho "Badlands" very very very nearly makes it too. Sometimes I find "Racing" too intense and I have to turn it off. If anyone asks "what historical moment would you like to have seen", sometimes I think that being present at the first studio playback of the completed "Racing" would be my real answer. I can't imagine what it must've been like to have finished that song, I picture everyone collapsing afterward. It's a song to put on when the only option in life seems to be staring into space and flicking a lit cigarette into the dustbin for every bad decision you've ever made, half in hope that maybe your house will burn down with you still in it. The delivery of the "Callin' out around the world" line is the finest recorded vocal in the history of music. Or one of them, anyway. ("Badlands" - that's more all-purpose put-on-any-time for me, mainly because I can tune out the words if I want to and train the beady rational-crit half of my brain onto the sonics. IMHO "Badlands" is the most intensely political song ever recorded because it would say the same thing even if I couldn't understand the words or even if there WERE no words. (In distorted symbolic form, what it seems to be saying sonically is "Whatever happened to the Vagrants? Does Leslie West ever step out of his limo to buy a hot dog from them? And why are THEY reduced to selling hotdogs when Lou Reed isn't?" ) The social analysis of the song is built into the structure and playing and arrangement and sound etc., whereas most artists attempt to prove they see beyond their own noses by taking stock forms and then singing lists of famous names and appalling historical tragedies over the result.

dave q, Monday, 15 July 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

Wow. I like it.

the pinefox, Monday, 15 July 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

"Candy-O= The Cars
"Candy's Room" = The Boss

Mark, Monday, 15 July 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

What an opening couplet:

I got a sixty-nine Chevy with a 396
Fuelie heads and a Hurst on the floor

It's nice to hear that the Boss does translate to other countries. I wondered about that.

Mark, Monday, 15 July 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

I absolutely adore Racing in the Street, Bruce's best song. However, if you have the Springsteen live box set (which I do) listen to that version of Racing in the Street. The middle of the song is a 5 MINUTE SAX SOLO. That makes it the worst song on the box, even worse than Bruce explaining why he was a draft dodger for 45 fucking minutes.

Yancey, Monday, 15 July 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

"what's so great about being nocturnal" => most british thread ever!!

"Candy-O", btw

geeta, Monday, 15 July 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'd go with "Candy-O" because the Vargas painting on the album cover entranced my then ten year old mind.

As an album, "Candy-O" is not nearly as good as "Darkness at the Edge of Town".

Is it just me or does the music to "Let's Go" sound like something written by Gary Numan? I was listening to the a bunch of Gary Numan a few months back and it kept occuring to me how much the music sounded like The Cars, the vocals and lyrical content notwithstanding.

earlnash, Thursday, 18 July 2002 00:00 (twenty-one years ago) link

fourteen years pass...

she's a lot like you, the dangerous type

bought 2 raris, went to chili's (crüt), Monday, 17 April 2017 06:47 (seven years ago) link


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