From Our Editors
'The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town Story' offers an
unprecedented look into Springsteen's creative process during a
defining moment in his career, the making of "Darkness On The Edge
Of Town." The Promise Deluxe Edition includes 3CD/3DVD package of
the remastered album, never-before-seen studio & live footage,
80-page notebook, 21 previously unreleased songs, an extraordinary
documentary film, nearly six hours of footage, including a classic
1978 Houston performance, more than two hours of audio. The
Promise: The Darkness On The Edge Of Town Story Deluxe Edition
Contains: 80 Page spiral-bound reproduction of Bruce's original
notebooks documenting the recording sessions for the album,
containing alternate lyrics, song ideas, recording details and
personal notes in addition to a new essay by Springsteen and
never-before-seen photographs. CD 1 - Remastered version of the
album "Darkness on the Edge of Town" CD 2 & 3 - The Promise DVD
1 - The Promise: The Making of Darkness on the Edge of Town * Never
before seen archival footage shot between 1976-1978, capturing home
rehearsals and recording sessions that allow us to see
Springsteen's creative process at work DVD 2 - Darkness on the Edge
of Town: Paramount Theatre, Asbury Park & Thrill Hill Vault:
1976 - 1978 * An intimate and complete album performance of
"Darkness on the Edge of Town" at Paramount Theatre in Asbury Park,
NJ shot in 2009 * Never before seen archival footage from the
Thrill Hill Vault including complete song performances taken from
private band rehearsals, studio sessions, and live concerts during
the "Darkness" era DVD 3 - Houston '78 Bootleg: House Cut *
Previously unreleased complete concert performance from the
historic Darkness on the Edge of Town Tour
Editorial Notes
The Promise: The Darkness on the Edge of Town Story is a
three-CD/three-DVD deluxe collection that includes a completely
remastered version of the Darkness album and two more discs
entitled The Promise, containing 21 unreleased songs recorded
during the period. The remastered version of the album by Bob
Ludwig is sonically righteous; it resists the temptation of the
era's technology to make everything sound flat. Its dynamics and
warmth mirror those on the original vinyl edition. The two discs of
unreleased material (available separately as well) offer an aural
view as to what might have happened had Springsteen been able to
record immediately after Born to Run. (He was barred from doing so
for two years due to a lawsuit with his former manager.) While many
lyric themes here reflect the brokenness and hard choices found on
Darkness, others sound more triumphant. All of these songs contain
a more maximal attitude in production. They also lack the
knife-edge, searing, angry guitar work that saturates Darkness.
Included are his versions of singles farmed out to other artists --
"Because the Night" (and while this version is terrific, it means
something else in the end; Patti Smith's remains definitive) and
the soulful, gritty "Fire" given to the Pointer Sisters. "Gotta Get
That Feeling" summons Jack Nitzsche's production ears with its big
mariachi brass. Many others openly recall Phil Spector's
"sha-na-na-na" backing choruses. Clarence Clemons' saxophone is
much more prevalent here than on Darkness. His meaty tone adds heft
and groove to these songs. "Ain't Good Enough for You" is pure
handclap, call-and-response, verse-and-chorus joy, approaching a
doo wop celebration. The poignant love poetry in "The
Brokenhearted" and "Spanish Eyes" could have been written by Doc
Pomus, and reveals the influence of Jerry Lieber's "Spanish
Harlem." "Candy's Boy" begins lyrically in the same place as
"Candy's Room," but becomes a very different song. "Racing in the
Street" contains some different words and David Lindley's violin
makes the track a bit less personal, more anthemic; it's absent the
shadow of doubt that makes the Darkness version so emotionally
devastating. "The Promise" is the only cut that may have added
something to Darkness that isn't already there. Its sense of
bewilderment, betrayal, uncertainty, and regret is total. That
said, the addition of strings draws it outside Darkness' more
skeletal purview, underscoring that Darkness is perfect as it is.
The first of the three DVDs features a full-length documentary
directed by Thom Zimny on the making of the album, with fantastic,
amazing archival studio and performance video footage by Barry
Rebo. The narration by Springsteen and interviews with producer Jon
Landau, bandmembers, Patti Smith, engineer Jimmy Iovine, and even
Mike Appel provide an intimate look at an intense and often
frustrating period in the career of Springsteen & the E Street
Band. The viewer can feel the places where confusion reigned given
the sheer amount of material -- over 70 songs were written and
demoed; piles of notebooks from which song lyrics and ideas were
cobbled are perched everywhere. The fact that a single album came
from this mountain is amazing in itself; that Darkness on the Edge
of Town emerged is a miracle. The second DVD here contains a
complete 2009 performance of the album at the Paramount Theatre in
Asbury Park, NJ on the first half. While the performance is
flawless and stirring, the lack of interaction with an audience
feels a bit strange. That said, hearing Springsteen play the hell
out of his guitar again, making it scream and snarl as it did
during the tour for Darkness, is not only welcome, but akin to the
sound of an old friend's voice after a prolonged absence. Bob
Clearmountain's mix is stellar. The band's instinctive playing is
tight and intuitive. The rest of the disc features footage from the
Thrill Hill Vault, including rehearsal footage, recording snippets,
and some concert performances from New Jersey, New York, and
Phoenix from the tour. The final DVD is a complete three-hour
concert by Springsteen & the E Street Band from Houston in
1978. It's called a "bootleg cut" on the cover for a reason; the
video is fine, but the audio is basically board sound and a bit
thin. That said, the performance is dynamic and riveting, and only
audiophiles are gonna care -- it rocks top to bottom. This box set
also includes an 80-page spiral-bound reproduction of Springsteen's
notebooks documenting the album sessions, plus an original,
insightful essay. It's the ultimate fetish item for hardcore fans
and rock historians. ~ Thom Jurek