Tracks (4CD) | 
enlarge | Artist: Bruce Springsteen Label: Columbia Category: Music
List Price: £41.99 Buy New: £23.10 You Save: £18.89 (45%)
New (18) Used (3) Collectible (1) from £23.10
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 30685
Format: Box Set, Original Recording Remastered Media: Audio CD Discs: 4 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.4 Dimensions (in): 11.3 x 5.9 x 1
EAN: 5099749260528 ASIN: B0000245CZ
Release Date: November 9, 1998 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: New, normally dispatched the same day. DirectOffers is a trading name for Entertainment UK Ltd. See our zShop for terms and conditions of sale.
| |
| Tracks:
| • | Mary Queen Of Arkansas | | • | It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City | | • | Growing Up | | • | Does This Bus Stop At 82nd Street | | • | Bishop Danced | | • | Santa Ana | | • | Seaside Bar Song | | • | Zero And Blind Terry | | • | Linda Let Me Be The One | | • | Thundercrack | | • | Rendezvous | | • | Give The Girl A Kiss | | • | Iceman | | • | Bring On The Night | | • | So Young And In Love | | • | Hearts Of Stone | | • | Don't Look Back | | • | Restless Nights | | • | Good Man Is Hard Find (Pittsburgh) | | • | Roulette | | • | Dollhouse | | • | Where The Bands Are | | • | Loose Ends | | • | Living On The Edge Of The World | | • | Wages Of Sin | | • | Take 'em As They Come | | • | Be True | | • | Ricky Wants A Man Of Her Own | | • | I Wanna Be With You | | • | Mary Lou | | • | Stolen Car | | • | Born In The USA | | • | Johnny Bye Bye | | • | Shut Out The Light | | • | Cynthia | | • | My Love Will Not Let You Down | | • | This Hard Land | | • | Frankie | | • | TV Movie | | • | Stand On It | | • | Lion's Den | | • | Car Wash | | • | Rockaway | | • | Days | | • | Brothers | | • | Under The Bridges | | • | Man At The Top | | • | Pink Cadillac | | • | Two For The Road | | • | Janie Don't Lose Your Heart | | • | When You Need Me | | • | Wish | | • | Honeymooners | | • | Lucky Man | | • | Leavin' Train | | • | Seven Angels | | • | Gave It A Name | | • | Sad Eyes | | • | My Lover Man | | • | Over The Rise | | • | When The Lights Go Out | | • | Loose Change | | • | Trouble In Paradise | | • | Happy | | • | Part Man | | • | Goin' Cali | | • | Back In Your Arms | | • | Brothers Under The Bridge |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.co.uk Review Next time you find yourself debating the worth of Bruce Springsteen, pull out this brilliant four-disc outtake set. With a flick of his grease-monkey wrist, Springsteen proves--simply by issuing long-unreleased material--why he's the most consistent (read: important) composer in the pop-rock field of his generation. It's there in a dozen included B-sides ("Pink Cadillac", "Shut Out the Light", "Janey Don't You Lose Heart"). It's there in countless rabble-rousing anthems, the singer's stock in working-class trade ("Roulette", "Stand on It", "Car Wash", "Brothers Under the Bridges"). But, mainly, it's there between the lines, in the small idiosyncrasies Springsteen detected within almost every cut that made him--until now--withhold this material. Some are glaringly obvious--the singsong "Living on the Edge of the World", whose lyrics were later lifted for the more sinister "Open All Night"; the morphing of several "Iceman" verses into sentiments expressed on Darkness on the Edge of Town. Some are collectible curiosities, like the starkly disparate alternate takes of "Stolen Car" and "Born in the U.S.A." And others are more meticulous, often coming down to a simple phrase, riff, or melody line that wound up flunking final-cut muster. And when you stumble across those tiny, fleeting moments, moments that would matter to only a true perfectionist, the true artistry of Springsteen unfurls in all its ragged glory. --Tom Lanham
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Bruce's hidden gems June 1, 2006 Spider Monkey (UK) 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
It is rare for an artists outtakes and demos to rival their recorded work, but in Tracks you have exactly that. Any of these tracks could of featured on an album. There are acoustic demos, full band rave ups and up to date outtakes. Bruce could always write a brilliant song, but these hidden tracks demonstrate just how prolific and constant his ability is. Worth every penny.
The Boss is still the best April 23, 2004 8 out of 11 found this review helpful
An absolutely brilliant box-set and a total musthave for all Bruce fans.Some of the previously unreleased tracks are Bruce at his very best.
Amazing November 22, 2003 Docendo Discimus (Vita scholae) 16 out of 16 found this review helpful
Not a career retrospective, Bruce Springsteen's "Tracks" features primarily unreleased songs, but several B-sides and alternate takes also pop up along the way.It does miss out on a few great songs, like the superb rock n'roll gem "From Small Things" (which is now finally available on the "Essential Bruce Springsteen" collection), and Springsteen's original version of "Because The Night". But that's a minor complaint, because this 4-disc set is a real treasure trove. Bruce Springsteen has always been famous for leaving great songs off his records simply because they didn't fit in with the overall mood or the theme of the record, and the quality of most of these songs is amazing. The songs are sequenced, beginning with a few early acoustic demos of songs which would appear on Springsteen's debut album, and ending with outtakes from "Human Touch" and "Lucky Town". The first 2 discs are the greatest, but there is a lot of quality material on all four CDs, including the tremendous hard rock of "Where The Bands Are", "My Love Will Not Let You Down", "Rendezvous" and "Roulette", the bluesy 11 -minute "Thundercrack", the acoustic ballad "When You Need Me", the swinging, near-legendary outtake "Bishop Danced", the slow, stately "Gave It A Name", the tough, sturdy rockers "Give The Girl A Kiss", "Pink Cadillac", "Janey Don't You Lose Heart" and "Rockaway The Days", and the rough, emotional "Hearts Of Stone". "Tracks" may not be quite as essential as, say, Bob Dylan's 1991 collection of rarities, but Bruce Springsteen isn't really a blidning visionary like Dylan, he is a solid craftsman, and a really great, down-to-earth rock composer. And that's not half bad. 4 stars.
Never lose heart July 15, 2003 Tim Stevens 20 out of 20 found this review helpful
If you've never heard of Bruce, or if you have but you associate his name with cheesy eighties pop, stop here. Buy Born In The USA, play it five times at full volume, and if nothing stirs within you, give up.If you're still here, you're either a fellow Springsteenista or you liked the single Lonesome Day off his latest album. In either case, rush - do not stroll, do not even jog - to your local music retailer and fork over the full price for this masterly four-CD collection of outtakes, bootlegs and B-sides from the Boss's thirty-year career. Do it now. The CDs dovetail neatly with four of Springsteen's five phases as an artist (the fifth began in 1999 after the release of this collection). Each CD in the box has a sleeve with a sepia photo which perfectly captures the mood of the era: there's the merry-go-round Dylan-inspired 1972-1975 Jersey period, the cars and girls River sessions, the industrial rock-out of Nebraska/BornITUSA, and the earringed ageing gypsy mellowness of 1990 onwards. Each CD contains gems, absolute crackers which missed the albums by a criminal whisker. To my great surprise, I listen to the first and earliest one the most: although the four acoustic demos of tracks which made it on to Bruce's first album are great starters, they don't come near the brilliance of Santa Ana, Linda Let Me Be The One and Thundercrack. 'Linda' is my all-time favourite Springsteen song, a simple piano-and-organ-driven street hymn with the most beautiful chorus in rock music, especially in the last verse. 'Thundercrack' is vintage early Boss, with its sprawling structure, exuberant (and sometimes chaotic) Vini Lopez drum thrash, and as always that gorgeous swirling Federici organ. CD 2 is perhaps the weakest, though 'Loose Ends' and the concert favourite 'Be True' stand out. The eighties CD 3 has the poppiest tracks - 'Lion's Den' and the wonderful 'Janey Don't You Lose Heart' should have replaced the dreary 'I'm On Fire' and 'My Hometown' on the BITUSA album - and also the hardest-rocking one, Pink Cadillac. 'This Hard Land' beats hell out of the Greatest Hits version, mainly because of Bruce's thrilling harp performance at the end. CD 4 is superb even if you didn't like his nineties albums; it's as pretentious as they were, but 'Happy' might just make you cry, and 'Part Man, Part Monkey', while pilloried by snobs as inferior white-reggae dross, is a snarling blood-churning slice of Nu-Boss, and has the funkiest bassline since the genius Garry Tallent left and the edgiest guitar howl since 'Cover Me' (later, Springsteen and the E-Streeters recapture this on 'Worlds Apart'). Human Touch turned me into an infidel. After listening to Tracks, just once, I turned on the road to Damascus. I'll never, *never*, write off the Boss again.
Great set October 6, 2000 hans_tunholmer@hp.com (Bracknell, UK) 12 out of 12 found this review helpful
This box has a lot of good tracks on it. I am personally not that bothered about the early stuff that Springsteen did. I start liking the tracks from 'Darkness' and on. As we know Springsteen doesn't bombard us with CDs and this box is very welcome to us Springsteen fans that can't get enough. Some of the tracks on this box you have already heard before but in a different way. My favourites are "A good man is hard to find", "Stolen car" and "Rockaway". If you are in to Springsteen (especially Born in the USA era) , you will not be disappointed when you buy this box.
|
|
|