I have often been accused that some of my favourite Bruce Springsteen songs are from the original "Tracks" CD set. "These are outtakes" they told me, "they're not from a 'proper' album". "How can they be your favourite songs?". Well there is a reason for that. When Springsteen consigned some of his songs to the vault it wasn't because they weren't good enough. It was just that they didn't fit into the particular album he was preparing at the time. More of these songs resurfaced on the deluxe box set editions of older albums that were re-released ("The Promise - The Darkness On The Edge Of Town Story" and "The Ties That Bind - The River Collection") however in the case of "Tracks II" we're talking about whole albums that went missing.
You will probably wonder why I'm reviewing this now almost a year after it has been released. Well, it was a very expensive box set. Very expensive. There's certainly no comparison with the original "Tracks" nor with the larger "Darkness" and "River" box sets. (We're still waiting for the "Born In The U.S.A." one by the way. Just sayin'). I couldn't buy it when it came out. I had to go to Milano to see Bruce live remember?
I did get a taste of what was in there when I managed to get the "Lost And Found - Selections From The Lost Albums" 2CD set. And I very much liked what I heard. Finally I managed to get the whole set in December, using my credit card to pay in installments. Which means I'm still paying for it. And during the Christmas holidays I found the time to sit down and listen to it. And one of the reasons I'm writing this review is that I didn't expect to like it so much. I would listen to two albums every day and it was like "Wow! A new Bruce Springsteen album!". And then "Wow! Another new Bruce Springsteen album!". Bliss!
So, let's start at the beginning: "LA Garage Sessions '83". This is classic 80's Bruce and several of the songs are clearly in demo form. There are several songs we were already familiar with, some from b-sides ("Johnny Bye Bye", "Shut Out The Light"), some from concerts and bootlegs ("Follow That Dream") and there's even an alternate version of "My Hometown" thrown in for good measure.
Next up is "Streets Of Philadelphia Sessions". That was the one I was mostly looking forward to. There was always talk about that "lost electronic album" from the 90's where Bruce plays synthesizers and uses drum loops. Now I have been accused (by the same people, mind you) that "I listen to that electronic stuff a lot". It's true. I like synth-pop and during the 90's I was into dance music. So I was intrigued that Bruce had the same influences and filled a whole album with them. As he mentioned on the book that is inside the box set he bought CD's full of drum tracks (maybe some that I own as well from Simon Harris's "Beats Breaks And Scratches" series? Who knows?). In the same book he goes on to say that they used these drum loops but later replaced them and played them themselves. They did keep a couple though and one of them is in the version of "Secret Garden" that's featured here. And as an added bonus, "Waiting On The End Of The World" is another song on this album, a track that previously I could only find on a YouTube video featuring an image of a Rolling Stone issue with Bruce on the cover.
The next album in the set is "Faithless", a soundtrack to a film that was never made. That was the one I expected to like the least. I thought that it wouldn't work without having seen the film. But, there is no film, is there?. That fact alone makes this conversation irrelevant. As expected, there are a few instrumentals, but the title track is my favourite.
"Somewhere North Of Nashville", the next album is a country album that Bruce was working on simultaneously with "Ghost Of Tom Joad". I was surprised to find here alternate versions of my two favourite b-sides "Stand On It" and "Janey Don't You Lose Heart".
"Inyo" on the other hand, is Bruce's "Mexican" album if you can call it that. The songs tell stories that take place around te Mexican border which immediately bring "The Ghost Of Tom Joad" to mind.
The penultimate album "Twilight Hours" is the companion to "Western Stars" with more Burt Bacharach and less Glen Campbell this time Now this is one album I really didn't expect to like. I wouldn't want to listen to Bruce playing the "crooner", I thought. But, surprise, surprise, it's one of my favourite albums on the set. Maybe I'm getting old... Anyway, "Sunday Love" is simply brilliant and "I'll Stand By You" which was originally written for the first Harry Potter movie but was later featured in the "Blinded By The Light" film is also included here.
Finally "Perfect World" wasn't a "lost album" per se, but something that was put together by Bruce collecting tracks from the vault with several of them being quite recent. This could have easily been an E Street band album and "You Lifted Me Up" is one of my favourite songs of the whole box set.
All in all, "Tracks II - The Lost Albums" made my Christmas holiday much brighter and I still wonder why Bruce wouldn't released these albums one by one every couple of years. It would have been cheaper for the fans. Aah, but I can't complain... I finally BOUGHT IT! (And Bruce promises there are more tracks in the vault)