Posted in: What's New | No Comments | December 4, 2021
A comprehensive look at “The River” era, this set contains 52 tracks with a wealth of unreleased material, and 4 hours of never-before-seen video
It is comprised of: - The original “The River” double album as released in 1980 - The first official release of “The River: Single Album,” - A 10-track album that Springsteen recorded in 1979 but never released - A film of never-released, newly edited multi-camera footage from Springsteen’s tamed 1980 show in Tempe, AZ - Rare tour rehearsal footage - A brand new documentary “The Ties That Bind’ about The River’ - A coffee table book of 200 rare or previously unseen photos and memorabilia with a new essay by Mikal Gilmore.
The River,’ Springsteen’s fifth album, was released on October 17, 2021 as a double album and reached #1 on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart. In his notes, Gilmore calls ‘The River’ Springsteen’s “pivotal album—(the] hinge between the ambitious commotions that had preceded it and the more succinct musical riots, and sometimes terrifying storytelling, that followed,”
‘The River: Single Album’ is the 10-track album that Springsteen recorded in 1979 as a follow up to 1978’s ‘Darkness On The Edge Of Town’ but never released. ‘The songs lacked the kind of unity and conceptual intensity I liked my music to have. So we went back in the studio,”he wrote in the lyrics/photo book “Songs!” The early sessions marked the beginning of a prolific 18-month long journey of writing and recording. Seven of the 10 titles on The River: Single Album’ eventually appeared on The River,’ some with alternate lyrics and arrangements, with outtakes like “Cindy” and a rockabilly version of “You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)” never released. Now for the first time ‘The River: Single Album’ will be officially available.
The fourth CD on the box set is The River: Outtakes,’ which spans the entire ‘The River’ sessions in 1979 and 1980 and illustrate the depth and variety of Springsteen’s work during this period. Eleven songs are rarities that have never been released before, and for the most part are completely unheard and unknown even to fans, who have long considered Springsteen’s outtakes to be treasured secrets. The eleven unheard outtakes (“Record One”) were mixed by Bob Clearmountain and mastered by Bob Ludwig. Eleven additional outtakes (“Record Two”) are collected from the Tracks’ box and ‘Essentials’ so as to put them in one place.
“The Ties That Bind” is a brand new 60-minute documentary featuring an intimate interview with Springsteen, interspersed with brand new acoustic performances, period concert footage and rare photos of Bruce and the band in and out of the studio. The final video component is “Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band: The River Tour, Tempe 1980,” a new film produced from footage professionally filmed in 1980 using four cameras and recorded in multitrack audio. The film features 24 songs — 2 hours, 40 minutes — from Springsteen’s November 5, 2021 concert at Arizona State University in Tempe, AZ. Widely regarded as one of Springsteen’s finest performances, this intense show features early live versions of over half of The River’ songs. Also included is 20 minutes of footage from the late September, 1980 River Tour rehearsals held in Lititz, PA, showing Springsteen and The E Street Band working through live arrangements of what was then unreleased material from the upcoming album. The film was recently edited by frequent Springsteen collaborator and Grammy and Emmy-winning filmmaker Thom Zimny, and the audio was mixed in Stereo & 5.1 surround by Bob Clearmountain from the original multitrack recordings and mastered by Bob Ludwig.
‘The Ties That Bind: The River Collection’ is packaged in a 10″ x 12″ box with a hardcover 148-page coffee table book containing 200 studio and live photographs — most of which have never been seen before — plus pages from Springsteen’s notebooks, single covers, images and outtakes from the original album package, and other memorabilia documenting the album. Liner notes include a new essay from journalist Mikal Gilmore, the original Rolling Stone album review from 1980, and Springsteen’s updated comments about the album from the 1998 “Songs” book.