Bruce Springsteen - Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J.
Columbia  (1990)
Rock

In Collection
#340

0*
CD  37:09
9 tracks
   01   Blinded By The Light             05:04
   02   Growin' Up             03:06
   03   Mary Queen Of Arkansas             05:20
   04   Does This Bus Stop At 82nd Street?             02:06
   05   Lost In The Flood             05:17
   06   The Angel             03:24
   07   For You             04:40
   08   Spirit In The Night             04:59
   09   It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City             03:13
Personal Details
Details
Country USA
Packaging Jewel Case
Recording Date 1972
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians
Drums and Percussion Vincent "Vini" Lopez
Percussion-Various Bruce Springsteen
Acoustic Guitar Bruce Springsteen
Bass Guitar Garry W. Tallent
Guitar-Electric Bruce Springsteen
Organ David L. Sancious
Piano David L. Sancious
Harmonica Bruce Springsteen
Saxophone Clarence Clemmons
Vocals Bruce Springsteen
Vocals-Backing Clarence Clemmons
Credits
Songwriter Bruce Springsteen
Producer Jim Cretecos; Mike Appel
Engineer Louis Lehav
Notes
NOTES Date: January 5, 1973 Length: 36:59 minutesLabel: SONY MUSIC Genre: ROCK Category: Rock/Pop CREDITS Performers Clarence Clemons : Handclapping, Saxophone, Vocals, Vocals (Background)Richard Davis : Bass, Bass (Upright)Vini Lopez : Drums, Handclapping, Horn, Vocals, Vocals (Background)David Sancious : Keyboards, Organ, Piano, SaxophoneBruce Springsteen : Bass, Conga, Guitar, Guitar (Acoustic), Guitar (Electric), Handclapping, Harmonica, Piano, Vocals, Vocals (Background)Garry Tallent : Bass, HornHarold Wheeler : Piano Production Credits Mike Appel : ProducerJack Ashkinazy : RemixingJohn Berg : Cover DesignJim Cretecos : ProducerLouis Lehav : EngineerFred Lombardi : Back CoverBruce Springsteen : Arranger, Main Performer REVIEWS April 27,2000 Many critics, and even some Bruce Springsteen fans, consider his first two albums, Greetings from Asbury Park, NJ and The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle, the most underdeveloped records of his career. When compared with his later work, particularly 1975's Born to Run, the record that directly followed the aforementioned albums, that may well be true (if only because of the incredible consistency of his post-1975 material). But as a debut release, 1973's Greetings … is, in hindsight, a