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Interview
vom 27. Oktober 1974 / Newsweek
"Making of a Rock Star"
Making of a Rock
Star
Newsweek, 10/27/1974
Maureen Orth, Janet Huck, Peter Greenberg
The movie marquee in Red Bank, N.J., simply said "HOMECOMING"
because everyone knew who was home. Out in the audience was Cousin Frankie,
who taught him his first guitar chords. So were the guys from Freehold
High who played in his early rock 'n' roll bands. They did not have
to be hyped on Bruce Springsteen. This was the scruffy kid they had
seen for years in the bars and byways of coastal Jersey. But Bruce was
suddenly big time. The rock critics, the media, the music-industry heavies
all said so. And in Red Bank, Bruce showed them just how far he had
come. With Elvis shimmies and Elton leaps, Springsteen re-created his
own electric brand of '50s rock 'n' roll magic. He clowned with saxophonist
Clarence Clemons, hustled and bumped his way around the stage and gave
a high-voltage performance that lasted more than two hours. When he
leaned into the microphone, ripped off his black leather jacket and
blasted, "Tramps like us, baby, we were born to run," the
Jersey teeny-boppers went wild. After four footstomping encores they
were ready to crown Bruce Springsteen the great white hope of rock 'n'
roll.
The official investiture took place last week in Los Angeles at Springsteen's
carefully staged West Coast debut, at the Roxy Night Club on Sunset
Strip. At the kind of opening-night event that defines hip status for
at least six months, new Hollywood and rock royalty embraced Bruce Springsteen
as one of their own. In a rare ovation that lasted a full four minutes,
Jack Nicholson, Ryan and daughter Tatum O'Neal, Wolfman Jack and Neil
Diamond seconded Cousin Frankie and the boys from Freehold High in Red
Bank. Bruce Springsteen was a superstar.
Bruce who? He is still not exactly a household name across America.
In San Mateo, Calif. last week, his 13-year-old sister Pam said, "Only
one girl at school has his record." The bus driver's son -- who
bears a striking resemblance to Dylan, sports black leather jackets
like Brando in "The Wild One" and wears a gold hoop earring
-- was known to only a small coterie of East Coast devotees a year ago.
But since the release last August of his highly professional third album,
"Born to Run," which rocketed to a million-dollar gold album
in six weeks, 26-year-old Bruce Springsteen has exploded into a genuine
pop-music phenomenon. He has already been compared to all the great
performers -- Elvis, Dylan and Mick Jagger. And rock critic Robert Hilburn
of The Los Angeles Times called him "the purest glimpse of the
passion and power of rock 'n' roll in nearly a decade." Springsteen's
own insistence on performing in small halls and clubs has created a
kind of cult hysteria and his emergence as one of the most exciting
live acts in rock today has only added to the mystique. Springsteen
buttons, T shirts, decals, key chains and three different kinds of wall
posters are currently the hot rock paraphernalia. In fact, Bruce Springsteen
has been so heavily praised in the press and so tirelessly promoted
by his record company, Columbia, that the publicity about his publicity
is now a dominant issue in his career. And some people are asking whether
Bruce Springsteen will be the biggest superstar or the biggest hype
of the '70s.
In a $2 billion industry that thrives on smash hits, the artist who
grabs the public's emotions the way Elvis or the Beatles once did is
the fantasy of rock critics and record-industry pros alike. Springsteen's
punk image, his husky, wailing voice, his hard-driving blues-based music
and his passionate, convoluted lyrics of city lowlife, fast cars and
greaser rebellion recall the dreams of the great rock 'n' roll rage
of the 1950s:
Well now I'm no hero
That's understood
All the redemption I can offer,
girl Is beneath this dirty hood
But he also injects the images with a new sophistication:
The highway's jammed with broken heroes
On a last-chance power drive
Everybody's out on a run tonight
But there's no place left to hide
Some critics, however, find Springsteen's music one-dimensional, recycled
teen dreams. "Springsteen's lyrics are an effusive jumble,"
music critic Henry Edwards wrote in The New York Times, "his melodies
either second-hand or undistinguished and his performance tedious. Given
such flaws there has to be another important ingredient to the success
of Bruce Springsteen: namely, vigorous promotion." Even some of
his champions like disk jockey Denny Sanders of WMMS in Cleveland agree
on that point. "Columbia is going overboard on Springsteen,"
he says. "He is the only unique artist to come out of the '70s,
but because the rock 'n' roll well is really dry, they are going crazy
for Springsteen."
As the real world has caught up with the record world, the penny-pinched
economy has begun to erode the record industry. Album sales are down
(Warner Brothers, for one, is off by nearly 20 per cent), the albums
going to the top of the charts are getting there on fewer sales while
advertising budgets are being drastically slashed. "Unless an act
has a great potential for sales," says one record-company executive,
"the companies won't spend the big dollars."
Too often, the companies have gotten burned when they spent their money
on the sizzle and forgot the steak. Bell Records dished out more than
$100,000 last year in parties to promote an act nobody ever heard of
-- Gary Glitter -- and people are still asking who he is. Atlantic bankrolled
the rock group Barnaby Bye for an estimated $200,000 but failed to turn
up any album sales. MGM decided to promote a singer-songwriter named
Judi Pulver. They sent her to a Beverly Hills diet doctor, created a
Charles Schulz "Peanuts" ad campaign, rented a Boeing 720
to fly journalists to her opening in San Francisco and even got astronaut
Edgar Mitchell to go along for the ride. When the evening was over,
the inevitable truth set in. Judi Pulver just couldn't carry the hype.
MGM's $100,000 experiment bombed.
Everyone in the industry is aware of the pitfalls of The Hype and insiders
think that the current Springsteen mania might inflict damage on his
career. "All the attention Bruce is getting now might hurt him
later on," says Hilburn. "What I'm afraid of is that while
Springsteen has all the potential everyone says he has, it's still chiefly
potential. I just hope he's strong enough to stand up under the pressure."
Warner Brothers Records president Joe Smith appreciates the "tumult"
Bruce is creating for the industry but is dubious about the extent of
his ultimate influence on the development of music. "He's a hot
new artist now," says Smith, "but he's not the new messiah
and I question whether he will establish an international mania. He's
got a very long way to go before he does what Elton has done, or Rod
Stewart or The Rolling Stones or Led Zeppelin."
Bruce himself is concerned about the effect the publicity campaign will
have on his creative equilibrium. "What phenomenon? What phenomenon?"
Springsteen asked in exasperation last week while driving up from Jersey
to New York. "We're driving around, and we ain't no phenomenon.
The hype just gets in the way. People have gone nuts. It's weird. All
the stuff you dream about is there, but it gets diluted by all the other
stuff that jumped on you by surprise."
Springsteen is experiencing superstar culture shock. He has never strayed
far from his best friends like Miami Steve Van Zandt and Gary Tallent,
who are in his E Street Band. He has spent hours hanging out on the
boardwalk at Asbury Park, N.J., and listening to the barkers tell their
tales. For gigs, he used to hitchhike to New York to play his guitar
in Greenwich Village. In both places, he found the cast of characters
who people his lyrics -- Spanish Johnny, the Magic Rat, Little Angel,
Puerto Rican Jane. They inspired him but they didn't corrupt him. Springsteen
rarely drinks, does not smoke, doesn't touch dope and never swears in
front of women.
"I'm a person -- people tend to forget that kind of thing,"
he says. "I got a rock 'n' roll band I think is one of the best
ones. I write about things I believe that are still fun for me. I love
drivin' around in my car when I'm 26 and I'll still love drivin' around
in my car when I'm 36. Those aren't irrelevant feelings for me."
The feelings usually find their way to vinyl. "The record is my
life," says Springsteen. "The band is my life. Rock 'n' roll
has been everything to me. The first day I can remember lookin' in the
mirror and standin' what I was seein' was the day I had a guitar in
my hand."
Throughout his unconventional career, Springsteen has found people who
felt he was born to star. From the moment he and his abrasive new manager,
Mike Appel, walked into Columbia Records in 1972 to audition for the
legendary John Hammond -- discoverer of Billie Holiday, Aretha Franklin
and Bob Dylan -- Springsteen was the object of high-pressure salesmanship.
"I went into a state of shock as soon as I walked in, says Springsteen.
"Before I ever played a note Mike starts screamin' and yellin'
'bout me. I'm shrivelin' up and thinkin', 'Please, Mike, give me a break.
Let me play a damn song.' So, dig this, before I ever played a note
the hype began."
"The kid absolutely knocked me out," Hammond recalls. "I
only hear somebody really good once every ten years, and not only was
Bruce the best, he was a lot better than Dylan when I first heard him."
Within a week, Springsteen was signed to Columbia and although he and
Appel had little previous recording experience, they insisted on producing
their own album -- the uneven "Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J."
released in January 1973. At the time Bruce had no band; he sang alone
with an acoustic guitar. And because of the originality of his lyrics
-- and perhaps the familiarity of their cadence -- he was compared to
Dylan.
Oh, some hazard from Harvard
Was skunked on beer playin' Backyard bombardier
Yes and Scotland Yard was trying Hard,
they sent some dude with a Callin' card
He said, "Do what you like but don't do it here."
The comparison was so tantalizingly close that Columbia promoted the
first album with ads announcing they had the new Bob Dylan. The cover
letter on the records Columbia sent to the DJ's flatly stated the same
thing. But the hard sell backfired. "The Dylan hype from Columbia
was a turnoff," said Dave Herman, the early-morning DJ for WNEW-FM,
the trend- setting pop station in New York. "I didn't even bother
to listen to it. I didn't want Columbia to think they got me."
Without radio airplay -- the single most important ingredient in any
hit -- a record dies. Though the Springsteen campaign was a special
project of then Columbia president Clive Davis, who personally read
Springsteen's lyrics on a promotional film, and even though Bruce got
good notices from important rock publications like Crawdaddy, only a
handful of the 100 or so major FM stations across the country played
him. The record sold less than 50,000 copies. "He was just another
media hype that failed," said Herman. "He was already a dead
artist who bombed out on his first album."
Springsteen's personal appearance at the Columbia Records convention
in the summer of 1973 was his biggest bomb. "It was during a period
when he physically looked like Dylan," says Hammond. "He came
on with a chip on his shoulder and played too long. People came to me
and said, 'He really can't be that bad, can he, John?'"
That fall, Springsteen's second album, "The Wild, The Innocent
& the E Street Shuffle," was released. Again it got some terrific
reviews -- Rolling Stone later named it one of the best albums of 1974
-- but it sold even less than his first LP. This time, accompanying
a stack of favorable reviews, the DJ's got a letter from Springsteen's
manager Appel saying "What the hell does it take to get airplay?"
Meanwhile, Springsteen had a disastrous experience playing as the opening
act for the supergroup Chicago on tour, and he refused to do what most
new rock acts must do to get exposure -- play short, 45-minute sets
in huge halls before the main act goes on.
Columbia began to ignore Springsteen because he couldn't make a best-
selling album or hit-single. But Springsteen was getting better in his
live performances and was starting to build followings in towns like
Austin and Philadelphia, Phoenix and Cleveland. "The key to Bruce's
success was to get people to see him," says Ron Oberman, a Columbia
staffer who pushed hard for Springsteen's first album within the company.
After a concert in Cleveland, says local DJ Sanders, "Springsteen
was a smash, and requests zoomed up. We had played him before but now
the requests stayed on."
ln April 1974, Jon Landau, the highly respected record editor of Rolling
Stone, caught Bruce's act in Boston, went home and wrote an emotional
piece for the Real Paper stating, "I saw rock and roll future and
its name is Bruce Springsteen." Landau's review was the turning
point in Springsteen's faltering career -- for the artist as well as
the company. "At the time," says Springsteen, "Landau's
quote helped reaffirm a belief in myself. The band and I were making
$50 a week. It helped me go on. I realized I was gettin' through to
somebody." Columbia cannily used the blurb in marketing Springsteen's
second album and other critics began to take notice. It was the first
time a record label used the prestige of a rock critic to push an artist
so hard.
"His first two albums' not selling was the best possible thing
for Bruce," says the 28-year-old Landau. "It gave him time
to develop a strong identity without anyone pushing him prematurely.
For twelve years he has had time to learn how to play every kind of
rock 'n' roll. He has far more depth than most artists because he really
has roots in a place -- coastal Jersey, where no record company scouts
ever visit."
One month after the Landau review, Springsteen, alone with Mike Appel
in a sparsely equipped studio in upstate New York, began to record his
third album -- his last chance to make it. It took three months to record
the title song, "Born to Run," and Columbia immediately sent
it out to some key people to review for singles potential. The word
came back: It's not top 40, forget it, it's too long. Then the ever-assertive
Appel released a rough mix of the song to a handful of stations that
had played Springsteen.
The response was overwhelmingly positive. The stations wanted the record.
But the potential superstar was in the studio for the next six months
unable to finish his masterpiece. "He told me he was having trouble
getting the sound he heard in his head on record," says Landau.
In April 1975, a year after his review, Landau became an adviser on
the album and quit his job at Rolling Stone to be come co-producer.
He moved them into a better studio, and helped shape the album into
a heavily produced wall of pulsating sound.
Last June, a group of Columbia executives heard a rough cut of the album
and decided to launch an unprecedented campaign. Building on the Landau
quote and $40,000 worth of radio spots on FM stations in twelve major
markets, they promoted the first two dud albums, mentioning a third
was on the way. It worked. Sales for the first two LP's climbed back
on the charts, more than doubling their original sales.
Columbia knew it had a winner; the question was how to showcase the
act. Appel, without consulting Springsteen, thought big. He asked a
booking agent to get 20,000-seat Madison Square Garden for an artist
who had never sold more than 150,000 records. He finally settled on
the 400-seat Bottom Line club in Greenwich Village for the week before
the release of the third album last August. The tickets sold out in
three and a half days, with Columbia picking up 980 of the 400O tickets
for the media "tastemakers." "Columbia put it on the
line," said DJ Richard Neer of WNEW-FM, "They said, 'Go see
him. If you don't like him, don't play him -- don't write about him'."
With the tickets so limited in number, the ensuing hysteria created
more press coverage and critical acclaim for Springsteen -- who delivered
topnotch shows -- than any recent event of its kind. "It was a
very intelligent use of an event," says Stan Snadowsky, co-owner
of the Bottom Line. "Columbia got all the right people down there."
DJ Dave Herman, who refused to even play Springsteen's first album because
of the hype, was completely won over. The next day he apologized on
the air. "I saw Springsteen for the first time last night,"
he told his audience. "It's the most exciting rock 'n' roll show
I've ever seen."
Orders for the new album, which had been given an initial press ordering
of 175,000, came in at 350,000. The LP has sold 600,000 so far, and
Columbia has spent $200,000 promoting it. By the end of the year they
will spend an additional $50,000 for TV spots on the album. "These
are very large expenditures for a record company; we depend on airplay,
which cannot be bought," says Bruce Lundvall, Columbia Records'
vice president. "What the public does not understand is that when
you spend $100,000 on an album for a major artist, your investment is
not so much on media as on the number of people you have out there pushing
the artist for airplay." Now, for the first time, a Springsteen
single, "Born to Run, has broken through many major AM stations,
where the mass audience listens.
The stakes are enormous, since a hot album can earn up to several million
dollars for the record company in a matter of a few weeks. Today Bruce
Springsteen is still a promising rookie. Nobody knows whether he can
sell like Elton John or even lesser publicized groups like Earth, Wind
& Fire -- a group that will ship more than 750,000 initial orders
with the release of its new LP. Because of his enormous build-up, Springsteen
now has the awesome task of fulfilling everyone's fantasy of what a
new rock hero should be. And most of the country -- which isn't even
aware of Springsteen yet -- may or may not agree that he is born to
succeed. "Bruce is undergoing a backlash right now," says
Irwin B. Segelstein, President of Columbia Records, "but even his
critics are treating him importantly."
Springsteen himself has not yet seen any big bucks. He keeps 22 people
on his payroll. He maintains sophisticated sound and lighting equipment
for his shows and has a video crew following him everywhere. He only
plays small halls where he can barely cover his expenses, but that hasn't
put a crimp in his style. He has just moved into his first home, a sparsely
furnished cottage overlooking the ocean -- about a 10-minute drive from
the Asbury Park boardwalk. His girl friend, 20-year-old Karen Darbin,
a Springsteen fan from Texas, lives across the Hudson River in Manhattan.
In Bruce's garage stands his prized possession -- a '57 yellow Chevy
convertible customized with orange flames, the same color as his first
guitar.
On the eve of his West Coast debut last week, Springsteen seemed to
be down. "People keep telling me I ought to be enjoying all this
but it's sort of depressing to me." He riffled through his beloved
'50s records -- Elvis and Dion -- from stacks of albums on the floor,
which also included Gregorian chants, David Bowie and Marvin Gaye. "Now
this," Bruce announces in a faintly Jimmy Durante delivery, "is
the sound of universes colliding." The room fills with Phil Spector's
classic production of the Ronettes' "Baby I Love You." Springsteen
swoons. "Come on, do the greaser two-step," he says, beginning
to dance.
Although Springsteen is a German name, Bruce is mostly Italian, and
he inherited his storytelling ability from his Neapolitan grandfather
Zirili. "In the third grade a nun stuffed me into a garbage can
under her desk because she told me that's where I belonged," he
relates. "I also had the distinction of being the only altar boy
knocked down by a priest on the steps of the altar during Mass. The
old priest got mad. My Mom wanted me to learn how to serve Mass but
I didn't know what I was doin' so I was tryin' to fake it."
He finally saved $18 to buy his first guitar -- "one of the most
beautiful sights I have ever seen in my life" -- and at age 14,
Springsteen joined his first band. He was originally a Rolling Stones
fanatic but gradually worked back to early rock. "We used to play
the Elks Club, the Rollerdrome and the local insane asylum," he
says. "We were always terrified at the asylum. One time this guy
in a suit got up and introduced us for twenty minutes sayin' we were
greater than the Beatles. Then the doctors came up and took him away."
Springsteen's parents moved to California when he was 16, but he stayed
behind scuffling in local bands. A year later he drove across country
-- someone else had to shift because Bruce did not know how to drive
-- to play a New Year's Eve gig at the Esalen Institute. "I've
never been outta Jersey in my life and suddenly I get to Esalen and
see all these people walkin' around in sheets," he says. "I
see someone playing bongos in the woods and it turns out to be this
guy who grew up around the corner from me." "Everybody expected
Bruce to come back from California a star," says his old friend
"Southside Johnny" Lyon who used to play with Bruce at the
Stone Pony bar in Asbury Park. But according to Bruce, "nobody
wanted to listen to a guy with a guitar."
They do today. Onstage Springsteen projects the same kind of high school
macho and innocence that many young male fans, for whom glitter is dull,
strongly identify with. Women think he's sexy and it's likely he'll
end up with a movie contract. "He's able to say what we can't about
growing up," said John Bordonaro, 23, a telephone dispatcher from
the Bronx who traveled to Red Bank to see Bruce in concert. "He's
talking about hanging around in cars in front of the Exxon sign. He's
talking about getting your hands on your very first convertible. He's
telling us it's our last chance to pull something off, and he's doing
it for us." "The peace and love movement is gone," chimed
in his friend, Chris Williams. "We have to make a shot now or settle
into the masses."
The question is will Bruce Springsteen be able to reach the masses?
"Let's face it," says Joe Smith of Warner Brothers Records.
"He's a kid with a beard in his 20s from New Jersey who happens
to sing songs. He's not going to jump around any more than Elton. His
voice won't be any sweeter than James Taylor's and his lyrics won't
be any heavier than Dylan's."
Springsteen's promoters would disagree, but they don't think it matters.
"The industry is at the bottom of the barrel," declares Springsteen's
manager Mike Appel, 32, as he paces around the Manhattan office once
occupied by Dylan's manager, Albert Grossman. "We've got people
scratching around for new talent. There's an amazing paucity of talent
because there hasn't been anyone isolated enough to create a distinctive
point of view." He whispers dramatically, "What I'm waiting
for, what Bruce Springsteen is waiting for, and we're all waiting for
is something that makes you want to dance!" He shouts, "Something
we haven't had for seven or eight years! Today anything remotely bizarre
is gobbled up as the next thing. What you've got to do is get the universal
factors, to get people to move in the same three or four chords. It's
the real thing! Look up America! Look up America!" Appel sat down.
Hypes are as American as Coca-Cola so perhaps -- in one way or another
-- Bruce Springsteen *is* the Real Thing.

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