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Badlands: A Tribute To Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska
 

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Badlands: A Tribute To Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska
Participated by Various Artists
Studio : Sub Pop
by Sub Pop
Release Date : 2000-11-07
Publisher : Sub Pop
Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days
EAN : 0098787052527
UPC : 098787052527
Avg. Customer Rating:(based on 36 reviews)

List Price : $11.98
Our Price : $7.49


Editorial Reviews for  'Badlands: A Tribute To Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska'
 
Album Description
Interesting and eclectic collection of artists on this tribute to Springsteen's 6th album, Nebraska. Like the original the tracks are recorded on four track at Bruce's request. Artists include, Chrissie Hynde & Adam Seymour, Hank Williams the third, Los Lobos & Son Volt. And 3 bonus tracks recorded during the Nebraska sessions by, Johnny Cash, Raul Mal o if the Mavericks and Damien Jurado with Rose Thomas. 2000 release. Standard jewel case.
 
Americancivilwar.com
There was a time when nobody besides Manfred Mann really bothered to cover Bruce Springsteen songs. All that changed once Born to Run turned the New Jersey singer-songwriter into a pop icon. Still, it was in the bleak character studies of 1982's Nebraska that he reaffirmed himself as a literate everyman steeped in the tradition of John Steinbeck and Flannery O'Connor, Woody Guthrie and Bob Dylan. And that's the side of Springsteen that clearly appeals to Johnny Cash, Los Lobos, Hank Williams III, and the dozen other artists who participate in this remake of Nebraska. Chrissie Hynde, Ani DiFranco, and Deana Carter all deliver haunting performances, but as far as the men folk go, the album's most striking covers are "bonus" tracks that were recorded for but not released on Nebraska: "I'm on Fire" sounds even creepier with Cash's craggy vocal; Raul Malo brings out the pop sheen of "Downbound Train"; and "Wages of Sin," in the hands of Damien Jurado and Rose Thomas, shows Springsteen can be just as depressing as your favorite emo idol. All of which makes this a fine companion to the original recording. --Bill Forman
 
Customer Reviews for  'Badlands: A Tribute To Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska'
 
Big disappointment
As a fan of Springsteen and one of the most innovative and poignant albums ever made "Nebraska" I was excited to hear some alternate versions of songs on this album. Actually, the main reason I gave it a try was the that Dar Williams (Highway patrolman) and Aimee Mann (Reason To Believe) was on the cd. The Aimee Mann version was o.k. but there was more of Michael Penn's singing on the song which kind of ruined it. The Dar Williams cover of Highway was also just o.k. as it seemed she was just going through the motions on the song. Ben Harper's version of "My Father's House" was decent as was Raul Malo's version of "Downbound Train".
The rest of it went from forgettable to just plain bad. Johnny Cash's version of "I'm On Fire" was flat and monotone, Los Lobos' "Johnny 99" didn't have any of the passion of the original version, and Hank III should have their hands cut of after the way they butchered "Atlantic City".
Overall, this "Tribute" album was anything but- it sounded like they asked a bunch of amateur musicians to record their covers after only one take and send it to some recording label with a P.O.Box in somewhere in Idaho. Save yourself some money and misguided anticipation and skip this one.
 
Strange Expectations
The reviews for this product are sadly typical of what is becoming an all-too-large portion of the fan-base for bluegrass, americana, and country music: the kind of people who would listen to this album and "try to like it," rather than just see if they did, or "listen to it with headphones" through their high-end system with airless gold-plated biwiring. The kind of people who haven't ever understood what bluegrass, country, or americana music mean to real people. The kind of people who listen to Johnny Cash because it's now trendy to do so, and have one Hank Sr. album but can't name the tracks on it, even as they decry Hank Jr. and Hank III as devaluing the family name. The kind of people who profess their love for Wilco but "don't get" Son Volt and Uncle Tupelo.

But country, bluegrass, and americana aren't about these people. These people may financially facilitate the promulgation of the music, but it will never be about or for these people. It is about the kind of people you find on Bruce Springsteen's Nebraska, and on this tribute.

It's incredibly disingenuous to suggest that the only artist who "made the song his own" on this compilation is Johnny Cash. If anything, Cash's cut might be the weakest. And that's saying something, because it's not bad by any stretch.

1) Nebraska (Chrissie Hynde/Adam Seymour)--It would be pretty hard to top or even approximate the haunting title track of the original album. Although Hynde's breathy, overdone vocal stylings might be more appropriate for a Pretenders album than for a reinterpretation of a grim, weary Boss classic, you can't argue with the instrumentation, and the point of the song is still driven home. 7/10.

2) Atlantic City (Hank Williams III)--Absolutely the gem of the album. Hank Williams III is one of the greatest torchbearers for the dying spirit of true country music, and he applies his strategies to the one song on the original album that never felt like it belonged. Way too AOR for the rest of Nebraska, Atlantic City was the song you always skipped as you played through the album. Hank III gives the lyrics the treatment they always deserved, and fully makes the song his own while musically delivering much more fully than the Boss did on what the lyrics spoke about. 10/10

3) Mansion on the Hill (Crooked Fingers)--Skillfully recalling Springsteen's vocal stylings without emulating them or ripping them off, Eric Bachmann complements his band's typically tasty, lush, but not too slick instrumentation and production for a reimagining that may not be completely faithful to the track you used to listen to, but is 100% faithful to the spirit Springsteen was trying to conjure up. 8/10

4) Johnny 99 (Los Lobos)--Picture the Springsteen original in your mind. Now picture the way the Boss lovingly updated all those Pete Seeger classics on We Shall Overcome. That's the treatment that Los Lobos apply to Johnny 99. Sounds basically the same, but with some fun new instrumentation that wasn't possible in the original Nebraska's solo-acoustic-guitar format. At times, this cover feels like it's almost too much fun for its lyrics, or too much fun for an album like Nebraska--but music can never be "too much fun," can it? 9/10

5) Highway Patrolman (Dar Williams)--One of the weaker cuts on the album, this cover is plagued by the problem with so many female country singers: Dar Williams sings too clean. Save that kind of singing for the slick Nashville hucksters that the masses can eat up, or for the too-earnest folk that college kids think makes them better people for listening to; real country music (or americana, in the case of a Springsteen cover) doesn't just tolerate harsher, dirtier vocals--it demands them. It's too bad, because the instrumentation isn't bad. Still, this song deserved better than Dar Williams. 5/10

6) State Trooper (Deana Carter)--I wouldn't have expected this good of a cut from someone like Deana Carter, yet somehow she cuts through her typically heavy production to achieve much of the same quiet urgency that Springsteen evoked, a deadlier version of the feeling you got when your dad almost whispered at you to go to your room after you swore at your mother. Carter also eschews a lot of her usual annoying Nashville conventions for a much hipper sound and style. 8/10

7) Used Cars (Ani DiFranco)--The original is the kind of folky rock that you could be as comfortable kicking in your car stereo as playing by yourself on a guitar on your front porch. Ani DiFranco is the kind of rocky folk that, as discussed earlier, makes college kids feel like they're better people for listening. While she turns in an impassioned delivery of the original, there's something about her twisty-turny approach to what is supposed to be a down-home style of music that leaves you wanting better. When the roots of the country/americana/folk/bluegrass style first sprang up in Appalachia, is this what they had in mind? Bottom line: you just can't believe lyrics like "my dad sweats the same job from mornin' to mornin'" from a style like this. 6/10

8) Open All Night (Son Volt)--Nobody's got alt-country cred like Son Volt do. Their frontman, Jay Farrar, was half of the duo that made up Uncle Tupelo. The other half was Jeff Tweedy, who went on to front the more successful Wilco. But while Wilco might sell more albums, Son Volt maintain a closer tie to the themes and styles of Uncle Tupelo, and they deliver on those themes and styles in this cover. They slow the Boss's lyrics all the way down to a lonely, twangy, country waltz that sounds just as natural for the lyrics as the original music did. 10/10

9) My Father's House (Ben Harper)--Here's what should have happened with Ani DiFranco's cover. An artist whose typical style isn't particularly in line with the Nebraska album, or with country, bluegrass, americana, or even classic folk, takes on a Bruce Springsteen song and makes it his own WITHOUT sacrificing the musical environment that gave birth to the original. This song is both unequivocally an American folk song, and undeniably a Ben Harper song. 9/10

10) Reason to Believe (Michael Penn/Aimee Mann)--The husband and wife deliver a final cut to the tribute album that almost serves its purpose better than the final cut on the original album did. After a collection of disillusioned, hard-working, despairing, American-Nightmare narratives, Springsteen turned it all on its head, recasting the whole thing in a hopeful light, reminding listeners that no matter what hardships life throws at the working man and woman, they still get back up on their feet and push onwards. As Jarvis Cocker wrote, "they burn so brightly you can only wonder why." Penn's and Mann's vocals, reminiscent of Steve Earle, capture that cynicism, while the instrumentation rises toward the heavenly and hopeful. 9/10

The album is rounded out with three rather useless and counterproductive tracks. Nebraska, like so many of the best Springsteen albums, was a concept piece, a fully realized work of art, not a collection of songs. Tacking three songs onto the end is the biggest mistake the album's producers made, regardless of how good or bad the tracks actually are.

Cash's cut, as mentioned previously, is among the weaker ones on the album, but still a pretty strong recording. He applies his latter-day career's well-worn technique of putting sparse instrumentation, lush production, and his almost too craggy vocals on a classic chestnut. Raul Malo's reading of Downbound Train is a great listen, and makes you think of some of the Beat Farmers' greatest moments. With Rose Thomas, Damien Jurado delivers an abominably boring version of what is supposed to be a searing, evocative song. 7/10, 8/10, 2/10, but they don't factor into the tribute's review, as they don't belong on this tribute.

Overall, it's a good solid tribute with some reworkings, some reinterpretations, and some full-on reimaginings, and on the whole, it works out pretty good. Kind of like life in Nebraska. 8/10
 
Don't bother
Like many other reviewers, I am a huge fan of Bruce's Nebraska, and I was excited to hear these re-workings of his excellent songs. Unfortunately I have to agree with many others too. It just doesn't work. They should be great but just aren't. And, let's be honest, it's a tough ask to try and better any of Springsteen's performances on this album.
 
Somewhat disapointing
Despite many so-so reviews here I expected to like this disk more than I did in the end. Over-all it's not bad but is somewhat disapointing. My favorite by far is Dar Williams's version of Highway Patrolman, but the disk is pretty uneven in quality and can't be recommeded very strongly over all. Some of it is fine, but it might be better to borrow and copy just the songs you want.
 
What A Kick!
What a cool idea - to take an album the Boss never finished and--well, finish it off. I know some people love the stark simplicity of the original, but let's face it--they were basement tapes, demos that never received a proper production because Bruce was skipping labels. However, the makers of Badlands decide not to finish the album as they think Springsteen might have (that album might have garnered 5 stars), but to offer their own interpretations. There are some oddball choices here, like Chrissy Hynde and Dar Williams, but others, like Johnny Cash and Ben Harper, just flat out work. And I get a kick out of Son Volt's "Open All Night." Even though you can't really explain lyrics like "Hey ho rock and roll deliver me from nowhere" when Jay Farrar's vocal sounds like a barbiturated lullabye. But that's what's great about really good tribute albums: they help you look at a song from another angle, one you may not have looked at before. Often the original angle was the one you really wanted, but seeing the subject from a new perspective can only increase its dimensions.
 
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