Hungry Heart
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"Hungry Heart" | ||
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Single by Bruce Springsteen | ||
from the album The River | ||
Released | October 1980 | |
Format | 7" single | |
Recorded | June 1979 | |
Genre | Rock | |
Length | 3:19 | |
Label | Columbia Records | |
Writer(s) | Bruce Springsteen | |
Producer(s) | Jon Landau, Bruce Springsteen, Steven Van Zandt | |
Chart positions | ||
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Bruce Springsteen singles chronology | ||
"Badlands" (1978) | "Hungry Heart"/"Held Up Without a Gun" (1980) |
"Fade Away" (1981) |
"Hungry Heart" is a song by Bruce Springsteen from the album The River, released in 1980. It was his first Top 10 hit single of his own in the United States.
Contents |
[edit] History
When Springsteen met Joey Ramone in Asbury Park, New Jersey, Ramone asked him to write a song for The Ramones. Springsteen composed "Hungry Heart" that night, but decided to keep it for himself on the advice of his producer and manager, Jon Landau. Previously, upbeat and catchy Springsteen songs such as "Because the Night" and "Fire" had been given away and become hits for others, and Landau was anxious that that trend not continue.
The song is easy to assimilate on early hearings, as the verses and the choruses have the same underlying music. However, as with several other numbers on The River, the song's lyrics don't quite match the mood of the music:
- Got a wife and kids in Baltimore, Jack!
- I went out for a ride and I never went back.
- Like a river that don't know where its flowing,
- I took a wrong turn and I just kept going
- Everybody's got a hungry heart
- Everybody's got a hungry heart
- Lay down your money and you play your part
- Everybody's got a hu-hu-hun-ga-ry heart
Springsteen's voice was slightly sped up on the recording, producing a higher-pitched vocal. (Bob Dylan had done the same thing on 1969's "Lay Lady Lay".) Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan of The Turtles sang backup. The mix of songwriting and production techniques was successful, and "Hungry Heart" reached #5 on the Billboard Hot 100 in late 1980. In the subsequent Rolling Stone Readers' Poll, "Hungry Heart" was voted Best Single for the year.
"Hungry Heart" was used in the 1983 Tom Cruise hit movie Risky Business; it was the first time a Springsteen song was used in a film.
The single was not a hit in the United Kingdom when first released, reaching only #44 on the UK Singles Chart. It did better in 1995 when it was reissued in conjunction with his Greatest Hits album; this time, it reached #28.
Not too long before his murder in December 1980, John Lennon praised the song and made a remark about it being his favorite single playing on radio.
The "Everybody's Got A Hungry Heart" episode of Japanese anime series Battle B-Daman is named after the line in the song.
[edit] Track listing
- Hungry Heart — 3:19
- Held Up Without a Gun — 1:15
"Held Up Without a Gun" is a track from The River sessions that began a Springsteen tradition of using songs that did not appear on his albums as B-sides. A River Tour performance of it is included on The Essential Bruce Springsteen compilation album's optional disc. This is the only live performance of the song in a regular Springsteen concert (although it was played at least once during rehearsals for 2004's Vote for Change Tour). The studio version has never been released on an album.
The cover of the single sleeve shows The Empress Hotel, one of Asbury Park's fading landmarks of the time.
[edit] Live performance history
At the beginning of The River Tour, Springsteen and the E Street Band played the song as an instrumental for the first verse and chorus. During the November 20, 1980, show in Chicago's Rosemont Horizon, right after the single hit the Top 10, the audience spontaneously sang the lyrics back to the band during this intro. A tradition was thus born of Springsteen always letting the audience sing the first verse and chorus.
Such a performance from December 18, 1980 at Nassau Coliseum (with Volman and Kaylan guesting) is included on the Live/1975-85 box set, but the ritual became even stronger during the 1984-1985 Born in the U.S.A. Tour, when "Hungry Heart" was a featured selection early in the second set. Even in Japan, where not many fans knew the words, this was still one of the best-received songs of his performances.
"Hungry Heart" was a regular in Springsteen band concerts through the early 1990s, but beginning with the 1999-2000 E Street Band Reunion Tour, it has only been irregularly performed, exemplifying a later-era Springsteen practice of avoiding his most popular radio hits. When it is played, it is often with guest artists singing along, since it is one of Springsteen's easiest songs to perform.
[edit] Performances by others
Rod Stewart performed the song during his 1984 American tour, but was apparently confused by the "Brooocing" reaction of the audience and thought he was being booed.
The song has also been recorded by Jesse Malin and Minnie Driver.
[edit] References
- Marsh, Dave. Glory Days: Bruce Springsteen in the 1980s. Pantheon Books, 1987. ISBN 0-394-54668-7.
- Brucebase recording sessions history
- Killing Floor song performance database