Friday, November 21, 2008

Random songfact to jumpstart your Friday...

Great little music resource- Songfacts.com:

Rosalita (Come Out Tonight) by Bruce Springsteen
Album: The Wild, The Innocent & The E Street Shuffle Released: 1973

Songfacts about Rosalita:
  • This is Springsteen's musical autobiography. After touring relentlessly around the Jersey Shore, he finally signed a record deal and got some money.
  • Springsteen considers this the best love song he ever wrote. It's proof that a love song does not have to be slow or sappy.
  • This is Springsteen's most popular live song. It was the last song before the encore at most of his shows from 1973-1984.
  • This became very popular in England when British TV aired a clip of Springsteen performing this at a concert in Phoenix in 1978.
  • The live film clip of this is the closest thing Springsteen had to a music video until he started making them in 1984, starting with "Dancing In The Dark."
  • Springsteen: "A kiss-off to everybody who counted you out, put you down, or decided you weren't good enough."
  • This was one of the first songs to showcase Clarence Clemons on sax. With his bright suits and imposing size, he quickly became the most popular member of the E Street Band.
  • After appearing on the covers of Time and Newsweek in October,1975, he sometimes changed the words to "Tell your papa I ain't no freak, 'cause I got my picture on the cover of Time and Newsweek."
  • The audience always went crazy when Springsteen sang: "The record company, Rosie, just gave me a big advance." He got a $25,000 advance from Columbia Records when he signed his first record deal, proving to his father and others who doubted him that he did have a real job.
  • Springsteen never liked his nickname "The Boss," and sometimes sang: "You can call me Lieutenant, Rosie, but don't ever call me Boss."
  • Springsteen wrote this to be a live show-stopper. He was inspired by the Soul revues in the '60s where the artists would pour all their energy into their final song, and just when it seemed to be over, keep playing. He knew his audience would remember this when he played it.
  • No comments: