- Hearts of Stone (Asbury Jukes)
Infobox Album
Name = Hearts of Stone
Type = studio
Artist = Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes
Released = 1978
Photography =Frank Stefanko Recorded =
Genre = Rock
Length =
Label = Epic
Producer =
Reviews =
Last album = I Don't Want To Go Home
This album = "Hearts of Stone"
Next album = The Jukes"Hearts of Stone" was the third album by seminal New Jersey Rock/R'nB band
Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes . It has been called "the best albumBruce Springsteen never recorded", which is not quite accurate. Springsteen did pen the compelling title track and the radio-friendly "Talk To Me", and is credited along withSouthside Johnny Lyon andSteve Van Zandt on "Trapped Again", but Van Zandt [http://music.aol.com/artist/steve-van-zandt/1111441] takes solo credit for the remaining 6 tracks. More to the point, this record pointed the way to the kind of music the reincarnated "Little Steven " would begin making in the early 1980s. Van Zandt tapped photographer,Frank Stefanko to shoot the album cover art, after meeting Stefanko when they worked together with Springsteen onDarkness on the Edge of Town . [http://www.southsidejohnny.com/]Although it was hailed by critics, the album did not sell well enough for Epic to renew the Jukes' contract, and they parted ways with their more famous Jersey Shore brethren for the next album, "The Jukes", relying on songs written by members of the band.
The first two tracks - the guitar-driven, syncopated raveup "Got To Be A Better Way Home" and the horn-powered "This Time Baby's Gone For Good", are classic Van Zandt compositions, heavily anchored in 60s soul. The bouncy third track belies its lyric; "I Played The Fool" makes very good use of bass and horns to carve a distinctive sound. The title track, Springsteen's main contribution, would perhaps have been a smash hit had it been released by its author, Springsteen. It is soulful, almost wan, as it details the ache of lovers who cannot be together. "Talk To Me", released as a single, provided a bridge to the Jukes' familiar sound from their first two records. It did not fare well on the charts.
Pointing the way to the sound they would embrace on their next record, the record's final track, "Light Don't Shine," is light on horns and relies more on detailed guitar, alongside a soft-voiced, reflective Johnny. This song would, ironically, prove to be something of an epitaph. The Jukes created well-received records after this. However, they were simply not able to crack the national consciousness and sell enough records to justify true star-level backing. They have bounced from label to label in the decades since, and scratch out their existence in little known bars not much higher in stature than the clubs they played on the way up. Their peak was not very high nor very long, but the Jukes, with a little help from their friends, left this one brilliant document to make sure that their contribution to the music of the Jersey Shore would not be forgotten. [http://pease1.sr.unh.edu/southside/]
In 1987 "Rolling Stone" voted the album Hearts of Stone among the top 100 albums from 1967-1987.
Track listing
# "Got to Be a Better Way Home" (Steven Van Zandt)
# "This Time Baby's Gone for Good" (Van Zandt)
# "I Played the Fool" (Van Zandt)
# "Hearts of Stone" (Bruce Springsteen)
# "Take It Inside" (Van Zandt)
# "Talk to Me" (Springsteen)
# "Next to You" (Van Zandt)
# "Trapped Again" (Southside Johnny Lyon, Springsteen, Van Zandt)
# "Light Don't Shine" (Van Zandt)ee also
* photographer
Frank Stefanko
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