Qualcuno ha letto questo libro? Le foto mi sembrano molto belle.
Bruce Springsteen’s Darkness on the Edge of Town broke new  ground for The Boss in 1978. A counterpoint to the operatic elegance of Born  to Run, the album was an angry, raw record that burst forth after a  three-year hiatus.   
Because of its darker tones, some might call Darkness a  difficult album, but despite this, it’s a cherished gem for many.   
Collecting stories and photos from hundreds of fans, The Light  in Darkness celebrates this classic record, allowing readers to  revisit the excitement of that moment when the needle found the grooves  in that first cut and the thundering power of “Badlands” shook  across the hi-fi for the very first time. Or the uninitiated, but  soon-to-be-converted teenager, brought along by friends and finding  salvation at one of the legendary three-plus hour concerts – shows that  embodied all the manic fury of a revival meeting.   
The book is also for those more recent converts to The Boss who  may have stumbled across a dusty bootleg in a used record store –  discovering the magic of the Agora or the Winterland shows.   
Finally, The Light in Darkness is for those who never gave  Bruce’s fourth album much consideration; those more partial to the  high-polished sounds of Born to Run or the stadium-rousing  choruses of Born in the U.S.A. For the skeptics, just read the  tales of those who struggle with the dark and trembling frustration of  “Something in the Night,” the open-road emptiness of  “Racing in the  Street,” and the too-faraway hope of “The Promised Land.” A troubling  album indeed. But the passion, the connection, the thrill of the fans as  they explore this classic record will make a convert of anyone.   
The Three-Year Wait 
It was a long wait. From the time Born to Run came out until  the release of Darkness on the Edge of Town, fans had to suffer  through a three-year hiatus, a lifetime for a musician to be off the  radar back then.   
And in the days before the Internet and MTV, Bruce’s devotees  often had no idea what was taking him so long, and little means to find  out. They resorted to scouring the pages of Rolling Stone and Creem  magazines for any mention of Springsteen, any hint or clue about when  the new record would be released. And when that produced no results,  they turned to prayer.   
We all know now that legal wrangling with his first manager, Mike  Appel, kept a new record off the shelves for those three years. When  Bruce finally came out victorious and replaced Appel with music writer  Jon Landau, the stage was set for the next record to be released. But  few would anticipate the frustration that had built up during those  years, anger that Springsteen would channel into the new album.  
The Light in Darkness shares the stories of fans coming to  grips with this new record and this very different sound from The Boss,  finding that Bruce’s struggles and frustrations often mirrored their  own battles in life. A frayed relationship with a father, a body made  sore with factory work, or the suffocating fear of being trapped in the  badlands, fans have lived the stories Bruce tells on Darkness –  the album is part of their history, a history they share in this book.   
Springsteen Live 1978 
From the Palladium in New York to Detroit’s Cobo Hall, from the  famed Winterland to the year’s final show at Cleveland’s Richfield  Coliseum, Springsteen’s 1978 tour is legendary.   
Bruce, who was already famous for his incredible shows, pioneered  a whole new kind of concert experience on this tour. Just the audience,  Bruce and the E Street Band for a marathon three-plus hours, with an  intermission in the middle just long enough to let the audience catch  their breath. The Light in Darkness brings these shows to life  through the testimony of those who were there, concerts that can still  be heard through the magic of bootlegging. The stories fans tell from  those electrifying 1978 shows only increases the power of hearing these  coveted, semi-legal tapes still circulating today.  
The Darkness tour also marked the last time many would get  to see The Boss in small concert halls, as Bruce’s exploding popularity  forced him to trade up to hockey arenas during several stops on the  tour. Stadiums would soon follow. Today, many fans lucky enough to have  attended the Darkness tour are glad they did whatever it took to  land a ticket, a memory they can still cherish as they now watch Bruce  from the nosebleeds.   
Over 200 Photos 
The Light in Darkness features stunning photography from the Darkness  tour. With over 200 photos taken by dozens of photographers, many of  them never before published, this is a book you’ll come back to time and  time again.   
Many notable Springsteen-era photographers contributed to the  volume, including: 
- James Shive
- P. Jay Plutzer
- Lynn Goldsmith
- Peter Howes
- Anastasia Pantsios
- Mark Wyville
- Cliff Breining
- Lawrence Kirsch
About the book: Limited Collector’s Edition 
This 208 page, large format, 9.25” x 12” full-color book is printed  on Premium Gloss 200m paper stock and contains more than 200 photographs  reproduced from the original negatives and slides. The book is only  available online for purchase at: www.thelightindarkness.com
 
			