Album version
I got so down and out in 'Frisco
Tired of the pills and the rain
I picked up, headed for the sunshine
I left a good thing behind
Seemed all of our love was in vain
My baby's coming in on the Tucson train
I come here looking for a new life
One I wouldn't have to explain
To that voice that keeps me awake at night
When a little peace would make everything right
If I could just turn off my brain
Now my baby's coming in on the Tucson train
We fought hard over nothing
We fought till nothing remained
I've carried that nothing for a long time
Now I carry my operator's license
And spend my days just running this crane
My baby's coming in on the Tucson train
Hard work'll clear your mind and body
The hot sun will burn out the pain
If they're looking for me, tell 'em buddy
I'm waiting down at the station
Just praying to the five-fifteen
I'll wait on God's creation
Just to show her a man can change
Now my baby's coming in on the Tucson train
On the Tucson train
On the Tucson train
Waiting on the five-fifteen
Here she comes
TUCSON TRAIN is a song written by Bruce Springsteen and released on his 2019 album Western Stars. The above lyrics are for Bruce Springsteen's album version of TUCSON TRAIN as released in 2019.
TUCSON TRAIN is the third single from Western Stars. It was released on digital platforms globally on 30 May 2019 at 12:00 p.m. GMT.
A music video for TUCSON TRAIN was simultaneously released on Bruce Springsteen's YouTube channel to coincide with the single release. The video is shot in black and white and consists of Springsteen and musicians performing the song on a small stage. The video was also included on the Japanese Singles Collection -Greatest Hits- compilation album.
Video credits:
Director: Thom Zimny
Producer: Thom Zimny, Paul McGuire
AP: Adrienne Gerard
DP: Joe Desalvo
Art Director: Kris Moran
Editor: Thom Zimny
Conform and Color: Brian Miele
In anticipation to the announcement, Springsteen dropped hints on his social media accounts over the course of the previous six days. On 24 May, he shared a black and white emotional shot of himself with the text "Waitin' on the five-fifteen #tucsontrain". On 26 May, he shared a still from the upcoming video with the text "To the voice that keeps me up at night #tucsontrain". On 28 May, he shared another still from the upcoming video, this time with the text "#TucsonTrain video coming soon". On 29 May, he shared a brief snippet from the upcoming video's last few seconds.
A demo of TUCSON TRAIN was recorded with Toby Scott on 02 Oct 2012 at Stone Hill Studio in Colts Neck, NJ. That was most likely the first time that the song was recorded with Scott, but there is a small possibility that it was also recorded earlier, in 2010.
Track credits:
Bruce Springsteen: vocals and multiple instruments throughout the album (see album credits below)
Ron Aniello: background vocals and multiple instruments throughout the album (see album credits below)
Matt Rollings: piano
Gunnar Olsen: drums
Toby Scott: loops, programming
Curt Ramm: trumpet
Barry Danielian: trumpet
Dan Levine: trombone
Rachel Drehmann: French horn
Leelanee Sterrett: French horn
Alden Banta: bassoon
Andrew Sterman: alto flute
Charles Pillow: oboe
Stone Hill Strings: string section
Western Stars is Bruce Springsteen's nineteenth studio album. It was officially released on 14 Jun 2019 on Columbia Records. It consists of 13 new tracks, all written by Springsteen, and clocks at 50:50. This marks Springsteen's first studio album since 2014 and his first of completely original material since 2012. On the album's release date, producer Ron Aniello stated on his Instagram page that work on the album "started in 2010... finished in 2014... finished again in 2018."
Springsteen has long had recording facilities set up at different properties he owns or owned at some point in the United States. These were named "Thrill Hill Recording", or sometimes referred to as "Thrill Hill East" or "Thrill Hill West" depending on whether it's on the East Coast or on the West Coast. In 2009, he set up Stone Hill Studio, a permanent recording facility at Stone Hill Farm, his horse ranch in Colts Neck, NJ.
Since 1987, Springsteen has recorded much of his material at his home studios. He would have an idea in mind and would bring in recording engineer Toby Scott for impromptu sessions to experiment with new sounds or new lyrics. "We don't really do demos," Scott told Uncut in 2019. "As I said to Bruce, 'You don't do demos either. You sing in key and in time while playing the guitar.' We just make recordings that don't get released." As per Scott's estimation, they recorded about 200 songs this way at seven different locations around the country. "He doesn't have any preconceived conceptual ideas for most of these songs," Scott said. "He'll try different instruments and different parts. If it doesn't sound good, he'll say, 'Eh, just delete that. Forget it.'" A song may be completed in two or three hours, sometimes they come back to it days later, and sometimes they just move on.
Work on what became Western Stars started in 2010. Springsteen recorded most of the basic tracking during sessions with Toby Scott at Stone Hill Studio, setting to tape stripped-down performances that he later elaborated upon. "Some of the parts were good, but they were only an indication of what they could be," Scott told Uncut. Scott thinks that 40 songs were recorded in 2010. Some of the songs were recorded early in the year, then work shifted to the outtakes for The Promise: The Darkness On The Edge Of Town Story box set, and then the rest of the songs were recorded around September or October.
In late November or early December 2010, Springsteen invited Jon Landau to for a listening session. They both felt the new material needed to be fixed up before any release. "[Springsteen] did some of the parts on a synthesizer or sampler, but they wanted to fix those parts up and use real strings and horns," Scott told Uncut. Ron Aniello first went to Colts Neck on 09 Jan 2011 to help Springsteen finish arrangements for the project. "Those were about 30 or 40 songs," Aniello told Andy Greene in a December 2013 interview for Rolling Stone. "They were very unique for him, unlike anything I'd ever heard."
After they had been working together for about a month, Springsteen started writing songs that were different in style to what they've been working on before. As Aniello told WCHR-FM's Tom Cunningham, "things just started steam rolling into this other record, you know, not sure what was going around in his mind." Springsteen was bringing in more songs and it was evident that the direction of the music was changing. Jon Landau came in, listened to the music, and after a discussion with Springsteen they decided to do a new album. This led to the Wrecking Ball album and the original project was shelved.
Aniello later wanted to work on these songs, to help arrange them or give Springsteen ideas for a potential release, but the project was set aside again and instead they ended up working on the High Hopes album. "Those are lovely songs," Aniello told Rolling Stone in the December 2013 interview. "I would compare them to Aaron Copland. It has a very open landscape feel and I guess... You wouldn't call it country. It's just very hard to describe. You'll just have to wait. I'm actually working on some of the songs now and going through them. He's looking for a way to approach that album." At the end of the interview, Aniello said that he doesn't know if any of those pre-Wrecking Ball songs are going to be released someday. "There's an amazing record there," he said. "It's all up to Bruce. I know they're going on tour in January. Hopefully sometime in 2014 they'll be interested in hearing my record."
The High Hopes Tour ended in May 2014 and Springsteen did not tour again until 2016. This would have been a good opportunity to finally finish the project, and it seems that this was accomplished based on the above-mentioned Instagram post by Aniello. But the project was again sidetracked; the focus shifted to The Ties That Bind: The River Collection box set. In a December 2015 Backstreets.com interview by Christopher Phillips, Springsteen explained that initially he was not planning on touring in support of the box set. "It was a surprise to us," he said. "We were kind of heading on a slightly different path — I had some new music, which was a little more of a solo record. I thought that I'd be out on that next. But then the box set came out, and we started to fool around with the idea of playing maybe a show... then, well, maybe two shows... and that turned into a short leg that we have going here in the States." Springsteen ended up touring with The E Street Band in North America, Europe, Australia, and New Zealand, from January 2016 till February 2017.
In the last three months of 2016, Springsteen also embarked on a book tour promoting his autobiography Born To Run. This was the catalyst to his five-shows-a-week Springsteen On Broadway concert residency that lasted till the end of 2018. In an interview published in the October 2017 issue of Variety, while Springsteen On Broadway was newly underway, Springsteen told Jem Aswad that he's still planning on releasing the solo album. "I've just been caught up in other projects," he said. "It's kind of waiting for its moment. Good music doesn't go away!" When asked what it sounded like, he said that it's influenced by Southern California pop music of the seventies. "Glen Campbell, Jimmy Webb, Burt Bacharach, those kinds of records," he explained. "I don't know if people will hear those influences, but that was what I had in my mind. It gave me something to hook an album around; it gave me some inspiration to write."
In 2019, finally, the time was right and Western Stars saw the light of day. The album was officially announced on 25 Apr 2019. In anticipation to the announcement, Springsteen dropped hints on his social media accounts over the course of the previous three days. On 22, 23, and 24 April, he shared each morning a photo of a desert scenery, without any caption or comment. These were photographed by Danny Clinch on a 2019 trip with Springsteen to Joshua Tree National Park in Southern California.
Western Stars was recorded primarily at Stone Hill Studio. Some of the musicians who appear on the album worked directly with Springsteen and Aniello at Stone Hill Studio and others recorded their parts at studios in California and in New York. Percussionist Lenny Castro recorded his parts at Ocean Studios in Burbank, CA. "This was my first time working for Bruce," he told Uncut. "My sessions were really quick. I don't sit around and overthink things. If you can't grab it off the top of your head, then it's not worth it as far as I'm concerned." Charles Giordano recorded his parts at Stone Hill Studio. He told Uncut's Petter Watts in 2020 that he thinks he recorded overdubs before even The River Tour 2016. "Some of the tracks on Western Stars were from a long time ago and I did my contributions over a period of several years."
In 2014, drummer Gunnar Olsen received a text message one morning from audio engineer Ross Petersen asking him that he comes in the afternoon for a recording session at Springsteen's ranch in Colts Neck, NJ. "That text changed my life to say the least," Olsen wrote on his website in 2019. He drove down from his home in New York, and when he got there, it was just Petersen, who's a friend of his, and producer Ron Aniello in the studio. As expected, Springsteen was not present. "They explained they had these songs and they wanted to try out some drum ideas," Olsen told Uncut. "I was just going to give them some options and ideas." He didn't expect that any of his parts would end up being released, or that a Springsteen album was in the works. But then Springsteen randomly showed up at the studio and soon it became clear that the music that Olsen was contributing to was already highly developed. "The stuff I was playing was stuff they'd been working on for a little while," he said. "It had a direction already. It wasn't like starting from scratch." After spending the day at the studio, the session ended and Olsen was thanked without being given any further information. "I guess [Springsteen] liked what I was doing, so they kept calling me back. I did four or five days over the course of a couple of months. Some days it would be a few songs and some days it was only one. Sometimes he was there. Sometimes we were adding stuff to songs and sometimes we were all recording together. But I didn't think I was going to be on the record."
Western Stars was produced by Ron Aniello with Bruce Springsteen, mixed by Tom Elmhirst, mastered by Bob Ludwig, and engineered by Rob Lebret, Ross Petersen, Toby Scott, and Ron Aniello, assisted by Joe Visciano. Aniello also plays bass, keyboard, and other instruments throughout the album. Patti Scialfa, the only E Street Band member that appears on the album, provides vocals and contributes vocal arrangements on four tracks. The musical arrangements include strings, horns, pedal steel, and contributions from more than 20 other players, as well as guest appearances by David Sancious, Charles Giordano, and Soozie Tyrell.
New York City-based creative director and graphic artist Michelle Holme, who had done a lot of work for Springsteen since 2005, designed by the album's artwork. For the front cover, she used a photo taken by Swedish photographer Kalle Gustafsson.
Bruce Springsteen's first new studio album in five years takes his music to a new place, drawing inspiration in part from the Southern California pop records of the late '60s and early '70s. "This record is a return to my solo recordings featuring character driven songs and sweeping, cinematic orchestral arrangements," Springsteen said. "It's a jewel box of a record."
Western Stars is available as a single-disc CD and as a two-disc LP set, as well as digital download and streaming. Four editions of the vinyl release were issued: a regular edition on black vinyl, a limited edition on dark blue marble vinyl exclusive to Bruce Springsteen's official webstore, a limited edition on light blue marble vinyl exclusive to independent online retailers in Europe, and a limited edition on clear vinyl exclusive to Barnes & Noble.
Western Stars topped the charts in many countries, including the UK and Australia. In the United States, it debuted and peaked at number 2. This makes it Springsteen's 20th U.S. top 10 album.
Country | Chart | Peak position |
Australia | Aria Top 50 Albums Chart | 1 |
Austria | Ö3 Austria Top 40 Longplay | 1 |
Belgium | Ultratop 50 Albums (Flanders) | 1 |
Belgium | Ultratop 50 Albums (Wallonia) | 3 |
Canada | Billboard Top Canadian Albums | 4 |
Czech Republic | ČNS IFPI - CZ Albums Top 100 | 9 |
Denmark | Album Top-40 (Hitlisten) | 4 |
Finland | Suomen Virallinen Albumilista | 3 |
France | Top 200 Albums (SNEP) | 3 |
Germany | Offizielle Deutsche Charts - Top 100 Album | 1 |
Hungary | Top 40 Album, DVD, És Válogatáslemez Lista (MAHASZ) | 16 |
Ireland | Top 100 Albums (IRMA) | 1 |
Italy | Top Album (FIMI) | 1 |
Japan | Oricon Albums Chart | 16 |
New Zealand | Official Top 40 Albums | 1 |
Norway | VG-lista Topp 40 Album | 1 |
Poland | ZPAV Oficjalna Lista Sprzedaży | 12 |
Portugal | Albums Top 30 | 1 |
Scotland | Official Scottish Albums Chart Top 100 (OCC) | 1 |
Spain | Top 100 Albumes (Promusicae) | 1 |
Sweden | Sverigetopplistan - Albums Top 60 | 3 |
Switzerland | Schweizer Hitparade - Alben Top 100 | 1 |
The Netherlands | Album Top 100 | 1 |
UK | Official Albums Chart Top 100 (OCC) | 1 |
USA | Billboard 200 | 2 |
Japanese Singles Collection -Greatest Hits- is a Bruce Springsteen compilation album released by Sony Music Japan in 2023. The compilation, which was exclusively released in Japan, consists of previously released 35 audio tracks and 62 video tracks. The collection is part of a 26-title reissue campaign to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Bruce Springsteen's debut album. The series, issued in three waves (25 Oct 2023, 22 Nov 2023, and 20 Dec 2023), includes 25 albums originally released between 1973 and 2014 plus a new compilation album that includes all of Springsteen's singles released in Japan from 1975 to 1999. All audio CD's were manufactured using Sony Japan's Blu-spec CD2 format.
Disc 1: (audio CD)
Disc 2: (audio CD)
Disc 3: (DVD)
Disc 4: (DVD)
Other versions of TUCSON TRAIN were also officially released.
Bruce Springsteen has never performed TUCSON TRAIN live.
At least 3 artists have recorded and released Bruce Springsteen's TUCSON TRAIN.
If you have any corrections or additional info, please contact me via the below form or by email: .
List of available versions of TUCSON TRAIN on this website:
TUCSON TRAIN [Album version]