Point Blank (Bruce Springsteen song)
"Point Blank" is a song written by Bruce Springsteen and first released on Springsteen's 1980 album The River. In Europe, it was also released as a single in 1981, backed by another song from The River, "Ramrod".[1] Although it was not released as a single in the US, it did reach #20 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart.[2][3] Lyrics and music"Point Blank" is recorded in the key of B minor with a soft rock tempo of 116 beats per minute with Springsteen's vocals ranging from B3 to A5 while the song follows a chord progression of Bm-G-A-F♯m-F♯7. The song was written in 1978, and was the first song Springsteen wrote after completing the Darkness on the Edge of Town album.[4] "Point Blank" had its live premiere on July 7, 1978, in a concert on the Darkness Tour at the Roxy Theatre in West Hollywood, California, at which "Independence Day" was also premiered.[5][6] In its 1978 incarnation, the lyrics dealt with the singer's girlfriend's drug addiction.[6] A live 1978 performance from Houston, Texas is included on a DVD in The Promise box set.[7] After several lyrical revisions, Point Blank was recorded on August 23–25, 1979 at Power Station Studios, New York City, NY.[8] In 2015, Springsteen stated that he regards "Point Blank," "Stolen Car," "Independence Day" and the title track as being "the heart and soul" of The River album.[9] "Point Blank", along with the title track, "Wreck on the Highway" and "Independence Day", is one of the verse-chorus songs on The River that was essentially a short story or character sketch.[5][10] As with "The River" and "Independence Day", this song deals with the disappointments of working-class family life.[11] With The River, Springsteen figured out how to create an album on which happy songs like "Sherry Darling" could co-exist with painful songs like "Point Blank".[12][13] And "Point Blank" is one of the most painful songs on the album.[14] The emotions covered by the song include disappointment, fear, loneliness and desperation.[13][14] "Point Blank" is also one of several songs on the album dealing with the conflict between dreams and reality.[13] The singer dreams that he is still with his former girlfriend and they are dancing together.[13][15] But waking up, he realizes he saw the girlfriend standing in the doorway trying to stay out of the rain, looking "like just another stranger waitin' to get blown away."[15][16] The ex-girlfriend is the subject of the song's narrative.[15] She grew up fast, but rather than getting the life she wanted, she ended up on welfare.[15] The singer sings that:[16]
This was the third reference to a Romeo in a Springsteen-penned song, earlier ones being "Incident on 57th Street" from the 1973 album The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle and "Fire", which was covered by Robert Gordon in 1978.[6] The music is highlighted by Roy Bittan's sensitive piano playing and Springsteen's singing, alternating between vulnerability, disbelief and anger.[15] ThemesAuthor Rob Kirkpatrick describes the theme of the "Point Blank" as "you're born dying."[13] Jeffrey Symynkywicz described the theme as being that "there is an inexorable decline that is carved at the heart of life."[14] Springsteen has stated that one of the themes of the song is the fact that if you ease up as you get older, you effectively cease to exist.[12] When introducing the song at a 1981 concert, Springsteen stated:[6][17]
There are at least two theories as to the origin of the title. One theory is that it comes from the 1967 Lee Marvin movie Point Blank.[6] Another is that it came from a comment made by an ex-girlfriend during the heat of an argument.[18] Critical receptionRolling Stone Magazine critic Dave Marsh described the song as "portentous."[17] Author June Skinner Sawyers described the song as "a song of shadows, of lives going nowhere, of broken relationships, and broken promises."[15] PersonnelAccording to authors Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon:[19]
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