Official studio version
Hey, alright, come on
Cynthia, when you come walking by you're an inspiring sight
Cynthia, you don't smile or say hi but baby that's alright
'Cause I don't need to hold you or taste your kiss
I just like knowing, Cynthia, you exist, doll, in a world like this
Cynthia, when you pass it seems like this whole town drops
Cynthia, or maybe it's just me, baby, and these fools stuck here punching this clock
Well you give us a reason to stop just for a while
To stop, stand, baby, and salute your style
Yeah Cynthia
Well now you ain't the finest thing I'll never have
And when you go the hurt you leave but baby it ain't so bad
Alright Cynthia
Yeah there ain't a man in this whole town who'd say you ain't fine
You hear them guys talking, tell me baby do you mind
Well you make us happy, honey, when we feel sad
To see something so good in a world gone bad
There's still Cynthia, oh yeah
Cynthia, no one knows your number, no one knows where you live
Cynthia, I wonder do you understand this strange thing you give
Yeah well baby is it your style, the mystery in your smile
Or just how cool you walk in a world gone wild
Oh tell me if you will, Cynthia
Well I gotta be pretty naive to believe in you
I know you ain't ever gonna be my dream come true
That's alright, I got other dreams as good as you, Cynthia
Yeah now baby, now this ain't no come-on
Now walk on, Cynthia, walk on
That's right
Yeah go on there baby
You make me holler, yeah, yeah, alright
I said yeah, yeah, alright
Well she's a yeah, yeah, alright
I said yeah, yeah, alright
Well I said yeah, yeah, alright
She's a yeah, yeah, alright
Say yeah, yeah, alright
Now yeah, yeah, alright...
[Fades out]
CYNTHIA is a song written by Bruce Springsteen and first released on the Tracks box set in 1998. The above lyrics are for Bruce Springsteen's official studio version of CYNTHIA as released in 1998.
CYNTHIA was first cut as a rockabilly-style demo on 20-21 April 1983 at Thrill Hill West, Springsteen's home studio in Los Angeles, CA. Springsteen recorded more than an album's worth of songs by himself during this period. He played all the instruments himself, with the help of a drum machine only, and overdubbing to create the final product. One take has surfaced among collectors. See the home demo version for more details.
The song was later recorded with the E Street Band in studio, in a more rocking arrangement. According to Sony's logs of Bruce Springsteen's studio sessions, CYNTHIA was recorded on 15 Jun 1983 at The Hit Factory in New York City, NY. Three takes, two of which complete, were cut on that day. Only one of these three takes has surfaced and was released on the Tracks box set in 1998. The Tracks liner notes incorrectly state that the song was recorded on 20 Apr 1983 ─ Springsteen was recording at Thrill Hill West on that day.
According to Sony's logs of Bruce Springsteen's studio sessions, Springsteen recorded a song of the same name on 23 May 1995 at Thrill Hill West, during The Ghost Of Tom Joad recording sessions. It remains unknown whether that's same song, recorded in an acoustic arrangement, or a totally different one that only the title with CYNTHIA.
A slightly different mix of the official studio version of CYNTHIA has first surfaced on bootlegs in the eighties. In the CD era, it appeared on several bootlegs, including Murder Incorporated (Flamingo Records) [track 11].
In the liner notes of his Tracks box set, Bruce Springsteen introduces the box set as follows:
During long intervals between my record releases, as I was spending more and more time in the studio, when I met a fan out on the street I was often asked, "What are you guys doing in there?" I regularly pondered that question myself.
What we were doing in there was making a lot of music, a lot more music than I could use at any one time. As a result, my albums became a series of choices — what to include, what to leave out? I based my decisions on my creative point of view at the moment — the subject I was trying to focus on, something musical or emotional I was trying to express. In certain instances, as on Darkness on the Edge of Town, Nebraska, and The Ghost of Tom Joad, these choices crystallized the album I was making. On some of my other records the reasons I had for choosing one song over another, in hindsight, feel a good deal less significant. One of the results of working like this was that a lot of music, including some of my favorite things, remained unreleased.
This collection contains everything from the first notes I sang in the Columbia recording studio, my early and later work with the E Street Band, through to my music in the 90s. It's the alternate route to some of the destinations I travelled to on my records, an invitation into the studio on the many nights we spent making music in search of the records we presented to you. I'm glad to finally be able to share this music; here are some of the ones that got away.
- Bruce Springsteen, September 1998
Bruce Springsteen's albums were thematically linked even if they were not strictly concept albums; so some tracks that didn't fit the theme of the album ended up orphaned, not necessarily because they didn't meet his high standards, but because, he says, they didn't fit in with the tone or themes he mined for each set. Many of these unreleased studio outtakes got under the hands of bootleggers. Discussing that issue in 1984, Springsteen told Rolling Stone's Kurt Loder, "We record a lot of material, but we just don't release it all. [...] I always tell myself that some day I'm gonna put an album out with all this stuff on it that didn't fit in. I think there's some good material there that should come out. Maybe at some point, I'll do that."
During a break in The Ghost Of Tom Joad Solo Acoustic Tour, Springsteen thought that "if it's gonna be a year or longer in between records, I have all this music that I know is very good that I never released and I should release some of it whether it was just a CD or something. In that period of time, I should put something out because people would like to have it and I'd like to see it get out." He told Toby Scott (his audio archivist and recording engineer), "send me all the archives, send everything that we recorded". Scott then went to work gathering the potential material from Springsteen's massive audio library (located, along with Sony's sound archives, in the high-tech Iron Mountain facility near Buffalo, NY). "For a week or so," he told Billboard in a Nov 1998 interview, "I just listened to everything that I'd done that we hadn't put out. I made some very brief notes in a notebook, and then I just put it away. It was something that I could do at some point when I get to that place in a new project where I'm not sure how long it's going to take and it would be nice to sort of fill the gap so the fans wouldn't be so long without hearing any music from me".
Springsteen told Mark Hagen in an interview for Mojo magazine published in January 1999, "So it began just with that idea and we listened to about 250 songs, maybe more, I made quick notes in a notebook and put it away. A year went by, more maybe, and I came off the Tom Joad tour and I began to write acoustically again and I wrote about half a record. Then I got stuck and said, 'Well, I'm going to put this aside for a while.' Then I wrote half of an electric record, and hit the same place. So I thought, instead of waiting for another year to put something out I'll put some of this music together. So once again I went back to the archives." According to interview comments made by engineer Toby Scott (Springsteen's audio archivist and recording engineer), it was in February 1998 during solo sessions being conducted at Thrill Hill Recording (Springsteen's home studio) in Colts Neck, NJ, that Springsteen told Scott that the time was right to proceed with the long-anticipated box set of archived, unreleased studio takes. Thrill Hill Recording served as the main operational center for all Tracks project activities. Note that the "Thrill Hill Recording" name is used for whatever home studio Springsteen is recording at, whether it's in Rumson, NJ, Colts, NJ, or Beverly Hills, CA.
Springsteen told Billboard that the songs were culled from between 200 and 300 tunes. According to Toby Scott, the number was down to about 128 songs by late June 1998. It was then narrowed down yet again in July to about 100 songs that were prepped for the Tracks release. Although the project was originally projected to be a 6-disc set, there was a commercial decision made later in the summer to reduce the size of the release to a 4-disc (66-track) set. The package was delivered to Sony in mid-September in order to facilitate the mid-November 1998 release schedule.
Unreleased songs from the Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ sessions were not included on the box set due to ongoing and still-unresolved court proceedings involving most of these unreleased 1972 recordings. The court battle wasn't resolved until in 2001 (April 2001 in the UK and June 2001 in the U.S.), and those recordings are now free for release at any time. The opening four tracks of the box set — which were culled from Springsteen's 03 May 1972 Columbia Records audition — were not part of the court proceedings.
On 16 Jul 1998, Springsteen attended a convention for Sony Music Entertainment Inc. in Miami, FL, where he officially announced that a box set was the works and he played a tape of three songs: WHERE THE BANDS ARE, LOOSE ENDS, and I WANNA BE WITH YOU.
The Tracks box set was released on Columbia Records on 10 Nov 1998. It was issued on both compact disc and audio cassette formats. It's a 4-disc (or 4-cassette) set consisting of a total of 66 tracks (almost 4.5 hours long), 10 of which were heretofore unavailable single B-sides, 6 were demos and alternate versions of already-released material, and 50 (48 studio and 2 live) were never-before-released songs recorded during the sessions for Springsteen's many albums. Some tracks were treated with a recent touch-up here or there to give the older recordings a fresh polish.
Disc 1:
1. | MARY QUEEN OF ARKANSAS | Recorded on 03 May 1972 at CBS Studios, New York City, NY |
2. | IT'S HARD TO BE A SAINT IN THE CITY | Recorded on 03 May 1972 at CBS Studios, New York City, NY |
3. | GROWIN' UP | Recorded on 03 May 1972 at CBS Studios, New York City, NY |
4. | DOES THIS BUS STOP AT 82ND STREET? | Recorded on 03 May 1972 at CBS Studios, New York City, NY |
5. | BISHOP DANCED | Recorded live on 31 Jan 1973 at Max's Kansas City, New York City, NY |
6. | SANTA ANA | Recorded on 28 Jun 1973 at 914 Sound Studios, Blauvelt, NY |
7. | SEASIDE BAR SONG | Recorded on 28 Jun 1973 at 914 Sound Studios, Blauvelt, NY |
8. | ZERO AND BLIND TERRY | Recorded on 28 Jun 1973 at 914 Sound Studios, Blauvelt, NY |
9. | LINDA LET ME BE THE ONE | Recorded on 28 Jun 1975 at The Record Plant, New York City, NY |
10. | THUNDERCRACK | Recorded on 28 Jun 1973 at 914 Sound Studios, Blauvelt, NY |
11. | RENDEZVOUS | Recorded live on 31 Dec 1980 at Nassau Coliseum, Uniondale, NY |
12. | GIVE THE GIRL A KISS | Recorded on 10 Nov 1977 at The Record Plant, New York City, NY |
13. | ICEMAN | Recorded on 27 Oct 1977 at The Record Plant, New York City, NY |
14. | BRING ON THE NIGHT | Recorded on 13 Jun 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
15. | SO YOUNG AND IN LOVE | Recorded on 06 Jan 1974 at The Record Plant, New York City, NY |
16. | HEARTS OF STONE | Recorded on 14 Oct 1977 at The Record Plant, New York City, NY |
17. | DON'T LOOK BACK | Recorded on 02 Jul 1977 at The Record Plant, New York City, NY |
Disc 2:
1. | RESTLESS NIGHTS | Recorded on 11 Apr 1980 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
2. | A GOOD MAN IS HARD TO FIND (PITTSBURGH) | Recorded on 05 May 1982 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
3. | ROULETTE | Recorded on 03 Apr 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
4. | DOLLHOUSE | Recorded on 21 Aug 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
5. | WHERE THE BANDS ARE | Recorded on 09 Oct 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
6. | LOOSE ENDS | Recorded on 18 Jul 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
7. | LIVING ON THE EDGE OF THE WORLD | Recorded on 07 Dec 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
8. | WAGES OF SIN | Recorded on 10 May 1982 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
9. | TAKE 'EM AS THEY COME | Recorded on 10 Apr 1980 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
10. | BE TRUE | Recorded on 21 Jul 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
11. | RICKY WANTS A MAN OF HER OWN | Recorded on 16 Jul 1979 at The Record Plant, New York City, NY |
12. | I WANNA BE WITH YOU | Recorded on 31 May 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
13. | MARY LOU | Recorded on 30 May 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
14. | STOLEN CAR | Recorded on 26 Jul 1979 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
15. | BORN IN THE U.S.A. | Recorded in January 1983 at Thrill Hill Recording, Colts Neck, NJ |
16. | JOHNNY BYE-BYE | Recorded in January 1983 at Thrill Hill Recording, Beverly Hills, CA |
17. | SHUT OUT THE LIGHT | Recorded in January 1983 at Thrill Hill Recording, Beverly Hills, CA |
Disc 3:
1. | CYNTHIA | Recorded on 20 Apr 1983 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
2. | MY LOVE WILL NOT LET YOU DOWN | Recorded on 05 May 1982 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
3. | THIS HARD LAND | Recorded on 11 May 1982 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
4. | FRANKIE | Recorded on 14 May 1982 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
5. | TV MOVIE | Recorded on 13 Jun 1983 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
6. | STAND ON IT | Recorded on 16 Jun 1983 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
7. | LION'S DEN | Recorded on 25 Jan 1982 at The Power Station, New York City, NY |
8. | CAR WASH | Recorded on 31 May 1983 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
9. | ROCKAWAY THE DAYS | Recorded on 03 Feb 1984 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
10. | BROTHERS UNDER THE BRIDGES ('83) | Recorded on 04 Sep 1983 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
11. | MAN AT THE TOP | Recorded on 12 Jan 1984 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
12. | PINK CADILLAC | Recorded on 31 May 1983 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
13. | TWO FOR THE ROAD | Recorded in February 1987 at Thrill Hill Recording, Colts Neck, NJ |
14. | JANEY, DON'T YOU LOSE HEART | Recorded on 16 Jun 1983 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
15. | WHEN YOU NEED ME | Recorded on 10 Jan 1987 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
16. | THE WISH | Recorded on 22 Feb 1987 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
17. | THE HONEYMOONERS | Recorded on 22 Feb 1987 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
18. | LUCKY MAN | Recorded on 04 Apr 1987 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
Disc 4:
1. | LEAVIN' TRAIN | Recorded on 27 Feb 1990 at Oceanway Studios, Los Angeles, CA |
2. | SEVEN ANGELS | Recorded on 29 Jun 1990 at Oceanway Studios, Los Angeles, CA |
3. | GAVE IT A NAME | Recorded on 24 Aug 1998 at Thrill Hill Recording, Colts Neck, NJ |
4. | SAD EYES | Recorded on 25 Jan 1990 at Soundworks West, Los Angeles, CA |
5. | MY LOVER MAN | Recorded on 04 Dec 1990 at Soundworks West, Los Angeles, CA |
6. | OVER THE RISE | Recorded on 07 Dec 1990 at Soundworks West, Los Angeles, CA |
7. | WHEN THE LIGHTS GO OUT | Recorded on 06 Dec 1990 at The Record Plant, Los Angeles, CA |
8. | LOOSE CHANGE | Recorded on 31 Jan 1991 at Record Plant, Los Angeles, CA |
9. | TROUBLE IN PARADISE | Recorded on 01 Dec 1989 at Soundworks West, Los Angeles, CA |
10. | HAPPY | Recorded on 18 Jan 1992 at A & M Studios, Los Angeles, CA |
11. | PART MAN, PART MONKEY | Recorded in January 1990 at Soundworks West, Los Angeles, CA |
12. | GOIN' CALI | Recorded on 29 Jan 1991 at A & M Studios, Los Angeles, CA |
13. | BACK IN YOUR ARMS | Recorded on 12 Jan 1995 at The Hit Factory, New York City, NY |
14. | BROTHERS UNDER THE BRIDGE | Recorded on 22 May 1995 at Thrill Hill Recording, Beverly Hills, CA |
Other versions of CYNTHIA were also officially released.
CYNTHIA was sound-checked prior to the 26 Apr 1999 show in Zurich, Switzerland, (as far as it's known) but it was not performed on any of The Reunion Tour's regular shows.
CYNTHIA was performed once during The Rising Tour (120 dates, August 2002 to October 2003), on 31 Aug 2003 in East Rutherford, NJ. The song was played in its full-band studio arrangement.
CYNTHIA was performed 6 times during the Devils & Dust Solo Acoustic Tour (72 dates, April to November 2005). On this tour, the song was played in a solo acoustic guitar arrangement. The live 31 Jul 2005 version of CYNTHIA was released on the Schottenstein Center, Ohio 2005 official live download in 2015. The live 03 Aug 2005 version of CYNTHIA was released on the Van Andel Arena, Michigan 2005 official live download in 2018.
CYNTHIA was performed twice during the Magic Tour (100 dates, October 2007 to August 2008). On this tour, the song was played in its full-band studio arrangement.
CYNTHIA was performed twice during the Wrecking Ball Tour (133 dates, March 2012 to September 2013). On this tour, the song was played in its full-band studio arrangement. The live 22 Sep 2012 version of CYNTHIA was released on the East Rutherford, NJ 09.22.12 official live download in 2019.
As far as it's known, no artist has recorded and released Bruce Springsteen's CYNTHIA.
List of available versions of CYNTHIA on this website:
CYNTHIA [Official studio version]