Night Moves — Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band

bob_seger

SONG OF THE DAY

Night Moves” by Bob Seger & The Sil­ver Bul­let Band (sin­gle, Capi­tol Records, 1976). Writ­ten by Bob Seger.

FROM WIKIPEDIA

- Released as a sin­gle, it charted in late 1976 and even­tu­ally reached #4 on the Bill­board Hot 100 pop sin­gles chart. In doing so, it almost sin­gle­hand­edly changed Seger from being a pop­u­lar regional favorite into a national star.

- Seger and the Sil­ver Bul­let Band went to Toronto for three days to record a few tracks with The Guess Who’s pro­duc­er Jack Richard­son, whose Nim­bus 9 Pro­duc­tions com­pany was hot at the time. The band quickly recorded two Seger orig­i­nals, one of which was “Long Long Gone”, and a cover of the Motown hit “My World Is Empty With­out You”, but before Seger left on the third day, he com­posed a fourth song to record. Seger said that the song was influ­enced by Bruce Springsteen’s “Jungleland”. As the only mem­bers of the Sil­ver Bul­let Band still in Toronto were the bassist and drum­mer (plus Seger on acoustic gui­tar and piano), Richard­son recruited local ses­sion musi­cians to play elec­tric gui­tar and organ.

- Richard­son said that “the whole arrange­ment came together in the studio.“ After the tracks were mixed by Richard­son and engi­neer Brian Chris­t­ian, Richard­son said that he received a call from Seger’s manager/producer Punch Andrews express­ing dis­sat­is­fac­tion with the tracks, and Andrews said that Capi­tol Records had been equally dis­ap­pointed. A few months later, when Richard­son was talk­ing to a Capi­tol A&R exec­u­tive, he asked about the Seger ses­sions and was told that “both tracks” were poten­tial B-sides. It turned out that Seger and Punch Andrews had never given “Night Moves” to Capi­tol, so Richard­son did and, after hear­ing it, Capi­tol made it the title track of Seger’s next album, as well as the first single.

- Seger remem­bers the ses­sions some­what dif­fer­ently. He claims that it was his deci­sion to use musi­cians other than his nor­mal band, and that he saw the song as poten­tially the one that would define his career. However, that appears to be incon­sis­tent with the fact that the song was not sub­mit­ted to Capi­tol by Seger and Punch Andrews.

- Music writer Samuel Del­liance of The New York Post wrote in 1977, “‘Night Moves’ is sup­posed to take place in Michi­gan in the early 1960s, but it is time­less and place­less. You can be across the street from Kissena Park in Queens in the early evening with no one in sight and the song will sud­denly flood your mind just as it did Seger’s.” In his 1979 vol­ume Stranded: Rock and Roll for a Desert Island, famed rock crit­ic Greil Mar­cus selected the sin­gle “Night Moves” for inclu­sion on same, writ­ing sim­ply: “The mys­tic chords of memory.”

- “Night Moves” was named by Rolling Stone as Best Sin­gle of the Year for 1977. The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame named it one of the 500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll, Seger’s only such selection.

- In the mid-1990s, nearly twenty years after the orig­i­nal song was released, an accom­pa­ny­ing video was pro­duced. Set in a drive-in movie the­ater in the early 1960s, it inter­spersed footage of Seeger per­form­ing in a present day ver­sion of the drive-in (seem­ing now aban­doned) with var­i­ous vignettes fea­tur­ing char­ac­ters described in the song.

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