Your Bright Baby Blues by Jackson Browne - Songfacts

Your Bright Baby Blues

Album: The Pretender (1976)
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Songfacts®:

  • Running 6:05, this song covers a lot of emotional ground, much of it dealing with Jackson Browne's personal life. Early in the song, he's trying to outrun his demons, but no matter where he goes, there he is:

    No matter how fast I run
    I can never seem to get away from me


    Later, he addresses a person who might be able to help:

    Baby you can free me
    All in the power of your sweet tenderness


    This could be Phyllis Major, mother to his son and his first wife. It appears she did have bright baby blue eyes.

    Major fell into a depression and died by suicide in 1976 as Browne was working on The Pretender album. This song was written and likely recorded before her death.
  • That's Lowell George on slide guitar and harmony vocals. Browne spent many nights getting loaded with the Little Feat leader, which he sings about near the end of this song:

    It's so hard to come by
    That feeling of peace
    This friend of mine said
    Close your eyes
    And try a few of these
    I thought I was flying like a bird


    Browne told Mojo: "There's a line in that song: 'Close your eyes and try a few of these.' That's exactly the way we turned each other on and gave each other drugs."

    Browne is godfather to Lowell's daughter, the singer Inara George. After Lowell died suddenly in 1979, Browne wrote a song about it adressed to Inara called "Of Missing Persons," which appears on his 1980 album Hold Out.
  • "Your Bright Baby Blues" wasn't released as a single but became one of Jackson Browne's most popular songs, played at many of his concerts. It's part of his fourth album, The Pretender, which has a timeless quality thanks to high production value and songs that explore the human condition. Browne brought in Jon Landau, known for his work with Bruce Springsteen, to produce the set.
  • Browne feels the song is best understood within context of the album, where it's the second track. "The whole album is a cycle," he told Phonograph Record. "Because more happens on the second side it's more obvious that there's a continuity. That's only because the first side is preparatory. Like without having 'Your Bright Baby Blues' where it is, then 'Sleep's Dark And Silent Gate' wouldn't mean as much if you didn't have it there. The things discussed on the first side really come to a head on the second side, so it appears as if the second side is more connected, but it's not really."
  • Roy Bittan of Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band is the piano man on this track. The other musicians are:

    Chuck Rainey - bass
    Jim Gordon - drums
    Billy Payne - organ

Comments: 1

  • Bill from Us"I thought I flying like a bird
    So far above my sorrow
    But when I looked down
    I was standing on my knees"

    LYRICS That stand alone, yet are enhanced by the vocals and arraignments. This whole album is like this. This album caused me to go out and get most all of Jackson Browne's albums, AND Bonnie Raitt's albums, she sings some great back up on this.
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