All of the songs on
Street Hassle were written by Reed, including "Real Good Time Together", a track that dates back to his days as a member of
the Velvet Underground. Recording of a live album began in
Munich and
Ludwigshafen, West Germany. Unlike most live albums, the audience is completely muted from the mix during the concert recordings. Upon returning to the United States in August 1977,
Arista Records told Reed releasing a live album was not an option, which began the NYC studio phase of the album. Then, producer Richard Robinson left the project after a fight in the studio. Determined to carry on, Reed moved the proceedings to
Record Plant studios, accompanied by his recording engineer, Rod O’Brien. Encouragement to focus and expand on the title song, "
Street Hassle", came from Arista President
Clive Davis, resulting in a three-part suite 11 minutes in length. The only song to be wholly written and recorded in the studio, culminating in a lyric by Reed, "Tramps like us, we were born to pay". After his engineer advised him that line belonged to somebody else, they both went downstairs, where
Bruce Springsteen was working on his fourth studio album, which would be titled
Darkness on the Edge of Town. Not only did Springsteen allow his "
Born to Run" phrase to be used, he personally sang the line at Reed's request. By all accounts, the part was completed in one or two takes, to the mutual satisfaction of both.
Binaural recording The recording of
Street Hassle was notable in that Reed and his co-producer chose to employ an experimental
microphone placement technique called
binaural recording. In binaural recording, two microphones are placed in the studio in an attempt to mimic the
stereo sound of actually being in the room with the performers and instruments. In the case of the recording sessions and concerts that composed
Street Hassle, engineers used a
mannequin head with a microphone implanted in each ear. Binaural recordings are generally only effective when the user listens to the album through
headphones, and do not generally translate correctly through stereo speakers. Reed's particular binaural recording system was developed by Manfred Schunke of the German company Delta Acoustics; Schunke is credited as an engineer on
Street Hassle. Reed would continue to use the binaural recording style on two more releases: the 1978 live album
Live: Take No Prisoners and the 1979 studio album
The Bells. ==Songs and composition==