Recording history Springsteen entered
Atlantic Studios in New York City with Landau and the E Street Band to record his next album on June 1, 1977, four days after the legal proceedings ended. Springsteen initially focused on pre-written material before turning his attention to unfinished compositions for which he had written music but not lyrics. Songs recorded or attempted at Atlantic, some of which he had used in live sets, included: "Rendezvous", "The Promise", "Frankie", "Don't Look Back", "Something in the Night", "
Because the Night", "
Racing in the Street", "
Fire" (which Springsteen wrote for
Elvis Presley), "Breakaway", "Our Love Will Last Forever", a
ballad titled "One Way Street", and two rockers named "I Wanna Be with You" and "Outside Lookin' In". Unlike the sessions for
Born to Run, the full band recorded the songs at once and moved quickly from one to the next, often shortly after Springsteen had written them. Landau had informed
CBS Records to not schedule a release date, wanting to ensure Springsteen had the right songs for the album at the right time. By September 1977, Springsteen grew frustrated with Atlantic's sound and environment and moved recording to the
Record Plant, where most of
Born to Run had been recorded. Weinberg, who suffered from illness during most of the sessions, remembered Springsteen
demanding perfection from the musicians while simultaneously giving them little direction, saying he "[let] things flow" and did not "nitpick over details". Van Zandt also had a hand in the arrangements, With Springsteen still unsatisfied, the sessions continued into November and December, with the band recording "
Adam Raised a Cain" and "Give the Girl a Kiss". The ballad "Let's Go Tonight" was rewritten as "Factory" with new lyrics and the incomplete compositions "Candy's Boy" and an untitled piece referred to as "The Fast Song" were combined into "Candy's Room". "
Darkness on the Edge of Town" was recorded during the tail end of the sessions in March 1978; Springsteen later said the band found the song's drum sound in Record Plant's Studio A while it was being renovated. The intention to record most of the backing tracks live with minimal
overdubs was hindered by the studio's carpeted floors, which muffled
resonance. The sessions reportedly yielded between 50 and 70 songs, although only 32 are known. After nine months, recording completed in January 1978, with overdubs extending into February and March. According to the authors Philippe Margotin and Jean-Michel Guesdon, Springsteen had a rule when choosing songs for the final track list: "Each song had to remain sober and austere, so as to convey its message as effectively as possible." Choosing ten tracks for the album, now called
Darkness on the Edge of Town, he scrapped songs he felt did not fit the desired theme, were too bland, or too commercial. He gave several songs to other artists: "Hearts of Stone" and "Talk to Me" to
Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes; "Because the Night" to
Patti Smith; "Fire" to
Robert Gordon; "Rendezvous" to
Greg Kihn; "Don't Look Back" to
the Knack; and "
This Little Girl" to
Gary U.S. Bonds. The tracks "Independence Day", "Drive All Night", "
Sherry Darling", and "
Ramrod" were held over for Springsteen's next album,
The River (1980), while others surfaced on
bootlegs before official releases on
compilations such as
Tracks (1998) and
The Promise (2010). "
Darlington County", later recorded for and released on
Born in the U.S.A. (1984), was also written during the
Darkness sessions. Springsteen said in a 1978 interview that he felt it "wasn't the right time" to release the extra material, nor did he want to "sacrifice the intensity" of the album.
Sound and mixing Springsteen struggled to achieve the exact sounds he envisioned for the record, which he admitted was due to his and Landau's inexperience as producers. He wrote in his 2016 autobiography that "as with
Born to Run, our recording process was thwarted by our seeming inability to get the most basic acceptable sounds." While Landau wanted "a highly professional, technically perfect sound", Van Zandt sought a "more
garage-band tone color". Springsteen assigned the engineer
Jimmy Iovine to create a combination of the two's ideals; however Iovine and the assistant engineer
Thom Panunzio struggled to achieve this goal. Iovine found trying to get the guitar sound was "impossible", while Panunzio described the drums as the hardest to record.
Mixing extended into May 1978, specifically for "The Promised Land". Iovine, suffering from exhaustion after months of recording, was replaced by the Los Angeles producer and engineer
Chuck Plotkin, who created a balanced mix. The album was
mastered by Mike Reese in Los Angeles. Van Zandt hated the final mix, saying the final record contained some of Springsteen's "best and most important songs", but suffered from "terrible production". ==Music and lyrics==