Album: Tracks II: The Lost Albums (2025)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "Inyo" might just be one of the most Springsteen things Bruce Springsteen ever recorded: a sweeping American parable full of dust, drought, and doomed idealism, all set to a quietly smoldering acoustic strum. The song takes its name from Inyo County, California, which sits between the Sierra Nevada mountains and the state of Nevada.
  • "Inyo" tells the story of the Los Angeles Aqueduct, the century-old engineering marvel that sucked the Owens Valley dry so the City of Angels could bloom in the desert. Springsteen threads through the tale of Bill Mulholland and Fred Eaton - the men who dreamed up the project in 1904 - and the devastation left behind among the farmers and Native communities who watched their water, and livelihoods, flow south. It's a kind of California-set "Born In The U.S.A.," except instead of soldiers returning from war, we get parched fields, broken treaties, and moral thirst.
  • The song was partly inspired by Margaret Leslie Davis' Rivers in the Desert, a history of the California water wars that helped birth modern Los Angeles. Springsteen read it while living in LA and finding himself captivated by the paradox of progress, something he'd been wrestling with since "The River."
  • The song is both the title track and opening song of the Inyo album, a thematic 10-song collection that remained unheard for three decades and was finally released in 2025 as part of Springsteen's Tracks II: The Lost Albums box set. A dusty series of border songs, Inyo explores the Mexican-American experience through a series of character studies, with a mood of quiet intensity.

    "He was thinking about manifest destiny and the drive to California," writer Erik Flanagan, who interviewed Springsteen at length for the liner notes, told Uncut magazine. "His parents had moved across country and he became infatuated with California culture."
  • The song emerged from creative inspiration during long drives along the California aqueduct, up through Inyo County on my way to Yosemite or Death Valley. "I was enjoying that kind of writing so much," said Springsteen. "I would go home to the hotel room at night and continue to write in that style because I thought I was going to follow up The Ghost of Tom Joad with a similar record, but I didn't. That's where 'Inyo' came from. It's one of my favorites."
  • Musically, "Inyo" is stripped down: Springsteen on acoustic guitar and synthesizer, producer Ron Aniello adding bass, and Soozie Tyrell contributing violin. The arrangement feels as dry and windswept as the desert it describes.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Intentionally Atrocious

Intentionally AtrociousSong Writing

A selection of songs made to be terrible - some clearly achieved that goal.

Church Lyrics

Church LyricsMusic Quiz

Here is the church, here is the steeple - see if you can identify these lyrics that reference church.

Amanda Palmer

Amanda PalmerSongwriter Interviews

Call us crazy, but we like it when an artist comes around who doesn't mesh with the status quo.

Maria Muldaur

Maria MuldaurSongwriter Interviews

The "Midnight At The Oasis" singer is an Old Time gal. She talks about her jug band beginnings and shares a Dylan story.

Justin Hayward of The Moody Blues

Justin Hayward of The Moody BluesSongwriter Interviews

Justin wrote the classic "Nights In White Satin," but his fondest musical memories are from a different decade.

Scott Gorham of Thin Lizzy and Black Star Riders

Scott Gorham of Thin Lizzy and Black Star RidersSongwriter Interviews

Writing with Phil Lynott, Scott saw their ill-fated frontman move to a darker place in his life and lyrics.