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Turn the Page (Bob Seger song)

"Turn the Page"
Single by Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band
from the album Back in '72, Live Bullet
Released 1973 (original), 1976 (live)
Recorded 1972 (original), September 1975 (live version)
Cobo Hall, Detroit, Michigan
Genre Rock, Soul
Length 5:11, 5:06 (live)
Label Capitol
Writer(s) Bob Seger
Producer(s) Punch Andrews, Bob Seger
"Turn the Page"
Metallica - Turn the Page cover.jpg
Single by Metallica
from the album Garage Inc.
B-side "Bleeding Me"/"Stone Cold Crazy"/"The Wait"
Released November 16, 1998
Format CD single
Recorded September–October 1998
Genre Heavy metal
Length 6:06
Label Elektra
Writer(s) Bob Seger
Metallica singles chronology
"Fuel"
(1998)
"Turn the Page"
(1998)
"Whiskey in the Jar"
(1999)
Music video
"Turn the Page" on YouTube

"Turn the Page" is a song originally released by Bob Seger in 1973 on his Back in '72 album. Though never released as a single, Seger's live version of the song on the 1976 Live Bullet album became a mainstay of album-oriented rock radio stations, and still gets significant airplay to this day on classic rock stations.

"Turn the Page" is about the emotional and social ups and downs of a rock musician's life on the road. Seger wrote it in 1972 while touring with Teegarden & Van Winkle. Drummer David Teegarden (of Teegarden & Van Winkle and later the Silver Bullet Band) recalls:

We had been playing somewhere in the Midwest, or the northern reaches, on our way to North or South Dakota. [Guitarist] Mike Bruce was with us. We'd been traveling all night from the Detroit area to make this gig, driving in this blinding snowstorm. It was probably 3 in the morning. Mike decided it was time to get gas. He was slowing down to exit the interstate and spied a truck stop. We all had very long hair back then – it was the hippie era – but Skip, Mike and Bob had all stuffed their hair up in their hats. You had to be careful out on the road like that, because you'd get ostracized. When I walked in, there was this gauntlet of truckers making comments – "Is that a girl or man?" I was seething; those guys were laughing their asses off, a big funny joke. That next night, after we played our gig – I think it was Mitchell, S.D. – Seger says, "Hey, I've been working on this song for a bit, I've got this new line for it. He played it on acoustic guitar, and there was that line: "Oh, the same old cliches / 'Is that a woman or a man?' " It was "Turn the Page."

Tom Weschler, then road manager for Seger, remembers the same incident:

"Turn the Page," Bob's great road song, came along in '72, while we were driving home from a gig. I think we were in Dubuque, Iowa, in winter and stopped at a restaurant. We stood out when we entered a store or a gas station or a restaurant en masse. At this restaurant it was particularly bright inside, so there weren't any dark corners to hide in. All these local guys were looking at us like, "What are these guys? Is that a woman or a man?" – just like in the song. ... That was one incident, but there were so many others on the road that led Seger to write that song.

While on tour in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on November 16, 2006, promoting his 16th studio album Face the Promise, Seger himself said: "I wrote this song in 1972 in a hotel room in Eau Claire, Wisconsin," prior to beginning the song.


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Wikipedia

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