I Don't Want to Go Home was the first album by New Jersey rock/R&B band Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes. The work helped establish the basis of the Jersey Shore sound. It was produced and arranged by manager Steven Van Zandt, who also sang, played guitar, wrote the title song, and elicited the contribution of two compositions by Bruce Springsteen, who also wrote the liner notes.[5]
The album features two perennial standards for the band, Steve Van Zandt's "I Don't Want to Go Home" and "The Fever" by Bruce Springsteen. There were a number of guest artists and duets, a tradition that continued in their next album, This Time It's for Real. The track "How Come You Treat Me So Bad" features a duet with Lee Dorsey, while "Broke Down Piece of Man" features a duet with Steven Van Zandt, "It Ain't the Meat (It's the Motion)" features a duet with Kenny 'Popeye' Pentifallo, and finally "You Mean So Much To Me" features a duet with Ronnie Spector.[6][7]
- Southside Johnny – lead vocals, harmonica
- Kenny 'Popeye' Pentifallo – drums, vocals (duet "It Ain't the Meat")
- Kevin Kavanaugh – keyboards, vocals
- Billy Rush – guitar
- Alan Berger – bass
- Carlo Novi - tenor saxophone
- Steven Van Zandt – guitar, vocals (duet "Broke Down Piece of Man")
- Clarence Clemons (credited as Selmon T. Sachs) - bass vocals ("The Fever")
- Lee Dorsey - duet vocals ("How Come You Treat Me So Bad")
- Ronnie Spector - duet vocals ("You Mean So Much To Me")
- The Miami Horns:
- Rick Gazda – trumpet (mute solo "It Ain't the Meat")
- Deacon Earl Gardner - trumpet, witness
- Bob Malach - tenor saxophone
- Louie 'The Lover' Parenti – trombone
- Bill Zacagni - baritone saxophone
- Strings:
- Charles Parker - violin
- Robert Zelnick - violin
- Naomi Anner - violin
- Cathy Tait - violin
- Nardo Poy - viola
- Ken Dreyfus - viola
- Revelation (background vocals on "The Fever"):
- Steven Van Zandt - producer
- Jimmy Iovine - engineer
- Dave Thoener - assistant engineer
- Mitchel Funk - photography
- Paula Scher - designer
- Bud Copeland - stylist[7]