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Music Storytellers - BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN
Music Storytellers -  BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN Photo

Bruce Springsteen - 


Albums:


Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar; born 9/23/49)

Bruce Springsteen ranks alongside such rock and roll figureheads as Chuck BerryElvis Presley,the Beatles and Bob Dylan. Just as those artists shaped popular music, Springsteen served as a pivotal figure in its evolution with his rise to prominence in the mid-Seventies. Early on, he was touted as one of several heirs to Bob Dylan’s mantle. All of these would-be “new Dylans"-who also included Loudon Wainwright, John Prine and Elliott Murphy-rose above the hype, but Springsteen soared highest, catapulting himself to fame on the unrestrained energy of his live shows, the evocative power of his songwriting, and the direct connection he forged with his listeners.

Springsteen lifted rock and roll from its early Seventies doldrums, providing continuity and renewal at a point when it was sorely in need of both. During a decade in which disco, glam-rock, heavy-metal and arena-rock provided different forms of escape into fantasy, Springsteen restored a note of urgency and realism to the rock and roll landscape. Each painstakingly crafted album since his 1973 debut, Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J., has served as a literate pulse-taking of a generation’s fortunes. As a live performer, he offers himself as a “prisoner” of the music he loves, and each concert has been played as if it might be his last.

Springsteen grew up in the nondescript working-class town of Freehold, New Jersey. “Rock & roll was the only thing I ever liked about myself,” he once remarked. Prior to the release of Greetings from Asbury Park, Springsteen had been a struggling rocker on the Jersey shore for nearly a decade. His early groups included the Rogues, the Castiles, Earth, Child, Steel Mill, Dr. Zoom and the Sonic Boom and the Bruce Springsteen Band. His break came in 1972, when manager Mike Appel landed him an audience with Columbia Records executive John Hammond Sr. Moving between guitar and piano, Springsteen performed 12 originals at that May 3rd audition and was signed to Columbia, where he remains to this day.

Greetings from Asbury Park didn’t even make the Top 200 until it was belatedly pulled onto the charts by the success of Born to Run in 1975. All the same, it ignited a groundswell of support for Springsteen with such favorites as “Blinded by the Light,” “Growin’ Up” and “Spirit in the Night” Greetings featured such Jersey Shore vets as saxman Clarence Clemons, bassist Garry Tallent, keyboardist David Sancious and drummer Vini Lopez. Rounded out by keyboardist Danny Federici, a longtime Springsteen accompanist, this outfit was tagged “the E Street Band,” after a street in Belmar, New Jersey, where Sancious’ mother lived. Touring incessantly, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band built a grassroots following. Their profile was further raised with the November 1973 release of The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle, which included the rousing anthem “Rosalita (Come Out Tonight).”

Springsteen’s national breakout came at mid-decade with Born to Run, a recording milestone that consumed a full year. Densely layered in the rock-orchestral style of producer Phil Spector, every song conveyed an epic sweep, from “Born to Run” and “Thunder Road” to the lengthy side-closers “Backstreets” and “Jungleland.” Prior to its release, Springsteen played a legendary five-night stand at New York’s Bottom Line. By this time, the E Street Band’s classic lineup was set, with Springsteen accompanied by keyboardists Federici and Roy Bittan, guitarist Steve Van Zandt, saxophonist Clemons, bassist Tallent and drummer Max Weinberg.

Fame came quickly for the ascendant star, who simultaneously made the covers of Time andNewsweek in November 1975. However, internal problems were brewing, as Springsteen and Appel squared off in court over management contracts signed years earlier. Springsteen filed a massive suit, charging fraud, undue influence and breach of trust. Appel responded with an injunction that prevented Springsteen from recording. During the two-year legal imbroglio, Springsteen funneled songs to other artists, including Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes ("Fever") and Patti Smith ("Because the Night"). After the bruising lawsuit was settled out of court in 1977, Springsteen turned to Jon Landau-a former Rolling Stone writer/editor and a coproducer of Born to Run-for management. (It was Landau who had written, in a 1974 concert review, “I saw rock and roll’s future-and its name is Bruce Springsteen.") He also began work on his fourth album, Darkness On the Edge of Town.

A year later-and nearly three years after Born to Run-one of rock’s most eagerly anticipated albums was released. Darkness was noticeably sparer than Born to Run, reflecting “a certain loss of innocence-more so than in the other albums,” according to Springsteen. His next release, The River (1980), was a 20-song, four-sided tour de force that exchanged thematic unity for a mix of songs and styles, from playful party rockers to more sobering material like “Independence Day” and “Hungry Heart,” which reached #5 in December 1980. On tour, Springsteen’s live shows were now running upward of four hours.

Springsteen’s followup to his hard-won stardom was Nebraska, a low-fi, homemade album that found him putting the brakes on his swelling celebrity. It was a brief respite, however, as 1984’sBorn in the U.S.A. album and tour catapulted Springsteen to a level of fame few have ever known.  As an album, Born in the U.S.A. loomed larger than life, much like Michael Jackson’sThriller and Prince’s Purple Rain from the same period. Born in the U.S.A. ultimately sold 15 million copies, making it Columbia Records all-time best seller. Seven songs from Born in the U.S.A.-more than half the album’s contents-became Top Ten hits in 1984 and 1985. The four-night finale to the 15-month Born in the U.S.A. Tour drew 330,000 people to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

Springsteen had become one of rock’s most revered figures, and he didn’t take the charge lightly, saying: “I believe that the life of a rock & roll band will last as long as you look down into the audience and can see yourself, and your audience looks up at you and can see themselves-and as long as those reflections are human, realistic ones.” Even off the road, the Springsteen phenomenon roared on. Lines formed at stores across the country when Live/1975-85 went on sale in the fall of 1986. It wound up selling 3 million copies-an amazing feat for a box set. His next studio record, Tunnel of Love (1987), addressed one-on-one relationships rather than the larger rites of community that had been his preoccupation on Born in the U.S.A.

The longest break between Bruce Springsteen albums was the nearly five years that passed between Tunnel of Love and its followups, Human Touch and Lucky Town, released simultaneously in April 1992. During that hiatus, Springsteen parted ways with the E Street Band, married singer Patty Scialfa and began raising a family. He supported Human Touch andLucky Town with a tour for which he assembled a new band, retaining only keyboardist Roy Bittan from the old crew. In 1994, Springsteen contributed the somber “Streets of Philadelphia” to the soundtrack of the film Philadelphia. It became his first Top Ten single since “Tunnel of Love” and won four Grammys and an Academy Award.

Springsteen’s Greatest Hits retrospective appeared in late 1995, entering the charts at #1 and reuniting him with the E Street Band on a clutch of new tracks. The video Blood Brothers, which contained unreleased material, documented their low-key studio reconvening. Springsteen closed the year by releasing The Ghost of Tom Joad, a largely acoustic album of spectral songs about marginalized characters struggling to survive in an increasingly troubled America. He supported it with a solo acoustic tour of small halls. It was a far cry from the celebratory rock and roll marathons of the Born in the U.S.A. era, now fully a decade in the past.

The four-CD box set Tracks, which appeared in November 1998, offered 56 unreleased performances and 10 non-album B sides. A single-disc set of highlights, 18 Tracks, came out in April 1999. That same month, Springsteen reunited with the E Street Band for a world tour for the first time since 1988-89’s “Human Rights Now! Amnesty International Tour.” This time, the E Street lineup included both Steve Van Zandt and Nils Lofgren on guitar. With its near-instant sellouts and three-hour performances, it was just like old times for the band and their fans. Springsteen set a record by performing 15 consecutive sold-out shows at the Continental Airlines Arena (formerly the Meadowlands) in New Jersey. He also anted up a new recording-"Lift Me Up,” from the soundtrack for the John Sayles movie Limbo-in 1999. Meanwhile, the tour headed toward a July 1, 2000, finale at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

http://rockhall.com/inductees/bruce-springsteen/bio/


| Closed on 10/11/12 at 05:00PM
FanIQ Pts? No | Locker Room, Music | Multiple Choice Opinion Poll
13 Fans 
38%a. 10 (The Boss Rocks)
8%b. 7-9 (Love most of his work)
54%c. 5-6 (He's ok)
0%d. 1-4 (No interest / never heard of him)
0%e. BRUCE SUCKSTEEN!

 &nbp;
TOP COMMENT * * * * * * * * * * * *
#5 | 252 days ago

Check out the song "Youngstown"....about the area in which I dwell, and its spot on
10 (The Boss Rocks)  
  
12 Comments | Sorted by Most Recent First | Red = You Disagreed
Vote for your favorite comments. Fans decide the Top Comment (3+ votes) and also hide poor quality comments (4+ votes).
#1 | 252 days ago

I respect what he's done in the Music Industry, but, I was never a fan of his music (shrug).

I do, however, dig the Born In The USA album!
5-6 (He's ok)  
#2 | 252 days ago
unopescatore (+)

great representative of JERSEY!!!!!   good stuff
#3 | 252 days ago

If you like Bruce I highly suggest The Gaslight Anthem.  I'm a big fan of both.  Bruce's best song is Streets of Philadelphia from the movie Invincible.  I'm going to rock out to it right now. 
#4 | 252 days ago

    I like his alot of his songs mostly in a "party" type atmosphere.

    His music is good, but not something I sit around and listen to...........

    There are a couple of songs that do stick out...Born In The USA,,,,Independence Day, Tunnel of Love....                         indecision
5-6 (He's ok)  
#5 | 252 days ago

Check out the song "Youngstown"....about the area in which I dwell, and its spot on
10 (The Boss Rocks)  
#6 | 252 days ago

Just about everyone in New Jersey back in the day say that they knew him.........................They just might have, because he was just about everywhere from Freehold to Asbury Park.
5-6 (He's ok)  
#7 | 252 days ago

jswol54 wrote:
If you like Bruce I highly suggest The Gaslight Anthem.  I'm a big fan of both.  Bruce's best song is Streets of Philadelphia from the movie Invincible.  I'm going to rock out to it right now. 
STREETS OF PHILADELPHIA is from the movie PHILADELPHIA,  where Tom Hanks plays a gay lawyer who is fired for having AIDS, won him his 2nd Oscar.

Great film, great song (won Bruce Grammy and Oscar).
10 (The Boss Rocks)  
#8 | 252 days ago

Greatest rock and roll song that defines our generation (if you are between 40-55) is BORN TO RUN.

And it is still relevant today.

BORN TO RUN
Lyrics and composition by Bruce Springsteen

In the day we sweat it out in the streets of a runaway american dream
At night we ride through mansions of glory in suicide machines
Sprung from cages out on highway 9,
Chrome wheeled, fuel injected and steppin out over the line
Baby this town rips the bones from your back
Its a death trap, it's a suicide rap
We gotta get out while were young
`cause tramps like us, baby we were born to run

Wendy let me in I wanna be your friend
I want to guard your dreams and visions
Just wrap your legs round these velvet rims
And strap your hands across my engines
Together we could break this trap
Well run till we drop, baby well never go back
Will you walk with me out on the wire
`cause baby Im just a scared and lonely rider
But I gotta find out how it feels
I want to know if love is wild, girl I want to know if love is real

Beyond the palace hemi-powered drones scream down the boulevard
The girls comb their hair in rearview mirrors
And the boys try to look so hard
The amusement park rises bold and stark
Kids are huddled on the beach in a mist
I wanna die with you wendy on the streets tonight
In an everlasting kiss

The highways jammed with broken heroes on a last chance power drive
Everybodys out on the run tonight but there's no place left to hide
Together wendy well live with the sadness
Ill love you with all the madness in my soul
Someday girl I don't know when were gonna get to that place
Where we really want to go and well walk in the sun
But till then tramps like us baby we were born to run

And don't forget about how Springsteen speaks up for the working poor, the middle class and how they are getting screwed by the Democrats and Republicans to the point that the American Dream is nothing more than A Nightmare from Wall Street. And he also stands up for the Vietnam veterans; BORN IN THE USA is a long overdue love letter to the veterans who served in Vietnam.   His music is like Sinatra, Elvis, and very few others--in another 100 years, it will still be relevant as it is today and was 50 years ago.
10 (The Boss Rocks)  
#9 | 252 days ago

he's ok.......he rocks!  did he do "summer of 69?
10 (The Boss Rocks)  
#10 | 252 days ago

kmj22 wrote:
he's ok.......he rocks!  did he do "summer of 69?
lol - that was Bryan Adams
5-6 (He's ok)  
#11 | 250 days ago

(Edited by icfeet)
Being from the NJ Shore, Springsteen was a guy that EVERYONE seemed to love.....and with my, at times, contrarian ways, I decided not to like him much.  I didn't think he could sing, I really wasn't a fan.  He grew up about 10 miles from here, and has been known to show up at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park unannounced (though, in the 25-30 shows my son has played there, I've never seen him).

I started to like Bruce a lot more with Born In the USA album...I guess it was Dancing In The Dark that made me appreciate him more, and I started to like his music more.

My son's first band was called "Chaosis", and their drummer was Jay Weinberg, Max's son.  Max is a hell of a nice guy, and one night when my son's band was playing a show in Springfield, VA, we went out to dinner after the show.  Max regaled us with  some of the band stories about the 3-4 hour shows, etc.  Max also was a friend of Les Paul (R.I.P.), and told us of stories about him.  I've never met Bruce, but did have the occasion to meet Stevie Van Zandt...I guess since I'm from the Jersey Shore, I've got to like Bruce... 
10 (The Boss Rocks)  
#12 | 249 days ago

icfeet wrote:
Being from the NJ Shore, Springsteen was a guy that EVERYONE seemed to love.....and with my, at times, contrarian ways, I decided not to like him much.  I didn't think he could sing, I really wasn't a fan.  He grew up about 10 miles from here, and has been known to show up at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park unannounced (though, in the 25-30 shows my son has played there, I've never seen him).

I started to like Bruce a lot more with Born In the USA album...I guess it was Dancing In The Dark that made me appreciate him more, and I started to like his music more.

My son's first band was called "Chaosis", and their drummer was Jay Weinberg, Max's son.  Max is a hell of a nice guy, and one night when my son's band was playing a show in Springfield, VA, we went out to dinner after the show.  Max regaled us with  some of the band stories about the 3-4 hour shows, etc.  Max also was a friend of Les Paul (R.I.P.), and told us of stories about him.  I've never met Bruce, but did have the occasion to meet Stevie Van Zandt...I guess since I'm from the Jersey Shore, I've got to like Bruce... 
Awesome story, Kurt!   Thanks for sharing that!  yes
5-6 (He's ok)  

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