Bruce Springsteen
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
Early thoughts though I still have a long way to go:
Streets of Phildelphia Sessions and Somewhere North of Nashville are both great (for totally different reasons).
I can't believe he recorded an entire Western Stars sequel album and didn't release it. Listening to that one now and enjoying it a lot.
Faithless sounds like it's playing with some really cool sonic textures. Looking forward to listening to all of that one.
On the flip side, I think it's going to be a long time before I get through all of Inyo (sleepy acoustic Bruce is my absolute least favorite style of his) or Garage Sessions ("Follow That Dream" is a good opener but the rest quickly becomes tiresome and most of the songs sound very unfinished).
Streets of Phildelphia Sessions and Somewhere North of Nashville are both great (for totally different reasons).
I can't believe he recorded an entire Western Stars sequel album and didn't release it. Listening to that one now and enjoying it a lot.
Faithless sounds like it's playing with some really cool sonic textures. Looking forward to listening to all of that one.
On the flip side, I think it's going to be a long time before I get through all of Inyo (sleepy acoustic Bruce is my absolute least favorite style of his) or Garage Sessions ("Follow That Dream" is a good opener but the rest quickly becomes tiresome and most of the songs sound very unfinished).
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
Okay, after getting deeper into this, I get it: it's way sleepier than WS. Where are all the energetic, uptempo songs?LoathedVermin72 wrote:I can't believe he recorded an entire Western Stars sequel album and didn't release it. Listening to that one now and enjoying it a lot.
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
Imagine if Bruce had released Streets of Philadelphia and Somewhere North of Nashville as his '90s albums instead of Human Touch, Lucky Town, and Tom Joad. Man.
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liebzz
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
We are very much on the same page. There’s a lot of me reading that the ‘83 sessions are the most essential, but I keep thinking that feels both incomplete and often redundant in terms of a conceptual recycle. Streets of Philadelphia sessions are much more interesting, not just because Bruce is branching out a lot more than you would expect, but also because there’s still more range in that.LoathedVermin72 wrote:Early thoughts though I still have a long way to go:
Streets of Phildelphia Sessions and Somewhere North of Nashville are both great (for totally different reasons).
I can't believe he recorded an entire Western Stars sequel album and didn't release it. Listening to that one now and enjoying it a lot.
Faithless sounds like it's playing with some really cool sonic textures. Looking forward to listening to all of that one.
On the flip side, I think it's going to be a long time before I get through all of Inyo (sleepy acoustic Bruce is my absolute least favorite style of his) or Garage Sessions ("Follow That Dream" is a good opener but the rest quickly becomes tiresome and most of the songs sound very unfinished).
The Somewhere North of Nashville was probably my favorite and the Western Stars sequel is great. I really enjoyed it the first time he visited that sound and I think this is just about as good.
- oasisfan35
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
Twilight Hoursliebzz wrote:We are very much on the same page. There’s a lot of me reading that the ‘83 sessions are the most essential, but I keep thinking that feels both incomplete and often redundant in terms of a conceptual recycle. Streets of Philadelphia sessions are much more interesting, not just because Bruce is branching out a lot more than you would expect, but also because there’s still more range in that.LoathedVermin72 wrote:Early thoughts though I still have a long way to go:
Streets of Phildelphia Sessions and Somewhere North of Nashville are both great (for totally different reasons).
I can't believe he recorded an entire Western Stars sequel album and didn't release it. Listening to that one now and enjoying it a lot.
Faithless sounds like it's playing with some really cool sonic textures. Looking forward to listening to all of that one.
On the flip side, I think it's going to be a long time before I get through all of Inyo (sleepy acoustic Bruce is my absolute least favorite style of his) or Garage Sessions ("Follow That Dream" is a good opener but the rest quickly becomes tiresome and most of the songs sound very unfinished).
The Somewhere North of Nashville was probably my favorite and the Western Stars sequel is great. I really enjoyed it the first time he visited that sound and I think this is just about as good.
absinthe makes the heart grow fonder...
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liebzz
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
oasisfan35 wrote:Twilight Hoursliebzz wrote:We are very much on the same page. There’s a lot of me reading that the ‘83 sessions are the most essential, but I keep thinking that feels both incomplete and often redundant in terms of a conceptual recycle. Streets of Philadelphia sessions are much more interesting, not just because Bruce is branching out a lot more than you would expect, but also because there’s still more range in that.LoathedVermin72 wrote:Early thoughts though I still have a long way to go:
Streets of Phildelphia Sessions and Somewhere North of Nashville are both great (for totally different reasons).
I can't believe he recorded an entire Western Stars sequel album and didn't release it. Listening to that one now and enjoying it a lot.
Faithless sounds like it's playing with some really cool sonic textures. Looking forward to listening to all of that one.
On the flip side, I think it's going to be a long time before I get through all of Inyo (sleepy acoustic Bruce is my absolute least favorite style of his) or Garage Sessions ("Follow That Dream" is a good opener but the rest quickly becomes tiresome and most of the songs sound very unfinished).
The Somewhere North of Nashville was probably my favorite and the Western Stars sequel is great. I really enjoyed it the first time he visited that sound and I think this is just about as good.
I keep forgetting…
- oasisfan35
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
It is but not entirely...liebzz wrote:oasisfan35 wrote:Twilight Hoursliebzz wrote:We are very much on the same page. There’s a lot of me reading that the ‘83 sessions are the most essential, but I keep thinking that feels both incomplete and often redundant in terms of a conceptual recycle. Streets of Philadelphia sessions are much more interesting, not just because Bruce is branching out a lot more than you would expect, but also because there’s still more range in that.LoathedVermin72 wrote:Early thoughts though I still have a long way to go:
Streets of Phildelphia Sessions and Somewhere North of Nashville are both great (for totally different reasons).
I can't believe he recorded an entire Western Stars sequel album and didn't release it. Listening to that one now and enjoying it a lot.
Faithless sounds like it's playing with some really cool sonic textures. Looking forward to listening to all of that one.
On the flip side, I think it's going to be a long time before I get through all of Inyo (sleepy acoustic Bruce is my absolute least favorite style of his) or Garage Sessions ("Follow That Dream" is a good opener but the rest quickly becomes tiresome and most of the songs sound very unfinished).
The Somewhere North of Nashville was probably my favorite and the Western Stars sequel is great. I really enjoyed it the first time he visited that sound and I think this is just about as good.
I keep forgetting…
The first disc feels more reminiscent of the first Tracks release in covering more ground as opposed to being a cohesive effort but also includes things we have heard before.Originally recorded 2010-2011 and 2017-2018, during the Western Stars sessions.
absinthe makes the heart grow fonder...
- LoathedVermin72
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
At the end of this, Bruce says he finished everything in his vaults during the pandemic, and that there will be a Tracks III.
- oasisfan35
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
That was great, totally forgot about it with the teaser months ago; thanks. The end is fantastic:LoathedVermin72 wrote:
At the end of this, Bruce says he finished everything in his vaults during the pandemic, and that there will be a Tracks III.
Interviewer: Thank you so much Bruce.
Springsteen: All right, is that it?
Interviewer: Yeah...
Springsteen: Great.
He doesn't say it but you can just see he's like "I gotta take a piss"
Rolling Stone also has an interview with Tracks III being more akin to the first effort.
absinthe makes the heart grow fonder...
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
I got the single CD Lost And Found compilation and am really enjoying it for the most part -- I've been through it a couple times over the past few days and there are a lot of great songs, my favorites being "Blind Spot," "Something In The Well," "The Lost Charro," "Sunday Love," and "I'm Not Sleeping."
Dipping my toes into the full set now-- all of the songs on the LA Garage Sessions album have some weird effect on the vocals that I find extremely distracting, and I agree with LV that the whole thing sounds very demo-ish (and not in a good way like Nebraska). Bruce has been mining this era for a lot longer than he's been mining the '90's and beyond, so it's not surprising that he's a bit closer to the bottom of the barrel, but on a cursory listen I think I'll end up finding this the least interesting batch of songs in the set.
Dipping my toes into the full set now-- all of the songs on the LA Garage Sessions album have some weird effect on the vocals that I find extremely distracting, and I agree with LV that the whole thing sounds very demo-ish (and not in a good way like Nebraska). Bruce has been mining this era for a lot longer than he's been mining the '90's and beyond, so it's not surprising that he's a bit closer to the bottom of the barrel, but on a cursory listen I think I'll end up finding this the least interesting batch of songs in the set.
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
Very different for sure! That said, I think I get why most of this stuff was kept back, commercially speaking -- after Human Touch and Lucky Town knocked his star down the ladder a few rungs, an album based on loops and/or a fairly straight-on country album probably would have been seen as further evidence of creative drift, and lost on overly serious/purist '90's rock audiences. The Greatest Hits album that came out instead seemed like an attempt to get him back into the public eye on good terms by reminding people how great he'd been in his best years (and introducing that stuff to a new generation of listeners), coupled with Tom Joad which seemed like an effort to regain some critical footing by releasing something that was serious, literary, "mature," etc. (not sure any of it worked, as he ultimately went radio silent and then got back with the E Street Band a few years later for a high profile reunion tour, but I think I get the in-the-moment logic). But it's certainly fascinating to hear it now, and no doubt it's high quality stuff -- not castoff-level material by any means.LoathedVermin72 wrote:Imagine if Bruce had released Streets of Philadelphia and Somewhere North of Nashville as his '90s albums instead of Human Touch, Lucky Town, and Tom Joad. Man.
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
What is Bruce Springsteen's signature song?
It's either "Born in the USA" or "Born to Run" right?
It's either "Born in the USA" or "Born to Run" right?
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
i would think here in the states it is born in the USA but for all the wrong reasons
Did the Mother Fucker pay extra to yell?
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
I would say “Born to Run” — some years ago I would have said maybe “Born In the USA” but I think it’s faded a bit.
For folks of a certain generation it’s probably “Dancing In the Dark” but over time, legacywise, probably “Born to Run.”
For folks of a certain generation it’s probably “Dancing In the Dark” but over time, legacywise, probably “Born to Run.”
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
This for sure. He has a lot of songs that could be considered signature - Hungry Heart, Badlands, Thunder Road and Glory Days are all also on that list, even if not all of those are my personal favorites.Kevin Davis wrote:I would say “Born to Run” — some years ago I would have said maybe “Born In the USA” but I think it’s faded a bit.
For folks of a certain generation it’s probably “Dancing In the Dark” but over time, legacywise, probably “Born to Run.”
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
His "Streets of Philadelphia" song was huge over here, I'm pretty sure I hadn't paid any attention before that one.liebzz wrote:This for sure. He has a lot of songs that could be considered signature - Hungry Heart, Badlands, Thunder Road and Glory Days are all also on that list, even if not all of those are my personal favorites.Kevin Davis wrote:I would say “Born to Run” — some years ago I would have said maybe “Born In the USA” but I think it’s faded a bit.
For folks of a certain generation it’s probably “Dancing In the Dark” but over time, legacywise, probably “Born to Run.”
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
I'm recording a podcast about it. In the format, we agree on 6 contenders and then we debate the final pick.
My contenders for Bruce are
Born to Run
Thunder Road
Born in the USA
Dancing in the Dark
I'm On Fire
The Rising
And my final pick is Born to Run.
Does that seem right?
My contenders for Bruce are
Born to Run
Thunder Road
Born in the USA
Dancing in the Dark
I'm On Fire
The Rising
And my final pick is Born to Run.
Does that seem right?
Anders wrote:I do not have a «neoliberal assessment of geopolitics», so please stop writing that I do.
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
i dont think you can be wrong. i would say maybe take im on fire off of there and any of those people would say...oh thats bruce's best songJorge wrote:I'm recording a podcast about it. In the format, we agree on 6 contenders and then we debate the final pick.
My contenders for Bruce are
Born to Run
Thunder Road
Born in the USA
Dancing in the Dark
I'm On Fire
The Rising
And my final pick is Born to Run.
Does that seem right?
Did the Mother Fucker pay extra to yell?
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
That's my favorite of his, haha. But the idea here is to nail down some candidates for "signature song" which takes the general public into account. I think "I'm On Fire" has the weakest argument for that out of that group
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Re: Bruce Springsteen
Jorge wrote:That's my favorite of his, haha. But the idea here is to nail down some candidates for "signature song" which takes the general public into account. I think "I'm On Fire" has the weakest argument for that out of that group
it is surely a good song but i just dont think it is as associated with bruce as the others are
Did the Mother Fucker pay extra to yell?