Getting ready for the Bruce Springsteen concert in Austin this past Thursday night I went through all of his studio albums and picked out my favorites. Yes, some of his biggest songs are missing. Yes, the list might change on another day. You'll see that I favor those songs with the tightest lyrics, that flow with the music, that make you want to sing along. Here they are, in chronological order. And here's the Spotify playlist.
I got into Bruce with his 1973 album, The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle, and then soon went back and picked up his first album, from earlier in 1973, Greetings From Asbury Park. I love a lot of those songs but it wasn't until Born to Run came out in 1975 (the one that landed him on the covers of Newsweek and Time, back when that was a big thing) that I feel that Bruce tightened his songwriting and music and produced some of the best rock 'n' roll ever.
Thunder Road (1975)
So you're scared and you're thinkingThat maybe we ain't that young anymoreShow a little faith, there's magic in the nightYou ain't a beauty but, hey, you're alrightOh, and that's alright with me
Born to Run (1975)
In the day we sweat it out on the streetsOf a runaway American dreamAt night we ride through the mansions of gloryIn suicide machinesSprung from cages on Highway 9Chrome wheeled, fuel injected, and steppin' out over the lineOh, baby this town rips the bones from your backIt's a death trap, it's a suicide rapWe gotta get out while we're young'Cause tramps like us, baby, we were born to run
The crazy thing, as we recently learned in his podcasts with Obama, is that Bruce probably didn't know how to drive when he wrote this!
After his long legal fight to gain control of his publishing, which left him near broke, Bruce returned in 1978 to spit in the face of anyone who tried to hold him down with the album Darkness On the Edge of Town, which included three of my favorites.
Badlands (1978)
For the ones who have a notion, a notion deep insideThat it ain't no sin to be glad you're aliveI wanna find one face that ain't looking through meI wanna find one place, I wanna spit in the face of theseBadlands, you gotta live it everydayLet the broken hearts stand as the price you've gotta payKeep movin' till it's understoodAnd these badlands start treating us good
The Promised Land (1978)
The dogs on Main Street howl 'cause they understandIf I could reach one moment into my handsMister I ain't a boy, no I'm a manAnd I believe in a promised land
Big Man sax break and then:
Well there's a dark cloud rising from the desert floorI packed my bags and I'm heading straight into the stormGonna be a twister to blow everything downThat ain't got the faith to stand its groundBlow away the dreams that tear you apartBlow away the dreams that break your heartBlow away the lies that leave you nothing but lost and brokenhearted
Bruce has shown us he has that faith for fifty years!
Darkness On the Edge of Town (1978)
Well they're still racing out at the TrestlesBut that blood it never burned in her veinsNow I hear she's got a house up in FairviewAnd a style she's trying to maintainWell, if she wants to see meYou can tell her that I'm easily foundTell her there's a spot out 'neath Abram's BridgeAnd tell herThere's a darkness on the edge of townThere's a darkness on the edge of town
Bruce put out The River, a double-record set, in 1980. So many great songs but two, very different, songs have stayed with me.
Sherry Darling (1980)
Your Mamma's yapping in the back seatTell her to push over and move them big feetEvery Monday morning I gotta drive her down to the unemployment agencyWell this morning I ain't fighting tell her I give upTell her she wins if she'll just shut upBut it's the last time that she's gonna be riding with meYou can tell her there's a hot sun beating on the black topShe keeps talking she'll be walking that last blockShe can take a subway back to the ghetto tonightWell I got some beer and the highway's freeAnd I got you, and baby, you've got meHey, hey, hey what you say, Sherry Darling?
Wreck on the Highway (1980)
Last night I was out drivingComing home at the end of the working dayI was riding alone through the drizzling rainOn a deserted stretch of a county two-laneWhen I came upon a wreck on the highwayThere was blood and glass all overAnd there was nobody there but meAs the rain tumbled down hard and coldI seen a young man lying by the side of the roadHe cried, "Mister, won't you help me please?"An ambulance finally came and took him to RiversideI watched as they drove him awayAnd I thought of a girlfriend or a young wifeAnd a state trooper knocking in the middle of the nightTo say your baby died in a wreck on the highway
Sometimes I sit up in the darknessAnd I watch my baby as she sleepsThen I climb in bed and I hold her tight
I just lay there awake in the middle of the night
Thinking 'bout the wreck on the highway
In 1984 came the Born in the USA album, which made Bruce a superstar. All great songs but I'm picking just one.
My Hometown (1984)
In '65 tension was running highAt my high schoolThere was a lot of fightsBetween the black and whiteThere was nothing you could doTwo cars at a light on a Saturday nightIn the back seat there was a gunWords were passed, a shotgun blastTroubled times had comeTo my hometownNow Main Street's whitewashed windowsAnd vacant storesSeems like there ain't nobodyWants to come down here no moreThey're closing down the textile millAcross the railroad tracksForeman says, these jobs are going, boysAnd they ain't coming backTo your hometown
In 1987 Bruce released Brilliant Disguise, recorded during a time when his first marriage, to Julianne Phillips, was falling apart, and his relationship with his backup singer, Patti Scialfa, was beginning. These two songs show his increasing maturity and vulnerability about relationships.
Tougher Than the Rest (1987)
The road is dark and it's a thin thin lineBut I want you to know I'll walk it for you any timeMaybe your other boyfriends couldn't pass the testWell, if you're rough and ready for loveHoney, I'm tougher than the rest
Walk Like a Man (1987)
I remember how rough your hand felt on mineOn my wedding dayAnd the tears cried on my shoulderI couldn't turn awayWell so much has happened to meThat I don't understandAll I can think of is being five years old following behind you at the beachTracing your footprints in the sandTrying to walk like a manBy Our Lady Of The RosesWe lived in the shadow of the elmsI remember ma draggin' me and my sister up the street to the churchWhenever she heard those wedding bellsWell would they ever look so happy againThe handsome groom and his brideAs they stepped into that long black limousineFor their mystery rideWell tonight you step away from meAnd alone at the altar I standAnd as I watch my bride coming down the aisle I prayFor the strength to walk like a manWell now the years have gone and I've grownFrom that seed you've sownBut I didn't think there'd be so many stepsI'd have to learn on my ownWell I was young and I didn't know what to doWhen I saw your best steps stolen away from youNow I'll do what I canI'll walk like a manAnd I'll keep on walkin'
Human Touch (1992)
I ain't lookin' for praise or pityI ain't comin' 'round searchin' for a crutchI just want someone to talk toAnd a little of that human touchJust a little of that human touch
Oh girl, that feeling of safety you prizeWell, it comes with a hard hard priceYou can't shut off the risk and painWithout losin' the love that remainsWe're all riders on this train
I Wish I Were Blind (1982)
I love to see the cottonwood blossomIn the early springI love to see the message of loveThat the bluebird bringsBut when I see you walkin' with himDown along the strandI wish I were blindWhen I see you with your man
I love to see your hair shiningIn the long summer's lightI love to watch the stars fill the skyOn a summer nightThe music plays you take his handI watch how you touch him as you start to danceAnd I wish I were blindWhen I see you with your man
We struggle here but all our love's in vainWell these eyes that once filled me with your beautyNow fill me with painAnd the light that once entered hereIs banished from meAnd this darkness is all baby that my heart sees
And though the world is filledWith the grace and beauty of God's handOh I wish I were blindWhen I see you with your man
1995's The Ghost of Tom Joad was Bruce's most political album. The writing on one song in particular is so crisp and tells such an important story it made this list.
Youngstown (1995)
Here in northeast Ohio, back in 1803James and Danny Heaton found the ore that was lining Yellow CreekThey built a blast furnace here along the shoreAnd they made the cannonballs that helped the Union win the warHere in YoungstownHere in YoungstownMy sweet Jenny, I'm sinking downHere, darling, in Youngstown
...
Well, my daddy come on the Ohio worksWhen he come home from World War IINow the yard's just scrap and rubbleHe said "Them big boys did what Hitler couldn't do"These mills, they built the tanks and bombsThat won this country's warsWe sent our sons to Korea and VietnamNow we're wondering what they were dying for
Bruce watched the World Trade Towers collapse from the Jersey shore and released The Rising the following year.
The Rising (2002)
Can't see nothing in front of meCan't see nothing coming up behindMake my way through this darknessI can't feel nothing but this chain that binds meLost track of how far I've goneHow far I've gone, how high I've climbedOn my back's a sixty pound stoneOn my shoulder, a half-mile of line
...
I see you Mary in the gardenIn the garden of a thousand sighsThere's holy pictures of our childrenDancing in a sky filled with lightMay I feel your arms around meMay I feel your blood mix with mineA dream of life comes to meLike a catfish dancing on the end of the line
Sky of blackness and sorrow (A dream of life)Sky of love, sky of tears (A dream of life)Sky of glory and sadness (A dream of life)Sky of mercy, sky of fear (A dream of life)Sky of memory and shadow (A dream of life)Your burning wind fills my arms tonightSky of longing and emptiness (A dream of life)Sky of fullness, sky of blessed life (A dream of life)
Come on up for the risingCome on up, lay your hands in mineCome on up for the risingCome on up for the rising tonight
Mary's Place (2002)
I got seven pictures of Buddha, the prophet's on my tongueEleven angels of mercy sighing over that black hole in the sunMy heart's dark but it's rising, I'm pulling all the faith I can seeFrom that black hole on the horizon, I hear your voice calling meLet it rain, let it rain, let it rain, let it rainLet it rain, let it rain, let it rainMeet me at Mary's place, we're going to have a partyMeet me at Mary's place, we're going to have a partyTell me how do we get this thing started?Meet me at Mary's placeMeet me at Mary's place
Familiar faces around me, laughter fills the airYour loving grace surrounds me, everybody's hereFurniture's out on the front porch, music's up loudI dream of you in my arms, I lose myself in the crowd
I got a picture of you in my locket, I keep it close to my heartThis light shining in my breast, leading me through the darkSeven days, seven candles in my window, lighting your wayYour favorite record's on the turntable, I drop the needle and pray (Turn it up)
Band's counting out midnight, floor's rumbling loud (Turn it up)Singer's calling up daylight, waiting for that shout from the crowd (Turn it up)Waiting for that shout from the crowd (Turn it up)
Fast forward to the end of the decade, to another attack on Americans, this one by Americans. Bruce responded with Wrecking Ball.
Death To My Hometown (2012)
Oh, no cannonballs did fly, no rifles cut us downNo bombs fell from the sky, no blood soaked the groundNo powder flash blinded the eye, no deathly thunder soundBut just as sure as the hand of God, they brought death to my hometownThey brought death to my hometownNo shells ripped the evening sky, no cities burning downNo armies stormed the shores for which we’d dieNo dictators were crownedI awoke from a quiet night, I never heard a soundMarauders raided in the dark and brought death to my hometown, buysDeath to my hometown
They destroyed our families’ factories and they took our homesThey left our bodies on the plains, the vultures picked our bones
So listen up, my sonny boy, be ready for when they comeFor they’ll be returning sure as the rising sunNow get yourself a song to sing and sing it ’til you’re doneYeah, sing it hard and sing it wellSend the robber barons straight to hellThe greedy thieves who came aroundAnd ate the flesh of everything they foundWhose crimes have gone unpunished nowWho walk the streets as free men now
Letter To You (2020)
I took all the sunshine and rainAll my happiness and all my painThe dark evening starsAnd the morning sky of blueAnd I sent it in my letter to you
This is your son! Love the list. Much to say about everything here but I'll mention two:
ReplyDelete- I'm always utterly impressed by how THUNDER ROAD keeps its melodic tension and memorable hook despote literally only voicing the title hook at one moment in the middle of the song. But because we open dreamily with the hook in the instrumentation, it's there in the back of our minds, waiting to explode like the car pulling out to win...
- You and I absolutely agree that "we're all riders on this train" is the most important lyric of HUMAN TOUCH and I'll raise you that it's one of the most important lines in Springsteen's body of work. It sums it all up! Fittingly, I'm writing this from a train so I look around at the diverse faces riding this uptown 3 train with me and I *feel* what he means.
Keep it up!
Despite*
ReplyDeleteDrew here. Loved the appreciation you have for Bruce's lyrics and the opportunity to really read them through and ponder. One of my daughter's took a high school course on the lyrics of that Nobel Prize winner, Bob Dylan, but I've always thought her time would have been better spent on a course on Bruce, who outlines so much about the country, injustice, the human spirit, relationships, as well as the meaning of rock and roll itself. As for the "riders on the train" line you and Gary key on, perhaps the best ending of a Bruce concert I've ever seen has been the collective singing of Land of Hope and Dreams:
DeleteOh oh this train,
I'm riding this train
Don't you wanna ride?...
Grab your ticket and your suitcase
Thunder's rolling down this track
Well you don't know where you're goin' now
But you know you won't be back
Well darlin' if you're weary
Lay your head upon my chest
We'll take what we can carry
Yeah, and we'll leave the rest
Well, big wheels roll through fields where sunlight streams
Meet me in a land of hope and dreams
Well, I will provide for you
And I'll stand by your side
You'll need a good companion now
For this part of the ride
Yeah, leave behind your sorrows
Let this day be the last
Well, tomorrow there'll be sunshine
And all this darkness past
Well, big wheels roll through fields where sunlight streams
Oh, meet me in a land of hope and dreams
Well, this train carries saints and sinners
This train carries losers and winners
This train carries whores and gamblers
This train carries lost souls
I said, this train, dreams will not be thwarted
This train, faith will be rewarded
This train, hear the steel wheels singin'
This train, bells of freedom ringin'
People get ready
You don't need no ticket
All you got do is just get on board...
You just thank the Lord (people get ready)
Thanks Drew! That song definitely should be on my list.
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