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Bruce Springsteen
Born to Run


5.0
classic

Review

by Channing Freeman STAFF
June 22nd, 2011 | 366 replies


Release Date: 1975 | Tracklist


We can compare modern “working-class” bands with Bruce Springsteen all we want, but the simple fact is that no one has ever done it better. Maybe no one besides him has ever done it, period. Today's bands of that ilk are really just the heartbroken songwriters of indie's milieu dressed in blue collars. They give the impression that somehow they are easier to relate to because their lyrical wheelhouse consists of small towns, of nondescript cars, and of bills to be paid. They take wrong turns when they presumptuously attempt to be the right band for a certain age. What they don't understand is that the age from which Springsteen sprung was the right age for him. It is not less noble for a band to take a look around them and hope to comment on or even combat events with their music. But it is better when music is written as a product of a microcosm (say, growing up in Asbury Park) and then naturally comes to embody a macrocosm (America in general). The idea is that listeners will see their own story in the songs instead of just hearing something with clever lyrics that they'd like to sing along to or remember to quote later on in conversation, which can create an illusion of familiarity.

It is this essential quality that sets him apart from everyone else even after all these years. His fictional characters are easier to relate to than any modern indie song sung in the first person. It has been interesting to watch this particular musical shift. How is it that a song rife with such nameless characters as the Magic Rat and the Barefoot Girl, with imagery of Exxon signs and ambulance lights and death in those lonely corridors of the city seems more homely than any song about the end of a relationship which, presumably, any listener would be able to relate to much more? It is as if the old rules have been transferred from stone tablets to pieces of notebook paper, frequently scratched out and rewritten to fit the latest trends. That storytelling trait has, with a few exceptions, long been absent from music and perhaps that is telling. What makes Springsteen's music so great is that his stories and characters made it all the more affecting when he did write something personal. When he personally wondered if love was real it sounded more genuine because of similar, prior sentiments from the lonesome, wandering denizens of Asbury Park. Story echoed real-life and vice versa, each lending weight to one another.

Springsteen's America seen through today's lens seems more modern than the vision being presented currently. It is a marvelous thing that none of Springsteen's songs seem quaint or outdated but it is not surprising in the least. He was able to both hearken to an earlier time by harnessing the power of music's golden age and to make an audience look to the future, to attempt to keep alive a sense of America's commoner nobility – the notion that there is nothing purer than trying to survive through means universal and familiar, through foot before foot and hand over hand. The notion that we could succeed or fail to walk like heroes but either way America, although perhaps dull-eyed and empty-faced, was nevertheless bound for a greater glory somewhere down the road.



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user ratings (1335)
4.4
superb
other reviews of this album
BigHans (5)
You may not ever visit Jersey itself, but the nuances of Springsteen’s glorified opera have taken ...

Distorted Vision (5)
...

bubbamickmac (5)
...

Handers (5)
Bruce discovered the best revenue to Rock'n Roll in amazing album...



Comments:Add a Comment 
fr33convict
June 23rd 2011


11723 Comments


neg.

good review.

robertsona
Staff Reviewer
June 23rd 2011


27371 Comments


reviews gay neggefd

Athom
Emeritus
June 23rd 2011


17244 Comments


oh hey. rules

Satellite
June 23rd 2011


26539 Comments


review fucking rules.

didn't have this rated wtf. backstreets is one of the best songs fucking ever.

mallen-
June 23rd 2011


1245 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

fuck yeah







I've said this before, and I'll say it again: Thunder Road and Jungleland are the best opener/closer combo of all time

TheBoss88
June 23rd 2011


208 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Agreed.

TheBoss88
June 23rd 2011


208 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

To both of those. Especially the first one.

CrisStyles
June 23rd 2011


807 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

One of the greatest albums ever made, hands down.

pizzamachine
June 23rd 2011


26998 Comments


Nice reviewin'.

Spare
June 23rd 2011


5567 Comments


better than your last one by like 10000

klap
Emeritus
June 23rd 2011


12408 Comments


how many reviews until downer quotes this review

bailar14
June 23rd 2011


1603 Comments


when he finally reviews an enrique album

WhiteNoise
June 23rd 2011


3884 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Review is alright, although it was more of a story than an actual review.



Album is genius.

Trebor.
Emeritus
June 23rd 2011


59810 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Like a boss.

Activista anti-MTV
June 23rd 2011


3152 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Good review from the wrong side of the tracks



Chrisjon89
June 23rd 2011


3833 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

I think Roy Bittan played on some of Bowie's albums. I will listen to this album.

qwe3
June 23rd 2011


21836 Comments


I've said this before, and I'll say it again: Thunder Road and Jungleland are the best opener/closer combo of all time


marryme also fuck ya chansteen

MO
June 23rd 2011


24015 Comments


awesome review, love this album

BigHans
June 23rd 2011


30959 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Great review Chan, similiar to what I was tryign to get across when I reviewed this. Album rules so hard.



Thunder Road is the best lyrical song ever. Of all time.

DocSportello
June 23rd 2011


3364 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

cool review, chan



love this album. and I agree with the "Thunder Road" / "Jungleland" sentiment



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