Bruce Springsteen drops anti-ICE song
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Bruce Springsteen’s 1984 album Born in the U.S.A. was historic in so many ways. The album’s chart and commercial successes were only part of the equation. The record was a massive part of pop culture at the time and still holds relevance today.
Here’s a rock and roll story that’s never been told. It’s a New York City summer day in 1975 and Bruce Springsteen is trying on an old leather motorcycle jacket his manager Mike Appel wore as a teen and just dug out of the attic. “Fit him like a ...
According to a recap in Variety, the Boss participated in multiple discussions about various aspects of Born to Run. Most exciting, the symposium ended with Springsteen teaming up with current and former E Street Band members to perform two songs from Born ...
Ain't no party like a Bruce Springsteen “Born to Run” party. The Springsteen classic album, released from Columbia Record on Aug. 25, 1975, saw its 50th anniversary on Monday, Aug. 25 and there's no stopping now. “Born to Run” events are happening ...
Spoiler alert! We're breaking down a key scene from the Bruce Springsteen biopic “Deliver Me From Nowhere” (in theaters now). ASBURY PARK, NJ − One of Bruce Springsteen’s most iconic songs almost sounded extremely different. In 1981, writer and ...
Strap your hands across the engines, we're in the middle of a very big Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band “Born to Run” week at the Jersey Shore. The Bruce Springsteen Archives and Center for American Music is hosting the “Born to Run” main ...
Bruce Springsteen performed a surprise rendition of Born to Run in honour of the album's 50th anniversary. The Boss marked half a century of the record at Monmouth University in New Jersey over the weekend at an event sponsored by the Bruce Springsteen ...
Bruce Springsteen is as big a music fan as he is a musician. That being said, the man has often paid credit to the musicians who crafted his understanding of the craft. In other words, Bruce Springsteen has never claimed that he did this all on his own.
In his 500-page memoir, “Born to Run,” Bruce Springsteen spends less than three pages on the making of his 1982 album “Nebraska.” Moving on, folks, nothing to see here, he seems to be saying. The first authorized biopic of his life — “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” — disagrees,