LeAnn Rimes has long and often cited “Secret Garden” as one of her favorite songs. In a 2018 in-studio performance, she showed us why, illuminating Bruce’s often-misunderstood song with tender sorrow.
Author: Ken
Bruce’s “Out in the Street” is essentially the same song as The Easybeats’ “Friday on My Mind,” a fact Bruce playfully acknowledged by playing them back-to-back in Sydney.
Often dismissed as a work-in-progress “Zero and Blind Terry,” “Phantoms” is actually a completely different song (with the same music). It represents the closing of a chapter in Bruce’s songwriting.
Daring, edgy, and absolutely fantastic: watch Sara McLeod nail the spirit of Bruce’s greatest hit in an amazing cover performance.
The second time’s the charm: Bruce takes another crack at writing about wedding days, and this time he captures the life lessons he learned since the first time.
One time only: Bruce becomes an honorary Beach Boy when he joins Brian Wilson on stage for “Surfin’ U.S.A.”
The curious tale of how an ad-libbed in-joke turned a throwaway outtake into a concert crowd-pleaser.
Bruce quoted it in “Born to Run” and imitated its sound, and in 1976 he finally had the chance to perform it with its original artist: Listen to Bruce Springsteen and Ronnie Spector play Spector’s signature “Be My Baby.”
Queen’s Roger Taylor picks up the pace in his cover of Bruce’s “Racing in the Street.” It moves faster, but is it still moving?
“Secret Garden” is one of Bruce’s best love songs. It’s also one of his least romantic.