Canadian one-man-band Tebo reimagined “New York City Serenade” as a straight-up rocker, and it’s pretty great.
Category: Cover Me
“Valerie” looms large in Bruce and Patti’s personal history, and that may be why their one and only performance of it was so lovely and powerful.
American Babylon’s title track is one of the only tracks Bruce had nothing to do with on the album, but that hasn’t stopped Bruce and Joe from teaming up to play it on stage.
Lorenzo Bertocchini and Elizabeth Lee transform “Be True” with their beautiful, world-weary, acoustic cover.
Decades before Bruce Springsteen and Alejandro Escovedo first met, Bruce covered one of Alejandro’s earliest studio tracks at a 1988 soundcheck.
In 2016, Northcote tucked an acoustic but rocking cover of “Radio Nowhere” on a B-side and unlocked the loneliness and isolation at the core of the song.
Bruce first covered The Crystals’ 1963 hit around the same time he recorded “Born to Run.” That’s almost certainly not a coincidence.
How in the world did it take Bruce until 2009 to cover The Kinks’ breakthrough hit?
The first cover single from former Infinite Three leader Daniel Knowler, The Shining Tongues’ version of “State Trooper” dials up the inner torment and paranoia at the heart of Bruce’s song.
This perennial holiday classic holds special meaning for E Street Nation: it’s the last song Clarence Clemons ever performed with the E Street Band.