“Bobby Jean” makes for a fascinating comparison with “Backstreets” — two songs about broken friendships, one that heals and one that doesn’t.
Bruce Springsteen’s most galvanizing anthem almost didn’t see the light of day, because it was too… Springsteenian.
It’s one of the great Springsteen mysteries: what exactly makes “I’m on Fire” so freaking popular?
“Downbound Train” is a master class in cinematic songwriting. Let’s look at how the director skillfully crafted his “movie” inside.
Working on the Highway: Perhaps the best jailbait song ever.
The continuing mis-adventures of Wilson and Wayne, chicken delivery men and fugitive ne’er-do-wells.
Lyrically lazy and musically plodding, “Cover Me” is a candidate for Bruce’s weakest song ever.
Even Bruce wasn’t always sure exactly what he was trying to say with “Born in the U.S.A.” Let’s finish tracing the evolution of one of Bruce Springsteen’s most famous songs, from early drafts to remixes and great live performances.
The road to “Born in the U.S.A.” starts here with this Nebraska-era demo.
Whenever I completed an entire album’s worth of Roll of the Dice articles, I’d celebrate by writing an Album Companion essay that served both as backstory and…









