A half-century ago today, Bruce Springsteen sent the world Greetings from Asbury Park, and rock and roll has never been the same.
A note of thanks for your readership this past year and a look ahead to the next one!
The dazzling and dizzying track that kicked off Springsteen’s fifty-year recording career and burned his rhyming dictionary to cinders
Bruce helped launch the American Music Masters series by leading an all-star encore of one of Woody Guthrie’s most-recorded songs.
Written for The Ramones and influenced by The Byrds, The Four Seasons, and The Beach Boys, “Hungry Heart” gave Bruce his first Top Ten hit.
Bruce galvanized his audiences to vote for change by leading all-star team-ups on Nick Lowe’s earnest anthem.
Happy Holidays from E Street Shuffle! Enjoy this guided tour through Bruce’s best Christmas-themed performances.
Bruce’s cover of this Motown classic may be the only track on Only the Strong Survive to rival the original.
Two abandoned, noir-ish Nebraska-era demos converge more than a decade later in an officially released gem.
A year after recording “James Lincoln Deere,” Bruce revisits his anti-hero and crafts a much strong and grayer tale.