Way back in 1976, Bruce invented some on-the-fly accompaniment for one of Patti Smith’s legendary improvised musical monologues.
Jon Landau logs a lone performer credit on this obscure hybrid outtake from the Darkness era.
This Nebraska-era demo uses cinematic vocabulary to devastating effect.
During the Born to Run Tour, Bruce worked up a simmering, slow burn of a cover of Solomon Burke’s 1962 classic.
One time only: Bruce and Southside continue the tradition of great male R&B duos performing Sam Cooke’s “Soothe Me.”
An ode to never growing up that never gets old.
Bruce Springsteen’s most beautiful track ever is a cautionary tale about the destructive power of lies–both spoken and unspoken.
An early, minor rock-and-roll hit proved a perfect fit for the young E Street Band.
Glasgow-based December is back with a terrific cover of Bruce Springsteen’s classic Nebraska-era track.
This quiet expression of grief was the last song written for The Rising and the most frequently misunderstood.