At the height of the pandemic, Bruce came out of lockdown to appear on Jack Antonoff’s album track, video, and live rooftop performance.
Let’s take another trip into Bruce’s 1968 Notebook with a lengthy entry that reads more like a poem than a song.
“Cross My Heart” always had more potential than its album arrangement allowed for, and this three-man combo proves it.
At John Fogerty’s 50th birthday party. Bruce debuted what may be a lost original song–and it’s a fun one, to boot.
One time only: Bruce and the E Street Band join the Asbury Jukes (minus Southside Johnny) to cover one of rock’s earlier risque classics.
A forbidden love leads to a bitter betrayal in one of Bruce’s most powerful epics.
The annual Cover Me competition is underway, and our first spotlight this year shines on Italian singer-songwriter Luca Milani’s hard-rocking re-imagining of Bruce’s Grammy-winning single.
Even fifty years ago, Bruce Springsteen was stopping audiences in their tracks with this fifteen-minute, preachifying, testifying, rueful improv piece.
One of the best singles of 1995, “Labor of Love” was also a musical seed for one of Bruce’s best songs too.
A little note to explain the new posting schedule.