At 77 seconds, this furious 1980 B-side is Bruce’s shortest studio track on record.
One time only: Listen to Bruce rejoin his former band to take lead vocals on Walter Brown’s blues standard, “Confessin’ the Blues.”
Bruce Springsteen, guitar hero. Don’t laugh, just listen.
Ladies and gentlemen, the definitive performance of “Adam Raised a Cain.” And it’s not by Bruce.
Like the man says, If you’re ever going to stand on it at all, stand on it now. The longer you wait, the slower you get.
Twice only: When Bruce and the E Street Band returned to Brazil after a quarter-century absence, they kicked things off by paying tribute to Brazil’s most famous rock star.
One of the first songs Bruce ever recorded in a studio featured one heck of a plot twist.
Darlene Love’s debut album featured this Springsteen-authored, Van Zandt-produced, Spectorian gem.
One time only: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street band cover an obscure single from a rockabilly one-hit wonder.
It’s one of Bruce’s best songs, and it arose from a simple question: And then what?