Beneath its prurient lyrics, there’s surprising substance to Bruce’s nuanced updating of Sonny Boy Williamson’s classic blues song.
When John Fogerty decided to record a sequel to his 1973 debut album, Bruce decided it was finally time to join his friend in the studio.
Part therapy and part love letter, “Randolph Street” is a breathtakingly intimate remembrance of his grandparents.
Twin sisters Louise and Ellie Macnamara paid tribute to one of their great musical influences on the day his latest album was released.
More urgent and more relevant with each passing year, “We Take Care of Our Own” is Bruce’s reminder to his countrymen: We are better than this.
Watch Bruce’s only performance of this perennial holiday classic (which isn’t really the holiday song you might think it is).
One time only: Bruce joins The Patti Smith Group for Patti’s land-mark opus from her debut album.
Singer-songwriter Stjerne teams up with the eclectic SMAF! combo on a beautiful, longing, torchy arrangement of “Streets of Philadelphia.”
This early composition by 18-year-old Bruce Springsteen reveals a growing awareness and concern for societal ills.
Twice only: Bruce joins an all-star line-up of music icons to cover one of the most iconic rock songs of the 20th century.