Nebraska is a pretty dark album, as is The River.
They do have the upbeat songs... but Nebraska especially is very somber. Born & a lot of his albums are about the working class people, the people underpaid & trying to rise up.
Where Nebraska ia about criminals, thiefs & people doing bad thing's to make ends meet. i don't think America was jumping on that Pistols sounded like "Fuck off," wheras The Clash sounded like "Fuck Off, but here's why.."- Thedigitialgardener
All music is shit music and no music is real- gunsnhalen Datdonkeydick- Asherfierce Gary Hunts Album Isn't That Good- Soulalive | |
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Wish i had a folk literature class in school Pistols sounded like "Fuck off," wheras The Clash sounded like "Fuck Off, but here's why.."- Thedigitialgardener
All music is shit music and no music is real- gunsnhalen Datdonkeydick- Asherfierce Gary Hunts Album Isn't That Good- Soulalive | |
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that always cracks me up
it was the first time i realised that a song can reach number one, with millions of people listening to it, singing it and broadcasting it whilst half of them don't even know what the lyrics are.
even in a native english speaking country
and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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Make a good "hook"......................and they will come. | |
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I never heard 1984 music described in such a...unique way before. "Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato
https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0 | |
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I think we all know that is what the conspiracy theorists are implying, but there were many other comparable white artists at the time that weren't as popular. What makes this album so huge compared to, say, Tom Petty's Southern Accents or John Mellencamp's Uh-Huh? | |
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Well Michael had the most successful album that year though.....And released the Thriller video so..... | |
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wow, are you even asking this? = the SONGS man, the SONGS
seriously, songs like Glory Days, Dancing in the Dark, the title-track, Cover Me, etc are natural winners...
Born in the USA was basically his mid-career Diamonds and Pearls (Born to Run his 1999/PR and The River his SOTT), but with better album-tracks/singles overall; with BitUSA Bruce basically conquered the "meat and potatoes" american audience, hungry for catchy melodies and "feel good" lyrics (despite some dark numbers like Downbound Train, Im Going Down or My Hometown)
Petty was always too alternative to reach this level of mainstream success
and Mellencamp never wrote a truly catchy hit as far as I'm concerned, if he achieved some kind of success that's because sticky Heartland-Arena Rock was the rage during the early-to-mid 80s...
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Of course most of us know this is the REAL answer. Yet conspiracy theorists are saying it's not the songs, but something else. | |
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I think because the songs were a lot more ''pop'' songs. really 80's sounding and very catchy and feel good up tempo songs (like Glory Days, Dancing in the Dark). even Born In The USA sounds like a feel good song, but in fact really it isn't.... it's because of the beat.... very catchy.
He has better album than this. Like for example; Born To Run, Darkness on the edge of town. etc | |
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oh, ok, it was a rhetorical question, I even didn't read the whole thread when I wrote that, lol yeah, there are paranoids everywhere, even in unsuspected corners... [Edited 10/9/12 16:21pm] | |
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probably Born to Run and River are better albums, not so sure about Darkness or Nebraska, USA at least sports some hope underneath the cynicism, while those two albums are just about defeat and the ugly side of life; USA is a more balanced album: the Vietnam veteran of Born in the USA may have been "ten years burning down to road with no place to go" but at least he's defiant about it, even proud [Edited 10/9/12 16:28pm] | |
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I wanna hear it from his mouth...or fingers. Or keyboard. | |
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Thriller always gettin in the way Pistols sounded like "Fuck off," wheras The Clash sounded like "Fuck Off, but here's why.."- Thedigitialgardener
All music is shit music and no music is real- gunsnhalen Datdonkeydick- Asherfierce Gary Hunts Album Isn't That Good- Soulalive | |
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and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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It was a strong album.
Video was king.
Patriotism (even misunderstood patriotism) was at an alltime high.
Someone please make a thread about, "What Do You Think Made The Joshua Tree" So Big?"
I was obsessed with that album.
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Another classic political album that got insane success....
Hmmm... well U2 had been building up for awhile.... maybe it was live Aid? maybe it was right place right time?
Also could be 86 & 87 they where ready for more political songs... hell you had sign o the times by P, Man In The Mirror by MJ, Shout & Everybody Wants To Rule The World where huge in 85 & 85. Beds Are burning was also a huge hit!
So idk.. just seems from 85-87 political songs where becoming more & more popular.
Pistols sounded like "Fuck off," wheras The Clash sounded like "Fuck Off, but here's why.."- Thedigitialgardener
All music is shit music and no music is real- gunsnhalen Datdonkeydick- Asherfierce Gary Hunts Album Isn't That Good- Soulalive | |
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Good songs, the cover, the controversy of the title track, etc.
That's probably what generated. Also his profile had been raised for quite some time. | |
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I can't answer the question with conviction. Amazing composer though. Less gimmicks than any commercially successful artist I can think of. He's still going strong. I didn't like him at the beginning, cause the whole thing reeked of patriotism. small circles, big wheels!
I've got a pretty firm grip on the obvious! | |
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I don't know about the rest of the nation but I remember why a lot of folks in The South loved it. Look at the pop music scene in the early 1980s.....a second British Invasion, wild punk rock hair, men in glam makeup, etc. Things that a lot of white Southerners hate..."foreigners, freaks, and queers". In other words, anything different than they are or what they consider "normal".
Bruce Springsteen and John Cougar Mellencamp was loved down here because they were the "normal" bluecollar looking artists they could relate to. Personally, that normal bluecollar image turned me off but hey, what can I say, I'm an outcast down here my damn self. . . .
[Edited 10/10/12 6:46am] Andy is a four letter word. | |
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Both were popular as hell up here too. Springsteen in fact hits here EVERY time he tours. Except for Dave Matthews I can't say that for anyone else!
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These guys are now silent because they know it's nonsense. | |
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Actually, he was never an independent artist. All of his records have been released on Columbia, which was an imprint of CBS (which became "Sony", which became "Sony BMG").
Although he'd never scored a Top 10 single prior to Hungry Heart, Born to Run went to #3 (and put him on the covers of TIME and Newsweek in the same week) and Darkness on the Edge of Town, #5.
Take another listen - lyrically, BUSA is very bleak (which makes sense, since most of the material was written at the same time as the Nebraska songs). ...Not that "dark" is usually a selling point for records, though. Not as "powerhouse" as Born to Run? I guess it depends on what you mean by "powerhouse". Personally, I don't care for the melodrama of much of BTR. And BUSA's more conventional song lengths and structures made it much more radio-friendly.
Bruce had steadily built up a very devoted following with his legendary live show and then Born to Run, Darkness and The River. This following was large enough to send an album of folk songs, recorded on cassette in his bedroom (Nebraska) to #3!
Enter Born in the U.S.A., less than two years later, with the now-buff Boss' derriere on the cover, against the American flag. Potent imagery, to be sure. The first single (Dancing in the Dark) is engineered for dancefloor play (and remixed as such), as well as the radio, and his first real video is all tight-jeans and rippling muscles. He's a mainstream sex symbol now.
He goes on a SRO tour, where he continues to pwn nightly (including, for the first time, in Australia and Japan). More hook-heavy, radio-friendly singles follow: Cover Me (originally written for Donna Summer), Born in the USA, I'm on Fire, I'm Goin' Down, Glory Days and My Hometown. USA, I'm on Fire, Glory Days and My Hometown are all accompanied by videos that go into heavy rotation on MTV and elsewhere. Now he's into stadia.
Short answer:
- Chock-a-block with very strong singles - Bruce's new, buff image, just in time for the music video explosion - Accompanying, highly-acclaimed tour, where he played a ton of shows to a ton of people | |
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Actually, his popularity there rivaled his popularity in North America, beginning with USA. And he's now more popular in Europe than anywhere else. | |
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No. As a matter of fact, he took great pains to talk about the meaning of the song and to distance himself from Reagan and his ilk. | |
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Chicks really dig I'm on Fire (the sex thing) and - although it's an incredibly hooky record - IGD did benefit from the momentum of what had, by then, become the Boss juggernaut. | |
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Never said "I'm not a huge fan of his music". He's a big Bruce fan. And I remember the quote you're referring to. Never said "nastiest". Said they started to go off somewhere, Bruce turned around and shot them a look and they straightened up right-quick. | |
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eh, I think I got the gist of the quote..but for you completists out there this is the quote:
"I'm not real into Bruce Springsteen's music," he says, "but I have a lot of respect for his talent."
Prince and Springsteen occasionally exchange notes; in recalling a Springsteen concert he saw from backstage a few years back, Prince displays the respect of a general reviewing another man's army. "I admire the way he holds his audience -- there's one man whose fans I could never take away," he says with a laugh. And how does he compare their stage tactics? "I'm not sure," says Prince. "But at one point, his band started going off somewhere. Springsteen turned around and shot the band one terrifying look. You know they got right back on it!" [Edited 10/10/12 12:19pm] My Legacy
http://prince.org/msg/8/192731 | |
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Actually, Joe, while Darkness is pretty...well...uh...dark (), ultimately, it's about overcoming setbacks and demons and pushing on with renewed vigor.
Nebraska, on the other hand (with the exception of Open All Night and - arguably - Mansion on the Hill) is pretty much darkness on the edge of town and everywhere else. The rising music at the end could be interpreted as hopeful, but - lyrically and musically - that is a bleak album. | |
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