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Springsteen realizes that the once ‘hungry heart’ will stop beating one day
https://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/opn-columns-blogs/leonard-pitts-jr/article246930402.html?fbclid=IwAR0Z1YYceJgDaaoSiRibKlkaMQi_Lh2U7KQDeNC9LiWS4ixIi0h5DMmnSGs
. by Leonard Pitts jr. NOVEMBER 03, 2020 03:28 PM,
UPDATED NOVEMBER 04, 2020 09:42 AM
. Bruce Springsteen’s new album is accompanied by a documentary, “Letter to You.” AP
Bruce Springsteen is wrestling with death. You hear him as you float high above leafless trees dusted with snow. The scene, captured in creamy tones of black and white, is one of beauty almost unbearably elegiac, sacred in its stillness. Then he speaks, giving words to a truth all too familiar to anyone who has lived long enough to see skin grow loose and hair turn thin and gray. “Age,” he says. “Age brings perspective and the fine clarity one gets at midnight on the tracks, looking into the lights of an oncoming train. It dawns on you rather quickly, there’s only so much time left. Only so many star-filled nights, snowfalls, brisk fall afternoons, rainy midsummer days.” All this is from “Bruce Springsteen’s Letter To You,” the Apple TV documentary on the making of Springsteen’s new album of the same name. It is, he tells you on film, a suite of songs born on a deathbed. Meaning that they were written after a vigil with George Theiss who, before he was a 68-year-old carpenter stricken with lung cancer, was a teenager playing in a Jersey Shore band called the Castiles with his girlfriend’s brother, Bruce Springsteen. “With George’s death,” says Springsteen in voiceover, “I was the last living member of the mighty Castiles.” He says this by way of introducing “Last Man Standing,” a propulsive paean to gigs long past in days long gone, to being young and loud, rocking together against the world. Which makes it also, inevitably, a song about the swiftness and the thievery of time, a song that implicitly asks, Hey, what happened to 1967?
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"It's the only album where it's the entire band playing at one time, with all the vocals and everything completely live. The record is the first record that I've made where the subject is the music itself... It's about popular music. It's about being in a rock band, over the course of time. And it's also a direct conversation between me and my fans, at a level that I think they've come to expect over the years." —Springsteen, on recording Letter to You[
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I find him boring but I did like that Broadway show thing he did | |
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He was on Jimmy Fallon's show about a week ago and SNL too You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton | |
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