Thursday, 6 March 2014

I just wanna see you smile!


Having finally scraped together enough pocket money to purchase Bruce Springsteen’s latest offering, High Hopes (Columbia, 2014), I rushed home to put it on, and wasn’t disappointed.  I haven’t met a Springsteen album I didn’t like yet, but, having read mixed reviews, I approached with an open mind. Although it’s obviously not a self-contained package like previous albums, I came to it fully aware that it was an odds-and-sods collection of previously unreleased and reworked tracks and the production is seamless throughout.  The tracks fit together well, showcasing Springsteen's rough New Jersey poetry in all its customary brilliance.


From the joyous horns on the title track (not a Springsteen composition, but one he has stamped his own unmistakable style on), through the pulsating “Down in the Hole” and the multi-layered rhythms and uplifting chorus of “Heaven’s Wall", both the new and the rearranged had me captivated.  Even “Frankie Fell in Love”, the weakest track on the album, still holds its own as a standard Springsteen rocky number.  The Irish folk elements in “This is Your Sword” work as well here as they did on Wrecking Ball and the haunting poignancy of the cornet and snare combination on “The Wall” really gets inside your chest.

“American Skin (41 Shots)”, written about the shooting of an unarmed West African immigrant by New York Police in 1999, which has mesmerised me since I first heard the live version, recorded at Madison Square Garden in July 2000 (featured on The Essential Bruce Springsteen), is beefed up in its first proper studio recording, but retains its hypnotic beauty.  In the sleeve notes Springsteen states that Tom Morello and his guitar became his muse in the development of this record, and it’s clear why.  Morello’s solos soar off every track he’s featured on, and none more so than on the electric new version of “The Ghost of Tom Joad”, an entirely different beast to the song that first appeared on the album of the same title.  Bruce Springsteen may not be the most virtuosic guitarist, but he knows how to craft songs that wrap you up in their narratives and this album demonstrates that his talent is in no way fading as the years pass.  As “Dream Baby Dream” swells and builds, in all its euphoric simplicity, you're aware that you’ve listened to an album that is a true musical experience.

Oh, and for an extra £2 I got a DVD of Springsteen and the E Street Band playing Born in the USA in its entirety in London last year, further evidence of why The Boss is considered one of the best live acts around.


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