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In his lengthy introduction to “The Promised Land” — which he called “probably one of my greatest songs” and “an ode to American possibility” — Springsteen said we are
Springsteen also released the fabled Electric Nebraska sessions last year as part of the box set Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition. Plus, the Boss sat down with Jeremy Allen White on Jimmy Kimmel Live! to discuss his new biopic Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere.
According to a report from the Daily Mail published on Saturday, January 11, the song was being played on Absolute Radio with one line altered. The lyric in question includes the phrase “yellow man,” which appears in a verse describing the experience of a working class American drafted into the Vietnam War.
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Why Deliver Me From Nowhere Cut One Of Bruce Springsteen's Biggest Hits, Despite Jeremy Allen White Recording
Jeremy Allen White performs multiple Bruce Springsteen songs while portraying the music legend in the new biopic Deliver Me From Nowhere, but the film’s playlist does not include White’s rendition of the Boss’s iconic track “Dancing In the Dark.”
In “Atlantic City,” Bruce Springsteen sings “Everything dies, baby that’s a fact. But maybe everything that dies someday comes back.” He never could have known that more than 40 years after releasing those ruminative words how true they’d ...
On Tuesday, Sept. 23, 2025, The Boss Bruce Springsteen — who has written countless hit songs — is celebrating his 76th birthday. With 21 studio albums and countless compilations under his belt, Springsteen has a dense catalog of hit songs. Even his ...
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This Bruce Springsteen song flopped at first but then slowly became one of his most loved tracks
It's quite hard to believe that an artist as big as Bruce Springsteen ever had a flop release, especially during his prime in the 1970s. His musical legacy is so vast and influential that many refer to him as "The Boss" — a nickname that speaks to his undeniable authority in rock music and his connection to working-class America.