Jump to content bruce springsteen albums
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

bruce springsteen albums
Watch Repair Talk

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Bruce Springsteen Albums Free -

After dismantling the E Street Band, Springsteen released the raw, folk-infused The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995) and the Y2K-bleak Devils & Dust (2005). These are difficult listens—acoustic, whispered sermons for the invisible poor. But just when you counted him out, he reunited the band for The Rising (2002). Written in the wake of 9/11, it is his most explicitly spiritual album, asking not "how do we escape?" but "how do we carry this grief and keep walking?"

If Born to Run was about escaping, Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978) is about what happens when you run out of gas. It is a bleak, adult record about responsibility, debt, and the limits of masculinity. This tension explodes into the double-album opus The River (1980). For the first time, Springsteen let the laughter and the tears sit on the same track—swinging from the goofy "Cadillac Ranch" to the devastating stillbirth narrative of the title track. It is messy, long, and utterly alive. bruce springsteen albums

Born to Run , Darkness on the Edge of Town , Nebraska , Born in the U.S.A. , The Rising . Skip if: You dislike saxophones, the word "tramp," or hope. After dismantling the E Street Band, Springsteen released

Nebraska (1982) is the fork in the road. Recorded alone on a 4-track in a New Jersey bedroom, it is a collection of murder ballads and economic despair. There are no drums, no glory, only the cold wind of Reagan-era America. Then, he did the unthinkable: he followed that spectral album with Born in the U.S.A. (1984). In a masterstroke of irony, he buried his angriest critiques of Vietnam veterans’ treatment inside massive, anthemic synthesizers. The world heard a fist-pumping party; the lyrics told of a suicide and a country that lied. Written in the wake of 9/11, it is

Springsteen’s first two records, Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. (1973) and The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle (1974), are dazzling, verbose sketches. They sound like a young man trying to swallow the entire dictionary and the entire city block at once. But it is Born to Run (1975) where the alchemy happens. A wall-of-sound masterpiece recorded in a frenzy of desperation, it is the ultimate teenage traffic jam: loud, hormonal, and impossibly romantic. Every sax solo (rest in power, Clarence Clemons) is a victory lap against oblivion.

Magic (2007) and Wrecking Ball (2012) see Springsteen fully embracing his role as the angry uncle of rock. Wrecking Ball , fueled by the 2008 financial crisis, is a vitriolic, Celtic-tinged triumph. "We Take Care of Our Own" is a scathing indictment of government neglect disguised as a patriotic anthem—he’s been pulling that trick for 40 years. His 2020 album, Letter to You , is a late-career miracle. Recorded live with the E Street Band in five days, it is a meditation on mortality. Hearing an aging Springsteen sing about the ghosts of his past—with Clarence and Danny Federici now gone—is heartbreakingly beautiful. It proves that the power of his music was never in the youth, but in the endurance.

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.