Bruce Springsteen Releasing New Album With “High Hopes”

Springsteen High Hopes
Bruce Springsteen has confirmed that he will release a new album January 14, 2014 called High Hopes. The 12-track album will include new material, covers, and new versions of other Springsteen songs. Yesterday we posted “Dream Baby Dream,” which will appear on the album. The title track is “High Hopes,” a song released by The Havalinas in 1990 (Springsteen earlier covered the song for his EP Blood Brothers in 1996. Here is the new version from the upcoming album.

Here are the tracks on the album: 1. High Hopes (feat. Tom Morello); 2. Harry’s Place; 3. American Skin (41 Shots); 4. Just Like Fire Would; 5. Down In The Hole; 6. Heaven’s Wall; 7. Frankie Fell In Love; 8. This Is Your Sword; 9. Hunter Of Invisible Game; 10. The Ghost of Tom Joad (Duet with Tom Morello); 11.The Wall; 12. Dream Baby Dream.

The E Street Band members play on the album, as does Tom Morello from Rage Against the Machine. Springsteen wrote one of the songs, “The Wall,” as a tribute to a friend who went missing during the Vietnam War. Springsteen explains more about the album on his website.

Are you excited about the new album? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    New Springsteen Video: “Dream Baby Dream”

    As a thank you to fans, Bruce Springsteen & the E Street band released a video to accompany a new recording of Suicide‘s “Dream Baby Dream.” The video features clips of audience members during the Wrecking Ball tour. I have been a fan of Springsteen’s version of “Dream Baby Dream” since hearing recordings made during his Devils & Dust tour. Check it out.

    The release of this video, along with the announcement that this week Springsteen will release a cover of the Havalinas song “High Hopes,” has led some to speculate that a covers album might be forthcoming. Either way, we can enjoy this cool new video.

    What is your favorite song that Springsteen has covered? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    “Jungleland” Makes Louis C.K. Sad

    On Conan, comedian Louis C.K. talked about the importance of being alone. He explained how the constant presence of cell phones removes us from the existential feeling of sadness, an experience he wants his daughters to understand.

    Previously, we discussed how Bruce Springsteen similarly wanted his children to understand a certain sadness in life as revealed in his song “Racing in the Street.” Louis C.K., however, used another Springsteen example for his existential crisis, “Jungleland,” even singing a few bars.

    So if you are the mood for that kind of sadness, put away your cell phone and sit back and listen to Bruce Springsteen and the E Street band live.

    What is your favorite song that makes you feel alone? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    It’s the Working, the Working, Just the Working Life

    Labor Day book We hope our U.S. readers are enjoying the Labor Day weekend. The official holiday was signed into law by President Grover Cleveland to honor working people, following the 1894 Pullman Strike where strikers had been killed by law enforcement officials and soldiers. But citizens had already been celebrating the Labor Day for years.

    There are a number of songs about jobs, but when I think of the word “work” and music, the first song that comes to my mind is Bruce Springsteen’s “Factory,” from Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978). The haunting repetitiveness of the line about “the working, the working, just the working life” captures the boring sameness that appears in some way in almost every job, although some more than others. Yet, the song always seemed like a tribute to those who do those difficult jobs, such as the factory workers in the song.

    I recently discovered the Canadian band The Deep Dark Woods. The band, from Saskatoon, has put out several albums that one might classify as alt-country. I plan to check out more of there music, and you should too. For now, though, check out their awesome take on Springsteen’s “Factory.”

    The U.S. Labor Department website notes that the holiday is “a creation of the labor movement and is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers.” And it is a “tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country.” Enjoy your day, and then get back to the working, the working, just the working life.

    What is your favorite song about working? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Mary Queen of Scots and Mary Queen of Arkansas

    Mary Queen of Scots On July 24 in 1567, the imprisoned Mary Queen of Scots was forced to abdicate her crown. Eventually, she would be beheaded.

    ]The abdication came after Mary’s second husband died under mysterious circumstances.  Mary subsequently married the main suspect, leading the nobility to have her imprisoned.  She was forced her to abdicate her throne in favor of her son.

    After Mary escaped and went to England, she became connected to plots to overthrow Queen Elizabeth. So, Mary was beheaded.  But when Elizabeth died, Mary’s son King James VI became King of England, Scotland, and Ireland.

    A Mary Who Was Queen of Arkansas

    More than four hundred years later, Bruce Springsteen wrote a song about another Queen Mary, “Mary Queen of Arkansas,” which appeared on Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. (1973).  Springsteen earlier included the song among the first demos he recorded for John Hammond at Columbia.

    When I first got the album, “Mary Queen of Arkansas” was one of my least favorite songs on the record.  Hammond did not especially like it at first either, and Springsteen rarely plays the former concert opener live these days. But gradually, the song grew on me.

    “Mary Queen of Arkansas” is a love song, with some circus references:  “Well, I’m just a lonely acrobat, the live wire is my trade.” Beyond that, I never thought too much about the meaning.

    But checking some sources for this post, I found various interesting theories. Some say Mary has religious significance or that she was a prostitute. Similarly, Springsteen has commented on how he often uses the name “Mary,” saying “I’m sure it’s the Catholic coming out in me, y’know? That was always the most beautiful name.”

    Here, though, the title’s similarity to Mary Queen of Scots seems less than a coincidence.  Reportedly, Springsteen got the idea for the title from the 1972 film Mary, Queen Of Scots, which starred Venessa Redgrave.

    The song, though, is not about the Queen of Scots. Wikipedia concludes, “The song appears to be sung in the first person, by a slave in the antebellum American south, to his white mistress, with whom he is having a clandestine affair.”

    I never saw that the slave connection in the song, although some of the lyrics support that theory.  For example, consider the lines: “your white skin is deceivin’ . . . But on your bed, Mary, I can see the shadow of a noose.” Hmmm. . .

    Either way, it is a beautiful song.  It also makes one think fondly of Mary Queen of Arkansas.

    The song also captures the escape theme that arises in other Springsteen songs like “Born to Run.” While Mary Queen of Scots was unable to escape a tragic end, we can hope that Mary Queen of Arkansas and her lover were able to get away clean to Mexico without either one of them losing their head.

    The above version of “Mary Queen of Arkansas” is from a 1974 Houston radio show.

    Do you think Mary Queen of Arkansas is in the voice of a slave having an affair or is it just an Arkansas love song? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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