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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bruce-springsteen.jpg]]
2
3->''The highway's jammed with broken heroes on a last chance power drive\
4Everybody's out on the run tonight, but there's no place left to hide\
5Together, Wendy, we can live with the sadness\
6I'll love you with all the madness in my soul\
7Oh, someday, girl, I don't know when\
8We're gonna get to that place\
9Where we really wanna go and we'll walk in the sun\
10But 'til then, tramps like us\
11Baby, we were born to run''
12-->--'''"Born To Run"'''
13
14[floatboxright:Influences:
15+ Music/TheAnimals, Music/TheBand, Music/TheBeatles, Music/ChuckBerry, Music/JamesBrown, Creator/FlanneryOConnor, Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival, Music/BobDylan, Music/WoodyGuthrie, Music/CurtisMayfield, Music/VanMorrison, Music/RoyOrbison, Music/ElvisPresley, Music/{{The Rolling Stones|Band}}, Sam & Dave, Pete Seeger, Music/RonnieSpector, Music/PhilSpector, Music/{{Suicide|Band}}, Gary U.S. Bonds, Music/TheWho, Music/HankWilliams
16Influenced:
17+ Music/AgainstMe, Music/ArcadeFire, Bleachers, Music/BonIver, Music/BonJovi, Lucy Dacus, Melissa Etheridge, Music/SamFender, Music/TheGaslightAnthem, Music/TheHoldSteady, Music/TheKillers, Music/LadyGaga, Music/{{Mitski}}, Music/TheNational, Music/PearlJam, Music/RageAgainstTheMachine, Music/JimSteinman, Music/TaylorSwift, Music/TitusAndronicus, Music/TeganAndSara, Music/SharonVanEtten, Music/{{U2}}, Music/TheWarOnDrugs, Music/PeteYorn
18]
19
20Bruce Frederick Joseph Springsteen (born September 23, 1949), nicknamed "The Boss", is one of the most notable singer-songwriters to come out of the [[TheSeventies 1970s]]. He's also the living patron saint of UsefulNotes/NewJersey; speak ill of him in the Garden State at your peril.
21
22Born in Long Branch, Springsteen arose out of the "Jersey Shore Sound" scene of the 1970s, which unabashedly combined rock and R&B elements. Perhaps his most well-known albums are ''Music/BornToRun'' (1975) and ''Born in the USA'' (1984). Alongside his backing group the E Street Band, the membership of which has remained mostly constant throughout the years, Springsteen is best known for a "heartland rock" style that features themes of Americana, working-class desperation in an age of cynicism, and hope for a better life. Despite his associations with liberal politics and John Kerry in particular, his songs have sometimes been appropriated by conservative politicians, oftentimes without his permission. The most glaring example is the song "Born in the USA", which [[SarcasticTitle despite its title]] is ''not'' an unequivocal celebration of that country, but rather a condemnation of its treatment of Vietnam veterans. When UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan tried to use the song for his reelection campaign in 1984, Springsteen famously told ''the President'' that he couldn't use it.
23
24Despite his most well-known work being produced in the '70s and [[TheEighties '80s]], he is still recording today. His latest album, ''Letter to You'', was released in 2020. He also campaigned for UsefulNotes/BarackObama during the 2008 American presidential campaign and performed at the inauguration.
25
26Springsteen is also notable for helping to launch Creator/CourteneyCox's career when she appeared in his video for "Dancing in the Dark."
27
28[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jqNXphenus Springsteen was honored at the 2009 Kennedy Center Honors]], with the presentation done by Jersey native (and lifelong fan) [[Series/TheDailyShow Jon Stewart]]. He was also awarded the UsefulNotes/PresidentialMedalOfFreedom in 2016, was inducted into both the UsefulNotes/RockAndRollHallOfFame and UsefulNotes/SongwritersHallOfFame in 1999, and has won a Best Original Song [[MediaNotes/AcademyAward Oscar award]] (for "Streets of Philadelphia") and a [[MediaNotes/TonyAwardWinners Tony award]].
29
30He once wrote [[http://www.springsteenlyrics.com/lyrics/i/illstandbyyoualways.php a song about Harry Potter]], after reading the books to his son, and tried to get it into the movie.
31
32----
33!!Studio discography
34* ''[[Music/GreetingsFromAsburyParkNJ Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J.]]'' (1973)^
35* ''The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle'' (1973)^
36* ''Music/BornToRun'' (1975)^
37* ''Darkness on the Edge of Town'' (1978)^
38* ''Music/{{The River|1980}}'' (1980)^
39* ''Nebraska'' (1982)
40* ''Music/BornInTheUSA'' (1984)^
41* ''Tunnel of Love'' (1987)
42* ''Human Touch'' (1992)
43* ''Lucky Town'' (1992)
44* ''The Ghost of Tom Joad'' (1995)
45* ''Music/TheRising'' (2002)^
46* ''Devils & Dust'' (2005)
47* ''We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions'' (2006)
48* ''Magic'' (2007)^
49* ''Working on a Dream'' (2009)^
50* ''Wrecking Ball'' (2012)^
51* ''High Hopes'' (2014)^
52* ''Western Stars'' (2019)
53* ''Letter to You'' (2020)^
54* ''Only the Strong Survive'' (2022)
55-->^=with the E Street Band
56
57----
58
59!!Bruce Springsteen is the {{Trope Namer|s}} for:
60* GloryDays. The song itself is a look back on high school memories.
61
62!! "Tropes like us, baby we were born to run!":
63
64* AdventurousIrishViolins: "American Land".
65* AesopAmnesia: In 1984, President Reagan famously wanted to use "Born in the USA" his campaign song, prompting Springsteen to note that the song's lyrics weren't quite as upbeat many people believed the chorus to be and that it was actually a mournful song about veterans (including some of Bruce's friends) who went through the Vietnam War. In a similar vein, Independence Day celebrations have often used the song. And Bruce will publicly have to explain once again how the song is about how poorly Vietnam veterans (and the working class in general) were treated.
66* AgeProgressionSong: Arguably "Outlaw Pete", albeit slightly nastier than most of these usually are.
67* AHeroToHisHometown: When it comes to New Jersey, Bruce is practically synonymous with the state more than any other artist, celebrity, or other figure.
68* AllDrummersAreAnimals: The very first words sung on a Springsteen album are "madman drummers" ("Blinded by the Light"), a nod to the original E Street drummer, Vini Lopez, who was nicknamed "Mad Dog". [[AvertedTrope Averted]] with the chilled-out Max Weinberg.
69* AllJustADream: A verse in "Downbound Train"
70* AmbiguouslyJewish: A common joke in references to Springsteen is a character thinking that because his last name sounds vaguely Ashkenazi, he's Jewish. [[Creator/AdamSandler Adam Sandler's]] "Hanukkah Song" has the line, "Bruce Springsteen isn't [Jewish]/But my mother thinks he is"; and in Film/BlindedByTheLight it's something of a running gag that Javed's dad calls him "that American Jewish man". [[note]] "Springsteen" is Irish; he's from a Catholic family and has an Irish-American dad and Italian-American mom. However, E-Street drummer Max Weinberg is Jewish. [[/note]]
71* {{Anadiplosis}}: In "Badlands":
72--> "Poor man wanna be rich, rich man wanna be king\
73And a king ain't satisfied till he rules everything"
74* AndStarring: When he introduces the members of the E Street Band in concert, he always saved saxophone player Clarence Clemons ("The Big Man") for last, usually shouting, "And last but not least..." In his 2000 ''Live from New York City'' album, the band intros take place between verses two and three of "Tenth Avenue Freeze Out", as Springsteen shouts, "Do I have to say his name?" while the rest of the band leads the audience in chanting "CLAR-ence! CLAR-ence!", segueing seamlessly into the first line in verse three, "The change was made uptown and the Big Man joined the band!" In performances since Clemons's death, the band stops playing after this line, giving way to a couple minutes of silent footage of Clemons performing on the overhead monitors.
75* AntiLoveSong: Most of the songs of ''Tunnel of Love'', which he recorded while [[RealitySubtext his first marriage was failing.]]
76* ArcWords: 'Magic' reappears a lot throughout his discography, culminating in the album ''Magic'' and being mentioned in multiple songs therein (including the TitleTrack).
77* ArtistAndTheBand: He has formed many backing bands during his career, but the most consistent one is the E Street Band. Bruce' 1974 tour for the promotion of ''Music/BornToRun'' was billed as Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, and that moniker would reappear more or less throughout other tours.
78* ArtisticStimulation: ''The Seeger Sessions'' is a mild form of this. The bonus DVD shows Bruce encouraging his fellow musicians to drink whiskey and beer so that their background vocals will sound "wild."
79* AudienceParticipationSong: "Hungry Heart", "Thunder Road", "The River" and "Waitin' On A Sunny Day" are the most common.
80** They are ''not'', however, the most ''consistent'' song. That honor has and always will go to ''Santa Claus is Comin' To Town'', in which the trope is blatantly [[InvokedTrope Invoked]] by Bruce and company. There has ''never'' been an instance of this song being sung live where the audience ''hasn't'' joined in during part, or even all, of the song. And the band '''''always''''' encouraged the crowd to have fun and get in on the act for this one. Bruce and the E Street Band are among the very few groups that keep such a classic song in their rotation. It's often requested by fans during the holidays, and they haven't been disappointed yet...
81* BalladOfX: "Ballad of Elmer and Pea," "Ballad of Jesse James," "Ballad of the Self-Loading Pistol"
82* BasedOnATrueStory: According to Springsteen, ''The River'' is largely based on the lives of his sister and her husband.
83* BawdySong: "Red Headed Woman".
84* TheBigGuy: Clarence Clemons of The E Street Band, of course. He was called “The Big Man” for a reason, after all.
85* BoDiddleyBeat: "She's The One", "Ain't Got You".
86* {{Bowdlerize}}: Music/TomWaits' "Jersey Girl" originally included the line "Don't want no whores on Eighth Avenue." Bruce changed it to "Or the girls out on the avenue."
87* BottleEpisode: ''Nebraska'' was recorded in his bedroom on a small 4-track recorder as demos. When he tried to record the songs with the E Street Band, the songs didn't evoke the same bleak, stark feel as the demos, so he polished the demos and released them as the record. [[WordOfGod Max Weinberg]] has confirmed that an "Electric Nebraska" does exist.
88* BreakoutCharacter: E Street Band drummer Max Weinberg is probably the most successful, being just as well known for his work as bandleader of the house band for Creator/{{NBC}}'s ''Late Night''/''The Tonight Show with Creator/ConanOBrien.''
89** In addition, lead guitarist Steven Van Zandt is also pretty successful as well, being just as well known for his role as Silvio Dante on the {{Creator/HBO}} drama ''Series/TheSopranos'', and for his long-running weekly radio show "Little Steven's Underground Garage" as well as a long running solo music career.
90* BreatherEpisode:"The Promised Land" is a lot more optimistic than the rest of the songs on ''Darkness''.
91* BungledSuicide: "For You" is about the narrator's girlfriend who survived a suicide attempt.
92* CallBack: The songs of ''Letter to You'' are musically reminiscent of Bruce's various pre-Reunion records, particularly ''Born to Run'' with strong use of piano, glockenspiel and (of course) sax solos.
93** In "Long Time Comin'" from 2005's ''Devils and Dust'', the narrator is married to a woman named Rosie. After the album's release, there was some speculation that "Rosie" is actually the title character from "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)"; she's just grown up now.
94** "The Promise" namedrops "Thunder Road".
95** "Matamoros Banks" is the tragic follow-up to "Across the Border".
96* CallingTheOldManOut: His strained relationship with his father made its way into a lot of his songs, leading him to joke during his Rock and Roll Hall of Fame acceptance speech:
97-->"I've gotta thank him because—what would I conceivably have written about without him? I mean, you can imagine that if everything had gone great between us, we would have had disaster."
98* CarefulWithThatAxe: The intro to "Something in the Night".
99* [[CheapHeat Cheap Pop]]: [[ParodiedTrope Parodied]] with the joke song [[http://www.metrolyrics.com/in-michigan-lyrics-bruce-springsteen.html "In Michigan"]], performed at two shows there in September 1996.
100* CheshireCatGrin: A few of the girls in his songs are described as having one. "For You" references it by name, and in "She's the One", there's a "smile on the lips" of a [[FemmeFatale woman]] who's about to make [[SecondPersonNarration your]] life very difficult.
101* ChristmasSongs: The Boss' cover of "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town", based on [[Music/PhilSpector Phil Spector's arrangement for the Crystals]], is a classic rock radio standard during Christmastime.
102** Ditto for his cover of "Merry Christmas, Baby" (based on Music/OtisRedding's arrangement).
103* ClicheStorm: Invoked and parodied with "My Best Was Never Good Enough," where the lyrics, except for the title and "Come'on pretty baby, call my bluff" are nothing ''[[http://www.greasylake.org/songs_record_lyrics.php?ID=515&s_song_title=My+Best+Was+Never+Good+Enough but]]'' clichés, including a TakeThat to ''Film/ForrestGump.''
104-->"Now life's like a box of chocolates\
105 You never know what you're gonna get\
106 Stupid is as stupid does and all the rest of that shit."
107* ConceptAlbum: Although he shied away from overtly describing them as such, many of his albums revolve around a central theme: ''Darkness On The Edge Of Town'' deals with the inability to escape and standing firm, ''Tunnel Of Love'' deals with the challenges of love and relationships. His overarching thematic focus revolves around "measuring the distance between the American Dream and reality". One music critic described him as "The Quintessential Album Era Rock Star" due to his strong thematic focus over the course of his career.
108* ConMan: Used as a metaphor for political demagogues in "Magic" and "Rainmaker". In his Broadway show, he describes ''himself'' as one, becoming a working-class hero despite [[SelfDeprecatingHumor "never doing an honest day's work in [his] life!"]]
109* CoolCar: Cars are often means of escape and objects of desire for his protagonists.
110** "Ramrod": "She's a hot stepping hemi with a four on the floor / She's a roadrunner engine in a '32 Ford..."
111** "Cadillac Ranch": "Cadillac, Cadillac / Long and dark, shiny and black / Open up your engines, let 'em roar / Tearing up the highway like a big old dinosaur..."
112** "Pink Cadillac": "Crushed velvet seats, ridin' in the back, cruisin' down the streets, wavin' to the girls, feelin' outta sight..."
113** Subverted in "Racing In The Street", about a guy who's sunk all of his dreams in a CoolCar that's never going anywhere.
114** Inverted in "The Line", in which border police use their cars as weapons against illegal immigrants ("We'd rush 'em with our Broncos...") and "Balboa Park", in which the protagonist [[spoiler:is hit and probably killed by]] a car.
115** Also inverted in "Used Cars," in which the child narrator is ashamed of his family's poverty and how they can't afford a new car. They always have to buy secondhand cars and even that is a strain on their finances.
116--->Now mister the day the lottery I win
117--->I ain't ever gonna ride in no used car again
118* CrapsackWorld: The overlying theme of his 1982 album ''Nebraska''.
119* CreatorThumbprint: Springsteen incorporates imagery and metaphors related to amusement parks, fairgrounds and carnivals (he called one album ''Tunnel of Love''). [[WriteWhatYouKnow Appropriate as it was the Jersey Shore where Bruce developed a following]] in TheSixties.
120** Cars also turn up frequently, as the CoolCar entry on the main page points out.
121** As does travel. ''Glory Days'', for instance, begins with a mention of a truck-stop bar, and ''Jungleland'' begins with a "magic rat" crossing the Jersey state line. Within "travel", crossing county or state lines is common, presumably because this represents moving from one thing to the next.
122** He's also got a lot of songs about trains.
123* CreepyCircusMusic: The entry music for shows on the ''Magic'' tour was a very eerie organ waltz. Fitting, considering the titular song is all about the potentially brutal consequences of tricks.
124* CryLaughing: In "For You"; "You can laugh and cry in a single sound."
125* CulturallyReligious: Biblical motifs are scattered everywhere in his discography, from titles like "The Promised Land" and "Jesus Was an Only Son" to the repeated symbolic use of the name Mary/Maria. Though now technically non-religious, Springsteen has noted that he still feels like he's "on the team" and considers himself a spiritual writer more than anything else.
126* DarkerAndEdgier: His 1982 album "Nebraska" is a lot more stripped down in its instrumentation and a lot more somber in its lyrical content. The songs are about blue-collar characters who, feeling no hope for the future, turn to crime. The title track, which is also the opener, is told from the POV of a young man who goes on a random drive-by shooting spree with his girlfriend before he's caught and sentenced to death by electric chair[[note]]The song was inspired by the real life spree killer Charles Starkweather. He and his girlfriend murdered eleven people between the states of Nebraska and Wyoming[[/note]]. Bruce's heartbreaking vocals and the minimalism of the acoustic music combine to make the album one of his most challenging and certainly not an album to play before you start your weekend.
127* DeadArtistsAreBetter: Rejects this idea in songs like "All That Heaven Will Allow" and "City of Night". His own career has been one of remarkable longevity.
128-->''Some people wanna die young and gloriously\
129But taxi cab driver, well that ain't me''
130* {{Deconstruction}}: ''Darkness On The Edge Of Town'' acts as this towards ''Music/BornToRun'', taking the optimism of the previous album and turning it on its head. If ''Music/BornToRun'' was about the glory of escape and getting to a better life, ''Darkness'' asks "What about afterwards?" Best exemplified in the song "Racing In The Street".
131* DistractedByTheSexy:
132** "Crush on You": the narrator is ''constantly'' getting distracted by beautiful girls to the point of wanting to drop everything and just run after them.
133** Also these lines from "Loose Change":
134--->''Yeah, I knew she was trouble but trouble sure was lookin' fine\
135When I pulled her close what I knew kinda slipped my mind''
136* DoubleEntendre: The line in "4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)" about how "I just got tired of hanging in them dusty arcades, banging them pleasure machines", which could either refer to arcade games or sex. And the following lines about a bad ride on a Tilt-a-Whirl also might be sexually euphemistic.
137* DownerEnding: Several of his songs, notably ''Jungleland.''
138* DramaticPause: "Born in the USA" has the singer lament the loss of a friend in Vietnam for a verse. In this verse only, the singer remains quiet where every third line should be.
139* DyingTown: "My Hometown" and "Youngstown". Based in large part on the economic turmoil that hit Bruce's hometown of Freehold, NJ and other towns that suffered with the loss of factory jobs during the postwar decades.
140** And of course, "Death to my Hometown" from 2012's ''Wrecking Ball''.
141** "Frankie" from ''Tracks'' contains the line, "Everybody's dying, this town's closing down."
142** "My City of Ruins" was written for Asbury Park, the home of Bruce's first prominent music scene, which had been on a long economic decline. Fortunately, it's gained a revival since then.
143* {{Eagleland}}: Most of his songs are meditations on American small towns, culture, politics etc. Usually coming in type 3 but with a few songs like "Born in the USA" closer in tone to 2 when discussing topics like the ill treatment received by the Vietnam Veterans or the existence of political corruption. That being said, his recent album "Wrecking Ball" goes back to Type 3: Despite the existence of corrupt powers-that-be, the album ultimately suggests that in the end the good will triumph, and Bruce celebrates the American small towns and urban centers that he hopes will recover from the current economic turmoil.
144* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness: ''Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.'' wears its Music/VanMorrison and Music/BobDylan influences on its sleeve, since he hadn't quite locked in to his own unique sound yet. Also, Clarence Clemons, who wouldn't officially join the band until after the album sessions, only appears on two songs.
145* EarnYourHappyEnding: Appears in some of his songs, notably "Badlands" and "Land of Hopes and Dreams".
146** In the album "Live In New York City" (also available on DVD), during "Tenth Avenue Freeze Out", he did his "Gospel of Rock and Roll" routine during [[EpicRocking an extended bridge between the second and third verses]], telling his audience that hope, happiness, companionship, a second chance, and all of life's blessings could be theirs. [[ArcWords "But you gotta work at it!"]]
147* EchoingAcoustics: Due to his love of the "Wall Of Sound", many of his albums feature this style of instruments blending together in a large sound. Most notably on ''Music/BornToRun''.
148* EpicRocking: Not so much with album versions, but there are some exceptions. "Kitty's Back", "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)", "Incident on 57th Street", "Racing in the Street", "Drive All Night", and "Outlaw Pete" are around seven or eight minutes long, while "Jungleland" runs for nine and a half, but his longest to date is "New York City Serenade", at nearly ten minutes long. At his longest (especially "Jungleland" and "New York City Serenade"), he arguably crosses into ProgressiveRock territory; this is also something of a case of EarlyInstallmentWeirdness as ''The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle'' had a much larger quantity of it than any of his later studio albums (it contains four of the songs listed here, out of seven songs on the album). Live performances are a different matter, though - live renditions of "Tenth Avenue Freeze Out", "Prove It All Night", "E Street Shuffle" or especially "Kitty's Back" (their dedicated "jamming song", where everyone gets a chance to solo) can stretch to ''twenty minutes''.
149** A 1980 live version of "Incident on 57th Street" that was used as the BSide for the live "Fire" single in 1987 clocks in at 10:07, which is notable since it may very well be the longest song ever released on one side of a 45 RPM vinyl single.
150** Springsteen's live performances as a whole can count as this trope. Not only were songs extended beyond their album counterparts, but the concerts as a whole can go on for up to 3-4 hours.
151* ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin: The album ''18 Tracks,'' a collection of 18 tracks.
152* FadingIntoTheNextSong: "Incident on 57th Street" into "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)". Each of these two songs would be a case of EpicRocking ''by itself''; combined, they run for 14:49.
153* FanDisservice: The graphic sex scene in "Reno" is creepy and sad, and fully meant to be so.
154* FelonyMisdemeanor: During the second run of ''Springsteen on Broadway'': "You have managed to engage in an act so heinous that it has offended the entire fuckin’ United States! You, my recalcitrant, law-breaking, bridge-and-tunnel friend... have drunk two shots of tequila."
155* ForTheEvulz: The narrator of "The New Timer" blames his friend's murder on "somebody killing just to kill."
156** Also invoked in "Nebraska," which is a semi-fictionalized account of the 1957-58 Starkweather-Fugate murder spree: "They wanted to know why I did what I did/Well, sir, I guess there's just a meanness in this world."
157* {{Foreshadowing}}: A number of songs on ''The River''. The title track, for example, presaged the themes he would devote ''Nebraska'' to.
158* FortuneTeller: "4th Of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)": "The cops finally busted Madame Marie, for telling fortunes better than they do." This referred to a real-life Asbury Park fortune teller named [[ShoutOut Marie Castello]], who once told Springsteen he would be a great success as a musician.
159** "Brilliant Disguise": "We stood at the altar / the gypsy swore our future was right / But come the wee wee hours / Well maybe baby the gypsy lied."
160* GenreMashup: While Springsteen's core genre is rock, he's integrated a variety of musical influences over the course of his musical career. Contemporaneous rock critics initially praised him precisely for integrating many of rock's traditions. His earliest bands went from Beatles-influenced rock, to hard rock, to more soul and R&B influence. His first two albums were a mixture of folk, jazz, soul, and R&B styles with Music/VanMorrison as a big influence. His third album ''Music/BornToRun'' integrated influences ranging from Phil Spector, Bob Dylan, Elvis, Roy Orbison and more. His fourth album ''Darkness On The Edge Of Town'' was influenced by the emerging punk scene. Later albums also began incorporating more country influence in terms of sound and lyrical themes. There are also the songs that he's given away to other artists of different genres, and the songs that he's covered. In terms of overall lyrics, he has often described his verses as blues and his chorus as gospel.
161* GiftOfSong: "The Wish" is one for his mother.
162* HeavyMeta[=/=]IAmSong: "I'm a Rocker".
163* HypocriticalHumor: PlayedForLaughs on his Broadway tour; he [[SelfDeprecation makes fun of himself]] for being "Mr. Born-to-Run" despite currently living 10 minutes from his hometown, and a working-class hero despite "never stepping foot in a factory" in his life. Some detractors levy these same criticisms against him more seriously, but YMMV.
164* IAmTheBand: Discussed in his autobiography ''Born To Run''. After several years in more democratic band settings, Springsteen decided to go in a different direction and signed on as a solo artist while also being the leader of the E Street Band. He wanted the creative control and decision-making of a solo artist, but he also valued the contributions of the E Street Band. As such, he writes all the songs by himself, while the E Street Band brings them to their full potential.
165* IconicItem: One of the most famous in rock, his guitar: a heavily modified 1950s butterscotch Fender Esquire/Telecaster hybrid (it's a Telecaster body with an Esquire neck.) He bought it in 1973 and basically never used any other guitar in concert until it had to be retired in 2005, but the guitars he does use onstage have been modified into clones of it, and he still records with it.
166* IconicOutfit:
167** He is probably best known for his Born in the U.S.A.-era clothing. For the cover of the album, he wore a white t-shirt and blue jeans, with a red baseball cap in the back pocket. The everyman nature of the clothes cemented him as a working-class icon. During the actual tours, he often sported a headband and emphasized a more muscular physique.
168** To a lesser extent, there is his look on the cover of Music/BornToRun; sporting a leather jacket and an Elvis pin to give off more of a "greaser" appearance.
169* IconicSongRequest: Taking sign requests is a tradition at his concerts, and the songs don't even need to be his own. Subverted in that he usually chooses lesser-known songs.
170* InsultBackfire:
171** His 1984 hit "Born In the USA" is about the negative effect the UsefulNotes/VietnamWar had on working class Americans and criticizes how the US government feels it needs to "police the world". However, it has been frequently misinterpreted as a patriotic anthem and was embraced by a number of nationalist figures during TheEighties who were oblivious to the song's true meaning. Most notably, UsefulNotes/RonaldReagan wanted to use the song for his 1984 reelection campaign (which Springsteen openly mocked him for) and Lee Iacocca wanted to use the song in a patriotically themed advertising campaign for Chrysler automobiles. Naturally, Springsteen refused to allow either to use the song.
172** His song "Glory Days" is often used at high school reunions and is embraced as a lighthearted tale of those reminiscing of their youth. However, the song is really about a group of high school classmates who are down-on-their-luck losers that have gone nowhere in life since their graduation. However, all of them were popular and really had things going for them back during their school days, so they regularly get together, get drunk and reminisce about their time in high school to feel better about themselves and forget about how pitiful their lives currently are.
173* IntercourseWithYou: "I'm on Fire". Fittingly enough, it was later covered by Music/{{AWOLNATION}} for the ''Film/FiftyShadesOfGrey'' soundtrack.
174* JadedWashout: Everybody in "Glory Days" who are hinted may have been driven to alcoholism as a result.
175* {{Joisey}}: Where Bruce was born, raised, and has usually drawn a lot of his inspiration from. The loss of many industrial jobs in Springsteen's hometown of Freehold and in other parts of New Jersey informed a lot of his lyrics and beliefs right from the start of his career, and his singing about this issue obviously found a sympathetic audience in the parts of the state that were suffering from the loss of jobs. Scenery from the Jersey Shore (no, not ''that'' Series/JerseyShore) are often used as imagery in his lyrics and song titles. And Bruce--loyal to his roots--always makes sure to have concerts in Jersey throughout his tours. It's no wonder that--although he's honored and adored by fans throughout America--[[AHeroToHisHometown it's in New Jersey where Bruce is the most beloved.]]
176** After Bruce and Patti began having children, Bruce decided to move the family out of Beverly Hills to get away from that kind of environment. So where did he and Patti go to raise their kids? Back home to Jersey of course. To a town merely 15 minutes from Freehold, in fact.
177** Listen to any live recording of a Bruce song containing the word "Jersey"; you'll probably hear a large cheer from the audience as soon as they hear the word.
178* KnightInSourArmor: Some characters, e.g. in "Highway Patrolman". Springsteen himself is more or less this in real life.
179* LargeHam: "The E Street Band has traveled thousands of miles, to fulfill their solemn vow...'''TO ROCK THE HOOOOOOOOUUSE!!!"'''
180** From his intro to their Super Bowl gig: "Ladies and gentlemen! Tonight we are bringing the ''righteous'' and the ''mighty'' power of the E Street Band into ''YOUR'' beautiful home! So I want you to to step ''back'' from the guacamole dip! I want you to ''put'' the ''chicken fingers down!'' And turn your televisions '''ALL the way up!...'''"
181*** [[Series/TheDailyShow Jon Stewart]], a life-long Springsteen fan, provided an AffectionateParody the next day; "You are about to witness the ''righteous'' power of the Daily Show! I want you to step ''away'' from your remote... wha, no? It was cool when Springsteen did it!"
182** Or this 2013 classic: "I want you to go home with your ''back'' aching and your ''hands'' aching and your ''voice'' hoarse and your ''feet'' aching and your ''knees'' aching '''AND YOUR SEXUAL ORGANS STIMULATED!!!'''"
183** "The heart-stopping, fun-loving, earth-quaking, love-making, record-breaking, air-conditioner-shaking, Viagra-taking, history-making '''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis E! STREET! BAND!]]'''"
184** "What time is it?" "It's '''BOSS TIME!!!!!'''"
185* LegacyCharacter: Max Weinberg was replaced by his son on the most recent tour for some shows that conflicted with his commitments to ''Series/TheTonightShow''. Danny Federici's son also played on the most recent album following his death. After Clarence Clemons' death, his nephew Jake joined the band on sax.
186* LineOfSightName: When the band was first starting out, they rehearsed in David Sancious' mother's house on E Street in Asbury Park.
187* LiveAlbum: ''In Concert: MTV Unplugged'', ''Live in New York City'', ''Hammersmith Odeon, London '75'', ''Live in Dublin''
188** And the 13x platinum box set ''Live 1975-85''.
189* LocationSong: "Nebraska", "Born In The U.S.A.", which all paint a not so rosy-posy picture of the USA.
190* LongDistanceRelationship: "Save My Love".
191* LongestSongGoesLast:
192** ''The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle'' ends with "New York City Serenade" (9:55).
193** ''Music/BornToRun'' ends with "Jungleland" (9:33).
194* LyricalDissonance: Bruce has a habit of mixing optimism and pessimism into the same song, describing his verses as "blues" and his choruses as "gospel". This is probably the reason so many people misinterpret his songs. These include:
195** "Born in the USA" (although it depends on what version you're listening to; the versions on ''Tracks'' and ''Live In New York City'' are more obviously mournful and don't really fit this trope)
196** "Dancing in the Dark"
197** "Cadillac Ranch"
198** "Hungry Heart"
199** "Johnny 99"
200** "Shackled and Drawn"
201** "Sherry Darling"[[note]] Not as dismal as the rest, but what seems to be an upbeat party ballad is really an extended complaint about the singer's mother in law.[[/note]]
202** "4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)"[[note]] The music is sweet and wistful, vaguely resembling a Christmas song even, while the lyrics are basically about SmallTownBoredom and romantic frustration.[[/note]]
203* LyricalShoehorn: Bruce is prone to inserting the word "mister" into lines where he needs a couple of extra syllables to fill out the meter.
204* TheMafia: "Atlantic City" opens by referencing the assassination of Philadelphia crime family boss [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philip_Testa Philip "the Chicken Man" Testa]], and it seems that the viewpoint character is about to join the Mafia as a hitman (either taking a job in AC or, more likely, spending his last free weekend on the Shore). "Murder Incorporated" takes it's title from the full name of "Murder, Inc.", the enforcement arm of The Mafia in New York city and elsewhere during TheThirties and TheForties.
205* {{Minimalism}}: Given the large and growing nature of the E Street band, Springsteen surprised listeners in 1982 by releasing ''Nebraska'', an album featuring only his own voice and acoustic guitar.
206* MoodWhiplash: ''The River'' (the album; the title track is an unrelenting downer). Completely intentional, according to WordOfGod.
207* MoralityBallad: "Born in the USA".
208** Many of Springsteen's songs could be described, to paraphrase Max Frisch, as morality ballads without a moral. His characters find themselves bewildered and torn by their actions, but it is clear they would do the same things again, for instance in "Hungry Heart".
209* {{Motormouth}}: Since he's known for his plainspoken singing style, it's definitely EarlyInstallmentWeirdness to hear his rapid-fire delivery of the wordy verses toward the end of "Blinded by the Light".
210* MurderBallad:
211** "Nebraska" - inspired by the real-life murder spree of Charles Starkweather.
212** "Johnny 99"
213** "Highway 29"
214** Arguably "Atlantic City"
215* MythArc: Bruce's relationship with his father has received attention across multiple songs. At first, the songs were defined by tension and separation with "Independence Day" and "Adam Raised A Cain". Over time, they shifted towards a slight desire for reconnection and emulation with "My Father's House" and "Walk Like A Man". Ultimately, this culminated in "Long Time Comin'", which depicts a father learning from the past generational mistakes to become a better father.
216* NeverBareheaded: Stevie Van Zandt was in a car accident a long time ago; his head broke the windshield and the hair on the top of his head never grew back. Consequently, he is always seen with a bandana tied around his head, except when he starred in ''Series/TheSopranos'' and wore a pompadour wig instead.
217* NiceGuy: By all accounts, Bruce is a very friendly, humble and good-natured person who enjoys meeting his fans and who is very good to work with.
218* NiceJobBreakingItHero: He once [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ullevi#Music broke a football stadium]]. With [[ThePowerOfRock rock'n'roll]].
219* NonAppearingTitle: "Does This Bus Stop At 82nd Street?" "Incident On 57th Street," "Reno," "The Wrestler"
220* NormalFishInATinyPond: Bruce was considered one of the best guitar players relative to the Jersey Shore scene that he came up in. It was only after going to California that he realized that the musicianship of bands was at a very competitive level, which prompted him to focus more on songwriting.
221* OdeToYouth: "Glory Days", "No Surrender", "Backstreets" and "Born to Run".
222* OlderThanTheyLook: He has aged remarkably well and looks very good despite being born in 1949.
223* OneWomanSong: "4th of July Asbury Park (Sandy)," "Candy's Room," "Cindy," "Janey Needs a Shooter," etc.
224* {{Outlaw}}: "Outlaw Pete"
225* OrdinaryPeoplesMusicVideo:
226** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4z2DtNW79sQ Streets of Philadelphia]]" features Springsteen walking through the city and crossing paths with various people.
227** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_91hNV6vuBY Tougher Than the Rest]]" has shots of real-life couples interspersed with a live performance of the song.
228** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-x8zBzxCwsM We Take Care of Our Own]]" alternates shots of Springsteen singing with shots of ordinary people.
229* OutlawCouple: "Nebraska", "Highway 29" and "Easy Money."
230* ParentalLoveSong: In both directions. "The Wish" is a song dedicated to his mother and his overall appreciation and love for her and her support. "Living Proof" and "Pony Boy" were both songs that were inspired in part on his feelings after his first child Evan was born.
231* PopCulturalOsmosis: The name "Thunder Road" was originally taken from the title of a Creator/RobertMitchum film. Since then, Thunder Road has become one of Springsteen's signature songs and more heavily associated with him than the original film.
232* PreacherMan: The natural combination of his LargeHam tendencies and copious use of Christian imagery, Springsteen often leans on this persona in live performances. His gospel is, of course, none other than [[ThePowerOfRock Rock & Roll]].
233** [[Characters/TheGrapesOfWrath Jim Casy]] makes an appearance in "The Ghost of Tom Joad".
234** "If I Was the Priest" features a [[TheWildWest Wild West]] version in a face-off with Sheriff Jesus.
235* PrecisionFStrike: Springsteen doesn't usually use R-rated language in his songs, he saves it for special occasions:
236** "Long Time Comin'": "Two kids in a sleeping bag beside / Reach 'neath your shirt, put my hands across your belly and feel / Another one kickin' inside / And I ain't gonna fuck it up this time!"
237** "Queen of the Supermarket": "As I lift my groceries in to my car / I turn back for a moment and catch a smile / That blows this whole fucking place apart!"
238** "My Best was Never Good Enough": "And the early bird catches the fuckin' worm..."
239** Live versions of "Lost in the Flood": "Hey man, did you see that, those poor cats are sure fucked up"
240** "Don't vote for that fuckin' [[UsefulNotes/GeorgeHWBush Bush]]!"- during a concert at the Nassau Coliseum on April 1, 1988.
241* ProtestSong: "Born in the USA" again, which is about the treatment of Vietnam veterans. Many other songs also qualify, and ''The Ghost of Tom Joad'' is almost an ''entire album'' of protest songs.
242** Several of the songs on ''Wrecking Ball,'' particularly "Shackled and Drawn" and "Death To My Hometown."
243* RearrangeTheSong: Notably, "Youngstown" was reworked from a mournful acoustic ballad to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ylKW8Uf0gTw furious rocker]] capped by possibly the wildest guitar solo in Springsteen's entire catalogue.
244** The "Live In Dublin" album contains several classic Springsteen songs that have been rewritten to sound like folk songs (this was right after his folk album ''We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions'' was released and he was on tour with the Sessions Band). "Open All Night", in particular, is transformed from [[MinisculeRocking a short track with a low, urgent vocal over a single thrumming guitar]] to an upbeat ten-minute barnstormer that gives everyone in the Sessions Band (all eighteen of them) a chance to sing or solo.
245** Starting in the '90s, Springsteen has regularly performed sparse acoustic versions of "Born in the U.S.A." that are intended to emphasize its bleak verse lyrics instead of the triumphant-sounding chorus, which he sometimes omitted entirely.
246* RecycledLyrics: ''Nebraska'' has some examples: "Atlantic City" and "Johnny 99" both have the narrator mention having "debts no honest man can pay". "State Trooper" and "Open All Night" share the couplet "in the wee wee hours your mind gets hazy / radio relay towers lead me to my baby". In "State Trooper", the "radio's jammed up with talk show stations", whereas in "Open All Night" it's "jammed up with gospel stations".
247** "Spanish Eyes" and "I'm On Fire" both start with the lines "Hey little girl is your Daddy home, did he go away and leave you all alone?"
248** "Further On Up The Road" and "Maria's Bed" both contain the lines, "Got on my dead man's suit and smiling skull ring, lucky graveyard boots and a song to sing." There's also a line in both songs about being "out in the desert, doing my time."
249* RedBaron: Springsteen's own nickname is "the Boss", dating back to the days of his early bands when he managed, booked and organised the band himself. He also has a variety of nicknames for the E Street Bandmembers - The Mighty Mighty Max Weinberg, Professor Roy Bittan, Patti "The First Lady of Love" Scialfa... Clarence Clemons usually got half a dozen, culminating in "the [[TheBigGuy Big Man]], Clarence Clemons!"
250* RepurposedPopSong: Barack Obama used "The Rising" in his campaign, and Springsteen himself played it at a few rallies.
251** Ronald Reagan rather famously tried to do this to "Born in the USA" apparently mistaking it for a (somewhat jingoistic) hyper-patriotic anthem. [[{{Understatement}} It's not]].
252* RhymingWithItself: "County Fair": "County fair, county fair / Everybody in town'll be there / So come on, hey we're goin' down there"
253** "I'll Work For Your Love": "The late afternoon sun fills the room / With the mist of the garden before the fall / I watch your hands smooth the front of your blouse / and seven drops of blood fall"
254* RunForTheBorder: Frankie in "Highway Patrolman"
255* SarcasticTitle: "Born In The U.S.A." is one of the most well-known examples of this trope. It makes the song sound as if it was a patriotic hymn, yet it's anything but, being a song against the war.
256* {{Scatting}}: "Streets of Philadelphia", "The Rising", "Worlds Apart" and "Maria's Bed" all have variants of "lie-la-lie-lie" in their refrains.
257* SecondPersonNarration: "She's The One".
258* SecondVerseCurse: "Glory Days" has a seldom-heard third verse;
259-->My old man worked 20 years on the line\
260And they let him go\
261Now everywhere he goes out looking for work\
262They just tell him that he's too old\
263I was nine years old and he was working at the\
264Metuchen Ford plant assembly line\
265Now he just sits on a stool down at the Legion Hall\
266But I can tell what's on his mind\
267\
268Glory days yeah goin back\
269Glory days aw he ain't never had\
270Glory days, glory days
271* SelfBackingVocalist: Springsteen sang all the background vocals on ''Nebraska.'' This is particularly noticeable in "Atlantic City."
272* SelfDeprecation: Usually his musical comedy routines with Creator/JimmyFallon [[Series/LateNight on Jimmy's talk show]]. Usually exaggerated parodies of Bruce's songs (or hit songs of the day) with Bruce and Jimmy using exaggerated "Springsteen" costumes and singing voices. In his Broadway show, he makes fun of himself for projecting a working-class image despite never "stepping food in a factor" or doing "an honest day's work in [his] life".
273* SequelSong: A number of his songs are either direct sequels or feature callbacks to previous ones. "The Promise" is essentially a sequel song to "Thunder Road", while "The Last Carnival" harkens back to "Wild Billy's Circus Story" while also acting as a tribute to Danny Federici. "Racing In The Street" acts as a sequel to many of the songs on ''Music/BornToRun''.
274* SesameStreetCred: The show did a parody of "Born to Run" called "Born to Add", which included the line "There's a lot of us adders on the Jersey Shore."
275* ShellShockedVeteran: "Shut Out The Light" (Vietnam) and "Devil's Arcade" (Iraq)
276* ShootHimHeHasAWallet: Bruce released a song based on the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Amadou_Diallo trope naming incident]], called "American Skin (41 shots)", which included lyrics like "is it a gun? is it a knife? is it a wallet? This is your life!"
277* ShootTheTelevision: His song "57 Channels (And Nothin' On)" is about a man who, after his investments in television, cable, satellite dishes, and home entertainment fail to bring him happiness, takes out his frustration by shooting the television set. The lyrics [[ShoutOut reference]] [[Music/ElvisPresley Elvis]] [[TropeCodifier Presley]] in this regard.
278-->''So I bought a .44 magnum, it was solid steel cast,''\
279''And in the blessed name of Elvis, well, I just let it blast.''
280** This visual is also present in the song's MusicVideo.
281* ShoutOut: ''The Ghost of Tom Joad'' references ''Literature/TheGrapesOfWrath''.
282** "Ain't Good Enough For You" contains the lyrics "And babe I tried to make the latest scene, hitting cool just like Jimmy Iovine." Iovine is a record producer who worked on ''Born To Run.''
283** In the liner notes of his greatest hits album, Bruce mentions that he got the title of "Thunder Road" from a Creator/RobertMitchum movie. Interestingly, he claims he hadn't actually seen the movie at the time he wrote the song; he simply found the poster inspiring.
284** "Thunder Road" also references [[Music/RoyOrbison Roy Orbison's]] song "Only the Lonely".
285** A similar borrowing of a movie title happened for ''The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle'', taken from the 1959 Creator/AudieMurphy {{Western}} ''The Wild and the Innocent''.
286** The chorus of "Mary's Place" is from [[Music/SamCooke Sam Cooke's]] song "Meet Me at Mary's Place".
287** "4th Of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)" features a reference to "The wizards down on [[Music/{{Tommy}} Pinball Way"]].
288** In "For You", the Narrator compliments his lover's strength by asking "Didn't you think I knew that you were [[ComicBook/{{Superman}} born with the power of a locamotive/Able to leap tall buildings in a single bound?]]
289* ShownTheirWork: ''The Ghost of Tom Joad'' has a ''bibliography''. The "Jenny" of "Youngstown" is also not a woman, but rather the nickname of the Blast Furnace at the steelworks in Youngstown, Ohio.
290* SillyLoveSongs: The ''Tunnel of Love'' album, among many others.
291* SilverFox: Hitting his seventies hasn't detracted from his rugged good looks at all.
292* SmallTownBoredom: Particularly in the first half of his career, most of his narrators were young Jersey Shore guys itching to leave town. ''Music/BornToRun'' is practically ''Small Town Boredom: The Album''.
293* SmurfettePrinciple: While there have been female touring members, Patti Scialfa has been the longest-serving sole female member of the core E Street Band.
294* SteelMill: "Youngstown"
295** Also, his first serious band before the E Street Band was called Steel Mill.
296* SomethingBlues: "California Blues"
297* TheSomethingSong: "Seaside Bar Song", "Song for Orphans"
298* SturgeonsLaw: Bruce complains in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAlDbP4tdqc "57 Channels (And Nothin' On)"]] that he hooked up a new satellite TV receiver to impress his significant other, only to find that there wasn't anything worth watching on any of the 57 new channels.
299* {{Supergroup}}:
300** The E Street Band to some extent. In the beginning, much of the band was composed of musicians who were either skilled or were relatively prominent in the Jersey Shore scene: Steve Van Zandt was a co-founder of Southside Johnny And the Asbury Jukes, while other musicians like Garry Tallent and Clarence Clemons were prominent in the scene and had been in prior bands. Later members also include Nils Lofgren, who is the frontman of his own band Grin and a member of Crazy Horse (known for their association with Neil Young).
301** As the E Street Band grew in fame, they started contributing their talents to other prominent artists like Music/MeatLoaf, Music/DavidBowie, Music/StevieNicks, and many others.
302* ThreeActStructure: "Spare Parts" is a particularly concise example.
303* ThreeChordsAndTheTruth: Especially on ''Nebraska'', ''The Ghost of Tom Joad'', and ''Devils & Dust''.
304* TitleOnlyChorus: "BOOOOOOOORN IN THE USA, BOOOOOOOORN IN THE USA".
305** "I'm goin' down, down, down, down..."
306** "Janey don't you lose heart..."
307** "ADAM RAISED A CAIN! ADAM RAISED A CAIN!"
308* TookALevelInBadass: Springsteen put on muscle and shed his earlier "new Bob Dylan" image for ''Born in the USA''. It worked.
309* {{Train Song}}: "Land of Hope and Dreams", "Downbound Train" and "Tucson Train" among others. "I'm on Fire" also arguably fits.
310* TrashCanBand: The final verse of "New York City Serenade" depicts one of these.
311* TropeCodifier: For Heartland Rock and blue-collar rock. Although he was not the first artist to write and sing about working class and blue-collar themes, he has become practically synonymous with them. This is to the point where artists both before and after him who focus on working-class themes have been compared to Springsteen's example.
312* TunnelOfLove: The title track is a Type 2.
313* TyopOnTheCover: In one of its first mentions of his second album in 1974, ''Billboard'' magazine mistakenly called it ''The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street'' '''Shuggle'''. Even funnier, the Website/{{Google}} Books search preview text renders it as ''the E Street'' '''Snuggle'''.
314* UncommonTime: "The Ghost of Tom Joad" and "House of a Thousand Guitars".
315* UnpluggedVersion: The tours accompanying ''The Ghost of Tom Joad'' and ''Devils & Dust'' were almost entirely solo acoustic and featured some substantially rearranged versions of older band songs.
316** Subverted on Bruce Springsteen's ''MTV Unplugged'' appearance. He first played an acoustic version of "Born to Run," which is this trope played straight. Then, he turned to his band, shrugged, and they all plugged in and played an electric set. The album MTV released for the show had the "Un" of "Unplugged" scratched out.
317** It's gotten to the point where "Born in the USA" is almost always played acoustically, as some people still simply do not get the meaning and need to have it explained to them slowly and clearly.
318* VisualInnuendo: He often plays up phallic imagery on stage using guitars and mic stands.
319* VocalEvolution: His voice mellowed considerably in the 90s.
320* WarIsHell: "Born in the U.S.A." from the 1984 album of the same title.
321* WhamLine: On "The River"
322--> "Then I got Mary pregnant, and man, that was all she wrote."
323** And on "Atlantic City"
324--> "So honey, last night I met this guy and [[TheMafia I'm gonna a do little favor for him.]]"
325* AWildRapperAppears: The song "Rocky Ground" features a rapped verse by gospel singer Michelle Moore.
326* WordSaladLyrics: "Blinded by the Light" and "Does This Bus Stop at 82nd Street?"
327----
328->[[CheapHeat TROPERS!]]
329->(BRUUCE)
330->'''[[LargeHam TROPERS!!!!]]'''
331->(BRUUCE)
332->You've just read the heart-stopping, pants-dropping, hard-rocking, earth-quaking, [[ShakingTheRump booty-shaking]], [[RagingStiffie Viagra-taking]], history-making, legendary-
333
334->'''[[PunctuatedForEmphasis MAIN!]]'''
335->'''[[Music/BruceSpringsteen PAGE!]]'''

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