Nightshift

Letter To You

Dustland (w/ The Killers)

Western Stars

Do I Love You (Indeed I Do)

Don't Play That Song

Tucson Train

Wasted Days (w/ John Mellencamp)


Bruce Springsteen

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Echo Chamber

Springsteen OKs Fictional Girlfriend in Gritty ‘Nebraska’ Biopic Rewrite

Writer-director Scott Cooper lifts the curtain on “Deliver Me From Nowhere,” a Bruce Springsteen biopic swirling around the mythos of “Nebraska.” With Springsteen’s approval, Cooper invents a fictional girlfriend to tease out the artist’s emotional core, a move steeped in poetic license.

Springsteen not only greenlights the embellished narrative but engages directly with script drafts. Cooper reveals unsettling silences, grim motel rooms, and creative friction shaping this stripped-down cinematic portrait.


Source: Music – Rolling Stone – Published on October 28, 2025

Springsteen cribs from Dylan, Elvis & Orbison—builds Born to Run from fan notes

Bruce Springsteen, more listener than legend, never hides behind mythology. He routinely nods to the trio fueling the grit and grandeur of Born to Run—Bob Dylan, Elvis Presley, and Roy Orbison.

Dylan’s lyrical density, Presley’s stage swagger, and Orbison’s operatic drama each feed the album’s fever-dream Americana. Springsteen crafts ambition from admiration, sculpting borrowed intensity into his own blueprint of rock romanticism.


Source: Music Industry News – Published on October 4, 2025

Springsteen files another solo dispatch—quiet, persistent, and between cycles

Bruce Springsteen wraps up work on a new solo album, adding another chapter to his already extensive recording catalogue. Positioned quietly between his larger creative cycles, this latest effort arrives with the same understated persistence that has marked his non-E-Street excursions.

A third volume of the Tracks box set is in progress, carefully curated from his archives, along with a fresh covers collection. Meanwhile, whispers of a solo tour hover in the background—neither confirmed nor denied, just methodically contemplated.


Source: Music – Rolling Stone – Published on June 19, 2025

Springsteen parks “Racing in the Street” at Brian Wilson’s garage one last time

Bruce Springsteen tips his hat to Brian Wilson, calling him the maestro and bidding him farewell with restrained reverence. He credits Wilson's influence as pivotal, admitting candidly that without him, "Racing in the Street" might never have idled into gear.

From Springsteen’s perspective, Wilson’s legacy isn’t just musical—it’s personal, a “lovely lasting debt” etched across the E Street Band’s body of work, paid not with fanfare but acknowledgment.


Source: Music – Rolling Stone – Published on June 14, 2025

Springsteen dusts off “Sunday Love,” a forgotten flicker from the Twilight Hours

Bruce Springsteen presents “Sunday Love,” a track excavated from the vaults of his unreleased Twilight Hours album, born during the Western Stars period. Released as the first preview from the forthcoming Tracks II box set, the song resurfaces without ceremony but not without consequence.

Absent from commercial release until now, the track offers a glimpse into a quieter corner of Springsteen’s prolific output, one he chose to let gather dust for nearly a decade.


Source: Pitchfork – Published on June 13, 2025

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