Bruce Springsteen gave fans a nice holiday treat by showing up at The Stone Pony in Asbury Park last night for WhyHunger's 50th Anniversary celebration.
There are bits of a really interesting movie in “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere.” If that version had been allowed to flourish, it could have been the cinematic version of Springsteen’s album ...
Peter Ames Carlin first heard Bruce Springsteen’s single “Born to Run” in 1975 when the future music biographer was a 12-year-old kid in a car headed home from a hike with his Boy Scout troop. He was, ...
The most unfortunate thing about “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere” is that the film, fundamentally, does everything right. The plot is trackable, director Scott Cooper doesn’t make any ...
The Boss is taking on the commander in chief – again. "You have to face the fact that a good number of Americans are simply comfortable with his politics of power and dominance," the singer added.
The following story is part of a special section on Bruce Springsteen published in the Asbury Park Press on Aug. 18, 1985. Bruce Springsteen seemed a bit tired at his show in Washington, D.C., earlier ...
Critiquing a music biopic is an oxymoronic pursuit. The standard music biopic has been algorithmically perfected down to a series of music cues. As the subject of film criticism, it is the lowest ...
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