Saturday, April 20, 2019

Album Review: Bruce Springsteen's Wild and E Street Shuffling

The latest release of Bruce Springsteen hits the needle with the number of openings for the earbuds. Unlike his divorce release, this is an experience of music genre conflict. The rock beat has a long-lived medicine with a jazz guitar flavor. The bass line is the joint of the animation, and its task is to connect the points. Springsteen uses jazz, rock, blues and folk songs.

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 Not a disguise, but a red carpet for some of the old-time blues. In "The Wild Billy Circus Story," he used a large size unlike a circus instrument; when it was spelled "Jass," it was more reflective of New Orleans jazz. ' 20 and 20 music and Bix Beiderbecke's crown will filter subtle beats and large pumping swings. The sound of Springsteen music today is filled with the energy that blows through these old records.

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 Springsteen wants to shoot all the music that affects him and edit it in every track, except for "Rosalita." This song is a rock song whose theme has been used by songwriters for many years. Who doesn't want to get a generous contract and girl? The songwriter of each guitar player. When Springsteen came to town, they would not get the girl. Guitar rhythms have a lot in common DOOBIE BROTHERS "China Grove" comes from their latest release from

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 But this is a few times this year, Springsteen has been affected by any music record.

The storyteller hidden inside explodes in the lyrics of "July 4 Asbury Park" because he can use this composition to transform visual effects, which makes the audience feel as if they can reach out and touch the character he is singing. When the smell of the beach consumes your senses, you can feel the fireworks show in front of you. Then, "Kitty's Return" can sometimes be a Broadway music event, with characters from the "West Side Story" in every gap of the stage. Could this be the combination that made him write this song?

The best thing about his vocal style is that every word is meant to be understood rather than disguised, because he is laughed at by being misunderstood. His lines are almost complete sentences, still allowing each listener to interpret the song as their own personal life. The "Events of the 57th Street" song was created in a Lou Reed-like way into the building of a song.

The long "New York Serenade" ended this record with some incredible piano art, making New York scream "play me." Although it was finally determined that a man and a woman might encounter destructive things in the process of encountering it, it brought a strong shock to the days of Cab Calloway. Also known as The Reaper man, this is a song about those who like marijuana, and Calloway is not afraid to tell his story and loves New York. The Cotton Club is Harlem's most important jazz venue, and when he gets a night scene on the stage while on tour of the Duke of Ellington, there is nowhere else. Springsteen can imitate all the feelings of New York from the 20th century to the present.

Like his first version, Springsteen has a preferred name that can be injected into every song. Greetings from Asbury Park, New Jersey, is Sandy, now Jane. The next time his muse is, only time will explain. These last two versions have achieved rapid success, so powerful, touring, and the word spread should keep him away from the studio for a while.




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