The child from New Jersey is what Jim Morrison said, "A man is not a bird." Each song is a story, the road to the next track, each capital has its own lyrical ensemble.
It is worth noting that the accelerated and lengthy tracks are strategically placed on the first and second sides to free the audience from the dark stories of songs such as "angels." The lyrics reflect the destruction, because humans climbed the ladder of hope with any means on the fingertips, "exuding venom from his engine." Springsteen is already thinking about what happens every day in our sky filled with ozone.
Springsteen takes a beat to cover up the lyrics that every American needs to sing and then let them flow into the subconscious. After that, after being sung and becoming second-hand, when the audience begins to understand that they are really seeds. Once planted in everyone's heart, the difficult story of the United States will begin to form. He saw in what he saw and felt and understood.
"Blind by Light" is a lengthy, saturated music enjoyment that is full of songs for the entire five minutes. He must sit in dictionaries, newspapers, and thesaurus while inhaling every tiny amount of information, reconstructing each word into the necessary lines, and then building a carousel of music. Springsteen's thoughts must run at the speed of sound, writing lines that distort human instinct. "I am crazy with Jenny, loves silence, sings our birthday song." The word creates an image with a double meaning, and divides the majority of the composed image into two lines. Genius! ! ! !
The insights he saw transcended headlines, and the story called for those who used mythological beliefs such as the Bible to claim their hypocrisy. "The nun is bald in the hall of the Vatican, the pleading of pregnancy and the perfect idea" is a line of "lost in the flood". Springsteen can be a loyal servant of the fact that no one is willing to admit every day. We buy this as a fact and don't ask any questions because we have already proposed to do it. Bob Dylan raises our understanding of what really happens in the world, and we let it go. Now Springsteen has picked up the baton and passed on information to young people in our country.
Clarence Clemons has an abstract philosophical approach to his saxophone performance because he combines the touches and fills of each song. The rest of the band often lags behind some of the fast-paced pace, but for its first release and record [no pun], Springsteen has proven that he will have a place in the future.
Orignal From: Album Review: Greetings from Asbury Park, New Jersey, Bruce Springsteen
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