The Man Behind the Glory: Bruce Springsteen and the Untold Truth Behind Born in the U.S.A.

Bruce Springsteen revealed he was not fully happy with his blockbuster 1984 album Born in the U.S.A., claiming it wasn’t the record he’d planned on making.

The Boss reflected on the 30-million-selling album in a new interview with Rolling Stone to promote his upcoming Tracks II: The Lost Albums box set, which comes out Friday.

In the box set liner notes, Springsteen says he “wasn’t happy” with Born in the U.S.A. and felt it didn’t “connect” in the same way as his previous work.

Bruce Springsteen Says ‘Born in the U.S.A.’ Wasn’t the Album He Was ‘Interested in Making’

“It was a record I put out. It became the record I made, not necessarily the record that I was interested in making,” Springsteen said when asked about those claims. “I was interested in taking Nebraska and making a full record that had somewhat that same feeling. If you hear ‘My Hometown’ and you hear ‘Born in the U.S.A.,’ they were sort of the bookends I intended. And the rest of the stuff was … just what I had at the time. Those were the songs I wrote. Those were the songs I recorded.”

He continued: “From conception to execution, it was not necessarily the record that in my mind I had planned on, but that’s the way creativity works. You go in the studio, you have an idea. It’s not necessarily what you come out with. So that was just the situation of that record for me personally.”

 

When writer Andy Greene suggested that Born in the U.S.A. sounds like a “cohesive” set of “dispatches from various people left behind by Reagan’s America,” Springsteen responded: “I guess, it was to a lot of other people too. I suppose maybe I was looking for something darker. But outside of that, the themes of Nebraska are in there — in ‘Downbound Train,’ they’re in there, they’re disguised somewhat into pop music.”

‘Tracks II’ Offers Insight Into Bruce Springsteen’s Pivotal Career Moment

Tracks II contains L.A. Garage Sessions, an entire album Springsteen recorded between the sparse, lo-fi Nebraska and the bombastic, stadium-ready Born in the U.S.A., providing some insight into his creative headspace during a pivotal moment in his career.

“I enjoyed the recording and the experience of Nebraska, and thought I might continue in that vein with a small rhythm section, still very lo-fi, and a new group of songs,” Springsteen told Rolling Stone. “At the time I wasn’t sure where I was going with Born in the U.S.A. I had half the record, but I didn’t have the other half. And so it was just a record that happened in between those two records.”

The tireless rocker has already finished Tracks III, another five-album set of previously unreleased music, though he doesn’t have a release date in mind yet. Springsteen will also get the big-screen treatment with Deliver Me From Nowhere, a biopic about the making of Nebraska. The film stars Jeremy Allen White as the Boss and is scheduled for an Oct. 24 release.

Bruce Springsteen Albums Ranked

From scrappy Dylan disciple to one of the leading singer-songwriters of his generation, the Boss’ catalog includes both big and small statements of purpose.

Gallery Credit: Michael Gallucci

22. Human Touch (1992)
22. Human Touch (1992)

Columbia

21. ‘Human Touch’ (1992)

After he disbanded the E Street Band in the late ’80s, Springsteen recorded a pair of albums with Los Angeles studio musicians. This is the lesser of the two records, a stifling and somewhat restrained set of songs detailing his happiness with his new wife Patti Scialfa. His songwriting lost much of the desperation that made his character studies in the ’70s and ’80s so critical to his career. More than that, the record is dull.

21. High Hopes (2014)
21. High Hopes (2014)

Columbia

20. ‘High Hopes’ (2014)

Patched together from castoffs and leftovers from 21st-century albums, Springsteen’s 18th sounds rushed and scattered – both firsts in a career for an artist whose meticulous dedication to his records is legendary. Neither producer – Ron Aniello or Brendan O’Brien – is well-suited to the music; their needles-in-the-red approach robs even the best songs here of nuance. Another Springsteen album wouldn’t arrive for five years.

19. Only the Strong Survive (2022)
19. Only the Strong Survive (2022)

Columbia

19. ‘Only the Strong Survive’ (2022)

Springsteen’s second covers LP (following 2006’s Pete Seeger collection, We Shall Overcome) mines mostly ’60s and ’70s soul songs from genre heavyweights Diana Ross & the Supremes, the Temptations and Commodores. Springsteen has long been a master at interpreting others’ songs. Still, the relative obscurities of Frank Wilson and Jerry Butler stand out in this slight but devoted tribute to the past.

16. Lucky Town (1992)
16. Lucky Town (1992)

Columbia

18. ‘Lucky Town’ (1992)

The second of two Springsteen albums released simultaneously, Lucky Town at least has better songs than those found on the languid Human Touch. But the L.A. studio musicians do the songs no favors. Nobody here comes close to the primal urgency or tightness of the E Street Band; even the best songs – “Better Days,” “Living Proof” – suffer from the group’s lack of commitment.

18. Letter to You (2020)
18. Letter to You (2020)

Columbia

17. ‘Letter to You’ (2020)

After the personal Western Stars, Springsteen got even more intimate in its follow-up the next year, Letter to You, written after his career-summation Broadway show but before the pandemic shut down the world. Letter to You reflects on death and the prospect of growing old; it resurrects three unreleased songs dating before his debut album in 1973. Thematically, the pieces fit.

19. Working on a Dream (2009)
19. Working on a Dream (2009)

Columbia

16. ‘Working on a Dream’ (2009)

Springsteen has called Working on a Dream the final album of a trilogy including The Rising and Magic. Like those albums, Dream is often hopeful, partly stemming from the campaign and eventual election of President Barack Obama in 2008. “The Wrestler,” from the 2008 movie of the same name, is included as a bonus track, but it’s a binding agent here. Not bad, but the weakest of Springsteen’s ’00s albums.

14. Wrecking Ball (2012)
14. Wrecking Ball (2012)

Columbia

15. ‘Wrecking Ball’ (2012)

Finally, a studio “Land of Hope and Dreams” (though Live in New York City contains the definitive version) plus others from the vault. Wrecking Ball finds its comfort in the familiar; the album included the last appearance by longtime saxophonist and foil Clarence Clemons, who died in 2011. A political LP by nature, it feels like a benediction as Springsteen entered his fourth decade as a recording artist.

20. Devils & Dust (2005)
20. Devils & Dust (2005)

Columbia

14. ‘Devils & Dust’ (2005)

Another solo acoustic work in the vein of Nebraska and The Ghost of Tom JoadDevils & Dust takes the pulse of America in the mid-’00s. As with The Rising, the ghosts of 9/11 haunt Devils & Dust, whether in the conflicted soldier of the title song or the familial bonds kicked up by loss in “Long Time Comin’.” The solo predecessors get more attention, but there are buried moments here worth uncovering.

12. Western Stars (2019)
12. Western Stars (2019)

Columbia

13. ‘Western Stars’ (2019)

After a five-year break after 2014’s disappointing High Hopes, Springsteen returned with one of his most personal works, a lush, strings-adorned album that recreates the soft-rock sounds that came out of California in the early ’70s. With nods to classic records by Glen Campbell and Jimmy Webb, Western Stars is a grown-up collection of songs about getting old, moving on and fading away.

9. We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions (2006)
9. We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions (2006)

Columbia

12. ‘We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions’ (2006)

Between the solo acoustic Devils & Dust and the rousing E Street Band record Magic, Springsteen gathered some friends, including a couple of recent E Streeters, and paid tribute to the folk tradition of Pete Seeger with a collection of cover songs. We Shall Overcome is the loosest record in Springsteen’s discography, a fun and spirited dip into the past that never sounds moldy or nostalgic. A fine detour.

10. Magic (2007)
10. Magic (2007)

Columbia

11. ‘Magic’ (2007)

Magic has more in common – thematically, lyrically and musically – with 2002’s The Rising than its two immediate predecessors, We Shall Overcome and Devils & Dust. Nostalgia collides with discontentment on MagicThe Rising‘s post-9/11 optimism giving way to more harsh realities. This is Springsteen at a new stage: growing up with a price. The American Dream has fallen out of reach.

17. Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. (1973)
17. Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. (1973)

Columbia

10. ‘Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J.’ (1973)

Springsteen’s debut is little more than a demo audition, but his clever, Dylan-like wordplay and raised-on-radio melodies hinted at more to come. Early favorites “Blinded by the Light” and “Spirit in the Night” showed more than a promise; they uncovered a singer and songwriter raised on tradition but determined to tear down its constraints. An accomplished debut that grows in stature each year.

11. The Rising (2002)
11. The Rising (2002)

Columbia

9. ‘The Rising’ (2002)

The Rising arrived at the right time in Springsteen’s career and an even more appropriate place in America’s history. Following the tragedy of 9/11, Springsteen – with the reunited E Street Band for the first time in almost two decades – delivers his strongest and most committed songs in years. The performances were alternately heartbreaking and uplifting, the perfect combination for a nation that was still healing.

15. The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995)
15. The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995)

Columbia

8. ‘The Ghost of Tom Joad’ (1995)

Maybe learning a lesson from the dual 1992 detours of Human Touch and Lucky Town, Springsteen abandons a band altogether on his 11th LP, an acoustic protest record that has as much in common with literary works as it does Woody Guthrie’s folk songs. Like NebraskaThe Ghost of Tom Joad is stripped to mostly just Springsteen and his naked guitar; unlike that earlier work, this one finds some hope in the crevices.

1. Tunnel of Love (1987)
1. Tunnel of Love (1987)

Columbia

7. ‘Tunnel of Love’ (1987)

With 1984’s Born in the U.S.A., Bruce Springsteen became one of the biggest artists in the world. Its impact changed his life forever and not always for the best. He moved to California from his longtime New Jersey home and married actress Julianne Phillips, a union that soon fell apart. Details are sketched out on Tunnel of Love, an intimate work that reveals the scars and uncertainty masked behind his fame. A quiet gem.

4. The Wild the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle (1973)
4. The Wild the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle (1973)

Columbia

6. ‘The Wild the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle’ (1973)

Looser and more band-oriented than his debut, Springsteen’s second album is the one where he takes the still-growing E Street Band for a ride and tests their durability. There’s still some Dylan in the air (the nearly 10-minute “New York City Serenade”), but this is where Springsteen begins to shed his influences for his own identity. “Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)” became a concert staple; the rest add to the legend.

6. The River (1980)
6. The River (1980)

Columbia

5. ‘The River’ (1980)

Regret, restlessness and the draw of chasing dreams run throughout Springsteen’s double-album opus. Picking up where Darkness on the Edge of Town left off, The River‘s characters are more beaten down by life but no less eager to cash in for something bigger and better. The sprawl is literary at times, pure rock ‘n’ roll elsewhere. The River was the first Springsteen album to reach No. 1. It wouldn’t be the last.

2. Nebraska (1982)
2. Nebraska (1982)

Columbia

4. ‘Nebraska’ (1982)

Nebraska started life as the next E Street Band album when Bruce Springsteen decided to release his stark acoustic demos as his next LP. Wrapped around the theme of darkness and sin that hides in everyone, Nebraska was most pronounced in its exploration of serial killers, family ghosts and the secrets that are never completely hidden from view. An unexpected treasure that has lost none of its power since its release.

8. Born in the U.S.A. (1984)
8. Born in the U.S.A. (1984)

Columbia

3. ‘Born in the U.S.A.’ (1984)

The album that made Springsteen a worldwide phenomenon was the stadium-filling record he had been working toward since his debut. Loaded with hits – seven of its singles reached the Top 10 – Born in the U.S.A. is a master songwriter working at the top of his game. Political at its core – the title track and “My Hometown” are bittersweet portraits of forgotten souls – Springsteen’s seventh album is also funny and catchy.

3. Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978)
3. Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978)

Columbia

2. ‘Darkness on the Edge of Town’ (1978)

Born to Run held up Springsteen as rock ‘n’ roll’s greatest promise, but as he got ready to make his fourth LP, a lawsuit against his manager derailed the songs he was working on. During the interim, when he was prohibited from releasing a new record, he and the E Street Band tracked dozens of songs. The best of them thread the simmering pot of frustration on Darkness on the Edge of Town. The myth and legend are sealed here.

5. Born to Run (1975)
5. Born to Run (1975)

Columbia

1. ‘Born to Run’ (1975)

The album that made Bruce Springsteen a star (magazine covers and sold-out concerts were happening all over) takes a creative leap of faith, pushing the artist’s grand Spectorian concepts to their max. The bookends to each LP side (“Thunder Road,” “Backstreets,” “Born to Run” and “Jungleland”) form one of the greatest thematic works in rock history; the imagery is iconic and myth-making. As far as career-making albums go, Born to Run rarely forces itself. Stories and characters unspool in their settings like they’ve always been there. Springsteen, a master storyteller at his most fluent here, finds their voices and, more importantly, his own among shattered hopes and dreams.

 

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