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Bruce Springsteen Soundtracks Imaginary Western On ‘Faithless'
Bruce Springsteen Soundtracks Imaginary Western On ‘Faithless'

Yahoo

time01-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Bruce Springsteen Soundtracks Imaginary Western On ‘Faithless'

Bruce Springsteen trots out his best husky twang amid mournful slide guitar lines on 'Faithless,' the third song to be released from his long-awaited collection of unreleased music, Tracks II: The Lost Albums. 'Faithless' is the title track to one of seven unheard, complete albums contained in the set, which arrives June 27 from Columbia. Faithless was previously described as a soundtrack to a 'spiritual Western' film that was never made. It was written during a two-week stint in Florida and recorded largely between the fall 2005 tour in support of Devils & Dust and the April 2006 release of We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions. More from Spin: Ed Sheeran's New Album, 'Play,' Coming In September Wolfgang Van Halen Drafts Slash, Danny Trejo For 'The End' Video Evan Dando and the Axis of Weirdness 'This was a really unusual collection of songs,' the Boss admits of composing music for a film that didn't exist. 'You could recognize details and maybe a character or two. But for the most part, I just wrote atmospheric music that I thought would fit.' The album mostly features Springsteen, although producer Ron Aniello and E Street Band members Soozie Tyrell, Lisa Lowell, Curtis King, Jr., Michelle Moore and Ada Dyer appear at times, as do Springsteen's wife Patti Scialfa and their children Evan and Sam. Beyond Faithless, Tracks II is divided into LA Garage Sessions '83, Streets of Philadelphia Sessions, Somewhere North of Nashville, Inyo, Twilight Hours and Perfect World. Somewhere North of Nashville features 'country combos with pedal steel,' Inyo includes 'richly woven border tales' and Twilight Hours is 'orchestra-driven, mid-century noir.' As for Perfect World, it is said to possess an 'arena-ready E Street flavor.' Springsteen and the E Street Band return to the road May 14 in Manchester, England. To see our running list of the top 100 greatest rock stars of all time, click here.

Lost albums are usually lost for a reason. But Bruce Springsteen's will be different
Lost albums are usually lost for a reason. But Bruce Springsteen's will be different

Telegraph

time03-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

Lost albums are usually lost for a reason. But Bruce Springsteen's will be different

It's only April, but Christmas would seem to be coming early for Bruce Springsteen fans, with the bard of blue-collar rock announcing the release of seven previously unheard albums. Granted, it isn't the first time Springsteen has opened the vaults – in 2015, he shared a three-hour-plus extended edition of his 1980 opus The River, crammed with out-takes, alternative versions and an hour-long documentary. But this new project – which he has christened 'Tracks II' – is something else entirely. On June 27, he will share seven 'lost' records made between 1983 and 2018 – each, by the sounds of it, a fully-realised work that, for various reasons, he had chosen not to put out into the world in the moment. If it's a cash-in – and the collected vinyl and CD editions are priced at £265 a-piece – it's one with a difference. Tracks II will, at the very least, provide a unique insight into Springsteen's creative process. Amongst the works soon to see daylight are a 'hip-hop-influenced album from the early 1990s', a country record titled Somewhere North of Nashville, and a 'pop' project called Twilight Hours. In other words, he isn't chasing the cynical music industry trend of scraping the out-takes barrel so much as inviting his audience to enter a sort of Bruce Springsteen parallel dimension – one where he went pop rather than rock and, with that hip hop LP, embraced the funk-master within. For devotees, it is an opportunity to dive headlong into the extended Bruce-o-verse. The news has been met with a spectrum of emotions among Springsteen fans. Many are shocked at the recommended retail price – north of 250 quid, or, in layperson's terms, the first 20 minutes of an Oasis concert. Others are disappointed that Tracks II will seemingly skip a much-rumoured electric version of his stripped-down 1982 masterpiece Nebraska. There is also, it should be pointed out, a Tracks part one – a 1998 collection of b-sides, including his demo of Born in the USA. Whatever their feelings, few fans will be entirely blind-sided by this week's announcement. Springsteen has long hinted at the existence of a vast trove of shelved work. In his 2016 autobiography, Born To Run, he recalls putting together an LP with a hip-hop edge immediately after experimenting with synths and a drum machine to write The Streets of Philadelphia for Jonathan Demme's Philadelphia (for which he won an Oscar). Springsteen spent a year toiling on the record – only to decide it was the wrong project at the wrong time. Aware that 1987's Tunnel Of Love was regarded by many as too introspective, he wanted to get back to a more anthemic sound. He wrote: 'I had to come to terms with the fact that after my year of work, writing, recording, mixing it was going on the shelf. That's where she sits.' But now he is dusting it down, and what good news that is for Springsteen lovers. It is also confirmation that, to the end, he remains a maverick. What other artist would devote more than a year of their life to a Broadway show, as he did in 2017, or, just this week, guest on a concept record by The Waterboys about Hollywood loose cannon Dennis Hopper? By announcing Tracks II he's ripping up the rule book one more time and for Bruce aficionados willing to pay the admittedly high asking price, the prospect of an entirely new continuum of Springsteen albums is surely a signal that glory days are here again.

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