COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
I'm not going straight through its going to take awhile

Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
#11
Thunder Road

album: Born To Run (1975)
It pains me that this song fell just outside of the top ten, but it also hurt just to leave out a
Couple dozen songs off of this list entirely. This is the opening track to his third album, Born To Run.
His first two albums were not very successful and Bruce was in danger of losing the contract with
His record label if he couldn't provide a big hit. This was the first song he wrote about escaping to
The open road, and in doing so, he began gathering one of the most loyal fan bases of all time.
This is essentially the song that kick-started his way into being one of the most legendary
Figures in the history of music. Ever felt a sense of worry, because you're getting older and not
Sure what the future has planned for you? This song is definitely for you.
Don't run back inside, darling, you know just what I'm here for
So you're scared and you're thinking that maybe we ain't that young anymore
Show a little faith, there's magic in the night
Thunder Road

album: Born To Run (1975)
It pains me that this song fell just outside of the top ten, but it also hurt just to leave out a
Couple dozen songs off of this list entirely. This is the opening track to his third album, Born To Run.
His first two albums were not very successful and Bruce was in danger of losing the contract with
His record label if he couldn't provide a big hit. This was the first song he wrote about escaping to
The open road, and in doing so, he began gathering one of the most loyal fan bases of all time.
This is essentially the song that kick-started his way into being one of the most legendary
Figures in the history of music. Ever felt a sense of worry, because you're getting older and not
Sure what the future has planned for you? This song is definitely for you.
Don't run back inside, darling, you know just what I'm here for
So you're scared and you're thinking that maybe we ain't that young anymore
Show a little faith, there's magic in the night
Thunder Road lyrics


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
Let me know which ones you dig.Tiggnutz wrote:I'm not going straight through its going to take awhile



Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
#10
Downbound Train

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
It's hard to put into words what so many of these songs mean to me - trying to word it in the best way
That I can in order to provide some sort of understanding where you can grasp exactly what I feel when
I listen to them. This one is an interesting one in a lot of ways, and I'm gonna give it my best shot to break it down.
As I've mentioned before, Bruce was always a part of my childhood, but certainly not his entire catalog of music.
My knowledge of Bruce only extended as far as his greatest hits could take me. Once I got to be about 21 or 22 is when
I really started getting heavily into Bruce Springsteen. I may have heard this song as a child, but I had no recollection
Of it when I put in the Born In The U.S.A. album about ten years ago. At the time, I was going through a very rough
Break up. I had lost my job, I found out my girlfriend had been cheating on me and I was an absolute wreck.
I was about 22, so I was at the age where I was smack in the middle of discovering who I was as a man.
When I listened to this song, it absolutely blew me away for so many reasons. In the song, he loses his job and his girlfriend, and he
Reminisces of the time she took the train and left him, saying at night he'll hear the whistle from the train keeping
Him up at night. He then describes a dream he had where he heard her voice, she was crying for him to come back,
And as he heads back to their wedding house, he hears the train whistle in his dream, reminding him that what he's
Experiencing isn't real, and in the dream he drops down to his knees and hangs his head. I can still remember how
Stunningly relatable this was for me, at the time. Not only did I experience all the hardships Bruce sings about in the
Song, I experienced nearly an identical dream, where everything was fine, we were together and she was sorry for all
The wrong things she had done to me, and in the middle of the dream I realized it wasn't real. Hearing this song with
All that pain that I was experiencing was one of the most incredible things I'd ever felt. If I had to guess, I would say that
Downbound Train is the song that really catapulted my desire to search for Bruce Springsteen's tunes, and the journey of
Discovering all the songs he wrote and relating to damn near every one of them on some level is an experience I will forever
Cherish. Childhood nostalgia is going to play a fairly prominent part on the rest of this top ten, but let it be known that I am
On record saying that Downbound Train is very likely the song that is responsible for my desire to discover Bruce Springsteen's
catalog, and he has never disappointed. He is my #1 musician, with a bullet, for a very good reason, and Downbound Train started it all.
Downbound Train may not be my favorite Bruce Springsteen song, but it is probably the most important.
Nights as I sleep, I hear that whistle whining
I feel her kiss in the misty rain
And I feel like I'm a rider
On a downbound train
Downbound Train

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
It's hard to put into words what so many of these songs mean to me - trying to word it in the best way
That I can in order to provide some sort of understanding where you can grasp exactly what I feel when
I listen to them. This one is an interesting one in a lot of ways, and I'm gonna give it my best shot to break it down.
As I've mentioned before, Bruce was always a part of my childhood, but certainly not his entire catalog of music.
My knowledge of Bruce only extended as far as his greatest hits could take me. Once I got to be about 21 or 22 is when
I really started getting heavily into Bruce Springsteen. I may have heard this song as a child, but I had no recollection
Of it when I put in the Born In The U.S.A. album about ten years ago. At the time, I was going through a very rough
Break up. I had lost my job, I found out my girlfriend had been cheating on me and I was an absolute wreck.
I was about 22, so I was at the age where I was smack in the middle of discovering who I was as a man.
When I listened to this song, it absolutely blew me away for so many reasons. In the song, he loses his job and his girlfriend, and he
Reminisces of the time she took the train and left him, saying at night he'll hear the whistle from the train keeping
Him up at night. He then describes a dream he had where he heard her voice, she was crying for him to come back,
And as he heads back to their wedding house, he hears the train whistle in his dream, reminding him that what he's
Experiencing isn't real, and in the dream he drops down to his knees and hangs his head. I can still remember how
Stunningly relatable this was for me, at the time. Not only did I experience all the hardships Bruce sings about in the
Song, I experienced nearly an identical dream, where everything was fine, we were together and she was sorry for all
The wrong things she had done to me, and in the middle of the dream I realized it wasn't real. Hearing this song with
All that pain that I was experiencing was one of the most incredible things I'd ever felt. If I had to guess, I would say that
Downbound Train is the song that really catapulted my desire to search for Bruce Springsteen's tunes, and the journey of
Discovering all the songs he wrote and relating to damn near every one of them on some level is an experience I will forever
Cherish. Childhood nostalgia is going to play a fairly prominent part on the rest of this top ten, but let it be known that I am
On record saying that Downbound Train is very likely the song that is responsible for my desire to discover Bruce Springsteen's
catalog, and he has never disappointed. He is my #1 musician, with a bullet, for a very good reason, and Downbound Train started it all.
Downbound Train may not be my favorite Bruce Springsteen song, but it is probably the most important.
Nights as I sleep, I hear that whistle whining
I feel her kiss in the misty rain
And I feel like I'm a rider
On a downbound train
Downbound Train lyrics


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
#9
Born In The U.S.A.

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
Max Weinberg on drums, ladies and gentlemen.
If Born In The U.S.A. is not the most anthemic song in the history of music, I don't know what is.
This is easily Bruce Springsteen's most political song and it could not be more perfect. Whether you're
A Conservative, Liberal, Authoritarian or Libertarian, this song is a universal message that everyone
Can enjoy. It really bugs me when people on opposite sides of the political compass play tug-of-war
With who this song belongs to. It belongs to all of us, the citizens of the U.S.A. (Not the lowly commies).
When the Vietnam War ended, it was an incredibly tough time for the war veterans who returned home.
The government completely failed to provide anything for them when they returned and many were stuck
With nothing, essentially. "Nothing", which is a great word to describe what those American soldiers died for.
Veterans suffered for many years, especially from the mid-late 70's immediately after the war ended.
Many people still use this song in protest, today, and while it used to bug me that groups would gather and play this song
As a form of protest that didn't match the song, I grew to understand it. Whether left or right, we all have some form
Of protest in our hearts for the way big government handles things, and while the fact that the true meaning behind
The lyrics to this song isn't necessarily as prominent as it was when it was written, we are lucky that we are able to protest
The things in our country that we disagree with. Most countries would not tolerate this behavior. We, as Americans,
Should rejoice in that we were all lucky enough to be Born In The U.S.A.!
This song was written for the soldiers relegated to war, not just for those who were neglected by the
Government upon their return home, but for those who never even made it back. It was also written in part
That because this was America's only losing war, they didn't even receive the hero's welcome they deserved.
No matter where we wish to apply the song in today's American culture, This song is, and always will be
The anthem for the American soldier.
Down in the shadow of the penitentiary
Out by the gas fires of the refinery
I'm ten years burning down the road
Nowhere to run, ain't got nowhere to go
Born In The U.S.A.

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
Max Weinberg on drums, ladies and gentlemen.
If Born In The U.S.A. is not the most anthemic song in the history of music, I don't know what is.
This is easily Bruce Springsteen's most political song and it could not be more perfect. Whether you're
A Conservative, Liberal, Authoritarian or Libertarian, this song is a universal message that everyone
Can enjoy. It really bugs me when people on opposite sides of the political compass play tug-of-war
With who this song belongs to. It belongs to all of us, the citizens of the U.S.A. (Not the lowly commies).
When the Vietnam War ended, it was an incredibly tough time for the war veterans who returned home.
The government completely failed to provide anything for them when they returned and many were stuck
With nothing, essentially. "Nothing", which is a great word to describe what those American soldiers died for.
Veterans suffered for many years, especially from the mid-late 70's immediately after the war ended.
Many people still use this song in protest, today, and while it used to bug me that groups would gather and play this song
As a form of protest that didn't match the song, I grew to understand it. Whether left or right, we all have some form
Of protest in our hearts for the way big government handles things, and while the fact that the true meaning behind
The lyrics to this song isn't necessarily as prominent as it was when it was written, we are lucky that we are able to protest
The things in our country that we disagree with. Most countries would not tolerate this behavior. We, as Americans,
Should rejoice in that we were all lucky enough to be Born In The U.S.A.!
This song was written for the soldiers relegated to war, not just for those who were neglected by the
Government upon their return home, but for those who never even made it back. It was also written in part
That because this was America's only losing war, they didn't even receive the hero's welcome they deserved.
No matter where we wish to apply the song in today's American culture, This song is, and always will be
The anthem for the American soldier.
Down in the shadow of the penitentiary
Out by the gas fires of the refinery
I'm ten years burning down the road
Nowhere to run, ain't got nowhere to go
Born In The U.S.A. lyrics


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
BONUS TRACK
Born In The U.S.A. was originally recorded for the Nebraska album, but Bruce simply wasn't feeling it, felt something was missing, so he left it out. While I do believe it was a damn good idea to go with the version he recorded for the Born In The U.S.A. album, his rejected version is not bad at all, and fits right in with the sound of Nebraska. Here's the rejected version of Born In The U.S.A...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22Gh1wQEe1I
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22Gh1wQEe1I


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
#8
Backstreets

album: Born To Run (1975)
In my review of Jungleland on this list, which was also on the Born To Run album, I considered it to be
Bruce Springsteen's "Stairway To Heaven" or "Bohemian Rhapsody". His "epic" song. Well, I think he has two.
Backstreets is one of Bruce's most powerful songs, musically and lyrically. Written as a combination of
Relationships that he had growing up and his overall experiences with the world as he grew to be a man,
Backstreets provided one of the most emotional songs in his entire catalog. I flipped back and forth on
Whether or not to include Born In The U.S.A. at #8 or Backstreets at #8. After changing my mind more than
A couple of times, I decided Backstreets deserved the nod for the simple reason of the song picking up
Speed about 2 minutes into the song. It gets faster, Bruce gets louder and emotions run high. It is a favorite
Among Bruce Springsteen concert-goers. When this song plays, put up your whiskey glasses and sing along,
because you are going on a fun ride with this tune.
Roy Bittan on piano, ladies and gentlemen.
Blame it on the lies that killed us, blame it on the truth that ran us down
You can blame it all on me, Terry, it don't matter to me now
When the breakdown hit at midnight there was nothing left to say
But I hated him and I hated you when you went away
Backstreets

album: Born To Run (1975)
In my review of Jungleland on this list, which was also on the Born To Run album, I considered it to be
Bruce Springsteen's "Stairway To Heaven" or "Bohemian Rhapsody". His "epic" song. Well, I think he has two.
Backstreets is one of Bruce's most powerful songs, musically and lyrically. Written as a combination of
Relationships that he had growing up and his overall experiences with the world as he grew to be a man,
Backstreets provided one of the most emotional songs in his entire catalog. I flipped back and forth on
Whether or not to include Born In The U.S.A. at #8 or Backstreets at #8. After changing my mind more than
A couple of times, I decided Backstreets deserved the nod for the simple reason of the song picking up
Speed about 2 minutes into the song. It gets faster, Bruce gets louder and emotions run high. It is a favorite
Among Bruce Springsteen concert-goers. When this song plays, put up your whiskey glasses and sing along,
because you are going on a fun ride with this tune.
Roy Bittan on piano, ladies and gentlemen.
Blame it on the lies that killed us, blame it on the truth that ran us down
You can blame it all on me, Terry, it don't matter to me now
When the breakdown hit at midnight there was nothing left to say
But I hated him and I hated you when you went away
Backstreets lyrics


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
#7
I'm Goin' Down

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
"It was either this, or 'Pink Cadillac'", Bruce Springsteen said about this song making the cut
For the Born In The U.S.A. album. While I do love Pink Cadillac, I feel he definitely made the right
Choice. It's a straight-forward, upbeat rocker about a girl losing interest in her lover. I'd wager most
Of us have been in this situation at one point or another. I can't tell you how many times an ex of mine
let out one of her bored sighs when we were spending time together. For a long time I knew it wasn't
Gonna last, but pressed forward as though it was just a hurdle we needed to climb. But she just wasn't
Digging me anymore, eventually driving her to cheat, which ended the relationship. It's been so long and
The memories I have no longer bug me. It's another relatable tune from Bruce, and what I love about it
Is the sound. The upbeat rocking track that generates an incredibly unique sound that can only be done by
Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band. A childhood favorite, one that's not only withstood the test of time,
But one that I enjoy more, and more, and more, every time I play it. Not many songs can make that claim.
I'm Goin' Down makes that claim easily.
I pull you close now, baby
But when we kiss I can feel a doubt
I remember back when we started
My kisses used to turn you inside out
I'm Goin' Down

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
"It was either this, or 'Pink Cadillac'", Bruce Springsteen said about this song making the cut
For the Born In The U.S.A. album. While I do love Pink Cadillac, I feel he definitely made the right
Choice. It's a straight-forward, upbeat rocker about a girl losing interest in her lover. I'd wager most
Of us have been in this situation at one point or another. I can't tell you how many times an ex of mine
let out one of her bored sighs when we were spending time together. For a long time I knew it wasn't
Gonna last, but pressed forward as though it was just a hurdle we needed to climb. But she just wasn't
Digging me anymore, eventually driving her to cheat, which ended the relationship. It's been so long and
The memories I have no longer bug me. It's another relatable tune from Bruce, and what I love about it
Is the sound. The upbeat rocking track that generates an incredibly unique sound that can only be done by
Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band. A childhood favorite, one that's not only withstood the test of time,
But one that I enjoy more, and more, and more, every time I play it. Not many songs can make that claim.
I'm Goin' Down makes that claim easily.
I pull you close now, baby
But when we kiss I can feel a doubt
I remember back when we started
My kisses used to turn you inside out
Im Goin Down lyrics


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
#6
Glory Days

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
The title says it all. Glory Days. They're passing me by in the wink of a young girl's eye. A very
Frequent play as a youngster, I never had any idea how relatable this song would be for me as
I grew up. Go back to my review for Downbound Train, add some nostalgia and that pretty much
Sums up the way I feel about this tune. I played baseball in high school, there's a girl who used to
Turn all the boys heads back in school who I talk to every now and then. As with most Bruce Springsteen
Tracks, the sound they generate play a heavy part in how you interpret the lyricism. It is OK to be
Nostalgic and reminisce of the Glory Days, which I do quite often, and probably too often. This
Song is one of Springsteen's most popular tunes, and for damn good reason. I didn't realize this
Until I was in my early 20s and first saw the music video, but when I watched the music video, I
Realized I was becoming the guy Bruce Springsteen plays in the video. The blue-collar worker,
Reminiscing about the good times and not quite being able to let go of the past and how great it was.
If you look closely, you can spot both of Bruce Springsteen's wives in the music video!
Well time slips away
and leaves you with nothing mister but
boring stories of glory days
Glory Days

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
The title says it all. Glory Days. They're passing me by in the wink of a young girl's eye. A very
Frequent play as a youngster, I never had any idea how relatable this song would be for me as
I grew up. Go back to my review for Downbound Train, add some nostalgia and that pretty much
Sums up the way I feel about this tune. I played baseball in high school, there's a girl who used to
Turn all the boys heads back in school who I talk to every now and then. As with most Bruce Springsteen
Tracks, the sound they generate play a heavy part in how you interpret the lyricism. It is OK to be
Nostalgic and reminisce of the Glory Days, which I do quite often, and probably too often. This
Song is one of Springsteen's most popular tunes, and for damn good reason. I didn't realize this
Until I was in my early 20s and first saw the music video, but when I watched the music video, I
Realized I was becoming the guy Bruce Springsteen plays in the video. The blue-collar worker,
Reminiscing about the good times and not quite being able to let go of the past and how great it was.
If you look closely, you can spot both of Bruce Springsteen's wives in the music video!

Well time slips away
and leaves you with nothing mister but
boring stories of glory days
Glory Days lyrics


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
Gonna complete the top 5 at some point this weekend.
Anybody feel like taking at a guess at what songs will be up there?
My top 3 are solid and not gonna change. #4 and #5 are the two songs I'm still debating where to place.
Anybody feel like taking at a guess at what songs will be up there?
My top 3 are solid and not gonna change. #4 and #5 are the two songs I'm still debating where to place.


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
I do believe I'll be finishing this thing today. Wooooooo.


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
#5
The River

album: The River (1980)
The sharp stab of Bruce Springsteen's harmonica in The River has echoed in my ears throughout my entire life.
The way the music comes together in The River is one of the most painfully haunting songs you'll ever hear, and
The lyricism cuts even deeper. Bruce claimed that it was one of his first songs where he felt like he was
Telling a story and said it paved the way for the entire Nebraska album. If ever a story was told perfectly, The River
Undoubtedly fits the bill. Truly, this may be Bruce Springsteen's greatest song. The River tells about a shotgun wedding
And how the young teen couple had to settle down and raise their child. The narrator reminisces of the "glory days"
When he and his girlfriend were totally in love and had their whole lives ahead of them, but everything was cut short
When she became pregnant. Still yearning for the days of his youth, he visits the dry riverbed that symbolizes their
Relationship at their highest point before it all slipped away.
This song is a true story about Bruce's older sister and her husband, who are still together today.
Now I just act like I don't remember
Mary acts like she don't care
But I remember us riding in my brother's car
Her body tanned and wet down at the reservoir
At night on them banks I'd lie awake
And pull her close just to feel each breath she'd take
Now those memories come back to haunt me
They haunt me like a curse
Is a dream a lie if it don't come true
Or is it something worse
The River

album: The River (1980)
The sharp stab of Bruce Springsteen's harmonica in The River has echoed in my ears throughout my entire life.
The way the music comes together in The River is one of the most painfully haunting songs you'll ever hear, and
The lyricism cuts even deeper. Bruce claimed that it was one of his first songs where he felt like he was
Telling a story and said it paved the way for the entire Nebraska album. If ever a story was told perfectly, The River
Undoubtedly fits the bill. Truly, this may be Bruce Springsteen's greatest song. The River tells about a shotgun wedding
And how the young teen couple had to settle down and raise their child. The narrator reminisces of the "glory days"
When he and his girlfriend were totally in love and had their whole lives ahead of them, but everything was cut short
When she became pregnant. Still yearning for the days of his youth, he visits the dry riverbed that symbolizes their
Relationship at their highest point before it all slipped away.
This song is a true story about Bruce's older sister and her husband, who are still together today.
Now I just act like I don't remember
Mary acts like she don't care
But I remember us riding in my brother's car
Her body tanned and wet down at the reservoir
At night on them banks I'd lie awake
And pull her close just to feel each breath she'd take
Now those memories come back to haunt me
They haunt me like a curse
Is a dream a lie if it don't come true
Or is it something worse
The River lyrics


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
BONUS TRACK
An Unforgettable live performance of The River in 1980, the year the song was released...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lc6F47Z6PI4
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lc6F47Z6PI4


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
[quote="Jason"]#4
Bobby Jean

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
"Good luck, goodbye..." Bobby Jean is one of the most heartfelt, gut-wrenching songs in Bruce Springsteen's
Catalog. It's totally straight-forward in its lyricism and if you've ever had someone important in your life who went
Away, this song captures the essence of that feeling. It's been an absolute staple throughout my Bruce Springsteen
Fandom. It feels as though the deeper and deeper I get into this list, more and more distance separates Bruce Springsteen
From every other presence in music. Totally unique and one of a kind, and this is one of the many examples that
Showcases exactly that. It's a beautiful sound that only Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band can generate, and
Just when you think the song couldn't possibly get any better, Clarence Clemons closes the song with my favorite
Saxophone performance in music history. Clarence Clemons on the saxophone is greatness beyond words, you can only listen.
Springsteen was inspired to write this song as a farewell to longtime friend and band mate, Steve Van Zandt,
Who left the E Street Band after the recording of this album to pursue a solo career. He would return to the band
15 years later in 1999.
"TWO, THREE, FOUR!"
Well, maybe you'll be out there on that road somewhere
In some bus or train, traveling alone
In some motel room there'll be a radio playing
And you'll hear me sing this song
Bobby Jean

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
"Good luck, goodbye..." Bobby Jean is one of the most heartfelt, gut-wrenching songs in Bruce Springsteen's
Catalog. It's totally straight-forward in its lyricism and if you've ever had someone important in your life who went
Away, this song captures the essence of that feeling. It's been an absolute staple throughout my Bruce Springsteen
Fandom. It feels as though the deeper and deeper I get into this list, more and more distance separates Bruce Springsteen
From every other presence in music. Totally unique and one of a kind, and this is one of the many examples that
Showcases exactly that. It's a beautiful sound that only Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band can generate, and
Just when you think the song couldn't possibly get any better, Clarence Clemons closes the song with my favorite
Saxophone performance in music history. Clarence Clemons on the saxophone is greatness beyond words, you can only listen.
Springsteen was inspired to write this song as a farewell to longtime friend and band mate, Steve Van Zandt,
Who left the E Street Band after the recording of this album to pursue a solo career. He would return to the band
15 years later in 1999.
"TWO, THREE, FOUR!"
Well, maybe you'll be out there on that road somewhere
In some bus or train, traveling alone
In some motel room there'll be a radio playing
And you'll hear me sing this song
Bobby Jean lyrics


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
#3
I'm On Fire

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
The lyrics behind I'm On Fire don't get cute, beat around the bush or dance around anything. It's a
Straight-forward message about pure sexual desire, and Bruce let's the music do a lot of the talking. While
The song is still simple in nature, both lyrically and musically, it's done in a way that I've never seen replicated.
Listen to the cross stick on the snare, the soft echo of the synthesizer and the plucking of the guitar
strings and tell me I'm On Fire isn't one of the most beautiful sounds you've heard in music. If ever there's
A sound so unique that perfectly captures the meaning of a song, this is it.
This one hits me on a personal level, as most of his songs do, in that I know the exact feeling he describes in
The song about lusting after a woman he can't (or shouldn't) have. She's in a relationship with another
Man, but the chemistry is there, it's burning him alive and he can't control his lust for her. You can't
Mistake the confidence in himself as a lover, but you can sense the jealousy he has for the man she's
With. "Can he do to you the things that I'd do? Oh, no... I could take you higher". While I do love
The music video behind the song, and watch it frequently, I prefer the song by itself rather than seeing
The music video because it eliminates some of the mystery behind the lyrics. You get more closure in the
Music video and while the closures of my lusting for women have ended similarly, the song provides enough
Story that you can make the ending whatever the hell you want. That's what I love about Bruce Springsteen.
He can do it all.
Sometimes it's like someone took a knife, baby, edgy and dull
And cut a six-inch valley through the middle of my skull
At night I wake up with the sheets soaking wet
And a freight train running through the middle of my head
Only you
Can cool my desire
I'm on fire
I'm On Fire

album: Born In The U.S.A. (1984)
The lyrics behind I'm On Fire don't get cute, beat around the bush or dance around anything. It's a
Straight-forward message about pure sexual desire, and Bruce let's the music do a lot of the talking. While
The song is still simple in nature, both lyrically and musically, it's done in a way that I've never seen replicated.
Listen to the cross stick on the snare, the soft echo of the synthesizer and the plucking of the guitar
strings and tell me I'm On Fire isn't one of the most beautiful sounds you've heard in music. If ever there's
A sound so unique that perfectly captures the meaning of a song, this is it.
This one hits me on a personal level, as most of his songs do, in that I know the exact feeling he describes in
The song about lusting after a woman he can't (or shouldn't) have. She's in a relationship with another
Man, but the chemistry is there, it's burning him alive and he can't control his lust for her. You can't
Mistake the confidence in himself as a lover, but you can sense the jealousy he has for the man she's
With. "Can he do to you the things that I'd do? Oh, no... I could take you higher". While I do love
The music video behind the song, and watch it frequently, I prefer the song by itself rather than seeing
The music video because it eliminates some of the mystery behind the lyrics. You get more closure in the
Music video and while the closures of my lusting for women have ended similarly, the song provides enough
Story that you can make the ending whatever the hell you want. That's what I love about Bruce Springsteen.
He can do it all.
Sometimes it's like someone took a knife, baby, edgy and dull
And cut a six-inch valley through the middle of my skull
At night I wake up with the sheets soaking wet
And a freight train running through the middle of my head
Only you
Can cool my desire
I'm on fire
Im On Fire lyrics


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
Don't want too many videos embedded on one page or the site will sometimes act kinda weird and mix them up.


Re: COUNTDOWN: Top 50 Bruce Springsteen Songs
So I'm going to shit post several times to get to the next page. :p

