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Born in the U.S.A. album for sale Product Description
Born in the U.S.A. album for sale by Bruce Springsteen was released Oct 25, 1990 on the Columbia label. It's almost hard to believe now that for the first decade of his career Bruce Springsteen was a gigantic cult artist; a musician who could sell a couple of million records and fill hockey rinks, but who was was no more likely than Elvis Costello to get airplay on pop radio. BORN IN THE USA was the album on which he flexed his muscles (literally) and changed all that. Born in the U.S.A. CD music contains a single disc with 12 songs. ...See Full Description
Bruce Springsteen - Born in the U.S.A. Album Track Listing
Born in the U.S.A. buy CD music Customer Reviews
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| the boss is back my favourite album ever. the haunting downbound train a great classic,and of course the huge hit dancing in the dark. this album and songs will be etched in my 80's memories forever. By a reviewer (noosa heads queensland) |
| The Boss Forever Bruce's amazing music helps you remember the glory days of rock n roll.The Boss is the best!!!!!!!!!!! By Blake (Brandon,MS) |
| one of the best!! this album is great!! i love the songs "cover me" and "i'm on fire" and it seems like they are over-looked by fm radio... i grew up on this album, "born in the u.s. a." and "dancin' in the dark" were my favorites from the first time i heard them ~ when i was five years old! :). By a reviewer (Tennessee) |
| BRUCE HIT HIS STRIDE WITH THIS ALBUM.... CAN ANYTHING MORE POSITIVE BE SAID OR ADDED ABOUT THIS ALBUM??? 7 TOP TEN HITS FROM THIS ALBUM. ONLY THE ALBUM "THRILLER" DID THAT WHEN MICHAEL JACKSON RELEASED IT ABOUT A YEAR EARLIER. By MICHAELCBAREFOOT (FOUR OAKS ,N.C.,USA) |
| springsteens best. what is there not to like about this one this record is a timeless classic. one finds it easy to be critical of at least some of his earlier recordings but not this. By peter (st.ives,n.s.w,australia) |
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Born in the U.S.A. songs Product Details
| CD Universe Part number | 1086065 |
| Label | Columbia |
| Orig Year | 1984 |
| Catalog number | 38653 |
| Discs | 1 |
| Release Date | Oct 25, 1990 |
| Studio/Live | Studio |
| Mono/Stereo | Stereo |
| Engineer | Toby Scott; Bill Scheniman |
| Recording Time | 46 minutes |
| Personnel | Roy Bittan - piano, synthesizer, background vocals Bruce Springsteen - vocals, guitar Garry Tallent - bass, background vocals Max Weinberg - drums, background vocals Danny Federici - piano, organ, glockenspiel Clarence "Nick" Clemons - saxophone, percussion, background vocals Steven Van Zandt - guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, background vocals Richie Rosenberg - trombone La Bamba Ruth Jackson - background vocals
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Fleetwood Mac Rumours CD (1977) Top Seller
Born in the U.S.A. songs Principally recorded at The Record Plant & Wally Heider Recording Studios, Los Angeles, California; Criteria Studios, Miami, Florida; Davlen Recording Studio, North Hollywood, California.
This deluxe edition of RUMOURS includes a bonus disc featuring outtakes, demos, and jam sessions.
The reviewers tell us what to buy, but the public actually part with the cash. Surely 26 million people cannot be wrong, as original Mac guitarist Peter Green's creation became the prime example of AOR long after his departure. The inner strife and turmoil of the band is credited as having helped to make this many-headed beast into such a success. Keyboardist Christine McVie sparred with husband/bassist John, and singer Stevie Nicks scrapped with boyfriend/guitarist Lindsey Buckingham. Drummer Mick Fleetwood held the emotional mess together with confident steadiness as demonstrated in his confident, inventive playing throughout the record. Nicks' fiery vocals on "Go Your Own Way" complemented McVie's beautifully understated style on tunes like "You Make Loving Fun," exemplifying their successful fire-ice dichotomy.
Includes liner notes by Dave DiMartino.
Personnel: Lindsey Buckingham (vocals, guitar); Christine McVie (vocals, keyboards, synthesizer); Stevie Nicks (vocals); Mick Fleetwood (drums, percussion).
Recording information: Criteria Recording Studios, Miami, FL (03/03/1976); Criteria Studios, Miami, FL (03/03/1976); Davlen Recording Studio, North Hollywood, CA (03/03/1976); Record Plant Studios, Los Angeles, CA (03/03/1976); Record Plant, Sausalito And Los Angeles, CA (03/03/1976); The Record Plant, Sausalito And Los Angeles, CA (03/03/1976); Wally Heider Recording Studio, Los Angeles, CA (03/03/1976); Zellerback Auditorium, U.C. Berkeley (03/03/1976).
Fleetwood Mac: Lindsey Buckingham (vocals, guitar); Christine McVie (vocals, keyboards); Stevie Nicks (vocals); John McVie (bass); Mick Fleetwood (drums).
Producers: Fleetwood Mac, Richard Dashut, Ken Caillat.
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Born to Run CD (1975) Top Seller
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$7.99 |
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$35.85 |
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With DVD; Anniversary Edition; Remastered; 30th Anniversary Edition |
Born in the U.S.A. CD music BORN TO RUN is the album that turned Springsteen from a phenomenon into a superstar. His first couple of releases found Bruce working out his fascination with Dylan and Van Morrison on earthy, wordy, folk-rock-R&B tunes full of soul and punch. On BORN TO RUN, Springsteen became even more ambitious, synthesizing Spectorian production with Orbison-esque drama and Duane Eddy-influenced guitar work, creating something grand enough to be called rock opera but too proletarian to ever claim that title.
BORN TO RUN was also the first album where the Boss began to crystallize his recurring theme of working class America's doomed-but-passionate rage against its circumstances. With the earnestness and emotion that bursts forth from Springsteen's street poems, the album is never less than exhilarating, and songs like "Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out" (a tongue-in-cheek history of the E Street Band) provide humor. "She's The One" puts the Bo Diddley beat to its most effective post-'50s use, and the title track is Springsteen's quintessential underdog epic.
Recorded at The Record Plant, New York, and 914 Sound Studio, Blauvelt, New York.
Personnel: Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar, harmonica, alto horn); Steven Van Zandt (vocals, guitar, alto horn, background vocals); Clarence Clemons (vocals, saxophone, tenor saxophone); Danny Federici (vocals, organ, keyboards); Mike Appel (vocals, background vocals); Suki Lahav (violin); David Sanborn (saxophone, baritone saxophone, bass saxophone); Michael Brecker (tenor saxophone, horns); Randy Brecker (trumpet, flugelhorn, horns); Wayne Andre (trombone); Roy Bittan (piano, Fender Rhodes piano, harpsichord, organ, keyboards, glockenspiel, background vocals); David Sancious (keyboards); Garry Tallent (bass guitar); Ernest Carter, Max Weinberg (drums).
Audio Mixer: Jimmy Iovine.
Audio Remasterer: Bob Ludwig.
Recording information: 914 Sound Studios, Blauvelt, NY; Record Plant Studios, New York, NY.
Photographer: Eric Meola.
Arranger: Bruce Springsteen.
Personnel: Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar); Steve Van Zandt (vocals); Suki Lahav (violin); Michael Brecker (tenor saxophone); David Sanborn (baritone saxophone); Clarence Clemons (saxophone, background vocals); Randy Brecker (trumpet, flugelhorn); Danny Federici (organ); Roy Bittan (keyboards, glockenspiel, background vocals); David Sancious (keyboards); Garry Tallent, Richard Davis (bass); Max Weinberg, Ernest "Boom" Carter (drums); Mike Appel (background vocals).
Producers: Bruce Springsteen, Jon Landau, Mike Appel.
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Darkness on the Edge of Town CD (1978)
Born in the U.S.A. buy CD music This was the album after the famous Jon Landau statement came to pass, and although there are still many references to cars and girls it is a blistering album. It has a similar energy that was later to be found on The River. He states in 'Something In The Night', 'soon as you've got something they send someone to try and take it away'. He repeated the themes again and again, and we loved it; maybe his fall from grace is because we ultimately can get by with just one song about cars and girls.
Live Recording
Recorded at The Record Plant, New York, New York.
Personnel: Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar, harmonica); Steven Van Zandt (vocals, guitar); Clarence Clemons (vocals, saxophone, percussion); Danny Federici (vocals, organ, keyboards); Steve VanZandt (guitar); Roy Bittan (piano, keyboards); Max Weinberg (drums).
Audio Mixers: Chuck Plotkin; Jimmy Iovine.
Recording information: Atlantic Studios, New York, NY; Record Plant Studios, New York, NY; The Record Plant, New York, NY.
Photographer: Frank Stefanko.
Personnel: Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar, harmonica); Steve Van Zandt (guitar); Clarence Clemons (saxophone); Roy Bittan (piano); Danny Federici (organ); Garry Tallent (bass); Max Weinberg (drums).
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River CDs (1980) Top Seller
Born in the U.S.A. album for sale Only Springsteen could have got away with releasing a double album with 19 tracks of what was basically the same song. Such was his standing that he did, and it worked like a dream. Almost all the tracks hit you in the stomach, with burning saxophone from Clarence Clemons and piercing wurlitzer organ. Bruce, meanwhile, sings of cars and girls and girls and cars, but at no stage does he forget that this is rock 'n' roll. With this release Springsteen completed a rite of passage. Described as the "new Dylan" early in his career, the singer proved this tag a fallacy, drawing on Dansette pop - Phil Spector, Gary US Bonds, Mitch Ryder - rather than the folk tradition. The singer articulated the dilemmas of America's blue-collar workforce, encapsulating a generation trapped in a post-60s malaise. He does so with sumptuous melodies which draw in, rather than confront, the listener and show Springsteen not just as a magnetic showman, but as a pensive, literate songwriter.
All tracks have been digitally remastered.
Recorded at The Power Station, New York, New York.
Personnel: Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar, electric 12-string guitar, harmonica, piano); Steven Van Zandt (vocals, guitar); Clarence Clemons (vocals, saxophone, percussion, background vocals); Danny Federici (vocals, organ); Howard Kaylan, Mark Volman (vocals, background vocals); Steve VanZandt (guitar); Garry Tallent (horns); Roy Bittan (piano, organ, keyboards, background vocals); Max Weinberg (drums).
Audio Mixers: Chuck Plotkin; Toby Scott; Bob Clearmountain.
Recording information: The Power Station, New York, NY.
Photographers: Amanda Flick; Frank Stefanko; David Gahr; Jimmy Wachtel; Barry Goldenberg; Joel Bernstein.
Personnel: Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar); Steve Van Zandt (guitar); Clarence Clemons (tenor saxophone); Roy Bittan (piano); Danny Federici (organ); Garry Tallent (bass); Max Weinberg (drums); Mark Volman, Howard Kaylan (background vocals).
Producers: Bruce Springsteen, Jon Landau, Steve Van Zandt.
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Nebraska CD (1982) Top Seller
Born in the U.S.A. CD music Recorded in Springsteen's New Jersey bedroom on a 4-track cassette recorder.
As a followup to THE RIVER, a double-album blast of old-time rock and roll, this amazing solo-acoustic folk album came out of nowhere in the fall of 1982. More precisely, it came out of Bruce Springsteen's back pocket. He recorded what would become NEBRASKA at home on a 4-track recorder, intending it as a demo tape for a full-band album. The band versions were recorded, but Springsteen sensed something missing; eventually, he became convinced that his demo tape, which he had carried around in a back pocket of his jeans for several days, had a spiritual wallop that he and the band couldn't recreate. He had the cassette cleaned up and turned into his sixth album.
There's little doubt that he made the right choice. The songs on NEBRASKA form a bleak cycle about men on the run, from the law, from their fathers or from themselves, usually for reasons even they don't understand. And Springsteen's dry, howling voice, which sometimes dips to a desperate whisper and sometimes rises to a haunted scream, seems to carry all their fears and all their hidden knowledge. The title song, about Charlie Starkweather, the serial killer chronicled in the movie BADLANDS, is one of two on the album about men who see the electric chair as their natural, God-given fate, if not their salvation. A couple of others could be the very drivers of the cars Paul Simon once counted on the New Jersey turnpike, except that where Simon saw America, all these characters see are dirty refinery towers.
This was songwriting that channeled both Woody Guthrie and Hank Williams, and the stark sound of NEBRASKA was not merely a homage to them, but a perfect casing for these tales. Whether strumming through "Atlantic City," picking out arpeggios on "Nebraska" or banging out a shuffle on "Open All Night" (a rare upbeat moment), Springsteen's lone acoustic guitar was all the accompaniment they needed, echoing their loneliness and isolation.
Solo performer: Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar, harmonica).
Personnel: Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar, harmonica); Bruce Springsteen.
Recording information: New Jersey; Nj.
Photographer: David Michael Kennedy .
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Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. CD (1973) Top Seller
Born in the U.S.A. buy CD music Hailed early on by Columbia producer and talent scout John Hammond as "the new Dylan," Bruce Springsteen has always shared many of the folky, poetic, word-savvy tendencies of his hero and predecessor. Nowhere is this more evident than on Springsteen's debut, GREETINGS FROM ASBURY PARK, NJ, which veritably bursts at the seams with lyrical invention, pell-mell imagery, and acoustic-guitar driven troubadour tunes. Yet Springsteen trades in on Dylan's pensive and bitter sides for dew-eyed optimism and exuberance.
While there is spare, folkie fare like "The Angel" and "Mary Queen Of Arkansas," on which Springsteen sings of his local New Jersey color in his uniquely passionate voice, there is also something fresh and irrepressible here. A rock & roll heart beats at the center of GREETINGS, with a spunk and spirit that push the whole affair along. "It's Hard To Be A Saint In The City" and "Growin' Up" are fueled by David Sancious's rollicking piano, wailing tenor sax, and Springsteen's husky voice. Together these elements defined a James Dean rebel persona and a giant rock & roll ambition that would guide Springsteen's music for the rest of his career.
Liner Note Author: Charles Burr.
Recording information: 914 Sound Studios, Blanvelt, NY; 914 Sound Studios, Blauvelt, NY.
Arranger: Bruce Springsteen.
Personnel: Bruce Springsteen (vocals, guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, harmonica, piano, congas, hand claps, background vocals); Bruce Springsteen (bass instrument); Vini Lopez (vocals, horns, drums, hand claps, background vocals); Garry Tallent (horns, bass instrument); Richard Davis (double bass, upright bass); Vincent Lopez (drums); Clarence Clemons (vocals, saxophone, hand claps, background vocals); David Sancious (saxophone, piano, organ, keyboards); Harold Wheeler (piano).
Audio Remixer: Jack Ashkinazy.
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