Label: Columbia Records (US), CD 86304
Style: Arena Rock, Pop Rock
Country: Long Branch, New Jersey, U.S. (September 23, 1949)
Time: 46:56
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 306 Mb
Charts:
US #1, AUS #1, CAN #1, GER #1, IRE #11, NLD #1, NZ #1, NOR #1, SWE #1,
UK #1. GER: 2x Platinum; UK: 3x Platinum; AUS: 14x Platinum; NZ: 16x
Platinum; CAN: Diamond; US: Diamond (17x Platinum).
East Berlin,
1988. Under a graphite sky, a familiar synthesizer riff echoes out over a
vast arena. As a thundercrack snare drum underscores one of the most
consistently spine-chilling intros ever, Bruce Springsteen, telecaster
in hand, stares out toward half a million East Germans who've all
started singing the chorus - before he's even begun the first verse.
500,000
Germans shouting "Born In The USA" in some huge-ass park in the
late-eighties is plainly quite weird. But they're not American. They're
not singing about being American, are they? Are they??
"Born In The
USA", the title track of The Boss' mega-selling 1984 album, was much
misunderstood. Accused at the same time of being repulsively
nationalistic, and viciously Anti-American, the track was endorsed by
conservative US politicians (including Ronald Reagan) as an exemplar of
"classic American values" whilst the bitter lyrics actually tell the
story of disaffected Vietnam veteran, chewed up and spat out by his own
country:
'I had a buddy at Khe Sahn
Fighting off the Viet Cong
They're still there, he's all gone
He had a little girl in Saigon
I got a picture of him in her arms'
Fire
up YouTube and watch John Sayles' music video for the track. The killer
punch comes near the end where you see the smiling veteran with a hole
where his left eye should be.
Despite the poor sync between the video
and audio, Springsteen's leather-clad delivery is scarily fierce. Heard
alongside the visuals of Bruce spitting the hopeless verses, the song
is revealed as far more than a knuckleheaded, jingoistic sing-a-long.
It's a ragged-lunged hymn to long gone friends, a treacherous
government, a stupid war, having no job, but f*** it, let’s shout the
chorus until we cough up our lungs.
Springsteen’s much-discussed
genius lies in finding the humanity in the everyday, punching it out
with a grizzled kind of grandeur, and managing it dressed as Mad Max.
That’s why our German friends, with their cold war blues and bad
blow-dries, are singing along in their hundreds of thousands. Despite
huge political and national gulfs, there are more similarities than
there are differences.
The other songs on the album? Apart from the
unsettling, tender "I’m On Fire", it’s familiar fare throughout,
reliable rock and soul courtesy of Bruce and his band of E Street musos,
with the added bonus of "Glory Days" and the irrepressible "Dancing In
The Dark" chucked in too.
But at no point does it become as stupid, or as complex, as track 1.
(bbc.co.uk/music/reviews/j2f9/)
01. Born In The U.S.A. (04:39)
02. Cover Me (03:28)
03. Darlington County (04:50)
04. Working On The Highway (03:15)
05. Downbound Train (03:37)
06. I'm On Fire (02:41)
07. No Surrender (04:02)
08. Bobby Jean (03:48)
09. I'm Goin' Down (03:31)
10. Glory Days (04:18)
11. Dancing In The Dark (04:05)
12. My Hometown (04:36)

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