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Bruce Springsteen - The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle (CD)

The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle
$4.71 - $7.18
5 out of 5.0 stars 8 Ratings (8 Reviews)

Album Details: The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle

Release Date:10/25/1990
Label:Sony
UPC:074643243223

Other Available Formats: The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle

User Reviews: The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle

  • Overall:

    What else can I say he's the Boss

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Aug 31, 2001

    Who had more of an impact in the mid-70's than Bruce.If anyone saw the Video Anthology when he sings Rosalita and the one girl comes on stage and bruce lets her sing in the microphone and she doesn't know what to do, thats the kind of impact Bruce ha...d he made people speechless. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Classic Bruce

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Apr 30, 2001

    The wild the innocent and the E street shuffle is classic bruce story telling with great musical arrangements
    Favourite tracks, Sandy and Rosalita.

Pro Reviews: The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle

  • All Music Guide

    Bruce Springsteen expanded the folk-rock approach of his debut album, Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J., to strains of jazz, among other styles, on its ambitious follow-up, released only eight months later. His chief musical lieutenant was keyboard player David Sancious, who lived on the E Street that gave the album and Springsteen's backup group their names. With his help, Springsteen created a street-life mosaic of suburban society that owed much in its outlook to Van Morrison's romanticization of Belfast in Astral Weeks. Though Springsteen expressed endless affection and much nostalgia, his message was clear: this was a goodbye-to-all-that from a man who was moving on. The Wild, the Innocent the E Street Shuffle represented an astonishing advance even from the remarkable promise of Greetings; the unbanded three-song second side in particular was a flawless piece of music. Musically and lyrically, Springsteen had brought an unruly muse under control and used it to make a mature state...ment that synthesized popular musical styles into complicated, well-executed arrangements and absorbing suites; it evoked a world precisely even as that world seemed to disappear. Following the personnel changes in the E Street Band in 1974, there is a conventional wisdom that this album is marred by production lapses and performance problems, specifically, the drumming of Vini Lopez. None of that is true. Lopez's busy Keith Moon style is appropriate to the arrangements in a way his replacement, Max Weinberg, never could have been. The production is fine. And the album's songs contain the best realization of Springsteen's poetic vision, which soon enough would be tarnished by disillusionment. He would later make different albums, but he never made a better one. The truth is, The Wild, the Innocent the E Street Shuffle is one of the greatest albums in the history of rock roll. - William Ruhlmann, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Bruce Springsteen

When Bruce Springsteen finally broke through to national recognition in the fall of 1975 after a decade of trying, critics hailed him as the savior of rock roll, the single artist who brought together all the exuberance of '50s rock and the thoughtfulness of '60s rock, molded into a '70s style. He rocked as hard as Jerry Lee Lewis, his lyrics were as complicated as Bob... Read more