Das amerikanische “Rolling Stone Magazin” hat Bruce Springsteens Singleauskopplung “We Take Care Of Our Own” unter die Lupe genommen und mit vier Sternen bedacht. Im besagten Onlinebericht schreibt David Fricke, dass Bruce Springsteen eine Nation anklagt, die durch die Weltwirtschaftskrise und Kriege erschöpft ist.
Auszug aus dem Rolling Stone Artikel:
Zitat:
Bruce Springsteen – We Take Care of Our Own Anguish and challenge run thick and fast, at a martial-rock clip, in the first single from Bruce Springsteen’s forthcoming election-year address, Wrecking Ball (due March 6th). “I’ve been stumblin’ on good hearts turned to stone/The road of good intentions has turned dry as a bone,” he laments in the first verse, a precise, devastating assessment of a nation exhausted by economic straits and locked in an uncivil war of values stoked by selfish Washington gridlock. It gets worse: “Where are the hearts that run over with mercy?” Springsteen asks with deep ragged disbelief. “Where’s the work that will set my hands, my soul free?” There is a quick reference to a shame that now seems like a lifetime ago: the black and poor of New Orleans, abandoned to sweaty feral hell in the Superdome during Hurricane Katrina. But it is a still-dark stain on our honor, now acted out in campaign vitriol about lengthening welfare rolls and the “food stamp president.”
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weiterlesen Ann Powers von NPR.org schreibt, dass Bruce Springsteen mit “We Take Care Of Our Own” eine bittere Hymne geschaffen hat und nach Lösungen sucht.
Zitat:
‘We Take Care Of Our Own’: Springsteen’s New Wave Of Social Protest One thing about “We Take Care of Our Own” is pure Boss, though: the lyric. This is a bitter anthem crafted for a political moment that, for progressives like Springsteen, demands cruel clarity. The way its hook — the seeming don’t-tread-on-me sentiment of the title line — plays against other lines like “I been stumbling on good hearts turned to stone/The road of good intentions has gone dry as bone” or “We yelled ‘help’ but the cavalry stayed home” is pure Boss. Just as he did on “Born In the U.S.A.,” “Glory Days” and even 2009′s beautiful “Girls In Their Summer Clothes,” Springsteen brings out big emotions and then demands we drop the delusions that often accompany them. When he delivers an old line like “from sea to shining sea,” his patriotic stance is a spit back in the face of power — a demand that, in hearing such America-first language fresh, we admit that it’s hollow unless it serves a real populist vision.
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weiterlesen Auch die LA TIMES hat über die Bruce Springsteen Singleveröffentlichung berichtet.
Zitat:
First take: Bruce Springsteen’s patriotic ‘We Take Care of Our Own’ Never one to stray too far from his core mission of crafting solidly structured rock songs built on a blueprint passed down from American generation to generation, “We Take Care of Our Own” — except for one modern wash of guitar, a few echoed drum pops, and one (big) glaring absence — sounds like a track that could have been on any his classic albums from 1975 to 1984, from “Born to Run” through “Born in the U.S.A.” (excluding his acoustic “Nebraska”). These records are undeniably rock ‘n’ roll and constructed with the help of his E Street Band.
His first recording since the death of saxophonist Clarence Clemons, the new song is notable for what’s not there — the horn player’s sonic bursts and furious tenor declarations. Absent too is an indication of whether the music is constructed by the E Street Band or whether, like his most recent studio album, “Working on a Dream,” it is a solo record. The backing band suggests the former, as does the glockenspiel a la “She’s the One,” the hum of the organ and the piano melody, coupled with a Phil Spector-esque string section drifting above.
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