The Sunday Guardian

When the Boss comes calling, it’s time to pay close attention

Bruce Springstee­n’s book of memoirs, Born to Run, deals with the several highs and lows of his career, bringing to light aspects of his personalit­y that were obscured by his stardom, writes Anirudh Vohra.

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Bruce Springstee­n Simon & Schuster Pages: 530 Price: Rs 799

Nickleback’s hit track “Rockstar” had us all longing. We have all, at one point of time or another, had that longing — to be a rockstar. And why not? Who doesn’t want to be a celebrity, and have that mass appeal that rockstars are seen to be wielding on the stage at live shows? Who doesn’t want a million people queuing up for hours to catch a glimpse of you, or to see them fighting among themselves to grab hold of that worn-out guitar pick that you threw at them?

It goes without saying that it’s a dream that only a chosen few get a chance to live. Lesser mortals only see it in movies, or read about it in newspapers and books. Born to Run by the arch rockstar Bruce Springstee­n is one such book, recounting some of the more memorable episodes from the life of the Boss, as Springstee­n was fondly referred to by many of his admirers.

A fruit of some seven year’s labour, the memoir is divided N TIO FIC N NO into three sections, namely “Growin’ Up”, “Born to Run” and “Living Proof”, which are all further subdivided into 79 short chapters dealing with different phases in Springstee­n’s life, and different aspects to his magnetic personalit­y.

Popular rock-’ n’- roll writers will tell you that Springstee­n became a muse for journalist­s, after being featured on the covers of both the Time and Newsweek simultaneo­usly in 1975. This was a tmie when very few people had even heard any of his works. Today, the musician has become a phenomenon. A quick Google search will show you the volumes of books written on him by fans and critics alike. Dozens of documentar­y films, too, have been made on him. But Born to Run surpasses them all — for it is serves as the word straight from the horse’s mouth.

The book covers the many phases of Springstee­n’s early life: the rough and poor childhood he had and the effect television had on his life. In fact, it was not just television but the Ed Sullivan Show that the singer-songwriter was hooked on, and about which he talks on several occasions in this book. Then, watching Elvis on TV made him want to learn to play the guitar.

In the book, Springstee­n writes, “The birthing conditions of today’s musicians will be different — just as valid, but different.”

With its short and compressed chapters, the book touches upon some very specific themes. It is highly focus stays on specific topics and anecdotes, revealing in turn the many complex layers of experience that make up Springstee­n’s character. But not all is well with this mammoth collection of words. Trevor Noah’s unlikely path from apartheid South Africa to the desk of The Daily Show began with a criminal act: his birth. Trevor was born to a white Swiss father and a black Xhosa mother at a time when such a union was punishable by five years in prison. Living proof of his parents’ indiscreti­on, Trevor was kept mostly indoors for the earliest years of his life. There are several chapters that seem a bit unnecessar­y, and could have been easily avoided, like the one where he goes on and on about his horses.

The book is bound to take the reader on an emotional rollercoas­ter with gripping and touching moments in one chapter while a few chuckles here and there in the next few. Like in one of the chapters Springstee­n writes: “When you play a bar inches behind the bartender you witness the unfolding of human events from a unique perspectiv­e. The formula was always familiar; the timing was all that changed. Woman + booze + man + booze + second man + booze = brawl.”

The most enticing part of the book is the one that deals with the musician’s early years. We are shown how Springstee­n as a young kid found the zeal, the zest and the stamina to be the man we know him as today. The bits about his humble beginnings and his Italian-Irish legacy are also very well portrayed. We get to encounter his father, who was an alcoholic and diagnosed at one point with paranoid schizophre­nia, as a very intense character in this book.

“I haven’t been completely fair to my father in my songs,” Springstee­n writes, “treating him as an archetype of the neglecting, domineerin­g parent … a way of ‘universali­zing’ my childhood experience. Our story is much more complicate­d.”

The most informativ­e and emotional parts of this constant friction between the father and the son are presented really late in the book, as Springstee­n talks about his struggles to find some peace and common ground with his father due to the former’s erratic temperamen­t.

The new thing that the book brings to light concerns Springstee­n himself. He writes of how he himself has been battling mood disorders and depressive phases in recent years. He mentions that touring was his way of coping with all this, but when he’s not on the road, he says, he just crashes: “When you’re on tour, you’re king, and when you’re home, you’re not.” He even says that had it not been for his psychiatri­st, this book wouldn’t have been possible.

If you just read the parts that talk about the Boss’s struggles during his formative years along with the ones about family’s troubles, Born to Run is sure to be one of the most moving autobiogra­phies you’d ever lay your hands on. But reading the entire book — with its 500-plus pages — may just seem a drag. In case you decide to go the whole hog, I’d recommend you put on a Springstee­n record in the background to make things a little smoother.

“I haven’t been completely fair to my father in my songs,” Springstee­n writes, “treating him as an archetype of the neglecting, domineerin­g parent … a way of ‘universali­zing’ my childhood experience. Our story is much more complicate­d.”

 ??  ?? Bruce Springstee­n with Max Weinberg on drums.
Bruce Springstee­n with Max Weinberg on drums.
 ??  ?? Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah Publisher: Spiegel & Grau
Born a Crime: Stories from a South African Childhood by Trevor Noah Publisher: Spiegel & Grau
 ??  ?? Born to Run
Born to Run

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