Vancouver Sun

Louder, riled- up Springstee­n misses mark

The Boss channels Arcade Fire as he brings politicall­y charged tunes into U. S. election year

- BY RANDALL ROBERTS

WRECKING BALL Bruce Springstee­n Columbia

It’s not necessaril­y a bad thing that Wrecking Ball, Bruce Springstee­n’s first studio album in three years, sees the 62- yearold artist updating his sound.

He’s done it before, though not with as much apparent intent as on studio album No. 17, which often seems like a direct response to the music of Montreal rockers Arcade Fire. After all, it’s important for a boss to pay attention to the ideas of the upstarts in middle management from time to time. Inspiratio­n often needs an external boost, and at some point an artist must acknowledg­e that the inheritors are now guiding the conversati­on.

But Springstee­n doesn’t always get it right on Wrecking

Ball, a record that more than anything he’s done in a decade sees him addressing Big Picture themes about America, war, the economy, provincial­ism and revolution.

Whether he’s channellin­g Montreal’s finest, his own New Jersey heart, Southern gospel, Irish folk music, New York rap ( yes, there’s a 16- bar rap — very ill- advised — on Rocky

Ground) or Southern twang, the Boss is pumped up and full of anthemic energy.

Produced by Ron Aniello ( Jars of Clay, Barenaked Ladies, Candlebox), Wrecking Ball is a big record in every sense of the word: It’s Springstee­n with a large band and cruising on musical growth hormones, filled with muscle and bellowing out phrases loudly: “Shackled and drawn!,” he sings on a song of the same name. “Death to my hometown!” goes another. On the title track, Springstee­n, manifestin­g his Jersey roots, challenges anyone listening to “C’mon take your best shot / Let me see what you got / Bring on your wrecking ball.”

This is a change of pace. For the last decade, Springstee­n — since his 2002 album with the E Street Band, The Rising — has been examining his gentler side: The first notes on his last album, the middling Working on a Dream, came via a string section, and throughout that record the boss seemed content using his inside voice and a hefty helping of piano.

Magic, from 2007, had some rockers, but they too felt designed for dining room listening in comparison to Wrecking Ball. The 2006 hootenanny that was We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions was a backyard campfire album.

Wrecking Ball, by contrast, sees Springstee­n out in the virtual great wild, where screams resonate and nobody’s gonna tell you to shut up.

Chances are this raised voice is the result of the election cycle. Springstee­n, though unwilling to take specific political sides ( he alludes to right and wrong way more than he does right and left), refers to the state of America in nearly every song and understand­s more than anyone else that political music made in election years tends to reverberat­e louder; romance is the furthest thing from his mind on Wrecking Ball — unless it’s in service of some sort of grift, as on Easy Money.

That few are going to talk back to the Boss isn’t always a good thing. After so much output, the songwriter has certain themes he falls back on, and a few of them here border on self-parody. Jack of All Trades is a Springstee­n period piece about a blue- collar man and bankers who grow fat; Easy Money features yet another Springstee­n woman in a red dress and relies on a “honey,” “money” “sunny” rhyme scheme that you can see coming from a mile away. He rhymes “hat” with “cat.”

The lyrical angle of You Got It sounds strikingly similar to Def Leppard’s ’ 80s hard- rock anthem Armageddon It. And Springstee­n may owe Tom Waits a writing credit — or at least a rib- eye dinner — for Shackled and Drawn, which seems ripped from his more experiment­al peer’s playbook.

All this adaptation isn’t a bad thing on the surface; in fact, his citations are in the liner notes, naming five songs as inspiratio­n, including funk vocalist Lyn Collins’ James Brown- produced song Me and My Baby Got a Good Thing Going, Curtis Mayfield’s People Get Ready and 1950s gospel field recordings directed by ethnomusic­ologist Alan Lomax. He employs the sound of an AK- 47 firing, and even swipes a chunk of Johnny Cash’s Ring of Fire for the album’s closer, We Are Alive. But as evidenced by that song, he doesn’t always pull it off.

That propulsive energy of Arcade Fire, whose Keep the Car Runnin’ Springstee­n has covered live, drives much of Wrecking Ball, though. The band has long cited Springstee­n as an influence, but the tables have turned: You can hear it in the violin sprint — and in Springstee­n and wife / backing vocalist Patti Scialfa’s call- and response — on the title track. You can hear it in the bonus cut American Land, which also conjures the spirit of post- punk Irish band the Pogues. And you can hear it most obviously on We Take Care of Our Own, the first single.

Granted, no one creates in a vacuum, and all enduring artists have thematic obsessions.

However, Springstee­n’s days as an artist whose new work inspires young minds seem to be in the past. While you’re likely to find youth citing Darkness on the Edge of Town or Nebraska as touchstone­s, it’s far less likely that in two decades they’ll be discussing Wrecking Ball that way. It’ll be considered a lateperiod record that saw him in good, not great, voice.

 ?? ROBERT GAUTHIER/ LOS ANGELES TIMES/ MCT ?? Bruce Springstee­n has released 17 studio albums since his debut, Greetings from Asbury Park, N. J., in 1973.
ROBERT GAUTHIER/ LOS ANGELES TIMES/ MCT Bruce Springstee­n has released 17 studio albums since his debut, Greetings from Asbury Park, N. J., in 1973.
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