The Jerusalem Post

Bruce Springstee­n’s ‘Western Stars’ shines

- • By OWEN GLEIBERMAN

LOS ANGELES – There’s a moment in Western Stars, the rapturous new Bruce Springstee­n concert film that’s also a meditation on all things Bruce, when Springstee­n lifts you up and carries you off in that way that only he can do.

Most of the movie was shot in the 140-yearold cavernous dark barn that sits on Springstee­n’s property in Colts Neck, New Jersey. Over several nights, he performed all 13 tracks off his latest studio album, Western Stars (released this past June), in front of a small private audience. The songs, composed in a glowing style of ’70s Southern California country pop, are what you might call happy portraits of heartbreak, and one of them, “There Goes My Miracle,” soars to a gorgeous cresting height of confession­al melancholy.

It’s Bruce singing about a love – a miracle – that was lost (“There goes my miracle, walking away, walking away...”), and what’s implicit is that the singer knows it was his fault that the miracle is walking; it’s what he did or failed to do.

The music is transcende­nt; the rise and fall of the melody expresses the faith and despair that love can bring. And Bruce, standing there in the burnished glow of his barn, croons it with an openhearte­d fragility that’s even more moving than it was on the studio version. The yearning in his voice, the crinkle of his eye, tells you: He knows this loss.

In Western Stars, Springstee­n strums a red C&W acoustic guitar, with Patti Scialfa, his partner of 30 years (they were married in 1991), standing at the microphone next to him, with a band behind him (piano, steel guitar, the trademark Springstee­n glockenspi­el), and, to his right, a 30-piece orchestra made up mostly of strings. (For some reason, all the violinists are women.)

In Western Stars, he takes a page from “Springstee­n on Broadway,” telling stories about the stories he tells, and doing it with a disarming directness. He never gets too specific about personal details, but he’s eloquent enough to let us read between the lines, and what the carefully written song intros suggest is that Bruce battled his share of demons not just in the tumultuous rock-god chapter of his life when he met and fell in love with Patti, and broke up his first marriage, but after he got together with Patti.

“I’ve spent 35 years trying to let go of the destructio­n parts of my character,” he says, owning up to the compulsion he had to take the people he loved and cause them pain.

Is he speaking of Patti? We can guess the answer is yes, and can speculate as to how he might have betrayed her. But the point is that we don’t need the gossipy details. We can imagine them, and Bruce’s mournful gravity tells us that the demons were serious.

He co-directed the movie himself, along with his longtime music-video and film collaborat­or Thom Zimny (who also directed “Springstee­n on Broadway”), and what they’ve done is to break up the 83-minute movie into sections framed by images of Bruce in the Joshua Tree desert, riding pickups and wandering trails with wild horses.

It’s a version of the mythologic­al Bruce – but what we hear on the soundtrack is the introspect­ive Bruce, letting us know that his struggles are ours. He says that the conflict between rootless freedom and the yearning for home – for family – is central to the American character, and while put that way it can sound a touch grandiose, listening to Bruce you realize that everyone, including you, has probably lived a version of that story.

Music docs are proliferat­ing like mushrooms these days, but most of them are semi-under the radar. To reach a national audience, they’ve generally got to feature someone like Justin Bieber or Katy Perry.

Western Stars isn’t a rockin’-out extravagan­za; it’s intimate in its embrace. Yet it’s a moving testament to how much Bruce Springstee­n has still got it. It’s a concert film you’ll want to experience with others, as a ray of light in the dark.

(Variety.com/Reuters)

 ?? (Courtesy) ?? BRUCE SPRINGSTEE­N’S intimate ‘Western Stars.’
(Courtesy) BRUCE SPRINGSTEE­N’S intimate ‘Western Stars.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel