The Borneo Post

Springstee­n reveals father’s ghost, depression in memoir

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NEW YORK: When Bruce Springstee­n’s first marriage fell apart, the rock legend — a multimilli­onaire about to turn 40 — received a surprise offer: his father asked him to move back temporaril­y into their tiny home.

“The old man finally wanted me around the house,” Springstee­n, who ultimately declined the invitation, writes in his new memoir, “Born to Run.”

Springstee­n’s late father Doug — who worked a string of unstable blue- collar jobs, struggled with drinking and mental illness, and only hesitantly late in life acknowledg­ed his failings to his son — looms as a reflection both for the artiste’s life and for the state of America in “Born to Run,” published on Tuesday.

The “Born in the USA” chronicler of working- class America describes his childhood fear of his father in their poorly heated home in Freehold, New Jersey and also reveals that he has spent years himself in treatment for depression.

While sensing that he inherited his father’s demons, the 67-year- old rocker also sees broader traits in his dad — “the rigidity and blue- collar narcissism of ‘manhood’ 1950sstyle.”

“I haven’t been completely fair to my father in my songs, treating him as an archetype of the neglecting, domineerin­g parent,” he writes.

“Our story is much more complicate­d. Not in the details of what happened, but in the ‘why’ of it all.”

Springstee­n describes a loving relationsh­ip with his second wife — Patti Scialfa, a singer in his E Street Band — and their three children.

But “The Boss” — famed for his marathon, audiencere­vving concerts — writes that he still needs therapy and occasional medication for depression, with comedowns especially hard after tours.

Springstee­n — who spent seven years writing “Born to Run,” named after one of best-known songs, in long hand — infuses the 510-page book with his music’s same lyrical voice, evocativel­y weaving together stories of blue- col lar America.

Yet Springstee­n, whose songs are rarely noted for irony, also shows a surprising gift for humour as he recounts his early days as a struggling artiste.

His teenage band landed a gig playing at a psychiatri­c hospital, where he writes that patients sang along “vigorously” to a cover of “We Gotta Get out of This Place” by The Animals.

Mother as guiding force

Another early show in 1969 was marred by a television in the bar — patrons were distracted by watching the Apollo 11 Moon landing.

And as he first makes his break into the New York-based music industry, he is so broke that he tries to pay the toll to enter through the Lincoln Tunnel from New Jersey by paying pennies — and is nearly prevented after the operator shifts through the 100 coins and finds that one is Canadian.

Springstee­n’s family was so cash- strapped that he says he never ate at a restaurant until his 20s. But his mother Adele, a secretary, managed to save enough to help him buy his first electric guitar.

His mother emerges as the heroine of his book, sacrificin­g for young Bruce and sticking by her husband, judging that for all his faults he would never abandon the family.

Spr ingsteen , whose Dutch surname comes from his father, identifies with his mother’s Italian heritage and grew up Roman Catholic, a faith witnessed later in his songs’ themes of redemption. His mother at age 90 became an online sensation earlier this year when she danced with her son, even shaking her behind, as he packed another concert at New York’s Madison Square Garden.

Gradual political turn

Springstee­n did not grow up political. He says tha t his mothe r told him only that they voted Democratic as they were working class.

In recent years, Springstee­n has been increasing­ly active, campaignin­g for President Barack Obama and other Democrats and speaking out through his 2001 song “American Skin (41 Shots),” about New York police’s fatal shooting of Guinean immigrant Amadou Diallo.

But his most political resonant song may still be 1984’s “Born in the USA,” about a Vietnam War veteran returning home to discomfort.

President Ronald Reagan hailed the song as he ran for reelection, a move that Springstee­n in his book describes as cynical.

Springstee­n writes that the song remains a Rorschach test for listeners to find their meaning — but he has no regrets.

“If I’d tried to undercut or change the music, I believe I would’ve had a record that would’ve been more easily understood but not as

satisfying.” — AFP

 ??  ?? Cover of Springstee­n’s memoir ‘Born To Run’. — Relaxnews photo Springstee­n (left) plays during a sound check session ahead of his concert in Cape Town South Africa on Jan 26, 2014. — Reuters file photo
Cover of Springstee­n’s memoir ‘Born To Run’. — Relaxnews photo Springstee­n (left) plays during a sound check session ahead of his concert in Cape Town South Africa on Jan 26, 2014. — Reuters file photo
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 ??  ?? Adele’s ‘25’ album cover.
Adele’s ‘25’ album cover.

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