The Mail on Sunday

TIM DE LISLE ALBUM OF THE WEEK

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Bruce Springtsee­n Letter To You Out Friday

Bruce Springstee­n has spent the past few years branching out, with an autobiogra­phy, a Broadway show, an orchestrat­ed folk album and a lockdown radio series. The book was a bestseller, the show made $100 million, the album went to No.1, but the Springstee­n on display was largely his inner loner. He’s also a party animal, who should be proving it all night, in football grounds, to crowds of 50,000. Instead, we have the next best thing. Before lockdown, in his New Jersey barn, The Boss brought The E Street Band back together.

They are one of the all-time best backing bands, up there with The Shadows, The Miracle sand The JBs. And one of the biggest, liable to break the rule of six just by gathering for a rehearsal. Their ir full, warm sound is built to welcome everybody. Seven hearts ts are better than one.

Letter To You is Springstee­n’s s 20th studio album. By ‘you’, he e means us: the nine new songs are a love letter to his audience. They celebrate the music itself and the band members who have died, including Clarence Clemons, Springstee­n’s saxophonis­t and soulmate.

The surviving E Streeters work k so well together that after giving ing themselves five days to record this album, they finished it in four. Their musiciansh­ip is a thrill throughout – the swell of Charles Giordano’s organ, the snap of Max Weinberg’s backbeat, the swagger of three guitars as Springstee­n swaps riffs with Nils Lofgren and Steve Van Zandt.

The writing isn’t quite so hot, but every song is likeable and the single Ghosts feels like a favourite of the future. The new tracks are joined by three very old ones, written when Springstee­n w was just a wannabe. One O of them, If I Was T The Priest, appeared in his audition for the gr great talent- spotter Jo John Hammond, back in 1972. Long L and winding, dy dynamic but derivative ( of Dylan), these old son songs bear the stamp of a yo young gun, so it’s fascina cinating to hear them sung by a septuagena­rian ( he turned 71 last month). Springstee­n is in fine voice throughout – commanding, raucous, then suddenly tender. What a Boss. Buy t his al bum and play it loud. For an hour your home will be full of warmth, and decency, and people.

 ??  ?? STILL THE BOSS: Bruce Springstee­n with wife and E Street stalwart Patti Scialfa
STILL THE BOSS: Bruce Springstee­n with wife and E Street stalwart Patti Scialfa
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