New Springsteen Video: “Dream Baby Dream”

As a thank you to fans, Bruce Springsteen & the E Street band released a video to accompany a new recording of Suicide‘s “Dream Baby Dream.” The video features clips of audience members during the Wrecking Ball tour. I have been a fan of Springsteen’s version of “Dream Baby Dream” since hearing recordings made during his Devils & Dust tour. Check it out.

The release of this video, along with the announcement that this week Springsteen will release a cover of the Havalinas song “High Hopes,” has led some to speculate that a covers album might be forthcoming. Either way, we can enjoy this cool new video.

What is your favorite song that Springsteen has covered? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • Springsteen’s “Whoop-Ass Session on the Recession” in Greensboro (Guest Post)
  • Bruce Springsteen on Jimmy Fallon: Wrecking Ball
  • Who Sings the Gospel Song “Last Mile of the Way” in the Film “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere”?
  • Springsteen Releasing “Letter to You”
  • Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band: Capitol Theatre, Sept. 20, 1978
  • Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band: “Purple Rain”
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    All I’ve Got Is a Photograph

    Ringo Starr became the third Beatle to have a solo number-one song when “Photograph” hit the top spot in 1973.

    Ringo Starr Photograph On November 24, 1973, Ringo Starr became the third former Beatle to have a solo number one song with “Photograph.” John Lennon would join the other three a year later with his first number one solo song, “Whatever Gets You Thru The Night.”

    “Photograph” appeared on the album Ringo (1973), which would be the only time the four Beatles would contribute to an album by one of their former members.  That contribution illustrates the fondness they all felt for the man also known as Richard Starkey, who was born on July 7, 1940.

    George Harrison co-wrote “Photograph” with Ringo, and Harrison sang backing vocals and played a 12-string guitar solo on the song. McCartney wrote another song on the album and sang backup on “You’re Sixteen,” while John Lennon wrote “I’m The Greatest” on the album and played piano and sang backup.

    “Photograph” is one of my favorite Ringo songs. I love the way the music contrasts with the story being told. “Photograph” is one of the happiest sounding broken-heart songs in history.

    But at this 2002 Concert for George, a memorial concert on the first anniversary of George Harrison’s passing, Ringo briefly explained that the meaning of the song had changed since Harrison’s passing. Then he turns “Photograph” into a wonderful celebration of Harrison’s life.

    What is your favorite Ringo Starr song? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • The Latest and Last Beatles Song: “Now and Then”
  • Ringo Starr Records a John Lennon Song (with a little help from Paul McCartney)
  • New Beatles ‘A Day in the Life’ Video
  • The Beatles’ “Black Album” from “Boyhood”
  • Hear the Beatles Sing Without Music on “Abbey Road” Medley
  • Behind the Scenes With the Beatles on the Set of “Help!”
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    Anybody Here Seen My Old Friend John?

    Less than five years after John F. Kennedy was killed on November 22, 1963, the country lost Martin Luther King Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy to the bullets of assassins in 1968. Later that year, in tribute to the fallen men, Dion released the song, “Abraham, Martin, and John,” which became a hit in a country in shock and mourning.

    The song, written by Dick Holler, has been performed by a number of artists, but nobody has matched Dion’s moving version. In the video below, he performs the song on The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour. [June 2014

  • RFK (and Aeschylus) on MLK Assassination
  • Lou Reed Inducting Dion Into Rock Hall
  • Song of the Day: Dion’s “Sanctuary”
  • Dion’s Lost “Kickin’ Child” (Album Review)
  • Valentine’s Day and Two Love Lessons
  • Dion: “New York Is My Home”
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    Stephen King’s 11/22/63 (Short Review)

    11/22/63 A number of television shows and movies have commemorated the anniversary of the death of President John F. Kennedy. PBS recently broadcast a new documentary in its American Experience series, JFK. The two-part examination of Kennedy’s life featured some new footage and it brought new understanding about Kennedy’s health problems. CNN’s The Assassination of President Kennedy is a fascinating portrayal of the events around the killing using a lot of archival footage I had never seen before (see video below). Meanwhile, the National Geographic Channel presented a dramatization of the period leading up to the assassination with its TV-movie version of Bill O’Reilly’s book, Killing Kennedy, which one might find superficial but still entertaining. While some have wondered if popular culture is overdoing the commemoration of the national tragedy of our president’s death, I found a quiet way to contemplate the anniversary by reading a novel related to the event: Stephen King‘s 11/22/63.

    The novel explores a famous what-if question about “what if you could go back and time and prevent a horrible event from happening?” In 11/22/63, the narrator is Jake Epping, a high school English teacher in Maine who learns from his friend Al about a time portal that will take him back to 1958. With some experimentation, Jake and Al discuss whether one may change the past and how the world might have been different had Lee Harvey Oswald not killed Kennedy. What happens if history is changed? Can it be changed? And what if Oswald was not the person who killed Kennedy?

    As King explains in his “Afterword,” he did a significant amount of research about Oswald, and the book is informative about the main players we associate with the events leading up to the assassination. But the book is more than a novel about a killing. King provides an interesting portrayal of life in America in the late 1950s and early 1960s. The protagonist of the novel is not Oswald or Kennedy but Jake Epping, and it is his life that fascinates us. Epping becomes the focal point in the context of major world events while King meditates on the fragility of both life and history. The book is long, but it is fast reading, and it is Jake’s story that makes it a page-turner that you cannot put down.

    Conclusion? 11/22/63 is a fun read that also asks some big questions. And while enjoying the book you might learn a little bit along the way. Earlier this year it was reported that the novel may be made into a TV series or miniseries, but the book is so fun you should read it.

    What is your favorite historical novel? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • Trailer for “11.22.63” Stephen King Miniseries
  • John F. Kennedy Inauguration and Robert Frost
  • Anybody Here Seen My Old Friend John?
  • Dylan Releases “Murder Most Foul”
  • RFK (and Aeschylus) on MLK Assassination
  • Harry Shearer’s New Series on Richard Nixon
  • Understanding De Niro

    A new movie montage compiles clips of Robert De Niro seeking understanding.  [Update: Unfortunately the montage is no longer available for embedding.] The montage was presented by Chris Wade, Forrest Wickman, Emma Goss, and David Haglund. For a list of the films in the montage, head over to Slate.

    What is your favorite Robert De Niro film? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • Movie Tributes on “The Simpsons”
  • Childhood Summers In the Movies
  • The Terminator Pranks Fans
  • How Camera Movement Dramatizes Speech In Cinema
  • The Fourth Wall Breaks
  • 19 Celebrity Cameos That You Might Have Missed
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)