Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band are releasing a new studio album, “Letter to You.,” with the title track and a new video out now.
Here is some good news for 2020: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band are releasing a new studio album, Letter to You. Springsteen also just released the title track and video.
According to the announcement for Springsteen’s twentieth studio album, it is a “rock album fueled by the band’s heart-stopping, house-rocking signature sound.” The album was recorded at Springsteen’s home studio in New Jersey.
Springsteen explained further about the album. “I love the sound of the E Street Band playing completely live in the studio, in a way we’ve never done before, and with no overdubs. We made the album in only five days, and it turned out to be one of the greatest recording experiences I’ve ever had.”
Letter to You includes nine new songs written by Springsteen, plus three previously unreleased songs from the 1970s. The track list is: “One Minute You’re Here,” “Letter To You,” “Burnin’ Train,” “Janey Needs A Shooter,” “Last Man Standing,” “The Power Of Prayer,” “House Of A Thousand Guitars,” “Rainmaker,” “If I Was The Priest,” “Ghosts,” :Song For Orphans,” and “I’ll See You In My Dreams.”
The new black-and-white video for the title track “Letter to You” features Bruce and the E Street Band in the studio. The lyrics reveal an elder statesman of rock looking back on how his songs were all letters to his listeners. Check it out.
In my letter to you, I took all my fears and doubts; In my letter to you, All the hard things I found out, In my letter to you, All that I found true, And I sent in in my letter to you.
Letter to You hits the Internet on October 23, 2020.
Photo via YouTube. What do you think of the new Springsteen song? Leave your two cents in the comments.
In 1976, Frank Sinatra brought Dean Martin to the MDA Labor Day Telethon for a brief reunion between Martin and Jerry Lewis.
Many of us who grew up in the 1960s and 1970s have fond memories of the MDA Labor Day Telethon that raised money for the good cause of the the Muscular Dystrophy Association. During a time when many television stations signed off at midnight, the telethon was unusual. For Labor Day Weekend, host Jerry Lewis and various guests entertained us throughout the night. There were many memorable moments, perhaps none more than that time on September 5, 1976, when Dean Martin surprised his former performing partner Lewis.
Jerry Lewis and Dean Martin had teamed up in 1946, when according to Lewis, he had approached Martin with the question, “You workin’?” They worked together in movies, nightclubs, radio and TV and were extremely successful.
But then the partnership ended when the two split up ten years later on July 24, 1956 after their final nightclub performance. Various theories abound about the reasons for the split, ranging from jealously to an argument about an upcoming movie to just being tired of working together. They had been so successful, many fans dreamed for them to team up again.
There would be no more Martin and Lewis movies, although director Peter Bogdanovich in the early 1980s tried to put together a film in which they both would appear. But we did get to see them together in 1976 on our televisions thanks to Frank Sinatra.
In 1976, Sinatra was appearing live at the MDA Labor Day Telethon instead of remotely, as he had done since 1953. And he decided to bring along his friend Dean Martin to surprise Lewis. Nobody really knows why Sinatra concocted the scheme, although he told others what he said on the telethon. It was just time for Lewis and Martin to be together again. Others have also noted that Sinatra loved a good prank too.
The reunion was a stealth operation. Frank slipped Martin into the dressing room of Lewis’ co-host Ed McMahon. Few people knew about the plan beyond those enlisted to help. Jerry’s 30-year-old son, the pop singer Gary Lewis, was helping his dad at the telethon and happened to catch a glimpse of Dean Martin backstage. Gary wondered what was going on, but decided to keep his mouth shut.
And then when Sinatra went on stage with Lewis, he said he had brought a friend along. The look of surprise on Lewis’s face was real.
The hug between the two feels real too. Then, Lewis fumbles for something to say, realizing that people around the world are watching. After a few expressions of surprise, he brilliantly calls back to the old encounter between the two giants: “You workin’?”
Contrary to legend, it was not really the first time Martin and Lewis had seen each other in twenty years. But it was an unexpected and memorable public reunion for the two legends.
After the telethon, there would be a few more brief public encounters between the two men. Lewis went to the funeral of Martin’s son , and he surprised Martin on Martin’s 72nd birthday. By most accounts, the two men genuinely loved each other. But some reason — egos, old grudges, bad timing, or something else — kept the two men from being close friends again in their later years.
We all have people we once were close to and who now we never see. I will sometimes have a passing thought about someone who once was a major figure in my life and wonder why we no longer talk. Maybe there was no reason or maybe there was a slight that no longer seems so important. Most people have those past connections. That is why we all feel a kinship with Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. It is why seeing them together at the MDA Telethon is so touching.
For that moment, we can imagine that the two friends will once again share their lives and be close friends. They will work together or maybe just have dinner once a week. But life is not a fairy tale. Sometimes it just has to be enough that two people still have that love even if they cannot be together. And if we get a brief encounter years later, we will have to settle for that bitter sweet moment that reminds us of what we once had.
Justin Townes Earle passed away on August 23, 2020, leaving behind an impressive catalog of music starting with a debut song on one of his father’s albums.
The first time I heard Justin Townes Earle’s voice was on the final song of his father Steve Earle’s 2003 album, Just An American Boy. The father gave his son the final track on the album on the son’s song, “Time You Waste.” Although I still had to wait several years for an album from the talented son, that wonderful debut led to a career of stellar music and albums. So, like many fans, I was heartbroken to learn that 2020 had claimed the life of Justin Townes Earle at the age of 38.
The news sent me back to listen to many of his albums that I had in my collection, including from his debut EP Yuma (2007) through his much acclaimed Harlem River Blues (2010) through his personal exploration in Single Mothers (2014) and Absent Fathers (2015) to his latest The Saint of Lost Causes(2019). Earle had carved out his own niche, separate from his father, but still influenced by him as well as the singer-songwriter he was named for, Townes Van Zandt.
Like his father and the man he was named for, Justin Townes Earle faced his own substance abuse problems throughout his life. We always rooted for him to succeed in controlling the demons, as his father had done. So we are heartbroken that he died even so much younger than his namesake, who had died at the age of 52.
Thinking about the music of Justin Townes Earle in this age of the pandemic where we have lost so many, I keep going back to that debut recording of “Time You Waste.”
Don’t think that I, I wouldn’t take every minute back If I could bring myself To live like that.
Cause all the other ones, You only get one chance; It’s seeing life through the eyes of the innocent; So take it slow; No need in haste,
Because the time you’ll miss Is the time you waste;
Yeah the time you’ll miss, babe Is the time you waste.
Our thoughts and prayers go out to the friends and family of Justin Townes Earle, including his wife and daughter, his mother, and his father Steve Earle.
John Mellencamp gives his fans a cover of a song “fitting for these times.”
John Mellencamp recently posted on his Facebook page his cover of a Vigilantes of Love song “Welcome to Struggleville.” The singer-songwriter offered a brief explanation: “John played this song because he thought it was fitting for these times.”
Through the 1990s into the early 2000s, Vigilantes of Love was fronted by Bill Mallonee. Although Mallonee never received the fame he deserved, it is cool that Mellencamp recognizes the talent.
And Mellencamp is also correct about how the song fits our times. Although the Vigilantes of Love version of “Welcome to Struggleville” is a rock song, Mellencamp slows things down, making it into a folk song that is almost a dirge. The song paints haunting images, including Biblical characters. And it ends with a dark warning.
They are building a new gallows For when you show up on the street. Polishing the electric chair, They’re gonna give you a front row seat. Heard a sneer outside the garden; Salutation so well-heeled: . . . . ‘Welcome all you suckers to Struggleville. ‘
Check out John Mellencamp’s version of “Welcome to Struggleville.”
In 1978, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street band were touring to promote Darkness on the Edge of Town, creating many legendary performances. Among these was their appearance in September 1978 at the Capitol Theatre in Passaic, New Jersey. And now, you may watch the entire show.
Through the magic of YouTube, the show is available to watch. Many consider it one of the greatest Springsteen shows, and now you may judge for yourself. Yeah, the video is in black and white and a little grainy, but it is still awesome. Check it out.
What do you think of the show? Leave your two cents in the comments.