Bruce Springsteen - Discography: -1973-2020- 320... [patched]

Sleeve Condition Artist: Bruce Springsteen Album: Nebraska Format: 180g Vinyl LP Genre: Rock / Americana Release Type: Studio albu... The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle

: A looser, more raw, and critically favored companion piece to Human Touch that explored newfound domestic stability. Key tracks: "Better Days."

Bruce Springsteen, affectionately known as "The Boss," is one of the most iconic and enduring figures in rock music. With a career spanning over five decades, Springsteen has built a vast and devoted fan base, churning out hit after hit, and cementing his legacy as a singer-songwriter, musician, and performer. This article aims to provide an exhaustive overview of Bruce Springsteen's discography from 1973 to 2020, featuring his studio albums, live recordings, compilations, and EPs, all in high-quality 320 kbps audio. Bruce Springsteen - Discography -1973-2020- 320...

: A lush, heavily produced, pop-optimistic record celebrating romantic love and political hope. Key tracks: "My Lucky Day." The 2010s–2020: Cinematic Westerns and Looking Back

: A raw, acoustic-driven debut filled with hyper-verbose street poetry and character sketches. Key tracks: "Blinday by the Light" and "Spirit in the Night." With a career spanning over five decades, Springsteen

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The album that made Springsteen a global pop icon. Driven by synthesizers and booming 1980s drum sounds, the record yielded seven top-10 singles. Despite its upbeat, stadium-ready sound, the lyrics remained deeply critical of post-Vietnam America. Key tracks: "My Lucky Day

50 years ago, Bruce Springsteen's breakthrough album, 'Born ...

To discuss Bruce Springsteen’s discography is to discuss the arc of the American century’s end and the uncertain dawn of the next. The number “320” is often seen in digital audio—320 kbps, the bitrate where compression ceases to betray the music. For Springsteen, whose work is a cathedral of small noises (the drag of a boot, the hiss of a harmonica, the crack of a snare drum that sounds like a screen door slamming), 320 is a metaphor for fidelity. It is the resolution at which you hear the difference between a promise and a lie. From the raw, Dylan-esque yawp of Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. (1973) to the meditative, orchestral grief of Letter to You (2020), Springsteen has built a discography that refuses to compress the contradictions of working-class life. This essay will trace that journey—album by album, era by era—through the lens of work, faith, masculinity, and the elusive promise of a home that never stays found.

is the return of the E Street Band and the first great album about 9/11. Springsteen does not write about the attack itself; he writes about the aftermath: the firefighter’s wife (“You’re Missing”), the widow who keeps her husband’s shirt (“Into the Fire”), the man who jumps from the tower (“Paradise”). The production (by Brendan O’Brien) is crystalline—the 320 mix reveals every harmony, every buried guitar. “My City of Ruins” was written about Asbury Park’s decline but became a requiem for New York. The album’s faith is not religious; it is communal. The Rising argues that grief, shared, becomes grace.

: Springsteen’s first and only non-original studio album, featuring high-energy, big-band interpretations of traditional American folk songs popularized by Pete Seeger. Key tracks: "Old Dan Tucker."