[This week, I finally get to cross off one of the very top items on my bucket list—seeing Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band in concert with my sons! In honor of that truly momentous occasion, I wanted to share a handful of the past posts where I’ve featured Bruce on the blog—leading up to a special weekend reflection on the concert!]
On two ways to
argue for the patriotic possibilities of an easily misunderstood song and album.
In one of my first-year
blog posts (back in those silly mid-2011 days before I used hyperlinks,
dear reader), I used an article by music
journalist Ben Schwartz on the battles over Bruce Springsteen’s “Born in the U.S.A.” (the
song) to think about questions of audience readings and misreadings, of whether
and how an artist’s choices can contribute to them, and of why I’d still make
the case for “Born” as representing some of the best and most thoughtful
(rather than most bombastic or simplified) visions of American identity and
community. Many of those same questions and lenses can be applied to the Born in the U.S.A. album as a whole, of
course, which consistently weds arena and bar rock sounds to dark and painful
lyrics and situations. No fewer than three of the album’s songs end with main
characters under arrest or in prison, and yet two of them (“Darlington County” and “Working on the Highway”)
are also among the album’s most upbeat-sounding rockers. As I argued in that
post, I believe audiences should be and are capable of looking beyond sound and
music to hear and engage with songs on lyrical and thematic levels as well—but
I also called “Born” a split-personality song there, and the same can
definitely be said about the album as a whole.
The most overt
way to read “Born” as uber-patriotic is, as I also wrote in that post, likewise
both a misreading and a further emphasis on sound over lyrics (the first line
of both the song and album is “Born down in a dead man’s town,” after all). But
that doesn’t mean that there aren’t other, and important, ways to think of both
song and album as patriotic nonetheless. In recent years Springsteen has consistently described
one of his central and lifelong artisitic goals as charting “the distance
between American reality and the American Dream,” and the album’s opening and
closing songs (“Born” and “My
Hometown”) chart particular
aspects of that distance with clarity and force. Like another easily misunderstood
song of Springsteen’s, “We
Take Care of Our Own” (the lead single from and first song on 2012’s Wrecking Ball), “Born” creates an
especially clear representation of that distance between ideal and reality in
the back and forth between its patriotic chorus and its far more dark and
critical verses (although the same could be said of “My Hometown,” with a
chorus that recognizes the value of a foundational place even while the verses
chart that place’s decline and limits). I’ve written a lot in recent years,
including in my
fourth book (NB. and then doubly so in my
sixth book), about the concept of critical patriotism, and both this
overall idea of distance and the specific representations of it in these songs
and their structural shifts exemplify critical patriotism.
There’s another,
even more overarching way to think about Born
in the U.S.A. as a patriotic album, however. The album’s most optimistic
song is its exact midpoint, “No Surrender,” an
anthemic tribute to Springsteen’s lifelong musical companion Steve Van Zandt
and to the power of rock and roll (“We learned more from a three-minute record,
babe, than we ever learned in school”). But what if we read that central song
as a mission statement for the album itself? That is, to put it in first-year
writing terms, what if “No Surrender” is the album’s thesis, “Born in the
U.S.A.” and “My Hometown” are its introduction and conclusion, and the
remaining songs are the evidence paragraphs? In that case, even if the songs
are consistently darker in their themes and images, the acts of creating and
performing them, of assembling them into an album, of sending that album out
into the world, of touring to share it with audiences, and so on are all
optimistic recognitions and extensions of the power and importance of rock and
roll, and of the role it can play in helping America move toward a better
future. Perhaps that future comprises the “romantic dreams” that the speaker of
“No Surrender” still has in his head, dreams that animate—if not without
challenge and complexity—the critical patriotism of Born in the U.S.A.
Concert
reflection this weekend,
Ben
PS. What
do you think?
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