Showing posts with label high hopes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label high hopes. Show all posts


Album Review: Bruce Springsteen - High Hopes


The title of Bruce Springsteen's new album has invited a lot of clever riffing from critics debating whether or not the work lives up to its "high hopes." Though the Boss's "late-career" songs are unlikely to claim the airwaves as tracks from his younger years once did, there is something to be said for critics hoping for greatness from the musician. Springsteen has been known for bridging mass appeal with widespread critical acclaim.

In truth, however, High Hopes doesn't feel like an album made with critics in mind. It isn't novel or inventive or particularly unexpected, yet it is what most fans of Springsteen likely would have wished for. Beginning with the funky jangle of the title track, it automatically connects with the casual listener looking for a good time.

But Springsteen is offering far more than that. High Hopes isn't merely dumb fun. It presents the workingman blues Springsteen perfected with a genuine sense of comradeship with its audience, and a poetic intelligence that never condescends. "Down in the Hole" even provides a strange, ghostly reprieve from the poppy anthems that make up most of the record's middle. 

Although High Hopes might feel corny or overdone at times (did Springsteen really need to rework "The Ghost of Tom Joad?"), the alleged "unevenness" cited in the mixed reviews it has received seem somewhat unfair. There is no half-hearted filler on the album. There is only Bruce Springsteen doing what he loves the way he loves doing it, and his amiable authenticity sounds pretty swell to this critic.

Grade: B






Listeners Digest: Bruce Springsteen - "High Hopes"


Bruce Springsteen's late-period has yielded some of the best work of his career, with 2012's Wrecking Ball in particular acting of a fine representation of what he's still capable of. Earlier this week, he announced the follow-up, High Hopes, which will be released in January. This album feels like it will be a bit of an oddball in his discography. Rather than another album of new original material, Bruce has gone for a mix of covers, and new versions of old songs that have been overlooked over the years.

The first track to be released was a stark, intense cover of Suicide's "Dream Baby Dream," while this week, the title track, a remake of a song from his lesser-know EP Blood Brothers made the rounds. This one represented Bruce's more rollicking side, but also contained the legendary fury of his live performances. The performance was raw, and gave the impression that the album as a whole could take a an angry, political tone (Tom Morello's involvement also gives that indication). In any case, while the concept for the album is a bit surprising, the first two tracks have eased any fears I may have had about this record. The Boss's winning streak will almost certainly continue.


John Hugar