Music Review: Bruce Springsteen - Magic - Page 2

In fact, the common thread among the characters who populate the songs of Magic seems to be the search for a way home. On the first line heard on this album, from "Radio Nowhere," we meet a traveler who "was trying to find my home, but all I heard was a drone." On another song that is appropriately titled "Long Walk Home," the narrator finds his hometown empty, right down to the "the veteran's hall high up on the hill," where he finds it "stood silent and alone, with a sign that just said gone."

On the song "Gypsy Biker," as a harmonica emits the most lonesome sounding wail heard on a Springsteen record since The River, the townsfolk mourn the biker who never made it home from a war, by dousing his bike in flames as "the favored march up over the hill in some fools parade, shouting victory for the righteous, but there ain't nothin' much here but graves." All of this is punctuated by a fiery guitar solo.

On "Last To Die," another of this album's great rockers that musically somewhat recalls Springsteen's outtake tracks like "Loose Ends," Springsteen pointedly asks "Who'll be the last die for a mistake, whose blood will spill, whose heart will break," in the song's chorus.

On "Devil's Arcade," one of Magic's few somber ballads, Springsteen mourns a soldier with the words "remember the morning we dug up your gun, the worms in the barrel, the hanging sun."

Springsteen likewise makes his feelings on the war quite clear in the otherwise jubilant "Livin In The Future." As has been noted elsewhere, this song is a classic E Street Band rocker in the tradition of "Hungry Heart," and "10th Avenue Freeze Out," — actually, I'd have to throw "Cover Me" into that particular mix as well — where the trademark, rollicking saxophone of the Big Man is the centerpiece of the track.

But again, underlying the celebratory tone, comes word of a "letter blowin in the wind, something about me and you never seeing one another again." Later in the song, we find the same guy "woke up on election day, skies gunpowder and shades of grey." Despite the heaviness in the lyrics, "Livin In The Future" still ranks right up there as the sort of instant E Street Band classic which is going to have them screaming and dancing in celebration down the aisles on the upcoming tour (which I understand starts tonight in Hartford, CT).

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Article Author: Glen Boyd

You'll find Blogcritics assistant music editor Glen Boyd sharing his Thoughtmares on his personal blogs The World Wide Glen, and The Rockologist. In a previous life, Glen was a music professional and journalist whose work has appeared in The Rocket, SPIN, Pulse!, and The Source. …

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Article comments

  • 1 - JC Mosquito

    Oct 03, 2007 at 1:08 am

    Yes indeed, Glen - it's a good'un. And I'm going to recast my vote for best song from Gypsy Biker to Girls in Their Summer Clothes. Great gawda'mighty, if it was the only good song on the album, it'd still be worth it.

    But there's something very wistful about this album - it reminds me of Caroline, No by the Beach Boys of all things. It feels like a revisit and a wrap up. Is it possible this is the last great classic r'n'roll album of Bruce's career? Or maybe even the last great classic rock album of all?

  • 2 - Glen Boyd

    Oct 03, 2007 at 2:06 am

    It is indeed a good un' Skeet.

    As to your thoughts on the best songs, I too started at "Gypsy Biker," along with "Long Walk Home" and your current choice "Girls In Their Summer Clothes" which does have some striking parallels to Brian Wilson. Right now, I kind of like "Livin In The Future" though because of the contrast between its bouncy sound and the darker images portrayed in the lyrics.

    I imagine every single one of these songs will spend at least some time as my favorite though. The album is just that good.

    -Glen

  • 3 - Jeffrey J. Hardy

    Oct 08, 2007 at 12:01 pm

    Bruce should spend less time ginning up false controversy and more time actually playing music (in my opinion).

    Related article.

    Be well, Jeff

  • 4 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 08, 2007 at 12:38 pm

    i don't think Springsteen is ginning up anything.

    and if you are unaware of him receiving any criticism, then you used the correct word: unaware.

  • 5 - Glen Boyd

    Oct 08, 2007 at 7:59 pm

    Hmmm...

    I'm not quite sure where this is coming from, but i'm assuming it's from the 60 minutes piece on Sunday. I thought Bruce was quite eloquent on the program -- a co-worker even remarked to me today that "Bruce is a very smart man."

    Bruce gets plenty of criticism from the righties and what not, but all he is doing is exercising his right -- his responsibility even -- to speak out on things that he sees happening this country that he cares very deeply about.

    What could be more patriotic than that?

    -Glen

  • 6 - PEG

    Oct 10, 2007 at 10:18 am

    I think Bruce's material is hot stuff on this one- great writing that's for sure. My only complaint about the album is the mix. I felt there was an overuse of reverb to the point of it ruining the intensity of great tones like Big Man's sax. It sounds a bi† on †he mucky side and too tunnel like sounding throughout the album. Reminded me of eighties type mixes however Born in the USA was a much better sounding album. Born in the USA captured that "stadium sound" production without overkill of effects. Hey Boss, if you ever read this I think you should mix your own stuff xo

  • 7 - JC Mosquito

    Oct 10, 2007 at 12:37 pm

    Hmm... lots of issues with the mix - not from my corner. I think it's a thoroughly modern mix that pays tribute to the entire spectrum of rock n roll production techniques. Sure, it isn't pristine - that's one of the problems I had with Born in the USA - rcok and roll is supposed to be messy, isn't it?

  • 8 - Mark Saleski

    Oct 10, 2007 at 1:44 pm

    i have problems with the mix myself, and it's exactly the "modernness" of it...specifically, there's just not enough air in it. everything can get smooshed together.

    still, the music itself is so great that i just don't care.

  • 9 - JC Mosquito

    Oct 10, 2007 at 2:53 pm

    Yes indeed, there's a fair amount of clutter in spots - just like an old mono mix from the mid 60s. But that's not necessarily bad, is it?

    Muscle. Noise. Ambience. Rock and roll.

  • 10 - PEG

    Oct 10, 2007 at 6:27 pm

    I don't think it sounds like anything from the sixties at all. O'brien's mix on this album reminds me of Chris Thomas'style of production on Elton John's albums. I am particularly thinking of the song "The One". When you compare the impact of EJ's music with Gus Dudgeon producing and mixing rather than Thomas, you'll come to this conclusion= one is timeless the other is fashionable and becomes dated.
    The E-Street band sounds big enough on their own without all the sauce. I do appreciate O'brien's mixes just not all that much on this project. It won't bring a downer to this new release-cause it truly rocks

  • 11 - Glen Boyd

    Oct 10, 2007 at 7:46 pm

    Interesting conversation thats opened up here. I think my only complaint is that the vocals sound a little buried at times. One of the great joys of Springsteen albums is being able to song along to them at the top of your lungs while stuck in traffic. After living with this album for over a week now, I still don't know all the words cause at times they are a little tough to make out in the mix without a lyric sheet.

    Other than that though, the big noise approach suits me just fine. And remember, when Born To Run first came out, it was often criticized as being "muddy".

    -Glen

  • 12 - PEG

    Oct 10, 2007 at 9:11 pm

    somehow I think a live recording of the magic tour would be a more satisfying listen than this studio effort. it's more than a muddy sounding issue here, it's simply a case of overproduction. i'll tell you one thing, i must hear these songs live, cause the material is just too good and the players are just too good to have been masked with a sea of reverb. you shouldn't have to hear a sax solo and wonder if maybe that's a guitar with some weird effect on it. i don't want to make comparisons with other albums, because each album becomes it's own entity. let's face it, a few listens to get used to things is what it takes sometimes when it comes to liking new albums. i just wish i could move this curtain of effects from in front of the speaker so i can hear the music!

  • 13 - JC Mosquito

    Oct 11, 2007 at 1:12 am

    Interesting observation, Peg - I wouldn't have said it was overproduced at all. To me, it sounds like all the stuff I like, which would be certainly not be characterized as extreme hi-fi.

  • 14 - PEG

    Oct 11, 2007 at 11:08 am

    you know this was really interesting †alking to you guys about bruce. i just bought the release about 3 days ago and it was fun to see other peoples' perspective on this. i've gone to other sites and people are saying that bruce doesn't know how to rock and roll anymore. the best comment i heard was that while other bands that have been around the 30-40 years mark are busy trying to cover themselves or become a parody of themselves, bruce continues to re-invent himself. i don't think he necessarily re-invented himself on magic, but he certainly is aging gracefully. his style of music allowed him to do that. a guy can't be in a bitch band when he has all that hair at the time and continue on in his fifties, ya know.

  • 15 - JC Mosquito

    Oct 11, 2007 at 11:52 am

    Nice talking atcha too, Peg - if you hang out here long enough, I think you might get a gold watch or something - ah, maybe not, but bc/music's still a pretty good read most days.

  • 16 - Belle 2

    Nov 02, 2007 at 11:51 pm

    Well, this conversation has moved Magic up to the top of my list of cd's to buy. I wouldn't have survived college without him but maybe I shouldn't only see him in that light. Maybe, Bruce and I can age gracefully together.

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