Cheap Born to Run (Music) (Bruce Springsteen) Price
CHEAP-PRICE.NET ’s Cheap Price
$9.99
Here at Cheap-price.net we have Born to Run at a terrific price. The real-time price may actually be cheaper — click “Buy Now” above to check the live price at Amazon.com.
| ARTIST: | Bruce Springsteen |
| CATEGORY: | Music |
| MANUFACTURER: | Sony |
| MEDIA: | Audio CD |
| TRACKS: | Thunder Road, Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out, Night, Backstreets, Born to Run, She's The One, Meeting Across The River, Jungleland |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 074643379526 |
Related Products
Customer Reviews of Born to Run
Born.... to rule 4 great and 4 mediocre songs. 4 stars for this album. One of the most praised and landmark albums of all time does not click 100% for me. I liked the latest 'The Rising' and the album following this 'Darkness at the edge of time' more than this album. The reason is stated in the first line of the review. The 4 great songs to me are 'Thunder road', 'Born to run', 'Night' and 'Jungleland'. The rest 4 just fail to match the brilliance of these songs. While rating album I think it is right to judge the consistency of the album. That's where it loses a star.
Otherwise this is a very good album. 'Night' has a great tune. I would like to compare it with 'Further up on the road' from 'The Rising'. Simply superb. 'Born to run' and 'Thunder Run' rocks. 'Jungleland' finishes with Bruce sounding like Mark Knopfler. Instruments by the E0street band is excellent, specially Roy Bittan's piono set the mood of the album (Remember how he made a guest appearence to make Dire Straits's 'Making Movies' sounding like a Bruce Springsteen album). As a listener of rock music you should have this album but I thinks it is not his best album, but with this a new bruce is born... to rule.
Essential Bruce at his Pinnacle
I was in high school in NJ in 1972, and my big sister was playing the "Greetings from Asbury Park" album and I was hooked. In 1974 I took the "Wild Innocent & E Street Shuffle" album to college and tried to convert all the kids in my dorm. I thought "Rosalita" was higher art than Beethoven. I waited longingly for the next Springsteen album. In '75, I got "Born to Run" the minute it was released. I was let down. Yes, it rocked, but Bruce's voice had gone hoarse, and the light humor was gone. But it was Bruce, and I listened over and over again. Over time, I was transformed. It is now forever ingrained, fabulous tunes of power, of desperation, of escape, of romance and broken romance. Bruce single-handedly moved Rock into the big leagues during the era of otherwise awful disco. I'm listening right now and every tune holds it glory. If you are building a Bruce collection, start here. Almost as essential is the followup, "Darkness on the Edge of Town". "Greetings" is raw but fun, and "Wild Innoncent E Street Shuffle" is also necessary. The first 4 albums, that's what you need. "Born in the USA" made him a big time star, but these were his high water mark.
Heady 70'sRock
This album is fantastic because it brings back to life those wonderful heady, heavenly, tranquil sunny 1970's days.
It is a real masterpiece released in 1975, but still popular today, with sound that is both timeless and rooted in those wonderful 1970's days.
My personal favorites are the rock n roll' exploration of frustrated loneliness and desire for excitement and life - Thunder Road, the bluesy reminiscence of a summer romance that went wrong in Backstreets, the pumping American biker title track Born to Run and the heady Jungleland.
A fantastic tribute to great music and a time of real meaning.