'Counting Down Bruce
Springsteen: His 100 Finest Songs’
delves deep into the music of The Boss
Old Forge native’s new
book examines and ranks the best songs of one of America’s best songwriters
By ALAN K. STOUT
MUSIC ON THE MENU
There is perhaps no other
American songwriter whose body of work has been as completely analyzed as that
of Bruce Springsteen. He is considered by many to be the very best at his craft
and, for the past four decades, his songs have enlightened and inspired
millions. Books – many of them – have been written about Springsteen’s
life and his music, and a new text, written by Old Forge native and
resident Jim Beviglia, dives deep into the context of that music in a way that
has never been done before.
Titled “Counting Down Bruce
Springsteen: His 100 Finest Songs,” the book offers a detailed analysis of 100
Springsteen gems while also ranking them in order from No. 100 all the way to
No. 1. For its author, delving into the songs of The Boss has been a lifelong
journey, as he’s been a fan for three decades.
“It happened around 1984-1985
with the ‘Born In The U.S.A.’ album,” says Beviglia, 42. “ I was 12 or 13 years
old, and I was a big fan of MTV. With MTV, a lot of those artists were
different than what I was used to seeing around town. And that was kind of the
allure – seeing artists like Adam Ant and Duran Duran. They were just from another
world. And then Springsteen came on, and it was like somebody that I knew, or
somebody that I might have seen around town. He was relatable in a way that
those other artists weren’t. That was the draw for me. With songs like ‘Glory
Days’ and ‘Dancing In The Dark,’ there was a relatable factor. And I think
that’s how a lot of fans feel about his music.”
After first discovering
Springsteen at the height of his commercial success, Beviglia began to dig
deeper into Springsteen’s catalog, purchasing albums such as “Greetings from
Asbury Park, N.J.,” “Born To Run” and “Darkness on The Edge of Town.” He soon
became an even bigger fan and has seen Springsteen in concert three times.
“His live performances were
just spectacular and they continue to be spectacular,” he says. “He really is
the preeminent live performer of his era. He is still setting the standard. ”
Beviglia is a 1990 graduate
of Scranton Prep High School and a 1994 graduate of Syracuse University, where
he received a degree in broadcast journalism. “Counting Down Bruce Springsteen:
His 100 Finest Songs” is his fifth book. He’s written similar countdown texts
on Tom Petty, Elvis Costello and Radiohead, which were e-books, and one on Bob
Dylan, which, like the Springsteen book, was a published text. He says that
because he’s been such a big Springsteen fan for the past 30 years, he didn’t
need to do much research when he sat down to write it. Still, that didn’t mean
it wasn’t a very time-consuming project.
“With artists that I really
love, I tend to be kind of a completist,” he says. “With Springsteen, I already
had everything. I had all of the studio albums, I had the ‘Tracks’ boxed set, I
had ‘The Promise,’ which was the ‘Darkness’ outtakes, I had the live albums …
so I knew it all pretty well. I’d read books on the making of the albums, so a
lot of the research was done before I started. I did, however, go back and
listen to everything all over again, from the first album to the last
album and every recorded song that he officially released. But it really helped
that I had an in-depth knowledge going in. From there, it was just sort of
reinforcing that knowledge.”
Beviglia’s selection of songs
is interesting. Yes, most of the big hits and classics made the list, but
throughout the countdown, there are also plenty of lesser known jewels,
including songs from Springsteen’s folksy ‘Devils & Dust” album and from
2012’s “Wrecking Ball.” It is a comprehensive look at Springsteen’s 40-year
career.
“That was important to me,”
says Beviglia. “We’re in an era in music where a lot of times an album comes
out and it sort of disappears. So whereas Springsteen’s diehard fans know the
stuff that he’s released in the last 20 to 25 years, maybe the casual fans
don’t, because the songs aren’t getting played on the radio all the time. And
yet there is work there that is comparable to any of his best stuff. He did set
such an amazing standard with what he did during the first 15 years of his
career that it made it hard for anything that he did to live up to it. But the
fact that he has been able to rise to that standard is amazing.”
Beviglia admits that,
sometimes, the difference in quality between a song such as “The River,” which
he ranks at No. 14, might not be that much from a song such as “Backstreets,” which
comes in at No. 8.
“After the book was done, I
was driving home one day and I had ‘E Street Radio’ on, and ‘The Promised Land’
came on, and I was listening to it, and it’s just perfect,” he says. “There’s
not an ounce of flab on it. The words, the music – everything just works
perfectly together – and it tells this great story. It sends a great message.
It’s uplifting. There’s nothing wrong with it. So I went back and I
looked, and was No. 37 in the book. I said ‘How is that possible?’ But then you
look at the other songs ahead of it, and you say ‘Oh, yeah, now I understand.’
It really was like splitting hairs. And with an artist like Springsteen, it’s
so tough, because he’s got so many great songs. Ultimately, it just came down
to a set of criteria that I had: ‘How well did the song communicate the
message? How well did the music fit with the lyrics? Did he achieve what he was
trying to set out to do?’ It’s kind of a gut feeling once you get to that
point. Obviously my list is going to differ from just about every other
Springsteen fan out there, but I tried to give it as much due diligence as
possible and really research these things and really thoroughly go over every
part of every song.”
Though they are not written
about in detail - as the songs are that are featured in the countdown - the
book also includes a section titled “… and 100 more” which lists an
additional 100 of Springsteen’s best songs.
“After 100, there were still
songs where I said, ‘How can this not be on there?’ ” says Beviglia with a
laugh. “The funny thing is, I could go past 200, and there’s still probably 20
to 25 songs that I enjoy that didn’t make the list. That’s the thing – if
you’re going to do a book like this, the artist has to have not only a long
career, but a consistently great career.”
“Counting Down Bruce
Springsteen: His 100 Finest Songs” has already received positive reviews.
Publishers Weekly wrote that “Beviglia's knowledge and enthusiasm for his
subject will be appreciated” and lauded not only his picks, but also how he
went about choosing them. They also praised the manner in which Beviglia
dissects the many themes found in Springsteen’s work and the cohesiveness of
his albums. Dave Marsh, a noted Springsteen biographer who has written
extensively for Rolling Stone, says that "Counting Down Bruce
Springsteen belongs in every bar on the shore—not just from Atlantic Highlands
to Barnegat Bay, from Maine to Florida, too. Guaranteed to start all sorts of
arguments, and settle a few too.”
Beviglia says his next book
will countdown the 100 greatest songs by The Rolling Stones. “Counting
Down Bruce Springsteen: His 100 Finest Songs” is available through all online
booksellers such as Amazon and Barnes & Noble.
“The neat thing about
Springsteen is that if you trace his career and trace each album, it kind of
follows the arc of a life,” says Beviglia. “You have the early albums, where
you have those characters, and they’re young, and they’re out in the streets
and causing trouble, and then things start to change. With ‘Darkness On The
Edge of Town,’ they have to get a job, and on ‘Nebraska,’ they start to look
out to the world around them and see these social concerns. With ‘Tunnel of
Love’ they start to have relationships. With ‘Working On A Dream,’ it’s really
about middle-aged people and getting older, and all of the triumphs and the
heartaches that come with that. That’s the great thing about Springsteen’s
music. And that’s the thing that people relate to. They can point at different
milestones in their own lives, and point to different songs he’s written, and
say ‘I can relate to that,’ or ‘I’ve been there.’ If there’s one characteristic
of Springsteen’s songwriting and his recording career that really stands out,
it is that ability to resonate with people throughout their entire lives.”
(Alan K. Stout has covered
rock and pop music in Northeastern Pennsylvania since 1992. His weekly radio
show, “Music On The Menu,” airs every Sunday from 9-10 p.m. on 105 The River.
He has seen Bruce Springsteen in concert 10 times and names “Racing In The
Streets” as his favorite Springsteen song. This story also appears in the Oct. 8, 2014 edition of The Weekender and the Oct. 8, 2014 edition of The Times Leader.)