Bruce Springsteen: Wrecking Ball

The Boss has always had an uneasy relationship with fame—not so much the celebrity aspect, but the wealth. Singing about the American working class made him wealthy, which in turn distanced him from his own subject. On every album since 1984’s legendary Born in the USA, Springsteen has worked visibly hard to maintain those ties to his roots, and a few misfires aside, he’s managed to make some meaningful music through sheer determination and earnestness. Ten years ago The Rising turned out to be exactly the album the country needed after 9/11, and more recently The Seeger Sessions revisited old public domain tunes as a means of underscoring the social—perhaps even the socialist—nature of American popular music.
Springsteen evokes that pair of late-career highlights on Wrecking Ball, which has the rousing boisterousness of Sessions and the unflagging sense of self-determination of The Rising. It could use a bit more of the former and less of the latter. As with most artists who’ve taken up protest music in the wake of Occupy Wall Street, Springsteen makes no room for humor or specificity, writing lyrics that nod to everyman characters but speak in the generalized language of “This Land Is Your Land” and “Blowin’ in the Wind.” He even mentions robber barons at one point. Guthrie and Dylan could get away with it, but Springsteen has never been one for loftiness. His best songs operate at street level. To the extent that this type of rhetoric sounds at all natural or compelling out of his mouth, Wrecking Ball works only because it doesn’t represent any of kind of plot twist in the greater Springsteen narrative: Despite that nickname, the Boss has always been a great lefty. The recent financial meltdown, with its cast of sympathetic victims (the entire middle class) and easy villains (predatory banks), didn’t provide him a subject so much as it simply loosed all of his outrage.