'Runaway Dream: Born to Run and Bruce Springsteen's American Vision'

indystar

September 10, 2009 by indystar | Staff

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By Louis P. Masur

(Bloomsbury Press, $23)

Even before its release on Aug. 25, 1974, Bruce Springsteen’s “Born to Run” held the stuff of rock myth.

Springsteen, just 24 at the time, had already released two albums that were critically lauded but fizzled commercially. His marathon live shows, performed at full-throttle from start to finish, had quickly become legend, leading one noted critic to exclaim: “I saw rock and roll future and its name is Bruce Springsteen.”

That summer, it seemed, everyone was eagerly awaiting the album that would either catapult Springsteen to fame or dash his dreams.

“Born to Run,” of course, did more than somersault Springsteen to stardom. It became an integral part of rock history. The record, from the exhilarating rush of the title song to Springsteen’s grinning pose on the album cover, is now solidly ensconced in this country’s cultural iconography.

In “Runaway Dream,” Louis P. Masur, a professor at Trinity College in Hartford, Conn., dissects the making of the album and the legacy it has left behind with the meticulous eye of a scholar and the unabashed affection of a true fan.

The book recounts the story of Springsteen’s summer in a recording studio, agonizing over each word, each note, each musical arrangement that would go into the album.

Masur draws heavily on previously published books about Springsteen and archival interviews with The Boss himself, but “Runaway Dream” would have benefited greatly from new interviews with Springsteen and others involved in the making of the album.

Still, it does an effective job of evoking the album’s power, and the role that the Jersey landscape (emotional and physical) and the aura of the times played in its creation and its staying power.

“The album spoke to the moment. And it still does,” Masur writes. “New generations coming of age hear it for the first time and are transfixed.”

At the very least, “Runaway Dream” will make you want to rifle through your iPod (for the nostalgic, your record collection) and give yet another listen to “Born to Run.” And that’s never a bad thing.

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Categories: Books, Living

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louis p masur, bloomsbury press, marathon live, jersey landscape, meticulous eye, new generations, musical arrangement, trinity college, rock history, somersault, true fan, staying power, coming of age, reco, stardom, recording studio, full throttle, rock and roll, conn, Bruce Springsteen, books, living

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