Archetypal American rock grounded in universal dreams and struggles.
Bruce Springsteen Video Essentials
The Boss celebrates the American experience.
Bruce Springsteen Live
Stirring storytelling meets fist-pumping thrills.
Bruce Springsteen: Influences
His sound overflows with a love for vintage rock and R&B.
Bruce Springsteen: Deep Cuts
The Boss delivers some of the hardest rockers of his career.
Set List: Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band 2023-2024 Tour
The Boss is back and better than ever. Hear what he’s playing on the rescheduled leg of his tour.
Bruce Springsteen: The Songwriters
He's had nearly as many hits as tributes from other artists.
Inspired by Bruce Springsteen
Passionate, plainspoken storytelling ahead.
Bruce Springsteen: Fitness+ Spotlight
Baby, we were born to run. And lift. And do yoga.
Bruce Springsteen: Chill
Lean back and relax with some of their mellowest cuts.
Artist Biography
More than mere performer, Bruce Springsteen is the embodiment of what we think of when we think of rock ’n’ roll. Born in 1949 and raised in working-class northern New Jersey, Springsteen melds the gut thrill of early rock and soul with the poetics of the singer-songwriter movement for a sound that doesn’t just describe the triumphs and sorrows of everyday Americans but spins them into myth. It’s a feat that elevated him from working musician to something like a national hero upon his arrival. Though best known for his arena-sized anthems, Springsteen actually varies his approach quite a bit, from the sweat-soaked grandeur of the E Street Band workouts on albums such as 1975’s Born to Run to the stark Dust Bowl folk of 1982’s Nebraska, embracing the nostalgic allure of rock while integrating his sound with synthesisers and Broadway-level showmanship (the latter evident not only in his marathon, tank-emptying concerts but also in 2017’s Springsteen on Broadway run). Tonally, Springsteen is just as hard to pin down, leavening his darkest, most politicised stories—“Born In the U.S.A.”, for example—with his most uplifting music, a contrast that has made him equal parts patriot and dissident, often blurring the line between the two. Or, as he himself put it in a press conference for his 2012 album, Wrecking Ball, “I have spent my life judging the distance between American reality and the American dream.” But while Springsteen’s celebrated examinations of contemporary social issues have won him numerous awards, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom and the National Medal of Arts, the past has always weighed heavily on his imagination. Some of his most vital work of the 21st century, like 2020’s Letter to You, finds him pairing decades-old compositions with new material, managing to look backward while also boldly pressing forward.