The Rising (Special Package) Bruce Springsteen

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CD

  • Release Date: 07/30/2002
  • Sales Rank: 1,665
  • Label: SONY
  • UPC: 696998660021

Listener Rating: (27 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Originality" See All

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CD - Special Edition$19.99
 
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  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

It would be a gross understatement to say that anticipation for The Rising was high. Having previewed one of its songs -- "My City of Ruins," which appears here in radically reworked fashion -- on a post-September 11th benefit show, Springsteen made it clear that the album was going to be more than a mere collection of tunes, and he certainly delivers on that promise. For one thing, the album is the first in years to feature the entire E Street Band; in addition, the songs all reverberate with the events of September 11th. On the surface, those two elements would seem to go together like ham and ice cream, but in practice the mixture works stunningly well. On several songs, Bruce revisits the plainspoken blue-collar characters that often pop up in his oeuvre, but here, they face concrete crises, rather than existential ones: The stark "Into the Fire" tells the tale of a doomed rescue worker, while the unsettled "Nothing Man" -- a song of brooding incantation and sharp release -- delves into the survivor's guilt of one who made it out alive. Springsteen departs from tried-and-true formulas on many of The Rising's better songs: Techno beats creep into "The Fuse" (one of the disc's more positive numbers), while the voices of a South Indian choir waft above and around the melody of "Worlds Apart." The ghost of E Street bombast past rears up now and again -- notably on "Mary's Place," which sounds an awful lot like a dusted-off outtake from The Wild, The Innocent & the E Street Shuffle -- but for the most part, the musicians show admirable restraint. That might be a result of producer Brendan O'Brien's careful mix, but more likely, it's the kind of maturity that can only come from a place that's dark, but not without hope. After all, a rising can only come after a fall. David Sprague, Barnes & Noble



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Customer Reviews

He Has Never Changedby Anonymous

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March 04, 2005: Most rock n roll artists who have been extremely successful in the 70's and have continued into the 80's 90's and the 2000's were either not as successful or have failed miserably during the period that followed the 70's. Surprisingly, Bruce Springsteen didn't. He was a true master of rock in the 70's as well as the 80's. Though, he didn't have much luck in the 90's, he did manage to make a huge comeback with "The Rising". When I first bought this album, I was afraid it wasn't going to turn out so good, but I was wrong. It's unbelievable! You cannot argue with any of the songs on here. The opening track, "Lonesome Day" shows a perfect example of what lies ahead on the album. Songs like the title track, "Empty Sky", "Into the Fire", and "Countin' on a Miracle" prove that Springsteen's songwriting is still from the classic Springsteen we all grew up with. There are also a couple of songs on here that show Springsteen's dark side very well ("Worlds Apart", "Further On (Up the Road)"). "Let's Be Friends" is not like a lot of songs that Springsteen has ever done, but it's still really catchy. There are also plenty of songs on here that give fans that same feeling the songs on "Born to Run" gave them ("Mary's Place" and "Waitin' on a Sunny Day"). There is no better way to end this album then with "My City of Ruins", Bruce's dedication to the many lifes that were lost on September 11, 2001. Overall, it's just a wonderful album!

Profound but not melodramaticby Anonymous

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July 16, 2003: If I go back and listen to a cd months after being released it means that I was emotionally impacted somehow; with The Rising the impact was profound. When I am feeling grief over 9/11 to this day I will seek solace in this cd. I was astonished it didn't win the Grammy for album of the year. This cd rocks and moves me with beautiful emotional transitions from grief to hopefulness, comfort to anger, anger to dread and then back again to hopeful. It isn't complicated, it's not obtuse or at all pretentious (nothing Bruce does sounds like something he isn't - he's as authentic as they come). This is real and sincere, no melodrama just great combinations of sounds and homey lyrics. Maybe it's because I'm just a scrappy chick from New Jersey but to me much of what Bruce has written and performed is very down to earth in a way only someone from a place like NJ could understand. The Rising cd still finds its way into my cd magazine. I look forward to each track like sitting with my warm labrador retriever on a chilly evening. It's comfortable and wears well cycle after cycle.


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