“SOMETHING IN THIS SONG FEELS… FAMILIAR. TOO FAMILIAR.” Bruce Springsteen didn’t just release a protest track — he slipped a quiet clue inside it. Streets of Minneapolis hit fast, loud, and angry, written and dropped in the immediate aftermath of a killing that shook the city. The lyrics rage. The timing shocks. But it’s the sound that’s making listeners stop mid-play and go, wait… haven’t I heard this before? and Fans caught it instantly

bruce springsteen

If you think you’ve heard Bruce Springsteen’s brand-new protest song before, you may not be far off base. The melody of the Boss’s “Streets of Minneapolis,” written, recorded and released just days after masked federal militiamen killed Alex Pretti, bears a strong resemblance to that of Bob Dylan’s “Desolation Row,” from the Nobel laureate’s 1965 album Highway 61 Revisited.

Whether Springsteen consciously or unconsciously patterned his song after Dylan’s doesn’t really matter. If anything, it is only appropriate that the Boss evoked it as a kind of tribute to one of his foremost musical inspirations (Springsteen inducted Dylan into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988) – one who just happens to be a native son of Minnesota, who once roamed the very streets of the song’s title while attending university.

Dylan first gained renown in the early 1960s for writing topical songs about events ripped from the headlines, including such self-described “finger-pointing songs” as “The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll,” “Only a Pawn in Their Game” and “Who Killed Davey Moore?”

While Springsteen is no stranger to writing topical protest songs, “Streets of Minneapolis” is “the most overt, forensic and unambiguous political song of a long and storied career in which he hasn’t exactly been shy about his opinions,” writes music critic Neil McCormick in the Telegraph.

 

0 Shares:
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like
toby-keith
Read More

The microphone stand center stage was empty. A single red solo cup sat on the stool next to it. Jason Aldean walked out, but he didn’t pick up his guitar. He just stood there, looking at that empty spot. The opening chords of “Should’ve Been a Cowboy” began to play, but nobody sang. The crowd was confused for a heartbeat. Then, they understood. 50,000 people started singing. They took the verse. They took the chorus. They sang for the man who couldn’t be there. Jason didn’t sing a note. He just lifted that cup towards the sky. In the VIP section, grown men in cowboy hats were openly weeping. It wasn’t a concert anymore. It was a family reunion missing its loudest brother. That night, Nashville didn’t just hear the music. They felt the loss.

The microphone stand at center stage was empty. No guitar leaned against it. No voice tested the sound.…
Ella Langley
Read More

“Ella Langley Stuns Country Fans With Hilarious Confession: ‘My First Audience Was a Field of Cows… and They Booed Me Like Real Fans!’ The Rising Country Firecracker Just Sent the Internet Into Chaos After Revealing Her Unexpectedly Savage First Crowd. Long Before the Spotlights, Arenas, and Festival Screams, Ella Tested Her Earliest Songs on a Pasture Full of Unimpressed Cows — And the Reaction Was Anything but Supportive. According to Her, “They Mooed Louder Than My Guitar.”

We all have to get our start somewhere. Just like many other musicians, Ella Langley has always dreamed of having…
phil-collins
Read More

Phil Collins took his seat behind the drums, the arena fell silent — and then chaos was unleashed; “Drums, Drums & More Drums” wasn’t just percussion, it was an earthquake in rhythm, each strike a thunderclap that shook the rafters and rattled hearts; sweat poured as Collins attacked the kit like a man possessed, summoning storms, wars, and oceans with his sticks, while the crowd rose to their feet as if pulled into the ritual; some screamed, others simply stared wide-eyed, knowing they were watching more than music — they were witnessing a man bend time with raw sound; critics gasped it was “the most primal performance ever staged,” while fans online hailed it as “a drum solo that could end civilizations”; and when the final crash echoed into silence, one truth lingered — Phil Collins didn’t play the drums, he conquered them.

Phil Collins Unleashes “Drums, Drums & More Drums” — Rhythm as Revolution The arena lights dimmed, and an…