
Music Review: Bruce Springsteen takes seven ‘Lost Albums' off the shelf for a new box set
The box set, out June 27,
comprises seven albums
encompassing the period between 1983 and 2018, all but one he prepared to release in its time but ultimately shelved. Now that he's decided to drop them simultaneously, they offer a fascinating alternative story of
his musical life.
Building on its predecessor 'Tracks,' 1998's four-disc, 66-song collection of unreleased material, there are 83 songs here. While some slipped out on other projects — 'My Hometown' and 'Secret Garden' among them — the vast majority hadn't been heard publicly. This is all fully completed material, not half-baked or half-finished outtakes. It's not unusual for artists to leave songs — or even full-lengths — on the cutting-room floor, but multiple entire albums? Springsteen explains that he's taken care releasing albums, looking to build
a narrative arc for his career,
and believes this approach has served him well.
Perhaps as a result, the most interesting work on 'Tracks II' comes when he stretches out and explores pathways not in his wheelhouse: countrypolitan Bruce, border-town Bruce, Burt Bacharach-inspired Bruce and a set of synthesizer-based songs modeled after his Oscar-winning 'Streets of Philadelphia.' Oddly, the one disc of strays cobbled together that feels most like an
E Street Band record
is the least compelling.
Breaking down a big pool of music
Since these are seven distinct albums, it's worth evaluating them that way.
'LA Garage Sessions '83' captures Springsteen working virtually alone at a home in the Hollywood Hills. It was squarely in between
his 'Nebraska'
and 'Born in the USA' albums, and he seems torn between those two approaches. There are character studies here, and more lighthearted fare like 'Little Girl Like You,' with a single man yearning to settle down. The most striking cut is 'The Klansman,' about a boy and his racist father, yet it cries out for more development. Ultimately, Springsteen chose the right albums to release at the time.
The
song 'Streets of Philadelphia'
was a genuine departure musically, and Springsteen decided to make an album in the same vein, with synthesizers and drum loops the dominant elements. If released in the early 1990s, this would have been the most contemporary-sounding disc of his career, with atmospherics that occasionally recall U2. Springsteen pulled it at the last minute, reasoning that the stories of doomed relationships — sample lyric: 'We loved each other like a disease' — was too much like 'Tunnel of Love.'
At the same time he recorded 'The Ghost of Tom Joad' in 1995, Springsteen also convened a country band steered by pedal steel player Marty Rifkin. Their work was terrific, led by the one-two punch of 'Repo Man' and the Johnny Rivers cover, 'Poor Side of Town.' The title cut to a disc he calls 'Somewhere North of Nashville' escaped into the public some two decades later. Since the somber 'Joad'
won a Grammy,
who are we to second-guess his choice of what to put out? 'Nashville,' though, is a rollicking good time.
'Inyo' is similar to 'Joad' and 'Devils & Dust,' mostly acoustic-based narratives, here many of them stories of the Southwest. Springsteen even appropriately brings in
mariachi bands
for 'Adelita' and 'The Lost Charro.' Soozie Tyrell's violin is notable, particularly on the majestic 'When I Build My Beautiful House.' We're guessing that Springsteen may have considered 'Inyo' one album too many in the same style, but it's still strong work.
At one point Springsteen considered making
'Western Stars,'
his salute to early 1970s California songwriting, a double album. When he didn't, the songs on 'Twilight Hours' were left behind. Here Bacharach is the primary influence, and this almost feels like
Elvis Costello's
collaboration with Burt, only without him (and is the lyric 'God give me strength' a hat-tip to that project?). The crooning Bruce of 'Sunday Love' is spellbinding, maybe the box's best song. 'Lonely Town' sits at the intersection
of Bacharach
and Roy Orbison, while 'Dinner at Eight' is a lovely sum-up. 'Twilight Hours' may startle Springsteen fans — and impress them, too.
The workmanlike songs on 'Faithless' were written on commission in two weeks, the soundtrack to a movie that was never made. It's a good bet it would have been a moody Western.
When Springsteen duels with
Tom Morello
on the song 'Another Thin Line,' you realize how little you've heard his electric guitar on 'Tracks II.' The album 'Perfect World' is the one here made up of leftovers from different periods, with the greatest E Street Band participation. Here's the deal, though: Most good E Street Band material has already been released. The best left behind for this disc is 'You Lifted Me Up,' with minimalist lyrics and a vocal collaboration with
Patti Scialfa
and
Steve Van Zandt.
The box gives Springsteen completists plenty to mull over, and you can question whether these 'lost discs' would get more attention released separately instead of together. If it's too much, he's releasing a 20-song set of its highlights.
___
David Bauder writes about the intersection of media and entertainment for the AP. Follow him at
http://x.com/dbauder
and
https://bsky.app/profile/dbauder.bsky.social
.
___
For more AP reviews of recent music releases, visit
https://apnews.com/hub/music-reviews
.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
15 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Lady Gaga leads 2025 MTV Video Music Awards nominations, followed by Bruno Mars and Kendrick Lamar
NEW YORK (AP) — Abracadabra, feel the beat under your feet — Lady Gaga is back on top. The 'Mayhem' musician tops the 2025 the MTV Video Music Award nominations with 12, ending Taylor Swift's two-year run in the top spot. Gaga is up for best collaboration, pop, direction, art direction, cinematography, editing, choreography, visual effects as well as song, video, album and artist of the year. Rounding out the artist of the year category nominees announced Tuesday are Bad Bunny, Kendrick Lamar, Morgan Wallen and The Weeknd as well as Beyoncé and Swift. The latter two are especially noteworthy because the two pop powerhouses are tied for the title of most career total VMAs. Each have 30. Beyoncé and Swift are only nominated in the artist of the year category at September's VMAs, so if one of them wins, they will become the most-awarded musician in VMA history. Gaga is followed closely by Bruno Mars, with 11 nominations. Lamar has 10. Sabrina Carpenter and first-time nominee Blackpink's ROSÉ are tied with eight; as are Ariana Grande and The Weeknd with seven. Billie Eilish has six. Charli xcx has five. Bad Bunny, Doechii, Ed Sheeran, Jelly Roll, Miley Cyrus and Tate McRae boast four each. The top prize of the night, video of the year, sees Gaga and Mars' 'Die With A Smile' go up against Grande's 'Brighter Days Ahead,' Eilish's 'Birds of a Feather,' Lamar's 'Not Like Us,' ROSÉ and Mars' 'APT.', Sabrina Carpenter's 'Manchild,' and The Weeknd, and Playboi Carti's 'Timeless.' The three-hour show will broadcast live on CBS on Sunday, Sept. 7 at 8 p.m. Eastern and 5 p.m. Pacific, broadcast live from the UBS Arena just outside New York City. It will also simulcast on MTV and be available to stream on Paramount+. A one-hour, live preshow will air across Paramount Media Networks. CBS is home to a number of award shows, including the Tony Awards and the American Music Awards. It has aired the Grammys since 1973, though that show will head to ABC in 2027. This year's Video Music Awards features 33 first-time nominees, which include Alex Warren, Blake Shelton, Brent Faiyaz, Gigi Perez, KATSEYE and Lainey Wilson. Mac Miller also became the first artist to get their first VMA nomination posthumously.


San Francisco Chronicle
12 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
An Australian artist is creating a massive mural in the middle of a small North Dakota town
MINOT, N.D. (AP) — High atop a massive grain elevator in the middle of Minot, North Dakota, artist Guido van Helten swipes a concrete wall with a brush that looks more appropriate for painting a fence than creating a monumental mural. Back and forth van Helten brushes, focused on his work and not bothered by the sheer enormity of his task as he stands in a boom lift, 75 feet (23 meters) off the ground, and focused on a few square feet of a structure that stretches over most of a city block. 'When you use these old structures to kinda share stories and use them as a vehicle to carry an image of identity, it becomes part of the landscape,' he said. 'I've found that people have really adopted them and become really super proud of them.' The work on the former Union Silos is van Helten's latest effort to paint murals on a gigantic scale, with earlier projects on structures ranging from a dam in Australia to part of a former cooling tower at the Chernobyl nuclear plant in Ukraine. Although he has created murals throughout the world, grain silos in the U.S. Midwest have been among his most frequent sites. 'I do enjoy the opportunity to uncover stories that are often kinda considered out of the way or flyover communities,' he said. Van Helten has been creating murals for years, working increasingly in the U.S. over the past seven years and around the world. The 38-year-old Brisbane native's interest in regional communities began in earnest after a mural he created years ago on a silo in an Australian town of 100 people. The new idea, he said, drew interest, and he began a series of commissions around Australia and the U.S. He uses a mineral silicate paint formulated to absorb and bond with concrete, and it lasts a long time. He mixes tones specific to the color of the wall and subtly layers the work so it blends in. 'I love the coloring of these buildings, so I don't want to fight with them, I don't want to change it, I don't want it to be bright. I want it to become part of the landscape,' he said. It's not a quick process, as van Helten initially meets with residents to learn about a community and then spends months slowly transforming what is usually the largest structure in a small town. He began painting in Minot in May with plans for a 360-degree mural that combines photography with painting to depict the people and culture of an area. The Minot elevator and silos were built in the 1950s and were an economic center for years before they ceased operations around the early 1990s. Van Helten isn't giving too much away about what his Minot mural will depict, but said he has been inspired by concepts of land and ownership while in North Dakota, from ranching and the oil field to Native American perspectives. Minot is a city of nearly 50,000 people and sits near the Bakken oil field and Fort Berthold Indian Reservation. 'It is really when you boil down to it in many ways about land and how different cultures interpret that and connect with it, and I feel it's really interesting in North Dakota because it is really such a big, open land,' the artist said. Much of the mural is still taking shape, but images of a barn and female figures are visible. Property owner Derek Hackett said the mural is 'a great way to take what is kind of a blighted property and be able to give it a facelift and kind of resurrect its presence in our skyline." Soon the mural will be visible from almost anywhere in town, he said. The mural project is entirely donation-funded, costing about $350,000, about 85% of which is already raised, said Chelsea Gleich, a spokesperson for the project. 'It is uniquely ours, it's uniquely North Dakota and you'll never be able to find a piece just like this anywhere else,' she said.


Buzz Feed
13 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
27 Celebs Who Were Delusional About Their Importance
In 2016, years after her time on Teen Mom ended, for which she is best known, Farrah Abraham suggested she was more famous than Kim Kardashian. "I've been beating out Kim on a lot of things," she said on the Nik Richie Podcast. "I think I've surpassed her in some aspects. Then again, I conduct myself and my brand in a different way in my life, in a very different journey. So I think I'm doing very well, and if not, better." She also said, "I'm not self-absorbed. Now I do acting and I'm doing films and stuff, and people say I'm so selfless, and that's why I'm so good at acting. They can't even believe it." Controversial director Lars von Trier once told a press conference, "I am the best director in the world." This came after the polarized reception of his film Antichrist. He also suggested that other directors feel the same. When asked to state other filmmakers he liked, he said, "All the others are overrated, so that's quite simple." Tom Cruise isn't delusional when it comes to his star power, but the power of Scientology. He once said of the religion, "We are the authorities on getting people off drugs, we are the authorities on the mind, we are the authorities on improving can rehabilitate can bring peace and unite communities." This came from a weird promotional video he made for Scientology in 2004, which leaked in 2008. He also made this baffling claim about car crashes. The Church of Scientology claimed the video was a pirated and edited version of a three-hour event. People were not thrilled when they woke up and discovered U2's newest album, Songs of Innocence, had been downloaded onto their Apple devices without them having actually chosen to download it. The moment was quickly mocked and memed to the point where lead singer Bono had to apologize for being so delulu he thought everyone wanted (or at least wouldn't mind) the band's newest album. "I'm sorry about that. I had this beautiful idea… might have gotten carried away with it ourselves. Artists are prone to that kind of thing. A drop of megalomania, a touch of generosity, a dash of self-promotion and deep fear that these songs that we poured our life into over the last few years might not be heard. There's a lot of noise out there. I guess we got a little noisy ourselves to get through it," Bono told fans. He later called it "vaunting ambition" and "overreach," and compared it to delivering milk to people who didn't want it. He said they initially thought, "What was the worst that could happen? It would be like junk mail. Wouldn't it? Like taking our bottle of milk and leaving it on the doorstep of every house in the neighbourhood." However, he acknowledged that wasn't quite what happened: "On 9 September 2014, we didn't just put our bottle of milk at the door but in every fridge in every house in town. In some cases we poured it on to the good people's cornflakes. And some people like to pour their own milk. And others are lactose intolerant." Kanye has always had a God complex. In 2013, he said, "I am the number one most impactful artist of our generation. I am Shakespeare in the flesh." Also in 2013, he compared himself to Picasso, Michelangelo, Basquiat, Walt Disney, and Steve Jobs, and in 2016, audio surfaced of him backstage at SNL saying he was more influential than Stanley Kubrick, Picasso, and the Apostle Paul. He also cast himself as God or a god-like figure through his music, even before The Life of Paolo. Jay-Z is also guilty of comparing himself to God, but it's not quite as bad. Still, his nickname HOVA is a reference to Jehovah, or God. He explained to NPR that the nickname started after a friend called his rapping a religious experience. "One time, I was recording in the studio and I wasn't writing, and one of my friends was like, man, this is like, how you doing that, man? God must really love you. It's like a religious experience, man. And then he was like, J-hova. And then, you know, it started out as a joke, and then it just stuck." His song "Izzo (H.O.V.A.)" also includes a lyric about being the "eighth wonder of the world." Speaking of activist Harry Belafonte said high-profile artists like Jay-Z had "turned their back on social responsibility," Jay-Z defended himself by suggesting he was a symbol. "I'm offended by that because, first of all, and this is going to sound arrogant, but my presence is charity. Just who I am," he said. "Just like Obama's is. Obama provides hope. Whether he does anything, the hope that he provides for a nation, and outside of America is enough." Jojo Siwa once declared she wanted to "start a new genre of music" called "gay pop." Not only has her music career itself fallen short of anything genre-creating, but "gay pop" is already very much a genre that has existed for quite a long time. Siwa later clarified her comments, saying, "So, here's the thing. Gay pop, right, is a thing that people have done, but it is not an official genre of music. ... It is a style, but it is how there's rap, there's rock, there's R&B, there's pop. Gay pop is not an official genre of music. If you look on the iTunes charts, there is no, there's a pop chart. ... Yes, there's so many gay pop artists. Oh my God. There's so many, but I think that those gay pop artists do deserve a bigger home than what they have right now." Zara Larsson said on the podcast The Diary Of A CEO that her dream was to have a number one album worldwide, a stadium tour, and a helicopter, and to be at a Beyoncé level of success. Joking that she truly wanted "world domination," Larsson said, "I think I'm a little entitled to success, and I think if I ever, let's say, get a Grammy, I won't feel like 'Oh my god, I can't believe this is happening' – it's more like 'Finally, it took long enough.'" She then said, "Since I first understood what fame was, I always said, 'I'm going to be more famous than Elvis Presley.'" However, she added that she'd changed her perspective now as fame is "a form of a prison." In perhaps one of the most delusional quotes on this list, Jason Derulo once claimed that he made TikTok "the app that it is today," saying it was just an app for posting videos of yourself dancing until he started "posting things that was more fun." He said he decided to be a leader and try something new on the app and thinks "it changed the app forever." After dealing with perceived backlash for his faith*, Chris Pratt once compared himself to Jesus. "That's nothing new, that's nothing new, you know?" he said of criticism, then quoted scripture. "'If I was of this world, they would love me just like that but as it is, I've chosen out of this world.' That's John 15:18 through 20. That's the way it is, nothing new, 2,000 years ago they hated him, too." Him being Jesus, of course. *I would argue that Pratt has not been criticized for being religious but for alleged ties to an anti-gay church, which he has denied. Donald Glover also compared himself to Jesus, after saying that there was nothing he was bad at. "Probably just people. People don't like to be studied, or bested. I'm fine with it. I don't really like people that much. People accept me now because I have power, but they still think, 'Oh, he thinks he's the golden flower of the Black community, thinks he's so different.' But I am, though!" He then said, "I feel like Jesus. I do feel chosen. My struggle is to use my humanity to create a classic work — but I don't know if humanity is worth it, or if we're going to make it." While Glover is undeniably talented, the Jesus comparison went a bit far. In a post addressing backlash to her comments on Israel and Palestine, Amy Schumer also addressed critics who called her a "failed comic," writing, "I'm the most successful female comedian of all time." While Schumer certainly has enjoyed quite a lot of success in Hollywood, the claim garnered intense backlash from those pointing out the careers of famous female comics before Schumer. Nicki Minaj similarly once referred to herself as one of the top ten rappers of all time, male or female, dead or alive. Saying you're in the top ten now is one thing, but all time??? We can't make this list without including former president Donald Trump. My favorite is probably the time Trump claimed that his cameo helped Home Alone 2 do well. After director Chris Columbus claimed Trump had "bullied" his way onto the film (by only letting them film at his hotel, The Plaza, if he could make a cameo), Trump responded, "That cameo helped make the movie a success, but if they felt bullied, or didn't want me, why did they put me in, and keep me there, for over 30 years? Because I was, and still am, great for the movie, that's why! Just another Hollywood guy from the past looking for a quick fix of Trump publicity for himself!" He also claimed they'd begged him to be in it and that his "little cameo took off like a rocket." The first film was the second-highest-grossing film of the year and one of the most beloved Christmas films of all time, so it's a bit of a stretch to say Trump's few-second cameo made it a success. In another example, after Princess Diana died in 1997, Donald Trump went on the Howard Stern Show to say he thought he could've gotten Diana to sleep with him. He also appeared to suggest that if she'd been with him, he could've saved her from dying. "I know that tunnel in Paris. It's got, like, a 30-mile limit. If you look at this tunnel – and I really know that tunnel well, I've been through that tunnel many times – you can't go more than like 30, 40 miles an hour. If you're going 40 miles an hour through that tunnel you're going fast. These people had to be going at 120-something miles an hour." He then said that Dodi Fayed, Diana's then-partner who was in the car with her (but was not driving), was clearly not good for her. Trump also wrote about regretting not courting her in his book and later again claimed he would've slept with her given the opportunity "without even hesitation." Trump also (falsely) bragged on 9/11 that he now had the tallest building in downtown Manhattan. Calling into a TV station to discuss the attacks, he said, "I mean, 40 Wall Street actually was the second-tallest building in downtown Manhattan. And it was actually – before the World Trade Center – was the tallest. And then when they built the World Trade Center, it became known as the second-tallest, and now it's the tallest." This was untrue and also seemed an inappropriate brag – as well as a way to make the attacks about his own so-called achievements — on a day when thousands were killed. Speaking of 9/11, Mark Wahlberg once claimed that, "If I was on that plane with my kids, it wouldn't have went down like it did. There would have been a lot of blood in that first-class cabin and then me saying, 'OK, we're going to land somewhere safely, don't worry.'" One more 9/11 one, just because celebs loved to make it about themselves — Sean Penn told Variety that if he were president at the time of 9/11, 'I'd have let White House counsel know that they are on vacation. I'm not consulting with them. If I have to go to prison, I'll go, but I'm going to kill them. I'm killing everyone that did this," he said. Because apparently Penn is some sort of Liam Neeson–in–Taken–style vigilante. He *may* have been joking, but Simone Biles' husband, Jonathan Owens, a safety for the Green Bay Packers, came off a little cocky when talking about dating Biles on a podcast. When asked if he was the catch in their relationship, Owens replied, "I always say that the men are the catch." He also said he didn't know who Biles was when they first matched on Raya, but that he saw that "she just had a bunch of followers. So in my mind, I'm like, 'OK, she's got to be good.'" Biles is the most decorated US Olympic gymnast and one of the greatest athletes of all time. Speaking of the have to mention when Andy Cohen asked what Kendall Jenner would do if she weren't a model, and she said she'd be an Olympic horseback rider as if this were also an achievable, reasonable goal. She also said on her reality show, The Kardashians, "I'm literally built as an athlete. Every blood test I've ever done has said that I am like over the normal limit of athleticness." Ariana Grande once called herself "the hardest working 23 year old human being on earth" on Instagram, hashtagging the photo of herself "#cute #butalso #CEO #haventsleptinyears." She deleted the post after people online pointed out that those struggling to provide for their families in minimum-wage jobs were probably working harder. This isn't really her fault, but Meghan Markle once claimed that she was told by a South African cast member at The Lion King premiere that because of her royal wedding, people in South Africa "rejoiced in the streets the same we did when Mandela was freed from prison.'" The only South African in the cast claimed to have never met Markle and said that in South Africa, Markle's wedding to Prince Harry was "no big deal." Markle did meet South African composer Lebohang Morake at the premiere, so she may have been referring to him. Morake, who goes by Lebo M., later said, "I cannot comment on the matter as it was three years ago and I don't remember details of that conversation which was less than a minute, except the Royals were going to South Africa or Botswana." In an example of someone being delusional about their partner, Ben Affleck once called then-partner "the greatest performer in the history of the world," calling her music "brilliant" and pointing to her acting skills as well. While is certainly a strong performer, this statement seemed a bit of a stretch, especially as someone who has long faced accusations of lip-synching and having others sing on her records. Debby Ryan once appeared to vastly overestimate the impact of her Disney Channel show Jesse. Speaking about an upcoming episode of Jesse that was set to feature Jesse's wedding, Debby Ryan claimed that she was making history (as apparently no other Disney lead had gotten married neither did Ryan's character, instead saying "no" at the altar). Patrick J. Adams similarly seemed to overestimate the impact of his show Suits, suggesting that the HBO mega-hit Succession was only so popular and celebrated because Suits existed first. "It's in New York, we're dealing with New York. Power brokers, people moving and shaking at the highest levels of New York society," he said, pointing out a couple of actors and one director/producer who worked on Succession. He called Suits a "predecessor" to Succession, saying of their massive Award show wins, "Yeah, well, they got to be the grown-up" to Suits' "PG version." Not only are the two shows vastly different, but Suits was really, really not up to par with Succession. And finally, we'll end on one of my favorite examples because it's just so random. Anyone else remember when Jeremy Renner decided to create his own app? This was something really only the Kardashians were doing around that time. Unsurprisingly, it wasn't a well-received move and was quickly brought down by trolls because it was super easy to impersonate people on it.