The Boss' latest: nostalgic but fresh
Bruce Springsteen's first album with the E-Street Band since 2002's "The Rising," "Magic" recalls earlier masterpeices like "Born to Run" and "Born in the U.S.A." but manages to dodge the tribute-band style of most classic rock comebacks.
By: Sam Robertson
Issue date: 10/12/07 Section: The Arts
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The album opens up with "Radio Nowhere," probably the hardest rocking song Springsteen has recorded since "Born in the U.S.A." On the surface, it's just a catchy song lamenting the lack of good rock and roll music on the radio - a terrible, cheesy topic. But Springsteen can get away with it. The song seems to be a tribute to Springsteen's "Born in the U.S.A." period, with loud guitars, crashing drums, and even lines like "Dancin' down a dark hole" and "I was driving through the misty rain," which eerily recall the songs "Dancing in the Dark" and "Downbound Train" from that album. To top it all off, the song features a perfect, albeit brief saxophone solo from E-Street Band member Clarence Clemons, something that has been sorely missing from Springsteen's recent albums. "Radio Nowhere" is not a perfect song, nor is it even one of the best on the album. But the song has everything that Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band are about and shows that the boys are back with a bang.
As he uses "Radio Nowhere" to lament the state of rock radio, he uses "Magic" to improve the state of rock radio. Albums like "Born to Run" and "Darkness on the Edge of Town"; while not concept albums, did have common themes linking all the songs. On "Born to Run" Springsteen captured the magic of youth and sang about hope, love, adventure, and dreams. "Darkness on the Edge of Town" followed a lengthy, ugly legal battle between Springsteen and his former manager, and is full of bitter songs about regret and broken dreams. There is no such underlying theme in "Magic," Springsteen just mixes a little bit of everything together. "Girls in Their Summer Clothes," a clear standout on "Magic," features lyrics that sound right out of "Thunder Road" sung perfectly by Springsteen over a catchy, pleasant acoustic guitar. The best thing about the song is not it's perfect musical structure, nor it's typically brilliant Springsteen lyrics. The most impressive thing is that Springsteen is still a teenager at heart. Despite approaching sixty, Springsteen still sings with the hope and optimism that he did thirty years ago and still sounds sincere about everything he sings.


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jimmy from philly
posted 10/12/07 @ 10:06 PM CST
one of the best reviews of magic i have read. great job, great album, great writing!!
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