#BruceSpringsteen's #BornToRun was released 40 years ago this week. "I remember when the riff came into my head," Springsteen told @RollingStone in 2005. "I'd been listening to the record 'Because They're Young' by Duane Eddy, and I'd been listening to quite a bit of Duane Eddy because I was into the twangy guitar sound at the moment. But it was one of those things that I can't completely trace back. I mean, I had these enormous ambitions. I wanted to make the greatest rock record that I'd ever heard, and I wanted it to sound enormous and I wanted it to grab you by your throat and insist that you take that ride, insist that you pay attention, not to just the music, but just to life, to feeling alive, to being alive. That was sort of what the song was asking, and it was taking a step out into the unknown. And that's the big difference, say, between 'Born to Run' and 'Born in the U.S.A.' 'Born in the U.S.A' was obviously about standing someplace. 'Born to Run' wasn't; it was about searching for that place. It was a moment when I was young and that's what I was doing. I was very untethered and you had a rough map and you were about to set out in search of your frontier — personally and emotionally — and everything was very, very wide open. And that's how the record felt, just wide open, full of possibilities, full of fear, you know, but that's life." From RollingStone.com. Photograph by Terry O’Neill

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Rolling Stoneのインスタグラム(rollingstone) - 8月26日 22時26分


#BruceSpringsteen's #BornToRun was released 40 years ago this week. "I remember when the riff came into my head," Springsteen told @Rolling Stone in 2005. "I'd been listening to the record 'Because They're Young' by Duane Eddy, and I'd been listening to quite a bit of Duane Eddy because I was into the twangy guitar sound at the moment. But it was one of those things that I can't completely trace back. I mean, I had these enormous ambitions. I wanted to make the greatest rock record that I'd ever heard, and I wanted it to sound enormous and I wanted it to grab you by your throat and insist that you take that ride, insist that you pay attention, not to just the music, but just to life, to feeling alive, to being alive. That was sort of what the song was asking, and it was taking a step out into the unknown. And that's the big difference, say, between 'Born to Run' and 'Born in the U.S.A.' 'Born in the U.S.A' was obviously about standing someplace. 'Born to Run' wasn't; it was about searching for that place. It was a moment when I was young and that's what I was doing. I was very untethered and you had a rough map and you were about to set out in search of your frontier — personally and emotionally — and everything was very, very wide open. And that's how the record felt, just wide open, full of possibilities, full of fear, you know, but that's life." From RollingStone.com. Photograph by Terry O’Neill


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