The Rising

The Rising

by Bruce Springsteen
The Rising

The Rising

by Bruce Springsteen

CD

$10.99 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

The many voices that come out of the ether on Bruce Springsteen's The Rising all seem to have two things in common: the first is that they are writing from the other side, from the day after September 11, 2001, the day when life began anew, more uncertain than ever before. The other commonality that these voices share is the determination that life, however fraught with tragedy and confusion, is precious and should be lived as such. On this reunion with the E Street Band, Bruce Springsteen offers 15 meditations -- in grand rock & roll style -- on his own way of making sense of the senseless. The band is in fine form, though with Brendan O'Brien's uncanny production, they play with an urgency and rawness they've seldom shown. This may not have been the ideal occasion for a reunion after 15 years, but it's one they got, and they go for broke. The individual tracks offer various glimpses of loss, confusion, hope, faith, resolve, and a good will that can only be shown by those who have been tested by fire. The music and production is messy, greasy; a lot of the mixes bleed tracks onto one another, giving it a more homemade feel than any previous E Street Band outing. And yes, that's a very good thing. The set opens with "Lonesome Day," a midtempo rocker with country-ish roots. Springsteen's protagonist admits to his or her shortcomings in caring for the now-absent beloved. But despite the grief and emptiness, there is a wisdom that emerges in questioning what remains: "Better ask questions before you shoot/Deceit and betrayal's bitter fruit/It's hard to swallow come time to pay/That taste on your tongue don't easily slip away/Let kingdom come/I'm gonna find my way/ Through this lonesome day." Brendan O'Brien's hurdy-gurdy cuts through the mix like a ghost, offering a view of an innocent past that has been forever canceled because it never was anyway; the instrument, like the glockenspiels that trim Bruce Springsteen's songs, offers not only texture, but a kind of formalist hint that possibilities don't always lie in the future. Lest anyone mistakenly perceive this recording as a somber evocation of loss and despair, it should also be stated that this is very much an E Street Band recording. Clarence Clemons is everywhere, and the R&B swing and slip of the days of yore is in the house -- especially on "Waitin' for a Sunny Day," "Countin' on a Miracle," "Mary's Place" (with a full horn section), and the souled-out "Let's Be Friends (Skin to Skin)." These tracks echo the past with their loose good-time feel, but "echo" is the key word. Brendan O'Brien's guitar-accented production offers us an E Street Band coming out of the ether and stepping in to fill a void. The songs themselves are, without exception, rooted in loss, but flower with the possibility of moving into what comes next, with a hard-won swagger and busted-up grace. They offer balance and a shifting perspective, as well as a depth that is often deceptive. The title track is one of Springsteen's greatest songs. It is an anthem, but not in the sense you usually reference in regard to his work. This anthem is an invitation to share everything, to accept everything, to move through everything individually and together. Power-chorded guitars and pianos entwine in the choruses with a choir, and Clemons wails on a part with a stinging solo. With The Rising, Springsteen has found a way to be inclusive and instructive without giving up his particular vision as a songwriter, nor his considerable strength as a rock & roll artist. In fact, if anything, The Rising is one of the very best examples in recent history of how popular art can evoke a time period and all of its confusing and often contradictory notions, feelings, and impulses. There are tales of great suffering in The Rising to be sure, but there is joy, hope, and possibility, too. Above all, there is a celebration and reverence for everyday life. And if we need anything from rock & roll, it's that. It would be unfair to lay on Bruce Springsteen the responsibility of guiding people through the aftermath of a tragedy and getting on with the business of living, but rock & roll as impure, messy, and edifying as this helps. ~ Thom Jurek

Product Details

Release Date: 01/16/2015
Label: Sony Bmg
UPC: 0888750419026
Rank: 69222

Tracks

  1. Lonesome Day
  2. Into the Fire
  3. Waitin' on a Sunny Day: The Song
  4. Nothing Man
  5. Countin' On a Miracle
  6. Empty Sky
  7. Worlds Apart
  8. Let's Be Friends (Skin to Skin)
  9. Further On (Up the Road)
  10. The Fuse
  11. Mary's Place
  12. You're Missing
  13. The Rising: The Song
  14. Paradise
  15. My City of Ruins

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Bruce Springsteen   Primary Artist,Guitar,Vocals,Harmonica,Guitar (Acoustic),Guitar (Baritone)
Max Weinberg   Guest Artist,Drums
Patti Scialfa   Guest Artist,Vocals
Steven Van Zandt   Guest Artist,Vocals (Background),Mandolin,Guitar (Electric)
Nils Lofgren   Guest Artist,Banjo,Dobro,Slide Guitar,Guitar (Electric),Vocals (Background)
Asif Ali Khan   Guest Artist,Vocals
Ricky Keller   Conductor,String Conductor
Brendan O'Brien   Bells,Hurdygurdy,Glockenspiel,Orchestra Bells
Jerry Vivino   Sax (Tenor)
David Angell   Violin
Alan Umstead   Violin
Lee Larrison   Violin
Mark Pender   Trumpet
Monisa Angell   Viola
Julie Tanner   Celli
Donald Clive Davidson   Violin
Clarence Clemons   Saxophone,Vocals (Background)
Jane Scarpantoni   Cello
Gary VanOsdale   Viola
Danny Federici   Organ,Farfisa Organ,Organ (Hammond),Vox Continental
Richie "LaBamba" Rosenberg   Trombone
Carl Rabinowitz   Celli
Carole Neuen-Rabinowitz   Celli
Haji Nazir Afridi   Tabla,Vocals,Guest Artist
Larry Antonio   Choir/Chorus
Tiffany Andrews   Choir/Chorus
Lynn Peithman   Celli
Ed Manion   Sax (Baritone)
Mike Spengler   Trumpet
Connie Ellisor   Violin
Soozie Tyrell   Violin,Vocals (Background)
Michelle Moore   Soloist
Carl Gorodetzky   Violin
Pamela Sixfin   Violin
David Davidson   Violin
Jere Flint   Cello
Garry Tallent   Bass
Jim Grosjean   Viola
Mary Kathryn Van Osdale   Violin
Kris Wilkinson   Viola
Roy Bittan   Organ,Piano,Crumar,Korg M1,Keyboards,Mellotron,Pump Organ,Kurzweil Synthesizer

Technical Credits

Nick DiDia   Engineer
Ricky Keller   String Arrangements
Danny Clinch   Photography
The Nashville String Machine   Performer
Brendan O'Brien   Mixing,Producer
Bruce Springsteen   Composer
Toby Scott   Engineer
Karl Egsieker   Engineer
David Bett   Design,Art Direction
Christopher Austopchuk   Art Direction
Erin Haley   Project Coordinator
Corinda Carford   Contractor
Alison Oscar   Project Coordinator
Katie Fendley   Project Coordinator
Kevin Buell   Project Coordinator
Laurie Flannery   Digital Editing
Mala Sharma   Project Coordinator
Dave Reed   Engineer
Michelle Holme   Design
Brian Humphrey   Second Engineer
Terry Magovern   Project Coordinator
Bob Ludwig   Mastering
Billy Bowers   Engineer
The E Street Band   Group
Carl Gorodetzky   Contractor
Chuck Plotkin   Engineer
Melissa Mattey   Engineer
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews