Bruce Springsteen: Magic (Take Two)

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By: Dennis Cook

Editor's Note: This review focuses on the musical content of Springsteen's latest album. For a cogent look at the lyrics see Take One.

Musically speaking, this may be the least subtle album of 2007. There's so much bombast, bells and ballyhoo it's like listening to someone recite Shakespeare through a megaphone. Springsteen has long suckled at the teat of Phil Spector, Brian Wilson and other '60s widescreen producers. At his best (Born To Run), he covered these influences in enough engine grease and bar band grit to avoid sounding like a nostalgia act but Magic (Sony) isn't so lucky. Here, The Boss seems to be reaching back for a sound he hasn't truly embraced since 1984's Born In The U.S.A.. Even 2002's E Street Band reunion The Rising didn't try to ape past glories, instead opting to embrace producer Brendan O'Brien's natural non-subtlety - a high gloss, ultra clean modern radio sound familiar from O'Brien's work with Pearl Jam, Stone Temple Pilots, Train and many others. Magic is an uncomfortable mix of the two strains – '60s orchestral sweep and '90s sledgehammer sonics – that rarely lets up. It's actually kind of exhausting, and you're relieved when eight tracks in you finally get a spot of gentility on the title cut - the only spot that echoes Springsteen's last album of original material, 2005's undeservedly ignored Devils & Dust. Springsteen's singing matches the music, accentuating all of his worst "squeezing one out" grunting and moaning while he wails and laments like a Trojan in Homer's Iliad. To their credit, the E Streeters and the additional studio musician muscle sound like they're having a ball, throwing themselves into Springsteen's songs with garage band gusto. It just so happens that their garage has a dearth of that Working Everyman's under-the-hood authenticity that made "Racing In The Streets," "Born To Run," "Spirit In The Night" and "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)" more than a mere homage to his influences. Today's Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band sounds more like a tribute act to themselves than anything else, and that is indeed a little sad.

JamBase | Edge of Town
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http://www.brucespringsteen.net/

[Published on: 11/29/07]


 

Comments

onearmguitarist star Thu 11/29/2007 02:30PM
+1 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

onearmguitarist

Im not the biggest fan of the boss but this album has good music all over it. I think everything on this album works, it sounds like e street but not overpowering. There are a few clarence moments that go a little far but all in all this is a sonicly sound album all the way through.

kirkbrew starstarstar Thu 11/29/2007 02:49PM
0 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

kirkbrew

I have only heard 1 or 2 tracks from this album and said to myself, “it sounds as bad as Born in the USA” (which is easily one of the worst recorded albums of all time).

It is too easy just to pack in a million sounds, compress the shit out of it and add a bit of reverb. It just makes my ears bleed. This is just not a problem with Springsteen, but so many bands (or should I say producers).

It is so much harder to arrange so that everything has its place. Less is more. I think it was Bill Putnam who said “You don’t need 24 tracks to do the rock and roll”. Too fucking true!

AintNoFreedom Fri 11/30/2007 10:51AM
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AintNoFreedom

Hm, I liked this album a lot... Has a fun, upbeat sound, but lyrically solid and somewhat venomous at points.

nbailin2 starstarstar Sun 12/2/2007 10:42AM
+2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

Respect the review..but love this album personally.

Reuben star Tue 12/4/2007 04:55PM
+2 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

Reuben

Tend to disagree with this review. Love the new album and they play out live very well. Maybe some specific examples would make the writer's case a little better but the only song referred to is Magic. Hard to respect a review of an album when only one song is barely analyzed.

RothburyWithCheese Wed 12/5/2007 06:13AM
-1 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

RothburyWithCheese

Kirkbrew: i finally agree with you, this guy blows!

D.B.Higdon star Wed 12/5/2007 06:45AM
-1 Votes Thumbs down! Thumbs up!

D.B.Higdon

I, too, will have to disagree with the reviewer. I think that this is one of the best releases this year. Brendan O'Brien did, in my opinion, a fantastic job with Magic. This album has the rock portions down perfectly, and the other songs are full of clarity bringing the full E Street Band into recognition. The album is full of emotion and urgency, and I have to say that the reviewer's use of the words "90's sledgehammer sonics" is definitely correct on Radio Nowhere; that song is a fantastic opener. But, radio glossy finish is far from how I would describe this album. Check out Velvet Revolver's Libertad for some other O'Brien produced rock n roll; he is quickly becoming the rock go to guy after Rick Rubin.

petemora star Fri 12/14/2007 10:56AM
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What a gay album title. Magic...He looks like he's squeezing out a deuce.

 
 

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