
Ladies Sing The Boss
In his 2016 autobiography, âBorn To Runâ, Bruce Springsteen reveals the essence of his songwriting: âMost of my writing is emotionally autobiographical. Iâve learned youâve got to pull up the things that mean something to you in order for them to mean anything to your audience. Thatâs where the proof is. Thatâs how they know youâre not kidding.â
As one of rockâs most prolific songwriters (clocking up in the region of 340 published songs), heâs covered a lot of bases, building a catalogue of albums that has seen him deliver stadium rockinâ anthems (âBorn In The USAâ, âThe Risingâ) and then switch horses mid-stream and riding solo with noir, character-based long players (âNebraskaâ, âThe Ghost Of Tom Joadâ).
Around the mid-70s, Bruceâs songs started to look at where he fitted in (or not). As he states in his autobiography, âMy writing was focusing itself around identity issues â who am I, who are we, what and where is home, what constitutes manhood, adulthood, what are your freedoms and responsibilities. I was interested in what it meant to be an American, one small participant in current history at a time when the future seemed as hazy and shape-shifting as that thin line on the horizon.â
Much of the publicâs perception of Bruce is wrapped up in his male persona, singing songs about girls and cars, a hyper masculine image. So, how do women relate to this? Part of the inspiration for this compilation came from me going to see the all-female Bruce tribute act the She Street Band at the Clapham Grand in 2019 and experiencing how these songs, which I had known all my life, took on another perspective when seen through the filter of a female protagonist.
What the tracks on this collection do is allow the singer to own the essence of the song and claim it as theirs. Anna Calvi is the driver of the car in âFireâ, itâs Moa Holmstenâs hand that slips up the womanâs skirt on âHighway 29â, and Emmylou Harris totally owns the dreamscape anxiety of âMy Fatherâs Houseâ.
Tracklist
1. BECAUSE THE NIGHT - Patti Smith GroupÂ
2. DANCING IN THE DARK - Lucy DacusÂ
3. NIGHT CLOSING IN - Darlene LoveÂ
4. DEVILS AND DUST - Jessie KennedyÂ
5. STATE TROOPER - Deana CarterÂ
6. GHOST OF TOM JOAD - SolasÂ
7. WAITING ON A SUNNY DAY - Piney GirÂ
8. IâM ON FIRE - Soccer MommyÂ
9. HIGHWAY 29 - Moa HolmstenÂ
10. THUNDER ROAD - Cowboy JunkiesÂ
11. STREETS OF PHILADELPHIA - Bettye LavetteÂ
12. VALENTINEâS DAY - HemÂ
13. FACTORY - Lucinda WilliamsÂ
14. JOHNNY 99 - Shovels & RopeÂ
15. COVER ME - Thea GilmoreÂ
16. SECRET GARDEN - Kerry HartÂ
17. FIRE - Anna CalviÂ
18. NEBRASKA - Aoife OâDonovanÂ
19. MY FATHERâS HOUSE - Emmylou Harris
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Description
In his 2016 autobiography, âBorn To Runâ, Bruce Springsteen reveals the essence of his songwriting: âMost of my writing is emotionally autobiographical. Iâve learned youâve got to pull up the things that mean something to you in order for them to mean anything to your audience. Thatâs where the proof is. Thatâs how they know youâre not kidding.â
As one of rockâs most prolific songwriters (clocking up in the region of 340 published songs), heâs covered a lot of bases, building a catalogue of albums that has seen him deliver stadium rockinâ anthems (âBorn In The USAâ, âThe Risingâ) and then switch horses mid-stream and riding solo with noir, character-based long players (âNebraskaâ, âThe Ghost Of Tom Joadâ).
Around the mid-70s, Bruceâs songs started to look at where he fitted in (or not). As he states in his autobiography, âMy writing was focusing itself around identity issues â who am I, who are we, what and where is home, what constitutes manhood, adulthood, what are your freedoms and responsibilities. I was interested in what it meant to be an American, one small participant in current history at a time when the future seemed as hazy and shape-shifting as that thin line on the horizon.â
Much of the publicâs perception of Bruce is wrapped up in his male persona, singing songs about girls and cars, a hyper masculine image. So, how do women relate to this? Part of the inspiration for this compilation came from me going to see the all-female Bruce tribute act the She Street Band at the Clapham Grand in 2019 and experiencing how these songs, which I had known all my life, took on another perspective when seen through the filter of a female protagonist.
What the tracks on this collection do is allow the singer to own the essence of the song and claim it as theirs. Anna Calvi is the driver of the car in âFireâ, itâs Moa Holmstenâs hand that slips up the womanâs skirt on âHighway 29â, and Emmylou Harris totally owns the dreamscape anxiety of âMy Fatherâs Houseâ.
Tracklist
1. BECAUSE THE NIGHT - Patti Smith GroupÂ
2. DANCING IN THE DARK - Lucy DacusÂ
3. NIGHT CLOSING IN - Darlene LoveÂ
4. DEVILS AND DUST - Jessie KennedyÂ
5. STATE TROOPER - Deana CarterÂ
6. GHOST OF TOM JOAD - SolasÂ
7. WAITING ON A SUNNY DAY - Piney GirÂ
8. IâM ON FIRE - Soccer MommyÂ
9. HIGHWAY 29 - Moa HolmstenÂ
10. THUNDER ROAD - Cowboy JunkiesÂ
11. STREETS OF PHILADELPHIA - Bettye LavetteÂ
12. VALENTINEâS DAY - HemÂ
13. FACTORY - Lucinda WilliamsÂ
14. JOHNNY 99 - Shovels & RopeÂ
15. COVER ME - Thea GilmoreÂ
16. SECRET GARDEN - Kerry HartÂ
17. FIRE - Anna CalviÂ
18. NEBRASKA - Aoife OâDonovanÂ
19. MY FATHERâS HOUSE - Emmylou Harris











