Tags
Language
Tags
November 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
27 28 29 30 31 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30

Bruce Springsteen - Wrecking Ball (2012) [Official Digital Download]

Posted By: HDV
Bruce Springsteen - Wrecking Ball (2012) [Official Digital Download]

Bruce Springsteen - Wrecking Ball (2012)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44,1 kHz | Time - 51:53 minutes | 611 MB
Studio Master, Official Digital Download | Artwork: Front cover

"Wrecking Ball" is the seventeenth studio album by American recording artist Bruce Springsteen. It was named best album of 2012 by Rolling Stone and along with the album's first single, "We Take Care of Our Own", was nominated for three Grammy Awards.

Heavy lies the crown on Bruce Springsteen's head. Alone among his generation – or any subsequent generation, actually – he has shouldered the burden of telling the stories of the downtrodden in the new millennium, a class whose numbers increase by the year, a fact that weighs on Springsteen throughout 2012's Wrecking Ball. Such heavy-hearted rumination is not unusual for the Boss. Ever since The Rising, his 2002 return to action, a record deliberately tailored to address the lingering anger and sorrow from 9/11, Springsteen has eschewed the frivolous in favor of the weighty, escalating his dry, dusty folk and operatic rock in tandem, all in hopes of pushing the plight of the forgotten into public consciousness. Each of his five albums since The Rising have been tailored for the specific political moment – Devils & Dust ruminated over forgotten Americans in the wake of the Iraq war; We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions was an election year rallying call; Magic struggled to find meaning in these hard times; Working on a Dream saw hope in the dawning days of Obama – and it’s no mistake that Wrecking Ball fuses elements of all four into an election year state of the union: Bruce is taking stock of where we are and how we’ve gotten here, urging us to push forward. If that sounds a bit haughty, it also plays that way. Springsteen has systematically removed any element of fun – "Mary’s Place" is the only original in the past decade that could be called a party song – along with all the romance or any element of confessional songwriting. He has adopted the mantle of the troubadour and oral historian, telling tales of the forgotten and punctuating them with rallying calls to action. Wrecking Ball contains more of the latter than any of its predecessors, summoning the masses to rise up against fatcat bankers set to singalongs lifted from Seeger. There's an unshakable collectivist hootenanny feel on Wrecking Ball, not to mention allusions to gospel including a borrowed refrain from "This Train," but Springsteen takes pains to have the music feel modern, inviting Tom Morello to do aural paintings with his guitar, threading some trip-hop rhythms into the mix, and finding space for a guest rap on "Rocky Ground." As admirable as the intent is, the splices between old-fashioned folk protests and dour modernity become too apparent, possibly because there's so little room to breathe on the album – the last recorded appearance of Clarence Clemons helps lift "Land of Hope and Dreams" above the rest – possibly because the message has been placed before the music. Springsteen is so focused on preaching against creeping inequality in the U.S. that he's wound up honing his words and not his music, letting the big-footed stomps and melancholy strumming play second fiddle to the stories. Consequently, Wrecking Ball feels cumbersome and top heavy, Springsteen sacrificing impassioned rage in favor of explaining his intentions too clearly.

Tracklist:

01 - We Take Care of Our Own
02 - Easy Money
03 - Shackled And Drawn
04 - Jack Of All Trades
05 - Death To My Hometown
06 - This Depression
07 - Wrecking Ball
08 - You've Got It
09 - Rocky Ground
10 - Land of Hope and Dreams
11 - We Are Alive

Analyzed: Bruce Springsteen / Wrecking Ball
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR7 -0.60 dB -9.23 dB 3:53 01-We Take Care of Our Own
DR8 -0.61 dB -10.06 dB 3:37 02-Easy Money
DR8 -0.60 dB -11.23 dB 3:46 03-Shackled And Drawn
DR9 -0.60 dB -12.33 dB 6:00 04-Jack Of All Trades
DR8 -0.60 dB -9.71 dB 3:29 05-Death To My Hometown
DR8 -0.60 dB -10.40 dB 4:08 06-This Depression
DR8 -0.60 dB -10.71 dB 5:50 07-Wrecking Ball
DR9 -0.60 dB -11.92 dB 3:49 08-You've Got It
DR9 -0.61 dB -12.01 dB 4:41 09-Rocky Ground
DR8 -0.64 dB -11.58 dB 6:58 10-Land of Hope and Dreams
DR9 -0.60 dB -11.67 dB 5:44 11-We Are Alive
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 11
Official DR value: DR8

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 1475 kbps
Codec: FLAC
================================================================================


Thanks to the Original customer!