Bruce Springsteen | Biography, Songs, Albums, & Facts - Britannica

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  • Introduction & Top Questions
  • A singer-songwriter from New Jersey
  • From Born to Run to Born in the U.S.A.
  • Working-class hero
  • Back with the E Street Band
  • Without “The Big Man”
  • Springsteen’s political messaging
  • Elder statesman of rock music
References & Edit History Quick Facts & Related Topics Images The Boss The Boss and the Big Man, 1988 The enduring E Street Band and its bandleader The Boss at the Super Bowl Guitarist Steven Van Zandt (center) and Bruce Springsteen Born to Run Bruce Springsteen, 2015 The Boss in 1984 At a Glance default image Bruce Springsteen summary Quizzes Empty movie theater and blank screen (theatre, motion pictures, cinema). Oscar-Worthy Movie Trivia USA 2006 - 78th Annual Academy Awards. Closeup of giant Oscar statue at the entrance of the Kodak Theatre in Los Angeles, California. Hompepage blog 2009, arts and entertainment, film movie hollywood Pop Culture Quiz Related Questions
  • Who is Bruce Springsteen?
  • Where is Bruce Springsteen from?
  • What was Bruce Springsteen’s breakout album?
  • When did Bruce Springsteen’s album Born in the U.S.A. come out?
  • For what did Bruce Springsteen win a Tony Award?
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The Boss
The Boss American rock musician Bruce Springsteen performs at the New York Film Festival Spotlight Gala at Alice Tully Hall in New York City, 2025. The gala featured a screening of Deliver Me from Nowhere (2025), a biopic centering on the making of Springsteen's 1982 album Nebraska. (more)
Bruce Springsteen The true story of the music legend who inspired the film Deliver Me from Nowhere. Ask Anything Quick Summary Homework Help Also known as: Bruce Frederick Joseph Springsteen, the Boss Written by Dave Marsh Editor Rock and Rap Confidential. Author of Louie Louie: The History and Mythology of the World's Most Famous Rock 'n' Roll Song and many others. Dave Marsh Fact-checked by Britannica Editors Encyclopaedia Britannica's editors oversee subject areas in which they have extensive knowledge, whether from years of experience gained by working on that content or via study for an advanced degree.... Britannica Editors Last updated Feb. 3, 2026 History Britannica AI Icon Britannica AI Ask Anything Quick Summary Table of Contents Table of Contents Quick Summary Ask Anything Top Questions

Who is Bruce Springsteen?

Bruce Springsteen is an American singer, songwriter, and bandleader who became the archetypal rock performer of the 1970s and ’80s with acclaimed albums such as Born to Run (1975), Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978), The River (1980), Nebraska (1982), and Born in the U.S.A. (1984). He received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2016.

Where is Bruce Springsteen from?

Bruce Springsteen was born in 1949 in Long Branch, New Jersey, a coastal community located along the Jersey shore. He grew up in a working-class family in Freehold and launched his music career in Asbury Park. Later Springsteen returned to Long Branch to write the songs for his 1975 album Born to Run.

Who plays Bruce Springsteen in the movie Deliver Me from Nowhere?

Jeremy Allen White plays the rock musician Bruce Springsteen in the movie Deliver Me from Nowhere, which dramatizes the making of the 1982 album Nebraska. The film is scheduled to be released in October 2025. White recorded his own vocals as Springsteen for the film’s musical scenes.

What was Bruce Springsteen’s breakout album?

Bruce Springsteen’s third album, Born to Run (1975), transformed him into a full-fledged rock and roller. The album, a diurnal song cycle, was a sensation even before it hit the shelves and captured the restless dreams of a generation hungry for something bigger. It features the explosive title track and the epic songs “Thunder Road” and “Jungleland.” The week of the album’s release, Springsteen was on the covers of both Time and Newsweek.

When did Bruce Springsteen’s album Born in the U.S.A. come out?

Bruce Springsteen’s album Born in the U.S.A. was released in 1984. The album produced seven hit singles, most notably the title track, a sympathetic portrayal of Vietnam War veterans widely misinterpreted as a patriotic anthem. The album received four Grammy Award nominations and won for best male rock vocal performance, for the song “Dancing in the Dark.”

Is Bruce Springsteen married?

Bruce Springsteen married vocalist and guitarist Patti Scialfa in 1991. Scialfa joined Springsteen’s E Street Band in 1984. They have three children: Evan (born 1990), Jessica (1991), and Samuel (1994). Springsteen was previously married to actress Julianne Phillips from 1985 to 1989.

What awards did Bruce Springsteen win for “Streets of Philadelphia”?

Bruce Springsteen won both an Academy Award and a Grammy Award for his 1994 hit single, “Streets of Philadelphia,” from the film Philadelphia (1993), a courtroom drama that stars Tom Hanks and Antonio Banderas and centers on the AIDS crisis.

For what did Bruce Springsteen win a Tony Award?

Bruce Springsteen earned a special Tony Award in June 2018 for the production of Springsteen on Broadway, a one-man show—with musical accompaniment by his wife, Patti Scialfa, on several tunes—in which Springsteen performed various songs and told stories, many of which were from his critically acclaimed 2016 memoir, Born to Run.

News

Bruce Springsteen’s Anti-ICE Song ‘Streets of Minneapolis’ Makes No. 1 Sales Debut Feb. 2, 2026, 11:44 AM ET (Billboard) ...(Show more) The Latest: Democrats threaten to trigger government shutdown over ICE reform Jan. 29, 2026, 8:26 AM ET (AP) Trump facing growing cultural revolt against immigration crackdown Jan. 28, 2026, 10:09 PM ET (AP) Bruce Springsteen sings out against Trump in 'Streets of Minneapolis' Jan. 28, 2026, 6:13 PM ET (AP) What to Stream: 'The Smashing Machine,' Louis Tomlinson, 'The Beauty' and Bruce Springsteen biopic Jan. 19, 2026, 12:01 AM ET (AP) Show less

Bruce Springsteen (born September 23, 1949, Long Branch, New Jersey, U.S.) is an American singer, songwriter, and bandleader who became the archetypal rock performer of the 1970s and ’80s. With his poetic lyrics describing the lives of everyday Americans, his commercial rock sound, and his high-energy concert performances, Springsteen established himself as one of the leading figures of American music in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. His best-known songs, all of which speak to the concerns of the American heartland, include “Born to Run,” “Badlands,” “Born in the U.S.A.,” “Streets of Philadelphia,” and “My City of Ruins.”

(Read Britannica’s article “Are Song Lyrics Poetry?”)

A singer-songwriter from New Jersey

Springsteen grew up in Freehold, a mill town where his father, Douglas (“Dutch”) Springsteen, worked as a laborer. His mother, Adele (née Zerilli) Springsteen, was a legal secretary. Springsteen and his two younger sisters were raised Roman Catholic. His rebellious and artistic side led him to the nearby Jersey Shore, where his imagination was sparked by the rock band scene and the boardwalk life, high and low.

After an apprenticeship in bar bands on the mid-Atlantic coast, Springsteen turned himself into a solo singer-songwriter in 1972 and auditioned for talent scout John Hammond, Sr., who immediately signed him to Columbia Records. His first two albums, Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. and The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle, released in 1973, reflect folk rock, soul, and rhythm-and-blues influences, especially those of Van Morrison, Bob Dylan, and Stax/Volt Records. Springsteen’s voice, a rough baritone that he used to shout on up-tempo numbers and to more sensual effect on slower songs, was shown to good effect there, but his sometimes spectacular guitar playing, which ranged from dense power chord effects to straight 1950s rock and roll, had to be downplayed to fit the singer-songwriter format.

From Born to Run to Born in the U.S.A.

With his third album, Born to Run (1975), Springsteen transformed into a full-fledged rock and roller, heavily indebted to Phil Spector and Roy Orbison. The album, a diurnal song cycle, was a sensation even before it hit the shelves; indeed, the week of the album’s release, Columbia’s public relations campaign landed Springsteen on the covers of both Time and Newsweek. But it sold only middling well, and three years passed before the follow-up—the darker, tougher Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978)—appeared.

Empty movie theater and blank screen (theatre, motion pictures, cinema). Britannica Quiz Oscar-Worthy Movie Trivia

With “Hungry Heart,” from The River (1980), Springsteen finally scored an international hit single. By then, however, he was best known for his stage shows, three- and four-hour extravaganzas with his E Street Band that blended rock, folk, and soul with dramatic intensity and exuberant humor. The band—a crew of mixed stereotypes, from rock-and-roll bandit to cool music professional—was more like a gang than a musical unit, apparently held together by little other than faith in its leader. Springsteen’s relationship and interplay onstage with African American saxophonist Clarence Clemons was particularly iconic.

Springsteen’s refusal, after Born to Run, to cooperate with much of the record company’s public relations and marketing machinery, coupled with his painstaking recording process and the draining live shows, helped earn his reputation as a performer of principle as well as of power and popularity. Yet to that point Springsteen was probably more important as a regional hero of the Eastern Seaboard from Boston to Virginia, where his songs and attitudes metaphorically summed up a certain rock-based lifestyle, than as a figure of national or international importance.

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Nebraska (1982), a stark set of acoustic songs, most in some way concerned with death, was an unusual interlude. It was Born in the U.S.A. (1984) and his subsequent 18-month world tour that cinched Springsteen’s reputation as the preeminent writer-performer of his rock-and-roll period. The album produced seven hit singles, most notably the title track, a sympathetic portrayal of Vietnam War veterans widely misinterpreted as a patriotic anthem. The album received three Grammy nominations, and the single “Dancing in the Dark” netted him the award for best male rock vocal performance.

Working-class hero

Springsteen’s social perspective was distinctly working-class throughout his career, a point emphasized both by his 1995 album, The Ghost of Tom Joad, which concerns itself with America’s economically and spiritually destitute, and by his 1994 hit single (his first in eight years) “Streets of Philadelphia,” from the AIDS-related courtroom drama film Philadelphia, for which he won both an Academy Award and a Grammy Award.

The other side of Springsteen’s work is reflected in the albums that he produced in the period beginning with Tunnel of Love (1987) and including Human Touch and Lucky Town (released simultaneously in 1992). The songs on those albums are intensely personal reflections on intimate relationships. In general, they have not been as popular.

Bridging all that is the five-record set Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band Live 1975–1985 (1986), which captures as much of his highly visual stage show of that period as can be rendered in a solely audio form. (His work in music video during the MTV era was judged to be far less good, showing his tendency to be somewhat stilted on TV despite his being a naturally gifted stage performer.)

Quick Facts In full: Bruce Frederick Joseph Springsteen (Show more) Also known as: “the Boss” (Show more) Born: September 23, 1949, Long Branch, New Jersey, U.S. (age 76) (Show more) Awards And Honors: Tony Awards (2018) Presidential Medal of Freedom (2016) Kennedy Center Honors (2009) Grammy Award (2009) Grammy Award (2008) Grammy Award (2007) Grammy Award (2006) Grammy Award (2005) Grammy Award (2004) Grammy Award (2003) Grammy Award (2002) Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum (1999) Grammy Award (1996) Academy Award (1994) Grammy Award (1994) Grammy Award (1987) Grammy Award (1984) (Show more) Notable Works: “Springsteen on Broadway” “Streets of Philadelphia” (Show more) See all related content

The breakup of the E Street Band in 1989 and general trends in pop music fashion curbed Springsteen’s popularity. In 1998 he put together a box set, Tracks, consisting for the most part of leftover material that had failed to make the cut on his albums with the band. That grandiose gesture established him as prolix beyond all but a couple of peers. Sales of Tracks were trivial compared with those for Live.

The Boss and the Big Man, 1988
The Boss and the Big Man, 1988With his E Street Band, Bruce Springsteen (pictured here performing with saxophonist Clarence Clemons) staged three- and four-hour concerts that became legendary for their high energy, humor, and dramatic intensity.(more)

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