Bruce Springsteen: A Discographic Journey (1973–2020) Bruce Springsteen , "The Boss," has built one of the most storied careers in rock history. His discography from 1973 to 2020 tracks the evolution of an American icon, from the poetic street tales of New Jersey to the stadium-filling anthems of world-renowned superstardom. The Foundation (1973–1975)
52 years ago today on November 11, 1973 Bruce Springsteen's second studio album “The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle” wa... Classic Rock Magazine Bruce Springsteen albums in order | Radio Times
An angry, folk-infused protest album targeting the 2008 financial crisis. The Late-Career Renaissance: 2014–2020 Bruce Springsteen - Discography -1973-2020- 320...
2009 — Working on a Dream (Columbia)
Before diving into the music, it is crucial to understand why collectors specifically search for "320." The number refers to the bitrate—the amount of data processed per second of audio. Classic Rock Magazine Bruce Springsteen albums in order
Bruce Springsteen album “Born In The USA” went to No. 1 on the UK ...
Orchestral pop/country. Absolutely requires 320 kbps to appreciate the sweeping string sections. 1 on the UK
: A stark, solo acoustic recording on a 4-track cassette that remains one of his most critically acclaimed departures.
Springsteen’s discography from 1973 to 2020 is a single, 47-year song about the same thing: the difficulty of being a person. He began as a carnival barker, became a prophet, then a skeptic, then an elder. Through 320 kbps—through the fidelity of attention—we hear the continuity: the harmonica on “The River” and the harmonica on “Letter to You” are the same breath, half a century apart. He has never stopped asking: What does it mean to work? To love? To fail? To try again? The answer is not in any one album but in the arc between them. Bruce Springsteen did not make a masterpiece; he made a discography. And that is the rarest thing of all.
Springsteen’s 21 studio albums (spanning up to 2022, with 2020's Letter to You being the last album before the period covered in the "Best Of" compilations of 2024) illustrate an artist in constant evolution—moving from Dylanesque wordplay to stripped-down folk and arena-filling anthems.