This compilation of rarities and B-sides is especially interesting to us because it includes the radically stripped-down, all-acoustic original version of "Born in the U.S.A." The more familiar chart-topping full-band version is probably a better song, but this one is haunting in its understated intensity.
This is it, the multiplatinum album that made Bruce Springsteen the biggest force in American music in 1984. Anthemic cuts like the title track, "Glory Days," "My Hometown," and "Bobby Jean" remain huge crowd-pleasers today.
If Born in the U.S.A. records Springsteen at his arena-rocking, radio-friendly finest, this album captures a very different side of the artist. The sparse arrangements—usually just Springsteen's voice and an acoustic guitar—and the harrowing lyrics result in a bleak, even haunting, record. You won't soon forget the desperate stories told in "Reason to Believe," "Johnny 99," or "Atlantic City."