Bruce Springsteen Shares 'Born To Run' Outtake 'Lonely Night In The Park'
Bruce Springsteen released a previously unavailable track from the Born to Run sessions, recorded in May 1975, to mark the album's 50th anniversary celebration.
- Bruce Springsteen released 'Lonely Night in the Park', a previously unreleased outtake from his 1975 album Born to Run, on August 23, 2025.
- The release commemorates the 50th anniversary of Born to Run, an album shaped by intense recording sessions at New York's Record Plant with producer Jon Landau.
- 'Lonely Night in the Park' was left off the final album due to management disputes favoring another track and has been briefly aired only once before on a dedicated radio station.
- Springsteen described aiming for "impact, influence, and the top rung" of artistic achievement, and the new release aligns with his extensive box sets 'Tracks II' and upcoming 'Tracks III'.
- The outtake's digital release enriches Springsteen's legacy by offering fans fresh material from a pivotal career moment and highlights his ongoing archival project.
16 Articles
16 Articles
Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Born To Run’ is turning 50. Is it the Boss’ greatest album?
“Born to Run” is a pretty flawless record and a necessary one in Springsteen’s evolution. It lifted him up to the cultural plateau where, remarkably, he still finds himself a half-century later.
First Time Ever: Listen to the Song Bruce Springsteen Left off "Born to Run" Released Now for 50th Anniversary - Showbiz411
So many box sets, anniversary remixes, and so on. It’s hard to believe there was one song left that Bruce Springsteen left off the original “Born to Run” 50 years ago. But here it is, today: “Lonely Night in the Park.” It’s very catchy but you can see why it didn’t make the final cut. […] The post First Time Ever: Listen to the Song Bruce Springsteen Left off “Born to Run” Released Now for 50th Anniversary appeared first on Showbiz411.
The restless hearts in Bruce Springsteen's 'Born to Run'
In perhaps the most famous sentences from St. Augustine’s magisterial fourth-century memoir, “Confessions,” the bishop of Hippo tells Our Lord, “You awaken us to delight in your praise; for you have made us for yourself, and our heart is restless until it rests in you.” But what is often overlooked are the sentences that precede these famous words. Our heart is restless, suggests St. Augustine, because we “carry around our mortality; we carry ar…
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