Hi, everyone. Welcome to this week’s edition of Music Monday.

(Image found online. Original source unknown.)
Happy 75th birthday to Bruce Frederick Joseph Springsteen!
Born September 23, 1949 in Long Branch and raised in the town of Freehold, he has been one of New Jersey’s (and America’s) most celebrated sons since his first album was released in January 1973. Five decades later, The Boss is still writing songs, performing his marathon concerts and proving why he is the word legend defined.
It is so fitting that his birthday coincides with the start of fall. The first time I bought one of his records-the masterpiece that is Born To Run-was in October following a very difficult summer. The world had become so dark I forgot what light was like. But one listen to Springsteen’s album and suddenly all that changed.
Despite all the exquisite colors the autumn season already had to offer, in that moment of discovering BTR for the first time, fall suddenly had a new hue. It was so exquisite and grounding I never saw things quite the same way again. That color gave me back a glimpse of hope that maybe I could look forward to a future after being in such a dark place. But even if it came for me again, I had Springsteen’s words to hold on to.
I love him for many things, but giving me back my hope is the biggest reason why. It is a debt I will never be able to repay. The mantra of my life, even after all these years, is from the first track on BTR, “Thunder Road”: “What else can we do now except roll down the window and let the wind blow back your hair.”. Those words, which carry me through my life, are the glorious ties that connect my heart to his.
Thank you for being the constant in my life, Bossman. Happy birthday & happy Fall.
“You sit and wonder just who’s gonna stop the rain
Who’ll ease the sadness who’s gonna quiet the pain
It’s a long dark highway and a thin white line
Connecting baby your heart to mine“.



Two outtakes and the final choice for the cover of Springsteen’s 1975 masterpiece, Born To Run. Photos by Eric Meola.
Bruce Springsteen: “The Ties That Bind” (1980, written by Bruce Springsteen).
Stay safe & well.




















