Outside the street’s on fire in a real death waltz between what’s flesh and what’s fantasy.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEENThe light from the oncoming train focuses the mind.
More Bruce Springsteen Quotes
-
-
The light from the oncoming train focuses the mind.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
Elvis Presley is all there is. There just ain’t no more. Everything starts and ends with Elvis. He wrote the book. He is everything to do and not to do in the music business.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
I always wanted my music to influence the life you were living emotionally – with your family, your lover, your wife, and, at a certain point, with your children.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
Every fool has a reason for feeling sorry for himself.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
The one thing I wished for my children is that they’d be readers.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
I have spent my life judging the distance between American reality and the American dream.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
The first thing that I do when I come out every night is to look at the faces in front of me, very individually.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
Just sitting around waiting for my life to begin, while it was all just slipping away.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
Being an artist is this kind of occupation in which you have to make people care about your obsession.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
I’m ready to grow young again.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
I guess there’s just a meanness in this world.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
The life of a rock & roll band will last as long as you can look down into the audience and see yourself.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
I’ve had an experience through music that has touched almost every part of me. It educated me in ways that I didn’t get educated in school. So we try to lay on a bit of that, through being funny, being serious, playing hard.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
Adult life is dealing with an enormous amount of questions that don’t have answers. So I let the mystery settle into my music. I don’t deny anything, I don’t advocate anything, I just live with it.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN -
It’s a sad man my friend who’s livin’ in his own skin and can’t stand the company.
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN