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First Released

Calendar Icon 1973

Genre

Genre Icon Rock

Mood

Mood Icon Enlightened

Style

Style Icon Rock/Pop

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Release Format Icon Album

Record Label Release

Speed Icon Columbia

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Album Description
Available in: Country Icon Country Icon Country Icon Country Icon Country Icon Country Icon Country Icon
The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle —en español: El salvaje, el inocente y el baile de la calle E— es el segundo álbum de estudio del músico estadounidense Bruce Springsteen, publicado por la compañía discográfica Columbia Records en septiembre de 1973.​ El álbum, descrito por la web Allmusic como «uno de los mejores discos en la historia del rock and roll», incluyó «Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)», la canción más utilizada por la E Street Band para cerrar los conciertos en sus primeros diez años de vida.

Al igual que Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J., el álbum fue bien recibido por la prensa musical, aunque mantuvo el escaso impacto comercial de su predecesor. Sin embargo, después de que Springsteen lograse un mayor éxito comercial con Born to Run, varias canciones del álbum obtuvieron una mayor difusión comercial en radio.

En 2003, The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle fue situado en el puesto 172 de la lista de los 500 mejores discos de todos los tiempos, elaborada por la revista musical Rolling Stone.​ El 7 de noviembre de 2009, Springsteen interpretó el álbum completo por primera vez en concierto en el Madison Square Garden de Nueva York, durante la gira de promoción de Working on a Dream
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User Album Review
"And the kids down there, either dancing or hooked up in a scuffle
Dressed in snakeskin suits, packed with Detroit muscle
They're doing the E Street shuffle"


Bruce Springsteen's second album found him at a pivotal point in his development. The most musically expansive record of his career, THE WILD, THE INNOCENT & THE E STREET SHUFFLE found Bruce beginning to find his own sound, moving beyond the Dylan-meets-Van Morrison folk-rock of his debut. Though the signature Spector-on-steroids E Street Band sound wouldn't fall fully into place until the next album, this one sounds like a sudden realisation of a universe of musical possibilities. While this is solidly a rock record, there are hints of jazz, blues, soul, Latin music, and more. This would be the only time the cinematic vistas of Springsteen's early lyrics were matched by equally impressionistic music. "Wild Billy's Circus Story" marks the point on wildly divergent career paths when Springsteen and Tom Waits seemed to intersect. "4th of July, Asbury Park" and "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)" are unlike anything that had come before them, story-songs full of shifts in tone, dynamics, and mood that are as surprising as they are evocative. Springsteen hadn't yet transformed into the Rock God he'd soon become, but THE WILD, THE INNOCENT... clearly shows him already well on his way.


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