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Bruce Springsteen has ‘High Hopes’ for 2014: Announces new record, releases video, pens note to fans

If this year is set to end with a three-night stand from Prince, it’s only fitting that 2014 starts with the Boss. Bruce Springsteen announced today that new record High Hopes will drop January 14 via Columbia, and in addition to releasing its first single, a cover of Los Angeles band Havalinas’ “High Hopes,” he also described the record in detail.

High Hopes is a collection of covers, re-recordings, and other odd and ends, and can be pre-ordered here.

Check out the video above, and word on the record below; High Hopes is a collaborative project that features Rage Against The Machine guitarist Tom Morello on eight tracks, and includes covers of songs by Suicide and the Saints.

Here’s the tracklist, with cover art after the jump…

HIGH HOPES TRACKLIST:
01 “High Hopes”
02 “Harry’s Place”
03 “American Skin”
04 “Just Like Fire Would”
05 “Down In The Hole”
06 “Heaven’s Wall”
07 “Frankie Fell In Love”
08 “This Is Your Sword”
09 “Hunter Of Invisible Game”
10 “The Ghost of Tom Joad”
11 “The Wall”
12 “Dream Baby Dream”

Here’s the word from the Boss:

I was working on a record of some of our best unreleased material from the past decade when Tom Morello (sitting in for Steve during the Australian leg of our tour) suggested we ought to add “High Hopes” to our live set. I had cut “High Hopes,” a song by Tim Scott McConnell of the LA based Havalinas, in the 90′s. We worked it up in our Aussie rehearsals and Tom then proceeded to burn the house down with it. We re-cut it mid tour at Studios 301 in Sydney along with “Just Like Fire Would,” a song from one of my favorite early Australian punk bands, The Saints (check out “I’m Stranded”). Tom and his guitar became my muse, pushing the rest of this project to another level. Thanks for the inspiration Tom.

Some of these songs, “American Skin” and “Ghost of Tom Joad,” you’ll be familiar with from our live versions. I felt they were among the best of my writing and deserved a proper studio recording. “The Wall” is something I’d played on stage a few times and remains very close to my heart. The title and idea were Joe Grushecky’s, then the song appeared after Patti and I made a visit to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington. It was inspired by my memories of Walter Cichon. Walter was one of the great early Jersey Shore rockers, who along with his brother Ray (one of my early guitar mentors) led the “Motifs”. The Motifs were a local rock band who were always a head above everybody else. Raw, sexy and rebellious, they were the heroes you aspired to be. But these were heroes you could touch, speak to, and go to with your musical inquiries. Cool, but always accessible, they were an inspiration to me, and many young working musicians in 1960′s central New Jersey. Though my character in “The Wall” is a Marine, Walter was actually in the Army, A Company, 3rd Battalion, 8th Infantry. He was the first person I ever stood in the presence of who was filled with the mystique of the true rock star. Walter went missing in action in Vietnam in March 1968. He still performs somewhat regularly in my mind, the way he stood, dressed, held the tambourine, the casual cool, the freeness. The man who by his attitude, his walk said “you can defy all this, all of what’s here, all of what you’ve been taught, taught to fear, to love and you’ll still be alright.” His was a terrible loss to us, his loved ones and the local music scene. I still miss him.

This is music I always felt needed to be released. From the gangsters of “Harry’s Place,” the ill-prepared roomies on “Frankie Fell In Love” (shades of Steve and I bumming together in our Asbury Park apartment) the travelers in the wasteland of “Hunter Of Invisible Game,” to the soldier and his visiting friend in “The Wall”, I felt they all deserved a home and a hearing. Hope you enjoy it,

Bruce Springsteen

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