![]() Around the time “Diamond Dog” Bowie had rooted his feet to the ground and find a nice little place is stardom forever.Īny really good example of poetry allows itself to be imagined in a variety of similar but different ways. When Bowie dissolved the Spider from Mars he was in many ways growing up. Nonetheless it is easy to project the song onto Bowie and it is even easier understand why Bowie would take an interest in this song and want to do a cover it. I once heard that Springsteen had written “Growin’ Up” for David Bowie, and that is was about him, and this made a lot of sense to me, but I cannot find any citation regarding the matter now, so it is entirely possible that I am misremembering something or was at one point misinformed, still this theory is reasonable, it would make sense if the song was written about Bowie. ![]() Of course everything fantastic and psychedelic within the song “Growin’ Up” is easily relatable to Ziggy Stardust the character Bowie was portraying at that time. In 1973 when “Growin’ Up” was written and released David Bowie was the cosmic kid in full costume dress, and he did command the night brigade, and he sort of took month long vacations in the stratosphere. I first heard “Growin’ Up” as a cover song by David Bowie off of the thirty year anniversary release of 1974’s “Diamond Dogs.” The studio recording of Bowie performing “Gorwin’ Up” had been initially recorded back in 1974 but it was never properly released until a nineties compilation album and then later again on the anniversary release of “Diamond Dogs.” The song, epically the third verse, fits Bowie so well. Man it’s really hard to hold your breath, hilarious. I swear I lost everything I ever loved or feared, I was the cosmic kid in full costume dress.” “I took month-long vacations in the stratosphere, and you know it's really hard to hold your breath. The beginning of the third verse is a further extension of impossible rock adventure metaphors, but there is a certain flair within that reminds me a lot of David Bowie If the metaphors are to be taken at all literally this implies he is embracing the impossible which is the very spirit of rock and roll. This could mean so many things, like he is rejecting a different path set before by his parents or other past expectations and instead is embracing the emotional and mystical beauty of music. Springsteen wowed he had and would “bomb” people with the blues, and stubbornly refused to return to his childhood. I mean flying up makes sense, he sings about sailing away and bombing people and being in the “clouded wrath of the crowd,” but hey, what do I know. I always thought the last line “when they said, “come down,” I flew up,” but the lyric sheet evidently disagrees with me. I love the second line of the second verse, the jukebox could sure sing. I hid in the clouded wrath of the crowd, but when they said, ‘come down,’ I threw up. I broke all the rules, strafed my old high school, never once gave thought to landing. I pushed B-52 and bombed them with the blues with my gear set stubborn on standing. I had a jukebox graduate for first mate, she couldn't sail but she sure could sing. “The flag of piracy flew from my mast, my sails were set wing to wing. The entire second verse introduces some very powerful imagery about becoming a rock star, again capturing that adventurous and rebellious attitude of youth Springsteen sings about aging out of childhood into rebellious youth with lines like “when they said, ‘sit down,’ I stood up.” The lyrics are a constant barrage of metaphors. “Growin’ Up” is predictably about growing up, but it is also about so much more. For those of you familiar with Manfred Mann’s cover of “Blinded by the Light” just imagine it being sung by Springsteen while he is trying to sound like Dylan that is exactly what the original version is like, because that is exactly what is going on. ![]() Also note worthy is the first track on “Greetings from Asbury Park N.J.” is “Blinded by the Light” which was covered by Manfred Mann whose version is considerably more famous. ![]() The early works of Springsteen were very different from songs like “Born in the USA” and “Born to Run,” which would make Springsteen famous, at the beginning the Boss was very influenced by Bob Dylan, and it shows as all his early tracks sound like he is trying to sound like Dylan. This was Bruce Springsteen’s debut album and right out of the gate Springsteen announces his New Jersey heritage in the title, successfully establishing himself as an American and Jersey icon for the rest of his life. “Greetings from Asbury Park N.J.” is a very significant album for a variety of reasons.
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