If you were to assume that if Bruce Springsteen could only listen to one song for the rest of his life, he would pick something that sounded like the good, old-fashioned rock โnโ roll on which he built his entire career, we wouldnโt blame you. But youโd be wrong (full disclosure, we were, too).
During a 2021 appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Springsteen revealed his one-and-done, โdesert islandโ track to be a pop track from 1966.
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Bruce Springsteen Picks One Song to Listen To For The Rest Of His Life
Selecting one song to listen to for the rest of your life would be a difficult choice for anyone, let alone an artist who spent most of his existence absorbing, learning from, and writing his own music. Yet, it didnโt take long for Bruce Springsteen to come up with an answer while he was taking the โColbert Questionnaireโ on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.
โOne,โ Springsteen said, looking at the ground, deep in thought. โWoah. Uh, โSummer Windโ by Frank Sinatra.โ
Sinatra released โSummer Windโ in 1966 as the second single from his album Strangers in the Night. The song, which details a summery romance giving way to a cold autumnal loneliness, was originally a German song that Johnny Mercer rewrote to feel more natural to American listeners. Many artists covered the song, but the most famous version is far and away by Sinatra.
Olโ Blue Eyesโ version of โSummer Windโ topped the Billboard Easy Listening chart and peaked at No. 25 on the Hot 100. The song is certainly a far cry from some of Springsteenโs more rock-oriented offerings. But when one considers just how long he had been listening to the iconic jazz crooner, his answer on The Late Show made a lot of sense.
The Boss Has Long Been a Fan of Olโ Blue Eyes
New Jersey folks tend to stick together whenever possible, so itโs unsurprising that Bruce Springsteen, a Freehold, NJ, native, would admire Frank Sinatra, who was from Hoboken. Before his performance of โAngel Eyesโ at Sinatraโs 80th birthday tribute show, Springsteen recalled listening to the โpatron saint of New Jerseyโ with his mother while they โwent searching for my father.โ
โShe said, โListen to that. Thatโs Frank Sinatra. He is from New Jersey,โโ Springsteen said. โIt was a voice filled with bad attitude, life, beauty, excitement, a nasty sense of freedom, sex, and a sad knowledge of the ways of the world.โ
โEvery song seemed to have its post script, โAnd if you donโt like it, hereโs a punch in the kisser,โโ Springsteen continued. โBut it was the deep blue of Frankโs voice that affected me the most. While his music became synonymous with black tie, the good life, the best booze, women, sophistication, his blues voice was always the sound of hard luck and men late at night with the last ten dollars in their pockets trying to figure a way out.โ
Sometimes, those men were longing for summer romances of yesteryearโa man who โsighs his lullabies through nights that never end.โ
Photo by Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images
