POPâS SMALL-TOWN BOYS
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I must take issue with Robert Hilburnâs statement comparing Bruce Springsteen with John Cougar Mellencamp (âBack Home in Indiana,â May 11). He states that in their songs, âMy Hometownâ and âSmall Town,â respectively, they both âspoke about the virtues of family, friends and community ties.
This is true only of Mellencamp. Springsteen tells about the reality of small-town life: â. . . fights between the blacks and the whites, there was nothing you could do . . .â and about â. . . Main Streetâs whitewashed windows and vacant stores. . . .â
He ends his song with a lyric revealing that, âLast night me and Kate we laid in bed talking about getting out. . . .â Hardly a celebration of the virtues of small-town life.
The difference is that Springsteen is a writer. Mellencamp is a kid trying to make enough noise so that the grownups will notice him. His lines read like the writing you see in newspapers about whatâs going on in the heartland rather than the hidden vein of human experience that Springsteen is trying to bring out.
Itâs the difference between an artist and a rock musician.
NED WYNN
Los Angeles
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