Thursday, May 18, 2006

Springsteen on American Idol?

There are wars and rumors of wars. There is famine. There is strife. An energy crisis looms. But the surest sign yet of the end times is this: A Springsteen song was sung on American Idol.

On May 16th, leading contestant Taylor Hicks sang Dancing in the Dark - making him the first contestant in the show's five seasons to sing the music of the boss. Hicks thanked Clive Davis for personally appealing to Springsteen for permission to use the song, making the performance possible.

I buried my face in my hands and wept openly.

Now, don't get me wrong. I'm not an American Idol basher. Sure it's sometimes mean, often bad and frequently shameful in it's drawn-out dramatics. Certainly, it is not a show that will deliver musicians of Springsteen's caliber. But I understand that not all situations call for a genius like Springsteen, an artist who leads and inspires people to improve themselves.

There is room in the world, I would hope, for poets like Springsteen and also for people who just belt out songs suitable for the prom. Why not? You have to play something at the prom!

I even watch American Idol regularly, something that began for me soon after discovering in the middle of the second season - quite by accident - that the sound of Clay Aiken's voice was the only thing that would soothe my colicky baby. I don't understand it. You don't understand it. No one understands it. It is just one of those mysteries of the universe. But it's true. I have witnesses.

My son is no longer colicky, but I continue watching because I developed some sort of Pavlovian response. The opening credits roll and I feel a deep sense of calm, the sort of calm that only a parent of a child who just quit crying can feel. It's a guilty pleasure. What can I say?

But I thought I could keep this separate from my more serious and respectable Springsteen obsession. My husband and I would joke about it sometimes. "When are they going to have Springsteen week on American Idol?" And we'd laugh at the absurdity of the idea! As if Springsteen would agree to let his songs be butchered in such a way!

Who's laughing now?

Well, fair enough. I suppose that Springsteen is as vulnerable to personal appeals from respected old codgers as everyone else. And he certainly doesn't need my permission to do what he wants. And how judgemental can I be, given that I'm the proud author of a book in which a minor European princess uses Springsteen lyrics to plot her career moves. (Princess Izzy and the E Street Shuffle has gotten great reviews. Check them out!)

And if there had to be a Springsten song on American Idol, Dancing in the Dark was as good as any. It's the closest thing to a "prom" song that Springsteen has, right down to the expressed dissatisfaction with appearance.

I felt, surprisingly okay about it -- until Simon Cowell critiqued Hicks' performance by saying it was a pale imitation of the original and the audience actually booed. They were booing the suggestion that Taylor Hicks was not Bruce Springsteen! Let me go lie down!

But then I remembered something. I was a young teen when "Born in the USA" came out. True Bruce Fans didn't like the album. They thought it was too commercial. They thought he had sold out. But I was a silly young thing that didn't even really know who Springsteen was. I didn't care about any of that. I just watched "Dancing in the Dark" on Friday Night Videos and I thought it was sort of fun and that Bruce was sort of cute. So I bought the album. And I listened to songs that were about more important things than not being satisfied with your appearance. And then I bought his other albums and they opened up a new world for me. I suppose you could say they changed my life.

And maybe that will happen again now. Out there in a troubled nation are 13-year-old girls who have never heard Nebraska or Darkness on the Edge of the Town. But will like the song that Hicks sang and give some Springsteen a try. And maybe it will change their life too.

And viewed that way, the sound of Springsteen on American Idol isn't a sign of the end, but of some kind of beginning!

3 comments:

Bster said...

I suppose if you just keep writing then closure of a good kind will always appear......

Unknown said...

I just like to think that Taylor Hicks is smarter than American Idol...

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