I can feel the heat coming around
I go to put my arm around you and you
You give me a look like I'm way out of bounds
Well, you let out one of your bored sighs
But lately when I look into your eyes
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
We get dressed up and we go
Out, baby, for the night
We come home early, burning, burning
Burning in some firefight
I'm sick and tired of you setting me up, yeah
Setting me up just to knock-a-knock-a-knock-a me down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I pull you close now, baby
But when we kiss I can feel a doubt
I remember back when we started
My kisses used to turn you inside out
I used to drive you to work in the morning
Friday night I'd drive you all around
You used to love to drive me wild
But lately girl, you get your kicks from just driving me down
Down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down
I'm goin' down, down, down, down

Bruce Frederick Joseph Springsteen (born September 23, 1949) is an American rock singer, songwriter, and guitarist. Nicknamed "the Boss", he has released 21 studio albums during a career spanning six decades, most of which feature his backing band, the E Street Band. Springsteen is a pioneer of heartland rock, a genre combining mainstream rock music with poetic and socially conscious lyrics that feature narratives primarily concerning working class American life. He is known for his descriptive lyrics and energetic concerts, which sometimes last over four hours.
Springsteen released his first two albums, Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. and The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle, in 1973. Although both were well-received by critics, neither earned him a large audience. He then changed his style and achieved worldwide popularity with Born to Run (1975). This was followed by Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978) and The River (1980); The River was Springsteen's first album to top the Billboard 200 chart. After the solo effort Nebraska (1982), he reunited with his E Street Band for Born in the U.S.A. (1984), which became his most commercially successful album and the 23rd-best selling album of all time as of 2024. All seven singles from Born in the U.S.A. reached the Top 10 of the Billboard Hot 100, including the title track. Springsteen mostly hired session musicians for the recording of his next three albums, Tunnel of Love (1987), Human Touch (1992), and Lucky Town (1992). He reassembled the E Street Band for Greatest Hits (1995), then solo recorded an acoustic album The Ghost of Tom Joad (1995), and the EP Blood Brothers (1996).
Seven years after releasing The Ghost of Tom Joad, the longest gap between any of his studio albums, Springsteen released The Rising (2002), which he dedicated to the victims of the September 11 attacks. He released two more folk albums, Devils & Dust (2005) and We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions (2006), followed by two more albums with the E Street Band, Magic (2007) and Working on a Dream (2009). The next two albums, Wrecking Ball (2012) and High Hopes (2014), topped album charts worldwide. From 2017 to 2018, and again in 2021, Springsteen performed a critically acclaimed show Springsteen on Broadway, in which he performed some of his songs and told stories from his 2016 autobiography; an album version from the Broadway performances was released in 2018. He then released the solo Western Stars (2019), Letter to You (2020) with the E Street Band, and a solo covers album Only the Strong Survive (2022). Letter to You reached No. 2 in the U.S., making Springsteen the first artist to release a Top 5 album across six consecutive decades.
One of the album era's most prominent musicians, Springsteen has sold more than 71 million albums in the U.S. and over 140 million worldwide, making him the 27th best-selling music artist of all time as of 2024. He has earned 20 Grammy Awards, two Golden Globes, an Academy Award, and a Special Tony Award. He was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1999, received the Kennedy Center Honors in 2009, was named MusiCares person of the year in 2013, and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Barack Obama in 2016 and the National Medal of Arts by President Joe Biden in 2023. In 2010, Rolling Stone ranked him 23rd on its list of the "100 Greatest Artists of All Time", which described him as being "the embodiment of rock & roll".
Why bring Barbara Streisand into this?
I just don't get it. This guy is marginal at best and a musical simpleton.
Yeah, but that ass.. it just doesn't quit
Down.
For those haters who've never seen him live, too bad.
He's pretty damn good!
I've heard this criticism of Bruce before — that you really need to be from the East or mid_Atlantic areas to truly appreciate his lyrics, etc. Never really understood it, but there must be something to it. Me, I have lived in those regions, and I understand his songs. What really gets to me, however, is criticism that makes it sound like Bruce is just a commercial, ripoff artist. It's fair to not like his music, but to imply that he is just trying to make a buck is so off the mark. Frankly, he's one of the more sincere artists we have in America.
Hmm, what? you have to be from the East to feel unworthy, trod-upon, victimized? Nah, not a locale sort of thing...and while some of us may or may have felt unworthy, at the time I don't think we were really listening to the words, we were too busy dancing and so was Springsteen. While he may have believed his personal power was usurped by The Man and others, whatever power and hope he did feel was channelled into his music. At least then. And all of us Southern Californians, despite the lyrics, definitely "got" what the music was expressing. Springsteen 1985, at the LA Coliseum, was seriously one of the best concerts I've ever been to. Despite however much more musically sophisticated I may consider myself to have become, I certainly can't deny the life affirming nature of music in from the '80s.... Music was just really FUN then!!! yeehaa!!
Sorry but an average rating of 6.5 is way too low for this.
I was thinking the opposite. An average rating of 6.5 is way too high for this...
I just don't get it. This guy is marginal at best and a musical simpleton.
Yep. You just don't get it.
This tune is just one of many great pieces on a vastly underrated album. Even as a Boss hardcore, I'll admit he's got 5 or 6 albums better than BITUSA, but track for track, for me, it stands the test of time very, very well. To decide to make one pop-oriented album in a career is not to sell out. In the case of someone who started with songs like "Mary Queen of Arkansas" and "Wild Billy's Circus," it represented a real creative stretch, and a wonderful one at that.
Can you imagine being so gifted that writing and performing *this* album was a guaranteed thing? Like they literally said "let's do a chartbuster rock album now" and just did it, ho-hum.
Why bring Barbara Streisand into this?
i call bullsh*t