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| Photo: Bruce Springsteen / Instagram |
Bruce Springsteen says he feared fame would change him when his career took off with Born to Run in 1975.
The rocker, now 76, told TIME100 in a cover story on Sept. 25 that he felt life becoming very different after his first TIME and Newsweek covers.
He said the praise for his music was a dream come true but came with new problems.
Springsteen called fame “a very distorted lens” and said he had to protect what mattered most to him.
Those fears helped inspire his next album, Darkness on the Edge of Town, which celebrated working-class life.
He also revealed he struggled with thoughts of suicide after his 1982 album Nebraska and began focusing on mental health.
Springsteen still goes to therapy today and says it has changed his life for the better.
Source: Parade


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