Jack of All Trades
Giorgio de Chirico The Enigma of the Hour oil on canvas 1911 Private Collection |
Farmer and sons, dust storm, Cimarron County, Oklahoma, 1936 Photographer: Arthur Rothstein Courtesy The Library of Congress |
Unemployed men vying for jobs at the American Legion Employment Bureau in Los Angeles during the Great Depression. |
I'll hammer the nails, and I'll set the stone
I'll harvest your crops when they're ripe and grown
I'll pull that engine apart and patch her up 'til she's running right
I'm a Jack of all trades, we'll be alright
Gregg Chadwick Call and Echo 16"x20" oil on linen 2011 |
Gregg Chadwick Mare e Ombra 24"x18" oil on linen 2012 |
When the blue sky breaks, feels like the world's gonna change
We'll start caring for each other like Jesus said that we might
I'm a Jack of all trades, we'll be alright
The banker man grows fat, the working man grows thin
It's all happened before and it'll happen again
Now sometimes tomorrow comes soaked in treasure and blood
Here we stood the drought, now we'll stand the flood
There's a new world coming, I can see the light
I'm a Jack of all trades, we'll be alright
Murray Anderson in 1942 Courtesy Geoff Micks at Face in the Blue |
So you use what you've got, and you learn to make do
You take the old, you make it new
If I had me a gun, I'd find the bastards and shoot 'em on sight
I'm a Jack of all trades, we'll be alright
I'm a Jack of all trades, we'll be alright
The song bleeds into a mournful guitar solo by Tom Morello. The horns join in. Is it a funeral march? Or a break in the storm?
Bruce Springsteen and Tom Morello |
Toward Los Angeles, California. 1937 Photographer: Dorothea Lange Courtesy: The Library of Congress |
All lyrics from Jack of All Trades - Copyright © Bruce Springsteen (ASCAP) |
Springsteen thanks fans by text
As reported previously, this week Dave Marsh began hosting a special daily one-hour edition of Live From E Street Nation on E Street Radio, in addition to his regular two-hour gig every Friday (which also will air in the 10 a.m - noon slot tomorrow). Dave's show has been previewing a track each day from Wrecking Ball (the same track released each day online in streaming audio), and taking calls from listeners to express their reactions. Yesterday's "Jack of All Trades" show elicited many powerful, moving comments as fans from various walks of life spoke, often through tears, about how relevant this new ballad is and how eloquently it addresses their own personal experiences. Just before beginning today's E Street Radio premiere of "Death to My Hometown," Marsh told listeners that he noticed his cell phone vibrating towards the end of yesterday's show. After he went off the air, he saw that he had been texted by the composer of "Jack of All Trades" himself: "Wow! What a show... Thank these folks for me. It was an honor hearing their stories. –B."
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