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  • American Songwriter

    The Shotgun Blast that Led to the Story Behind “My Hometown” by Bruce Springsteen

    By Jay McDowell,

    21 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=37vuX2_0vYFUGID00

    The May 21, 1969, edition of The Asbury Park Press reported the events of the previous evening as they occurred in Freehold, New Jersey. The police logbook showed a group of black teenagers gathered near the bus terminal and were dispersed without incident. Two hours later, another group was broken up, leading to multiple smashed windows. Multiple calls came in to report groups of blacks with sticks and clubs at various locations around town. At 10 p.m., a caller reported a crowd “pelting passing cars with rocks and bottles.” At 10:27, a “large group” of cars filled with white teens drove through the bus terminal area “shouting catcalls to nearby black youths.” Several minutes later, police said, “A carload of white youths pulled alongside a car of black youths, and a shotgun was fired into the backseat of black teenagers.” Let’s take a look at the story behind “My Hometown” by Bruce Springsteen.

    I was eight years old

    And running with a dime in my hand

    To the bus stop to pick

    Up a paper for my old man

    I’d sit on his lap in that big old Buick

    And steer as we drove through town

    He’d tousle my hair

    And say, “Son, take a good look around”

    This is your hometown

    This is your hometown

    This is your hometown

    This is your hometown”

    “Unspoken Rules”

    Freehold’s most famous citizen was still unknown at the time. Bruce Springsteen was playing with a band called Child. In 2021, he told former President Barack Obama, “I grew up in a bit of an integrated neighborhood. I had Black friends when I was really young, but there were a lot of rules, whose house you shouldn’t be in. You’re a child on your bicycle, and you’re aware of all these unspoken rules. Freehold was your typical small provincial redneck racist little American 1950s town, you know? It was a town that suffered a lot of racial strife. … A friend of mine lost his eye. … They brought in the state troopers, and there was a state of emergency.”

    In ’65, tension was running high

    At my high school

    There was a lot of fights

    Between the black and white

    There was nothing you could do

    Two cars at a light on a Saturday night

    In the back seat, there was a gun

    Words were passed in a shotgun blast

    Troubled times had come

    To my hometown

    To my hometown

    To my hometown

    To my hometown

    “Your Hometown”

    The victims of the 1969 shotgun blast were Dean Lewis, 16, who suffered wounds to his face, and Leroy Kinsey, Jr., 19, who was hit in the neck. They both survived and were taken to Jersey Shore Medical Center in Neptune. Mayor John Dawes declared a state of emergency and ordered a curfew until 6 a.m. Quiet was restored shortly after midnight.

    Springsteen began writing the song in 1982 as an upbeat rockabilly number called “Your Hometown.” After recording a few demos of the song, he reworked it into a ballad called “My Hometown.”

    In 2024, drummer Max Weinberg told Rolling Stone magazine, “One of the times I was staying at his house, there were two bedrooms, and mine was next to his. Late at night, I remember him writing, and I could hear literally through the door, him writing ‘My Hometown’ on his acoustic guitar. And that I remember distinctly. When he came to record it, he had done it with a Linn drum, just with the beat that ended up on the record. But he wanted me to replace the drum machine. And I overdubbed to what he had pretty much laid down in his house.”

    Now, Main Street’s whitewashed windows

    And vacant stores

    Seems like there ain’t nobody

    Wants to come down here no more

    They’re closing down the textile mill

    Across the railroad tracks

    Foreman says, “These jobs are going, boys

    And they ain’t coming back

    To your hometown

    To your hometown

    To your hometown

    To your hometown”

    The 3M Factory Shutdown

    Springsteen sings of the closing of a textile mill. A year after the release of the song, the Freehold 3M factory closed. On January 19, 1986, Springsteen played a benefit show for the affected workers at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park. Before he played “My Hometown,” he said, “The marriage between a community and a company is a special thing that involves a special trust. What do you do after 10 years or 20 years, you wake up in the morning and see your livelihood sailing away from you, leaving you standing on the dock? What happens when the jobs go away, and the people remain? What goes unmeasured is the price that unemployment inflicts on people’s families, on their marriages, on the single mothers out there trying to raise their kids on their own. The 3M Co.: it’s their money, it’s their plant. But it’s the 3M workers’ jobs. I’m here to say that I think that after 25 years of service from a community, there is a debt owed to the 3M workers and to my hometown.”

    Last night me and Kate, we laid in bed

    Talking about getting out

    Packing up our bags, maybe heading south

    I’m thirty-five, we got a boy of our own now

    Last night, I sat him up behind the wheel

    And said, “Son, take a good look around

    This is your hometown”

    ‘Born to Come Back?’

    The song closes the album Born in the U.S.A., which is one of the biggest-selling of all time. It has sold more than 30 million copies worldwide. “My Hometown” was the seventh single off the album. When it hit the Top 10, it became the seventh song to achieve that milestone, tying a record for most Top 10s from an album. The music video for the song was directed by Arthur Rosato and was filmed live at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum toward the end of the Born in the U.S.A. Tour.

    When Springsteen introduced the song On Broadway in 2018, he said, “Everybody has a love/hate relationship with their hometown. It’s just built into the equation of growing up. If you take me, I’m Mr. ‘Born to Run.’ I’m Mr. ‘Thunder F—ing Road.’ I was born to run, not to stay. My home, New Jersey, it’s a death trap. It’s a suicide rap. Listen to the lyrics, alright? I gotta get out. I gotta hit the highway. I’m a road-running man. I got the white-line fever in my veins. I am gonna bring my girl, and I have had enough of the s–t that this place dishes out. I am gonna run, run, run, and I’m never coming back. I currently live 10 minutes from my hometown. But, ‘Born to Come Back?’ Who would have bought that?”

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    Photo by Ilpo Musto/Shutterstock

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    unidentified 27
    20m ago
    Great song!!!!
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