Bruce Springsteen - Musician - 2023

(Credits: Far Out / Bruce Springsteen)

Sun 19 April 2026 19:35, UK

In the 1970s, Bruce Springsteen emerged as the voice of the American everyman, singing songs about working-class life, pioneering a genre known as heartland rock.

Following his commercially unsuccessful debut album, Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J., Springsteen found better luck with 1975’s Born to Run, scoring him a number three slot on the Billboard 200. 

Since then, Springsteen has become one of the most successful artists in American music, attracting masses of fans to his lengthy concerts just to catch a glimpse of ‘The Boss’ in action. Besides playing his own material at live shows, Springsteen often plays covers of other artists he admires, even releasing a whole covers album, Only the Strong Survive, in 2022. 

That instinct to revisit and reinterpret other artists’ material has always been a crucial part of Springsteen’s identity. Long before he was filling stadiums under his own name, he was a student of American songcraft, absorbing everything from soul and R&B to the crooning tradition that Sinatra helped define. Covering songs on stage wasn’t just a crowd-pleasing exercise, it was a way of placing himself within that lineage.

In that sense, his admiration for Sinatra feels less like a surprising detour and more like a natural extension of his own storytelling approach. While their sounds may differ on the surface, both artists built their reputations on embodying the emotional lives of their characters, whether that meant barroom loneliness, fleeting romance, or the quiet desperation of everyday existence.

Frank Sinatra - Singer - Actor - Can-Can - Walter Lang - 1960(Credits: Far Out / 20th Century-Fox)

Springsteen greatly admired Frank Sinatra, even inducting him into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995. The musician decided to cover ‘Angel Eyes’ in honour of Sinatra, a song composed by Matt Dennis, which the iconic crooner sang in 1958.

However, it’s another one of Sinatra’s songs which Springsteen referred to as the one track he’d be happy to listen to for the rest of his life. Speaking to Stephen Colbert, Springsteen revealed that ‘Summer Wind’ would be his pick, which was recorded by Sinatra in 1966, appearing on his album, Strangers in the Night.  

The track was initially written in German under the title ‘Der Sommerwind’, written by Heinz Meier with lyrics by Hans Bradtke. After Johnny Mercer transformed the song into English, it was first recorded by Wayne Newton. Eventually, other singers took a crack at the song, although Sinatra’s version remains a favourite for many, such as Springsteen.

Springsteen paid tribute to Sinatra’s legacy in his induction speech at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He shared, “My first recollection of Frank’s voice was coming out of a jukebox, it was in a dark bar on a Sunday afternoon when my mother and I went in searching for my father, and she said, ‘Listen to that… that’s Frank Sinatra, he’s from New Jersey.’”

“It was a voice filled with bad attitude, life, beauty, excitement, nasty sense of freedom, sex and a sad knowledge of the ways of the world.” He added, “It was the deep blueness of Frank’s voice that affected me the most, and while his music became synonymous with black tie, good life, the best booze, women, sophistication, his blues voice was always a sound of hard luck, and men late at night with the last ten dollars in their pockets trying to figure a way out.”

Listen to ‘Summer Wind’ below.

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