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<title>Solid Rock - reviews, criticism and philosophy about rock music</title> 
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk</link> 
<description>Solid Rock presents, interprets and debates music that doesn't only rock your body - we focus on the ethical and existential meaning of solid rock.</description> 
<webmaster>Smeltemand</webmaster> 
<language>en-us</language> 
<item> 
<title>Worlds apart - Bruce Springsteen's involvement in the American election</title> 
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/springsteen/worldsapart1.php</link> 
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<date>14-Mar 2005</date> 
<description>The rock king Bruce Springsteen should almost be 55 before he made the decision of his life. For this 
definitely seems to be what he has done by participating in the socalled Vote for Change concerts.</description> 
</item> 
<item>
<title>About 'Devils + Dust' - the song</title>
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/springsteen/devils-and-dust-the-song.php</link>
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<data>04-May 2005</data>
<description>The title track is the only song on 'Devils and Dust' with obvious political implications. It offers an 
acute and condensed account of Springsteen's critical stance towards the war in Iraq - and towards the whole war on 
terrorism, as this war is being fought out under the dubious leadership of George W. Bush. </description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Notes on 'Jesus was an only son'</title>
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/springsteen/jesus.php</link>
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<data>30-May 2005</data>
<description>...the question arises, why Springsteen had to put 'Jesus was an only son' on his new album. And the 
obvious place to look for an answer seems to be in the lyrics: The song must express something that he badly needed 
to express.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>Notes on 'Reno'</title>
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/springsteen/reno.php</link>
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<data>20-Jun 2005</data>
<description>...Springsteen isn't just describing sexual activities to provoke the public. 'Reno' is a very quiet and gloomy 
song, and only prudes will be too offended to notice, that its message is extremely serious, probably even religious</description>
</item>
<item> 
<title>Review: Born to Run</title> 
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/springsteen/btr1.php</link> 
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<data>03-Oct 2005</data> 
<description>Despite his many great albums the majority of fans and critics will agree, that 'Born to Run' stands out 
as his finest. And whenever some magazine sets up a list of the leading albums in the history of rock it is by 'Born 
to Run' that you should expect to see Springsteen represented in the top 30. </description> 
</item> 
<item> 
<title>Review: Born to Run 30th Anniversary Edition</title> 
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/springsteen/btr30.php</link> 
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<data>16-Nov 2005</data> 
<description>On November 15th 2005 Bruce Springsteen released this box set including a remastered edition of the 
masterpiece itself and two DVD films. Though first impressions may cheat it is hard not to shout it out loud and 
immediately: The power and the promise! </description> 
</item> 
<item>
<title>Springsteen and existential philosophy</title>
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/springsteen/existentialism.php</link> 
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<data>29-Nov 2005</data> 
<description>Springsteen has never enlarged upon something so different from the dudes and little pretties of his 
youth as dead philosophers but at its core his songwriting bears an obvious affinity to existential philosophy - a 
tradition for thinking about man's active participation in his own life, represented by e. g. Søren Kierkegaard, 
Martin Heidegger and Jean-Paul Sartre.</description> 
</item> 
<item>
<title>Review: Human Touch</title>
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/springsteen/humantouch.php</link> 
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<data>12-Dec 2005</data> 
<description>Whatever the reason, 'Human Touch' was not the kind of unified statement about an existential situation 
that Springsteen’s great albums had been. He did not reach his one true voice of the moment but ended up with a 
hotchpotch of voices, some more reliable than others.</description> 
</item> 
<item>
<title>Jim Steinman's 'Left in the dark' (from the album 'Bad for Good')</title>
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/steinman/leftinthedark.php</link> 
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<data>25-Dec 2005</data> 
<description>'Left in the dark' (from his solo album, 'Bad for Good') is quite an unusual Jim Steinman song. Steinman 
is a sworn worshipper of forceful attitudes and an ironist who always gets, at least, the laughter on his side. But 
for the narrator in Left in the dark it is not that easy to act heroic and there is definitely nothing to laugh about.</description> 
</item> 
<item>
<title>Springsteen and Heidegger on the concept of angst</title>
<link>http://www.solidrock.dk/springsteen/heidegger.php</link> 
<author>Jørgen Dalsgaard</author> 
<data>18-Jan 2006</data> 
<description>Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), German philosopher, generally acknowledged as one of the most important 
thinkers of the 20. century. In his principal work, 'Sein und Zeit' ('Being and Time') from 1927, Heidegger inquired 
into the basic structures of human existence and the peculiarly human way of experiencing the world</description> 
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