Bruce Springsteen, whose 70th birthday is Monday, still has a story to tell

Former manager Carl “Tinker” West talks about the Boss’s roots. There’s a new book on his work in film and TV. And the film ‘Western Stars’ is the latest of his pursuits.

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Bruce Springsteen arrives for the film “Western Stars” at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 12 in Toronto.

Bruce Springsteen arrives for the film “Western Stars” at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 12 in Toronto.

Chris Young/ The Canadian Press via AP

Bruce Springsteen, who turned 70 Monday, always had a story to tell.

That’s one aspect of a young Springsteen that former manager Carl “Tinker” West noticed early on.

“He’s a good storyteller,” said West, who’s also a giant in the surfing world thanks to his founding of Challenger Eastern Surfboards in Ocean Township, New Jersey. “Vini [Lopez of the future E Street Band] brought him over to the shop. He was a smart kid, sort of quiet, and he wrote songs. I said, ‘You just keep writing something, you guys rehearse — work here all day, make surfboards and rock n’ roll.’ ”

That was the plan. It worked.

Springsteen has sold millions of records, plays to stadiums around the world, is enshrined in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2016, all for his rock ‘n’ rolling.

Now, as Springsteen turns 70, he’s in an era of new artistic pursuits, new creative formats. The latest is the movie “Western Stars,” a filmed version of his latest album. He co-directed “Western Stars” with frequent collaborator Thom Zimny. The film features a performance of the folk-rock orchestral album and vignettes starring a solo Springsteen.

Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa exit after the “Springsteen On Broadway” opening-night performance at the Walter Kerr Theatre in New York on Oct. 12, 2017. 

Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa exit after the “Springsteen On Broadway” opening-night performance at the Walter Kerr Theatre in New York on Oct. 12, 2017.

AP

The film follows the hit “Springsteen on Broadway,” which featured the Boss baring his life story, set to song and remembrance. “Springsteen on Broadway” ran from October 2017 to December 2018.

The music play was based on his New York Times best-selling memoir “Born to Run,” which was released in September 2016. Springsteen did a nine-city book tour, where he greeted thousands of fans in person for hours at a stretch in a feat of physical and mental stamina.

Still telling stories and still on stage, Springsteen’s exploring new formats for the stories, and the stories he’s telling are largely his own.

“He truly envisions himself as an artist, and I feel that all of these projects are in service of him wanting to tap into all of the different facets of who he is,” said Caroline Madden, 26, of Toms River, New Jersey.

Madden is set to release a book on Springsteen’s music in films and TV, “Springsteen as Soundtrack: The Sound of the Boss in Film and Television” (McFarland & Co., $45). “That’s why he’s so unique and has endured as an artist for so long — he doesn’t settle. He’s always looking to renew himself or try something new.”

West saw that creative energy up close when Springsteen fronted the band Steel Mill, which West managed and did sound for.

“I liked Springsteen because those guys would go in the back of the shop, and they would rehearse,” West said. “Vini Lopez, Danny Federici, they would write lots of music. And whenever we’d get a couple of songs together that were pretty good, we’d go and try it out at Pandemonium, right at the bottom of Sunset Avenue.”

The club was less than a mile from West’s surfboard factory.

“What changes his music is that he wants to write something different,” West said. “He writes some great stories. Stories, to me, are what makes great music, especially the early stuff. The first two albums” — ‘Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.’ and ‘The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle’ — “people are still asking for those songs. Even so, he’s written a lot of stuff after that’s pretty damn good.”

Bruce Springsteen in the crowd at Monmouth College in New Jersey, watching another band perform in 1969 before his band, “Child,” took the stage.

Bruce Springsteen in the crowd at Monmouth College in New Jersey, watching another band perform in 1969 before his band, “Child,” took the stage.

Billy Smith Collection via USA Today Network

West and Springsteen’s enduring friendship is explored in the book “Born to Run” and, in “Springsteen on Broadway.” A highlight of the play is West, Springsteen and West’s dog driving out west in West’s 1950 Chevy flat-bed truck to play a concert and meet people in the music industry. Springsteen didn’t know how to drive until he drove the Chevy truck with West in the passenger seat. West still owns the truck.

“He knew what he wanted to do, I’m pretty sure,” West said of Springsteen’s artistic drive. “He wanted to wow an audience, and he did. He had a great band. Federici was great. Lopez was great. Little Vinnie Roslin was great.”

Carl “Tinker” West at the Purple Building in Highlands, New Jersey.

Carl “Tinker” West at the Purple Building in Highlands, New Jersey.

Chris Jordan / USA Today Network

West used his connections and hustle to get a deal with Paramount Records.

“I finally found a deal that wouldn’t screw him over,” West said. “Then, he said, ‘I don’t want to do Steel Mill anymore.’

“I introduced him to Mike Appel. He introduced him to John Hammond, and the rest is history,” West said of Springsteen’s subsequent manager and the famed talent scout who signed him to Columbia Records.

The stories Springsteen has been telling in recent years are stark, revealing and confessional.

“For a long time, if I loved you or if I felt a deep attachment to you, I would hurt you if I could,” Springsteen says in “Western Stars.”

He talked of his troubled relationship with his father in “Springsteen on Broadway” and has been candid about his struggles with mental illness.

“I have come close enough to [mental illness)] where I know I am not completely well myself,” Springsteen previously has told Esquire. “I’ve had to deal with a lot of it over the years, and I’m on a variety of medications that keep me on an even keel; otherwise I can swing rather dramatically and ... just ... the wheels can come off a little bit. So we have to watch, in our family. I have to watch my kids, and I’ve been lucky there. It ran in my family going way before my dad.”

Springsteen and his wife and bandmate Patti Scialfa have three children, Evan, 29, Jessica, 27, and Sam, 25.

This 2013 photo shows an unidentified man with Jessica Rae Springsteen, Patti Scialfa, Adele Springsteen, Bruce Springsteen and Pamela Springsteen at MusiCares “Person of the Year” ceremony honoring Bruce Springsteen.

This 2013 photo shows an unidentified man with Jessica Rae Springsteen, Patti Scialfa, Adele Springsteen, Bruce Springsteen and Pamela Springsteen at MusiCares “Person of the Year” ceremony honoring Bruce Springsteen at the Los Angeles Convention Center.

Getty Images

Springsteen’s non-rock ‘n’ roll work the past few years has also framed the aging process for fans. He’s showing the way to baby boomers about what to do, how to do it and what’s important in life when you get to a certain age.

The fans of his generation might have looked to John Lennon for the answers, but he didn’t get to grow old like Springsteen. Lennon would have been 78 if he were still alive.

”Aging is scary but fascinating, and great talent morphs in strange and often-enlightening ways,” Springsteen wrote in “Born to Run.”

As for the E Street Band, Springsteen isn’t done yet, despite the success he’s had with his new avenues of artistic expression.

“We want the band to get back together,” Springsteen said to applause Sept. 12 at the Toronto International Film Festival. “I’ve got some songs written for the band, and I’d like to make a really good rock band record with the E Street Band. We’ll be seeing you.”

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