Bruce Springsteen’s Anti-ICE Song ‘Streets of Minneapolis’ Makes No. 1 Sales Debut

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Hmmm..seems this song appears to resonate among many Americans.
They're spending their hard-earned money on it--not bad for a has-been, washed-out rocker!


Bruce Springsteen’s “Streets of Minneapolis” was the highest-selling song in the United States last week, even with it being available for just two days of the tracking period, debuting at No. 1 on Billboard’s Digital Song Sales chart dated Feb. 7.

“Streets of Minneapolis” marks Springsteen’s first No. 1 on the all-format Digital Song Sales survey, which began in 2004 following the proliferation of paid downloads on the internet. In fact, it’s his first track to reach the ranking’s top 20, exceeding the No. 22 peak of Mark Knopfler’s Guitar Heroes’ “Going Home (Theme From Local Hero),” for which he joined its all-star cast, in 2024.

Attention around “Streets of Minneapolis” stems from its subject matter. Springsteen wrote and recorded the anti-ICE (United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement) song following the deaths of Renée Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis in January amid Operation Metro Surge, during which undocumented immigrants have been targeted and apprehended by ICE.

Springsteen first performed the song live in Minneapolis Jan. 30 during the Tom Morello-helmed Defend Minnesota benefit concert.

Thanks to its sales plus streams and early radio airplay, “Streets of Minneapolis” also bows at No. 20 on the multimetric Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart. In addition to its sales, the song drew 678,000 official U.S. streams and 175,000 in airplay audience in that two-day span.
 
Hmmm..seems this song appears to resonate among many Americans.
They're spending their hard-earned money on it--not bad for a has-been, washed-out rocker!


Bruce Springsteen’s “Streets of Minneapolis” was the highest-selling song in the United States last week, even with it being available for just two days of the tracking period, debuting at No. 1 on Billboard’s Digital Song Sales chart dated Feb. 7.

“Streets of Minneapolis” marks Springsteen’s first No. 1 on the all-format Digital Song Sales survey, which began in 2004 following the proliferation of paid downloads on the internet. In fact, it’s his first track to reach the ranking’s top 20, exceeding the No. 22 peak of Mark Knopfler’s Guitar Heroes’ “Going Home (Theme From Local Hero),” for which he joined its all-star cast, in 2024.

Attention around “Streets of Minneapolis” stems from its subject matter. Springsteen wrote and recorded the anti-ICE (United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement) song following the deaths of Renée Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis in January amid Operation Metro Surge, during which undocumented immigrants have been targeted and apprehended by ICE.

Springsteen first performed the song live in Minneapolis Jan. 30 during the Tom Morello-helmed Defend Minnesota benefit concert.


Thanks to its sales plus streams and early radio airplay, “Streets of Minneapolis” also bows at No. 20 on the multimetric Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart. In addition to its sales, the song drew 678,000 official U.S. streams and 175,000 in airplay audience in that two-day span.
Bruce Springsteen has always been an anti-American retard.

The only song that ever made him famous, “Born in the U.S.A.” is actually a song mocking America but it has a patriotic hook that caught on.

He’s always been a little closet Marxist. This newest song confirms it.
 
Hmmm..seems this song appears to resonate among many Americans.
They're spending their hard-earned money on it--not bad for a has-been, washed-out rocker!


Bruce Springsteen’s “Streets of Minneapolis” was the highest-selling song in the United States last week, even with it being available for just two days of the tracking period, debuting at No. 1 on Billboard’s Digital Song Sales chart dated Feb. 7.

“Streets of Minneapolis” marks Springsteen’s first No. 1 on the all-format Digital Song Sales survey, which began in 2004 following the proliferation of paid downloads on the internet. In fact, it’s his first track to reach the ranking’s top 20, exceeding the No. 22 peak of Mark Knopfler’s Guitar Heroes’ “Going Home (Theme From Local Hero),” for which he joined its all-star cast, in 2024.

Attention around “Streets of Minneapolis” stems from its subject matter. Springsteen wrote and recorded the anti-ICE (United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement) song following the deaths of Renée Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis in January amid Operation Metro Surge, during which undocumented immigrants have been targeted and apprehended by ICE.

Springsteen first performed the song live in Minneapolis Jan. 30 during the Tom Morello-helmed Defend Minnesota benefit concert.


Thanks to its sales plus streams and early radio airplay, “Streets of Minneapolis” also bows at No. 20 on the multimetric Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart. In addition to its sales, the song drew 678,000 official U.S. streams and 175,000 in airplay audience in that two-day span.

The left's taste in music is awful.
 
The ironic thing is when he gets his communist government many entertainers like him, they and their music will be outlawed. He will be playing at a gulag.
 
Hmmm..seems this song appears to resonate among many Americans.
They're spending their hard-earned money on it--not bad for a has-been, washed-out rocker!


Bruce Springsteen’s “Streets of Minneapolis” was the highest-selling song in the United States last week, even with it being available for just two days of the tracking period, debuting at No. 1 on Billboard’s Digital Song Sales chart dated Feb. 7.

“Streets of Minneapolis” marks Springsteen’s first No. 1 on the all-format Digital Song Sales survey, which began in 2004 following the proliferation of paid downloads on the internet. In fact, it’s his first track to reach the ranking’s top 20, exceeding the No. 22 peak of Mark Knopfler’s Guitar Heroes’ “Going Home (Theme From Local Hero),” for which he joined its all-star cast, in 2024.

Attention around “Streets of Minneapolis” stems from its subject matter. Springsteen wrote and recorded the anti-ICE (United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement) song following the deaths of Renée Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis in January amid Operation Metro Surge, during which undocumented immigrants have been targeted and apprehended by ICE.

Springsteen first performed the song live in Minneapolis Jan. 30 during the Tom Morello-helmed Defend Minnesota benefit concert.


Thanks to its sales plus streams and early radio airplay, “Streets of Minneapolis” also bows at No. 20 on the multimetric Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart. In addition to its sales, the song drew 678,000 official U.S. streams and 175,000 in airplay audience in that two-day span.
Who cares? It’s just Springsteen being a douche again.
 
Hmmm..seems this song appears to resonate among many Americans.
They're spending their hard-earned money on it--not bad for a has-been, washed-out rocker!


Bruce Springsteen’s “Streets of Minneapolis” was the highest-selling song in the United States last week, even with it being available for just two days of the tracking period, debuting at No. 1 on Billboard’s Digital Song Sales chart dated Feb. 7.

“Streets of Minneapolis” marks Springsteen’s first No. 1 on the all-format Digital Song Sales survey, which began in 2004 following the proliferation of paid downloads on the internet. In fact, it’s his first track to reach the ranking’s top 20, exceeding the No. 22 peak of Mark Knopfler’s Guitar Heroes’ “Going Home (Theme From Local Hero),” for which he joined its all-star cast, in 2024.

Attention around “Streets of Minneapolis” stems from its subject matter. Springsteen wrote and recorded the anti-ICE (United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement) song following the deaths of Renée Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis in January amid Operation Metro Surge, during which undocumented immigrants have been targeted and apprehended by ICE.

Springsteen first performed the song live in Minneapolis Jan. 30 during the Tom Morello-helmed Defend Minnesota benefit concert.


Thanks to its sales plus streams and early radio airplay, “Streets of Minneapolis” also bows at No. 20 on the multimetric Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart. In addition to its sales, the song drew 678,000 official U.S. streams and 175,000 in airplay audience in that two-day s

Has been? Are you sure you didn't mean never was?
 
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