- Stranger In Town · 1978
- A Very Special Christmas · 1987
- Against the Wind · 1980
- Night Moves · 1976
- Stranger In Town · 1978
- Night Moves · 1976
- Stranger In Town · 1978
- Stranger In Town · 1978
- Like a Rock · 1986
- The Distance · 1982
- Greatest Hits · 1980
- 'Live' Bullet · 1973
- Against the Wind · 1980
Essential Albums
- Released on the heels of a breakthrough 1976, Stranger in Town marked Seger’s first album after becoming a bona fide star. Not that you’d know it outside, say, “Hollywood Nights”, which tells tale of a homesick Midwestern boy looking out at L.A. For the most part, Stranger sticks to the same passionate rave-ups (“Feel Like a Number”, “Old Time Rock and Roll”) and hard-bitten ballads (“Still the Same”, “Till It Shines”) that paved Seger’s road to fame in the first place—a strong but humble sound that still resonates.
- Released more than 10 years into his career, Night Moves transformed Bob Seger from regional hero to national star. Throwing together everything from roadhouse rave-ups (“Mary Lou”) to bittersweet, Van Morrison-style ballads (“Night Moves”), the album stands as a monument to the power of rock ’n' roll at its most passionately direct, revelling in the past while still trying to cut loose in the present. Or, as Seger puts it in “Rock and Roll Never Forgets,” “Sweet Sixteen’s turned 31”.
Albums
- 1986
- 1982
- 1976
Music Videos
Artist Playlists
- A set of arena-filling intimacy from the legendary Detroit rocker.
- Seger's heartfelt music is felt by country, rock, even metal legends.
- Classic rock and R&B titans that inspired Seger's work.
- B-sides and live tracks that illustrate the rock icon's depth.
Singles & EPs
- 2021
Live Albums
About Bob Seger & The Silver Bullet Band
Bob Seger’s status as a rock icon rests upon his run of albums with The Silver Bullet Band from the mid-’70s until the early ’90s. With his raspy, underdog voice front and centre, albums like 1976’s Night Moves, 1978’s Stranger In Town, 1980’s Against the Wind and 1986’s Like a Rock became cornerstones of a heartland rock movement that also counts Bruce Springsteen and John Mellencamp among its giants. Seger himself is as blue-collar as they come. A Detroiter born in 1945, he grew up listening to ’50s rock ’n’ roll and R&B on his transistor radio. His father was a skilled musician, but he left the family to fend for themselves when Seger was only 10. This hardscrabble attitude shaped the first 15 years of his career, which were marked by a string of short-lived bands including The Last Heard and The Bob Seger System, gruelling tours that stretched on forever and gritty records that, outside of “Ramblin’ Gamblin’ Man” (a U.S. Top 40 hit in 1968), remained regional Midwest hits. Along the way, Seger bounced back and forth between garage rock, sweaty soul and even psychedelia before nailing the sublimely rootsy style heard on “Night Moves”, the landmark 1976 single that not only catapulted him to stardom but also set the stage for working-class anthems like “Old Time Rock & Roll”, “Feel Like a Number” and “Mainstreet”. Though Seger’s recording career had slowed considerably by the late ’90s, his influence on modern music has remained profound. Both Kid Rock and Metallica can be counted among his loyal fanbase, while 21st-century country music frequently sounds more indebted to Seger’s heartland rock than it does to traditional Nashville twang.
- FROM
- Detroit, MI, United States
- FORMED
- 1974
- GENRE
- Rock