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Bruce Springsteen Image Credit: Getty Images

Bruce Springsteen couldn’t cast a spell over the the producers of the Harry Potter film franchise. The Bossadmitted ission during a Wednesday interview on BBC Radio 2 when asked to address a rumour that he had written I’ll Stand By You for one of the Harry Potter films.

“That is true,” he said. “They didn’t use it.”

Springsteen said he wrote the song for his eldest son.

“It was a big ballad that was very uncharacteristic of something I’d sing myself. But it was something that I thought would have fit [in],” Springsteen said.

He’s still hoping to have it included in a “children’s movie of some sort because it was a pretty lovely song”.

According to Springsteen fan forum BruceBase wiki, the song possibly dates as far back as 1998, and was inspired by Springsteen’s experience reading the Harry Potter novels to his son. The site alleges that Springsteen offered the song to director Chris Columbus, who directed the first Harry Potter installment, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone in 2001. Author J.K. Rowling is said to have had a contract stipulation that prevented the use of commercial songs in the Harry Potter films.

On Wednesday, member’s of Trainspotting’s crew claimed that Oasis turned down the chance to feature on the soundtrack for the classic because Noel Gallagher presumed the film was about actual trainspotters rather than an adaptation of Irvine Welsh’s black comedy about heroin addiction in Edinburgh.