MUSICIAN – SPRINGSTEEN 1992

Quest’articolo su Springsteen è tratto dal Musician Magazine’s  del novembre 1992.

AT THE WORLD MUSIC THEATRE, a big new shed sitting out in a corn field an hour south of Chicago, Bruce Springsteen and his new band are playing “Better Days” to an empty room. It’s afternoon soundcheck for the first of two nights at the World. When Springsteen finishes the song, distant cheering comes from somewhere beyond the grassy embankment that rises behind the last row of seats. “There’s people out there! Bruce calls into his mike and another distant roar answers. It’s the sound of early-arriving fans, camped out beyond the gates. Bruce’s wife, Patti Scialfa, approaches from the wings, slips on her guitar and she and Bruce practice their “Brilliant Disguise”harmonies three or four times. But Patti’s got something on her mind more pressing than practice. She confers anxiously with her husband while the band stands in place. He listens, answers, listens again, then nods. Patti rushes offstage, a big smile on her face, saying, “Where’s the E-man?” A minute later she comes back carrying Evan Springsteen, two years old and wearing protective plastic ear muffs. Evan is psyched. Patti puts him down next to his dad and Bruce takes Patti’s vocal mike off its stand, says in an Elvis voice, Ladies and gentlemen, I’d like to introduce a special guest,” and puts the mike in Evan’s hand. Bruce starts playing “Johnny B. Goode,” mouthing the words for the little boy like come on, son, you know this one.

 Evan’s inherited his father’s onstage stance—he plants his little feet far apart, puts the mike to his mouth and—when Dad gets to the “go go”s Evan sings, “wo wo!” Bruce is playing, the band is tapping along, Uncle Roy Bittan comes down from the keyboard riser to clap Evan on and Bruce is smiling at his kid and insisting, “Go! Go!” and Evan is insisting “Wo! Wo! ” Go, Johnny, Wo, Johnny, Wo Wo Johnny B. Goode. Bruce shifts to a Bo Diddley beat and tries to get Evan to sing, “Papa gonna buy you a mockingbird” but Evan won’t let go of the wowos. The band, laughing (and not minding one bit that this means supper is on the table), slips away. Patti sits down on the stage chatting with bandmember Crystal Taliefero. Evan’s little sister Jessica finds her way out and Bruce scoops up both his babies and walks around the drums with a kid in each arm. It could be the living room of any young family, except for all the musical equipment. These are Bruce Springsteen’s better days. It’s a big change,” Bruce says when asked about traveling with this new family. “In the past I think one of the ideas of the road was the idea of escape. The other idea is the search for adventure or experience. For me, part of it was throwing off whatever your daily life is. Even when you’re traveling in a van with six other guys, it’s all-consuming.
It’s not that particular thing for me anymore. So the trick now was to make it all work together. It’s been going
good. “If I have any knowledge about the way that relationships work— whether it’s partners or kids—it’s, you gotta be there. That’s what kids want—to see you on a steady basis. That’s the most fundamental thing that youcommunicate. Particularly when they’re real young. The first five or six weeks everybody was adjusting to it.
Particularly because at the time the schedule was tighter and the show felt so exhausting. That took a little
reorienting. ‘I can’t play this many shows this close together ’cause then when I go home all I’m going to do is
sleep.'” Springsteen laughs. “I’m not going to be any good to anybody. So we sorted it out, the spacing is slightly better, and it’s been great. I’ve got plenty of energy, we all travel together. I really, really enjoy it. Part of what Patti does with me is say, ‘Get out there and work! Get out there! Say what you’ve got to say.’ And if you feel what you have to say has some value, that’s what you want to do.”
On “Local Hero,” one of the cornerstones of his concerts and his Lucky Town album, Springsteen tells the story of a man who finds his way home from a debilitating life of fame and travel. He is rescued by a “gypsy girl,” he settles down with her, but Iying in bed he still hears the highway call. It’s a funnier version of the story he told in a Cautious Man” on Tunnel of Love. No matter how happy domestic life gets, the character still hears temptation whispering.
“Oh yeah!” Springsteen says. “You got to! You don’t ever not hear that. That never goes away. That’s the point. That’s what makes your choice mean something.” Maybe what Springsteen’s figured out that the Local Hero and the Cautious Man haven’t is that it’s a false choice: When the family man hears the road calling he can go to it—and take the wife and kids along.
Springsteen is closing most of his shows with My Beautiful Reward, a song of vague dislocation, in which the
narrator surveys ever,vthing he has and wonders why he still has not found complete satisfaction. In the final verse, in an unusual flight of poetry, the singer turns into a black bird and soars over gray fields and rivers, still searching. “I think I saw the image somewhere in a book,” Springsteen says. aWhen I started I planned to write a nice song about my kids. It just took a funny turn. It was one of those songs like ‘Highway Patrolman’ in that there was a certain inconclusiveness to it that always made me feel like it wasn’t finished. I kept trying to make it nice and neat, to tie up the ending and make it more concrete. After I recorded it I thought, ‘I didn’t quite get it on this one.’ But then it started to come out and I realized it was right the way it was. It’s one of those songs you don’t consciously write—it comes up out of your unconscious or subconscious. That’s why it’s better than the stuff you slave over. I haven’t tried to really interpret it. It was dealing with death in some fashion.”
It suggests both the possibility of finally finding your beautiful reward, and also the chance that even when your
soul is floating out of your body you’ll still be looking for it in vain. Springsteen answers, “I think it’s that there is no concrete it, that idea that you reach a point where a) everything’s okay, b) you’re going to be happy now forever, c) you figure out everything. That’s not the way life is lived, that’s not the human experience. I think that when you begin to deal concretely with your own mortality and your family and your partner, death becomes a big part of that equation. You see your children. Well. Your children are vour afterlife, there they are. And your love with your partner is, too. That lives on through your kids. That’s your after life.
“Forty-two is still really young, but it’s old enough to see the whole picture, and it’s old enough to stop living
completely for yourself and to start seeing the lines that you’re leaving, how things start to spread out in front of you. That was a good song to finish the record with because I wasn’t trying to make an Everything’s Coming Up Roses kind of record. I was trying to make a record that was really strongly positive and had a feeling of real love in it and real hope. Because I’ve felt and found those things in my own life. But I wasn’t trying to present it as a blueprint. I was trying to stay away from all the fairy tale stuff. That song expresses a little bit of the part of everybody that’s always alone.
aIt’s not like any of my early road songs, it’s not about escape. It’s about coming to terms with different realities. Sort of a confrontation with your own individual soul or spirit. But I think it was an important end for that record. I was trying to write aboutlike in ‘Big Muddy’—moral ambivalence and moral ambiguousness. Hey, morality is something a lot of people can’t afford.”
One of the reasons aBeautiful Reward” comes as a surprise is that while his early songs contained great bursts ofpoetic language, Springsteen has for years pared his Iyrics down to basics. On this tour, when he performs
aGrowin’ Up” or even aThunder Road,” the change in his songwriting over the years is striking. He says that
change was premeditated.aThere were two reasons. I altered the language of music. And I wanted to get away from the Dylan comparisons at the time. Which, really, I go back now and the songs had a lot of imagery in them but they weren’t like Bob’s songs at all. But at the time I was self-conscious about it and trying to find my own voice. I just felt like I wanted to speak more directly. I liked the way Robbie Robertson was writing at the time with the Band. Sort of colloquial. It
sounded like people telling stories and talking about themselves, as if you were sitting on the couch. So I started to go in that direction. In the end I’m not sure what difference it makes in communicating, but at the time it was something I wanted to pursue and I’ve gone that way ever since. I tend to opt for simplicity and clarity. I like the images to be clear.”
Singing songs like “Growin’ Up” now, Springsteen says, “They all had funny imagery and a lot of humor in them.And I got some of that back on Lucky Town. That humor’s sometimes the toughest thing for me to get into my music.”
What’s changed a lot on Lucky Town, though, is the degree to which Springsteen is writing in the first person—his new songs are sung by me” to “you.” There’s no Magic Rat, no Highway Patrolman, standing in.
“You get more comfortable with who you are and you create less of a persona,” Springsteen says. “I was
concerned about the music being that. That’s what I was looking for. That’s what I waited for when I was off: to find something that felt like the music I should be singing now. Something I felt would be defining to my audience, that would help people get a fix on where I’m standing and who I am. I waited for quite a while for that stuff to come out and for me to be able to get to it. I initially tried to write more genre-like. Some of the better examDles of that ended up on Human Touch. I alwavs say. ‘Oh.
I’ll make this album 10 rock songs or 10 this or 10 that, get away from searching searching all the time.’ If I put more records out maybe I’d have an opportunity to do that. I’d like to put more records out, but I always say that and never do.
“I had been through a lot of changes and a lot of experiences through the ’80s. I think people listen to my music to find out about themselves. I’ve got to press to find out about myself before I can broaden it and present it. So it took a while. But it felt good.”
I tell Springsteen that it’s surprising to hear how much his writing is affected by his expectations of how it will be heard. In the ’70s he worried about irrelevant Dylan comparisons, in the ‘9Os he sweats over what his audience expects.
“I guess,” he says softly. Yeah, yeah. I believe everybody who writes has an audience in his head, whether it’s an imaginary audience or your real audience. I had a feeling who my audience was most of the time and why people came to my music or bought my records or came to my shows. I felt I knew what I was delivering that drew people to those things. At least a core of the people that have come. I always write with an audience in mind. Not in terms of if it’ll be a big hit, but in terms of what the music’s delivering. It’s pretty simple—I try to write really well, I try to write emotionally. And if I feel that coming back at me then I feel like I’m doing my job. That’s why people come to my music—for some emotional experience or a perspective, either on their own lives or on the world that they’re living in, or on their relationships. For a perspective.
“Until I get some perspective on it, I can’t find it. Once I find a point of view, that’s wherc I’m standing and that’s when the records are released. That’s what gives me the motivation to come out and travel and tour and work and try to stay a part of the thread of people’s lives, just by doing my job.” Bruce lets out a laugh. “It feels like a big job a lot of the time. I’m historically ambivalent at this point; it’s just always been a part of my personality that I say, ‘Gee, maybe I should’ve been a truck driver.’ It’s baloney but everybody does it. Maybe it’s a way of escaping whatever you feel the responsibility of your job is.
“I’ve tried to keep my eye on the ball, to keep a clear view of those things. And I try to be consistent with the
characters. The guy on ‘Beautiful Reward’ is the guy on ‘Born to Run.’ Hey, that’s where life has taken these
people. I always try to make sure the stuff I’m writing is inclusive in that sense. That it’s broad enough. It’s partly about me but for it to work right it’s got to also be partly about you. If it’s just one or the other something’s missing.”
Springsteen moves around his dressing room. Outside the fans are coming in. “I’d like to do more experimental things,” he says. “Things where I step out of that specific chronology. I feel like I need to find an outlet that will sort of allow me to take a side road here and a side road
there. If I made more records I’d be able to do that, even if they were less consistent in some fashion.”
Like Neil Young? “Yeah! He goes over here and over there. I like the idea of that freedom. I don’t tend to do it on my own. At some point I’d like to find some place to move like that.”
OUT IN THE BACKSTAGE CORRIDOR is Roy Bittan, the happiest man in Illinois. I’ve never seen Roy this happy. He’s been Springsteen’s keyboard player for 18 years, he’s been a top session pianist, he’s the only member of the E Street Band still playing with Bruce, he co-produced the Human Touch album and even cowrote two
songs, he’s got a beautiful wife, a wonderful son, a beach house in Malibu, but that’s not why Roy is so happy. “I just got the R&R numbers!” he tells the other musicians, who may or may not know that Radio Records is a broadcasting tipsheet. “We’re the second most added record in the country! Only Bobby Brown is ahead of us!”
Roy is bouncing off the walls. No, it’s not a Bruce Springsteen record he’s so excited about. It’s “Sometimes Love Just Ain’t Enough by Patty Smyth with Don Henley, a single from a new Patty Smyth album produced bydrum roll)—Roy Bittan. Roy has been trying to establish himself as a record producer for years (Springsteen says he is especially fond of an album Roy produced last year for singer/songwriter Will T. Massey). The fact that Bruce
made Roy coproducer of his album was a huge boost—but as all Springsteen albums are produced by a team that
includes Bruce, managerJon Landau and engineer Chuck Plotkin, it did not necessarily establish Roy as a first-call
record maker in the eyes of the industry. Getting a hit for Patty Smyth does.
I mention to Roy that I could call a friend at Billboard to find out next week’s chart position. Roy’s eyes light up.
We go to a pay phone and Roy stands there saying (or praying), “Let it go to number nine. Nine, nine, nine, nine.”
“It’s number seven, Roy.”
“SEVEN! IT’S NUMBER SEVEN!! I’M TOP TEN!” Roy goes off to share the good news with Landau, comanager
Barbara Carr, the crew, the cook, the security guard….
Roy is the link between the glory days of the E Street Band and the risky new course Springsteen’s set out on.
Chances are the E Street Band will play again (as he started this tour Springsteen surprised his old bandmates with
a generous and unexpected gift—royalties on all the albums they made together), but Springsteen talks about
wanting the freedom to make any kind of album with any different musicians. He talks about making a whole
album with the sort of bass-driven, dense sound of the re-mixed “57 Channels,” or an album that builds songs to
accommodate his guitar playing, instead of the other way around. He has a lot of ideas and this band is only the
first of them.
This band started with Bruce and Roy and a young trio—guitarist Shane Fontayne (ex-Mick Ronson, Mick Taylor,
Lone Justice, with Jimmy Page hair, stagger and British accent), Tommy Sims (a session bassist for everyone from
Divinyls to Garth Brooks who has never before gone on the road) and Zachary Alford, the young drummer of the
New York band Bodybag. That was the band that did “Saturday Night Live” and played a private showcase at New
York’s Bottom Line. At that Bottom Line show Bruce brought up singer Bobby King to duet on a couple of the
more soulbased songs from Human Touch. After the show, King was invited to do the whole tour.
Back in Los Angeles, with the first date of the tour breathing down their necks and a live nationwide radio
broadcast even closer, Springsteen started auditioning background singers. To save time he had them come in and
sing in groups, eliminating vocalists one by one until there was no one else he could bear to cut. That’s how Bruce
ended up with four backup vocalists beside King— Cleopatra Kennedy (ex-Diana Ross and James Cleveland), Gia
Ciambotti (from the Graces), Carol Dennis (longtime Dylan backup) and Angel Rogers (Stevie Wonder, Paula
Abdul). Five days before the radio broadcast they made one more addition—Crystal Taliefero, a singer/guitarist/
percussionist/sax player who has become Bruce’s main onstage foil.
All these musicians took a little time to become a band. Some of them weren’t even all too sure who Bruce
Springsteen was and were startled at the size and fervor of his audiences. During an 11-show stand at the Brendan
Byrne Arena in NewJersey inJuly and August the band found itself. Initially Bruce was carrying the whole show
without the safety net the E Street Band had always provided. Early concerts felt a little too careful, as if the players
were more scared than enthused, which sometimes forced Bruce dangerously close to the line where great
showmanship slips into shtick. Afternoon soundchecks were spent with Bruce teaching the band more and more
songs from his catalog, which they’d perform in public that night. No wonder some of them looked a little shellshocked.
But over the course of those 11 Jersey concerts the musicians relaxed,
got to know the songs and each other a lot better, and found their confidence as a unit. By the last night, when
Bruce pulled out “Sandy” and “Rosalita,” the new group seemed to have learned the lesson of the roller
coaster—how to have fun with terror.
They rolled into Massachusetts with what some longtime fans dared to call the best Springsteen concerts ever.
Band consensus is that they topped those in Philadelphia. Tonight in Illinois, they are sailing. The balance between
new material and old, which tilted backward in New Jersey, is moving toward the new stuff again. “57 Channels”
has grown from the Albert-Ayler-learns-guitar version of “Saturday Night Live” into a raging indictment of
Republican policy with police sirens wailing and a throbbing chant of “No justice, no peace.” “Souls of the
Departed” has become one of several guitar blow-outs where Springsteen challenges his usual limits. Tonight he
takes it into Hendrix’s “Star-Spangled Banner.” USoul Driver” has lost its gospel lilt and become a slow, moody
piece a little like something from Van Morrison’s Veedon Fleece. Springsteen rewards the attention his fans pay to
this new material with lots of his hits, as well as crowd-pleasing bonuses like Working on the Highway” and
“Darlington County.”
Bruce explains, I had a variety of theories before I started the tour about what I was going to do, but you don’t
know until you get out there. I thought I was gonna be playing a shorter show.” He laughs. “That’s almost always
wrong. The minute you step in an arena. . . An arena is a funnv thin. Tust the word itself: the stadium. the
coliseum.
theforum. The scale of the places generally calls for some large heroic or antiheroic action. I think the size of the
show over the years expanded to meet that particular thing I felt in air. That’s kinda what people come for. The
arena is a bigger-than-life experience. I think once you step out of the theater it’s a different ball game. So I’m
probably playing longer than I thought I would be and playing more old things than I thought I would be as the
result of playing longer. As the show expanded I followed the line of the way the thing moved and felt and what
resonated best. About 60 per cent new stuff and 40 per cent old is what feels good on a nightly basis right now.
Springsteen was always a cautious man about how to present his live shows. He played clubs until long after he
was big enough to fill theaters, he stayed in theaters when arenas made more sense, he stuck to arenas when
stadiums were beckoning, finally moved to stadiums with great success in 1985, and then—for the 1988 Tunnel of
Love tour insisted on going back to arenas. aI was always paranoid of expansion,” Bruce says. “What was I going
to lose? That’s how I approached life in general: I couldn’t imagine what I’d gain, I could only see what I’d lose.”
It’s between sets and I settle into the
backstage hospitality room when a horde of people with guest passes pour through the door en masse and start
stripping the buffet. It’s like the stateroom scene in Night at the Opera, they fill the place and keep coming. Ah, I
figure, radio contest winners ! No, I’m corrected, Crystal Taliefero’s guest list. Crystal—a fireball on and
offstage—grew up in nearby Indiana and played in local hero John Mellencamp’s band. Everyone she ever met
called her for tickets to this. After the show, at a private party at a chic restaurant that’s been opened just for the
band, I’m introduced to Crystal’s dad Charles, a real nice man. He asks what I do and I tell him I work at a music
magazine, that I got a call yesterday at suppertime asking if I could be in Chicago the next morning to spend three
days with Springsteen. It was a mad rush, I say, but you know, I gesture to the fancy surroundings, there are harder
jobs. “Yeah,” he says. “You could work in an oil refinery. Like me.”
We get the word that soup’s on and choose tables while waiters pile up our plates. Bruce and Patti arrive like the
bride and groom at a wedding reception and go around the room saying hi. During some shows Bruce tells the
crowd that since he’s not selling records anymore, he’s had to take on a sponsor this tour. The fans boo and he tells
them, But it’s not a beer! It’s not an athletic sneaker! This tour is sponsored by LOVE! ” Now it’s not my place to
say this, but I think the company that might be able to overcome Springsteen’s historic aversion to corporate
sponsorship is Chef Boy-ar-Dee. Because, let me tell you, this tour is the pasta express. There’s noodles cooking
in the hospitality room, there’s angel hair steaming in the catering room, before Bruce goes on stage he sits in his
dressing room chowing down on spaghetti, and tonight—for a special treat—he’s leading everybody through a
fancy 2 a.m. multi-pasta dinner. In spite of his Dutch name, Springsteen is of Irish and Italian heritage. If his
father’s Irishness sometimes emerges in the black fatalism that underlines even his most joyous music, his mother’s
Italianness sure dominates Bruce’s menu.
Bruce and Patti take a seat at a table with Zack, Shane and Gia and Bruce regales his new musicians with tall tales
of the E Street Band’s adventures. There was the Jersey club owner who thought an amp was too loud, so he pulled
out a gun and shot it. There was the time when the band reached football stadiums that Roy Bittan and Nils
Lofgren were so engrossed in a ping-pong game that they didn’t know the rest of the band had gone on. The
musicians who were onstage could not get the attention of an excited Springsteen, who looked out at the mass of
humanity and screamed “ONE TWO THREE FOUR! Instead of Roy’s majestic synthesizer hook opening “Born
in the U.S.A.,” he heard the dink dink dink of Danny Federici playing the line on the high end of the piano. Bruce
laughs and says, “I looked down and saw 80,000 people going huh?”
That story gets a big laugh from the new musicians, but it sends a chill through crew members who were there.
They remember Bruce coming offstage at intermission and looking for the guy whose job was to collect the band
before the shov. Bruce held up his hand and asked, “How many fingers? Five? How many with this hand, too?
Ten? Now how many people in the band? How high do you have to be able to count?
There’s a lot that’s fun in hitching along on Springsteen’s ride,
but there’s a lot of responsibility, too. Jon Landau is Springsteen’s manager, his record producing partner,
probably his best friend. Landau is considered to be one of the shrewdest and toughest powers in the record
business. But it would be a mistake to think of Springsteen as the friendly guy, Landau as the tough one; Bruce as
the pal, Jon as the boss; Bruce as the music, Jon as the business. They’re both both. They work together so well
because they are a lot alike.
Over at his table, Landau talks quietly about Springsteen’s relationship with Columbia Records, the subject of a lot
of scrutiny and gossip. First, it was widely perceived that Landau’s public expression of lack of faith in former
Columbia boss Walter Yetnikoff helped bring Yetnikoff down. Second, other record labels have made little secret
of their hunger to sign Springsteen, which would be an embarrassment to Columbia. Third, the two new albums
Springsteen released last spring, Human Touch and Lucky Town, did not sell in the multi-platinum numbers that
were expected. One might think that Landau would have doubts about the current Columbia regime led by Tommy
Mottola and Don Ienner. But Landau says nothing is further from the truth. In fact, he brings up the subject in
order to dispel it. Sure, he says, there was some tension before the albums were delivered. Mottola had been
waiting for three years—who could blame him if he was impatient? And Ienner had come over from Arista; who
could blame him if he said, hey, if a Bruce Springsteen album is a smash I won’t get the credit, Yetnikoff will. But,
Landau insists, since the albums have not done as well as expected, Mottola and Ienner have been incredible. They
have refused to give up, they have kept working the records, they have been wonderful. Landau says he and the
Columbia chiefs are closer now than they ever were before.
One place Springsteen and Landau do part company a bit is in how much each cares about commercial success.
Virtually everyone who knows Bruce well—even those with hard feelings about other things—says he is motivated
by devotion to his art; the marketplace does not much interest him. Now that Bruce is on the road, playing the
music he loves to the audience who loves him, Jon has had to twist Bruce’s arm to get him to agree to do any
promotion at all. Tonight Jon is relieved that he just finished the exhausting task of convincing Bruce to
do an acoustic television concert for MTV’s “Unplugged.” He says that like every such decision, it was a huge tug
of war. “And now that Bruce has agreed to do it he’ll spend the next three weeks—two of which are his
vacation—obsessing over it. It will occupy all his thoughts until it’s done.”
The next afternoon I ask Bruce about it. I find him in his dressing room two hours before show time, strumming
an acoustic guitar.
“Yeah, I’m gonna take a stab at that,” he says. “A lot of the new songs, particularly on Lucky Town, are pretty folkbased.
It’s all stuff I can sing by myself or with a band. They work a lot of different ways. I have some ideas for
some small arrangements that’ll push the songs themselves out front and give me a chance to present the material in
a different way.
“At some point I want to do an acoustic tour by myself and play in theaters. It’s something I’ve been wanting to do
for a long time. When I did the Christic Institute benefit I said, ‘Oh, I can do this.’ I’d like to work more steadily
now if I can get myself to do it. And Patti’s got her record coming [in February] and she’s going to be working in
some fashion, so we’re trying to figure a way to make it all work out. Theoretically I’d like to work more, whether I
have a new record out or not. Just go out and play. There’s so many things I could do that I haven’t done yet, so
many ways of presenting the music that I haven’t done that I’m anxious to do. I’d like to do something out of this
particular rhythm I’ve gotten into. I think that’s in the cards. In the ’90s I want to do a lot of different things. I feel
freer to branch out.”
Springsteen mentions that at the Christic Institute benefit concert in 1990 he got to sit down and do some songs at
the piano, something else that vanished when his shows moved from theaters to arenas in the late ’70s. Although
Bruce had spent the ’60s playing in local New Jersey rock bands, he only got discovered when he went up to
Greenwich Village in the ’70s and played folk clubs.
UIt was a funny time, ’72, ’73,” he says. UI used to come down to Max’s Kansas City and play by myself. Paul
Nelson would bring some people down. I used to open for Dave Van Ronk, Odetta, all those people were still
around. David Blue came down one night and as I was walking offstage he said, ‘Hey man, that was great! Come
with me.’ We got in a cab and went downtown to the Bitter End where I met Jackson Browne. He had his first
album out. I auditioned forJohn Hammond at the old Gaslight. And then late at night the New York Dolls would
play at Max’s. They’d play at 2 a.m. Max’s was still really thriving at the time, the whole downstairs scene was
going on. It was the cusp of those two things. I was opening for, like, Biff Rose but there was that whole other
scene starting to come in.”
I ask Springsteen when he realized that he could compete with Dylan, with Robbie Robertson—when did you
knowyou could work at that level?
Springsteen answers slowly. “I just thought I was gonna be a guy who was gonna have to. . .work really hard.”
We both crack up laughing. “I wanted to have my own vision and point of view and create a world of characters,
which is what the writers I admired did. It was a world unto itself, a world you slipped into, and yet a world that felt
connected to the real world in some very important ways. I knew when I was very young I wanted to do that.
Dylan’s writing—that’s just what felt exciting. So I took off in that direction. Hey, everybody shoots for the top!
You don’t know where it’s gonna lead you. I just took it a day at a time. I had a real serious dedication to it, but I
always felt I’d have to really sweat it out, to work really hard at it.
“I think I wrote ambitiously. From the beginning I wrote wildly big with the idea of taking the whole thing in and
being definitive in some fashion. I think the show took on that approach also. I was ambitious. He laughs. “I was
ambitious. I was shooting for the moon.”
He adds quietly, “And I guess somewhere inside I felt like I could hit it.”
TONIGHT IS THE LAST NIGHT of the summer tour. Everyone has two weeks off before reconvening in L.A. to
begin the autumn stretch. It’s a beautiful September evening. During The River a bright half moon shines through
an opening in the roof next to the stage. Springsteen pulls out all the stops. The show climaxes with an electrifying
version of “Light of Day,” the song Bruce wrote for Paul Schrader’s movie about a rock band. Springsteen has
played “Light of Day” on other tours, but it didn’t lift off the way it was meant to—it seemed to try too hard to be
joyous and came off as a sort of weaker “Out in the Street.” This tour, though, he’s brought out what he must have
known was inside the song, ’cause it’s the high point of the concert. Springsteen hurls the band through “Light of
Day” in a wailing frenzy, drives the audience completely crazy, and then freezes in place as the music slams to a
stop. This is not a new trick but Bruce really milks it, standing rigid as a statue while flowers, hats, and other
objects fly past him (I ask later how he avoids flinching when an object comes sailing out of the dark and just
misses his eye. Bruce: “That would be bad form! “). Then he screams and the whole band slams back into action.
This may be repeated once, twice, even three times during the song, the crowd getting wilder each time. Sometimes
Bruce fills the silence between stops with Dirty Harry’s “Are you feelin’ lucky, punk?” speech. Usually he flicks
his eyes from one side of the house to the other, creating eruptions of cheering wherever his glance falls. Tonight
he falls over flat on his back. The singers rush to prop him up by the mike stand and after a dramatic, James
Brownlike pause Bruce screams and kicks it in again. From that point on all bets are off. He doesn’t even bother
leaving the stage between finishing the usual hour of encore numbers and pulling out the bonus Working on the
Highway.”
It’s midnight as that song plays. Outside in the moonlight, Patti Scialfa is doing donuts in the parking lot in the
promoter’s 1960 El Dorado convertible, a beautiful machine with tail fins you could shave with. “Working on the
Highway” ends, the crowd explodes, and out the back door comes the running, sweating, laughing, toweling band.
Last show! Last show! Standing in the parking lot they hug and say goodbye to each other, to Patti, to Landau, to
Barbara Carr. They break into small groups and climb into the waiting vans. Inside they give each other handslaps
and…uh-oh…Where’s Bruce? Roadies come running out the back door yelling, “He’s back onstage! ” The
musicians whoop and pour out of the vans, race up the steps, in the back door, down the backstage corridor,
through the stage doors, into the wings, across the ramps and back onstage as Bruce kicks into “Bobby Jean.” By
the time he starts “Hungry Heart” and climbs up on top of the speaker columns. it’s clear nobody in this audience
is going to work in the morning.
As a police car leads the speeding vans through the crowds and traffic and back toward Chicago, Roy Bittan, the
old vet, congratulates the young recruits on finishing their first campaign. “We made it, boys! Thirty-eight shows!
Half the tour! All are exhausted, elated, delighted. The cop leading the vans hits his siren and Bobby King says,
”Oops, I thought it was the intro to ’57 Channels’! I almost started chanting ‘No justice, no peace!’ D Tearing up the
highway toward Chicago, Roy talks about how strange it was to be told the E Street Band was ending, live with that
for three tough weeks, and then be invited by Bruce to get back together—to collaborate on songwriting and
production as well as playing! When the E Street Band ended he took it as a sign that it was time to give himself
fully to producing. He was in L.A., he got management—and then Bruce called back. Did he hesitate at all before
reenlisting? “Are you kidding? Bittan asks. “No! Artistically, Bruce is the best. I hope to always work with him.
And the fact that we were writing together
meant our relationship was progressing. That was important to me. ” As we drive down Michigan Avenue, past the
jutting castle tower of the Chicago Waterworks, Roy tries to explain to undomestic Shane why every building,
every house, must have a small pipe coming through the roof to accommodate water pressure. Shane stares at Roy
with polite incomprehension. Roy says, “Think of it as a parametric equalizer for your toilet.” He is the man they
call professor.”
Bruce lands in the hotel bar and raises a glass of champagne to his bandmates. I compliment him on the guitar solo
he took on “Human Touch,” a keening, almost whistling lead quite different from his usual playing. Bruce says
he’s been working on his guitar playing a lot late Iy, and often thinks that if he’d stuck with that—his first
vocation—instead of switching his concentration to songwriting he might have become a really good guitarist.
“In my first band I was hired as the lead guitarist,” Bruce says.”I couldn’t play much lead but I could play a little
more than everybody else. Like any at a/l! There was a time when the general playing ability in the local bands was
really rudimentary. And it seems like everybody learned a lot slower. I think these days kids pick up a guitar and in
a year or two they’ve got the Eddie Van Halen licks goin’!”
I tell Bruce we shouldn’t have this discussion in the bar. Let’s go up and get the tape recorder out. Bruce
Springsteen is a cautious man. He wants to work this out. It’s quarter to two. Bruce wants to go get a massage,
which he reckons will take until quarter of three. Then he wants to get some dinner. He asks if it would be okay if
he came by my room to tape some more interview at 4 a.m. Sure, I say, great, see you then. For
tl.o nPYt tr 1 C T rl;cr tl.o
truth in 57 channels and nothing on.” At 4:15 Bruce calls and says, let’s wait till morning. Fine, I say. I close my
eyes and it seems like about two seconds later I hear “shave and a haircut” knocking on my door. I open it and
there’s Bruce. He comes in, sits down and starts talking. An hour, two hours, three hours. The phone rings, he’s
going to miss his ride to the airport. Bruce doesn’t stop.
“I didn’t sing in the Castilles, my first band,” he says. I basically played the guitar. Everybody in the band felt that I
couldn’t sing at all. I think I got to sing one Dylan song. Over the years I started to sing a little bit more, eventually
I think we ended up splitting a lot of the vocals. And after that I went off and had my own bands.
“I put together a real Hendrix/Cream three-piece group called Earth for quite a while. That was the Day of the
Guitarist. Alvin Lee and Jeff Beck and Clapton and Hendrix. And locally I was the guitarist, I was the fast gun at
the time.
“When I got my record deal I was in a place where I’d said, ‘Gee, there’s a lot of guys who play really well. There’s
not a lot of guys who rite that well.’ I think I’d decided that if I was going to create my own point of view, my own
vision, it wasn’t going to be instrumentally—it was going to be more through songwriting. So I put a lot of my
energy into that. I had no band for a while, I just wrote a group of songs that felt unique to me, and that was when I
went up and met [Columbia’s] John Hammond—that was the stuff I played for him.
“Then I was typecast as an acoustic act for a while. Locally I took a tremendous amount of heat. When the first
record came out people were incensed that there was no electric guitar on it! It was like I screwed up. All I heard
everyplace I went was ‘Where’s the guitar, man? What happened?’ I had such a big local reputation in the Jersey
area—and a little bit down south, ’cause we’d play in Vlrginia and Carolina—as a hard-rockin’ guitar band that
when thefirst record came out people were sort of, ‘What happened?’
“But I felt like I knew what I was doing, I stuck with it, I put the band together after that record. I became more
arrangement-orientated, i got more interested in how the thing
was going to function as an ensemble. If there needed to be a solo I tended to give it to Clarence. I’d like to play a
little bit more now, but I still relegate it to the song. I always felt the song was my fundamental means of
communication. It would be nice to do something that was out of that context, something that was less immediately
songoriented. More texture-oriented or abstract or something.n
When you were playing in Earth, were you playing like Alvin Lee and Hendrix?
“oh yeah.”
Did you have better chops in 1969 than you had in, say, 1975?
“Because I played so much more, I probably had a wider range of things that I played. Right now I’m playing
pretty well in a sort of limited vein. It’s the old story, you gotta play a lot. I have sort of an area that I’m playing in.
There was a lot of fast guitar playing at the time because that’s what was going on. Eventually I moved away from
that idea. I got more into what B.B. King was doing, I liked the idea of less notes. Yeah, I probably had a little more
flexibility-or dexterity at the time. But it doesn’t really leave you that much, it doesn’t go that far away. Generally I
haven’t created a context where I allow myself the freedom to stretch out and play and investigate ideas more
instrumentally. But maybe I’ll get to it.n
You do have a very distinct, emphatic guitar style which you use to convey strength, anxiety, joy—but you very
rarely use guitar to convey tenderness or melancholy. You tend to go to harmonica for that.
“Yeah. I played a little bit on ‘If I Should Fall Behind’ and in the early days I had ‘Sandy.’ A little bit, not that much.
I was probably more confident of my voice in my songs than I was in developing a distinct voice on the guitar. And
when you’re leading the band, singing, and writing the songs eventually you’ve got to make some choices. I choose
to go away from a long, jamming sort of style, even though I did it for a long time when I was younger. As I got
older I wanted to be more direct, clear, immediate and not waste a lot of time.”
The talk turns to his new work. On “Real World,” a central song on Human Touch, Springsteen sings, “I still got a
little faith but what I need is some proof.n On Lucky Town the birth of his son brings him “Living Proof.”
“Yeah,n Bruce smiles, “that’s what people do for each other. My relationship with Patti—she just somehow
managed to bring to me a lot of self-acceptance. Just the way she looked at me or the way she was with me. People
can come in and help center you and pull out the best of you and tell you when you should cut yourself some slack
and when you ought to be working a little harder. That’s what we do for each other when it’s working right. Kids
do it too. Kids make you rise above yourself.”
Some successful musicians discover that when they find the secure love of a family, they no longer need the love of
an audience.
“There’s people who feel the other way, too. There’s people who feel, ‘I get what I need when I go onstage and I
don’t need the rest.’ I felt like that for a long time. I always got to a point in relationships where if it got too
complicated or there was too much pressure, whether it was right or not I’d say, ‘Hey, I don’t need this!’ That’s the
classic line. I don’t need this. The only thing I’ve been able to figure is, that’s never true. You do need it.
“But I figure it can work the other way, too. The connection with your audience is
something you want and you need. I guess I feel that’s how I impact upon the world. I didn’t see any reason why
both of those things couldn’t nurture each other. That was the idea anyway. And the tour is when you experience it
the most. Both things are happening: My family’s here and the audience is out there. It’s a balancing act. Some
days you do it poorly and some days you do it really well.
“But I can understand that feeling. Because I think if you develop a real happy family thing you’re always tempted
to take refuge in it. Which is part of why it’s there. Just like you can take refuge in your work. That’s partly why
it’s there. But if you hide in either one of those things, maybe you’re cutting off a part of yourself.
”The idea is that you and the audience learn together. You ferret out your own illusions. That’s what my work is
about—people stumbling across their own illusions, letting them drop to the wayside, then trying to move on a little
further, finding something that’s real. And then you bump into your deeper illusions.” Bruce laughs. You try to let
some of them slip. And through it all you try not to get lost in the distortion of fame or success, or the different
things that the job brings along with it.” Bruce looks up and smiles and says, ‘It’s a trip.”
It’s hard for anyone who’s not famous to talk about what being famous does to you, but it sure does seem that
Springsteen’s been working to dismantle his superstardom ever since the Tunnel of Love album and tour.
“I feel less famous at the moment!” Bruce says and he lets out a big laugh.”And it’s good. The zeitgeist is…AII I
know is, I feel able to get on with my own life, it’s just a little easier. Things are really good right now. I don’t know
what my intentions were. Your intentions are always complicated. On one hand, it’s fun to have a big smash and
you want your music to be powerful and to reach as many people as possible. But there’s all sorts of different
issues, and none of them are clear. A big audience may not be your best audience. I don’t know. How you feel
about it can vary any given night. The main thing I was concerned with was taking the whole thing down, making it
feel more humanscaled, less iconic and more about everyday issues, which I thought the Tunnel of Love record and
my new records dealt with. That’s basically what I did.
” Outside of that, your control over the thing has a life and dynamic of its own. You
have some control over it. But I don’t try to exert that much. I thought Born in the USA would be a popular record;
I didn’t think it would be the thing it ended up being. That’s just what happened. I thought Tunnel of Love or these
records would be more popular, but that’s what happened there. Hey, you ride along with it.”
So fame’s not so bad?
‘ While there’s a lot of stress and tension involved, a good part of me enjoyed the whole thing. Except for ’75—I
was kinda young and pressed at the time. But hey, I
could have not been on those covers of Time and Newsweek if I didn’t want to! I didn’t have to do those interviews.
I remember sitting in a room saying, ‘Gee, do I want to do this? It seems scary.’ ‘Yeah, but I don’t want to to be
sitting on my porch when I’m 60 saying, Oh, I shoulda, I coulda, I woulda!’ Hey! You got one ride. So I said,
Let’s go! “
Like giving up your freedom to get married—every time you give up one thing you gain something else.
“Yeah. I think that I was real protective over my music. Probably too much so. The
stuff isn’t so fragile or precious. But that’s how I felt. Maybe I was trying to protect myself at times. The world is
threatening. You can feel that big breath on the back of your neck right before you step into those particular
decisions. You go, ‘Hmm, I think the heat’s gonna get turned up here.’ And it does. Part of it can make you
miserable, but part of you also may just ride with it and go Woooo! You’re flying by the seat of your pants. So it’s
sort of both those things. It’s been a good ride, you know.
“Like you say, you tend to not have an idea what you’re going to get, even in painful experience. Some of the best
things I learned were learned from getting beat up, making mistakes. And if you’re afraid to do that, to step out and
fall, that’s living in fear. If you can’t take the pain you’re not going to get to that higher place. My fear of failure
always held me back in dealing with people and relationships. I always stopped right before I committed to the
place where if it failed it would really hurt. ‘I’m okay up to here but there, no.’ It wasn’t until I stepped out into that
other place that I realized what the stakes were, what the rewards were, the pleasures. The past eight years have been
a tremendous time of learning for me. One of the best times of my life. Really difficult but definitely. ..” Bruce
stops and thinks about it. “To be sitting here with the kids, Patti, my music—it’s a nice seat.”
Bruce’s new albums are full of songs about being set free by having your lies exposed— as opposed to Tunnel of
Love, where songs like “Two Faces and “Brilliant Disguise talked about how hard it is to live with getting away
with lies.
“Everybody lives with their illusions,” Bruce says, drumming his fingers on a water glass. “Nobody’s who they
think they are. Not completely. There’s a limit to how much you can know yourself. Or all the little things we do on
a daily basis to live with ourselves. I guess what I’ve found satisfying is that if you try to strip away as much of this
stuff as you can and find out what you’re about— whether it’s pretty or ugly or what—you do find some sort of
freedom. But no matter how much you’re doing it you feel you’re still being cowardly with it. You can always push
harder. But I think just singing the song is an act of self-awareness. Those people in the songs, they know.
Whether they do something about it, the characters are copping to it. They’re saying, ‘This is how I see it, this is
what I’m doing.’ That’s always the first step. But it’s tough.”
Listen to some of the lines on the new albums:”A little sweet talk to cover all the lies,” “Chippin’ away at this chain
of my own lies,” “I had some victory that was just failure in deceit,” You get paid and your silence passes as honor
and all the hatred and dirty little lies are written off the books.. .”
“Everybody lies in some fashion or another,” Bruce says. “Big ones, little ones. Really, if I was trying to capture
anything on those records. it was a sense of a less morally certain universe. Perhaps in some of my earlier
music—though those ideas are in ‘Prove It All Night’—people may have felt a greater degree of moral certainty. I
think it might have been one of the things that attracted people to my music. That’s obviously not the way the real
world is. I guess on these records I was interested in trying to paint it as I saw it. Wlth your own weaknesses and
the places where you fail and get caught up in the Big Muddy. I was interested in taking a less heroic stance. I
think that, despite my protestations over the years in some of my Iyrics, there was a heroic posture to a lot of the
music I created. You try to do the right thing, and as you get older you realize how hard it is to do the right thing.
“When you isolate yourself off in the world of music it allows you a flexibility and control that the real world just
doesn’t allow. If you step outside that and begin to engage with people, it’s gonna get messy. Painting the mess was
part of what I wanted to do on those records. Because that’s the way it really is. But that can also be less appealing
or less compelling for some people. That moral certainty is attractive in a world that’s so fundamentally confusing.
That’s why fairy tales are popular. That’s why so many action movies are big. The first thing people want to know
when they hear about any conflict is, ‘Who’s the good guy? Who’s the bad guy?’ Tabloid entertainment, TV news
all comes down to ‘Who’s the good guy? Who’s the bad guy?’ It’s rarely as simple as that. Particularly in ‘The Big
Muddy,’ that’s what I was tryin’ to get to: Your moral certainty is a luxury. What passes for ‘family values’ or gets
twisted under the umbrella of ‘family values’ is a luxury for a lot of people. It’s something that a lot of people can’t
afford. ‘The Big Muddy’ wrestles with that. It’s not here, it’s not there, it’s somewhere in the middle and you’re
down in it.”
As Bruce and I are talking, President Bush’s latest surge in the polls has collapsed and Bill Clinton is pulling away.
Maybe with so many Americans financially strapped, the Family Values crusade of the G.O.P. is ringing the
national bullshit meter.
“And they know that’s what it is!” Bruce nods. “First of all, Bush just isn’t as good, he can’t present it like Reagan
presented it. Plus, hey—we heard that last time! And that sounds like bullshit. People are really saying,

‘Hey—that’s BULLSHIT. It’s too real out here!’ That’s not gonna work. I really don’t think it’s gonna work.”
Springsteen sighs. “Most of popular culture is based on childhood fairy tales. It just continues. That’s what a lot of
political discourse became. There’s a real patronizing aspect to the whole thing. I just think people at this point have
become fundamentally skeptical and cynical—in a good way. The answers are complex. Even though some part
inside of us yearns for a morally certain world, that world doesn’t exist. That’s not the real world. And at some
point you’ve got to make that realization, make your choices,and do the best that you can.”
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SPRINGSTEEN ON ROLLING STONE

Articolo su Springsteen  tratto da un numero di Rolling Stone del 1990.

On the night of November 5th, 1980, Bruce Springsteen stood onstage Tempe, Arizona, and began a fierce fight for the meaning of America.
The previous day, the nation had fateful corner: With a stunning majority, Ronald Reagan – who campaigned to end the progressive dream in America – was elected president of the United States. It was hardly an unexpected victory. In the aftermath of Vietnam, Watergate, the hostage crisis in Iran and an economic recession, America developed doubts about its purpose and its future, and to many voters, Reagan seemed an inspiring solution. But when all was said and done, the election felt stunning and brutal, a harbinger of years of mean-spiritedness to come.

The singer was up late the night before, watching the election returns, and stayed in his hotel room the whole day, brooding over whether he should make a comment on the turn of events. Finally, onstage that night at Arizona State University, Springsteen stood silently for a moment, fingering his guitar nervously, and then told
his audience: “I don’t know what you guys think about what happened last night, but I think it’s pretty rightening.” Then he vaulted into an enraged version of his most defiant song, “Badlands.”

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TUNNEL VISION – SPRINGSTEEN 1988

Articolo tratto da un numero di Rolling Stones del 1988, inutile dire che l’ argomento è Springsteen ed il suo nuovo disco Tunnel of love.

Bruce Springsteen’s
TUNNEL VISION
After the mammoth success of ‘Born in the U.S.A.’,
the rocker took a hard look at his career and decided
to bring his music back to human proportions
By Steve Pond

THE AUDIENCE CONSISTS OF; HIS SOUND CREW, HIS sax player’s wife and son
and a couple dozen ushers and security guards. But that doesn’t stop Bruce
Springsteen, who’s turning in an extraordinary performance at the Omni, in Atlanta.
He’s in the middle of a late-afternoon sound check – not one of the marathon sound
checks for which Springsteen used to be known but an hour-long chance to refresh
his music by playing oldies or current favorites or whatever pops into his head.
Springsteen stands in the middle of the huge white stage in jeans and a
longsleeved white shirt, laughing as he tries to piece together half-remembered Iyrics,
joking when a band member tosses out the riff from a familiar oldie and muttering,
“Okay, what next?” when he finishes a tune. It’s a country and folk set: the Everly
Brothers, Hank Williams and some lesser-known choices. Some songs fizzle out after
a verse or two; every so often, though, Springsteen and the band instinctively craft a
full-bodied arrangement, grab a song and claim it as their own.
That happens during “Across the Borderline,” a six-year-old song by Ry Cooder,
John Hiatt and Jim Dickinson from the movie The Border. A plaintive lament about
Mexicans in search of an American paradise, the song is one of Bruce’s current
passions: one person in Springsteen’s entourage says he’s driven everyone crazy
playing it in the van.


So when Springsteen sings its opening lines, the members of the band quickly
latch on to the slow groove; they’ve heard this one before. Guitarist Nils Lofgren picks
up a slide and adds an aching counterpoint to Springsteen’s vocals. By the first
chorus, this has become a performance to break hearts: “When you reach the broken
promised land Every dream slips through your hand And you’ll know that it’s too late
to change your mind ‘Cause you’ve paid the price to come so far/Just to wind up
where you are/And you’re still just across the borderline.”
Like the best of Springsteen’s own music, this is a song with a deep sense of
consequences. Not only do its lines about shattered dreams and broken promises
recall his songs, but the song seems to speak directly to the experience of a man who
dreamed of becoming a rock star, then became the biggest, who found himself feeling
isolated and empty and fought that by reassessing his work, then by turning to his
marriage; who at age thirty-eight has set aside his fervent belief that rock and roll can
save you in favor of the more sober idea that love might save you – if you work at it
hard and long enough.
“I guess I used to think that rock could save you,” he says later. “I don’t believe
it can anymore. It can do a lot. It’s certainly done a lot for me – gave me focus and
direction and energy and purpose. I suppose, when I was a kid, it was your best
friend: your new 45, man that was your best buddy.
“But as you get older, you realize that it is not enough. Music alone – you can
take some shelter there, and you can find some comfort and happiness you can
dance, you can slow-dance with your girl, but you can’t hide in it. And it is so
seductive that you want to hide in it. And then if you get in the position of somebody
like me, where you can if you want to, you really can.”
He stops himself. “Well, you think you can, anyway. In the end you really can’t,
because no matter who you are, whether it’s me or Elvis or Michael Jackson, in the
end you really can’t. You can use all your powers to isolate yourself, to surround
yourself with luxury, to intoxicate yourself in any particular fashion that you so
desire. But it just starts eating you away inside, because there is something you get
from engagement with people, from a connection with a person, that you just cannot
get anyplace else. I suppose I had a moment where I kinda crashed into that idea,
before I was married….
“It’s just confusing. Even the type of connection you can make in your show,
which is enormous, you can’t live there. You have three hours onstage, and then you
got the other twenty-one. You may know exactly what you’re doing in those three
hours, but you better figure out what you’re gonna do in them other twenty-one,
because you can’t book yourself around the clock.”
THE FIRST THING I DID, SPRINGSTEEN SAYS, WAS make everyone stand in a
different place.” It was the first day of rehearsals for the Tunnel of Love Express, and
he knew it was time for a show that would be drastically different from the stadiumrock
blowouts that had followed his album Bonn in the U.S A. – especially since those
shows had themselves been similar to the acclaimed concerts he’d been doing ever
since he started playing large arenas in 1978.
So he moved the members of the E Street Band out of the places most of them
had occupied onstage for the past thirteen years: drummer Max Weinberg moved to
the side; pianist Roy Bittan and keyboardist Dan Federici traded places; so did
guitarist Nils Lofgren and bassist Garry Tallent; sax man Clarence Clemons shifted
from Bruce’s right to his left; and singer Pam Scialfa picked up a guitar, moved into
Clarence’s old position and became Springsteen’s new onstage foil. A horn section
recruited from the New Jersey bar band La Bamba and the Hubcaps took up the rear.
Springsteen had tried this once before – at the beginning of the rehearsals for the
Born in the U.S A. tour but back then, he says, the band “flipped.”
This time the musicians, who knew that their boss had considered a solo
acoustic tour, quickly adjusted to the change. Springsteen knew what he didn’t want-
“I made a little list of stuff I couldn’t imagine playing,” he says – but when manager
Jon Landau said it was time to start booking the tour, he didn’t know what he wanted.
“I said, ‘I don’t know if I have a show, I don’t know if I have a let,’ ” says Springsteen
with a laugh. “Jon said, ‘Well, you know, that’s your job, you’ve been doing it a long
time, you do it good, so it’ll happen.’ So I took his word for it.”
Two and a half months later, when he takes the stage of the Omni, Springsteen
has a show. It rocks almost as much as his past concerts, but it’s also far more
intimate: where his last tour, which played some huge outdoor stadiums, explored the
ideas of community and society, this tour, which is limited to indoor arenas, focuses
on desire, commitment and family. The first set is part relationship songs from the
Tunnel of Love album. It’s part B sides and outtakes: “Be True” and “Roulette” were
both recorded for The River. (Springsteen now says, “Both of those songs should have
been on The River, and I’m sure they would have been better than a couple other
things that we threw on there.”) And at the end of the set are a couple of barn
burners from the Born in the U.S.A. tour. Songs that have served as longtime
Springsteen staples are missing, for the most part replaced by music that is hard,
dark and almost claustrophobic: each gentle, nostalgic moment is shattered by
colder, more fearful songs.
Near the end of the set, pianist Roy Bittan plays a pastoral melody, and
Springsteen steps to the mike. The monologue he delivers, ostensibly about the
unmarried mother who’s the central character in “Spare Parts,” could just as easily
deal with a rock ~ roll star who’s determined to do something different.
“The past is a funny thing,” he says, as the crowd quiets down and Bittan plays
softly. “The past is something that seems to bind us all together with memory and
experience. And it’s also something, I guess, that can drag you down and hold you
back as you get stuck in old dreams that just break your heart over and over again
when they don’t come true.”
A brutal version of “Spare Parts” follows, then an angry “War” – no introduction
needed, what with Ronald Reagan’s troops sitting in Honduras – and finally, just
before intermission, “Born in the U.S.A.” Three years ago, this song was the hard
fought call to arms that began virtually all of Springsteen’s shows; now, coming at the
end of a set that dwells on devastating personal and social struggles, it lacks any
suggestion of the patriotism that some people insisted on reading into it on the last
tour. Musically as exultant as ever, “Born in the U.S.A.” suddenly hits home as an
agonized, brutal modem-day blues.
WHEN WE PLAYED THAT FIRST SET IN REHEARSAL, Springsteen says, “I said, ‘Yeah,
that’s good.’ ” Sitting in the semidarkness of his backstage dressing room in Atlanta,
he drops his voice to a gravelly whisper. “It felt real new, real modern to me. I figure
some people will wrestle with it a little bit.” He breaks the spell with a loud, hoarse
laugh. “But that’s okay.”
It’s shortly after 1:00 a.m., and the rest of the E Street Band is gone. There’s
nobody around in the Omni dressing rooms marked HORNS, PATTI, BAND and
MOKSHAGUN (the name given to Clarence Clemons by his guru, Sri Chinmoy, whose
framed picture sits next to a lighted candle in Clemons’s dressing room). The
Springsteen tour is low-key, calm and precisely organized; if there weren’t a show
tomorrow, they’d already be flying to the next city or flying home to Jersey for a day
or two.
Now Springsteen sits back in an overstuffed chair, clad in black slacks, a black
dress shirt, a black leather blazer and the silver-tipped black cowboy boots he wears
onstage; he has a gold wedding band on his left hand and a single diamond stud in his
left ear. He drinks a Heineken very slowly and occasionally takes a pretzel from the
small bowl on his coffee table. Behind him, a portable heater glows red. The room is
austere: a curtain in front of the door, a folding rubdown table, a buffet table lightly
stocked with food and drink.
Though he doesn’t look tired, Springsteen speaks slowly, fighting his impulse to
ramble. Most of the time he’s serious and philosophical, though the nervous,
wheezing belly laugh with which he constantly interrupts both his jokes and his most
thoughtful and revealing comments suggests he can’t take himself too seriously.
“The idea on this tour,” he says, “is that you wouldn’t know what song was
gonna come next. And the way you do that is you just throw out all your
cornerstones, the stuff that had not become overly ritualized on the Born in the
U.S.A. tour but would have been if we did it now. It would have been pushin’ the
buttons a little bit, you know?” Springsteen and the band had more rehearsals for this
tour than for all their previous tours combined. In the process, songs were dropped
as Springsteen found his themes, and certain tunes “stopped making emotional
sense.” The last song to go was “Darlington County,” which he’d added to lighten a set
he finally decided he didn’t want to lighten.
“That sense of dread – man, it’s everywhere,” he says, staring at the wall of his
dressing room. “It’s outside, it’s inside, it’s in the bedroom, it’s on the street. The
main thing was to show people striving for that idea of home: people forced out of
their homes, people looking for their homes, people trying to build their homes,
people looking for shelter, for comfort, for tenderness, a little bit of kindness
somewhere.”
Springsteen doesn’t vary the show much from night to night, because he feels it
is “focused and specific.” At its heart are echoes of the struggle that he went through
when he began to live out the rock & roll dream that had driven him since he was a
high schooler growing up near the Jersey shore. “I guess you get to a place where
your old answers and your old dreams don’t really work anymore,” he says, “so you
have to skip into something new. For me, there was that particular moment when I
had to put my old dreams down, because I had grown beyond them. I suppose I had a
particular time when I felt pretty empty.”
For Springsteen, that time came after the breakthrough success of the tworecord
set The River, when he recorded the stark, haunted folk songs that made up
his 1982 album Nebraska. “I suppose that’s where some of that record came from,”
he says. “I took a little trip across the country, ’cause I felt very isolated.” He pauses.
“So you start taking those steps outward. That’s where you gotta go. And you reach a
point where there’s a person who says, ‘I can show you these other things, but you
have to trust me.’ “
That person was Julianne Phillips, an actress-model he met in 1984 in Los
Angeles and married the following May. The songs that followed, the songs that make
up Tunnel of Love, focus on the perils of adult romance and commitment. “I wanted
to write a different kind of romantic song, one that took in the different types of
emotional experiences of any relationship where you are really engaging with that
other person and not involved in a narcissistic romantic fantasy or intoxication or
whatever.
“In my life previously, I hadn’t allowed myself to get into a situation where I
would even have cause to reflect on these things. When I was in my twenties, I was
specifically voiding it.” He laughs. “It was like ‘I got enough on my hands, I ain’t ready
for that, I don’t write no marryin’ songs.’ But when this particular record came
around, I wanted to make a record about what I felt, about really letting another
person in your life and trying to be a part of someone else’s life. That’s a frightening
thing, something that’s always filled with shadows and doubts and also wonderful
things and beautiful things.”
He laughs again. “It’s difficult, because there’s a part of you that wants the
stability and the home thing, and there’s a part of you that isn’t so sure. That was the
idea of the record, and I had to change quite a bit to just get to the point to write
about that stuff. I couldn’t have written any of those songs at any other point in my
career. I wouldn’t have had the knowledge or the insight or the experience to do it.”
And does he think he’s found the home he sings about onstage? “Sometimes I
really do,” he says quietly. “I don’t believe that you find something and there it is and
that’s the end of the story. You have to find the strength to sustain it and build on it
and work for it and constantly pour energy into it. I mean, there’s days when you’re
real close and days when you’re real far away. I guess I feel like I know a lot more
about it than I ever did, but it’s like anything else: you gotta write that new song
every day.”
He grins. “I guess, gee, I’ve been married for three years, just about. And I feel
like we just met.”
RIGHT OFF THE BAT, THE SECOND SET AT THE OMNI violates a given of any Bruce
Springsteen concert: it starts not with a flat-out rocker but with a measured,
emphatic version of the Tunnel of Love ballad “Tougher Than the Rest.” It’s followed
by a thundering rendition of the thirteen-year-old “She’s the One”; the original neorockabilly
arrangement of “You Can Look (but You Better Not Touch)”; a rollicking
overhaul of “I’m a Coward,” an old Gino Washington number; a sinuous new reggae
original, “Part Man, Part Monkey”; and the rockers “Dancing in the Dark” and “Light
of Day.” But it’s “Walk Like a Man,” full of telling autobiographical detail and plaintive
yearning “I pray for the strength to walk like a man,” sings Springsteen, who worried
about being too direct and personal when he wrote the song – that brings the set’s
tales of desire to a head.
For an encore, Springsteen walks out with an acoustic guitar. “When I was sittin’
at home, thinkin’ about comin’ out on tour and trying to decide what I was gonna
do,” he says “I thought, ‘Well, I gotta sing a new song.’ That’s my job. But this is an
old song. I wrote this song when I was twenty-four years old, sitting on the end of my
bed in Long Branch, New Jersey, and thinking, ‘Here I come, world.’ ” A giggle. “When
I wrote it, I guess I figured it was a song about a guy and a girl who wanted to run and
keep on running.”
A huge cheer; the crowd knows what’s coming. “But as I got older, and as I sang
it over the years, it sort of opened up, and I guess I realized that it was about two
people out searching for something better. Searching for a place they could stand and
try and make a life for themselves. And I guess in the end they were searchin’ for
home, something that I guess everybody looks for all their lives. I’ve spent my life
looking for it, I guess. Anyway, this song has kept me good company on my search. I
hope it’s kept you good company on your search.”
The acoustic version of “Born to Run” that follows is elegiac and anti romantic,
the kind of haunting moment that wins Springsteen and his audience the right to
celebrate. And they do – with “Hungry Heart” and “Glory Days” and finally with
“Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)” and the “Detroit medley,” Springsteen’s customary
encore of rock and roll standards, including “Devil with a Blue Dress.”
And as Springsteen gives this determinedly new show a very old ending, in the
middle of a rock & roll maelstrom in which he almost seems to turn his back on the
hard lessons that preceded the celebration, he shouts out just how this stuff fits in.
He introduces “Rosalita” as “the best love song 1 ever wrote!” And before the “Detroit
medley,” he shouts, “But that’s not the end of the story. They got in their car, they
drove down the road, they went into a little bar, there was a band there, the
bandleader shouted ‘One, two, three, four! Devil with a blue dress . . .’ ” Every love
story, it seems, deserves a happy ending and as a coda to this dark, dark ride, Bruce
Springsteen is grinning like a fool and doing the boogaloo and writing his happy
ending.
THERE S A STEINWAY BABY GRAND IN THE LIVING room and a guitar case by the
couch, but the music in Bruce Springsteen’s posh hotel suite comes from a small
boom box blaring out a tape of Chicago blues. It’s almost time for another sound
check, and the remnants of Springsteen’s most recent meal sit on his dining-room
table: a box of Shredded Wheat, a cereal bowl in which uneaten strawberries sit in a
small pool of milk. Twenty-five floors, one private elevator and a couple of
receptionists and security guards away from the fans outside Atlanta’s Ritz-Carlton,
Springsteen sits in an armchair in blue jeans, a pin-striped white shirt and his silvertipped
cowboy boots, nursing a chocolate milkshake and talking about his career.
To some, Tunnel of Love is a foolish move: an album of intimate ballads from a
guy who broke things wide open with an album of rockers. The tour isn’t the
juggernaut its predecessor was, and the album has sold considerably less than Born in
the U.S.A. – although Springsteen clearly prefers it to the earlier record, which he
shrugs off as “a rock record.” He says, “I never really felt like I quite got it, though
‘Born in the U.S.A.’ and ‘My Hometown’ made it feel more thematic than it probably
was.” Is the quintessential mainstream American rock hero now just another guy with
an album in the Top Twenty and a tour in the local arenas?
“I don’t really have a desire to have some super big selling record,” he says. “I
mean, I enjoyed Born in the U.S A., and it did bring a new audience to me, some who
will fall away and some who will stick around for the rest of the show. I don’t
consider Tunnel of Love a small record, but I suppose it doesn’t reach out and grab
you by the throat and thrash you around like Born in the U.S.A.
“I wouldn’t mind having another big record like that. But my main concern is
writing that new song that has that new idea, that new perspective. To me, that is the
essence of my job.” He chuckles. “Also, you want to rock people. That’s my job, too.
So that makes you want to write a fast song.”
But for now, the most moving moment of his show may well be the fast song
slowed down, the song about running that’s become a song about home. “I wanted to
separate ‘Born to Run’ from any way we’ve ever done the song before,” Springsteen
says. “I didn’t want to crash into it like some old anthem or something, and I wanted
to give people a chance to reexperience the song. And myself, too.” He grins. “I guess
in that song I asked every question I’ve been trying to answer since I was twenty-four.
I was young, and those were the things I wanted to know. And fifteen years down the
line, you understand much clearer what those things are, and what they cost, and
their importance. And I suppose, when I play the song now, I would imagine that you
get some sense of that.
“I asked myself those questions at that age, and I really did faithfully, I feel, do
everything I could to find some answers. The way you keep faith with your audience
is not by signing autographs; it’s by keeping faith with that initial search you set out
on. I suppose this show is a- it’s not a resolution by any means, but it is what I’ve
learned and what I know.”
But can Bruce Springsteen, a multimillionaire rock star in his penthouse suite,
remain close to his audience while his images have been appropriated by politicians
and television commercials? After all, Springsteen may have added “Backstreets” to
his set after a fan sent him a letter explaining how much the song meant to him and
his friends – but when he tells that story, even Bruce is amazed that the fan managed
to penetrate security and get the letter to his hotel room.
“In some ways,” he stammers, “there’s not a lot of difference. I still go out, meet
people. With the size of the thing, the way that you counteract that is by becoming
more intimate in your work. I suppose that’s why after I did Born in the U.S.A., I
made this intimate record. I made a record that was really sort of addressed to my
core audience, my longtime fans.”
He frowns. “The size is tricky, it’s dangerous. You can become purely iconic, or
you can become just a Rorschach test that people throw up their own impressions
upon, which you always are to some degree anyway. With size, and the co-option of
your images and attitudes – you know, you wake up and you’re a car commercial or
whatever. And the way I think the artist deals with that is just reinvention. You’ve got
to constantly reinvent, and it’s a long trip, it’s a long drive.”
If there was ever a point when his relationship with the audience would have
changed, he adds, it would have been during the Born to Run furor of 1975 – the
covers of Time and Newsweek, the move from clubs to theaters, the charges that he
was a record-company hype rather than the Born in the U.S.A. explosion of a decade
later.
“Obviously, the Born in the U.S.A. experience had its frightening moments,” he
says. “But I had a real solid sense of myself by the time I was thirty-five. When I was
twenty-five, I thought that I would slip away…. Also, when I was twenty-five, I just
worked all the time, because I had nothing else going. I think at this point in my life
I’ve gotten to the place where I want a real life, which is something you’ve got to cut
out for yourself. And I’ve been lucky: most of my fans, most of the people I meet wish
you the best. Then you meet people that- your real life is an intrusion upon their
fantasy and they don’t like that.”
He laughs uproariously. “But, hey, that’s not my problem. So anyway, along the
road I probably come in contact with fans a little less than I used to, but outside of
the details of the thing, I think my basic feelings and atitudes toward my audience
haven’t really changed. I guess I still feel like one of them, basically.”
And this, it seems, is why the new Bruce Springsteen still pulls out those
warhorses at the end of the night, the reason the guy who refuses to do “Badlands”
and “Thunder Road” and “Jungleland” winds up every show with “Rosalita” and half
an hour of the “Detroit medley.”
“That’s the trick of the show,” he says. “The most important song, really, is
‘Devil with a Blue Dress.'” He laughs heartily, savoring the seeming silliness of that
idea. “Because the show really builds up to the moment when the houselights come
up. The lights come up, and the stage slips back into the crowd, and the audience
comes forth, and that is the event. You would think the end of the show is about
excitement but it’s really not. It’s about emotion. Because that’s when people are the
most visible, when they’re the most vulnerable, the freest.
“That’s when things sit in a certain perspective. You can look up, way up, and
you see some guy, and he waves to you, and you wave back – and in a funny kind of
way, you know, that’s the idea of the whole night. And the thing that keeps it from
being just an aerobic exercise is the rest of the show, which resonates underneath
that and gives those songs, which appear to be kind of thrown of; emotional meaning
and emotional life.
“And in a funny way, with all the stuff I sing about for the whole rest of the
night, I’m not sure I say anything that’s more important than that particular
moment.”

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BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN – MUSICIAN 1984

Articolo tratto del numero dalla rivista Musician del novembre 1984.

Bruce Springsteen

In a year when both political parties are fighting to see which can reclaim the
American flag and it’s attendant values as it’s own, how odd to see a rock’n’roller
predate them. Bruce Springsteen, as evidenced by Born In The USA’s introspective,
even homey slice of American life sagas has created a curious but very real rock
audience that might unknowingly have more in common with Cotton Mather than
Judas Priest, with Woody Guthrie than Prince. Springsteen’s shows, his music and his
attitudes share with his audiences a sort of New Puritanism, a sense of quasi religious
manifest destiny, and a fundamental acceptance of life and it’s troubles, along with the
faith that true belief will bring a better way. When Springsteen ends his shows with a
cry to “let freedom ring- that’s what we are here for, even if we have to fight for it
everyday’ there are no scoffers in his rock’n’roll flock, only true believers.
Springsteen has the power and the touch. In many ways, he resembles the television
evangelists riding the crest of a rebirth of religious fervor in this country. Unlike Jerry
Falwell, though, Springsteen’s message is that true salvation lies in a rock’n’roll way of
life. Articulating that way is not easy; it seems to be an intuitive way of knowledge.
How unusual it is to hear 20,000 rock fans cheer a performer’s rap on why you should
love your street and your hometown and your state and your country. Bruce talks
more about family values than Reagan does. Yet none of this suggests jingoism so
much as a pure yearning for a return to solid values. Of course any value is better than
no value, as demagogues and hucksters have always known. Any shyster can flourish
in a moral vacuum, and in the past rock ‘n’ roll has never gotten gold medals for
presenting either wholesome role models or messages to young people. So what is this
all about?
Part of Bruce Springsteen’s current level of success must be attributed to his talent as an
entertainer, and the absence of any real hard-edged competition. Even so, the ofthesitant
New York Times has flatly proclaimed Springsteen the “best rock performer
ever.” And there is no denying the fanatical intensity he brings to a show, the
evangelical zeal of the true believer. Springsteen is the hardest-working white man in
show business. His appeal transcends traditional rock ‘n’ roll parameters, though. He’s
selling something unique among rock superstars: a self-evident faith. And in
performance, he manages to project a R&R greatest hits collage: a bit of Buddy Holly’s
innocence, some of the dark sensuality of Elvis, a bit of Bob Seger’s blue collar integrity,
and the exuberance and abandon of a Mitch Ryder.
That charisma is as strong offstage. I caught up with Springsteen at shows in Detroit
and New Jersey and found the backstage atmosphere unusual for rock. No hysteria of
any sort, no cocker-spaniel bed-wetting exuberance. The feeling was rather like being in
a busy ant colony at work. (The parallel to the Crusades shall go unmentioned.) People
around Bruce don’t want reflected glamour so much as approval. The Springsteen work
ethic is clearly palpable. MTV may offer its viewers a lost weekend with Van
Halen—for Bruce, it’s the chance to be a roadie.
Bruce does not behave like a star either. When he met me in his dressing room in
Detroit after a show, his manner was that of an accomplice, a confidant, a comrade. For
someone who seldom grants interviews, he was forthright, to the point, and funny.
“A rock
and roll
evangelist
for our
times
crusades for
patriotism
and
puritanism
of a
different
stripe”
I
When I told him that he finally had a big enough constituency to either run for the
Senate or start his own church, he laughed it off: ‘Naw, Clarence is gonna do that.” That
breezy Jersey Shore camaraderie does not disguise a manner that is so simple and
direct that it’s almost misleading. This is a man who clearly has thought out his position
in the scheme of things and has some things to say about it.
MUSICIAN: Aren’t you offering uplifting rock ‘n’ roll? Isn’t there a moral lesson
involved with all that you do?
SPRINGSTEEN: Yeah, I guess. The one thing that bothered me about the Born To Run
record was that when it was initially criticized people thought it was a record about
escape. To me, there was an aspect of that, but I always felt it was more about
searching. After that, that’s what I tried with Darkness On The Edge Of Town and The
River and Nebraska. It was like: How real are these things in people’s everyday lives?
How important are they? I don’t know exactly what I’d call it, but I know that most of
my records after the Born To Run were somehow a reaction to the Born To Run album.
To my own experience of it, which was really wild, it was really a big moment in my
life. Now, “Born To Run,” the song means a lot more to me than it did then. I can sing it
tonight and feel like it breathes in all those extra years. It’s been, like—I wrote it ten
years ago now. But it still feels really real. Very real, for me. It’s one of the most
emotional moments of the night. I can see all of those people and that song to them is
like—that’s their song, man. It’s almost as much the audience’s as it is mine. I like it
when the lights are up because you can see so much from people’s faces. That’s what
it’s about. But I like doing the old songs now, because I really feel they let the years in,
they don’t feel limiting. Like, I hear part of Nebraska in Born To Run now.
MUSICIAN: Is Born In The U.S.A. pnmarily about, as it suggests, blue-collar patriotic values
androck ‘n’roll realism?
SPRINGSTEEN: That was the direction I was going in. It was kind of hard to get there
because I was just learning the importance of certain types of detail, which I began to
get a handle on, I think, in “Darkness On The Edge Of Town.” And ‘IStolen Car” and
“Wreck On The Highway,” which was kind of country-music-influenced stuff. I wanted
the record to feel like what life felt like. You know, not romantic and not some sort of
big heroic thing. I just wanted it to feel like an everyday, Darlington County kind of
thing. Like in “Glory Days,” it sounds like you’re just talking to somebody; that’s what I
wanted to do. Wanted to make it feel like you meet somebody. The Nebraska stuff was
like that: you meet somebody and you walk a little while in their shoes and see what
their life is like. And then what does that mean to you? That’s kind of the direction my
writing’s going in and in general it’s just the thing I end up finding most satisfying. Just
saying what somebody had to say and not making too big a deal out of it.
MUSlClAN:Do you feel that you have real, believable characters now that people your
songs?
SPRINGSTEEN: That’s the hardest thing to do, the very hardest. When I wrote the
Nebraska stuff, there were songs that I really didn’t get, because I didn’t get the people. I
had all the detail, but if you don’t have that underlying emotional connection that
connects the details together, then you don’t have anything. There were songs that
didn’t get onto Nebraska because they didn’t say anything in the end. They had no
meaning. That’s the trickiest thing to do and that was my only test of songs: is this
believable? Is this real? Do I know this person? I was real lucky because I wrote almost
all the Nebraska songs in about two months. Which is really fast for me. I just locked in
and it was really different for me. I stayed in my house. I just worked all the time. Sat at
a table or with the guitar. It was exciting because I realized that this was different from
stuff I’d done before and I didn’t know what it was. But with songs like “Highway
Patrolman” and the “Nebraska” song itselfl writing like thatl I was real happy with it. It
just felt real. I didn’t know I was gonna do that, but I knew I was going somewhere in
that direction.
MUSICIAN: Are those songs a reaction to what is happening in America? To American
values?
SPRINGSTEEN: I don’t know. I think that what happened during the Seventies was
that, first of all, the hustle became legitimized. First through Watergate. That was a real
hurting thing, in that the cheater, the hustlerl the dope pusher on the street—that was
legitimization for him. It was: you can do it, just don’t get caught. Someone will ask,
what did you do wrong? And you’ll say, I got caught. In a funny kind of way, Born To
Run was a spiritual record in dealing with values. And then Nebraska was about the
breakdown of all those values, of all those things. It was kind of about a spiritual crisis,
in which man is left lost. It’s like he has nothing left to tie him into society anymore.
He’s isolated from the government. Isolated from his job. Isolated from his family.
And, in something like “Highway Patrolman,” isolated from his friends. That’s what the
record is all about. That happens in this country, don’t you see, all the time. You see it
on the news. And it seems to be a part of modern society. I don’t know what anybody
can do about it. There is a lot of that happening. When you get to the point where
nothing makes sense. Where you don’t feel connected to your family, where you don’t
feel any real connection to your friends. You just feel that alone thing, that loneness.
That’s the beginning of the end. It’s like you start existing outside of all those things. So
Born To Run and Nebraska were kind of at opposite poles. I think Born In The U.S.A. kind
of casts a suspicious eye on a lot of things. That’s the idea. These are not the same
people anymore and it’s not the same situation. These are survivors and I guess that’s
the bottom line. That’s what a lot of those characters are saying in “Glory Days” or
“Darlington County” or “Working On The Highway.” It certainly is not as innocent
anymore. But, like I said, it’s ten years down the line now.
MUSICIAN: So you and your characters are facing adulthood?
SPRlNGSTEEN:That’s kind of where I’m at right now. I wanted to make the characters
grow up. You got to. Everybody has to. It was something I wanted to do right after
BornTo Run. I was thinking about it then. I said, Well, how old am l? I’m this old, so I
wanna address that in some fashion. Address it as it is and I didn’t see that that was
done a whole lot [in rock Iyrics]. To me it seemed like, hey, it’s just life, you know. It’s
nothin’ but life. Let’s get it in there. I wrote “Racing In The Street” kind of about that.
See I love all those Beach Boys songs. I love “Don’t Worry, Baby.” If I hear that thing in
the right mood forget it. I go over the edge you know? But I said: How does it feel for
you right now? So i wrote “Racing In The Street” and that felt good. As I get older I
write about me, I guess, and what I see happening around me and my family. So that’s
Born In The U.S.A. Born To Run was the beginning of that and it’s funny because I always
felt that was my birthday album. All of a sudden, bang! Something happened, something
crystallized and you don’t even know what. And now what are you gonna do? That’s
the big question. You have an audience; you have a relationship with that audience; it’s
just as real as any relationship you have with your friends. It’s funny. I wrote “Born To
Run” in 1974 and now it’s 1984 and you can kind of see that something happened along
the way. That’s a good feeling.
MUSICIAN: How do your rock values apply to your audience? What can you tell them of what
you’ve learned?
SPRINGSTEEN: I think it’s different for every performer. I don’t think it’s any one
thing anymore. You really can’t tell people what to hold onto—you can only tell your
story. Whether it’s to tell it to just one person or to a bunch of people. There’s nothing
more satisfying to me than coming in and playing really hard . . . and watching
people—watching their faces. And then going home and feeling real tired at the end of
the day but knowing that something happened. So, I don’t know about the question of
what rock ‘n’ roll means to anyone. I think every individual has got to answer that
question for themselves at this point. I don’t think there ever was anyone with an
answer. It’s like the difference between Jerry Lee and Elvis. At the time, they were both
great. It’s just that you’ve got to take it for what it is and see if you can make something
out of it. Some people, they don’t even hear it. It just goes over their heads or
something. So I don’t think you can really generalize.
MUSICIAN: So, is your music just about girls and cars?
SPRINGSTEEN: That’s what everybody is saying. I always like those reviews. It’s
funny, because I remember that when I was about twenty-four and I said, “I don’t want
to write about girls and cars anymore.” Then I realized, “Hey! That’s what Chuck Berry
wrote about!” So, it wasn’t my idea. It was a genre thing. Like detective movies. I used
to compare it to spaghetti westerns.
SPRINGSTEEN: Yeah. It’s probably less like that now than it was at one time. But I was
always very interested in keeping a continuity in the whole thing. Part of it for me was
the John Ford westerns, where I studied how he did it, how he carried it off. And then I
got into this writer, William Price Fox, who wrote Dixiana Moon and a lot of short
stories. He’s just great with detail. In “Open All Night” I remember he had some story
that inspired me, I forget what it was. But I was just interested in maintaining a real line
through the thing. If you look just beneath the immediate surface, it’s usually right
there. So I like the girls and cars idea.
MUSICIAN: But you consciously write images.
SPRINGSTEEN: Oh yeah, I always loved the movies. And, after all, music is evocative.
That’s the beauty of it. Which is also the danger of video. The tools can be great there
and obviously it can be used real well. But it can also be used badly because it’s an
inanimate thina in and of itself. The thing about a good song is its evocative power.
What does it evoke in the listener? A song like “Mansion On The Hill”—it’s different to
everybody. It’s in people’s lives, in that sense. That’s what I always want my songs to
do: to kind of just pan out and be very cinematic. The Nebraska record had that
cinematic quality, where you get in there and you get the feel of life. Just some of the
grit and some of the beauty. I was thinking in a way of To Kill a Mockingbird, because in
that movie there was a child’s eye view. And Night Of The Hunter also had that—I’m not
sure if surrealistic is the right word. But that was poetic when the little girl was running
through the woods. I was thinking ofscenes like that.
MUSICIAN: What about your relationship with video, from “Atlantic City” filmed without you
in it to “Dancing In The Dark?”
SPRINGSTEEN: Well, when I did the Nebraska record they didn’t want it. I really didn’t
have anything to do with the Atlantic City video. The only direction I gave was to say
that it should be kind of gritty-looking and it should have no images that matched up to
images in the songs. I was really happy with it. I liked the way it came out. “Dancing In
The Dark” was Brian DePalma. That was interesting, working with him. I really haven’t
gotten into video as of yet. We did that one around the time we were starting the tour
and putting together the show. And that is the center of what we do. That has to be
right. I look forward to getting into video, to see what can be done with it.
MUSICIAN: What about reactions to the blaster mix of “Dancin’ In The Dark?”
SPRINGSTEEN: People kind of get a rigid view of certain things. That mix was an
experimental thing initially. I heard one on the radio and I said, “Man, that sounds like
fun! Let’s do one of those.” And so we got it to (producer) Arthur Baker and he was
great, he was tremendous. I had a good time with it. He did the whole thing. His
overdubs were kind of connected to my songs. He would put in something that
sounded like a glock (glockenspiel) or a twangy guitar. When I heard it I just thought it
was fun. This was kind of wild, man, this guy, he’s got an unchained imagination. I
thought it was real creative. You’ve gotta do different things and try stuff. I figured that
a lot of people would like it and that the people that didn’t like it would get over it. My
audience is not that fragile, you know. They can take it. I’m just into seeing some
different things. I could easily go out and do just what I did before. But now we’re
playing outdoors on this tour, which I hadn’t done before. And we did the blaster thing
and the video thing. I want to learn it myself. I want to just step out and see what
works. If something doesn’t work, that’s okay and if something does, great. In ten
years I’ve built up a relationship with my audience.
MUSICIAN: To the point where they would support a quasicommercial risk such as
Nebraska?
SPRINGSTEEN: Yeah! It was really well-supported by my audience, which was real
satisfying and in tune. So, I say, hey, let’s do some things, get in there. I can’t stand in
one place. You’ve got to take some chances.
MUSICIAN: What about fans’ expectations? Especially the assumption that you’ve
inherited the rock ‘n’ roll crown.
SPRINGSTEEN: I don’t think you can ever think about that. I certainly would never
think that. All those people were my heroes at one point or another. I still love Dylan,
love the Stones. I kind of look at what I do in a couple of different ways. One is that it’s
my job and it’s something I like doing and I do it the best that I can. Obviously I’m
aware of people’s expectations and you gotta wrestle with that. But at the same time
you gotta say, I write songs and we got a band, and that’s who you are, you know? I
don’t think you can carry that kind of thing around with you. I just want to do what I
can do. At different times I allowed myself to live under those types of pressures, of
expectations.
I think that the audience and the performer must allow each other room to be human
and to make mistakes. If not, then they don’t deserve each other. That’s what I wanted
our band to be like. When I’m onstage I always feel, “What would I want to see if I was
the guy in the fifth row?” I’m watching it and being up there and doing it at the same
time. I still feel like such a big fan myself of all music.
MUSICIAN: What happened with Steve van Zandt?
SPRINGSTEEN: It was real emotional, him going, and I’ll certainly miss him. But he
had to. He had written a lot of real good songs; he had something to say and he has for
quite a while. And it was time that he stepped out and did what he had to do. But I talk
to him all the time. Nils (Lofgren) I’d known on and off. Me and Nils auditioned the
same night at the Fillmore West in 1969. When the situation came up, I had spent some
time with him and I knew that he thought and felt about music and rock ‘n’ roll the way
that I did. So that was kind of it. We never auditioned anybody or anything. He really
brought an emotional thing to the band. At this point I think that the band is the only
thing that counts. It’s the emotional commitment you gotta have to get on that stage.
MUSICIAN: Are you going to vote this year?
SPRINGSTEEN: I’m not registered yet. I think I am gonna register and vote my
conscience. I don’t know that much about politics. I guess my politics are in my songs,
whatever they may be. My basic attitude is people-oriented, you know. Kind of like
human politics. I feel that I can do my best by making songs. Make some difference that
way.
MUSICIAN: You have no perfume or beer companies or anybody sponsoring your tour.
Would you ever?
SPRINGSTEEN: We get approached by corporations. It’s just not something that
struck me as the thing that I wanted to do. Independence is nice. That’s why I started
this. For the independence. I’m telling my story out there. I’m not telling somebody
else’s. I’m ;,aying what I want to say. That’s the only thing I’m selling. I had a few small
jobs before I started playing but when I picked up that guitar, that was when I could
walk down my own path. That’s just the way I like it. It’s a lucky feeling, you know,
because how many people get to set their own standards and kind of run their own
circus?
MUSICIAN: You’re doing the Rolling Stones’ “Street Fighting Man” as an encore. Is that a
polibcal statement?
SPRINGSTEEN: I don’t know. I like that one line in the song, “What can a poor boy do
but play for a rock ‘n’ roll band?” It’s one of the greatest rock ‘n’ roll lines of all time. It
just seemed right for me to do it. It’s just fun. In that spot of the night it just fits in there.
It’s just so driving, man. After “Born To Run,” we got to go up. That’s the trick. ‘Cause
it’s hard to find songs for our encore. You gotta go up and then you gotta go up again.
It ,has tremendous chord changes, that song.
MUSICIAN: Is this another tour that lasts forever?
SPRINGSTEEN: Well, it’s just the way we’ve always done it. It’s partly because the
records take a while and by the time we get out, you want to go everyplace. But that
was the original idea: this is a traveling band. You gotta bring it to people. Up real close,
as close as you can get. That’s what I like to do. ‘Cause if you want it for yourself, you
gotta want it for everybody, ’cause it’s all connected. In the end it’s all part of the same
thing. Which is why Elvis’ message was so profound. It reaches everybody,
everywhere. Doesn’t matter where or what the problems are or what the government
is like. It bypasses those things. It’s a heart to heart. It’s a human thing. That’s why it
should go out. Somebody comes out, they shout and yell, they have a great night, it’s a
rock ‘n’ roll show. It makes a difference, makes them think about something different.
If I walk out on that stage and I feel it, there’s a moment here that can’t be recaptured.
This is the night that they meet you and you meet them, head on. That chance only
comes once. One time. And you gotta take advantage of it. Some nights, like tonight in
that Detroit medley, you can hear- the scream and that captures the entire night. That’s
what I came to do. That’s all I wanted to say.
PLAYING IN THE BAND
By Bill Flanagan
Recording Born In The U.S.A. really depended on the band playing at its full potential
all the time,” says Max Weinberg. “Because there was very little rehearsal. We just went
in without ever really running the songs down and recorded everything live. We cut
seventy or seventy-five songs. Sometimes the band didn’t even know the chords.
They’d be looking at Bruce’s hands. Bruce always sings live. We really depended on
linking up.
“It was funny about this record,” the drummer went on. “Most of it was recorded before
MTV, before the Police got really big. ‘Born In The U.S.A.,’ ‘Darlington County,’ ‘Glory
Days,’ ‘I’m On Fire’—all those songs were recorded in the original sessions. This is more
of a true American rock ‘n’ roll band sound. It’s the way we always sounded in
rehearsal.
“We hadn’t played in six months and suddenly we came together and played. So it was
very loose, very relaxed. We didn’t even work it out. That makes more sense for a
band like us, trying to capture the heat of the moment. It took us ten years to get to the
point where we could really do that. We’ve always tried, but it didn’t come off. That’s
one of the reasons I think my drumming on Darkness At The Edge Of Town leaves a bit
to be desired. You’ve got to make it as immediate as possible. As Bruce says, ‘We don’t
make records, we make music.”‘
It’s July. Max Weinberg and the rest of the E Street Band are in Canada to play three
nights in the Toronto Blue Jays’ baseball stadium. “Dancing In The Dark” has been all
over the radio since early May. Born In The U.S.A., the new album has been in the stores
for a couple of weeks. The Bruce Springsteen tour, which will last more than a year, is
just getting underway.
Like this tour, the E Street Band has been over a decade in the making. Organist Danny
Federici has been playing with Bruce for fifteen years. Garry Tallent (bass) and Clarence
Clemons (sax) came aboard before Springsteen’s first album was recorded in 1973.
Weinberg and pianist Roy Bittan started in late ’74, in time to play on all of BOM TO
Run except the title track. The band has two new members tonight. Nils Lofgren is a
star in his own right, almost as well known for his work with Neil Young as for his own
albums. Also new is background
vocalist Patti Scialfa, a striking young woman with a powerful voice and
southern New Jersey origin. By the end of a three and a half hour concert, it’s obvious
that one of rock’s best bands has gotten better. At a point when any ambitious musician
would be content to maintain his level, Springsteen’s group has made a leap forward.
“I’ve seen Bruce’s show a lot over the last ten years,” Nils Lofgren comments. “As good
as the band has always been, they’re certainly better now. They’ve really matured. The
first time Bruce played the new album for me, I especially noticed how good the band
had gotten. They needed all that time, ten or fifteen years, to all progress to that stage.
There’s no short cuts to where they are. To walk into the band at this moment is just
fantastic.”
There’s a wonderful moment toward the end of “Born In The U.S.A.” when the whole
band sounds as if they’re teetering, about to lose it, then pull back together with the
exhilaration of an airplane pulling out of a nosedive. Compliment Springsteen on that
track and he says, “That’s Max. Max was the best thing on that song. That was only the
second take, and it’s Max’s best ever.”
Weinberg recalls the moment: “We all thought the song was over. I was just about to
stop playing. Then we went on for another eight minutes. There’s a long jam that’s not
on the record. It was very exciting. At the point when we started recording Born In The
U.S.A., my style was very stripped down. I made a conscious effort not to do as many
fills. That particular song was a real fluke because I wasn’t into playing that way. It was
real late at night, the session was over, and Bruce just started playing this guitar
rhythm. That day on the way to New York I’d been listening to a Stones tape. I had the
‘Street Fighting Man’ groove in my mind. Roy came up with the line that he plays and it
just fell into place. It was the simplest, quickest thing that I’ve ever had happen to me in
the studio.”
Weinberg’s sparser approach was influenced by his research for The Big Beat, his book
of interviews with the greatest rock drummers. Talking to his heroes and studying their
work gave Weinberg new insights. Max spent a day with Ringo, came back to the
States, and played like Ringo on the next song the band cut, “Bobby Jean.” Listening to
Who’s Next led to approximating Keith Moon on the end of “No Surrender. ” “I used to
overplay terribly,” Weinberg volunteers. It’s a surprising admission from one of the
most imitated—and sought after—rock drummers of the last ten years. Wasn’t that big
drum presence part of the Springsteen sound?
“I was never comfortable with that,” Max declares. “There’s certain tracks I listen to I
know I could have done better on. I played badly on ‘Prove It All Night.’ I just wasn’t
hitting the mark that day.”
Clarence Clemons doesn’t disagree. “Like Max says,” the sax player shrugs. “He was
over-playing. He was over-anxious to do everything just right instead of relaxing and
letting it happen. In the three years we were off the road everybody grew so much,
musically and emotionally. Ind it shows. Now everybody’s sure of themselves, of their
abilities. You just play. It’s a lot easier now.”
Bruce Springsteen has grown. And not just as an artist, as an influence, and as a
commercial force. Springsteen has GROWN. He’s taller. After the first of the Toronto
concerts, my buddies and I were at the hotel pool when the Boss came out to join us for
a swim. Heavy exercise and proper diet has transformed a once Jaggeresque physique
into He-man proportions. The word around the dressing room is that with his new
muscles, Bruce’s once horrible posture got unbent, and new inches were unfurled. The
morning after one of his marathon shows leaves him exhausted, Springsteen drags
himself out of bed and heads for the gym.
All of which brings us to the E Street Band’s role as New Prototype for rock ‘n’ roll
habits. People magazine compared the clean-living band to the Hardy Boys. Intoxicants
stronger than beer can’t be found backstage, and workouts are the hot pursuit. Moms
and dads who fell in love to the music and image of the Rolling Stones must wonder
what to make of kids who celebrate being “Born In The U.S.A.,” bring American flags to
rock concerts, and make a drugless guy like Springsteen the country’s top rocker.
Whatever happened to decadence? [You wanna take that one, David Lee? -Ed.]
During intermission at one of the four-hour concerts Clarence Clemons stretches out
on a rub-down table and says, “This tour, everybody’s physically fit. Everybody!s into
being in shape, being aware of what you’re putting in your body.” To the suggestion
that, in a high-glamour era, the E Streeters project a regular guy image, Clarence says,
“That’s the fun of it. To be a regular guy and to generate such enthusiasm. And not lose
touch with your reality. We’ve all been around. We’ve seen it. And it’s no big deal. I
hate that decadence. Some bands go out and play forty-five minutes. They’ve got
limousines and caviar and champagne.” Clemons makes each luxury sound like a
communicable social disease. “Forget that. I just want to do my job and make people
happy. “
Confronted with accusations of temperance, bassist Garry Tallent flops back in his chair
feigning drunken incoherence. “No,” he smiles as he straightens up. “It’s true but,
especially since People magazine, it’s become a thing. There’s a lot of bands out there
who aren’t zonked every night. We’re not the only ones. I just don’t want it to become
a big thing: ‘Oh. These guys are straight.’ That’s silly. Tlien it becomes something that
it’s not intended to be. To my way of lookin’, it sort of fits. All of a sudden people are
taking care of themselves, running, working out. If anything, ” Tallent smiles, “I think
the times have caught up with us. We’re the band of the 80s.”
Garry Tallent joined the band in January of 1971. “Bruce always did originals,” Tallent
says. “As long as I’ve known him. When I started playing with him the idea was,
‘Strictly originals.’ And we didn’t work. I think we were together nine months,
rehearsing in the garage, working just once in a while. Then we decided to play some
clubs. So we learned some Rolling Stones songs and some Chuck Berry songs,” Tallent
laughs, “which were basically the same—so we could fill out five sets.”
What’s most different now?
“Being accepted,” Tallent smiles. “Even in the little clubs, the acceptance has been there
quite a while. This scale, worldwide, is great. But I can’t remember too many times it
was really a bummer ’cause people didn’t accept us. I remember a couple of occasions
early on when people wanted to hear Steel Mill (Bruce’s hard rock band) and we
weren’t giving them that kind of stuff any more. We had trouble playing in places
where he was once very popular. But that was a long time ago. What’s the same is
feeling that what you’re doing is great. I’ve always loved Bruce’s writing and I’ve
always loved playing in a band with him. That has always been.”
It’s twenty-five minutes before showtime the next evening. Springsteen wanders out of
the dining room backstage, and toward his dressing room. Lofgren paces up and down
the hall, strumming the Chuck Berry rhythm of “Open All Night” on an acoustic guitar.
From out of a side door emerges crew member Terry MaGovern—a big, dignified man
with a gray beard—dressed in a large foam-rubber tree costume. During “Growin’ Up”
Bruce will launch into a monologue about Clarence and he being lost in the Jersey
woods. MaGovern has been drafted into portraying the woods. His partner Jim
McDuffie will represent the animal kingdom, dressed as a bear. Roy Bittan comes out,
sees MaGovern and goes into hysterics. While Nils still strums to himself, Roy grabs his
camera and gets his wife Amy to pose with the forest primeval.
In the dressing room across the hall, Patti Scialfa lines her eyes and searches for her
toothpaste. ” I always take my work seriously,” Scialfa says. “But working for Bruce is
real different. I want to be as good as I can possibly be. I’ve never been as disciplined as
right now. I do a voice lesson every day. I work out. I feel a real responsibility to give a
hundred percent. Bruce makes me feel that in a very positive way.
“Some people you work for are crabby, or they have a lot of problems that come out.
That makes it hard to feel good about yourself. But Bruce is a great leader. He’s
fearless.” Patti laughs. “He gets up there and he’s calm, he looks very centered. It’s like,
‘This is it. This is what we’re going to do.’ Working for somebody like that enables me
to rise to my best. He brings out a purity. There’s nothing putting up blocks.”
Patti had seen Bruce play only once before joining the band. She met him in the
summer of 1983, while sitting in with a local bar band, Cats on a Smooth Surface, in
Asbury Park. (She had left a gig with Southside Johnny a year earlier.) At the beginning
of the summer of ’84, Bruce invited her over to his house to sing with Nils, Roy and
him. “We just sat around with acoustic guitars,” Scialfa remembers. “It was very casual,
which I thought was nice. He called about two days later and asked if I wanted to come
up and sing with the whole band.” Patti passed the audition, and was asked to join the E
Street Band on a Sunday night. The tour began that Wednesday. She got through the
first show using crib notes. Patti still hasn’t told Bruce that she’s one of the girls who
auditioned to join the band when Born To Run came out.
Is there a greater lesson in Patti’s story? She thinks so: “You can meet somebody nice in
a bar.”
Nils Lofgren was about to start work on an album for a European label when he got
the call, in May. Last winter Nils spent some time at Bruce’s house. “I’d heard these
stories that Steve (Van Zandt) might not be able to stay,” Lofgren explains. “So just for
my own head, I told Bruce that if it got to the point where he actually had to find
another guitar player, to keep me in mind. I just said it and dismissed it.”
When Bruce asked Nils to join, he jumped at the chance. “I love bands,” Lofgren says.
“Grin had to break up ’cause we did four albums and none of them did well enough on
the business end for us to stay together. That was a real painful thing. It had been ten
years since that break up, and to get a chance to play in a great band was really
fantastic. It’s exciting for me to be in a band and not be the leader.”
On their night off, several E Streeters went to see Difford and Tilbrook. As Glenn
Tilbrook was ill, the former Squeeze leaders played, with their encore, only about sixty
minutes. Afterwards Garry Tallent went backstage to pay his compliments and invite
them to the following night’s Springsteen concert. “I’d love to go,” Tilbrook said, “but
we’ve got to play here again tomorrow at eleven.”
“Well,” Tallent replied, “We go on about 8:15.”
“Oh great, then we’ll come see the first part of your show before we play.”
“Yeah,” some wise-ass piped up. “and then when you’re done you can go back and see
the rest.”
No one’s worked as hard to bring intimacy into arenas as Bruce Springsteen. He still
runs all over the hall during soundcheck to check out acoustics in the cheap seats. Every
time Springsteen has moved up—from clubs to 3,000 seat theatres, from theatres to
civic centers, he’s delayed the move way past the point where ticket demand warranted
an escalation.
Rather than play one night to the whole Toronto ballpark, Springsteen had chosen to
play to part of the stadium for three nights. But he was uncomfortable with the video
screen that was used to give those far off a good look. Although assured that the
multiple cameras and sympathetic direction had made the movie screen a valuable
addition, Bruce sighed that he had doubts about it. The whole show was an experiment,
an attempt to see if it was possible to achieve in a ball park anything like the intimacy
he’d maintained on the slow climb from bars to arenas. Springsteen is again at a point
where his audience has gotten too big for the halls he wants to play.
“As far as interaction with the audience goes,” Roy Bittan says over dinner a few weeks
later, “I do not feel Bruce has lost anything. Some people say, ‘Oh, it was so much better
when we played in little clubs.’ I don’t perceive any difference. Bruce relates to the
entire audience, whether it’s 50 people or 3,000 or 25,000. I don’t believe he increases
the size of the places we play until he feels that, sound-wise, productionwise, and with
his own particular way of performing, he’s positive he can project to that last person in
the last row.
“I like sound outdoors,” Bittan continues. “It’s real clear. It has a real stereo quality about
it. Technology today has reached the point where you can play those large places. It’s
not like the Beatles playing Shea Stadium with two little P.A. columns and 64,000
screaming people. I want to see us in a 60,000 seat arena. I know people are going to
react in the same way. That interaction between Bruce and his audience isn’t going to
change. I’m looking forward to that. I think it’s a positive step. I think the video screen
is great. I love it. I think you do reach a point where the visual element is reduced to a
bunch of ants on a postage stamp. That’s the point where the video screen really
enhances it.”
Even at Blue Jays Stadium, the crowd hushed when Springsteen dismissed the band to
sing “No Surrender” with his acoustic guitar. They also paid strict attention to his long
stories about growing up. Springsteen demands a lot of his audience, and he usually
gets it. He began to tell a story about his hometown:
“When I was a kid, I lived by this park. And in the park was a monument. My mother
used to always say, ‘Where are you going?’ We’d say, ‘We’re gonna go play around the
monument.’ Then when I was fifteen and in my first band, we needed our publicity
pictures taken. We all had these plastic leather snakeskin vests we got at the auction.
And we had these frilly shirts like the Kinks used to wear. Beatle boots. We went down
to the monument and we did all our poses. Had to have all those poses down exactly. It
wasn’t till I was olderthat I found out there’d been this Revolutionary War battle fought
outside my town ….”
At that point one kid yelled, “Rock ‘n’ roll.” One kid out of 22,000. Springsteen instantly
cut short the story and, with a signal to the band, began playing.
The day after Labor Day, the last night of summer vacation, Springsteen played the first
of two shows at the Centrum in Worcester, Massachusetts. “Dancing In The Dark” had
lasted a whole summer on the radio. That night, Springsteen finished the story of the
monument.
“It wasn’t till I got in my late teens that I even knew what it was a monument to. There
was a Revolutionary War battle fought outside my town. Before this tour I went down
to Washington and I visited the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. It’s a big walk and a lot of
years between those two places. One of the guys, the drummer, who was in my first
band’s name is in the stone down there. I guess that’s what monuments are for. So that
you’ll always, always remember. So that you never forget. That this is your
hometown.”
In the summer of ’75, just after he finished mixing Born ToRun, I approached
Springsteen after a gig and asked him about the buzz that he was going to be a really
big star.
“I don’t think about it, man,” Bruce shrugged. Then he admitted, “Well, I do think about
it, I guess. But . . . you do what you do. And whatever comes from that, then that’s
what happens. Whether it’s a big place or a little place, it’s great.” He looked at his feet
and explained, “See, what it is is, I’m always happy when I play with the band.”

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WALK TALL OR DON’T WALK AT ALL

Articolo del 1974 quello di quest’oggi scritto da Dave Marsh il biografo ufficiale di Springsteen.

“Walk tall or don’t walk at all”
By Dave Marsh

I’ve seen Bruce Springsteen twice in the last few months. He is better than anything
on the radio, and he has a new single, “Born To Run,” which, if we are at all fortunate,
will be played across the land by now. Given the current paucity of interesting subject
matter, he’s the subject of this column.
When I first saw him, last April in Boston, it was in a sweaty little bar in Harvard
Square, packed to the walls with street kids and college students, rock writers and
general hangers-on, drunks and know-it-alls. I expected nothing; I got everything.
When I saw him again at the Bottom Line in New York, I expected everything, and he
didn’t let me down. Springsteen is the perfect AM performer. His sangs don’t have all
the obvious hooks that wear out after you’ve heard them for a couple of weeks.
Instead, they grow on you, and soon, you’re fascinated not only by the Latin-inflected
soul and rock he’s playing, not only by Clarence Clemons’s magic saxophone, not only
by Springsteen’s voice—which embodies the mystique of James Dean and (yes) Bob
Dylan—but by the tales he’s telling, and the characters he creates.
There is a passion here, for the mythical girl friend, Puerto Rican Jane (known in
Springsteen’s greatest songs as Rosalita), and for everyone else who pops up: the fishwife
in “New York City Serenade” is enough to make you weep.
The magic of Springsteen harks back to a tradition at least as old as “Jailhouse Rock,”
and “Maybelline.” What you discover in the hundredth listening is not only music that
compels you to listen that often, but a tale that deserves telling. It’s not so far
different from trash epics like the cannibalistic “Timothy,” or even a nice little
suicide saga like “Without You.” But Springsteen does it every time out; if he cleans
up his production, there is no reason why the key line of “Born To Run”—”Tramps
like us, we were born to run”—won’t become the rallying cry of the decade.
But “Born To Run” is not Springsteen’s greatest song. His best is “Rosalita,” the tale of
a love affair at least the equal of Romeo and Juliet’s, or Catherine the Great and
Secretariat’s. It begins with a guitar and saxophone swoop into utter ecstasy that I’m
listening to as compulsively as ever I did to the song closest to its music, Van
Morrison’s “Wild Night.”
Bruce loves Rosie, but Rosie’s parents don’t love him; he’s nothing but rock ‘n’ roll
trash as far as they’re concerned. “Now I know your mama don’t like me ’cause I play
in a rock ‘n’ roll band, and I know your daddy don’t like me, but he never did
understand…And your papa says he knows I don’t have any money,” he taunts,
mocking eternal parental misgivings, just the way Chuck Berry did in “You Never Can
Tell.” But Springsteen has it in him to make the story even more magical, certainly
more contemporary. “Tell your daddy this is his last chance,” he exclaims, pulling his
best lines from nowhere, “To get his daughter in a fine romance. ‘Cause the record
company, osie, just gave me a big advance.” And proceeds to crack up his car in a
Jersey swamp.
There’s no tale anywhere in rock. at the moment and certainly nothing on the radio
today, which can come close to matching it. There’s hardly a performer anywhere
who can make you so joyous when he comes out with the gestures that belong to a
movie star and the voice that belongs to an amalgam of Wilson Pickett and Morrison.
“This is music,” a friend of mine said at the Bottom Line, “that can make you care
again.”
Which is what I want to do, and what Springsteen offers that no one else does. Elliott
Murphy and the Dolls, as much as I love them, are doomsayers; Springsteen just
comes out and acts like nothing’s changed, or if it has, he doesn’t care very much,
anyway. Wouldn’t it be a pleasure to hear this stuff on the highway? Might up the
accident rate, of course, but then, that is what the best music has always done: it is a
little like drowning. If your entire life does not flash before your eyes, all the best
parts of it do, or all the most special ones.
And whether Springsteen is joking about being “Born To Lose,” which he wasn’t, or
celebrating Manhattan in “New York City Serenade,” with a passion that can bring
tears to your eyes, or blasting onto the stage with “Then I Kissed Her,” or doing his “E
Street Shuffle,” those moments are so special, you know that next time they’ll be part
of the drowning experiences that total immersion in great music brings.
“Walk tall,” he demands, “or don’t walk at all.” Springsteen struts, because he knows,
as if he were 6’6″ instead of as short as me, that he’s as big as anybody who ever took
a stage. I’d trade everything else I’ve heard this year for the evenings I spent with him.
He has everything, the past, the present and the future. For once in your life, do
touch that dial— Springsteen will touch you back. And when you’re rockin’ your
baby, that’s just what you need, just like it is when there ain’t no baby to rock. The
music on the radio is like Springsteen’s “Spirit In The Night,” and you grab that spirit
every chance you get. This is the best chance of all.
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