SPRINGSTEEN NUOVO SINGOLO

Il nuovo singolo di Bruce Springsteen uscirà sabato 17 aprile:

CELEBRATE RECORD STORE DAY WITH A BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN SINGLE

Record stores across the U.S. are celebrating Record Store Day on April 17, with exclusive, collectible items from a broad range of artists, including Bruce Springsteen.

Columbia Records has produced a 10″ vinyl single available only on Record Store Day:


Side A: “Wrecking Ball (Live at Giants Stadium)” 
Side B: “The Ghost Of Tom Joad (Live Version featuring Tom Morello)”

Exclusively created for Record Store day, this limited edition 10″ single features two great, rare live performances from 2009 and 2008. Both of these tracks have previously only been available digitally. Get your copy on Record Store Day which takes place on Saturday, April 17th. 

This piece is strictly limited so contact the store in advance to make sure that they will have stock. 

Check out Record Store Day to find your nearest participating store, and don’t forget to visit on Saturday, April 17!




Il link al sito ufficiale.   Ovviamente a Trieste non lo vendono, chi me lo prende?



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MELBOURNE 20.03.2003

La scaletta del concerto di apertura del leg australiano di Bruce Springsteen e la E-street band durante il tour di The Rising nel marzo del 2003

01 Born in the USA (acoustic)
02 War
03 The rising
04 Lonesome day
05 No surrender

06 Prove it all night
07 Empty sky
08 You’re missing
09 Waitin’ on a sunny day
10 The promised land
11 Worlds apart
12 Badlands
13 Out in the street
14 Mary’s place
15 Countin’ on a miracle
16 Backstreets
17 Into the fire
18 Thunder road
19 Bobby Jean
20 Ramrod
21 Born to run
22 My city of ruins
23 Land of hope and dreams
24 Dancing in the dark
25 Glory days

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TRADEWINDS 08.03.1997

Mini bootleg del 1997 di Bruce Springsteen con gli Wallflowers, la band di Jakob Dylan, il figlio di Bob Dylan.

01 God Don’t Make Lonely Girls (6:38)
02 My Girl (4:53)
03 Brand New Cadillac (3:49)
04 Bring It On Home To Me (4:58)
05 Not Fade Away (5:29)

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SPECTACLE WITH BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN 25.09.2009

American Skin acustica, basterebbe questo per volere questo bootleg di Springsteen in DVD. Stupendo.

Elvis Costello presents Spectacle with… Bruce Springsteen (apocalypse sound)

Apollo Theater, New York City, New York, USA, September 25th 2009

Episode 1 (Broadcast Date : January 20, 2010)
01. She’s the One – Elvis Costello, Nils Lofgren & The Imposters
02. Interview #01
03. Wild Billy’s Circus Story – Bruce Springsteen, Nils Lofgren & Roy Bittan
04. Interview #02
05. American Skin (41 Shots) – Bruce Springsteen
06. Interview #03
07. I Can’t Stand Up For Falling Down – Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Roy Bittan, Nils Lofgren & The Imposters

Episode 2 (Broadcast Date : January 27, 2010)
01. Radio Silence – Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Roy Bittan, Nils Lofgren & The Imposters
02. Radio Nowhere – Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Roy Bittan, Nils Lofgren & The Imposters
03. Radio Radio – Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Roy Bittan, Nils Lofgren & The Imposters
04. Interview #01
05. Pretty Woman – Bruce Springsteen & Elvis Costello
06. Interview #02
07. Seeds – Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Roy Bittan, Nils Lofgren & The Imposters
08. Interview #03
09. Black Ladder – Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello & Nils Lofgren
10. Interview #04
11. Galveston Bay – Bruce Springsteen & Roy Bittan
12. The Rising – Bruce Springsteen, Elvis Costello, Roy Bittan, Nils Lofgren & The Imposters

DVD : NTSC CODE REGION 0 (Plays on all DVD players) DOLBY DIGITAL INTERACTIVE MENUS
SOURCE: TV BROADCASTS 1 DVD TRIFOLD DIGIPACK SLEEVE

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Blue Collar Troubadour

Spero che questo articolo del 1984 sia di vostro interesse.

Che ne pensate?

BLUE-COLLAR

TROUBADOUR

At 34, Bruce Springsteen has never been better, as his barnstorming road showrollsacrosstheU.S.A by Chet Flippo
Groaning and sweating cannonballs, Bruce Springsteen jounces along in the passenger seat of a packed-to-the-gunwales van barreling out of downtown Detroit at 4 in the a.m. He radiates waves of locker-room Ben-Gay powerful enough to knock down a charging rhino at 30 yards. And he s happy. Happy as only a certifiablyfanaticalrock n rollercan be when he has just strapped on his Fender Telecaster guitar and blown away 24,039 also certifiable rock fans in the very heart of Motor City. Home of the Cadillac and of the Motown Sound. A tough audience. Bruce had just brought them to their knees with three and a half hours of no-mercy, flat-out rock n roll played the way God intended, and now he issuffering for it. Even after a half-hour rubdown by his trainer, Bruce aches from the grueling marathon of singing, dancing and screaming.
Man, he rasps in that familiar Jersey Shore staccato, this was a four and a half tonight. A visitor crammed up against a guitar case behind him asks what he means. I usually lose between three and five pounds during a show, he says. This felt like a four point five. He laughs a contented laugh, and the van sails on through the night.After laying out for three years, the Boss is back with a vengeance. Back with no flash, no lasers, no glitter, no glove. Back with his highly personal brand of straight-ahead, gJoves-off rock overlaid with a deceptively folksy vox populi that has made him the poet of the blue-collar baby boomers, for whom his carefully wrought songs sound like letters ftom home. Just as Hank Williams and Woody Guthrie did before him, Springsteen articulates the thoughts of an entire class of people. And right now nobody does it better. In Detroit Springsteen learned that his new album, Born in the U.S.A., was No. 1 on the charts, the LP s first single release, Dancing in the Dark, was No. 2, and the tour was steaming along at such a pace that he had sold 202,027 tickets—that s 10 nights—at Brendan Byrne Arena in home state New Jersey in just two days. And the tour (this week Bruce is in Washington, D.C.) is going to continue for at least a year, with forays to Canada, the Far East and Europe.
Given all that, the trappings of rock superstardom were astonishingly absent backstage at Detroit s Joe Louis Arena earlier on the balmy summer evening. The fans milling around outside were so well-mannered that even the cops were yawning. No stretch limos for the rock stars; just unobtrusive vans. No stiletto-heeled, slit-skirted, glossy groupies stalking their turf. In the dressing rooms and the tunnels backstage, there were no drugs and nothing stronger to drink than beer.
Welcome to the Hardy Boys on the Road, laughs a management associate. She s kidding, of course, but there s a hearty, all-American air to the proceedings that one doesn t usually find at this sort of event. Sit down, comes a holler from a man with a familiar rock face. He s assistant road manager Chris Chappel, for many years in The Who s organization. Chappel explains he s happy to be here for many reasons. For one: Sanity, no drugs. For another, he s a fan: When I first saw Bruce at Hammersmith Odeon [in London] in 1975, I knew immediately that the rock n roll torch had been passed from the Beatles and the Stones and The Who to him. I had never seen such a great show. And I still haven’t.”
Meanwhile, Bruce is winding up his usual exhaustive sound check in a cavernous hall. He is one of the few rockers who bothers to do a walk-through, listening carefully from every area of the hall while his band is playing. Then he disappears into his dressing room,to remain alone until the show starts. This is a typically exuberant Bruce crowd, screaming Brr—uuu—ce chants that sound like “boos” to the uninitiated. They
hold up lighted matches and those 99-cent discount lighters and scream for Br—uuce some more. Then they stomp and shake the floor and do the Wave and cheer each other. When Bruce finally gains the stage at 8:35 p.m., the spontaneous roar from 24,039 throats is seismic, physically felt, unsettling in its Intensity. Most performers never get thls klnd of ovation when their concerts end. Bruce is clearly among friends In Detroit. He’s a folk hero in his biker boots, tight jeans, kerchief headband and short-sleeved sport shirt with Its sleeves rolled up to display his newly pumped-up biceps. And he’s sporting a proud attitude that proves to be contagious when he rips into Born in the US.A., a blue-collar anthem of the ’80s If ever there was one (kid gets drafted, sent to Vletnam, then prison and every other raw deal possible, but remains a “cool rocking Daddy In the U.S.A.”). The applause is, of course, thunderous. Some of the blue collars in the $14
seats behind the stage (all tickets are $14 or $15) unfurl American flags.

SPRINGSTEEN IN EUROPA !!!







La notizia è di quelle che fanno squillare i telefoni alle sei del mattino, anche se fosse domenica.
Quando Tsitalia me la trasmette non vado neanche a leggere lo schermo del pc alle sue spalle, vado direttamente al calendario da muro nella stanza accanto a verificare le date. 
Che strano, non ricordavo di aver portato qui il mobile TV della mia camera a casa dei miei. Oltretutto ingombra da morire e Zzi non si è ancora lamentato, meglio così.

Vediamo, allora, quali sono i giorni dei concerti di questo improvviso mini tour di Springsteen in Europa:

24, 25 e 27 Maggio: Dublino 
29 Maggio: Londra
31 Maggio: Bruxelles
2 Giugno: Parigi
5, 6 Giugno: Milano
9 Giugno: Roma
11 Giugno: Bologna
13 Giugno: Lubiana
14 Giugno: Zagabria
17, 18 e 20 Giugno: Stoccolma
22: Goteborg
24: Copenhagen
26, 27 e 29: Barcellona

“Amore, ragioniamo. A parte il fatto che siamo fottuti, analizziamo lucidamente [si fa per dire] la progressione:
Fine Maggio a Dublino: un classico: è ovvio che c’ha l’anniversario con l’amante, altrimenti non mi spiegherei tanta regolarità. Noi ci siamo sempre andati, non vorrei che non vedendoci si offendesse.
Il 2 giugno in Italia è ponte, quale occasione migliore per invadere la Gallia?
Milano è teoricamente bidonabile, ma essendo due serate è fondamentale andare almeno alla seconda.
Bologna è l’ultima data italiana, sicuro che fa For You, bisogna che ci andiamo.
Lubiana è Lubiana, è dientro l’angolo e non ci sarà nessuno…e poi, guarda che comodo: Bologna – Trieste/doccia – Lubiana, è una tratta unica, quando ci ricapita di passar da casa?”
“Non c’è il matrimonio della tua amica a Tortona il 12 Giugno?”
“Me ne fotto, capirà.
Zagabria, idem, anzi, quasi quasi mi metto già in coda.
La Scandinavia è la Scandinavia, ma a qualcosa bisogna pur rinunciare, però andiamo a Copenhagen per il nostro anniversario e poi Barcellona, che ti lamenti sempre che non ti porto mai al mare.
Che ne dici?
Eh, che ne dici?”
“Troppe date”
“Eh, belin, lo vedo che sono troppe date, ma cadono tutte bene. Tu hai ferie?”
“Le dovrei spostare, ma le ho. Tu, piuttosto, non so quante ne abbia maturate”
“Checcefrega, Zzi, tanto a Giugno mi licenziano”
“Ma no, sei andata anche a Roma a imparare…”
“Sì, sì, facciamo che lo so già che mi licenziano, facciamo anche che adesso andiamo al Verdi a comprare i biglietti, eh?”
“Per l’opera?”
“Ma che opera, cosa vuoi che me ne freghi dell’opera! Per Bruce! Facciamo che li vendono adesso al teatro Verdi, ma bisogna che ci muoviamo altrimenti le vecchine ci prendono a bastonate. Anzi, guarda, adesso vado dentro l’ufficio postale e gli chiedo se ci imprestano la macchinetta che fa i numeri della coda, così evitiamo litigi.”
“Ma siamo già in coda davanti al teatro?”
“Sì, hai visto? E siamo vestiti da casa, porca miseria, si vede che siamo usciti di corsa”
“Va beh, tanto mica andiamo a teatro, siamo venuti solo a comprare i biglietti”
“Ma metti che passa qualcuno che mi conosce? Ecco, vedi? C’è la mia amica che suona che è venuta a far le prove e io sono in pigiama e con le ciabatte rattoppate”
“Fanno le prove alle sette del mattino?”
“Sai come sono i musicisti. Quanti biglietti venderanno a testa? E quanti soldi hai?”
“Io non ho soldi, sono vestito da casa: ho in tasca solo il fazzoletto sporco”
“Merda. E il bancomat?”
“È a casa”
“Andiamo a prenderlo”
“Hai le chiavi?”
“No che non ho le chiavi! Cazzo, guarda come sono vestita, sembro Artur Dent, ho anche la vestaglia adesso!”
“Quindi siamo chiusi fuori”
“Ma come cazzo fai a essere così calmo? Siamo chiusi fuori di casa, in pigiama, senza soldi, davanti al teatro dell’opera per comprare i biglietti di un tour di Springsteen che inizia tra meno di due mesi annunciato dieci minuti fa, assediati dalle vecchie che vogliono passarci davanti per prendere il numerino della posta e tutta l’orchestra che passa e ci deride. Ma ti rendi conto o no di quanto è surreale la situazione?”
“Io sì”
“E sei così calmo?”
“Non è mica reale. Mciù. Mciù”
…  …
“Non darmi bacini!”
“Non vuoi bacini, piccina? Ti rigiravi tutta!”
“Oh, ciao Zzi. Scusa, sì che voglio i bacini del buongiorno. Facevo un brutto sogno, eravamo a comprare i biglietti di Bruce, ma non avevamo i soldi…”
“Su, su. È passato.”
“Sai ho sognato che c’era un tour adesso”
“Vai a fare il caffè, io scarico il Fatto, poi mi racconti”

“Larry! C’è davvero! È scritto sul giornale: <>”é>
“Uaaah! Lubiana! Allora è stato un sogno premonitore! Sono in collegamento telepatico con Springsteen, come Dracula e Mina, come Harry Potter e Voldemort, come Sam e Oda Mae. Sono una strega! Sono una medium!”

“No! Sei una boccalona, era un pesce d’aprile!” 

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THE STADIUM ASS BREAKER 11.07.2009

Ottimo bootleg DVD multi camera del concerto di Springsteen e la E-band a Dublino lo scorso 11 luglio 2009 durante il tour di Working on a dream.

Setlist, DVD 1:
0. The Fields of Anthenry
1. Who’ll Stop the Rain?
2. Badlands
3. Cover Me
4. My Lucky Day
5. Outlaw Pete
6. Out in the Street
7. Working on a Dream
8. Seeds
9. Johhny 99
10. The Ghost of Tom Joad

Setlist, DVD 2:
1. Raise Your Hand
2. You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)
3. Seven Nights to Rock
4. For You
5. Thunder Road
6. Because the Night
7. Waiting on a Sunny Day
8. The Promised Land
9. The River
10. Kingdom of Days

Setlist, DVD 3:
1. Lonesome Day
2. The Rising
3. Born to Run
———————
4. Hard Times
5. Tenth Ave Freeze-out
6. American Land
7. Bobby Jean
8. Dancing in the Dark
9. Ramrod
10. Twist and Shout

Qualche nota dal realizzatore di questo bootleg DVD:

First night of two in Dublin. Bruce’s first High-Definition sourced multi-camera bootleg ever. Overall, this isn’t as good as the footage from the second night, mainly due to a lack of NB filming as he did on night 2 (and he was no. 1 in line on Night 1, so it would have been a little hard to stealth from there 😉 ). My angle is complete, the other two are not. So some songs are 3-cam, some are 1. And, as we were all shooting from the pit, not all the footage is great. On the other hand, BECAUSE we were shooting from the pit, the best shots are utterly fantastic. There are times when just I am shooting when the video gets a bit crap, due to obstructions and/or shakiness caused by my relative lack of height and poor upper body strength (lightweight the cam may be, holding that fecker steadily up above your head for 3hrs straight isn’t easy). In fact, it took me until half way through Cover Me before I really got the hang of what I was doing. I managed to shoot up until Bruce’s guitar solo before CC’s Sax in Badlands with the Optical Image Stabilisation switched off. Who’ll Stop the Rain isn’t too bad because I could cut away to Skipjack’s angle fo much of it, but Badlands had only me filming, so it’s a bit of a trainwreck. Bruce’s solo is audio only as I realised the OIS was off (and so had to stop recording for the cam to let me switch it on). Even after that it’s still pretty shaky as I don’t start to hold it with both hands until halfway through Cover Me. Anyway, yeah… It’s somewhat inconsistant. Very good overall though, and the spectacular close-ups far outweigh the shaky shots of people’s feet in front of me 😉
The one availible audio source was very poor quality, so I used the in-camera audio from the HF100. It’s not brilliant, but better than the existing audio only source, and fine to listen to once your ears get used to it. Vocals a little low. Yes, the audio is in WAV, yet the cam records in AC3. I decided to do that to avoid any possible re-encoding artifacts from doing 2 levels of AC3 on it, and the video bitrates are still pretty high even with the increased WAV filesize. I was supposed to be being sent a second external audio recording, but the guy started ignoring my PMs after agreeing to mail me a copy…

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STILL THE BOSS

STILL THE BOSS
From blacks brownbagging it on a New York subway to Ronald Reagan in Washington, 
everyone has jumped on Bruce Springsteen’s bandwagon. But his patriotic call’s not of the 
jingoistic variety so close to the hearts of  American conservatives. Rather, the 
message from the man from New Jersey is simple. The American dream may be in t
atters,but it’s not beyond repair.
BY J. MAX ROBINS

Since the release of Bom in the USA, just about everybody has tried to grab hold
of that red kerchief in Bruce Springsteen’s back pocket and ride with him to the
top. Attempting to bask in the light of the Boss’s glory days, even Ronald Reagan
mentioned him in campaign speeches last fall in Springsteen’s home state of New
Jersey.
Perhaps Reagan had read his favorite columnist. George Will, a staunch
conservative and arguably the most powerful columnist in America, had gushed
over a Springsteen concert he had seen in Washington, D.C. “If all Americans—in
labor and management, who make steel or cars or shoes or textiles made their
products with as much energy and confidence as Springsteen and his merry
band make music, there would be no need for Congress to be thinking about
protectionism. No “domestic content” legislation is needed in the music industry.
The British and other invasions have been met and matched.”
One can imagine Ronnie settling down with some milk and cookies to watch
Dynasty with Nancy before his impending trip to New Jersey, a critical state in
the upcoming election, and saying to her: “You know, Mommy (believe it: that’s
what the leader of the most powerful country in the world calls his wife), this
young guy Springsteen is awfully popular with the kids and George Will likes
him. Why don’t I mention him on my campaign trip—might pick up a few votes
with the young people.”
Obviously Reagan and his toadies didn’t go any farther than Will’s column,
though Will admitted to having cotton in his ears and to having “not a clue
about Springsteen’s politics.”
It’s simple to interpret an album cover with “Born in the USA” emblazened
across a giant American flag as a call to the brand of old-fashioned
patriotism—read “call to arms/us against them”—that’s been the staple of
Reagan’s political career. Springsteen himself admitted as much when he said:
“The flag is a powerful image, and when you set that stuff loose, you don’t know
what’s gonna be done.”
The release of Born in the USA its huge success and that of
thetourtosupportithadcatapauitedSpringsteenfromrock’n’ roll star to media
megastar. He was in the midst of a tour that would eventually gross $30 million
from ticket sales alone and had a number one record that would sell more than
five million copies, earning him another $8 million. But Springsteen didn’t want
to be invited to the White House a la Michael Jackson for the requisite
handshake, medal and photo session . In concerts following Reagan’s attempt to
bring him into his fold, the Boss would joke that ” Mr. President obviously isn’t
listening to what I’m singing about.” Then he’d launch into a song like
“Downbound Train:”
I had a job, I had a girl
I had something going mister in this world I got laid off down at the lumberyard
Our love wen tbad, times got hard
Now I work down at the car wash, where an it ever does is rain
Don ‘t you feel like you’re a rider on a downbound train?
In an interview a couple of weeks before the election, Springsteen responded to
Reagan’s attempt to co-opt him.
“You see the Regan re-election ads on TV—you know: ‘It’s morning in America.’
And you say, well, it’s not morning in Pittsburgh. It’s not morning above 125th
Street (Harlem) in New York. It’s midnight and, like, there’s a bad moon risin’.
And that’s why when Reagan mentioned my name in New Jersey, I felt it was
another manipulation, and I had to disassociate myself from the president’s
kind words.”
Working class young people and yuppies from
America’s big cityheart, Vietnam vets and
grown-up war protesters, moms and dads with
MTV junkie kids in two—they were all part of
the Springsteen audiences.
In a way, you can’t blame Reagan for trying, even if it’s a little like Herbert
Hoover, the president who led America into the Great Depression, evoking
Woodie Guthrie. Springsteen has built a constituency that would be any
politician’s wet dream. To go to a Springsteen concert is to see America at close
to its polyglot best. Working class young people and yuppies from America’s bigcity
heart, Vietnam vets and grown-up war protesters, moms and dads
approaching middle age with MTV junkie kids in tow—they are all part of the
audiences that go to see Springsteen’s four-hour-plus concerts.
Even the one group that has never been part of Springsteen’s crowd is starting to
tune him in. Despite his strong rhythm and blues roots, he’s never had much of a
black following. But now there are signs that he’s making inroads with that
audience too.
The other night, waiting for a subway, at the end of the platform two middleaged
black men were wailing the Iyrics of “Born in the USA,” as they shared a
brown bag of wine. While that’s no litmus test, remixes of “Dancing in the Dark”
and “Born in the USA,” by Arthur Baker, who cut his funky teeth with rap master
Afrika Bambaataa, coupled with Springsteen’s show-stopping performance on
“We Are the World,” are turning his audience into a true rainbow coalition.
“The first day I can remember looking in a
mirrorand being able to stand what I saw was
the day I had a guihrin my hand. Music was a
reason to live. “
The breadth of Springsteen’s reach can be traced back to his New Jersey days. A
working class kid and lapsed Catholic, he found his salvation—his truth—early
and that was in rock ‘n’ roll.Springsteen traces his first dose of rock’n’roll
fevertoseeing Elvis Presley on The Ed Sullivan Show. “Man, when I was nine, I
couldn’t imagine anyone not wanting to be Elvis Presley,” Springsteen told Dave
Marsh in his bio, Born to Fun. Four years later, when Bruce put down $18 at the
local pawnshop for a guitar, his life changed for good. “Rock and roll has been
ever,vthing to me. The first day I can remember looking in a mirror and being
able to stand what I saw was the day I had a guitar in my hand… Music gave me
something. It was never just a hobby—it was a reason to live.”
His uncanny ability to convey that feeling in his music is key to his decade of
mushrooming success.
Springsteen’s rock ‘n’ roll obsession found outlet in a number of bands that
played the beach circuit from Asbury Park to Virginia Beach. Sucking in
disparate influences, including Chuck Berry, Bob Dylan, the Rolling Stones, Eric
Burden and the Animals, along with nuggets from the Motown and StaxNolt
rosters, he distilled a uniquely American sound. Instrumentally his music was the
perfect foil—sometimes raucous and raunchy,other times sweet and sentimental
— strong on pathos, but always shot through with hope.
John Hammond, the legendary record producer responsible for the signing of,
among others, Billie Holiday, Bob Dylan and Aretha Franklin, first heard
Springsteen in 1972 and was blown away. On Hammond’s recommendation, the
Boss was signed by Columbia Records. Soon Springsteen was being pushed by
Columbia as the “next Dylan.” The Dylan hype hurt and his first record,
Greetings From Asbury Park, flopped.
But it left little doubt where Springsteen was coming from. Songs from that
album, like “Spirits in the Night,” “Growing Up” and ” Blinded by the Light, “
were loaded with the juice of a rebel spirit, searching, albeit naively, for truth. A
year later Springsteen released The Wild, the Innocent, and the E Street Shuffle. It
contained more tales of the characters from the Boardwalk in Asbury Park and
streets of New York—all looking for salvation.
Meanwhile, if anyone was wanting of a little of that salvation, Bruce Springsteen
and the E Street Band, now a tight enough unit to rival the best in rock, were
ready to offer it. In certain parts of the States, people were getting the word on
the Boss. Playing the Eastern seaboard, Springsteen and the E Street Band were
achieving cult status, buoyed by fans who sung their praises with religious fervor.
It was during that period that Springsteen’s manager, John Landau, then a rock
critic, penned his famous review of a concert by the Boss in Boston, with the
prophetic statement: “I have seen the future of rock and roll, and it’s name is
Bruce Springsteen.”
I remember running into Bob Seger back then and he gave an equally ecstatic
report of a Springsteen show. “I caught Springsteen’s act in a small club in
Atlanta,” Seger said. “It was a place where nobody ever dances, and he had
everybody on their feet and shaking it. The way the guy works a crowd is
amazing.”
With 1 975’s Bom to Run, Springsteen began to reach a mass audience. When his
picture was plastered in the same week on the covers of Time and Newsweek,
there were those who thought he’d succumb, like so many before him, to all the
hype.
“The next thing you know there’ll be pictures of him in the tabloids with Britt
Eckland’s hands in his blue jeans as they tumble out of Studio 54,” said an
ardent Springsteen fan from the early days. “Then he’ll record some crummy
record about being too rich, too famous and too high.”
But the Springsteen records that followed, Darkness on the Edge of Town, The
River, and Nebraska, were a leaner, harderedged commitment to the concerns
always central to his music. Then in “No Surrender” on Born in the USA, he
summed it all up:
We busted out of class to get away from all those fools
We learned more from a three-minute record than we ever learned from school
Tonight I hear the neighborhood drummer sound
I hear my heart begin to pound
You say you ‘re tired and you just want to close your eyes and follow your dreams
down
We made a promise we swore we’d always remember no retreat no surrender. . .
Part of Springsteen’s allure, perhaps more than any other performer in rock ‘n’
roll, is that he packs a visceral hit. He taps an audience’s hidden rock ‘n’ roll
soul; if they had rock dreams for themselves, Springsteen’s the embodiment of
them. There’s a comfortable familiarity about his presence. He still lives in New
Jersey and shows up at the local bars to jam with whichever garage band is
playing that night. But there’s also a certain energy and intelligence that’s larger
than life.
“When you first meet him, you think, ‘Oh, another nice regular guy from New
Jersey.’ Then you listen to him for a while— he’s a great storyteller—and you
realize nothing much gets by him,” says John Tintori, who met Springsteen when
he was editing several of the Boss’s videos with director John Sayles. “We’ll
explain why we technically can’t do something he wants done in a video and he
immediately grasps the concept. You get the sense the guy has the kind of genius
where he could’ve excelled in any art form he were to choose.”
With Bruce there’s none of the removed other worldliness of a megastar like Michael
Jackson or the lascivious preening of a Mick Jaggerora Prince.
Fortunately, the form Springsteen chose was rock ‘n’ roll. The for-everyman spirit
he brings to it is still refreshing, especially when compared to the other
superstars who inhabit that terrain. With Bruce there’s none of the removed
otherworldliness of a megastar like Michael Jackson or the lascivious preening of
a Mick Jagger or a Prince. There’s no pretense, no posturing to stand between the
Boss and his audience.
Sure the Boss may strut and swagger once in awhile, like the young Elvis who got
him revved up when he was a kid. Hey, the best rock ‘n’ roll has always been
rebel music. But there’s no sign of degenerating, like Elvis, into the Las Vegas
shtick of coming on stage every night to tell the audience “I really mean
it—you’re beautiful.” Decadent materialism and nihilism, so often a part of the
rock ‘n’ roll star stance, get no play from Springsteen.
It is patriotism manifest in Springsteen desire
to give hope to people whose lives seem out of
controL
What does get play is the plight of the common man and his search for respect.
You see there is something patriotic about Springsteen. His is not the fierce
nationalism of a Reaganite, but simple love and devotion to his country, to his
working class roots. It is patriotism manifest in Springsteen’s desire to give hope
to people whose lives seem out of control. It’s that spirit that led Springsteen to
play disarmament rallies a couple fo years back. It’s knowing what it means to
squeeze some bucks from the paycheck to catch your favorite act—the Boss, the
guy who kept a lid on ticke tprices a t$16 for four hours when the Jacksons were
charging $30 for a 75 minutes. During that tour Springsteen voiced his support
on stage for local food banks and other community action groups, as well as
digging into his own pockets, discreetly, to help them out.
The year of Born in the USA has also been the year of the rehabilitation of the
Vietnam vet. Long-overdue tribute is finally being paid to the men who fought
and died in the politicians’ dirtiest war. Although he managed to avoid the draft
by getting classified 4F, Springsteen knows it was guys from his background who
largely did the fighting and dying in Vietnam, including the drummer from his
firs tband. It’s that knowledge, no doubt, that’s made him a champion of
Vietnam vets.
Springsteen has done benefits and reportedly has contributed large sums of
money to vet counseling and rehab groups. When the memorial to New York’s
Vietnam vets was dedicated last May, it was “Born in the USA” that played at the
finale.
Shortly after the dedication of that monument, word got out that Springsteen
was about to get married. In fact it was frontpage news in newspapers across the
country and on People magazine, which had the tasteful cover “Who’s the Boss
Now?” Something about the media circus surrounding his impending nuptials to
actress-model Julianne Phillips seemed more absurd than these things usually do.
Here was Springsteen getting the media treatment afforded a Jackie Kennedy
Onnasis or Elizabeth Taylor. Days after the wedding, Clarence Clemmons,
Bruce’s close friend and sax player, showed up on The David Letterman Show
and worked as a flak catcher for his buddy. ” Now you girls out there who are
upset about this don’t be, ” he said. “Bruce is very happy and you should be
happy for him.”
A week later Springsteen is in New Jersey to shoot a video before leaving on his
European tour. He has his band assembled across the Hudson River from
Manhattan, inside Maxwell’s bar in Hoboken, a working class town, the birth
place of Frank Sinatra. Maxwell’s is the rock afficionado’s dream club —even for
name acts like Huster Du and the Minute Men, the cover never climbs past five
bucks. Outside, despite every effort at secrecy, a crowd is gathered, joined by TV
crews from every station in New York, anxious to grab a peak at the Boss. Inside,
the band is weary from a long day of shooting, but one more take is needed
before they wrap.
Even though he has sung the song about one hundred times that day, Bruce
attacks it with all his awesome vocal force. It’s a song about people getting caught
up in thinking their best is past—all those faded scrap book achievements of
youth. And here’s the Boss at 35, still screaming like an oversexed teenager on
stage in a dive in New Jersey.
“Yes,” he sings, “faded youth don’t have to mean the end of Glory Days.”
(J. Max Robirls is a New York writer.)

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