• Bruce Springsteen,  Local

    Faith Was Rewarded: Bruce Springsteen @ Jobing.com Arena

    Well that was one for the ages. Bruce and the Band rolled into town yesterday for the first time in seven years. I decided to do it right, and show up early for a chance in the “pit”, the fenced off section at the foot of the stage. Of the 960 people who showed up for numbered wristbands, I was one of the 400 who made it in.

    The only person I know who’s willing to put in the work for the pit experience is my brother Dave, and he’s in Boston, so this was a solo mission. A “mission from God”, as Elwood put in the Blues Brothers.

    Last night was only show # 2 of the Working on a Dream Tour. But just a couple minutes into the opener, “Badlands”, it was clear that Bruce and the band were in prime form, and were feeding off the raucous energy of the Arizona crowd (seven years is a long time to wait!).

    Of the new tunes, “Outlaw Pete”, “My Lucky Day”, and “Working on a Dream” were well received – but he really connected on “Kingdom of Days” (which he sings with his wife Patti) and especially “The Wrestler”. With Nils Lofgren on acoustic guitar, Bruce poured it all out at the mic, and surpassed the studio version, I thought. [You can see the video from last night here].

    It was great to experience “Seeds” live – a hard luck rocker that appears on the Live 75-85 box set. Nebraska’s “Johnny 99” followed it – the full band version. And then “The Ghost of Tom Joad”, with Nils blazing on lead guitar.

    Bruce was  taking requests, too. The signs were abundant in the crowd. Before “Working on the Highway”, Bruce worked the crowd and collected a handful. The “winners” were “Downbound Train”, “Because the Night”, and, later, “Rosalita” during the encore.

    “Downbound Train” is one of my all time faves – I wonder how man car hours I’ve logged singing that song at the top of my lungs – and it was so nice to hear it / see it right in front of the man.

    The atmosphere last night was absolutely electric: Bruce and the band grinning ear to ear, The “Big Man” Clarence Clemons even shuffling across the stage. “The Big Man’s dancin’!” Bruce cried…

    Since I was solo, and could really let the Bruce fan in me rear its geeky head, I Twittered the whole set list. Also, I hung around the arena after the show, looking down on the loading dock a few hundred feet below, watching the roadies load the trucks, and Bruce and the Band’s fleet of black limos and SUV’s waiting for their passengers. At about midnight, Bruce came out of the arena and got into the front passenger seat of his luxury SUV. Two police motorcycle escorts led the way up the ramp. The next thing I see? Brake lights. And off to the races I went. The Boss stopped on the street, rolled down his window, and signed for the few lucky fans who waited it out. After running a couple hundred yards, I had him sign a 5×7 card I had tucked in my back pocket, and I think I said to him: “Bruce….Gammage Auditorium! [where he signed my tour program in 1996]… love you… *heavy breathing…” Leave it to Bruce to make me feel like a pimply 16 year old…

    As I walked back to my car in the cool desert air, I was on cloud nine. Mission accomplished, and faith rewarded.

    See my photos from the night here in my Google album.

    Setlist:
    Badlands
    Outlaw Pete
    My Lucky Day
    Night
    Out in the Street
    Working on a Dream
    Seeds
    Johnny 99
    The Ghost of Tom Joad
    Working on the Highway
    Downbound Train
    Because the Night
    Waitin’ on a Sunny Day
    The Promised Land
    The Wrestler
    Kingdom of Days
    Radio Nowhere
    Lonesome Day
    The Rising
    Born to Run
    * * *
    Hard Times
    Tenth Avenue Freeze-out
    Rosalita
    Land of Hope and Dreams
    American Land
    Dancing in the Dark

  • Bruce Springsteen

    This Hard Land

    Bruce originally recorded “This Hard Land” in 1982 during the sessions for Born in the U.S.A, but it would never see the light of day on any Springsteen studio release. However, in 1995, when Columbia was packaging Bruce’s first greatest hits release, the E Street Band returned to the studio and recorded four songs: “This Hard Land” and “Murder Inc.” (also originally from the BITUSA sessions), “Blood Brothers” and “Secret Garden”.

    Also, on 1998’s Tracks box set, the original ’82 version was released.

    The first “This Hard Land” I ever heard was the Greatest Hits version. It was 1995, and I was in the midst of my “lost” years job-wise: in my mid-20’s and working as co-manager of a car rental company.  It was a waste of my college education, it didn’t pay well, and it didn’t challenge me. There was one thing I loved about the job, though, and that was being out on the open road with the music blaring. We rented brand new Fords, and we had to shuffle them between our offices in Scottsdale and Mesa. Windows down,  crystal-clear blue sky, the Superstition Mountains in the near distance to the east… this was how I first heard “This Hard Land”.

    The song was so full of joy and pain, beauty and ugliness. My heart pounded and tears welled in my eyes.

    I still get the same rush every time I hear this song. The energy, the imagery of the great wide open, Bruce’s harmonica, the “Bar-M choppers sweepin’ low across the plains”. Bruce’s “come on” that ushers in the full band at 47 seconds in. The hooves twistin’ and churnin’ up the sand. Sleeping by the fields, sleeping by the rivers. The undercurrent of desolation, sparseness and struggle , and the insistence on overcoming it all….

    I heard the song again this morning during my drive to work. Things sure have changed since that sunny day in 1995. I make a decent living at a job I enjoy. I met and married the girl of my dreams. I have two darling little squirts that I feel so much love for it can’t even be measured… all this good in a world that “stirs you up like it wants to blow you down”…

    How do I face these hard times? How should we face these hard times?

    “Stay hard, stay hungry, stay alive if you can / and meet me in a dream of this hard land.”

    Here’s the full band in 1995, with a rocking and spirited version virtually identical to this Greatest Hits recording. They must’ve been fresh from the studio. Does anyone know where (and for what) this was shot?

  • Bruce Springsteen

    Super Bowl Boss: Half Time

    Photo Credit: David J. Phillip (AP Photo)
    Photo Credit: David J. Phillip (AP Photo)

    First of all, may I take a moment for a self-congratulatory look at my set list prediction for Bruce’s half-time show? This was my Twitter to the world at 8:42am yesterday morning:

    I called 3 out of 4, in the correct order, mind you (and no, I didn’t have any advance notice!). He didn’t end with “Twist & Shout”. Instead, he opened with “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out”. But golly, that’s a mighty fine prediction…

    So, my hometown Arizona Cardinals couldn’t pull it off against the Steelers, though they sure made it close. Thanks to Kurt Warner and Larry Fitzgerald for giving us an opportunity to jump up and down for a few minutes in the second half. By that time, the Fat Tire had run dry, and we had raided the ladies supply of Strawberry Daiquiris. We were convinced that the red drink was the good luck charm. Turns out we were wrong.

    Bruce and the band’s half-time performance was as intense as I expected. It was fun to see Bruce pull out all the tricks from an E Street Show and condense them into a dozen minutes: Working the crowd. The running stage slide. Right into the camera. We saw Bruce hang on to the mic stand for one of his lean-backs (a move that had a co-worker of mine wondering for a moment if he was stuck, and needed the Big Man to help him back up). We got the leap on to the piano and the guitar swing-around. And how about the opening silhouette shot, as Bruce and Clarence brought the Born to Run era back to life? Nice.

    Sure, I enjoyed the hell out of seeing Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band perform at the Super Bowl. How could I not? But at the same time, a lot of my focus was spent wondering how others might be perceiving the performance – sort of how I felt the last couple years watching Petty and Prince. These are three of my absolute favorites, after all. Each of them legendary live performers whom I’ve had the privilege of seeing many many times. I know what to expect.  So most of my energy is spent thinking about how they’re playing out to the biggest audience of their careers. What Joe Six-Pack is thinking… What the people around me in the room are thinking. It doesn’t make a difference, of course, but that’s how I’m wired to watch my favorites at the Super Bowl.

    What it also did was get me even more pumped for 10am this morning, when tickets went on sale for the Boss’s Phoenix date – Friday, April 3rd at Jobing.com Arena in Glendale. I secured my GA-Floor ticket, and will be taking a vacation day, planting my butt out at the arena nice and early, and working my way into the pit, as close to the stage as I can get.

    It was a thrill watching the Boss give it to the world for 12 minutes. But it’ll be even better watching 160-180 minutes in person. There’s nothing like it, people. If you’re one of the people who was intrigued and entertained by the E Street Band: Super Bowl Edition, do yourself a very big favor and catch them in your town on this tour.

    Life’s too short not to.

    Bruce Springsteen.net

    See some other Super Bowl thoughts from some friend of Ickmusic:

    And this just in…

    The Boss and Phish to headline Bonnaroo in June. Looks like it’s time for that RV trip to Tennessee… Holy flippin’ poopy pants.

  • Video

    Super Bowl Boss: Interview on NFL.com

    Bruce and the Band held a press conference today in Tampa. Can’t find video yet of the actual presser, but here’s a nice interview with the Boss that took place right afterward…

    Click here or on the image:

    I’ll post the press conference video when I find it.

  • Bruce Springsteen,  Ick's Pick

    Ick’s Pick (Week IV): Springsteen’s Working On A Dream

    In 1975, When Bruce was blowing up on the cover of Time and Newsweek because of the groundbreaking Born to Run (an album that came out when he was 25, for crying out loud), I wonder if he ever pondered his long term success, if he ever wondered how his career would be trucking along in the year he turned 60?

    Well, it’s 2009, the year Bruce Springsteen will turn 60. And if anyone is proving that age is just a number, Bruce is it. Look at the year he’s embarking on… his 16th studio album is released this week. He’ll play for something like a billion people around the world this weekend as the half time entertainment for the Super Bowl (go Cardinals!). He’ll embark on yet another world tour. He’s winning awards for his contributions to film (but inexplicably shut out for the Academy Awards – F.U. Oscar!). He played at the inauguration celebration of the new U.S. President. All told, he’s set to have a banner year (hell, he already has). It’s good to be the Boss…

  • Bruce Springsteen

    The Boss Was Made for Lovin’ You?

    The Boss lifting from Ace, Gene, Paul and Peter? A new controversy brewing on the interwebs is the similarity between Bruce’s new album opener “Outlaw Pete”, and Kiss’ 1979 foray into disco, “I Was Made For Lovin’ You”. Similar? Sure, but not to the extent of Coldplay’s rip of Satriani. I rule in favor of – guess who? – The Boss!

    What do you guys & gals think? Did Bruce dip back into his repository of shitty disco-rock?

    “Outlaw Pete” vs. “I Was Made for Lovin’ You”:

  • Rock

    Year of the Boss, part 1

    One more for the mantle
    One more for the mantle

    And so it begins – the year of the Boss! Bruce picked up a Golden Globe award tonight for Best Original Song in a Motion Picture for “The Wrestler”. Mickey Rourke looked like he was on cloud nine watching Bruce thank him. That, or he fell off the wagon again. [Congrats also to Mickey for pulling down Best Actor – life imitates art.]

    So congrats to the Boss for a great start to a very busy few weeks…

    January 11 – Golden Globes
    January13 – Greatest Hits released (exclusively at Wal-Mart) – looks funny, but it’s true
    January 27 – Bruce’s 16th studio album, Working on a Dream, is released.
    February 1 – Bridgestone Super Bowl Halftime Show
    April 1 – American Idol *

    * Untrue. At this point.

    The Screen Door Breaks Down the Boss: Speaking of the Boss, Anthony K. is in the midst of an exhaustive album by album “review and reflection” of Bruce’s work, over at his blog The Screen Door. He’s four albums in (Darkness on the Edge of Town), and it’s full steam ahead. So head on over and delve into Bruce’s stuff with Tony, who writes as passionately as any Boss fan I’ve seen.

  • Rock

    The Firecracker Show Turns 30

    It was New Year’s Eve 30 years ago when Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band played the Richfield Coliseum in Cleveland, Ohio. Just after the clock struck midnight, and the band had played “Auld Lang Syne” and “Good Rockin’ Tonight”,  some jackass threw a firecracker on stage, coming dangerously close to Bruce. Well, the Boss was not happy, and admonished the dumbass.

    Therefore, this close to 3 hour concert came to be known as “The Firecracker Show”, and quickly wove itself into the mythology of classic Boss bootlegs.

    Nothing beats Bruce and the band during this era. I could unleash the superlatives till the cows come home, but that would delay you from hearing a classic E Street show – the Boss in his prime.

    Happy New Year to everyone!

    Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band
    Richfield Coliseum, Cleveland, Ohio
    December 31st, 1978

    Disc 1 (zip)

    • Badlands
    • Streets Of Fire
    • Rendezvous (mp3)
    • Spirit In The Night
    • Darkness On The Edge Of Town
    • Independence Day
    • The Promised Land
    • Prove It All Night
    • Pretty Flamingo

    Disc 2 (zip)

    • Thunder Road
    • Jungleland
    • The Ties That Bind
    • Santa Claus Is Coming To Town
    • The Fever
    • Fire
    • Candy’s Room
    • Because The Night
    • Rave On
    • Auld Lang Syne
    • Good Rockin’ Tonight

    Part 3 (zip)

    • Firecracker Incident‘ (mp3)
    • Point Blank
    • Mona / She’s The One (mp3)
    • Backstreets
    • Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)
  • Bruce Springsteen

    Bruce’s Greatest Hits, exclusively at Walmart

    First, the cover for Working on a Dream. Now comes news that a new greatest hits compilation will be released exclusively at Walmart on January 13th – a couple weeks before his Bridgestone Super Bowl Half Time show.

    1. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)
    2. Born to Run
    3. Thunder Road
    4. Darkness on the Edge of Town
    5. Badlands
    6. Hungry Heart
    7. Glory Days
    8. Dancing in the Dark
    9. Born in the U.S.A.
    10. The Rising
    11. Lonesome Day
    12. Radio Nowhere

    Is 2009 the year that the Boss appears on American Idol??