Bruce Springsteen

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93. 'Land of Hope and Dreams'
Get it on: Live in New York City (2001)

It's funny how we spend our lives looking back on the little moments in life. The things we remember. Your first kiss. All that stuff. Things which last a second or two stay with us for years.

We also expect too much from our heroes, from those we idolise or even those we just admire. We think them to be above the pains and worries of the mere ordinary, and rely on them to provide us with the extraordinary on our command. But life doesn't work like that, no matter how much we want it to. So it was cringe-worthy to see the expectations of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band as they embarked on their 1999-2000 tour. All of a sudden, people seemed to forget that the intervening years had even occurred and miraculously expected everything to be as it was when they saw Bruce in 1975, or 1978, or 1981 or 1985... whenever their favourite period or tour was.

They wanted songs to be played just like the way they had been played when they had seen the band on some cold night one December long ago. Forgetting the changes in themselves, or perhaps acknowledging them, they wanted to be transported back to a time when things seemed idyllic. But that was never going to happen. People were going to see a new E Street Band, and even though the band members were the same, each of them bought to the table everything they'd experienced and learned in the time apart.

For 134 nights, the band played their guts out. Gone were the two sets with an intermission. Fans got two and a half hours of sweat each and every night. By the time they got to New York City you could forgive them for being completely exhausted. But for 10 shows, they gave everything they could. The July 1, 2000 show is where the recording of 'Land of Hope and Dreams' comes from. The final night of the tour, and since it always closed the show (or was second to last), it was one of the last performances of the whole tour.

Let's take a little tiny detour for a bit...

I'm not a fan of the fascination of continuing to write songs with metaphors about hopping on train and getting on board. It's a fallback position, it's cliched and it's pretty lazy writing. Sure, once upon a time when the train symbolised a gateway to another world where one could start their life over again, trains held some meaning, but today, hopping on a train just means sometimes to me that you can't bothered getting stuck in traffic. Besides... why try to sing a song about getting on a train when we've already got 'People Get Ready'? What more needs to be said?

So, my first impression of 'Land of Hope and Dreams' wasn't an overly warm one. But then, you know what? I began to like the song and the train metaphor seemed to make sense. Debuted in the warm-up shows to that tour, it wasn't great at all. It was clunky, and symbolised a band who hadn't played together in far too long. But it had promise. As the tour rolled along, the song gathered steam (pardon the awful train puns, I promise they're not intended), and by the time the tour pulled into Madison Square Garden for 10 shows, it had been played at every single show and the band had it down to a tea.

But just based on everything I knew about the song to that point wouldn't have got it into the top 101. Again, there's a sax solo which basically says to me that "we can't have a new song on this reunion tour and not have Clarence on it", but since it isn't horrible, I'll let it slide. By the time of the NYC shows, any doubts about Max Weinberg being dispensable had been lay to waste as night after night he proved himself to be a colossus behind the kit.

But the one tiny moment (in the scheme of things) which elevates this to where it is occurs late in the piece. You can hear Bruce's exhaustion, but as the song is winding down, he rallies himself for one final medieval wail. My god it's miraculous. I listen and listen to the song for that one moment. Then I wind it back just to catch that moment again. I listen to it and continue to listen to it and I can still not believe it.

Maybe the fans were wrong to ask the past of Bruce. But maybe I was wrong in thinking that he could never replicate the highs of those days. Maybe he was looking for new peaks to climb, and on July 1, 2000, he'd reached his new summit. For all its flaws, 'Land of Hope and Dreams' rises above all but a relative handful because of nine seconds of greatness. And I have no problem with that.

The Best Bit: It's what I just spoke about. 8:11 in and Bruce lets out his colossal wail. It's jaw-droppingly good and far more than you could ever expect from a nearly 51-year-old man during the second-last song on the last night of a tour which had seen him play over 130 dates.
 

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92. 'You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)'
91. 'Held Up Without a Gun'

Get the first one on: The River (1980)
Get the first second on: The Essential Bruce Springsteen (2003)

I know that on the day that I die, whenever that may be, I'll be able to take stock and see parents who raised me well, friends who I'd lie down in front of a steamroller for, a wife who makes me smile every time she walks in the room and someone permitting, a brood of healthy kids who think their Dad's pretty cool. I'll also be able to say that at the very least, I had some fun in my time on Earth.

Fun's important. Not everything in life need to be though-provoking, not everything needs to be hard-hitting. There's no shame in acting beneath your age. And with songs like 'You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)' and 'Held Up Without a Gun', Bruce Springsteen shows that to every serious turn, there's the version of himself just around the corner who wants to rock out and have a little fun.

'You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)' will never be known as the greatest song in the world. It could easily have fallen the other side of 101, but the little devil in me which pops up on my shoulder every now and then always gets a vote would've shouted me down for months if I didn't include it. And he's right. Dumb fun is still fun.

'Held Up Without a Gun' is a different story. Originally a B-Side, it was discarded from The River, or perhaps it was never even considered. Its similarities to 'You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)' probably mean that the two could never co-exist on the same album together. But to me, it's the better song.

For 1:21 you don't breathe. No time to do so. Grab a lung full at the start (preferably before the start) and just go hell-for-leather with every line. No time for pretenders, none for those who think too much.

These two songs are for me on a Saturday Night when I want to forget about whatever happened between Monday and Friday. These are for the jokers, the rockers. These are for those who want to be able to say that in the end of all things, they had fun.

The best 'You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)' bit: The rockabilly-esque guitar which runs through the whole song.
The best 'Held Up Without a Gun' bit: Miami Steve, please. This is a man who'll say that he had fun.
 
Bought the New York City DVD. It's the first footage of the band with Patti I've seen.

I'm not entirely sure what it is she actually does.
You've never seen anything on YT?

The NYC DVD is great. My Love, Murder Inc, Atlantic City, Badlands, Two Hearts, Out In The Street, American Skin, BToR, Flood, Jungleland, Backstreets, LOHAD all fantastic on that.
 
99. 'The Fuse'
Get it on: The Rising (2002)

I love/loathe The Rising. I love many of the songs there, but I loathe the fact that it contains just a few of my least-favourite Springsteen songs ever. I mean 'Let's Be Friends (Skin to Skin)' is just the biggest piece of shit you're ever likely to hear from Springsteen or anyone else. It's the kind of song that you'd expect Maroon 5 to pass on.

But for all the minutes the album takes up, it's the 5:38 which 'The Fuse' uses which intrigues me the most and I can't tell you why exactly. Not to say it's my favourite song on the album, it's just the most intriguing. First listen and I skipped the song after about a minute. The album was too long to squeeze into my trips to and from work, so I edited the album down to make a nice 40-minute version. 'The Fuse' didn't make the cut.

Fast forward a while later, and I put the album on to see how it held up. Sure enough, 'Let's Be Friends (Skin to Skin)' was just as bad, if not worse than it was the first of two times I've listened to the entire song of my own choosing. But 'The Fuse' stood out as something I might have been harsh on... and since that listen it's done nothing but grow on me.

It's an insistent song. Bruce's gruff, almost-couldn't-give-a-crap vocals match the pounding beat that drives the song and what you're left with is a song that shouldn't work on really any levels, but ultimately sticks with you until you realise the inevitable truth - that it's one of the finest songs on The Rising.

The Best Bit: I'm not one who'll chime in and say "wow, those female backing vocals kick ass!" on really any Bruce Springsteen song. But here, they do. I actually had to check the credits just now to see who it was and it turns out it's Patti Scialfa and Soozie Tyrell. Wow, ladies. Bringing it. Oh, and Max Weinberg, take a bow... this is your song.

I just can't get into The Fuse. I don't think Bruce can either - he has only performed it 35 times in 2002 ad 2003 and in those 2 years did 150 shows.
 
http://brucespringsteen.net/news/2014/notes-from-the-road-brisbane

FEBRUARY 26, 2014
NOTES FROM THE ROAD: BRISBANE

.......

Bruce thanked the audience for their warmth over two summers and advised us to keep Australia a secret for as long as we could. Eddie Vedder came on for a scorching Highway To Hell and Bruce closed the set with Thunder Road. 118 songs were played over 11 nights. Four albums were played in their entirety and Australian covers were learned and performed in rapid-fire time. Bruce, you came, you saw and you totally rocked. A sign from the Hunter Valley sums up all of our feelings. It read: ‘Thank You Brother’.

-Sean Sennett

http://brucespringsteen.net/news/2014/notes-from-the-road-brisbane
 
Gold Coast Bike Ride

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On February 8th, 2013, Bruce Springsteen was honored as the 2013 MusiCares Person Of The Year. MusiCares was established in 1989 by the Recording Academy to provide a safety net of critical assistance for music people in times of need, through innovative programs and services.
A highlight of Grammy week activities, this recording brings together a stellar list of other artists paying tribute to Bruce and his music performing many of the songs he wrote throughout his illustrious career, as well as Bruce himself and the E Street Band performing new songs and a few favorites.

Track list:

1. ALABAMA SHAKES – “Adam Raised a Cain”
2. PATTI SMITH – “Because the Night”
3. NATALIE MAINES, BEN HARPER, and CHARLIE MUSSELWHITE – “Atlantic City”
4. KEN CASEY – “American Land”
5. MAVIS STAPLES and ZAC BROWN – “My City of Ruins”
6. MUMFORD & SONS – “I’m On Fire”
7. JACKSON BROWNE featuring TOM MORELLO – “American Skin (41 Shots)”
8. EMMYLOU HARRIS – “My Hometown”
9. KENNY CHESNEY – “One Step Up”
10. ELTON JOHN – “Streets of Philadelphia”
11. JUANES – “Hungry Heart”
12. TIM MCGRAW and FAITH HILL – “Tougher Than the Rest”
13. TOM MORELLO and JIM JAMES – “The Ghost of Tom Joad”
14. JOHN LEGEND – “Dancing in the Dark”
15. STING – “Lonesome Day”
16. NEIL YOUNG & CRAZY HORSE – “Born in the U.S.A.”
17. NEIL PORTNOW – MusiCares Award Presentation,
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN & THE E STREET BAND
18. “We Take Care of Our Own”
19. “Death to My Hometown”
20. “Thunder Road”
21. “Born to Run”
22. “Glory Days” with Cast Ensemble

Pre-order:
 
Center mic picture shows noted flog Graham front and centre again with his stupid Queen of the Supermarket sign.

FFS he would've flown out of Brisbane first thing Thursday morning. What utter lunacy.
 

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