Bruce Springsteen Thrills Fans, Performs Two Full LPs at Rare Theater Show

5/8/08, 1:00 pm EST

It’s unclear exactly what motivated Bruce Springsteen to perform his Darkness on the Edge of Town and Born to Run albums in sequence last night at New Jersey’s Count Basie Theater. Maybe it was the fact that fans bid a minimum of $1,000 for tickets (the proceeds of which went towards refurbishing the theater) and he wanted to give them something special. Maybe it was because the last time he played a theater with the E Street Band in 1980 these songs were all relatively new. Maybe the recent death of founding E Street Band organist Danny Federici has made him reflect on the group’s early days. Maybe after a strenuous eight-month arena tour he was ready for something different. Regardless, the nearly three-hour marathon concert — entirely composed of songs from the 1970s — was the most powerful Springsteen show I’ve ever seen.

With the exception of the Darkness track “Factory,” all the songs on those two seminal albums are in regular rotation on his set list — but you’d have to attend about 15 concerts to hear all of them. The two albums have been at the core of nearly every E Street Band concert ever since they were released, particularly since the group reformed nine years ago. Hearing them in sequence for the first time ever on a stage made them even more moving. The despair of “Racing in the Street” was perfectly followed by the hope of “The Promised Land.” Born to Run was even more carefully sequenced at the time to give the feel of twenty-four hours in a swampy Jersey day. The title track always feels victorious when played at the end of a long arena show, with the house lights on and fans holding their beers high. When played in a small, dark theater right after “Backstreets,” the desperation and restlessness seeped through every word.

Patti Scialfa — who helped organize the fundraiser — gave a speech before the show about the importance of saving historic theaters. NBC newscaster (and Jersey boy) Brian Williams introduced the band with tales of hanging out at the Stone Pony as a teenager hoping Bruce would show up. New Jersey Governor John Corzine sat in the front row, where he endured some jeers from fans about state taxes. Considering the ticket price, the crowd was obviously more upscale than a typical arena show. Surprisingly, they stood most of the night and seemed nearly as into it as your typical crowd at Giants Stadium. The event raised over $3 million to restore the delipidated Count Basie theater to its original 1920s glory. Proving nothing will please everyone, some schmuck still screamed “Rosalita!” throughout the night.

The four-piece Max Weinberg 7 horn section joined the already bulging nine-piece E Street Band on a handful of songs, leaving nearly every inch of the stage packed. Their presence made “10th Avenue Freeze-Out” one of the night’s highlights — and Mark Pender did an excellent job re-creating Randy Brecker’s trumpet intro to “Meeting Across the River.” Even with the help of an occasional horn section, Clarence Clemons was forced to work harder than he has in years and clearly deserves the MVP award for the evening. Since the 1970s, Springsteen’s music has utilized the saxophone less and less, which has let the 66-year-old Clemons take a rest on his Big Man throne during large portions of the show on this tour. Last night he had few opportunities to rest, particularly during the Born to Run section of the show — which all built towards his epic “Jungeland” solo. He passed the test with flying colors and seemed to be having a blast all night.

As Bruce let out the final moans of “Jungeland,” the audience didn’t know what song was coming next for the first time of the night. Keeping with the 1970s theme, the group played a rollicking version of the Born To Run outtake “So Young and in Love” before launching into a ten-plus minute “Kitty’s Back” featuring solos from nearly everyone on the stage. “Who’s she with?” Bruce screamed at the end before diving right into “Rosalita (Come Out Tonight).” A cover of “Raise Your Hand” — a Bruce live favorite from the Seventies — closed out the night. For the first time in memory there were no encore, but nobody seemed to mind.

[Photo: Evans/AP]


Comments

Brad | 5/14/2008, 10:27 am EST

Wow. What an amazing show. It’s hard for me to imagine a better set.

BostonRumbleDoll | 5/12/2008, 7:03 pm EST

I was in the house w. Bernie for this show and although almost a week ago and just about 28 years since my first Springsteen show, I am still blown-away (and so very grateful) by what I experienced at the Count Basie Theatre.

Two beautifully crafted and superbly performed records, an intimate crowd filled with adoration and admiration for Bruce, the band and the material and an energy level that just plain kicked ass…oh, and a beautiful old theatre got some love and support! Yes, Bernie….Unbelievable!!!

Laura in NJ | 5/10/2008, 3:09 pm EST

Well, Mr. Andy Greene, I sure hope you ponied up just like everyone else. The media shouldn’t get a free ride for an important benefit show like this.

Me | 5/9/2008, 10:39 pm EST

Easily worth the money they paid. Once in a lifetime show. The haters can fuck off. Bruce is god.

Correy | 5/9/2008, 9:13 pm EST

to Paul-O
thank for your help i never would have thought of The Cult i am now a fan of The Cult
¿Rock ‘N’ Roll?

Correy | 5/9/2008, 9:13 pm EST

to Paul-O
thank for your help i never would have thought of The Cult i am now a fan of The Cult
¿Rock ‘N’ Roll?

Create A Caption | 5/9/2008, 4:48 pm EST

Thank You very much, everybody.

Good Night, I’ve gotta take a wicked shit!

Dingleberry | 5/9/2008, 3:50 pm EST

Springsteen is God. What I did is clip out a picture of Springsteen’s head from Rolling Stone’s past issue, and taped it over Jesus’ head on the crucifix hanging on my wall so it looks like Springsteen died on the cross for us all. Springsteen is the savior! All hail the Boss!

Jordan Catalano | 5/9/2008, 2:49 pm EST

I’m seriously welling up over here just reading about this show. I was recently arguing with a friend about how powerful it would be for Bruce to do something along these lines. As much as I admire and respect everything he’s done over the years, there will always be something very, very special about albums like “Darkness” and “BTR”. Everything from the brilliance of the music to the relevance in context to when they were released, $1000 seems a small price to pay in order to experience something so positively magical. Bless Bruce and the boys for not only doing it, but doing it for a cause.

Bernie | 5/9/2008, 12:59 pm EST

I was there and it was easily the highlight of a lifetime of concert going. The crowd was a hometown one and the vibe was spectacular throughout. And to those who have grumbled about the price, I admit it was steep, but it was tax deductible and went to help preserve and restore a wonderful old theatre that has become a cultural cornerstone of our communtiy. Kudos to the band for helping that worthy cause.
The band, with family members in attendance, was clearly having a blast and gave it their all. The final song, “Raise Your Hand” brought down the house. Unbelievable!!

Mission Man | 5/9/2008, 12:43 pm EST

That’s a show I would have easily paid a thousand to see if I had been able to get tix — and that’s after already seeing Bruce over 35 times in 35 years.

Joe Momma | 5/9/2008, 11:26 am EST

Sorry, but NO concert is worth $1,000. Not even from Bruce singing all his classic tunes.

Bill1255 | 5/9/2008, 10:15 am EST

If anything is worth $1000, this must have been. Goodness gracious me oh my.

Paul-O | 5/9/2008, 9:45 am EST

Correy, the song is Fire Woman, by The Cult…

Nader Applesquinnie | 5/9/2008, 8:24 am EST

It looks like Bruce is having a problem with his bowel movements. Don’t force it, let it come naturally or you’ll end up with huge hemorroids.

FRY UP | 5/9/2008, 5:25 am EST

HEY DUDES THE BOSS IS THE BEST, SAW HIM AT VILLA PARK IN THE UK HE WAS AWSOME.MOST POWERFULL SINGER EVER GOT CHILLS DOWN MY SPINE.THE GUY IS GREAT

Tom Joad | 5/8/2008, 10:41 pm EST

Bruce is the most overrated singer/songwriter of the last 25 years. Seriosuly, dude….hang it up…

Correy | 5/8/2008, 9:53 pm EST

i need some help peeps with finding a song. the lyrics are like this (moneyyyyyy smokes on the horizon moneyyyyyyyy) its and 80s rock roll song if you could post up that song and band for me that would really help.
thank you

Jay | 5/8/2008, 9:29 pm EST

Yep - they paid $1,000 or more and it was still a bargain. I wish I had paid the money and gone.

Jay | 5/8/2008, 9:28 pm EST

Yep - they paid $1,000 or more and it was still a bargain. I wish I had paid the money and gone.

Matt | 5/8/2008, 4:19 pm EST

That sounds like the concert I saw in my basement 25 years ago. Thats “The Bruce Springsteen and the E-Street Band” that I see in my head when I would put the Records/Tapes/CD’s on growing up. That is a unreal set list and envy isn’t a strong enough word for me not being in the building.

SalParadiseWasRight | 5/8/2008, 1:17 pm EST

I don’t have a thousand dollars but that seems worth a thousand dollars.

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