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Springsteen Takes Requests, Shows How “Magic” Tour Has Evolved at Jersey Stand

8/1/08, 12:35 pm EST

Midway through last night’s Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band concert at Giants Stadium, Bruce held up a sign from an audience member that read “Play ‘Incident on 57th Street’ for your old, bald fans.” He was seconds away from complying when another sign caught his eye. “Ooh, that’s a good one — let’s do that instead,” he said, before blasting into “Blinded by the Light.” Such last-second decisions were the norm during Springsteen’s three-night stand at the venue, where he played to sold-out crowds of 55,000 fans a night — many holding up gigantic homemade signs like they were at Wrestlemania. The overall effect made night felt like a gigantic Jersey house party.

When Magic tour began last September each night was a carefully planned out, two-hour show with little room for surprises. As it winds down nearly a year later, much has changed. Many of the Magic songs have been dropped, and the show regularly stretches well past the three-hour mark. Bruce’s knee slides, preacher rants and even the occasional goofy dance with guitarist Steve Van Zandt have returned. Although the pacing occasionally felt a tad bit off compared to last fall (did “Mary’s Place” really have to be 15 minutes every night?), the thrill of never knowing what may come next more than made up for it. In total, a whopping 55 different songs were played during the three shows.

The highlights are nearly too many to list. Night one of the Jersey stand began with a bang when Springsteen and company took the stage to 1975’s “Tenth venue Freezeout,” which had the entire stadium jumping up and down like it was a Robbie Williams concert in Barcelona. The nightly cover of Eddie Cochran’s “Summertime Blues” featured great vocal interplay between Bruce and Clarence Clemons was always a blast, while Nils Lofgren astounded everyone (including Bruce) with a mid-guitar solo somersault during “Because the Night” on night two. Quiet, long rarities like “Drive All Night” and “Incident on 57th Street” were played to perfection — but they seemed lost on the gigantic crowd who used them for mass bathroom breaks and loud conversations.

Problems like that proved that it’s very hard to play a stadium. The few acts that can fill them (Pink Floyd, U2) prepare carefully rehearsed, hit-packed visual extravaganzas that don’t vary at all from night to night. Springsteen took a complete opposite approach with a bare-bones stage and a willingness to play anything he felt like at the moment. On the second night — after seeing a sign for 1973’s “It’s Hard to Be a Saint in the City” — Sprinsteen had to repeatedly tell the band he wanted to play it in C, much to the confusion of his band who could be heard yelling something close like, “Don’t you mean A?” Such a scene sounds like something you’d see at the Stony Pony, not a filled-to-the-rafters football stadium.

Word on the street is that six nights at Giants Stadium were originally planned, but when sales were initially soft (they all eventually sold out) they scaled back to three. It sure felt like they could have done at least one more, with scores of fans desperate for tickets outside last night and not a scalper to be seen. The tour goes on for eight more shows before wrapping up August 30th at the Harley 105th anniversary concert in Milwaukee. It’s a very odd way to end an epic tour. Hey Jon Landau, how about one more Giants Stadium show in September?

[Photo: Getty]


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Comments

Greasy Lake | 8/22/2008, 10:52 am EST

He is, BY FAR, the GREATEST entertainer in the World. 3+ hours for every show! AMAZING.

Shorty | 8/4/2008, 11:28 pm EST

Bruce, please come to Australia.

Steve | 8/4/2008, 2:46 pm EST

“Tenth AVENUE Freeze Out,” not “Tenth VENUE Freeze Out.”

Sheesh….who does the editing for these articles?

Music is a personal choice and opinion, and opinions vary. Everyone’s entitled to like whomever they like. “Born to Run” came out when I was four years old, and it remains one of my favorite albums of all time.

You don’t have to like him or his music, but you DO have to respect a man and his band that’s been around for over thirty years and still does a three-hour plus show, and has sold millions of albums over those thirty-plus years.

I dunno….somebody likes him, I guess. I think there’s too much synthesizer, too much drum beats and too much borrowed material from yesteryear today. Give me a true storyteller with a guitar over any of the new punks today. Ain’t a one of ‘em hold a candle to Springsteen.

Steve | 8/4/2008, 2:46 pm EST

“Tenth AVENUE Freeze Out,” not “Tenth VENUE Freeze Out.”

Sheesh….who does the editing for these articles?

Music is a personal choice and opinion, and opinions vary. Everyone’s entitled to like whomever they like. “Born to Run” came out when I was four years old, and it remains one of my favorite albums of all time.

You don’t have to like him or his music, but you DO have to respect a man and his band that’s been around for over thirty years and still does a three-hour plus show, and has sold millions of albums over those thirty-plus years.

I dunno….somebody likes him, I guess. I think there’s too much synthesizer, too much drum beats and too much borrowed material from yesteryear today. Give me a true storyteller with a guitar over any of the new punks today. Ain’t a one of ‘em hold a candle to Springsteen.

Wireman | 8/4/2008, 8:27 am EST

Does anyone care outside of NY?Well I’m from the UK and have just seen my 13th show on this tour including Chicago last Oct. and Giants last week so at least one person does care.There were also one or two other people from beyond NY at the shows in Europe too I believe(unless 60000+ New Yorkers migrated to Europe this Summer?).Oh by the way I never saw a duff show-they were worth every hard earned pound.

DUTCH Springsteen fan | 8/4/2008, 7:37 am EST

Hanover, you are just a classic example of a sad LIAR. The fact that you are nearly dead and don’t hear the quality of his work and the hope he gives people is one thing, but DENYING his influence and popularity for almost 40 years around the world is just a LIE and very, very sad

Norway says | 8/4/2008, 5:26 am EST

Hanover wrote:
Yawn…does anyone outside of New York care about Springsteen???
———
Uhh — Sold out 220.000 tickets in Norway and Sweeden in 1 hour. Sold out Camp Nou (Barcelona) 2 nights each 80.000 tickets in matter of seconds.

Sold out entire Europe, except for Amsterdam and Antwerp.

Played over 120 different songs on this tour. Plays about 12-18 different songs from last night each night.

Plays about 30 songs each night, about 3 hours. Played 3 hours and 20 min in Barcelona.

Has given us some of the best album`s ever. Born To Run and Darkness.. and so on.

Has done great albums for four decades.(Ex: Born To Run, Tunnel of Love, Ghost of Tom Joad and Magic, you could pick almost any other album as well)

You need to wise up.

Give me one artist who is even close. And don`t give me that shit about bands who could have, when they don’t.

“Badlands, you gotta live it everyday
Let the broken hearts stand
As the price you’ve gotta pay
We’ll keep pushin’ till it’s understood
and these badlands start treating us good”

nicktaf | 8/4/2008, 4:31 am EST

hi guys, i was in Barcelona not for Robbie Williams but for Springsteen concert on 19 and 20 July. Be sure that the 80.000 spectators have jumped on Tenth Avenue Freeze Out like i’ve never seen before!

NJ | 8/4/2008, 12:19 am EST

Three hours and fifteen minutes of religion that makes sense of the world we occupy. After seeing 20 plus shows over the last 20 years - I have to say this was his best! Shocking.

NJ | 8/4/2008, 12:19 am EST

Three hours and fifteen minutes of religion that makes sense of the world we occupy. After seeing 20 plus shows over the last 20 years - I have to say this was his best! Shocking.

Eli J | 8/3/2008, 6:27 pm EST

Do people realize how difficult it is for a band to see a sign in the crowd and just nail it. How many artists know how long it’s been since they played something? the Springsteen catalog stretches across 4 decades! They set out to be the best bar band in the land and ended up being the house rockin’, pants droppin’, earth shockin’, hard rockin’, booty shakin’, love makin’, heart breakin’ legendary E Street Band.
Need I say anymore?

Carlos Fonseca | 8/3/2008, 6:03 pm EST

I´m not a Springsteen fan, however as my wife likes him a lot we saw 2 shows of him in Paris and Milan (last june) and i must confess to 59 y.o the man is really amazing!!!Terrific shows!!!

Philehofish | 8/3/2008, 3:54 pm EST

Hanover’s comments are classic troll….lookig for a rise via spouting idiotic statements with no basis in reality. None of the hundreds of thousands that attended concerts on this evolving tour cared. Bruce and E - Street…Rock N Roll LEGENDS !

Art 16 | 8/3/2008, 2:59 pm EST

Saw him last night at the Gillette Stadium outside of Boston. I must be one of those “stupid Springsteen Fans” because I really enjoyed the show. He draws a wide range audience, not just a niche flash in the pan gaggle.

kay | 8/3/2008, 2:51 pm EST

It’s laughable that there always has to be those pitiable music listeners who claim that Bruce sucks, yet feel the need to read an article on him and comment. Meanwhile his “crap” music holds the top spot for best American song catalogue ever in the history of recorded music. Not to mention his gifts are so broad–the voice, the writing, the playing and the performing make him one of the very best. And his band kicks some serious ass, too. So for those who claim Bruce is ‘crap’ (lol), I presume the shite on the radio is right up your alley then? What are the names of these god-forsaken bands, Hinder? Seether? Motley Crue’s new album and tour sound promising?

Not everyone has to like Bruce, but to say he’s crap is utterly absurd. Not to mention false. And who else can pack those stadiums in Europe (and in America) night after night while offering new material, that fans do love, whilst not becoming a cover band of themselves???

stupid Springsteen Fans | 8/3/2008, 12:29 pm EST

Hanover has it sooooo right,,,Springsteen and Band suck ass. Crap music listened to by sucky fans,,,,,snore, bore,,,,,zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz!

Tony | 8/3/2008, 11:53 am EST

Do you care about anything but yawning, poor pitiful Hanover Montano? Sounds like you’re living proof of the unwritten axiom which intimates if you’re not responsive at a Springsteen gig, you’re clinically (at the very least, cerebrally) DEAD! Must be sad to be that jaded! Lots of us around the world wonder at the all-American wastefulness of your teenage wasteland…

Steve jones | 8/3/2008, 11:29 am EST

OVERRATED……

Rakesh | 8/3/2008, 10:03 am EST

Hey Hanover,

I from India….longlong way from New York and I have been a huge of Bruce since the mid 80’s. I dont think there is any other entertainer quite like him

Anonymous | 8/3/2008, 3:44 am EST

i saw the boss in tampa and orlando, two of the best concerts i have ever been to. He truly is the definition of rock-n-roll.

Gabe | 8/2/2008, 8:19 pm EST

Bruce should have been on the RS cover, not the undeserving Jonas Bros. He earned it.

Ruby | 8/2/2008, 5:29 am EST

i went to see the boss at emirates stadium in London and it was off the hook!! He could have played for three weeks and no one would have left…

spencer | 8/2/2008, 12:11 am EST

let’s be easy on hanover, guys… it’s not his fault he’d probably rather listen to panic at the disco or paramore than one of the greatest songwriters of all time.

Cesare | 8/1/2008, 9:35 pm EST

Hanover, if you are just a music basic person that only knows the music is on the radio actualy I understand your comment, if you really try to know about music even the actual one is a must to know the origins (as in any field of art)and for that you need to research and learn, Springsteen is not my favorit music Writer or singer but I recognize he is a key element in Rock History and has a very big number of great songs.

Kay | 8/1/2008, 5:34 pm EST

Jon, I think I love you for saying that…LOL!

Coz really, some should just get a grip!

Johnny 99 | 8/1/2008, 5:31 pm EST

Hanover, you’re about 25 years too late with your comment because ever since the release of Born in the U.S.A. Bruce has been one of the most well-renowned artists in the world with sold out shows all over the globe and a string of number one albums in multiple countries. If you think no one outside of New York cares about Springsteen, check out his “Live in Barcelona” DVD where the reaction from the crowd puts the crowd from his “Live in New York City” DVD to shame.

SalParadiseWasRight | 8/1/2008, 5:13 pm EST

Hanover- He just finished a stadium tour in all of europe and an arena tour of the entire US and pretty much everything was sold out. But I guess he hasn’t been on the cover of US Weekly lately so he’s a nobody!

HarvG | 8/1/2008, 5:02 pm EST

Does anyone outside of NY care about Springsteen? Yes - a great deal. Next question?

jeff | 8/1/2008, 4:57 pm EST

Ummm …. yeah Hanover anyone who has any taste in music. I live in Texas and Bruce has been my favorite singer, songwriter, guitarist, performer since I was a kid and I’m not sure if you’ve seen the ticket sales, but yeah I would say people around the world care about Springsteen. Magic was the No. 1 album as well. Way to stay in touch though.

jon | 8/1/2008, 4:53 pm EST

Hanover…of course they do you fucking idiot. Get your head out of your ass.

sea bright KURT | 8/1/2008, 4:51 pm EST

ooofah what a nite! Bruce and the band rule..

Leonardo | 8/1/2008, 4:21 pm EST

Springsteen is God!

Hanover | 8/1/2008, 4:14 pm EST

Yawn…does anyone outside of New York care about Springsteen???

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