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U2, Bruce Springsteen and Eager Nation Kick Off Inaugural Celebration

1/19/09, 9:30 am EST

Photo: Sullivan/Getty

On Sunday, dozens of the world’s best-known entertainers gathered on the site where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his “I Have a Dream Speech” 45 years ago to offer an exuberant welcome to President-elect Barack Obama. U2 provided one of several emotional highs of the day, performing their tribute to King, “Pride (In the Name of Love),” during which Bono declared, “On Tuesday that dream comes to pass!” (Check out photos of all the big-name performers.)

Bruce Springsteen, James Taylor, Beyoncé and Garth Brooks were among the A-list performers who helped set the joyful, optimistic tone at the concert, officially called “We Are One: The Obama Inaugural Celebration at the Lincoln Memorial.” Hundreds of thousands of sturdy souls waited in sub-zero temperatures for hours to join the free event, which lasted 90 minutes and also included readings from Tom Hanks, Jack Black, Denzel Washington and dozens of other actors, as well as speeches by the President- and Vice-president-elect.

Besides the artists and actors huddled backstage, a motley crew of politicians, media personalities and Hollywood types, including John Kerry, George Lucas, and future U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, were among the V.I.P.s occupying the first several rows in the concert. “I’m excited to see the Boss and JT,” Kerry said before the show began, noting that many of the musicians performing stumped for him in 2004. “These are all my buddies!”

Springsteen opened the event with a barnstorming rendition of “The Rising,” back by a gospel choir, after which Joe Biden outed himself as the biggest Bruce fan in the incoming administration: He shot up to offer a standing ovation before the rest of his box — wife Jill, and Barack and Michelle Obama — followed suit. Michelle more often led the ovation, encouraging the presidential box to give it up for Usher, Shakira, and Stevie Wonder’s collaboration on “Higher Ground,” while Jill Biden led the cheers for John Mellencamp’s “Pink Houses.” Sasha and Malia got most excited by Garth Brooks’ rendition of the Isley Brothers’ “Shout.”

Bettye LaVette and Jon Bon Jovi updated the lyrics to Sam Cooke’s “A Change Is Gonna Come,” singing “a change has come.” The duo’s powerhouse vocal delivery, along with “The Rising” and Mary J. Blige’s “Lean on Me” gave the event a soulful resonance right off the bat. Brooks’ high-energy mini-set, backed by a youth choir, included his version of Don McLean’s “American Pie,” “Shout” and his own “We Shall Be Free,” and gave the crowd one of several opportunities to dance, sing along, and express the shared joy of the occasion.

Another opportunity came as Sheryl Crow, Will.i.am, and Herbie Hancock collaborated on “One Love,” although Will.i.am sadly saw fit to interpolate his atrocious rap from the Black Eyed Peas’ “Where Is the Love” (”To discriminate only generates hate/And when you hate then you’re bound to get irate”), notably dropping references to the CIA and the KKK and the word “nigga.”

Backstage before the event, Will wasn’t shy about the impact his hit viral video “Yes We Can,” built around an Obama speech, had on the campaign. “Al Gore told me that video changed the course of the election,” he said. “But it wasn’t just me, it took people out there willing to be inspired.”

Most of the actors maintained a stiff demeanor, dutifully reading the stilted history lessons and quotations fed to them off a teleprompter, but not Jamie Foxx. He came out and shouted “Chicago, stand up!” — getting the reluctant Obama family to briefly leave their seats — before risking a dead-on impression of the President-elect which seemed to please no one more than Obama himself.

The only other seemingly unscripted moment came during U2’s rendition of “Pride (In the Name of Love),” during which Bono suggested Dr. King’s dream is also an Irish, European, African and Israeli dream, adding, with special emphasis, “It is also a Palestinian dream!”

If any nerves were rattled by U2’s infusion of current events, they were soothed by the next two performances. Beyoncé offered a timeless, traditional rendition of “America the Beautiful” before Pete Seeger, joined by Bruce Springsteen, resurrected Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” for one more merry sing-along.

Related Stories:

Photos: Bruce, U2 at “We Are One” Concert
Inside the Inaugural Rehearsals: Bruce, U2 Prep for Special Visit From Obama
All Barack Obama Stories in Rolling Stone
Barack Obama: A Photo History
Kanye West, Wilco, Beyoné, Mellencamp Shout Out Historic Obama Victory


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Comments

Timmaayyyy | 1/19/2009, 10:57 am EST

I guess GW wasn’t invited. Probably opted to take advantage of his last opportunity to eat pretzels in the white house.

robthestudent | 1/19/2009, 11:04 am EST

While it must have been a great day filled w great performances, I have to laugh at the fact that no one in TV land could see any of this unless they pay for HBO. Now i have HBO so I will watch this at some point, but it makes me shake my head to think that cable news channels could not air a FREE concert due to HBO contracts. I believe they paid the performers for their work, which seems alil off since they all seem so genuinely excited about the inauguration I wouldn’t think they would demand to get paid to play on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial for the president-elect who they love so much.

Change might come in Washington but America’s corporate culture will never lol.

Laura | 1/19/2009, 11:28 am EST

Actually, it was free on HBO. You didn’t need to have to subscribe to HBO to view it. I was there – it was freakin awesome!!

Truf Jones | 1/19/2009, 11:34 am EST

Actually Mr. I.am did drop the N-bomb in his performance. Tivo’d it and rewound and watched and watched again.

diane | 1/19/2009, 11:39 am EST

ah! Rob the student you might want to drop your cynicism at the door and do some homework. The HBO concert was free to anyone who tuned in (it was great!)and also all stars performed for free.

Doug_Ellice@Yahoo.com | 1/19/2009, 11:46 am EST

Who was the third singer with Pete Seeger and Bruce Springsteen doing “This Land is Your Land”? You know, the one who seemed to actually know the words?

Joe | 1/19/2009, 11:52 am EST

Rob the student, HBO broadcast the concert for free. Come on, I know it’s easier than anything to criticize, but do your homework.

Sh | 1/19/2009, 12:12 pm EST

Mr. i am certainly changed the course of the race, only because I know that age demographic of 40-100 love the black eyed peas and Will iam…Willi am…..Will I am’s music, I sing “got it from your momma” all the time

Evan | 1/19/2009, 12:12 pm EST

Doug: That was Pete Seeger’s grandson.

Doug_Ellice | 1/19/2009, 12:16 pm EST

Thanks.
I was very disappointed that James Taylor didn’t sing “Shed a Little Light”. It is a stirring song in its own right, but the line “Let us turn our thoughts today to Martin Luther King” would have been so appropriate….
Doug

Jack | 1/19/2009, 12:40 pm EST

NPR also videocast the event on their website. However, due to that HBO contract, they were not allowed to archive it.

I’m personally waiting for guerilla Youtube vids of the event. Only way the people are ever going to get what was supposed to be for them out of the hands of corporate media.

Jamier | 1/19/2009, 12:41 pm EST

Random thoughts on the performances:
Loved Bruce w/the choir on “The Rising”-so powerful
What was Jon Bon Jovi doing with Bettye Lavette? He’s so not soulful.
Could have used more Stevie and less of Shakira’s braying.
Garth Brooks doing “Shout”? Whaaat? Pretty cheesy
Will I Am-more like “What A Hack”
U2, Beyonce-Could definitely feel the excitement from the crowd responding to the historical moment and excitement.

robthestudent | 1/19/2009, 2:26 pm EST

Well I stand corrected and I’m glad. I have HBO so I didnt know if came thru even if one doesn’t have HBO. I just thought it was suspicious how the media coverage of a free concert was restricted bc of the HBO contract…i’m glad they let everyone see it tho, I don’t think that would have been in the spirit of the event

I’m actually watching a replay of the concert now. Music is good and sometimes cheesy (G. Brooks going shout) but the biggest thing I am getting from it is that the bar is set very high for Obama. If anyone can rise to the occasion I’m starting to think he can…but i wish him all the luck in the world he will need it.

drinkslinger77 | 1/19/2009, 3:22 pm EST

you can still see the whole show for free online at hbo.com. thought the whole show was very good, albeit more than a little cheezy at times, but that’s to be expected I suppose. agree that could have used less of Shakira’s braying and more Stevie, JT was awesome and I thought the Garth Brooks mini set was histerical and actually pretty good. the Boss rocked and Beyonce knocked it out of the park

frank rizzo | 1/19/2009, 3:50 pm EST

I think is it so sad how naive people are.
“We are One”? Hardly.
There are so many factions out here of us all. We disagree on so much. There is almost half the country that has no excitement that Obama is going to be the president and are not happy about it.
I think people need to get over the “school girl crush” they have on Obama and get real about life.

Real change comes from within. Look to your loved ones and friends not the gov’t

Peace to you.
FR

alejandro paramo | 1/19/2009, 4:10 pm EST

u all talk about bruce springsteen u2 and all that stuff but who talk about shakira

madmilker | 1/19/2009, 4:19 pm EST

Frank, your rite, the government has put US in this mess. That “we are one” wasn’t even around at Cooper Union Address of 1860. When the we the people start thinking for themselves and put the people in D. C. working for this great union and not special interest groups nothing is gonna change.

CM | 1/19/2009, 5:02 pm EST

It must have killed BONO to promote someone other than himself

archie | 1/19/2009, 7:19 pm EST

How original “CM”, another Bono/U2 cynic, it’s nice to share cynicism and negativity isn’t it?

ahaugheyU2 | 1/19/2009, 7:38 pm EST

I don’t have HBO. does anyone know where to see a replay of it.

Nathan | 1/19/2009, 8:21 pm EST

I *thought* I heard the n-word during that rap… That was so classless, especially delivered on THOSE steps and a day before MLK Day. Wow.

nishules | 1/19/2009, 11:32 pm EST

I always thought Obama was more white than black, being 50 percent white and raised by a white grandmother. Today, however, when I saw him jiving out on the Lincoln memorial to Will.I.am’s use of the “n word”, I finally knew I was wrong. No white president in history would have ever gotten away with that. You can’t host an event that largly focuses on how much a race has overcome and then disgrace that race by letting a word like this go without any apologies. Guys….that’s Change we can believe in.

Dave | 1/20/2009, 7:24 am EST

Obama will be remembered as the worst President in US history.

This is an off-topic comment. Please delete.

Ben | 1/20/2009, 8:21 am EST

da hell was tom hanks doing there. And yeh americans are stupid the n world infront of the guy that freed the ns…
real smart

HisPrinceMichael | 1/20/2009, 11:27 am EST

Endless foreclosures.
A TERMINAL Economy.
One “war” is being traded, for
another “war”.
Meanwhile, elitists and POP STARS
are having a 150 million-dollar
Par-tay?
ONLY, in America.

basser | 1/20/2009, 1:15 pm EST

It’s interesting that Obama had pastor Rick Warren from Saddleback Church (and author of “40 Days of Purpose”) speak at his inauguration just now. Does anyone at Rolling Stone think this to be odd? Maybe Obama isn’t as rock and roll and hip as he led so many to believe. Time will tell. I hope the U.S. economy gets better, but please, people, stop putting Obama on a pedestal and chanting his name in the streets like he’s some crazed dictator ….

HisPrinceMichael | 1/20/2009, 3:36 pm EST

Basser, here’s your sign:
One’s a glorified book salesman,
the other is a glorified Chicago-politician/saleman. What, you’ve never seen two HUCKSTERS before?

Anonymous | 1/20/2009, 5:02 pm EST

What was U2 doing there? Are they American? Bono should keep his nose in his own country’s business.

Dave Evans | 1/20/2009, 5:14 pm EST

Archie—sorry but CM is right! let me guess you think Bono is ALSO a messiah. Give me break

Greg | 1/21/2009, 2:45 pm EST

Does anyone else have a problem with U2 performing at these events??? They couldn’t find an American act to perform?

bw33333 | 1/22/2009, 12:22 am EST

With all the power and fame Obama
has now maybe he needs a entrance song lets hope it does not turn out to be Darth Vader’s theme the
Imperial March.

White Cross on the Blue Sky | 1/24/2009, 1:38 am EST

Because U2 became president’s pet band and already played couple of time for kings Bush, even in the rain, suggestion for the next occasion, or better service, play cover of “Vision Thing” written perfectly by The Sisters of Mercy. And Larry, please, kick Bono in the ass, maybe his brain comes back in place.

Alloptionsonthetable | 2/10/2009, 8:48 am EST

“If any nerves were rattled by U2’s infusion of current events”?? Isn’t that the role of an artist? Who else but Bono and U2 would bring the topic up at that place and time? The USA has been complicit in spoiling the lives of millions of Palestinians for far too long. Bono and U2 were true to their roots as a political band born in the late 70’s when rock and roll still had, and believed in having, a relevant political purpose. I think he correctly juxtaposed the concept of an Israeli and Palestinian Dream. Why? Because it is precisely the paradox that Israeli’s get to live (and defend) their Dream, while the Palestinians live an oppressive nightmare with little if any hope for real self-determination as a people. This is what MLK spoke for, and what U2 correctly reminded us – and Obama – of at that uniquely American time and place: that Palestinians are included in MLKs Dream which is our human dream.

Thank you Bono, for using the limited time available to remind us all that when it comes to freedom, Palestinians deserve nothing less than Israelis! (I think I even saw Lincoln nod in agreement, and I absolutely felt the spirit of MLK!)

On a side note, but reflective I think of the U.S. rock n’roll community’s political apathy of late: I was disappointed when reading the Rolling Stone print edition that there was no mention of this statement by Bono. Just a big, warm, fluffy photo spread with little connection to the global import of the political event this was.

wearyinwelldoing | 3/5/2009, 9:37 pm EST

Where the hell are all of you liberals since you see what Obma is doing to our country??????????
Are you happy now???

Hwkvzisa | 7/13/2009, 11:20 pm EST

eUEnsF

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