|
WSWS : Arts
Review : Music
Thirty years down the road
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band at Manchester, England
By Robert Stevens
18 June 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
US singer-songwriter Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
are currently on the European leg of their world tour following
the release of their latest album, The Rising. The album
and the tour mark a return to form and importantly
mark the reuniting of Springsteen and the E Street Band following
an 18-year hiatus.
The album was in the main written after the September 11 terrorist
attacks. While most of the songs are not directly about September
11, Springsteena native of nearby New Jerseyattempted
to infuse the album with themes of love, remorse and mourning.
He personally contacted the wife of one of the firemen killed
in the World Trade Centre after he read that her husband had been
a lifelong fan of his music. Two of the songs on the album were
written within one week of September 11.
Following the release of their biggest-selling album Born
in the USA in 1984 and the subsequent two-year tour that broke
records for ticket sales, Springsteen decided to separate from
the E Street Band he had worked with for over a decade to pursue
other projects. During this period, he released a number of albums,
written during and after his divorce from his first wife, his
remarriage and his relocation from his native New Jersey to Los
Angeles. At that same time, he produced a number of solo projects
with assorted musicians including Tunnel of Love, Lucky Town,
Human Touch and The Ghost of Tom Joad. He also released
an important four-CD collection of 66 unreleased songs entitled
Tracks in 1999.
His songs have traced in an honest manner the trajectory of
numerous social layers and ongoing themes in US societythe
worker burdened with the monotony of life in the factory, the
laid-off workers and their anxieties, the desperate hardships
faced by immigrants who struggle in the face of constant adversity,
police brutality, disenfranchised young people in gangs and those
with family trouble and personal problems, and the problems people
confront in cultivating meaningful relationships.
A number of songs on his albums from the late 1970s and the
1980s were themed around the impact of the Vietnam War and its
aftermath on an entire generation. Many of these issues and this
empathy with his characters were the subject of The
Ghost of Tom Joad.
In June 2000, Springsteen performed a new song called American
Skin about the brutal police killing of Amadou Diallo in
New York in February 1999. Diallo was slain in a hail of 41 gunfire
shots. The police officers were acquitted of his murder. For daring
to sing about such an event, he was denounced by police organisations
in New York who called for the song to be blacklisted and by Mayor
Rudolph Giuliani amongst others.
Speaking about his attitude to his craft, Springsteen said
in an interview in 1999, Part of what we call entertainment
should be food for thought.... Thats what I
was interested in doing since I was very young, how we live in
the world and how we ought to live in the world. I think politics
are implicit. Im not interested in writing rhetoric or ideology.
I think it was Walt Whitman who said, The poets job
is to know the soul. You strive for that, assist your audience
in finding and knowing theirs. Thats always at the core
of what youre writing, of what drives your music.
The band played three shows in the UK and is continuing the
European tour in Ireland, Italy, Germany, Denmark, Finland, Norway,
Sweden and Austria. The Manchester concert saw Springsteen and
the E Street Band playing a wealth of material spanning each of
their three decades before an audience approaching 50,000.
Springsteen opened the show with a remarkable solo acoustic
rendition of Born in the USA. The song is the title
track from the 1984 album. He began to play the song acoustically
in his set a few years ago, and stripped of the anthemic sound
and production that went into the studio version, it stands as
a searing indictment of the state of social relations in America.
The writer is on record that he is concerned about how the
song has been or could be misconstrued in a way that
diluted the protest themes inherent in it. The new version had
its original incarnation during the tour that followed the
Ghost of Tom Joad album. In his book Songs, he
addresses this question: Over the years Ive
had an opportunity to reinterpret Born in the USA
many times in concert. Particularly on the Tom Joad
tour, I had a version that could not be misconstrued. But those
interpretations always stood in relief to the original and gained
some of their new power from the audiences previous experience
with the original version.
The track is about a young man who is drafted and sent off
to the Vietnam War. The opening stanza is:
Born down in a dead mans town/The first kick I took
was when I hit the ground You end up like a dog thats been
beat too much/Till you spend half your life just covering up
The man sees one of his friends killed in the war. When he
returns, he tries and then fails to get a job amid recession and
unemployment. The song ends with the lament of the songs
character a decade after the war.
Among the many highlights of the 27-song set list in Manchester
were Born to Run, Jungleland, Badlands,
Thunder Road, Darkness on the Edge of Town,
Born in the USA, Bobby Jean, Lonesome
Day, Waiting on a Sunny Day, Marys
Place, Worlds Apart, Youre Missing
and My City of Ruins. The six latter songs
are taken from The Rising. The tour has also been noticeable
for the varied set lists that have been played.
Springsteen and the E Street Band have achieved a deserved
status as being among the most brilliant live performers. On stage,
Springsteen pushes his artistic and physical abilities to their
limits, often over a period of three hours or more. One has the
distinct impression that in some way he deliberately punishes
himself during a performance and seeks to impart his desires and
feelings to the audience in a very emotional and physical way.
The band, whom Springsteen describes as long-time compadres
and collaborators, are all excellent musicianssaxophonist
and percussionist Clarence Clemons, drummer Max Weinberg, bass
player Garry Tallent, guitarists Nils Lofgren and Steve Van Zandt,
keyboardist and pianist Roy Bittan, and organist Danny Federici.
Springsteens wife and band member Patti Scialfa plays acoustic
guitar as well as backing vocals. Her harmonies sometimes beautifully
complement Springsteens often raw and bassy voice and help
bring out the passion and warmth in his musicthough Springsteen
himself can display a remarkable vocal range.
One of the most interesting songs on The Rising is My
City of Ruins. It was originally written several years ago
as a comment on the visible social decline of Springsteens
adopted hometown of Asbury Park. Several of the landmarks featured
in some of his earlier songs such as the Palace amusement park
in Born to Run are rundown and dilapidated today.
One of the first clubs that Springsteen regularly performed, the
Show Pony, has now closed and become a dance hall. The band rehearsed
and prepared for their tour in the Asbury Park convention hall.
One of the verses in My City of Ruins runs:
Young men on the corner/Like scattered leaves/The boarded
up windows/The hustlers and thieves/While my brothers down
on his knees/My city of ruins
The beautifully crafted ballad Youre Missing
opens with a piano solo and features a haunting violin that plays
as Springsteen sings lyrics with a restrained vocal that chronicles
the despair of losing a loved one. The lyrics relate to how the
possessions of the missing person are still thereShirts
in the closet, shoes in the hall, Pictures on the nightstandbut
the living person is irrevocably gone.
Worlds Apart fuses elements of African and Middle
Eastern music including a Sufi choir and tabla drums with a strong
guitar, along with a vocal performance from Springsteen. Two loversa
Muslim and an Americanstruggle to maintain a relationship
amidst widespread animosity. One line is particularly memorable:
May the living let us in before the dead tear us apart.
Springsteen has always sought to develop a close relationship
with his audience, which he has termed a deep communication.
He often introduces his songs with short stories and tales from
his childhood and adolescence, including arguments with his father
over what he was doing with his life, his hopes and aspirations,
as well as comments on contemporary events.
His songs often evoke a feeling of indignation and protest,
and he undoubtedly sees his own contribution to music in these
terms. In a recent interview he commented on these issues: For
me the greatest pop music was music of liberation: Bob Marley,
Bob Dylan, Elvis Presley, James Brown, Public Enemy, the Clash,
the Sex Pistols. Those were pop groups that liberated an enormous
amount of people to be who they are. That connection, I always
thought, was the essence of the great bands that I lovedthat
they did that for people. It was the spirit of popular music that
courses through everybody from Woody Guthrie to Hank Williams,
the great Robert Johnson, all the way on, you know. I wanted to
be a link in that chain. I wanted to just come and do my part
as best as I could.
It is to Springsteens credit that he has retained his
outlook of posing and illuminating certain social and political
problems in a period when many artists simply refuse to even acknowledge
or consider them. On the basis of his latest album and tour, one
would hope that Springsteen will continue to address these themes.
The tour continues in Europe until the end of June and ends
in the United States at the end of September. We recommend it.
See Also:
Impassive resistance: Protest
songs for today
[23 April 2003]
New York police, Mayor
Giuliani attack Bruce Springsteen for criticizing Diallo shooting
[15 June 2000]
Tracks, a Sony
Music 4-CD boxed set by Bruce Springsteen: Anthology charts Springsteens
musical journey
[4 May 1999]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |