BABY I GOT MY FACTS LEARNED REAL GOOD RIGHT NOW: I want to be careful from the outset: I still love Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band, and I still believe they're a great concert band. Perhaps the greatest.
But, man, last night's concert at the Linc was weird. I'm increasingly attuned to things I'd rather not be attuned to, and I don't like it, because it's getting in the way of my enjoyment of the concerts.
Last night was my sixth time seeing Bruce live, ranging as far back as 1988's Amnesty International benefit at JFK, through the the Lucky Town tour and up to the last date of the 1999-2000 reunion tour, when we went up to the Garden only to find ourselves seated right friggin' next to a Jen ex-boyfriend, and, oh boy, that was pleasant.
Anyway, back to the problems.
One: There's always been a level of shtick to Springsteen's performances, little rehearsed bits like having every member of the band sing the line "meet me out in the street" in turn at the end of "Out in the Street", or the traded vocals with Steven Van Zandt at the end of "The Rising". But instead of just experiencing and enjoying the shtick, now I find myself expecting and dissecting it as shtick.
For whatever reason -- and some of it, to be sure, is from listening to too many Bruce bootlegs and hearing the repetitions -- I'm no longer seeing the concerts as celebration of the brotherhood and solidarity and friendship between the longtime bandmates, but instead as a carefully-designed spectacle intended to create a similacrum thereof. In other words, it's not necessarily true that these guys do love each other that much and are that close together as that they want to make sure you think they do. In that sense, last night's Springsteen concert may have been no less choreographed than the Justin Timberlake/Christina Aguilera show across the street the same night. Oof.
What makes this especially painful to note is that one of the values Springsteen's music has always espoused is authenticity, that he's presenting the feelings of the real working man (despite now living in a mansion on a hill), and I really don't want to accept that the band needs to stage things in order to convince me of its authenticity. But when you can start plotting the calls-and-responses with mathematical precision and know exactly when Bruce is going to slide on his shins past Clarence because you saw him squirt the water on his legs first, well, that's a problem.
Two: Too much stuff from The Rising, while nothing from Nebraska, Ghost of Tom Joad or Tunnel of Love (granted, he never plays stuff from his breakup album anymore). I highly doubt any of the 55,000+ in attendance both (a) didn't own the almost year-old album yet but (b) were convinced to do so based on the turgid "Empty Sky"/"You're Missing" combo early in the show, which Jen and I renamed "Hey, should I get some more water?" and "No, really, does anyone need me to go for a walk?" Yawn.
The man's got a deep, deep catalogue, but no longer seems as interested in exploring it all. I wish he'd retire "Badlands", "Out in the Street" and, yeah, "Born to Run" for a while, and give some of his other great songs a workout. I'd love to know what he could do with "Brilliant Disguise" fifteen years later.
Three: Related to the first, but more pointed: last night's concert was the kind of Bruce show my conservative friends (and this means you, Paul) would have loved, because the politics were kept to a minimum, and safely cabinned-off to brief comments about lying during wartime and the Kensington Welfare Rights Union which were accepted respectfully by the crowd.
Look, I'm not asking him to play a full show of "Seeds", "War", "American Skin (41 Shots)" and the Joad album, but an apolitical Bruce made safe for the drunken middle-aged frat boy wannabe crowd is not my preferred Bruce Springsteen.
Okay, But Now For The Good Stuff: We had fun. Despite everything I said above, we had a damn good time. Show opened with "Promised Land", one of my favorites, and singalongs like "Badlands" and "Out in the Street" still make me smile. I love "Lost in the Flood", and, oddly, while the stats say they've only played the intense song four times live in 20+ years, Jen and I have been there for two of them. It's an incredibly moving song.
What else? The bar-stompin', roadhousin' "Ramrod", with Prof. Bittan pounding on the piano, soon followed by a cover of Moon Mullican's boogie-woogie obscurity "Seven Nights To Rock" that has apparently become a regular on this tour. It's simple, and it rocks.
The energy of the crowd, as always, just kicks ass. Plus which, we had good seats two-thirds of the way back on the field at Lincoln Financial Field, even if it took forever to find them. (Note to the staff: please don't tell us five different ways to get there next time?)
(By the way, was it wrong for me to try to pinpoint the moment in the show at which Clarence had his mid-show chicken break? Just wondering.)
The show closed with "Rosalita" and "Dancin' in the Dark", with Jen and I dancing under the electric overhead lights, me doing my best Bruce and Jen her own Courtney Cox, smiling in a crowd of tens of thousands, losing ourselves in the music, completely un-self-conscious of everything around us.
All the bullshit, all the annoyances were forgotten, and it was just us, the band and the music. When you get to that point in a concert, when all you're doing is feeling, smiling and enjoying, it's wonderful. It's getting there that's becoming harder and harder, and that's a shame.
Maybe I need to take a break from Bruce Springsteen concerts, and maybe he does too.
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