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On The River Tour, Bruce Springsteen Proves Himself To Be The Benjamin Button Of Rock

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Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band performing in Louisville, February 2016. Photo by C Michael Stewart

On December 8, 1980, Bruce Springsteen and his E Street bandmates walked off stage at the Philadelphia Spectrum after turning in a three-and-a-half hour show typical of the legend that now precedes them. It was one of many nights in the City of Brotherly Love that the E Street faithful in attendance would never forget, and for the worst reason. As Bruce and the band strode toward the dressing room, a roadie delivered the shocking news that John Lennon had been shot.

The next night Springsteen and band returned to the Spectrum. โ€œItโ€™s hard to come out and play tonight when so much has been lost,โ€ Springsteen told the crowd. โ€œ The first record I ever learned was a record called โ€˜Twist And Shout,โ€™ and if it wasnโ€™t for John Lennon, weโ€™d all be in some place very different tonight.โ€ Then he cracked a hole in the sky and counted the band into โ€œBorn to Run.โ€

It was two months into the original River Tour and Springsteen was still standing in the shadows of giants, proving all night, every night that rock and roll mattered; that rock and roll could give life in the face of death. Thirty-six years later, on September 7, Springsteen, a few weeks shy of 67, stood in his own shadow, looking like he had even more to prove as, E Street Band in tow, he stepped onstage for the first of two shows at Citizenโ€™s Bank Park.

Bruce Springsteen has been in an uncharacteristically nostalgic mood in 2016. When The River Tour kicked off in January the jaunt featured start-to-finish performances of the singerโ€™s 1980 double album. By the time the trek wrapped with a run of East Coast stadiums River songs fell out of rotation, making way for requests, audibles and the loose spontaneity behind the mythic shows Boss fans chase. This was a monster run of record-breaking marathon gigs rife with potent performances and set-list heroin the strength of which the E Street nation had never seen.

The first 90 minutes in Philly felt like a fever dream โ€” a 12-song opening stretch consisted solely of pre-1975 deep cuts from Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. and The Wild, The Innocent And The E Street Shuffle era. Long, messy, jazzy, wordy songs like โ€œKittyโ€™s Backโ€ and โ€œThundercrack.โ€ Greetings and Wild, Innocent are disorderly records that capture Springsteenโ€™s youth as he runs to catch every idea before it races away from him; production-wise they hardly foresee โ€œthe future of rock and roll.โ€ In 2016, raved-up โ€œRosalitasโ€ and a reflective โ€œIncident on 57th St.โ€ reveal buried nuances the way that memories teach better lessons than a moment. But at a Springsteen show minute feels in the moment.

โ€œBefore my biography, this was my biography,โ€ Springsteen said with a lock-jawed chuckle, plucking away over Roy Bittanโ€™s tinkling piano intro to โ€œGrowinโ€™ Up.โ€ But when the crowd belted along to lines about walking on crooked crutches and finding the keys to the universe in old parked cars, they werenโ€™t singing Springsteenโ€™s story, theyโ€™re singing their own stories and the stories of characters who became miserable companions in lonely times.

This makes even the darkest moments of a Springsteen show a communal event. Itโ€™s what inevitably finds them all pumping firsts together during โ€œBadlandsโ€ and taking selfies together during โ€œDancing In The Darkโ€ by the end of the night. Itโ€™s the reason that these concerts are addictive revivals that keep Springsteenโ€™s music from, as he writes in autobiography Born To Run, โ€œreceding into rockโ€™s glorious but embalmed past.โ€ Every night when Springsteen counts off โ€œBorn To Runโ€ and the house lights come up, the song is just as much a living, breathing thing as it was when it opened the show the night after Lennonโ€™s assassination.

This is what Springsteen still has to prove in 2016, that tour after tour to greater effect since reuniting the E Street Band in 1999, he still makes music that still matters. Folks in the back of the stadium might not have noticed when E Street saxophonist Jake Clemons, standing out of the spotlight, raised his arms in a hands-up-donโ€™t-shoot pose during โ€œAmerican Skin (41 Shots),โ€ a painfully prescient song thatโ€™s sadly more relevant in 2016 than it was in 1999. โ€œThe Risingโ€ stands as a rousing anthem that heals America a little bit more with every performance. The grand theme of The River and this tour, is that life is a race against time, where your reality fights William Wallace-worthy battle with your dreams as the sand slips through the hourglass. But Bruce Springsteenโ€™s figured out a neat trick to slow his aging โ€” that as long heโ€™s performing his songs, theyโ€™ll never get old. But they will get wiser, and better.

As September 7 turned into September 8 and fireworks erupted above the ballpark, thousands in the crowd had their eyes on the clock as Bruce and rocked out a closing โ€œBobby Jean.โ€ A sign in the pit said it all: โ€œBreak your record.โ€ At four hours and two minutes, this would be Springsteenโ€™s longest U.S. concert to date, and second-longest of his career.

โ€œPretty sure Iโ€™m in the 220-230 [shows] range,โ€ one Springsteen die-hard told American Songwriter after the first Philly gig. โ€œAnd that was top three.โ€