
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. โItโs hard to come out and play tonight when so much has been lost,โ Springsteen told the crowd. โ The first record I ever learned was a record called โTwist And Shout,โ and if it wasnโt for John Lennon, weโd all be in some place very different tonight.โ Then he cracked a hole in the sky and counted the band into โBorn 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 Citizenโs 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 singerโs 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 โKittyโs Backโ and โThundercrack.โ Greetings and Wild, Innocent are disorderly records that capture Springsteenโs youth as he runs to catch every idea before it races away from him; production-wise they hardly foresee โthe future of rock and roll.โ In 2016, raved-up โRosalitasโ and a reflective โIncident 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.
โBefore my biography, this was my biography,โ Springsteen said with a lock-jawed chuckle, plucking away over Roy Bittanโs tinkling piano intro to โGrowinโ 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 werenโt singing Springsteenโs story, theyโre 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. Itโs what inevitably finds them all pumping firsts together during โBadlandsโ and taking selfies together during โDancing In The Darkโ by the end of the night. Itโs the reason that these concerts are addictive revivals that keep Springsteenโs music from, as he writes in autobiography Born To Run, โreceding into rockโs glorious but embalmed past.โ Every night when Springsteen counts off โBorn 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 Lennonโs 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-donโt-shoot pose during โAmerican Skin (41 Shots),โ a painfully prescient song thatโs sadly more relevant in 2016 than it was in 1999. โThe 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 Springsteenโs figured out a neat trick to slow his aging โ that as long heโs performing his songs, theyโll 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 โBobby Jean.โ A sign in the pit said it all: โBreak your record.โ At four hours and two minutes, this would be Springsteenโs longest U.S. concert to date, and second-longest of his career.
โPretty sure Iโm in the 220-230 [shows] range,โ one Springsteen die-hard told American Songwriter after the first Philly gig. โAnd that was top three.โ
