Pencilstorm on Springsteen: Our Top Five Stories So Far

A very wise band from DE-troit, Michigan once said, "The time has come for each and every one of you to decide whether you are gonna be the problem or whether you are gonna the solution."  (I fully realize that adage may have originated elsewhere - like Voltaire, or Benjamin Franklin, or a Marvel comic book - but being a West Side rock & roll boy, I only know it from The MC-5.)  I thought of that quote last Friday when Bruce Springsteen cancelled his North Carolina show over the issue of LGBT rights, and reminded me of those long-lost days when rock stars cared more about social issues and less about how many of their tunes they could peddle to car company commercials, in order to sell their souls to the highest bidder.

So, as a kind of preview to Tuesday's E Street Band show at Value City Arena (there's that highest bidder thing, again) we at Pencilstorm thought we'd post links to our five favorite Bruce stories we've run in the past.  (Later in the week, sometime after the Willie Phoenix show Thursday at the CD 102.5 Big Room Bar during the Pencilstorm Hall of Fame festivities, Ricki C. will be providing his review of the show, which is taking place exactly 40 years & 1 week after the first time Ricki saw Springsteen, April 5th, 1976.)  

Click here to read "The Perfect Age For Rock n Roll Pt 2"  - Ricki C. describes seeing Bruce for the first time in 1976. This whole series is a must, must read. 

Click here to read "My Chance Meeting With Bruce or His chance Meeting With Me" - Colin G. once hung out with Bruce, one on one, for about 45 minutes. Go figure.

Click here to read " A Review of Bruce Springsteen Cincinnati 2014" - Ricki C reviews Bruce 38 years after seeing his first show.

Click here to read "In His Passing, Clarence Has Given Bruce the Gift of Music Everlasting" - Before there was Pencilstorm. Colin wrote this review of the dazzling new E Street line-up on the Wrecking Ball tour for Colingawel.com

Click here to read "Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band, Veteran's Memorial, 1978" - Ricki C on his favorite Springsteen show ever.

a little video action from the current tour

 

 

 

Five Must Read Bruce Springsteen Stories. Take That, Grantland

Last week I took my ten year old son Owen to his first Bruce Springsteen show in Columbus, Ohio. Tonight, ignoring all logical reasoning I'm driving to catch the Boss in Pittsburgh because you know, he is the boss. At some point Springsteen's magic powers have to fade and I want to see him at least one more time while he is still in top form. In honor of this, I thought I would tidy up our excellent Bruce coverage here at Pencilstorm with a quick recap of past stories. They are all excellent and worth your time. You find anything comparable on our rival website, Grantland. Please share them with other like minded music fans. Thanks- Colin

Click here to read "The Perfect Age For Rock n Roll Pt 2"  - Ricki C. describes seeing Bruce for the first time in 1976. This whole series is a must, must read. 

Click here to read "My Chance Meeting With Bruce or His chance Meeting With Me" - Colin G. once hung out with Bruce, one on one, for about 45 minutes. Go figure.

Click here to read " A Review of Bruce Springsteen Cincinnati 2014" - Ricki C reviews Bruce 38 years after seeing his first show.

Click here to watch Bruce cover Highway to Hell by AC/DC  - Not really a story but worth a revisit nonetheless. So fun.

Click here to read "In His Passing, Clarence Has Given Bruce the Gift of Music Everlasting" - Before there was Pencilstorm. Colin wrote this review of the dazzling new E Street line up on the Wrecking Ball tour for Colingawel.com

Bruce, I Went Ahead and Wrote Out Setlist For Tonight's Show in Columbus. You're Welcome, Colin

Bruce, I am sure you have a million things to do, what with family activities and just keeping the band organized. I mean, between Little League and work I can barely find time to get our four-piece together for practice, so I have no idea how you get the entire E Street Band in the room to rehearse. Scheduling must be a bitch.

Anyway, as luck would have it, I own a small coffee shop and usually have a little free time on my hands before people start stumbling in for their daily fix. You have done a lot for me so I figured it is time for me to chip in and help you out a bit. It's no big deal really. Happy to do it. Also, this seems more efficient than bringing a bunch of signs to the show. They are hard to carry and I'm sure you get tired of squinting through the lights every night trying to read them. Win - Win.

I went ahead studied your shows from 2014 and I think I have kept it pretty close to what you have been trying to accomplish.  In the interest of full disclosure, I suppose I should mention I am bringing my ten year old son Owen  tonight for his first blown E. Street show (He caught you solo with the Prez in 2012) so I suppose my intentions aren't completely altruistic . Admittedly, I  sprinkled in tracks to stack the deck a little in his favor.

Here you go, feel free to print out as many copies as you need. You're welcome. Good luck tonight!

Setlist: Bruce Springsteen Nationwide Arena Columbus, OH Tuesday April 15th

High Hopes

Badlands

Darkness on the Edge of Town

Two Hearts

Bobby Jean

Wrecking Ball

Death to My Hometown

Atlantic City

Shackled and Drawn

Heaven's Wall

Because the Night

--You can pick a "sign request" here though I would appreciate you looking for "Long Walk Home" or "Lucky Town."

Darlington County or Cadillac Ranch

American Skin

Promised Land 

Ghost of Tom Joad

The Rising

The Land of Hope and Dreams

Encore:

Racing in the Street  (Read the chapter of the same title in the book "Hitless Wonder - A Life in Minor League Rock n Roll" and you will understand why this is a good Columbus choice.)

Born to Run

10th Ave Freeze-Out

Dancing in the Dark

Encore 2: 

You can decide.

Colin Gawel plays in the band Watershed. He once met Bruce Springsteen and wrote about it. Click here to read. He also was chosen to perform with his band the Lonely Bones at the Springsteen Exhibit opening at the Rock n Roll Hall of Fame.

 

 

Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band in Cincy, April 8th, 2014 by Ricki C.

"For the ones who had a notion, a notion deep inside

That it ain’t no sin to be glad you’re alive”


- Bruce Springsteen, “Badlands,” 1978

 

I went to see Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band last Tuesday, April 8th, 2014, in Cincinnati, Ohio, and it was an all-timer – the best rock & roll show I’ve seen in more years than I can remember and the second-best Springsteen show I’ve ever witnessed, coming in right behind the September 5th, 1978 show at Vet’s Memorial in Columbus.  (Wait, have I said that about EVERY Springsteen show I’ve seen after 1978?  Is the one I just saw and been left in open-mouthed wonder by, and the one that is freshest in my memory, the second-best Springsteen show I ever saw?  No, this time I mean it.)  (At least until tomorrow night in Columbus.)   

I attended this show with my oldest & dearest friend Jodie and our friend Chris Clinton – whom we met exactly thirty years ago this year, in 1984 in the overnight camp-out line for the Born In The U.S.A. tour at the Buzzard’s Nest Records store on Morse Road.  We met back in the days when ticket-buying was still a communal experience, when you could hang out from Friday afternoon to Saturday morning to try to score great seats, before buying tickets became soulless & computerized like everything else.  Chris is from Ireland, was working on some kind of exchange program for a computer company, and we just started talking because he was immediately in front of us in line.  He retains a great Irish brogue to this day, thirty years down the line, but back then, that night, his accent was so thick that when he got excited and started talking fast we couldn’t understand a single fucking word he said.  Jodie & I would just nod and smile and try to hang on and catch the gist of what was flying out of that gifted Dublin mouth of Mr. Clinton’s.  Jodie and I have known each other most of our lives.  We dated briefly in our teens, remain forever friends to this day, all these years later.  There are no two people on the planet I would rather see a Bruce Springsteen show with. 

Okay, just some scattershot observations before I get into the heart of the piece:

1)    It somehow had not occurred to me before the start of this show, that with Clarence Clemons and Danny Federici gone from the E Street Band line-up, bass player Gary W. Tallent is the LAST remaining member of the original Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. and The Wild, The Innocent & The E Street Shuffle era band.  I’m simultaneously enormously saddened by the fact that he is The Last Man Standing and immensely heartened by the fact that he has weathered all of the changes of the last 41 years.  Can you imagine how many vans, RV’s, tour buses, clubs, theaters, arenas, stadiums, gas stations, telephone poles, farm fields, full moons, hotel rooms, towns, cities, countries, stages and faces he's seen since 1973?

2)    Little Steven Van Zandt is off filming Lilyhammer or some other extracurricular activity, so this is the first time since the Born In The U.S.A. tour I’m not seeing his Ultimate Badass Presence on a Bruce stage, and I REALLY, REALLY miss him.  So does The E Street Band.  There is a telling moment in “Promised Land” where substitute guitarists Tom Morello and Nils Lofgren – and yeah, I still consider Nils Lofgren just a sub lo these 30 years on – strain to recreate one Little Steven guitar figure BETWEEN THE TWO OF THEM and they STILL can’t/don’t get it right.

3)    Speaking of substitutes: THERE ARE JUST TOO MANY GODDAMN MUSICIANS & SINGERS onstage at these shows.  With four extra horn players PLUS Jake Clemons (ably) standing in for his late, lamented Uncle Clarence (and HOW LUCKY is Bruce Springsteen that a nephew of The Big Man is this good a tenor sax player?), three back-up singers, a totally-superfluous percussionist (you’ve got MAX FUCKING WEINBERG in the band, Bruce!), plus Soozie Tyrell and (on this night, at least) Patti Scialfa augmenting the core E Street Band of Tallent, Weinberg, Roy Bittan and new guy Charlie Giordano, there are 17 musicians & singers onstage.  This is at least 10 too many.  They’re all great, mind you, and I realize that Bruce wanted to expand the range of the band after the Wrecking Ball album to include gospel & soul elements into the mix, but there are times in the show I find myself longing for the lean, mean, streamlined, superfine seven-man band I saw in 1978.

I NEEDED this concert.

It was a long, cold, snowy, tough winter and I had my fourth (minor) cardiac surgery exactly one week before the show, on April 1st.  (And what better day to have heart surgery than April Fool’s Day?)  In his introductory remarks to “Growin’ Up” – during which Bruce brought a guy celebrating his birthday down to sing (see video below) – Springsteen said, "First thing you do, before you write a decent song, before you pick up a guitar, before you play your first gig, you lay in bed at night and you dream yourself up.”  As I alluded to in my "Why I Hate Kiss" pencilstorm piece, I was a painfully shy child & teenager until I got the idea in my head that I could pick up a guitar and be a whole other person, a completely new human being, I could “dream myself up.”  It’s times like those in Bruce shows where I’m just totally astounded that Springsteen can take concepts & thoughts that have been rattling around in my head for 50 years or so – without my ever being able to articulate them – and send them back to me from a rock & roll stage in two or three perfect, succinct sentences.   

So there’s a lot of things I could say here: I could say Bruce Springsteen is my absolute favorite rock & roll performer of all time, and that would be true;  I could say there is no other arena-rock act performing today who comes anywhere NEAR Bruce’s commitment to artistic merit and continuing integrity – let’s face facts, The Rolling Stones may still be cool, but they haven’t made a great album since maybe 1982, and while they may pay lip service to performing new material, you KNOW it’s gonna be an oldies show with Mick & Keith and the boys;  I could – in the words of Elliott Murphy, my other all-time favorite rock & roll performer, who began his career as a fellow “New Dylan” with Bruce back in 1973 – “analyze each and every song, but that’s what took all the fun out of chemistry class.”

So let me just say this – Bruce Springsteen has the most instinctive and complete command of the power, passion and promise of rock & roll music of any performer I have ever seen, and he knows exactly where the heart & soul of songs as disparate as “High Hopes,” “Badlands,” “Lost In The Flood,” “The Ghost Of Tom Joad,” and the Isley Brothers’ partytime soul-smasher “Shout” all meet.

They meet right in our hearts.

Go to the show in Columbus tomorrow night.  I guarantee you won’t regret it. – Ricki C. / April 13th, 2014


(editor’s note: We expect Ricki C. might have 1000 or so words to say about the Columbus show later
in the week.  So might Colin.  So might you.  Send ‘em in and we’ll run the best in Pencilstorm.)

(ps. You can't really see it in the video but the crowd DID NOT CATCH birthday boy (and how cool would it be to get to sing with Bruce Springsteen ON YOUR BIRTHDAY?!? ) when he stage-dove at the end.  He picked a place with a bunch of little girls and a definite shortage of guys and the girls just kinda parted and let him fall.  A couple of guys made a last-minute grab for him and kept him from hitting the floor square on his head and killing himself, but he hit the arena floor HARD.  It's too grainy to see, but the look on Bruce and the band's faces was priceless, they were like, "WHAT THE FUCK WAS THAT???!!!??? Did that guy just dive off the stage?"  Classic.) 

 

This is how close we were to Bruce on Tuesday.  (photo by Jodie)

This is how close we were to Bruce on Tuesday.  (photo by Jodie)

Jodie, Chris, Ricki C.

Jodie, Chris, Ricki C.

My Chance Meeting with Bruce (Or, Bruce's Chance Meeting With Me)

Note from Colin: This the final and likely most interesting chapter of a three-part Bruce essay I wrote a little while back when Colin Gawel and The Lonely Bones were the only band asked to perform at the opening of the Bruce Springsteen exhibit at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Needless to say it was a huge honor. I knocked out this story to contribute to the program. Hope you enjoy.  Part OnePart Two.

 

Yes, I met Bruce Springsteen once, but it wasn’t how I imagined it. In fact, it was totally unexpected. The two of us had a nice conversation in his dressing room one winter night in Youngstown, Ohio.

I was there because my band, Watershed, was in the process of being dropped from Epic/Sony Music Entertainment. Something about how we didn’t sell enough product and/or our records weren’t very good anyway. Go figure. In an effort to cheer me up, Columbia/Sony reps Andy Flick and Dave Watson invited me up from Columbus to catch one of the early Ghost of Tom Joad performances. I don’t remember the name of the small theater he played, but I can recall vividly that it was snowing so hard, Andy and I barely made the gig in time.

The theater was coal-fired warm and our seats were 20th row or something. Bruce killed. Hearing the song "Youngstown" performed in Youngstown was eerie. Initially, the crowd went wild hearing their hometown’s name mentioned, but by the end of the song they were quiet.

After the gig, knowing I was a huge fan, Andy asked if I wanted to go backstage with the press. “Uh, ok, sure. Is that cool? Yeah,” I sorta mumbled. Five minutes later I am whisked down a narrow hallway and find myself standing in a small dressing room with Bruce and five or six members of the Northeast Ohio press corps. (I remember the famous music critic from the Cleveland Plain Dealer was there. Bruce greeted her warmly. Her name?  (editor's note: It was likely Jane Scott, who covered music at the PD from 1964 to 2002. She died in 2011.)

No one seemed to know how to get the thing started so I offered up: “It must be very strange to spend your entire career learning how to wind up a crowd, and now devote most of your energy to winding them down." Understand, this was his first solo tour and people just couldn’t stop screaming during quiet moments.

Bruce looked at me and said: “Wind 'em down…. Yeah that’s good, that’s right.”

We continued chatting about the show and reporters busily jotted down notes and held tape recorders out in our faces as talked. Noticing I was doing neither, Bruce asked: “Who are you exactly, anyway?” I explained about my band getting dropped, guys at the label feeling sorry and hooking me up, etc.

Someone came in and said it was time for the press to go. Bruce asked if I wanted to stick around and have a couple of beers with him. “If the label’s buying, I’m staying,” I said.

Everyone left and we sipped our beers and chatted about this and that. I recall bits and pieces of the conversation, but what I remember most is that it was comfortable and very two-way. It felt like old friends catching up.

OK, let’s address the obvious question: “Weren’t you nervous?” Strangely enough, I wasn’t nervous at all. But it’s not like I’m above getting a little jittery around people I admire -Steven Tyler, Terry Anderson, and Cincinnati Reds broadcaster Marty Brennaman jump to mind.

Eventually, it was time for both of us to go. I grabbed a beer for the road and Bruce said, “Might as well grab two - get 'em while you can.” or something to that effect.

Looking back, I think our connection that night in Youngstown was real because we had something in common that trumped any of our differences in status or accomplishment.

We were just two musicians sitting in a dingy dressing room in Youngstown, Ohio, who had absolutely no idea what the future would bring either of us. One would lose his record deal and return his old job making sandwiches at Subway. The other would continue touring alone, singing songs about Mexican immigrants working in meth labs.

Both were terrified and thrilled at what the future might hold and both knew it was going to be a tough fight. Rock 'n' roll is always a tough fight.

 

Colin Gawel is a founding member of Pencilstorm. He writes songs and performs with Watershed and his solo band The Lonely Bones. You can read all about it in the acclaimed book Hitless Wonder. He owns a small coffee shop and lives in Columbus Ohio with his wife and 9-year-old son whose favorite band is Aerosmith. More Springsteen stories can be found at www.colingawel.com