Bruce and Patti at Home in the “Land of Hope and Dreams”

Springsteen Scialfa

Bruce Springsteen and his wife Patti Scialfa are among the latest of artists working to help us through the coronavirus pandemic while we stay in our homes. As part of the Jersey 4 Jersey telethon supporting the New Jersey Pandemic Relief Fund, the two sang “Land of Hope and Dreams” and Tom Waits’ “Jersey Girl.”

Their performance of “Land of Hope and Dreams” was understandably more subdued than the versions on 2001’s Live in New York City and 2012’s Wrecking Ball. As we previously discussed in our analysis, the song reflects a long history of American music and has special resonance for Springsteen and fans. One of the themes of the song is one of hope, something we all really need right now.

The tone of their performance, of course, is appropriate for the occasion as there is comfort in knowing other people connect to your suffering. But I cannot help just being more sad seeing Bruce and Patti looking forlorn singing a song that in the past has lifted my spirits. We need to believe Springsteen’s promise in the song, “Tomorrow there’ll be sunshine/ And all this darkness past.”

Regarding the other song in the video, Springsteen always gives a great performance of Waits’ “Jersey Girl.” And here, that song gains added meaning as Springsteen sings it to his own Jersey girl and to those experiencing pain and heartbreak in New Jersey.

Check out Springsteen and Scialfa performing “Land of Hope and Dreams” and “Jersey Girl” from their home.

Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Fathers, Birth, and Rebirth In Springsteen Songs

    Phoenix For Father’s Day weekend, we discuss two of Bruce Springsteen’s songs about adult life, fatherhood, rebirth, and birth: “Long Time Comin'” and “Living Proof.” Early in his career in songs like “Independence Day,” Springsteen explored the relationship between sons and fathers with a focus on his experience as a son. But later in his life, some of his songs, like the two discussed below, focused on the joys and fears of being a father.

    “Long Time Comin'” and “Living Proof” explore some similar themes connecting the singer’s rebirth to the birth of a child. But although they were written less than five years apart, the singer’s perspective changes significantly between the two songs.

    “Living Proof,” which appeared on Springsteen’s 1992 Lucky Town album, is about the joy and the celebration of starting a family. The singer tells us about his own struggles in life and about “crawling deep into some kind of darkness.” Through that, he sought some type of rebirth: “I went down into the desert city / Just tryin’ so hard to shed my skin.” Ultimately, he found faith and hope in his lover and the child she gave him.

    Well now on a summer night in a dusky room,
    Come a little piece of the Lord’s undying light,
    Crying like he swallowed the fiery moon;
    In his mother’s arms it was all the beauty I could take,
    Like the missing words to some prayer that I could never make;
    In a world so hard and dirty so fouled and confused,
    Searching for a little bit of God’s mercy;
    I found living proof.

    “Living Proof” was written after Springsteen’s future wife Patti Scialfa gave birth to the couple’s first child, a son, on July 25, 1990. As such, it reflects the happiness Springsteen was feeling at finding a happy family life following a period that included a divorce in 1988.

    “Long Time Comin'” officially first appeared on Springsteen’s 2005 solo album Devils & Dust. But Springsteen wrote the song much earlier around the time of his 1995 album, The Ghost of Tom Joad. Thus, he wrote “Long Time Comin'” within five years of the birth of his first son and around the time of the birth of his third child. Springsteen and Scialfa had a daughter born in December 1991 and a second son born in January 1994.

    “Long Time Comin'” is set somewhere in the Western United States (“The wind in the mesquite comes rushin’ over the hilltops”) out under the open sky. The singer in “Long Time Comin’,” like the singer in “Living Proof” is seeking rebirth: “Tonight I’m gonna get birth naked and bury my old soul / And dance on its grave.”

    Unlike “Living Proof,” the father in “Long Time Comin'” focuses more on the future of his children, and he fears what his children may face. The singer is happy, but he worries that he will transfer his own failings to his children.

    Thus, with a few more years with experience being a father, the songwriter of “Long Time Comin'” creates a character who wonders about his own abilities as a father. It is a weariness earned by experience.

    Well now down below and pullin’ on my shirt,
    Yeah I got some kids of my own;
    Well if I had one wish for you in this God forsaken world, kid,
    It’d be that your mistakes will be your own,
    That your sins will be your own.

    The lyrics written by Springsteen-the-father contrast with the lyrics written by Springsteen-the-son in his earlier song “Adam Raised a Cain,” which appeared on Darkness on the Edge of Town (1978). In the song from Springsteen’s early years, the singer concluded, “You’re born into this life paying,/ For the sins of somebody else’s past.” Additionally, recalling his father’s pain, the singer warned, “You inherit the sins, you inherit the flames.” That son’s understanding of his own father’s burdens resulted in the son’s hope not to pass on those sins and flames.

    In the end, the father of “Long Time Comin'” looks at his two kids in sleeping bags, and then he looks at his pregnant wife, promising that he will do better this time around (even using the f-word for the first time on a Springsteen record). It’s one of the most touching and honest moments in the singer-songwriter’s expansive catalog of songs full of honesty and faith.

    Image of rebirth of Phoenix via public domain. What are your favorite songs of birth and rebirth? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Tougher Than the Rest

    Springsteen Tougher than the Rest Columbia Records released Bruce Springsteen’s Tunnel of Love on October 9, 1987. While the album was a quieter follow-up to the mega-hit Born in the USA and modern fans often consider it shadowed by other albums like Born to Run and Darkness on the Edge of Town, it is a great album.

    Had almost any other artist made Tunnel of Love, the album would have defined their careers. Instead it remains one of Springsteen’s somewhat overlooked albums.

    Tunnel of Love also remains one of Springsteen’s most personal and least political albums. While he has many other love songs, the songs on Tunnel of Love focus largely on the heart, isolated from any one time and place.

    Of course, Springsteen fans at the time sensed that the album reflected one particular troubled heart. In May 13, 1985, Springsteen had married actress Julianne Phillips after the two knew each other less than a year. Many thought Tunnel of Love reflected rocky waters for the marriage with lyrics in the title track such as “It’s easy for two people to lose each other in this tunnel of love.” The two had separated before the release of the album, and soon the couple filed for divorce on August 30, 1988.

    During the tour for the album, tabloids reported on Springsteen’s new love with backup singer Patti Scialfa. Within a few years of Springsteen’s divorce, he and Scialfa would get married and the two are still together today.

    In this video from the Tunnel of Love tour for “Tougher Than the Rest,” it may be acting, but one can sense some smoldering passion in the looks between the two on one of Springsteen’s greatest love songs.

    Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Springsteen & Family Rock Raleigh (Guest Post)

    Bruce Patti

    The following is a Guest Post by Brad Risinger, reporting on Thursday’s Bruce Springsteen concert in Raleigh, North Carolina.

    Bruce Springsteen’s April 24 Raleigh stop on the High Hopes (2014) tour was a family affair. Vocalist wife Patti Scialfa made the scene, along with daughter Jessica, who is a student at nearby Duke University. Little Steven — a blood brother if ever there was one — was missed, but the ensemble feel of this E Street iteration has a comfortable vibe that is less forced than the Seeger conglomeration and more at peace with the voids left by old friends Clarence Clemons and Danny Federici.

    The band’s sound is large on this tour, benefiting from a lot of layering and height provided by a blistering horn section which Jake Clemons helms and a gifted trio of back-up singers. I probably paid more attention to the latter than I usually would have after seeing the wonderful documentary 20 Feet From Stardom (2013) earlier this spring that centered around Darlene Love and a handful of should-be-famous back-up singers. Go queue up The Rolling Stones’ “Gimme Shelter,” turn up the sound and down the lights, and listen to what soars behind Mick Jagger. And then rent the movie.

    Tom Morello has been nicely enmeshed into the band, and it has produced interesting results. Springsteen opened with “High Hopes,” and featured a prominent role for Morello that could have set the stage for a tougher backbone to much of the night helmed by the former Rage Against The Machine guitarist. But as the band dealt with Little Steven’s departure and return, and incorporated Nils Lofgren’s lilting voice and tilting guitar, it has found a home for Morello that gets the best of some nasty shreds within the team concept. The “Ghost of Tom Joad” collaboration between Springsteen and Morello, which introduced the latter to E Street, continues to be a wicked piece that shines, but does not overstate its presence. Morello blended in for much of the evening, and was a foil for Springsteen in Van Zandt’s absence. Lofgren’s wild solo in “Because The Night” had a partner-in-crime feel to it, while Morello’s role is more like a younger, evil twin. It’s an interesting balancing act that could take some neat turns in the band’s new phase.

    Any band that forms, endures, separates and then charges back reinvents itself regularly. Clarence cannot be replaced, but his nephew Jake has carved his own space. He does not so much mimic the Big Man’s iconic turns on “The Promised Land” and “Thunder Road” as he does honor them. His spin through “Land of Hope and Dreams” feels authentic; it may not turn out to be his “Jungleland,” but it gives the audience confidence that Jake and Bruce will find it. The talented “Sister” Soozie Tyrell feels more lost in this band configuration, but she still has a couple of moments in the parts of the show that recall the Seeger Sessions feel. I would still like one chance to hear Tyrell reprise the string track from the “Incident on 57th Street” version at the February 1975 Main Point show. You may hear that version online; it is a WMMR simulcast that stands the test of time.

    Scialfa has always had an interesting role on E Street, and while she has not been steadily on the road in recent years, her voice is aging with her husband’s in a very complementary and intertwined kind of way. I have always liked her voice, and the tension it sometimes has lent the band. While she has had her critics among the Springsteen faithful, her Rumble Doll (1993) CD is a quirky, honest album worth a listen. And she plays off of Bruce in ways now that she didn’t a decade ago. “Brilliant Disguise” in their hands is rarely played but has become smoky over the years and more intimate. And she and Bruce ratchet over each other on “Because the Night” in a way that is angry and conciliatory at the same time. Let’s hope before Patti heads home some audience gets a tortured and understanding take of “One Step Up” sung with her man.

    E Street Band shows have always been a tactile experience; for years the curved catwalk behind the stage was a staple when the backshop seats were sold. And, then as now, “Dancing in the Dark” brings company to the stage. But Bruce’s audience roaming has become nomadic in a fun and personal way. Springsteen visited a walkway that sliced through the center of the arena floor a number of times, and it is a slower, more luxuriant trip these days. He stopped for fan selfies, perused the signs requesting songs, and he confidently flung himself into the crowd to be “surfed” back to the stage. It was a snaky looking path, to be sure, but he got there. It is impossible to declare that the band, or Springsteen himself, is having more fun than before. It is tempting to say Springsteen sees the end of the touring road coming at age 64 and is taking a long, reflective walk through his catalog for loyal fans. But honestly, the message he sends off is more celebratory than “so long.”

    Nobody gets everything, even in a three-hour rock show that never takes a break. But there is always an oddity that jumps up to surprise. On the Australia swing, a raucous “Highway to Hell” cover banged around on a few nights. And there’s no telling when you will get an “I Fought the Law” or “Summertime Blues” bar band moment. In Raleigh, Patti selected a bright, construction-paper pink flamingo from the crowd and asked Bruce to play “Pretty Flamingo,” a 1960s Manfred Mann hit that he has played only a handful of times over the years. Springsteen exhorted himself to “tell the story, Bruce” to set up the song, and had to reach a bit to find the lyrics and chords before diving in.

    These requests from the floor for rarities are a funny business. A fan came with an elaborate sign request for a song Bruce has not played in years, and only rarely ever. It reminds me of the story Bruce used to tell about the guy who followed him for years and held up a sign requesting “Murder, Incorporated” long before it became widely popular. Bruce said he never had any intention of playing it, but admired the persistence. But, some obsessive fan who had the song on a vinyl bootleg from the early 1980s kept requesting it and finally got it. I did not hold up the sign, but I wore that old record out in college.

    Springsteen called an early audible by picking a sign request for “Brilliant Disguise,” as a lead-in to “Atlantic City” and “Johnny 99.” The show’s Nebraska cameo was an eclectic, and interesting tempo and mood shift. “Atlantic City” had a minister’s desperation to it, less personal perhaps than the album version, but with a keen and softly spoken pulpit verse that resonated. “Johnny 99” was a treat, part Preservation Hall with the E Street Horns and part Roy Bittan rockabilly. (The horns were a good return jab at the recent, loopy comments from Courtney Love critical of the E Street Band because saxophones, she says, have no place in a real rock band.)

    I resist the “tape measure” crowd among E Street loyals that obsessively compares minutes on stage, tour premieres, and set lists as if they were Albert Pujols home runs. At just under two hours, 50 minutes and 26 songs, the show was a bit shorter than some recent 3-plus-hour, 30-song cycles, but it was outstanding nonetheless. Sure, there were songs missing — as there always are — but it was a show with lots of flair and personality even if some of the recent, off-beat set list appearances stayed in the drawer. “Wrecking Ball” has better wings now as a cog in the show rather than a centerpiece, and “Because the Night” growled its way through the audience following a nice, moody sign-request of “I’m on Fire.”

    It is fair to be jealous that Charlotte got “Louie Louie,” “Mustang Sally” and “Racing in the Street,” but “Pretty Flamingo” surely counts as a surprise, and a fun one at that. And Springsteen dressed up “Growin’ Up” for his daughter Jessica, who is graduating this spring and was in the pit with friends. She also made it on stage to twirl with her dad for “Dancing in the Dark” in a sweet moment. She seemed like a graceful kid, comfortable with dad’s stardom and with being onstage with the family.

    Check out Blogness on the Edge of Town for the full Raleigh setlist.

    What did you think of the Raleigh show? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell Discuss New CD

    Crowell Harris Old Yellow Moon

    In this video from the Wall Street Journal‘s WSJ Cafe, Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell discuss their history together and their new CD, Old Yellow Moon (2013). The album is the first collaboration between Crowell and Harris since Crowell joined Harris’s Hot Band in 1975. The new album also features members of the Hot Band, who had worked with Crowell and Harris thirty years ago.

    The connection between the two talented artists goes back to when Harris chose Crowell’s song “Bluebird Wine” as the lead track for Pieces of the Sky, her 1975 album that followed the 1973 death of her collaborator and mentor Gram Parsons and was her first album with a major label as a solo artist. On the new CD, Harris and Crowell perform a new version of “Bluebird Wine,” after Crowell made some changes to the lyrics. In the following video, also at the WSJ studios in New York City, Crowell and Harris perform another one of the new songs off the album, “Dreaming My Dreams.”

    Old Yellow Moon includes songs by Crowell, former Hot Band member Hank DeVito, Roger Miller, Patti Scialfa, Allen Reynolds and Matraca Berg. Vince Gill also plays on the album. NPR also has a story about Harris and Crowell along with audio of some of the songs.

    What are your favorite songs by Rodney Crowell and Emmylou Harris? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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