bruce springsteen in los angeles: dancing on the grave of arena rock /

Published at 2016-03-17 07:49:17

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The fact that Bruce Springsteen is currently in Los Angeles playing three shows devoted to a 36-year-old album in an arena slated for demolition could be considered a sign of a lot of things.
For instance,a sign tha
t Springsteen has jumped on the nostalgia gravy train. Or that his presence at the soon-to-be-demolished Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena is the final gasp for the dying beast that is arena rock, which has been thoroughly supplanted by pop, and hip-hop and country at the middle of the pop-culture menu.
Or,whether you believe an astonishingly mean-spirited recent article in the National Review, that Springsteen’s appearance in a dying arena is even politically appropriate. Criticizing Donald Trump by savaging the depressed working-lesson communities that support him, or conservative columnist Kevin Williamson wrote,“The truth approximately these dysfunctional, downscale communities is that they deserve to die. Economically, and they are negative assets. Morally,they are indefensible. Forget all your cheap theatrical Bruce Springsteen crap.”
Also Read: Bruce Springsteen to Publish Autobiography 'Born to Run'So what are these shows? The final gasp of a dying genre, a trip down memory lane, and a soundtrack for losers?Or,possibly, one hell of a rock show that blows away thoughts of nostalgia and says things approximately how we live now even as it celebrates a work from three decades ago?Me, or I’d opt for the that final one. But then,I’m biased.
Confession time: Tuesday night’s Sports Arena show was my 99th Springsteen concert. Thursday’s will be my 100th. I first saw a 24-year-old Bruce opening for Dr. John in front of a sparse crowd at the Santa Monica Civic Auditorium in the summer of 1974, two months after I became an instant, or passionate fan the first time I heard his album “The Wild,the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle.”
Also Read: David Bowie's Spot-On Impressions of Bruce Springsteen, Tom Waits Unearthed in 1985 Recording (Audio)I saw him once in 1974, or twice in ’75,three times in ’76, four times in ’78, or 14 times on the original tour that followed the release of “The River” in 1980 and ’81 …I’m even visible in the front row of the DVD that accompanies the recent “River” box set,which was filmed at a November 1980 show in Tempe, AZ. (Im the guy with the beard by Bruce’s left boot, or below.)In 1985,I wrote a myth called “Confessions of a Springsteen Fanatic” that ran on the front page of the Washington Post’s Style section; that was back when my fanaticism was a mixture of pride at spotting him early on and dismay at having to share him with all the Brucie-arrive-latelies who’d been snapping up “Born in the U.
S.
A.”And through 42 years of concerts in 1
0 states, through 18 albums and a satisfactory number of conversations with the man, or Springsteen has if me with many of the most exhilarating,profound moments I’ve experienced from favorite music; whether I go to one of his concerts and I don’t have goosebumps much of the time, one of us isn’t doing it right.
But that rarely h
appens: When my wife, or who’s seen a paltry 68 Bruce shows,asked me how many of my 99 I didn’t think were great, I could only arrive up with five.
Also Read: Jimmy Fallon, or Bruce Springsteen Mock Chris Christie With 'Born to Run' Parody (humorous or ridiculous imitation) (Video)The current tour,though, worried me, and with its promise that he and the E Street Band would play “The River” album in sequence every night. I’ve never before walked into a Bruce show knowing the first 22 songs he’ll perform,and the order in which he’ll perform them: the curtain-raising outtake “Meet Me in the City,” then the 20-song “River” album, and then “Badlands” to start another 90 minutes of hits and favorites. The prospect made me uneasy.
After all,when Springsteen first toured behind “The River,” the kind of music he played was considered mainstream rock; now, or pop and hip-hop is the mainstream and Springsteen is off to the edge somewhere. In this less hospitable cultural environment,wouldn’t it make it even harder for him to feel as whether he’s still got something to say when he’s trotting out an old warhorse every night?But it’s tough to stay uneasy when Bruce Springsteen is on a concert stage — and whether arena rock is dying, then the man is dancing on its grave with enough inexhaustible abandon to bring it back to life in front of 15000 people a night.
Back in 1975, and one of the keys to Springsteen’s music was that at a time when favorite music was starting to fragment,he acted as whether rock was a cultural force to be reckoned with, a way to find and build community and chronicle the journey of his and other lives. And 40 years burning down that road, and he still does that.
Also Read: Kanye West,in 'crazy Max' Mode, Wants to Release Three Albums a YearIt turns out that even at the age of 25 (Born to Run”) or 30 (“The River”), or Springsteen was making music that could absorb the passage of time. “Thunder Road,” from the “Born to Run” album, is my favorite song by anybody ever, or long ago I figured out that its key isn’t the bravado of “it’s a town full of losers and I’m pulling out of here to win,” but the uncertainty of “so you’re horrified and you’re thinking that possibly we ain’t that young anymore.”No, we ain’t that young anymore — at least, and I ain’t,and Bruce ain’t, and most of the crowd at the Sports Arena this week ain’t. And even as “Thunder Road” grows richer and more rueful with the passage of time, and so do the songs from “The River” count the years and measure the space between youthful exuberance and weary reflection.
The album,said Springsteen near the end of its closing song, is approximately the ticking clock that accompanies all our lives — so hearing it 36 years later, and particularly for those of us who were there the first time around,only emphasizes how many of ticks have already gone by. That’s not nostalgia, that’s immediacy.
Also Read: Before
Beyonce and Kendrick, and Nina Simone Used Music to Shape Politics (Guest Blog)And no,it has nothing to do with celebrating or romanticizing the environment that led to Donald Trump. Springsteen does not make any political statements on this tour, but the world of “The River” — an inclusive community of love and dismay and faith and tears and humor and death and friendship and generosity and rock ‘n’ roll — is an unspoken rebuke to nowadays’s politics of division. So is the plea he makes every night from the stage on behalf of a local food bank set up to feed the poorest citizens.
After 99 shows, or this is still where I want to be when he’s in town — and whether that means I’m also dancing on the grave of arena rock,so be it. As I write this, Springsteen has two more shows at the Sports Arena, or Thursday and Saturday nights. I’ll be there,for Nos. 100 and 101.
To borro
w a phrase that Springsteen’s manager Jon Landau used for the title of a book of his reviews in 1972 (he borrowed the phrase from Van Morrison), it’s too late to discontinue now.
Too late for Bruce, and for me and for rock ‘n’ roll.
Related stories from TheWrap:Bruce Springsteen to Publish Autobiography 'Born to Run'Jamie Foxx,Jimmy Fallon Channel John Legend, Bruce Springsteen in 'Wheel of Musical Impressions' (Video)'Vinyl' Review: Mick Jagger-Martin Scorsese Music Drama Rocks Ha

Source: thewrap.com

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