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- Just around the corner... onsale tomorrow for Light of Day '24, featuring Max Weinberg's Jukebox
November 9, 2023 The January 20, 2024 main event of Light of Day Winterfest 2024, also known as "Bob's Birthday Bash" in honor of The Light of Day Foundation, Inc.'s co-founder Bob Benjamin, will take place at The Count Basie Center for the Arts' Hackensack Meridian Health Theatre in Red Bank, NJ. The headlining act will be Max Weinberg's Jukebox, featuring Mighty Max supported by the members of The Weeklings. Other venues hosting LOD WinterFest 2024 shows include: Asbury Park’s Stone Pony, Wonder Bar, McLoone’s Supper Club, Watermark, Berkeley Oceanfront Hotel; Deal’s Axelrod Performing Arts Center; Outpost In The Burbs in Montclair; City Winery in Manhattan and Philadelphia; and Penguin Rep Theatre in Stony Point, NY. All performances and events will raise money and awareness for the continuing battle to defeat Parkinson’s disease and its related illnesses ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis) and PSP (Progressive Supranuclear Palsy) within our lifetime. Tickets for “Bob’s Birthday Bash” featuring Max Weinberg's Jukebox, as well as a separate Winterfest tribute-bands show scheduled for January 12 (along with various ticket combo packages,) will go on sale tomorrow, Friday, November 10 at 10:00 am ET and will be available via theBASIE.org, the Basie Center box office onsite at 99 Monmouth Street in Red Bank and through Ticketmaster.com. Ticket prices range from $89.50-$425.50 (plus additional fees where applicable) with various multi-tiered packages being offered: “On-Stage All-Access,” “Platinum All-Access,” Gold All-Access,” “Silver All-Access,” and “Bronze All-Access." Tickets for all other WinterFest 2024 performances will go on sale on Friday, November 17. For more details on lineups, performances and ticket packages, visit LightofDay.org. The Light of Day Foundation, Inc., utilizes the power of music to raise money and awareness in its continuing battle to defeat Parkinson’s disease and its related illnesses ALS (Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis) and PSP (Progressive Supranuclear Palsy) within our lifetime. The concerts and the organization began as a birthday party in November 1998 at the Downtown Cafe in Red Bank, NJ to celebrate the 40th birthday of artist manager and music industry veteran Bob Benjamin. Benjamin had recently been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, a degenerative disorder of the central nervous system, and in lieu of gifts, asked that donations be made to the Parkinson’s Disease Foundation. Over $2,000 was raised that night. Spurred by the generosity and support, Benjamin reached out to friends, including concert promoter Tony Pallagrosi and musician Joe D’Urso, and formed the Light of Day charity, taking its name from the Bruce Springsteen song. The first official Light of Day concert was held at Asbury Park, NJ’s legendary Stone Pony in November 2000 and primarily featured local, unsigned artists. The critically acclaimed Pittsburgh-based band Joe Grushecky and the Houserockers (managed by Benjamin) headlined the show, which featured a surprise appearance by Bruce Springsteen, who joined the Houserockers for a raucous hour-long set. Over the years Light of Day has grown from a one-day event into a festival spanning 10 days in the New Jersey/New York metropolitan area. More significantly, Light of Day has expanded into an internationally recognized tour, through a true grassroots effort of musicians, music fans and benefactors. Light of Day shows take place around the world on three continents, including six shows in Canada, an eighteen-days late-November-into-December trek through Europe, with stops in England, Wales, Ireland, Sweden, Belgium, Norway, Denmark, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, and Spain, as well as an additional Light of Day event in Australia. Portions of the proceeds from each show are donated to a local Parkinson's organization. Just Around The Corner, an award-winning documentary about Bob Benjamin’s battle with Parkinson’s and the history of Light of Day (with extensive concert footage,) was produced by Ohio-based Flat Broke Productions and released by Virgil Films in 2012. Click here to purchase the DVD and/or click here for DVD/streaming options. Click here to donate directly in support of Light of Day.
- Surprise, Surprise, Surprise-Bruce@STAND UP FOR HEROES (pro-shot photos & fan-shot videos in order)
November 7, 2023 It was just one day after the official 50th anniversary of his now-classic second album The Wild, The Innocent, & The E Street Shuffle and, to paraphrase a lyric from one of that album's outtakes... Thundercrack! Bruce Springsteen was back... to performing live, that is. He was a surprise, unannounced addition to last night's musical lineup for the 17th Annual Stand Up For Heroes Benefit, presented by The Bob Woodruff Foundation and the New York Comedy Festival. He looked and sounded great, indicating that he's continuing to recover successfully from the illness that forced him back in late September to postpone all of his remaining scheduled tour dates in 2023 (one of which would've kept him from playing Stand Up For Heroes 2023 last night, if it hadn't been postponed.) Bruce first showed up on stage during John Mellencamp's set. They performed together with Mellencamp's backing musicians a great version of "Wasted Days," one of the songs that Springsteen recorded with Mellencamp for Mellencamp's 2022 album Strictly A One-Eyed Jack. Last night's performance of "Wasted Days" marked the first time that Mellencamp and Springsteen publicly performed the song together. Later, Bruce opened his own set with another song he'd never performed live previously: a solo acoustic version of "Addicted to Romance," the song that he wrote for Rebecca Miller's film She Came To Me and recorded with Patti Scialfa. Although last night's version didn't include Patti's beautiful backing vocals or Bryce Dessner's orchestration, it remains such a heartwarming song at its core, so clearly it easily passed the "Does-it-work-with-just-a-guitar-and-a-voice?" test. He then followed up with yet another world-premiere live performance: "The Power of Prayer," from Letter To You. This double-shot of live premieres, both delivered strongly in such beautiful solo acoustic versions, raises hopes that material like this might make it into solo-acoustic or even full-band performances at least occasionally once Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band resume their tour next year. "Working On The Highway" and "Dancing In The Dark" closed the mini-set on an appropriately upbeat musical note (even if the lyrics of those songs aren't quite as upbeat as their music is.) At one point during "Dancing..." Bruce got a bit closer to his microphone than intended while doing the "I'm-going-off-mic-for-a-bit-to-sing-even-more-directly-to-you" move he perfected during Springsteen On Broadway. But other than that slight misstep, nothing major seems to have gotten in the way of making this a triumphant, exciting return to live performing for Springsteen, one that's filled with much potential and hope for both him and his fans. Fan-shot videos of all songs performed last night by Bruce Springsteen are below, presented in their chronological order of performance...and including, of course, all of those dirty jokes he also likes to tell each time he plays Stand Up For Heroes. (Hey, it is meant to be a night of comedy and music.) Finally, on a serious note, please click here for The Bob Woodruff Foundation's website, where you can donate to the Foundation and also connect for support if you're a veteran who needs it. Welcome back, Bruce!
- The Springsteen Archives celebrates THE WILD, THE INNOCENT... @50, along with Springsteen himself
October 30, 2023 Not surprisingly, the biggest highlight of this past Saturday's 50th Anniversary Of The Release Of The Wild, The Innocent & The E Street Shuffle symposium, hosted by The Bruce Springsteen Archives & Center for American Music at Monmouth University, was that it marked the first time that Springsteen himself has participated in any Springsteen-focused symposium at Monmouth, before or after the Archives' formation. His onstage appearance wasn't announced officially or widely beforehand, though the Archives' Executive Director Robert Santelli teased and hinted at it earlier in the day, and the online agenda cryptically listed a 4:00-4:30 slot entitled "Writing the Songs: A Conversation with [Santelli and]…………………………" (A printed poster of the agenda, eventually displayed on Saturday only near the event's location at the University's Pollak Theatre, also confirmed Springsteen's appearance.) This probably was an extra-cautious and extra-smart move on the part of event organizers, given the possibility that Bruce's ongoing health/recovery issues might have prevented the appearance from happening. After all, why promise folks a Springsteen appearance and risk disappointing them if it can't occur, when you can just leave it unannounced and have everyone at the sold-out event be in a much more positive mood if and when it happens, without ever putting yourself in the position of having promised anything you didn't deliver? In any case, Bruce couldn't have shown up at a better time. Prior to his onstage appearance, despite the symposium having started seven hours earlier and having more than a few interesting segments, it still was surprising that overall there hadn't yet been that much actual in-depth discussion centered around The Wild, The Innocent & The E Street Shuffle album itself, its creation, and (most important) its lasting significance as a work of art. Perhaps it could be seen as sort of inevitable when discussing the history behind an album in which one of its songs' more memorable lines is "Someday we'll look back on this and it will all seem funny," but symposium participant and longest-tenured E Street Band member Garry Tallent was only half-joking (at most) and got right to the heart of the matter when, at several points throughout the day, he repeatedly raised his unwillingness to over-romanticize that history. Part of the problem was that, unlike previous Springsteen-themed symposiums held at Monmouth, there was no time officially allotted for questions or comments from anyone in the audience. The decision to omit this kind of interaction (an interaction that is normally an essential element of any truly successful symposium) might have played a significant role in keeping unchallenged even some of the more dubious "tall-tale-"type pronouncements uttered onstage by some of the scheduled panelists and speakers (particularly one involving the late, great John Hammond and a stopwatch,) especially since no such challenges ever came from any of the onstage moderators. Here's hoping that the event organizers will reconsider this "no-questions-or-comments-from-the-audience" decision when planning future symposiums. Fortunately, once Springsteen arrived onstage, the in-depth discussion of The Wild, The Innocent, & The E Street Shuffle kicked into high gear...big time. He participated not only in a one-on-one sitdown with Santelli, but also in the panel-discussion that directly followed it, hosted by Springsteen on Sunday's Tom Cunningham, featuring Bruce interacting with the three surviving E Street Band members who recorded The Wild, The Innocent, & The E Street Shuffle with him: Vini Lopez, David Sancious, and Garry Tallent. A lot of what was said onstage (including Bruce's great story about skipping his high-school graduation ceremony to spend the day in New York City's Greenwich Village) also can be found in the The Wild, The Innocent, & The E Street Shuffle section of the 1998 book Songs, which was a collaboration between Springsteen and Santelli, and/or Chapters 14 and 27 of Springsteen's autobiography Born to Run. Nevertheless, there were some new wrinkles, selections of which have been transcribed below. (To see and hear - again or for the first time - everything that occurred onstage, just stick around for a few more years. As has happened with some previous events at Monmouth, the Springsteen Archives arranged to have all of this symposium filmed/recorded professionally, so that when its new building opens as planned, visitors will be able to watch and listen to such archival recordings on-demand.) Bruce Springsteen: "['Kitty's Back'] was a distorted piece of big-band jazz. I have no idea where it came from... I was interested at the time in writing these very sort of complex songs that move through a variety of different types of progressions, that had a lot of big jazz elements and soul elements in them. Also, I had to write things that were showstoppers, because people didn't know us at the time. We were opening up for a lot of strange acts. We opened up for Black Oak Arkansas... Brownsville Station... We were unknown, so I had these very dramatic, complex, but showstopping pieces of music. 'Rosalita' was one... 'Thundercrack' [an outtake from the album] was another... My intent was to write something that would just blow people down when we played it live. Why ['Thundercrack'] didn't get on the record... Really, what needed to happen was... I needed to [release] more records than I actually [did] at the time, because I had a lot of pretty good material. There's a nice version of it on TRACKS. That was our 'Good night, everybody!' showstopper." "When we went to [Asbury Park,] we thought we were going, like, to Barbados or something. It was so far away, and... there were these rides there, the beach. From Freehold, when you're a kid... ['Incident on 57th Street' and 'New York City Serenade'] were just sort of my romanticized visions of New York City. I wrote ['Incident...'] in Bradley Beach. 'New York City Serenade...' a lot of that record we improvised. We went to the studio; it had that one progression and a few changes, and Davey [Sancious,] of course, did that fantastic piano intro. It was just a groove we got into; it was pretty free and spontaneous... That album is very carny... 'E Street Shuffle,' 'Sandy,' even 'Wild Billy's Circus Story...' It was very much connected to the scene in Asbury Park on the street around the time of [now-defunct and now-legendary after-hours musicians' club] The Upstage... late sixties... early seventies. And I just sort of manifested stories from the locals that I knew, and people that were around... The thing I had all to myself at the time was the New Jersey thing. I remember going to San Francisco in 1969, and I went to the men's room at The Matrix. There was a guy at the urinal, nice to me, who said, 'Where ya from? You guys are pretty good!' I said, 'We're from New Jersey.' He said, 'What's that?!' Not 'Where is it?' ''What is it?!' So [with the album] I was trying to show what it is, y'know? And I was just very locked into that." "Luis Lahav, our engineer, is here. [Lahav traveled from his home in Israel for the symposium, and his wife Suki, who played and sang on the album and some of the tour dates that followed its release, appeared via a video-segment from one of Santelli's recently recorded oral histories for the Archives.] Luis, that record sounds great to this day, man... When you listen to it... all of the tube-amps and everything we used at that time; it was so authentic. I put it on today, and it sounds like a modern record. You did such a good job, Luis. Thank you." "[The album is] a lovely wild-card. It's a very youthful record, and it's me finally getting a chance to really express who I was, which I felt I didn't quite have the opportunity to do on the first album. All of my talents came to fruition: my ability to write lyrics, my ability to write evocative music to set cinematic scenes... Everything that I've basically done with the rest of my career really began on [this album.] It wasn't as stripped-down or as streamlined as Born to Run became, with the influence of Jon Landau... but it was a wonderful record that holds up tremendously well. I love just the eclecticness [sic] of it... all those horns, Davey's doing classical fill on 'New York City Serenade...' There's only seven songs on it, it's a lovely little record, and I'm still very proud of it." "[Vini Lopez] totally has his own style [of drumming.] The sounds that Luis and Mike got really made Vini's drum-style work on those [first two Springsteen albums.] It just worked; it was something that was totally his own and eccentric, but it worked on those records really well. When I go back to those records, I enjoy it tremendously." Vini Lopez on sharing a tent with Clarence Clemons on the grounds outside of 914 Sound Studios in Blauvelt, NY, where The Wild, The Innocent, & the E Street Shuffle was recorded, so the two financially struggling musicians could sleep close enough to where they worked without having to pay for a nearby hotel- or motel-room: "Clarence wanted to stay there... and we had the tent in the back. It was like the original Temple of Soul. It was funny. Nobody wanted to go in there but me and Clarence." Garry Tallent on his fondest memory related to the recording of the album: "[Several times when driving from home to the studio,] I got to bring John Hammond from Black Rock [nickname for The CBS Building in New York City] up to the studio because he wanted to visit... and [Springsteen's former manager and producer Mike Appel] called me, so I brought [Hammond] up with his car. It was about three times, but he had the greatest stories, so I just pumped him and asked him lots of questions. He probably got sick of it, but it was...the best part of the record for me..." David Sancious on the role of improvisation in developing his piano parts on the album: "Bruce gave me a lot of freedom, and I've always been able to improvise music. Basically you're composing in real time. So when you get good at that, and you kind of have to have a pretty broad harmonic sense, but once you get into it, to this day it surprises me what comes out when you improvise like that. So whatever I did, that was that day, y'know? It wasn't something that I thought a lot and said, 'Hmm, when I get back in the studio, I'll do this,' y'know? It just wasn't like that kind of energy. And thankfully, he really gave me this tremendous amount of freedom to come up with that." Bruce Springsteen: "Davey has never played anything bad. I don't know if he's capable of doing that, so it was always easy to give him free rein." Vini Lopez on the beautifully gentle cymbals-bass interplay that occurs between him and Garry Tallent four minutes into "Incident on 57th Street:" "That's another thing that just came about because it was that kind of a part in the song, and like Bruce said, you're looking for the best way to do the songs. Everybody wanted to be pleased themselves, too, with the song, the way it came out, y'know? And we were. At certain times, we came into that booth and listened back and said, 'Wow! We did THAT?!'" Bruce Springsteen: "You have to remember... We hadn't heard ourselves very much. In those days, to get yourself recorded, you either had to know somebody or have some money or... So we were really kinda hearing ourselves for the first or second time [with the first two Springsteen albums.] It was just an adventure." David Sancious on strumming the piano's strings at the beginning of "New York City Serenade:" "That's a technique I saw... There's a brilliant jazz pianist named Keith Jarrett. That's something that he used to do. He used to give entire concerts with just a grand piano on his own, and he would improvise a composition. His improvisations were so tight [that it sounded] like something that he wrote and worked on... but he would just be flowing... and he would do this thing occasionally. He would stand up, and it's a weird technique. You have to stand up and do it, and you have to hold down the chord on the piano, but not so hard that it sounds. So you just lift the dampers off the keys, and then you just stroke it like it's a dulcimer or something. It's not that easy to do. It's very delicate, because if you hold the chord down too hard, you hear the chord produced. I saw him do that and thought, 'Yeah, I can maybe do that.' It took me a minute to figure it out, but..." Bruce Springsteen: "It was a great intro. [imitating the sound of the strumming] Wonderful intro." Tom Cunningham: "Vini, there is a drum part in 'Rosalita' that only you know..." Vini Lopez: "Uh, I don't know about that." Tom Cunningham: "Can Max [Weinberg] play that part?" Vini: "Yeah." Bruce Springsteen: "Uh, absolutely not. Vini is being humble. I guarantee [Max] cannot. You cannot imitate the style of Vincent Lopez. It simply can't be done. And I gotta salute Garry; Garry kept up with him somehow." "[Recording the entire album] only took three months. It wasn't a long time, and it was the first record where we got involved in actually overdubbing...putting guitars and keyboards on after the rhythm track. There was a good amount of that, that we just started getting into." "I wanted to get [Richard Blackwell on the album.] When he slides his thumb across the top of that conga drum at the beginning of 'New York City Serenade,' it was a sound that I'd never heard before. [imitates the sound] And he also played on 'E Street Shuffle.' So it was nice having one of my old friends from Freehold there." "Mike [Appel] and [co-producer Jim Cretecos] and Luis... they got good sounds; they did a good job. I remember Mike, when I first went up to his office [to begin planning the album,] he said, 'Listen to this acoustic guitar.' And he played me Cat Stevens' 'Peace Train.' I said, 'That sounds great. That's a great-sounding record.' And when we went in [to the studio to begin recording,] Mike compressed the acoustic [guitar sound] in a way that was something similar. They just got good sounds. For that stage of the band, it was the perfect marriage." "The guys played great. We had played together for quite a while before [recording this album,] and hey, we were the best of Asbury Park at the time, y'know? The band was a tremendous sense of support, and their musicianship was tailored to what I was writing and then playing. They really tailored themselves to my music in a way that was totally unique. There weren't any other musicians who could have captured that sound like that at that moment... It's a real 'gumbo' record, a gumbo of so many different things, probably the most diverse record I've ever made, still to this day. It's a record that's a lot of fun." Appropriately, the symposium concluded with live performances of all seven songs from The Wild, The Innocent, & the E Street Shuffle, performed by various Jersey-based artists joined by Hall of Fame E Streeters Lopez, Sancious, and Tallent. And extra-appropriately, the album-sequence wasn't followed, instead placing those three "Good night, everybody!" showstoppers at the end of the set. After the music ended, and the audience began to file out of the Pollak Theatre, Santelli said that he hoped to see everyone again in 2025 for The Bruce Springsteen Archives and Center for American Music's 50th Anniversary Of The Release Of Born to Run symposium. That's definitely something to look forward to, of course, but here's hoping they don't fixate on just 50th anniversaries from now on. After all, in 2018 the Archives hosted a great 40th-anniversary symposium for Darkness on the Edge of Town, and next year a fairly popular Springsteen long-player entitled Born in the U.S.A. will hit its big 4-0 mark. Just sayin'... - Special thanks to Lisa Iannucci
- E Streeters had major roles in this year's historic Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony
November 4, 2023 Two E Street Band members - one past and one present - made significant appearances at last night's 2023 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony, held at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, NY. It was an historic induction ceremony, as not only was it the first ceremony to be streamed live in its entirety, but it also was the first to be held since Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Foundation board-member and legendary Rolling Stone publisher/editor Jann Wenner was removed from the board after making racist and sexist comments in a September New York Times interview. Last night's ceremony played out very much as a conscious, public response to the Wenner controversy, with a heightened focus on the contributions of African-American and female inductees, along with an appreciation of diversity embedded throughout the evening. Current E Street Band member Jake Clemons was the first member to appear onstage during the ceremony. Jake performed on saxophone in support of Miguel's performance of "Careless Whisper," part of the musical tribute to the late George Michael, who was inducted as part of the Hall's Class of 2023. And then there was Tom Morello, whose amazing guitar work graced the E Street Band during his many live shows as an official band-member in 2013 and 2014, and who also recorded the 2014 High Hopes album with Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band. (Springsteen himself had this to say about Morello's importance to that album, in its liner notes: "Tom and his guitar became my muse, pushing the rest of this project to another level. Thanks for the inspiration, Tom.") Morello was inducted into the Hall last night as a member of the groundbreaking, musically and politically revolutionary band Rage Against The Machine. Ice-T, another Los Angeles-based artist who, like Rage, brilliantly blurred the lines between hip-hop, metal, and radicalism in the early 1990s, delivered the induction speech, and spoke about how eager he was to do so. "Right out of the gate," he said, "Rage Against The Machine was not a game. And in their career, they did things that impressed cats like me. You can't impress me with normal stuff. You gotta impress me with stuff like... suing the U.S. State Department for using their music in Guantanamo Bay for torturing. Who does that?! Rage Against The Machine does that. Or how about 1993, pulling up in Lollapalooza buck-naked with duct tape, protesting against the PMRC. Who does that?! Rage Against The Machine does that. I respect the hell out of this band... but I love them. They're my brothers from L.A... I'm proud to introduce and induct Rage Against The Machine into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame." Morello, who was the only member of Rage Against The Machine present for last night's induction, had been seated in the audience at a table with Stevie Van Zandt. He then rose and walked to the stage to deliver a very passionate, heartfelt, and inspiring acceptance speech, which is transcribed in full here: My name is Tom Morello and I am one-quarter of Rage Against The Machine. I am deeply grateful for the musical chemistry I've had the good fortune to share with Brad Wilk, Tim Commerford, and Zack de la Rocha. Like most bands, we have differing perspectives on a lot of things, including about being inducted into the Rock Hall. My perspective is that tonight is a great opportunity to celebrate the music and the mission of the band, to celebrate with the fifth member of the band, and that is Rage Against The Machine's incredible fans. You're the reason we are here, and the best way to celebrate this music is for you to carry on that mission and that message. The lesson I've learned from Rage fans is that music can change the world. Daily, I hear from fans who've been affected by our music, and in turn have affected the world in significant ways. Organizers, activists, public defenders, teachers, the Presidents of Chile and Finland have all spent time in our mosh pit. When protest music is done right, you can hear a new world emerging in the songs, skewering the oppressors of the day, and hinting that there might be more to life than what was handed to us. Can music change the world? The whole fucking aim is to change the world, or at a bare minimum, to stir up a shitload of trouble! When Rage started, we rehearsed deep in the San Fernando Valley. This guy passed by our place regularly, and one day asked, "What are you guys doing in there?" We said, "We're a band." He asked to hear us, and we said, "Sure." He came in, sat down. Now this is the first guy to ever hear the music of Rage Against The Machine. We played him a couple of songs. After we finished, we asked him what he thought. He paused, stood up, and said, "Your music makes me wanna fight." Throughout history, the spark of rebellion has come from unexpected quarters: authors, economists, carpenters... But as Salvador Allende said, "There is no revolution without songs." So who's to say what musicians might or might not be able to achieve, with revolutionary intent, when the bouncing crowd makes the Richter scale shake? Personally, I'd like to thank my wife Denise and my kids who remind me daily that the world is worth fighting for. And thanks to all the musicians and changemakers who helped shape the band's collective vision. Rage has also been fortunate to have so many talented co-workers and co-conspirators who have believed in the band, from Michael Goldstone, the guy who signed us and insisted the first radio single be an unedited song featuring seventeen cuss words, to the greatest guitar tech of all time, Slim Richardson. Thank you, and thanks and deep appreciation to the hundreds of others, from those who put up flyers to those who have moved mountains to amplify the message and the music. What I hear in the music is this: that the world is not going to change itself. but throughout history, those who have changed the world in progressive, radical, or even revolutionary ways did not have any more money, power, courage, intelligence, or creativity than anyone watching tonight. The world's changed by average, everyday, ordinary people who have had enough, and are willing to stand up for a country and a planet that is more humane, peaceful, and just. And that is what I'm here to celebrate tonight. Fans often ask, "But what can I do?" Well, let's start with these three things: 1. Dream big, and don't settle, 2. Aim for the world you really want, without compromise or apology, and 3. Don't wait for us. Rage is not here, but you are. The job we set out to do is not over; now you're the ones that must testify. If you've got a boss, join a union. If you're a student, start an underground paper. If you're an anarchist, throw a brick. If you're a soldier or a cop, follow your conscience, not your orders. If you're bummed out you didn't get to see Rage Against The Machine, then form your own band and let's hear what you have to say. If you're a human being, stand up for your planet before it's too late. So tomorrow, crank up some Rage, and head out and confront injustice wherever it rears its ugly head. It's time to change the world, brothers and sisters, or at a bare minimum, to stir up a shitload of trouble! And finally, a special thanks to my mom, Mary Morello, a retired public high-school teacher, a proud Rage Against The Machine fan, and a lifelong radical who turned one-hundred years old a couple of weeks ago. She's watching at home tonight, but she asked me to tell you this... History, like music, is not something that happens. It's something you make. Thank you very much. The complete 2023 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony was recorded live and remains available for on-demand streaming in its entirety (and uncensored, to boot) at Disney+. Stay tuned for more coming soon from Letters To You on the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, the Jann Wenner controversy, and efforts to address the deeper, lingering issues behind it.
- The Road is My Home - Lucinda Williams' Triumphant Return to the Jersey Shore
November 3, 2023 Lucinda Williams has triumphed over adversity time and again, and she proved it again last Sunday at the Count Basie Center for the Arts in Red Bank, NJ. It was the closing night of a brief tour she pulled together to showcase both her new record, Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart (which features backing-vocal contributions from both Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa) and memoir, Don’t Tell Anybody the Secrets I Told You. She’d picked up a bit of a cough overnight, she said, but in truth, it was barely noticeable. Her unique and mellifluous voice was as transcendent as ever; it hits you in the gut, that ability to convey profound sorrow and yet also resilience and determination and empathy. Williams, on a recovery journey after a stroke suffered in 2020, was guided onstage by a member of her road crew; she moved slowly, haltingly, to her location center stage, where a barstool chair and small table were placed. She was welcomed with a standing ovation. Wearing a black Runaways t-shirt and her trademark black leather jacket and jeans, Lucinda remained her warm, folksy self for most of the evening, making self-deprecating comments about her tendency to ramble - especially on the subject of Southern cuisine - during her onstage raps. She also explained that she would not be playing guitar due to her physical challenges; this was just a “temporary setback,” she said with a smile. Supported by her stellar band Buick 6, Williams performed several songs while standing, but was seated for most of the evening; the process of being seated or standing up required some crew assistance that took several minutes each time. During these pauses, both band and audience waited in respectful silence except for the occasional shout of support, and all treated her with gentle kindness and respect. It was a slow-moving, carefully planned and executed show that demanded attention, and she got it, as the audience mostly sat in respectful silence throughout. This was not a traditional rock’n’roll show, though; rather, it was a reflective performance that told the story of her life through her songs, which were introduced by brief comments that placed each one in context. The story of her life was also told through video and still images projected behind the band as each song was performed; moody, mostly black and white, the presentation included both family photos and home movies as well as images and music videos that illustrated some of the themes of the material. As a whole, the entire event was so deeply personal that at times, it felt as though you were sitting in her living room rather than in a theater. Each song in the carefully chosen set list represented a specific time in her life and career and often a musical influence as well. The show opened with “Blind Pearly Brown,” a new, as yet unrecorded ode to a vagabond blues musician whom she had seen performing on the streets of Macon, Georgia as a young girl. Holding her father’s hand, Williams recalled in the song’s introduction, she stood transfixed by the raw emotion and pathos of this Black preacher, blind since birth, who although he was a celebrated musician who had once made a record, was forced to make his meager living busking for money. The narrator’s heart seemingly breaks as she relates that the reverend often lamented how people could be so cruel to a poor Black man just trying to survive. The simple tale of a neglected and all but forgotten early influence, “Blind Pearly Brown” was followed by her cover of Elizabeth Cotten’s “Freight Train,” a starkly beautiful folk song that effortlessly conveys the invisible weight borne by Black sharecroppers and itinerant workers as they struggle to make their way in the harsh physical and social landscape of the Depression-era South. These two plainspoken songs, performed in Williams’ empathetic, soulful soprano, hit like a one-two gut punch that left the audience in stunned silence. Indeed, mortality was a central theme of the evening, as friends, colleagues and family who had passed from her life were memorialized in a quartet of songs dealing with death and loss: “Pineola,” written for a colleague of her father, poet and academic Miller Williams; “Lake Charles,” which mourns the loss of an early romantic partner; “Drunken Angel,” an ode to the late Austin musician Blaze Foley; and “Little Angel, Little Brother,” a character sketch of her younger brother, from whom she’s been estranged for some time. There is death and heartache and loss in everyone’s life – it’s part of being human. But there are few artists who can illuminate the pain of such experiences in such simple yet profound language. It’s a remarkable feat. Her reverential discussion of Bob Dylan and subsequent performance of his “It Takes a Lot to Laugh, It Takes a Train to Cry” was also noteworthy, given the vast and diverse array of influences she’s cited over the years. Perhaps he was provided the space in the set because like Lucinda, he has also had a brush with death, and despite being ten years older, is not only still touring, but is himself releasing some of the best material of his career and putting together thoughtful and engaging performances of his own. The detailed structure of the show made it easy to see the through line from her life on the road, the time spent looking through the windows of her tour bus at the passing scenery, to where her career has landed. Her 2016 double album, The Ghosts of Highway 20, was inspired by such trips down that “blues highway” and through the southland of her youth, during which she recalled many of the scenes later depicted throughout that record and in “Blind Pearly Brown.” The evening was not a completely mournful road trip through Williams’ life, however; following “Freight Train,” there was a bright, upbeat performance of Hank Wiliams’ “Jambalaya,” and the urgent desire of “Righteously” got the audience on its feet to round out the night. However, in keeping with the overall zeitgeist of the evening, the main set ended in a reflective mood, with “Where the Song Will Find Me,” a lovely, lyrical rumination on the creative process and “Rock n Roll Heart,” her triumphant statement of purpose. (The latter was introduced with a brief thanks to Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa, who, to her apparent surprise, contributed vocals to the album track.They were nowhere near the Jersey Shore that evening to accept her thanks, however, as Scialfa’s induction into the New Jersey Hall of Fame was taking place in Newark that same night.) If there was a bone to be picked in this memorable evening, it was perhaps the omission of earlier, noteworthy material like “Six Blocks Away” and “Passionate Kisses,” which may have been more suitable encore material. But that was insignificant next to the power and mastery of Williams’ otherworldly, unforgettable performance in Red Bank. Bob Dylan, take heed - Lucinda has still got it, too.
- "I'm just a devil with love to spare..." - Happy Halloween from Letters To You!
October 31, 2023 Hmm... That Jersey Devil pictured above looks VERY familiar, doesn't he? He definitely reminds us of someone, but we'll be damned (to eternity?) if we know exactly who that'd be. Oh, well; Happy Halloween, everyone, and watch out for The Jersey Devil, who - as the grave-marker in the above photo notes - has been known to haunt not just New Jersey but, beginning in 1909, Letters To You's home state of Pennsylvania (and its home county of Delaware County, even,) along with many other parts unknown since then. In fact, he just might be visiting YOUR neck of the woods this very evening...
- "...a Jersey girl, through and through..." - official video of Patti Scialfa's NJ HoF induction
October 31, 2023 Below is The New Jersey Hall of Fame's Facebook reel of official pro-shot video highlights from last Sunday night's 15th Annual Induction Ceremony, including - beginning at the 11:44 mark - complete video of Patti Scialfa's induction (her second induction, officially, as we reported previously,) with Bruce Springsteen's full induction speech followed by Scialfa's Hall of Fame bio-video and her full acceptance speech. Immediately after all of that is the evening's concluding musical number. The house band performed the Joe Cocker arrangement of The Beatles' "With A Little Help From My Friends," eventually joined by Patti Scialfa, Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Van Zandt (who was there to induct Sopranos creator David Chase,) and... I can't believe I see... fellow Hall of Famer Tony Orlando singing right along with them! Our friend Jay Lustig at NJArts.net also has posted transcriptions of both Bruce's and Patti's speeches. Click here to read them, and click here to read Jay's transcription of Stevie Van Zandt's induction speech for David Chase.
- Back in Europe's Arms Again: 22 new European dates announced for Bruce Springsteen's 2024 tour
October 31, 2023 Bruce Springsteen has just announced 22 tour-dates for his 2024 return to Europe with the E Street Band. They are as follows: May 5 – Cardiff, Wales @ Principality Stadium (On-sale: Friday, Nov. 3 at 10am*) May 9 – Belfast, Northern Ireland @ Boucher Road (On-sale: Monday, Nov. 6 at 8am*) May 12 – Kilkenny, Ireland @ Nowlan Park (On-sale: Monday, Nov. 6 at 8am*) May 16 – Cork, Ireland @ Páirc Uí Chaoimh (On-sale: Monday, Nov. 6 at 8am*) May 19 – Dublin, Ireland @ Croke Park (On-sale: Monday, Nov. 6 at 8am*) May 22 – Sunderland, England @ Stadium of Light (On-sale Friday, Nov. 3 at 10am*) May 25 – Marseille, France @ Orange Vélodrome (On-sale Tuesday, Nov. 7 at 10am*) May 28 – Prague, Czech Republic @ Airport Letnany (On-sale Friday, Nov. 3 at 10am*) June 1 – Milan, Italy @ San Siro Stadium (On-sale Monday, Nov. 6 at 12pm*) June 3 – Milan, Italy @ San Siro Stadium (On-sale Monday, Nov. 6 at 12pm*) June 12 – Madrid, Spain @ Cívitas Metropolitano (On-sale Tuesday, Nov. 7 at 10am*) June 14 – Madrid, Spain @ Cívitas Metropolitano (On-sale Tuesday, Nov. 7 at 10am*) June 20 – Barcelona, Spain @ Estadi Olímpic (On-sale Tuesday, Nov. 14 at 10am*) June 27 – Nijmegen, Netherlands @ Goffertpark (On-sale Friday, Nov. 3 at 9am*) July 2 – Werchter, Belgium @ Werchter Park (On-sale Friday, Nov. 3 at 10am*) July 5 – Hannover, Germany @ Heinz von Heiden Arena (On-sale Wednesday, Nov. 8 at 10am*) July 9 – Odense, Denmark @ Dyrskuepladsen (On-sale Thursday, Nov. 2 at 10am*) July 12 – Helsinki, Finland @ Olympic Stadium (On-sale Monday, Nov. 6 at 11am*) July 15 – Stockholm, Sweden @ Friends Arena (On-sale Friday, Nov. 3 at 10am*) July 18 – Stockholm, Sweden @ Friends Arena (On-sale Friday, Nov. 3 at 10am*) July 21 – Bergen, Norway @ Dokken (On-sale Monday, Nov. 6 at 10am*) July 25 – London, England @ Wembley Stadium connected by EE (On-sale Friday, Nov. 3 at 10am*) *All on-sale times are local time For further information, including links to purchase tickets online, please click here to visit the "Tour" page at Bruce Springsteen's official website.
- You CAN go back... Patti Scialfa to receive her second NJ Hall of Fame induction this Sunday
October 27, 2023 Congratulations to "The First Lady of Love," Ms. Patti Scialfa, who will be inducted again into The New Jersey Hall of Fame this Sunday night. She first was inducted in 2012 as a member of the E Street Band, when the entire band got inducted. On Sunday she will join fellow E Streeters Stevie Van Zandt (who was re-inducted in 2017) and Max Weinberg (who was re-inducted in 2022) on the extra-short-list of twice-inducted E Street Band members. Scialfa recently spoke with Chris Jordan from The Asbury Park Press about her upcoming induction. “I’m super-flattered,” she told Jordan. “You look at the list of inductees and it’s quite illustrious, so you're going, 'Oh my gosh!' I’m a little overwhelmed with imposter syndrome right now.” Patti also explained why she was not part of the band lineup during most of Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band's 2023 tour, which led to some speculation and concern among fans. “I didn’t feel as needed in a way because there were a lot of musicians on stage,” she said, while also noting that she'll be on stage again when the tour resumes in 2024. “I did the first couple of shows, and as I saw how it was all rolling, I thought, 'This is good. This is completely intact. There’s not much room for me to add anything special.' And the main thing was I have a record that I couldn’t have finished when Bruce was home because he’s in the studio all the time. So I took that opportunity to do my record." The new record, her fourth album, will be released next year, as well. The time away from touring also allowed her to spend some extra time with her first grandchild, Lily Harper, the daughter of Bruce's and Patti's son Sam and his wife, Alex Reph. Click here to read Chris Jordan's Asbury Park Press article "Patti Scialfa talks NJ Hall of Fame induction, performing with Springsteen, E Street Band" in its entirety. And congrats again to the red-headed, rumble-doll Hall of Famer.
- Happy Birthday, Garry Tallent...From '74 to 74! (with a special "BossBassBday" offer for readers)
October 27, 2023 Happy 74th Birthday to "the foundation of The E Street Nation, The Tennessee Terror..." bassist extraordinaire Mr. Garry W. Tallent. And special thanks to Nicki Germaine for providing us with the beautiful images above for our "From '74 to 74" photo-montage birthday tribute to Garry. We also want to thank both Nicki Germaine and Garry Tallent for arranging a special "BossBassBday" signed-item offer for our readers. See all of the details below. The black-and-white 1974 image above on the left is, of course, from Nicki's excellent limited-edition photo-book Springsteen: Liberty Hall. This book, published late last year, is a stunning visual record of Bruce Springsteen and the (not yet officially named as such) E Street Band's first-ever gigs in Texas, at Houston's Liberty Hall in March of 1974, during the relatively brief period when Ernest "Boom" Carter was the band's drummer, before both Carter and keyboardist David Sancious left the band to pursue together a jazz-fusion path with bassist Gerald Carboy in their band Tone. In addition to full-page high-quality presentations of Germaine's beautiful black-and-white and color photography, the book contains insightful, moving essays by Bruce Springsteen, Robert Santelli (Executive Director of The Bruce Springsteen Archives & Center for American Music,) Garry Tallent, and Nicki Germaine. Check out this cool, rockin' little promo-video for the book, with music by Garry Tallent: And if you don't yet own a copy, or if you'd like to purchase a copy for someone else as a gift (especially with the holiday gift-giving season approaching,) we have a special Letters To You Garry's-Birthday signed-item offer for you, courtesy of Nicki Germaine and Garry Tallent themselves. You can email info@springsteenlibertyhall.com with this subject-line: "BossBassBday" That will let Nicki Germaine and her team know that you're a Letters To You reader interested in a Nicki-Germaine-AND-Garry-Tallent-autographed copy of the book ($65 plus shipping and handling) and/or a Nicki-Germaine-AND-Garry-Tallent-autographed 8x10 high-quality archival pigment print on cotton rag paper (see image below, $85 plus shipping and handling.) In the body of your email message, please specify how many of which item you want, and provide your Paypal or Venmo information for invoicing/billing purposes, along with your mailing address. Thanks again to Nicki - AND Garry - for arranging this special offer for Letters To You readers. And of course Happy Birthday - and many, many more - to "Boss Bass Man" Garry Tallent!
- "...I'm building me a new home..." - BSACAM officially announces new-building/theater plans
October 18, 2023 Above, Bruce Springsteen shares a laugh with old pals Carl "Tinker" West (left) and Vini "Mad Dog" Lopez (right) at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, NJ earlier today. He was there for The Bruce Springsteen Archives & Center for American Music's official announcement of its plans for constructing a new 30,000-square-foot building to house the Archives, the Center for American Music, related exhibition galleries, and a 230-seat, state-of-the-art theater, to be located on Monmouth University's campus, with an anticipated Spring 2026 ribbon-cutting ceremony. Click here to read the official announcement. And stay tuned for our Letters To You full-length report on today's announcement and related information, accompanied by additional photos from New Jersey's own Mark Krajnak, who took the beautiful shot above.
- A double-shot "Shout"-out to the legacy of the late, great Rudolph Isley
October 13, 2023 Here are two Springsteen covers of two classic Isley Brothers recordings strongly associated with the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame-inducted - and for many years New-Jersey-based - group's founding member Rudolph Isley, who died yesterday at 84: First up is "Shout," which Rudolph co-wrote with his brothers O'Kelly Isley, Jr. and Ronald Isley. In 1959, this extremely influential and extra-long Black-gospel-derived classic had to be issued by The Isley Brothers as a double-sided, two-part vinyl single. Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band's epic covers of "Shout" became a standard part of their encores on the Wrecking Ball Tour, High Hopes Tour, and The River Tour 2016-17. Here's the pro-shot/pro-recorded version of "Shout" from the April 6, 2014 NCAA March Madness Music Festival, broadcast live from Dallas, TX: And of course there's no Isley Brothers recording more influential on the music of Bruce Springsteen than their 1962 version of "Twist and Shout," which was the first hit version. "Twist and Shout" also was the first rock-and-roll song that Bruce ever learned to play on guitar. While Rudolph played no role in writing "Twist and Shout," it was his and O'Kelly Isley's background singing, particularly on producer/songwriter Bert Berns' newly arranged ascending "aaah, aahh..." bridge, that made the Isleys' version so memorable, influential, and virtually immortal, especially as it was their version on which The Beatles would base their now-equally-classic version. As Paul McCartney once rhetorically asked onstage. "Where would we have been without [The Isley Brothers?] ...In Liverpool; that's where would have been! And we'd have stayed there!" Here's Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band's New Year's Eve 1975 performance of "Twist and Shout," clearly modeled at least as much on the Isleys' version as The Beatles'. Rest in peace, Rudolph Isley, and thank you for so much great music. May it all play on forever... - Special thanks to Lisa Iannucci












