Scheduled: 19:30 Local Start Time ??:?? / End Time ??:??
Info & Setlist | Venue
Excellent versions of "Point Blank" and "Jungleland" (the first version of the European Tour). Last "The Price You Pay" until 2009, performed in the full-band arrangement. "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)" includes a snippet of "Sweet Soul Music" during the band introductions. "Detroit Medley" includes "High School Confidential". First ever performances in England of "Stolen Car" and "I'm A Rocker".
incl. Rehearsals.
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Audience tape ('Unbooted'). Two versions circulate, the one which has better sound quality is missing "Hungry Heart".
27.05.81 Brighton, England, middle of ´Rosalita´
´´Alright, now we´re at my favorite part of the show….the band introductions….to the far left of the stage, your right, we´ve got on the piano, Professor Roy Bittan….on the guitar….he´s the guy up there in a purple shirt….we´ve got….Miami Steve Van Zandt….and on bass guitar, the guy right over here, his name is Garry W.Tallent, on the bass…..on the drums (?) the Mighty One, Max Weinberg….and on the organ, for all you folks from Flemington, New Jersey here tonight (cheers) oh yeah, we´ve got Phantom Dan Federici….now….now….now ….last but not least, baby….oh yeah….let me think how I could say it…..a rose by any another name ain´t as sweet as this, no….I´m telling you right now around home we like to call him the king of the world….the master of disaster….emperor of the universe…..creator of all things….he´s faster than a speeding bullet….more powerful than a roaring locomotive….able to leap tall buildings in a single bound….I´m talking about….I´m talking about….I´m talking about….Spotlight on the Big Man !….”
27.05.81 Brighton, England, intro to ´Jungleland´
´´This is the first time we´ve done this one on this tour so (?) so this is for you guys…..”
27.05.81 Brighton, England, middle of ´Detroit Medley´
´´I just talked to the hall manager, I gotta make an emergency announcement….if there´s anybody, if there´s anybody in the house tonight that has a weak heart or a weak stomach, during the next part of the show will you please step out into the lobby as it might be dangerous to your health ?….I ain´t kidding, you´re gonna be sorry, this is your last chance ….don´t sue me….sue yourself now….see, it ain´t so bad when me and the Big Man do this ….and it ain´t so bad when we do this….and you might even get off with light injuries and a short trip to the emergency room when we do this….(chuckles) but woah, when we do this
….”
Compiled by : Johanna Pirttijärvi
Paul Lucas | "I was in the foyer of the Brighton Centre a few hours before the gig when they threw everyone out and locked the doors as the soundcheck was about to begin. With a bit of subterfuge I avoided the purge and after a few minutes walked through the doors that led to the corridor on the right of the hall. Halfway down I stopped at a pair of double doors with portholes in it and could see the band. I didn’t want to push my luck and take a seat, but pushed the door open and watched them rehearse time and time again the “Spotlight on the Big Man” bit from Sweet Soul Music that they inserted into Rosalita. Can’t remember how I got out of the venue." |
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The River in Brighton |
Greetings Facebonkers. An amazing 39 years ago this very day, I saw a gig by a visiting American rock star in my hometown that blew my mind and started me on the path to international travel and financial ruin. And I went back for more the next day.
I'd been aware of Bruce Springsteen's existence since 1975, when I heard "Born To Run" on the radio, but didn't actually see the light in a life-changing, tour-following way until July 1980, when I bought "Darkness On The Edge Of Town". In October, I bought "The River" in the week it was released. Soon after that came the first rumours of a UK tour in spring 1981. The first three dates were announced just before Christmas and eight more were added throughout January. I didn't have any luck, but eventually bought a pair of tickets to Bruce's second Wembley Arena gig via the small ads in the music papers. In early March, a last-minute, tour-opening 12th concert was added at the Brighton Centre. It was only announced locally and because my parents didn't buy the "Evening Argus" or listen to local radio, I was blissfully unaware of the gig until it was well and truly sold out. Not much more than a week later, the entire tour was postponed from March/April to May/June, due to Bruce's exhaustion. The Brighton gig moved from 17th March to 26th May. Four more shows were later added to the tour, bringing the final total to 16. These included a second night in Brighton on 27th May. Again, I only found out about this afterwards, but was still able to grab a decent seat from the box office.
On the day of the first show, still ticketless, I went down to the Brighton Centre to see what I could see, including the Edwin Shirley trucks parked round the back. I hung around for a while outside the nearby Metropole Hotel, where I saw Roy Bittan and Garry Tallent coming and going. Garry had obviously just raided Virgin Records. While wandering past the main entrance to the Centre, a guy offered me a ticket for £15, which was twice face value. That was my first experience of touts. Needless to say, I took it. Flash the cash, grab the ticket and don't look back was my modus operandi that afternoon. I worried that it might be a forgery but luckily it wasn't, otherwise I could be telling a very different story.
The Brighton concerts were generally considered to be the best of the tour by those who saw multiple nights. Heavy on material from "Born To Run", "Darkness" and "The River", with new material and a few covers thrown in, they were performed with an intensity that I hadn't seen before and lasted the best part of two and a half hours, not including the interval. They came midway through the UK tour after a five-day break, so Bruce was rested and raring to go. At that point, the tour was moving from theatres into arenas. Capacity at the Centre was around 4,500. (I wouldn't see Bruce play to a crowd that small for another 15 years). My seats were halfway back and very central on both nights, with a perfect unobstructed view. I can still remember the lights going down, the stage rush and the opening chords of "Prove It All Night" (26th) and "Born To Run" (27th) blasting out, and the sweat dripping off Bruce's arm as he strummed his guitar.
After the second show, I hung out with fans at the stage door and saw the E Street Band come out and board their bus. I also glimpsed an old black couple who turned out to be Clarence Clemons' parents. We waited. Security told us Bruce had gone. Some went home. We waited. This went on for a little while. The crowd thinned. We waited. Finally, a guy said "everybody form a line". We were taken down the street towards a nondescript white van or minibus, which had emerged unnoticed from the venue's underground car park. Bruce was sitting in the front passenger seat with the window rolled down. I didn't know it at the time, but this was a regular occurrence. He autographed the back of my ticket on the dashboard (I'd bought a programme the night before and taken it home) and stayed to meet and greet all the diehards. I remember him saying that the Brighton gigs were numbers 100 and 101 of the "River" tour. (I checked. He wasn't far out). It was raining a bit by then and I'd missed the last bus, but I walked home with a big grin on my face, my only regret being that I didn't bring my camera with me. I've lived in London for a long time now but still get back to Brighton and occasionally visit that spot. I certainly will on the 40th anniversary next year.
Saunders over and out.
By Mike Saunders via Facebook.com. |
Links:
- Highway '81 Revisited: Springsteen's Longest U.K. Tour (Part One: From the Thames to the Tyne) (Backstreets)
- Highway '81 Revisited: Springsteen's Longest U.K. Tour (Part Two: Rested, Rescheduled, and Recovered) (Backstreets)
- Highway '81 Revisited: Springsteen's Longest U.K. Tour (Part Three: From Newcastle to Brighton) (Backstreets)
- Highway '81 Revisited: Springsteen's Longest U.K. Tour (Part Four: Wembley, Birmingham, and Beyond) (Backstreets)
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