Scheduled: 18:00 Local Start Time ??:?? / End Time ??:??
Unique acoustic "Independence Day" opens the show on July 4, its final performance of the tour. "Seeds" includes a spoken introduction accompanied by Nils on the guitar. "I'm On Fire" includes a keyboard led introduction. "Can't Help Falling In Love" is introduced by Bruce telling the story about going to Graceland. The song itself is played by Bruce and Roy rather than like the River Tour versions that were performed by Bruce alone. Little Steven guests on "Two Hearts", "Ramrod" and "Twist And Shout" - "Do You Love Me".
incl. Rehearsals.
- 2024-07-27 Wembley Stadium, London, England
- 2024-07-25 Wembley Stadium, London, England
- 2016-06-05 Wembley Stadium, London, England
- 2013-06-15 Wembley Stadium, London, England
- 1988-09-02 Wembley Stadium, London, England
- 1988-09-01 Wembley Stadium, London, England
- 1988-06-25 Wembley Stadium, London, England
- 1985-07-06 Wembley Stadium, London, England
- 1985-07-04 Wembley Stadium, London, England
- 1985-07-03 Wembley Stadium, London, England
© All credits to the original photographer. We do not monetize a photo in any way, but if you want your photo to be removed, let us know, and we will remove it.
Audience tape. Three recording sources circulate; an audience tape released on CDs 'Independence Night' (Crystal Cat), 'Independence Day' (Great Dane), 'Born On The Fourth Of July' (Growin') as well as the four-LP set 'Wembley Stadium' (Spacematic). An alternate source was put into circulation in 2012 (Cre). A third source was released on the four-LP set 'Independence Day' (Warlike Goose). A fourth source is available (JimCT/Hobbes4444/hrubresh).
Intro to "Seeds"
´´Here´s a song about, uh….traveling down through Texas, throughout the Southwest…. there´s a lot of people came down from Detroit….up north, looking for work in the oil fields ….and in the refineries….and when the oil prices dropped….they were shutting ´em down, people come down there with their whole families and everything that they had´d find no work, ended up sleeping out on the highway in a tent or in their cars….this is called ´Seeds´ …”
Intro to "The River"
´´Oh….nice to be back in London, good to see everybody….yeah, it´s been a little while (chuckles)….this song, this is uh….when I was a kid, my old man used to….sit in the kitchen every night….and he´d turn out all the lights downstairs of the house and he´d get mad if you turned any of ´em on or anything….and my mother used to sit in the frontroom with just the television on….with thos pink curlers in her hair (chuckles) the kind the ladies used to wear ….and pink slippers with flowers on the toes (chuckles)….but uh, my old man used to lock up the frontdoor so that me and my sister would have to come in around the side….and I remember I´d come up the driveway, if I was late and I´d tuck my hair down inside my collar because,. man, I had a long hair and forget it, he hated it, you know (chuckles) he didn´t like it, no, and I´d stand there….I´d get my nerve up and I´d walk up on the porch and I´d walk through the screendoor and he wouldn´t say nothing, I´d walk into the livingroom and say goodnight to my mom….she wouldn´t say nothing and just as I was about to hit that bottom step, I´d hear from the kitchen….´Bruuce´, he´d be calling me to come back….he´d always wait till I almost made it and I´d come back and I´d sit down and…..and we could never talk about anything, you know, he was mad all the time, I guess it wasn´t….until a lot later that I understood about what he was mad about….but uh, anyway if I was too late, sometimes I´d sleep out on a friend of mine´s porch, I had an old sleeping bag…..or I´d sleep in somebody´s car….and I´d let him sleep it off overnight….and now when I go home, them places sometimes are more like….like they belong to me more than my own house did at that time ….but anyway this is, uh….this is ´cause everybody needs some place to go on those nights when they can´t go home…..”
Intro to "Glory Days"
´´Now I gotta sit down a minute….too much excitement…..I´m getting too old…..yeah, bring it down, boys, that´s too loud (chuckles) oh, I´m 35 now, man, all this jumping around tires you out and stuff, oh, now Roy, he turned 36 the day before yesterday….he´s gone, it´s too late, he´s over the hill….I´m just 35, I´ve got a little time left….I can go out and find out about life still….well, this is a song about growing old….gonna happen to everybody, you might as well go with it (chuckles) instead of going against it….yeah (chuckles) but like….like I remember sometimes you go out on a Friday night….there´s always somebody who comes up to you in a bar and they always go like ´Oh, remember me ?´ and you look at ´em and you kind of remember ´em but….´Remember me, like, high school ? yeah, we went to high school together…yeah, remember the guy, the guy in study hall, the guy that dumped the pizza pie on your shirt ? yeah, that´s me, that´s me´ ´Oh, yeah, yeah, how you doing ?´….but everybody´s always telling you what a great time you had in high school and stuff…like they got all that nostalgia stuff for the 50´s and ´American Graffiti´ and all that stuff but like I remember high school, man, high school was the worst, man, I hated high school….couldn´t stand it….man, I was bad at my studies….I couldn´t do no sports….I didn´t know how to, uh, uh, uh, you know, in high school I was only interested in two things ….now, one was the guitar….and the other one was…..amore, amore (chuckles)….now, of those two, the guitar´s the only one I really became good at….that´s why the shows are so long ´cause the other thing happens so fast….yeah, but that´s alright….I´m practising, I´m still practising, practising ….see, I´m married now so I get in a lot of practise (chuckles)….oh, hey man…..in the end it ain´t nothing but glory days….”
Intro to "The Promised Land"
´´Oh, this is for, uh, Bono and the guys….”
Intro to "My Hometown"
´´Oh, thanks….I guess, uh, this is a song about….when I was about 17….I remember thinking I couldn´t wait till I got out and traveled….till I got away, I grew up in this small town, it was real narrowminded….and uh, I was lucky, I was 19, I started to get out on the road and….and I was sure I´d never miss, miss the town I grew up in and I wouldn´t miss my old friends…..I wouldn´t miss my folks….all I remember….I guess I was angry about everything that had happened to me there….but uh, for a long time I went out and I traveled and I didn´t miss it, didn´t miss it much at all….(?) I´ve been lucky that I´ve always had most of my best friends traveling right with me (chuckles) so….yeah, but, uh….I started going home and I´d get in my car and I´d start driving down the old streets I grew up on and I´d drive past all the houses that I grew up in and I´d always wonder who lived in there now, if they had kids….and uh, I guess I got to realising that the place that you´re born and raised in always stays in your blood, that no matter what you become or where you go, it never ever leaves you….and that, uh….and that you belong someplace….and I guess the hardest thing about belonging someplace means you´ve got some responsobility to that place that you belong….and uh, sometimes that´s hard to live up to, I think, when I look back at my hometown, there was so many things where….there´s so many things that I´m ashamed of and so many things, I guess, there´s things I´m proud of….I guess you gotta live with the two of them….and I guess that´s what growing up´s about…..anyway, this is from my hometown to your hometown….”
Intro to "I´m on Fire"
´´I remember….my old man always sitting around thinking about things he wasn´t ever gonna, ever gonna have….till he´d get me thinking like that too….I remember thinking like him and acting like him….and I remember laying up in bed….staring at the ceiling at night…. feeling like if something didn´t happen….I felt like I was just gonna….like someday I was just gonna….remember I felt like I was just gonna….like I was just gonna…..”
Intro to "Pink Cadillac"
´´Bring it down here….oh, now, this is a song….about the conflict….between worldly things and spiritual health…. between desires of the flesh….and spiritual ecstasy ….that´s right, can´t have ´em two things….now, where did this begin ?….well, it began in the beginning in a place called the Garden of Eden….now, the Garden of Eden was originally believed to have been located in Mesopotamia….but the latest theological studies have found out that its actual location was ten miles south of Jersey City, off the New Jersey Turnpike….but now understand, in the Garden of Eden, there were none of the accoutrements of modern living ….you didn´t have no TV….they didn´t have no little bed you could go home and crawl up in to at night….you couldn´t go out on to the corner and get some of those….them fish and chips …couldn´t get not hamburgers if you wanted one….no, Sir !….in the Garden of Eden there was no sin, brother…. there was no sex….man lived in a state of innocence….now, when it comes to no sex, I prefer the state of guilt that I constantly live in….but just before the tour I decided to make a spiritual journey to the location of the Garden of Eden to find out the answer to some of these mysteries….why I feel this conflict, this temptation all the time…. so I went out there and the place was now occupied by Happy Dan´s Celebrity Used Car Lot ….I walked in, he looked at me, he said ´Son, you need a yellow convertible, a four-door DeVille with a Continental spare, wide chrome wheels, air-conditioning, automatic heat, fold-out bed in your backseat, eight-track tapedeck , TV and a phone so you can speak to your baby when you’re driving all alone’…I said ‘I’ll take two’…then I said ´But Dan, that´s not the reason why I came, I wanna know the answer to temptation´ and he said ´Well, son, that´s easy because right here on these ten beautiful commercially-zoned acres was the sweetest little paradise that man had ever seen, in the Garden of Eden there was many wonderous things : there was a Tree of Life, there was a Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, there was a man, Adam, there was a woma, Eve and she looked so fine….and when Adam kissed her, it was the first time that a man had ever kissed a woman…..and when Adam touched her, it was the first time that a man had ever touched a woman…and then they went out into the green fields….that´s where the trouble started…..and they lay down….and when Adam…let´s just say it was the first time….but there was something else in the Garden of Eden on that day, old Satan came slithering up on his belly and somehow he turned their love into a sweet betrayal and sent them running down into the darkness below….but that´s alright because right here tonight on this backlot, for 99.95 and no money down, don´t worry, man, if you´ve got bad credit, it´s good here, I´ve got the keys to their getaway car and if you´ve got the nerve to ride….we´ve got the first….pink… Cadillac …”
Intro to "Can´t Help Falling in Love with You"
´´Thanks….thanks….I´d like to, like to just….take a second and thank everyone for coming down to the show tonight in London, thank you very much…..and I´d also like to thank you for, for your continuing support of our band over the past ten years….when we haven´t gotten over here as often as we´d liked….I´d just like to say that we appreciate it, thank you very much….but uh, this is, I´d like, this next song, this is….this is my, I guess, one of my favorite Elvis Presley songs….and uh, oh, it was back in….1976, we were in the States on the ´Born to Run´-tour…and.we played in Memphis one night, we played in this little auditorium….it was down in the middle of the town….and, uh, we came home after the show and me and my guitar player Steve were sitting around….and we called a taxi cab to come and take us out to Elvis´ house….and so the cab driver came and he brought us out to Graceland….and I remember it was about 3.30 in the morning and I got out of the cab and I stood in front of those gates with the big guitar players on ´em….and me and Steve were standing there and I saw a light on in the second window so I figured that Elvis must be up reading or something, you know (chuckles) and I remember saying, I said ´Steve, I gotta try, man, I gotta do it´ and I jumped up over the wall and down on to the other side and I started running up the driveway as fast as I could…and uh, I don´t know what I was thinking about or what I was planning on saying but man, I ran right up to the frontdoor….and I was about to knock and a guard came out of the woods and asked me what I wanted and I said ´Well, is Elvis home ?´ ….and he said ´No, no, Elvis isn´t home tonight, he´s in Lake Tahoe´…and I said and I tried to tell him, I said ´Well, I´m a guitar player too and I got my own band and we played in town tonight and, uh….´….you know, told him that Elvis was my idol and I told him I had my picture on the cover of Time and Newsweek (chuckles) and uh (chuckles) I pulled out all the stops trying to (chuckles) but he looked at me like I was crazy, I know, I don´t think he believed me and he was nice, he just took me by the arm and brought me back and put me back out on to the street (chuckles)….but uh….I don´t know what I was doing, sometimes at night I look back, I think like ´How was I expecting to meet ?´ or what I was, ´cause when people come knocking on my door around 3 o´clock, I feel like, you know, beating them over the head with a stick or something (chuckles) but, but, uh, I never got to meet him…. and it wasn´t too much longer….that a friend, a friend of mine called me up and told me that he´d died….and I remember how it was hard for me to understand that somebody whose music was filled with so much life….who´d taken away so many people´s loneliness….and who gave so many people….a reason to live and a look into the promise of life, could´ve died so tragically….and it seemed like such a meaningless, meaningless death and he deserved a lot better, that´s for sure, you know….but uh….but it´s easy, you know, it´s easy to let the best of yourself slip away so what I´d like to, I´d like to do this for you tonight wishing you all the longest of life with the best of everything you can get your hands on, hold on….”
Compiled by : Johanna Pirttijärvi. |
Dreamon47 | His commercial peak and the gig of my life. I've been looking for that same hit again and it's never quite happened. My best pal, my sister and me sat outside a few hours before the gates even opened and when they did we found ourselves as far from the stage as it was possible to be. But hold up the Gods are smiling and it seams even though we've got to dash the length of the pitch we're somehow just feet from the stage. Did they really open the rear gates minutes before the rest. Then it's three hours standing in the sun before the show even starts. And when it starts… the sound is amazing down front when BIUSA hits its stride its like an aircraft is flying overhead. The band lining up for Cadillac Ranch, Bruce goofing the works. I've never been that close again and these days just wouldn't have the energy to stand the six hours before show time that's required. But we were in our early twenties and we can say we were close enough to feel the sweat and me and my best pal who don't see each other as much as we like still get together every couple of years in a field or arena and say boy we're still at it it's too late to quit now. Just as a foot note, on the live box set on the inner sleeve with Bruce with his back to the crowd you can see my pal down the front. |
Mark Lancaster | Only missed 1 show on this tour, due to a stag party, great weather on 4 July and a lovely independence day. Seeds was awesome. Had to hotfoot it to l Newcastle for stag do then bomb down to Leeds for Round Hay Park show. A classic summer. |
Martin J. Brewer | Getting the opportunity to attend a Bruce concert on the 4th July is a rare treat indeed. I was teacher training at Felpham Comprehensive in W. Sussex at the time and called in sick so that I could attend this and the previous night's show. It was a gloriously warm evening and Bruce was at his zenith in terms of world-wide popularity. He was a major singles artist at this time and so a new breed of fan was in attendance - the Fairweather fan sad to say. Bruce had started every concert on this tour with "Born In The USA" but on this occasion he opened with a beautiful acoustic version of "Independence Day". Not many artists could hush 80,000 fans with such a sensitive opening number. This brought the ferocity of "USA" into greater contrast and the rest of the concert was relentless in its frenzied attack. I can recall Bruce and Nils donning huge cowboy hats for "Cadillac Ranch" and Steve Van Zandt was a guest at the show, foreshadowing his return to the band by about 14 years. Nils was a great foil for Bruce and I rather miss the fact that he tends to be relegated to the sides these days. "Trapped" was a highlight with thousands of people punching the air and I loved his soulful version of "Can't Help Falling In Love" which he dedicated to the King of rock and roll himself. In my opinion Bruce has never bettered the final 1-2-3 punch of "Ramrod", "Twist and Shout" and "Do You Love Me". I can recall completely losing my voice at the concert and explaining to my school that I'd had a nasty cold! I had planned to see all 3 Wembley shows but I (reluctantly) missed the Saturday gig to attend Andy Foster's wedding - cheers Andy! |
Antony Holman | This was the first concert I'd ever been to, and still the best. An incredible show which converted me from someone who liked a few of his songs but didn't really know that much of his older stuff. Since that day I've managed to get his entire back catalogue and everything he's released since. I've seen some brilliant stars from Bryan Adams to Bon Jovi, Green Day to Aerosmith and as good as they were, still not a patch on The Boss. |
© All credits to the original photographer. We do not monetize a photo in any way, but if you want your photo to be removed, let us know, and we will remove it.
35th Anniversary of the Final UK Shows of the Born in the U.S.A. Tour |
Greetings Facebonkers. Hope you had a great Independence Day, American citizens or not. I'd intended to post this story yesterday but didn't finish it as quickly as I hoped. It's time to mark the 35th anniversary of the final UK shows of Bruce Springsteen's historic "Born In The USA" European tour back on July 3, 4, 6 and 7, 1985. A month ago, I told you the story of our momentous trip to see his opening salvo of shows at Slane Castle in Ireland and St. James' Park in Newcastle. That summer, the UK and Irish dates bookended a series of concerts in mainland Europe. Four weeks after Newcastle, Bruce returned to finish the tour with a three-night stand at London's Wembley Stadium and a final show at Roundhay Park in Leeds. For those of us who'd been lucky enough to see Bruce over here in 1981 or even 1975, these huge mega concerts were a shock to the system and (in E Street terms) the shape of the future, with very few exceptions. Having been accustomed to seeing him indoors in the dark in comparatively small venues, we now had to contend with watching him in daylight with thousands of newcomers who thought Pink Cadillac Ranch was a gay nightclub in Texas.
But it wasn't like that in June 1984 when the LP first hit the shops. Back then, Bruce was a mere superstar. He didn't earn the right to the prefix "mega" for another year. Nevertheless the album reached the top of the Billboard chart (Number 2 in the UK) and Bruce began a huge 94-date US arena tour that kept him occupied until the end of January 1985. At that point he was still playing roughly the same size indoor venues that he had at the end of the "River" tour in 1981, but this time there were a lot more of them. The itinerary included ten gigs at the Brendan Byrne Arena in East Rutherford in his home state of New Jersey, six at the Philadelphia Spectrum and seven at the Los Angeles Sports Arena, which ensured that over 400,000 people saw Bruce in just three cities. The final two gigs took place at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse, still indoors, but with a capacity of 40,000 each night, the largest audiences of his career at the time, but they were about to get a whole lot bigger. After Syracuse, Bruce went straight to LA to record his vocals for the "We Are The World" single and then had seven weeks off before playing eight shows in Australia and another eight in Japan between mid-March and mid-April, the majority of which also took place indoors.
The UK tour came together a lot easier than it did in 1981. Back then, dates were added at intervals over a three month period, which was followed by a postponement and yet more dates. This time, three months of rumours preceded one final official announcement, but the delay was equally frustrating. In early February, just after the US tour had finished, the first rumours of possible UK gigs began to circulate and at least to begin with, it appeared that Bruce would be playing indoor venues over here as well. The NME revealed that his "eagerly awaited British visit will take place in September, when he will play a string of concerts, possibly a week, at London's 15,000-capacity Earls Court. It's known that dates have already been reserved and that plans are under way to organise coach trips from outlying areas". A week later, they said that the Earls Court season could now be brought forward to June. Dates were being held at the arena in both months until a decision was made. In early March, Melody Maker said that wheels were in motion to bring Bruce here in June/July and that it was likely that the itinerary would include "four nights at Earls Court, followed by a show at Wembley Stadium". Also on the cards was a gig at Dublin RDS on June 22. These tour rumours came during a major sea change in Bruce's career, in which he forgot about the remaining rungs on the ladder of fame and jumped straight to the top. In the UK, this sudden transition to the stratosphere has often been attributed to a report from the US tour on the "Old Grey Whistle Test", but it's hard to believe that one TV show could have had such a massive impact. It may also have been influenced by radio airplay, MTV video rotation, a major promotional campaign, heavy interest in the dreaded Arthur Baker remixes on the club circuit, Big Daddy's cover of "Dancing In The Dark" or a similar kind of persuasive word-of-mouth publicity that ensured demand for his 1981 shows outstripped supply by three-to-one, although he'd not played in the UK for more than six years. Bruce was now mentioned in the same sales meetings as Michael Jackson and Madonna, was featured in pop magazine Smash Hits and became a tabloid hero with an average of ten references to "The Boss" per square inch.
In early April, Melody Maker was the first UK music paper to print specific dates, which were in bigger venues than were suggested before:
- Newcastle St James Park (June 4 and 5)
- London Wembley Arena (July 3 and 5)
- Leeds Roundhay Park (July 7)
Although there was still no official confirmation and CBS were denying everything, this rumour was so strong that the shows were announced on Breakfast TV and Radio One. Two gigs at Earls Court (May 28 and 29) were still under consideration, as was a show at Slane Castle in Ireland on June 1. They later retracted the Wembley Arena rumour because it had already been block-booked by Dire Straits. Their source probably meant Wembley Stadium. The same week, the NME added fuel to the fire, suggesting that Bruce may play Cardiff Arms Park on May 27 as well as Birmingham NEC and Edinburgh Ingliston. They also said that dates were still pencilled in at Earls Court in both June and September.
In mid-April, Melody Maker revealed that "the popular view" was that Bruce would play the following dates in the UK and Ireland:
- Slane Castle (June 1)
- Newcastle St James Park (June 4 and 5)
- London Wembley Stadium (July 6 and 13)
- Leeds Roundhay Park (July 7)
- London Earls Court (July 8, 9, 10, 11)
This was a strange blend of massive-to-medium outdoor venues and an indoor arena, although it was unlikely that Bruce would have agreed to play six consecutive nights from July 6 to 11 inclusive.
In the end, Harvey Goldsmith completely bypassed the UK music papers by announcing the official tour dates live on "The Old Grey Whistle Test" on April 23, just after they'd gone to press, ensuring that they wouldn't be able to print the news for a week. "Thanks for nothing Harvey" said the headline in the NME, who saw this as "the latest in a string of dirty tricks" played on them by various promoters. This may have been a deliberate snub or simply an acknowledgment of the show's role in boosting Bruce's profile. Either way, the BBC switchboard had a major meltdown after the broadcast.
The only dates that Goldsmith actually released were:
- Newcastle St James Park (June 4 and 5)
- London Wembley Stadium (July 3 and 4)
The Leeds Roundhay Park gig on July 7 was confirmed soon afterwards and the concert on June 1 at Slane Castle got the go-ahead once local residents were placated. Amazingly, the first of the shows was only six weeks away, which seems like a huge risk. Nowadays artists announce big stadium shows months, possibly up to a year, in advance. Approximately one million requests were received for less than half that number of tickets. Again, demand beat supply by a three to one ratio. As a result, the NME later said it was hoped that Bruce's arm could be twisted into playing more shows, but in the end, the mid-May addition of one more gig at Wembley on July 6 was the only extra date. No additional requests would be accepted because there were enough unfulfilled applications for the first two shows. Tickets were £14.50 in Newcastle and Leeds and £15 in London, very expensive back then. Included in the cost was a controversial 50p "booking fee", introduced on this tour. Limited to six per person, they were available by post (cheques or postal orders with SAE) from a London PO Box address and buyers were asked to allow five weeks for delivery, which was cutting it fine for Newcastle attendees. In the pre-internet and credit card hotline years this tedious and prolonged process was all there was for shows by visiting US megastars. Send cheque, wait and hope. Nowadays you print your own. For a small fee. Where did Harvey Goldsmith's envelope stuffers go after the WWW was invented? Maybe the "admin fee" we're routinely charged pays their pensions.
The final itinerary was a little disappointing to say the least. No Earls Court shows (it would be 14 years until Bruce played that concrete cavern), nothing in Wales or Scotland, less than half the amount of shows that he played in 1981 and a huge rise in venue capacities. They all sold out of course, which is a perfect example of how his audience had grown. When he returned for the Wembley and Leeds gigs, "BITUSA" topped the album chart a year after it came out, five of his other six records made the Top 50 and "Nebraska" got to number 60.
Once the tour dates had been set in stone, we began making plans to attend all seven gigs in the UK and Ireland. Actually other people did. I'd just met Dan French and tapped into the Springsteen fan network and relied mostly on them to organise tickets, transport and accommodation. I was new to the travelling game, hence the reason I only saw Bruce play in Brighton and Wembley back in 1981. I'd never been north of London before. I was grateful to Dan and many others I met in 1985 for introducing me to the wonderful world of Bruce touring. This was just the start of a lifelong adventure which began with the unforgettable trip to Slane and Newcastle that I told you about last time.
That took weeks of planning in the days when everything was done by phone or post. Seems like the Stone Age now, but it all fell together as smooth as silk and nobody got lost along the way. I wish I could tell you that the Wembley and Leeds story also involves great feats of human endurance and long late-night drives, but it was a lot simpler. In fact, I have very little recollection of the events surrounding those shows. We came, we saw, we went home.
Most of us from the Slane and Newcastle trip were there too, but we weren't always in the same place at the same time.
I have a memory of staying at my new friend Tony's parents' house near Wembley, sleeping on the floor beside other fans from far and wide and hearing bootleg tapes in the kitchen. But as for Leeds, I really have no clear idea of who I went up with, if I stayed anywhere or how I got back, but I'm fairly certain that Julian Soden (aka Max) was involved somehow.
Compared to Slane, the shows in Newcastle had felt like club gigs, but Wembley was twice as big. In 1981, Bruce played six shows at the 12,000-seat arena. Now he was appearing for three nights at the 72,000 capacity stadium for the same number of fans in one show as he did in an entire week at the arena. Things had changed, to reference Bob. I can remember going up early on July 3 with a small group of people and just wandering around to see what we could see. What we found was a large open gate that led us directly onto the pitch and it was rude not to. We stood at the back and watched Bruce and the band soundchecking something we didn't recognise until we were asked to depart the premises. It turned out to be "Seeds", which received its tour premiere later that night and appeared at all three gigs.
The three Wembley concerts (the most shows Bruce played in any city in Europe) were the centrepiece of the five-week tour and the focus of massive media attention. The stadium was certainly the place to be that week, unless you were a Dire Straits fan with tickets for one of their 13 concerts at the arena. Despite the enormity of the venue, we'd been looking forward to the shows for ages. The desire to see Bruce again overrode the fact that he was going to be playing in bright sunshine most of the evening for a crowd the size of a small town. The tickets were general admission. They got you in the stadium. After that, you could stand or sit anywhere. There were no reserved seats, no pit, no Gold Circle. It was possible to reach the front barrier if you began queueing early enough. With the Slane experience still fresh in our minds, we elected to base ourselves in seats on the right-hand side for each show. We had a clear view of the stage and were sheltered from the sun by the stadium roof. When we looked down at the heaving mass of sunbaked humanity on the pitch, moving slowly forward to increase the pressure on those at the front, we knew we'd made the right decision, especially when a big fight broke out. (An idiot clambered up the PA system and jumped up and down on the stage roof during one of the gigs. If he'd fallen through the thin tarpaulin or canvas sheet, there might have been catastrophic consequences). The gates were opened at 4pm on July 3 and 4, with an approximate concert start time of 6pm. Opening time on July 6 was 2pm, with the show due to start at 4pm. Given Bruce's habit of being fashionably late, the kick-off didn't happen until at least half an hour later than billed. Extra time was needed.
Those expecting Bruce to play material from his early albums were in for a disappointment.
The set was heavily weighted towards "Darkness On The Edge Of Town", "The River" and, of course, "BITUSA". Only "Rosalita", "Born To Run" and "Thunder Road" represented his 1973-1975 era, and while he'd included up to five songs from "Nebraska" at shows in the summer of 1984, only the rocked-up "Johnny 99" and "Atlantic City" now remained. Unreleased songs ("Because The Night", "Seeds") and covers ("Trapped", "Can't Help Falling In Love", "Twist And Shout", "Do You Love Me?") completed the set, which was largely identical from night to night, with just enough room for alternative choices, rarities and very occasional surprises.
At Wembley, four songs stand out in the latter categories. On July 4, Bruce opened with an acoustic "Independence Day". It had only appeared on four other occasions on the entire tour and he wouldn't perform it again until 1996. Later that night, he took "Pink Cadillac" for a spin for the third and last time in Europe. On July 6, he replaced "Atlantic City" with a rare "Highway Patrolman", its first appearance since January and last but one for 11 years. Finally, during the encores, he pulled out The Rolling Stones' "Street Fighting Man", which had been a set regular on the US tour until October. It's not been played anywhere since.
But undoubtedly the biggest surprise of all was when Little Steven appeared for the final three encores: "Two Hearts", "Ramrod" and "Twist And Shout"/"Do You Love Me". There was no social media to spread advance rumours, so this was a genuine surprise. We'd last seen Steven playing with Bruce on the "River" tour in 1981 and as leader of the Disciples of Soul on several subsequent UK visits. Few of the new fans may have known who he was, but us old timers gave him a rousing welcome. To make the Wembley stand even more memorable, he was back onstage on July 4 and 6.
It's generally understood that Bruce's Wembley stage was left behind to be used at Live Aid a week later, but it's never been officially confirmed. My Wembley story concludes with a vague recollection of waiting for Bruce to leave after one of the shows and watching a van with tinted windows drive out of the gate without stopping. Fans around me said that they saw Bruce and any number of band members in that vehicle, but I couldn't see anything.
And so to Leeds, the last UK show and the final night of the comparatively short European tour (18 dates with only one in Italy and none in Spain). After a run of stadiums, Bruce was ending the tour as he'd begun, in a field with 80,000 friends. The backdrop-free stage with its view of the trees behind it was identical to Slane, but the similarity ended there. It was level for a start and there was only one gently sloping hill on the right-hand side, where the disabled facilities were based.
This event was considerably better controlled, except when "dozens" or "hundreds" broke down a section of the concert arena's eight-foot high fence and surged forward, causing a dangerous crush at the front and apparently extending the mid-show interval while it was sorted out, although I have no memory of that whatsoever.
It was another weekend gig, so the gates opened early at 1pm and Bruce was due on around 4pm. The local press reported traffic chaos before and after the show. One of my abiding memories is the smell of the gents' toilets (basically giant troughs) wafting across the crowd on the breeze, not for the faint-hearted it has to be said. It was another sunny day with a massive audience and I chose to stay near the back. Maybe the memory of Slane was still burning bright, or perhaps I was just tired, but I watched the gig from a safe distance in relative comfort.
The set followed the standard pattern, but omitted "Seeds" and included three songs that weren't played at Wembley; a superb "Racing In The Street" (played only three times in Europe and destined not to appear again until 1992); the only European performance of "Follow That Dream" and a final encore of John Fogerty's "Rocking All Over The World", one of only 12 performances on the entire "BITUSA" tour. (Anyone who still thinks that it's a Status Quo song should see me afterwards. There will be detention). And just when we thought Little Steven was down in London, he appeared during the encores one more time to close out the tour with his old friend. He made a total of 10 guest appearances with Bruce on the 15-month world tour and four of them were in the UK. It was a fitting end to an exciting adventure that had begun five weeks earlier on a hill in Ireland. Bruce still had two more months of stadium shows back home before he could put his feet up. These included six nights at Giants Stadium in New Jersey and four final shows at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.
By the end, he'd played 156 shows in 11 countries around the globe, "BITUSA" had sold bucketloads and spawned no less than seven singles and he'd finally made a few bob.
Reminiscing about those 1985 shows 35 years later, it's clear that they were hard-rockin', fist pumpin', crowd-pleasin', baseball cap wearin', ass shakin', goofy, sweaty, horny, musclebound, heterosexual white male performances. They were designed for huge stages and equally massive audiences. Bruce's accessible, commercial songs dominated, at the expense of his romantic epics and more thoughtful and introspective material. While they were undoubtedly great fun and very successful, they only reflected limited aspects of his musical character and were a good example of how biggest does not necessarily mean best. I had as great a time as any other Springsteen obsessive who saw the seven UK and Irish shows, but there was a nagging sense that he was much better than all this, that cramming thousands into a stadium like sardines was dehumanising and dangerous and that rock music is always best heard in indoor venues. Unfortunately, his sustained level of popularity in Europe with the E Street Band ever since has meant that it's been stadiums all the way, with few exceptions. "BITUSA" defined Bruce's career to some extent for many people, and they've expected him to churn it out onstage ever since. Luckily he didn't take that route and has presented us with some very interesting musical detours in subsequent years, but songs from that album have always crept into his sets, even if he's started tours not playing them. The mid-80s were his Glory Days and they'll never fully pass him by, which is both a blessing and a curse. When he got home, he saw the tour as the end of an era, not the dawning of a new one. Next time around, according to his autobiography, he was looking forward to "something less".
By Mike Saunders via Facebook.com. |
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