Scheduled: 19:30 Local Start Time 20:21 / End time 23:00
Info & Setlist | Venue
Second show at the Meadowlands features five tour debuts in a shorter 24-song set, clocking in at around 2 hours 35 minutes. Three premieres in the first seven songs include "The Ties That Bind" and "Candy's Room". A beautiful "Racing In The Street" is the Darkness On The Edge Of Town album version and the fourth premiere of the night. "My City Of Ruins" includes "People Get Ready". Audible "Ramrod" is included in the encores. First appearance of a short film in tribute to Clarence Clemons during "Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out".
- Bruce Springsteen
- The E Street Band
- Charles Giordano
- Soozie Tyrell
- The E Street Choir
- The E Street Horns
- Michelle Moore (Guest)
incl. Rehearsals.
- 2012-04-04 Izod Center, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2012-04-03 Izod Center, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2009-05-23 Izod Center, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2009-05-21 Izod Center, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2007-10-10 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2007-10-09 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2007-09-28 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2005-11-17 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2005-11-16 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2005-05-19 Theater At The Continental Airlines Arena (The), East Rutherford, NJ
- 2004-10-13 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2002-08-07 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2002-08-05 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 2001-12-15 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-08-12 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-08-11 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-08-09 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-08-07 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-08-06 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-08-04 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-08-02 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-08-01 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-07-29 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-07-27 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-07-26 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-07-24 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-07-20 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-07-18 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-07-15 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1999-07-14 Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1993-06-24 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-08-10 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-08-07 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-08-06 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-08-04 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-08-02 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-07-31 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-07-30 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-07-28 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-07-26 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-07-25 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1992-07-23 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-20 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-19 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-17 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-16 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-12 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-11 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-09 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-08 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-06 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1984-08-05 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1981-07-09 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1981-07-08 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1981-07-06 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1981-07-05 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1981-07-03 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
- 1981-07-02 Brendan Byrne Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
© 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 tapes (Bakerstuff & FatahRuark) and audience shot DVD/Blu-ray (NYCBC). Available on CD 'My Home's Here in These Meadowlands' (Godfather).
Sorry, no Storyteller available.
Gracie | After so many shows you think I'd expect the unexpected. Racing gave me goosebumps Racing? Absolutely one of my best Bruce moments ever Racing? I thought I was tired of the oldies,nope Racing!!!! |
Jack | Blown away! We Take Care of Our Own rocks! Death to My Hometown is a stomping rocker! A nice dose of some River songs thrown in with, Ties that Bind, Jackson Cage and Ramrod. Bring out more from The River. Let's hear Stolen Car, Point Blank, Sherry Darling and Drive all Night! Happy to have gotten Candy's Room and Racing in the Street, wow! Terrific encores.Great tribute to Clarence with both Dancing in the Dark and 10th Ave! Looking forward to the late summer shows. |
Tommy C. | So many great songs both Jersey nights. Night 1 was so damn good, I was fearful of being slightly disappointed with Night 2, but such was not the case. New material, just sounds better every show. Bruce and band really put their heart, soul and sweat into those new songs and it pays off big time. Some great surprises with a blistering Candy's Room, a powerful Jackson Cage, She's the One and the magnificent, Racing in the Streets! Bruce should be playing that one more often. Simply amazing to watch the band kick in during the outro and take it to another whole level. Encores were pumped up with Trapped and a little roadhouse trip with Ramrod. Love the video footage of Big Man and Bruce during 10th Ave — sends chills up and down your spine. A solid show all the way thru. |
© 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.
The Boss Roars Tough and Tender |
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Bruce Springsteen kept toggling between hope and despair at the Izod Center here on Tuesday night, and not just with his usual cathartic aplomb. Over the course of a nearly three-hour show he led the E Street Band through a succession of peaks and valleys, sometimes choosing to emphasize the disjunction between them. “It’s fun in here,” he said during one of these moments, “but there’s a lot of hard times out there.”
That was the jarring transition from “E Street Shuffle,” a euphoric old staple, to “Jack of All Trades,” a sour, hard-bitten newish ballad. And just in case the point hadn’t fully registered, there were lyrics like these: “The banker man grows fat, the working man grows thin/It’s all happened before and it’ll happen again.” Mr. Springsteen spit them out like a bitter tonic, resigned but hardly accepting; he struck a similar chord in the following tune, “Seeds,” before the dizzying upswing of “Prove It All Night.”
Maybe this emotional seesaw was unavoidable under the circumstances. Mr. Springsteen is on tour behind an album, “Wrecking Ball” (Columbia), that flogs a populist message with about as much blunt force, and as little nuance, as the title suggests.
The tour, which lingers in the New York region through Monday, has so far preserved certain anchors in the set list, some from the new album. Its curtain raiser is “We Take Care of Our Own,” a national call to conscience; the first song in the encore is “Rocky Ground,” a sanctified plea for deliverance. “Jack of All Trades” comes about a third of the way in, not long after “Death to My Hometown,” which adopts a Celtic-punk heave, a robber-baron conceit and more than a hint of kitsch.
Mr. Springsteen, 62, has never had a problem wringing uplift from struggle; that was the implication of the show’s most rousing songs, like “Born to Run,” “Badlands” and “The Promised Land.” And he has engaged poignantly with national tragedy. Among the other highlights here were “The Rising,” originally a salve for Sept. 11, and “American Skin (41 Shots),” inspired by the 1999 police shooting of Amadou Diallo and rededicated, during a show last week, to Trayvon Martin.
Speaking of which, another whiplash: “American Skin” came immediately after the concert’s frothiest moment of pop communion, a soul medley culminating in “634-5789.” After he belted that Wilson Pickett hit, standing on a platform in the audience, Mr. Springsteen crowd-surfed his way back to the stage, on his back with arms outstretched.
Behind him at every turn, the E Street Band played with a lean, explosive vigor, sounding stalwart on the war horses and invigorated by relative obscurities like “So Young and in Love,” an old roadhouse shuffle. Max Weinberg exerted his thunderous but fastidious force at the drums; Garry Tallent laid a concrete foundation on bass.
Steven Van Zandt and Nils Lofgren shared guitar duties with Mr. Springsteen and his wife, Patti Scialfa; the solos, mostly by Mr. Springsteen, were good, though Mr. Lofgren fashioned a great one on “Because the Night.”
There were also backup singers, a violinist, a percussionist and a horn section — 17 musicians in all — and somehow the bigness of the output felt right.
But no Big Man: this is Mr. Springsteen’s first tour without Clarence Clemons, the tenor saxophonist who did as much as anyone to define the E Street sound, before his death last year. His nephew, Jake Clemons, took over many of his riffs and solos, delivering a strong approximation of his tone, though only a portion of his presence.
A natural tribute arrived in “Tenth Avenue Freeze Out,” the final tune: after Mr. Springsteen sang “And the Big Man joined the band,” he led the arena in a minute-long round of applause, smiling as he held his microphone aloft.
The home-field advantage that Mr. Springsteen savored throughout the show got its ideal expression in the new album’s title track, which inhabits the point of view of the old Giants Stadium.
The song’s lyrics propose a defiant dare, along with a philosophical refrain: “And hard times come and hard times go,” Mr. Springsteen growled, repeating the line again, and again, and again, and again.
By Nate Chinen via The New York Times. |
Links:
- The Boss Roars Tough and Tender (NYTimes)
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