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DGA35
I'm sure you know Bruce wrote Because The Night. My favorite version is from 10,000 Maniacs on their unplugged album in the early 90's.
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Sighunt
I just don't get what the animosity is all about on this site when it comes to Bruce. Yes, this is a board about the Stones who I love first and foremost, but Bruce is also right up there with them as far as great albums and memorable concerts. The man puts himself out there and appears to actually give a shit about his audiences (still touring, playing long shows, continuing to challenge himself-taking risks/releasing new material, etc). As fans, we need to cherish that these artists (including our beloved Stones) are still touring. There will come a time when these trail -blazers will not grace the stage and then we will all be bitching and moaning about it.
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keefriffhard4life
bruce just broke his own usa record for longest show and included 2 of my favorite early sprinsteen tunes. tracks 11 and 12
1. New York City Serenade
(with string section)
2. Does This Bus Stop at 82nd Street?
3. It's Hard to Be a Saint in the City
4. Growin' Up
5. Spirit in the Night
6. Lost in the Flood
7. Kitty's Back
8. The E Street Shuffle
9. Incident on 57th Street
10. Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)
11. The Fever
(sign request, tour debut)
12. Thundercrack
(tour debut)
13. Night
14. No Surrender
15. The Ties That Bind
16. My Love Will Not Let You Down
17. Death to My Hometown
18. Jack of All Trades
(with string section)
19. American Skin (41 Shots)
20. The Promised Land
21. Hungry Heart
22. Darlington County
23. Working on the Highway
24. Downbound Train
25. Because the Night
26. The Rising
27. Badlands
28. Encore:
29. Streets of Philadelphia
(tour debut)
30. Jungleland
31. Born to Run
32. Dancing in the Dark
33. Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out
34. Shout
(The Isley Brothers cover)
35. Bobby Jean
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DGA35
I'm sure you know Bruce wrote Because The Night. My favorite version is from 10,000 Maniacs on their unplugged album in the early 90's.
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reg thorpeQuote
DGA35
I'm sure you know Bruce wrote Because The Night. My favorite version is from 10,000 Maniacs on their unplugged album in the early 90's.
Patti Smith
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keefriff99
I think it comes down to two different and distinct things:
1. The Stones are all about sex, drugs, sleaze, and cynicism. They revel and wallow in it. Bruce is the opposite: he's earnest and heartfelt and tender. The tone in their music and lyrics couldn't be more different.
...secondly, and more importantly...
2. Pure jealousy. Let's face it: the Stones have been coasting for decades by riding largely the same goddamned 10-15 greatest hits for all they're worth. Springsteen still puts out relevant material and takes his audiences on an unpredictable rollercoaster of a journey EVERY show.
.
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DandelionPowderman
But does Setlist.fm make those rules?
You're clearly ignorant of Springsteen's history.Quote
wonderboyQuote
keefriff99
I think it comes down to two different and distinct things:
1. The Stones are all about sex, drugs, sleaze, and cynicism. They revel and wallow in it. Bruce is the opposite: he's earnest and heartfelt and tender. The tone in their music and lyrics couldn't be more different.
...secondly, and more importantly...
2. Pure jealousy. Let's face it: the Stones have been coasting for decades by riding largely the same goddamned 10-15 greatest hits for all they're worth. Springsteen still puts out relevant material and takes his audiences on an unpredictable rollercoaster of a journey EVERY show.
.
Bruce's act is a shtick, the working class/folkie hero routine. I'm sure he believes in it, his audience does, too, but it's sentimental claptrap. He became big just at the time the industrial base in this country began to erode and working class people began to go to college and move into white collar jobs. He tapped into that nostalgia for what they grew up with. They have a shared memory of something that really didn't happen quite that way.
Yes, he is earnest, but he has absolutely no sense of humour.
The Stones are different, yes -- unsentimental and cynical and funny and real.
Springsteen is, like Keith wrote, overblown and contrived.
So that's how I see this depression reveal. He was a 60-year-old man going through the normal ups and downs of life, maybe bummed about some things, but instead of calling it what it was, he has to play it as part of the heroic struggle with his father/past history nonsense.
That's by far my favorite version. In fact, when I sing along to it at a Springsteen show, I usually end up singing the Maniacs version of the lyrics.Quote
DGA35
I'm sure you know Bruce wrote Because The Night. My favorite version is from 10,000 Maniacs on their unplugged album in the early 90's.
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DandelionPowderman
If you record or perform other people's work, you are covering their work. It should be as simple as that, imo.
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superglenQuote
DandelionPowderman
If you record or perform other people's work, you are covering their work. It should be as simple as that, imo.
Bruce wrote and recorded Because the Night during the Darkness sessions (1977/1978), but letf it off the record and gave it to Patti because it was "too poppy". she changed part of the lyrics to a more sexy/female POV, that's why the shared writing credit. she recorded it and had a huge hit (the only one of her career).
Bruce's awsome studio version remained unreleased until 2010.
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marcovandereijkQuote
DandelionPowderman
But does Setlist.fm make those rules?
They make the rules about what is published on their website, I guess.
That's where keefriffhard4life took his information from.
I think it is rather funny to call Because the night a Patti Smith cover.
And they broke their own rule by not calling Wild Horses a cover.
But in the end, who cares? It's a brilliant website with loads of interesting facts.
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wonderboyQuote
keefriff99
I think it comes down to two different and distinct things:
1. The Stones are all about sex, drugs, sleaze, and cynicism. They revel and wallow in it. Bruce is the opposite: he's earnest and heartfelt and tender. The tone in their music and lyrics couldn't be more different.
...secondly, and more importantly...
2. Pure jealousy. Let's face it: the Stones have been coasting for decades by riding largely the same goddamned 10-15 greatest hits for all they're worth. Springsteen still puts out relevant material and takes his audiences on an unpredictable rollercoaster of a journey EVERY show.
.
Bruce's act is a shtick, the working class/folkie hero routine. I'm sure he believes in it, his audience does, too, but it's sentimental claptrap. He became big just at the time the industrial base in this country began to erode and working class people began to go to college and move into white collar jobs. He tapped into that nostalgia for what they grew up with. They have a shared memory of something that really didn't happen quite that way.
Yes, he is earnest, but he has absolutely no sense of humour.
The Stones are different, yes -- unsentimental and cynical and funny and real.
Springsteen is, like Keith wrote, overblown and contrived.
So that's how I see this depression reveal. He was a 60-year-old man going through the normal ups and downs of life, maybe bummed about some things, but instead of calling it what it was, he has to play it as part of the heroic struggle with his father/past history nonsense.
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wonderboy
[
Bruce's act is a shtick, the working class/folkie hero routine. I'm sure he believes in it, his audience does, too, but it's sentimental claptrap. He became big just at the time the industrial base in this country began to erode and working class people began to go to college and move into white collar jobs.
No kidding. Sorry dcba, but you're absolutely full of it on this point.Quote
Mainman
...more laughable bollocks from dcba...talking utter shite.
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keefriff99No kidding. Sorry dcba, but you're absolutely full of it on this point.Quote
Mainman
...more laughable bollocks from dcba...talking utter shite.
Springsteen was singing about working-class issues pre-Reagan. HE'S the one who had to fend off the right-wing trying to coopt Born in the USA at the height of his popularity.
Don't tell me that didn't take massive balls, and don't call him an idiot for ACTUAL idiots misinterpreting his anti-war song for a patriotic beer commercial.
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dcbaQuote
wonderboy
[
Bruce's act is a shtick, the working class/folkie hero routine. I'm sure he believes in it, his audience does, too, but it's sentimental claptrap. He became big just at the time the industrial base in this country began to erode and working class people began to go to college and move into white collar jobs.
Yeah like it or not Bruce's status as a cultural figure (just not a rock figure) started to grow exactly when Reagan was shipping American jobs to China and Mexico.
Said differently Bruce glorified the American worker just when he was slowly being put to death by globalization and Reaganomics.
Loot at the extremely interesting "Glory Days" video : it's a joyful celebration of the average "Joe USA" who was right at that time (the mid-80's) starting to be exterminated.
Dylan who's far more intelligent than Brooce did feel the danger. As soon as 1983 he wrote "Union Sundown" which described the war on American workers.
[www.google.fr]
Bob's smart, Brooce is a naive genial idiot.