Springsteen, Part IV

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Re: Re: Bruce endorses Obama

Lila64 said:
At Eddie Vedder's show on Sunday, someone asked him who he was voting for, and he said he didn't want to get into politics. Then an Obama banner was walked across the stage to a good response :up:

Either this is being staged by Eddie, or people in the audience already know to ask that question so the banner will come out.

i.e. I was at both Berkeley shows and the same thing happened. :lol:
 
phanan said:
Well, if it makes you feel any better, Springsteen always has been and always will be a liberal Democrat. It's been no secret where his stance has been throughout his career - he's just been more vocal about it this decade, and I think that has more to do with his disgust of Bush more than anything else.


I know that, and that is one thing I've always loved about him for sure :yes:
 
...My computer/iPod hates Livin' In The Future:

Ok, I thought maybe I just screwed up the file somehow when I imported it into iTunes in the first place, but when I would listen to Livin' in the Future on my iPod, it would freeze, then restart itself. Then I found, when I listen to it on my computer it would freeze, the crash, and restart.

Now, fine, whatever, I'll just have to deal with not listening to the song, even if I really like it.

But today, I finally downloaded a boot, and when Livin in the Future came on, the comp froze, crashed, and restarted! Shocked
Played the song on my iPod after that and it did the same thing.

WTF! See, my iPod crashed about a month ago, and I lost all my Magic files, and I just got them back from a friend, but it never did this before when it was on my iPod, and it never did this to my computer before, but this is a new computer.

How can a computer/iPod hate just ONE track?
 
martha said:
Clearly a vast right-wing conspiracy, given the nature of the song. :shifty:


I KNOW RIGHT!

That's what I was thinking exactly! of ALL the songs, that's the one that sets it off?
 
Terry's Song in Houston

April 16, 2008, 5:39PM
One song touches the heart


By KEN HOFFMAN
Copyright 2008 Houston Chronicle

There was a raw emotional moment during Bruce Springsteen's concert Monday night at Toyota Center that fans might not have understood.

Introducing Terry's Song, a song Springsteen wrote about the death of his friend and personal assistant for the past 23 years, Frank "Terry" Magovern, Springsteen said, "This song is for the Cox boys, Christopher Cox, Curtis Cox and Timmy, but I'm dedicating it to Ward Cox, number 9."

After the slow, sad song, Springsteen bent to one knee, face down, and held his guitar straight up for 20 seconds.

Toyota Center was silent.

Ward Cox, 16, died last October in a swimming accident in Galveston. He was a student at St. Thomas High School in Houston, one of those kids who seems to know everybody, and whom everybody loved. He wore No. 9 on his football jersey. Twenty-five hundred young people attended his funeral.

"We had no idea that Bruce was going to dedicate that song to Ward. I was hoping he would sing Terry's Song because he had never performed it live before. If you go on YouTube.com, you'll see a video about my son's life with Terry's Song playing in the background. It was an incredible moment, you can't imagine how incredible, when Bruce talked about him," said Tom Cox, a Houston businessman.

Some of the lyrics of Terry's Song:

"Now your death is upon us and we'll return your ashes to the earth

And I know you'll take comfort in knowing you've been roundly blessed and cursed

But love is a power greater than death, just like the songs and stories told

And when she built you, brother, she broke the mold."

"I have a friend who, without me knowing, passed Ward's story to Bruce's people. We got a phone call at 3 p.m. Monday asking if we had tickets to the concert, which we did, and saying there would be backstage passes for us. After the last song, we were escorted back to a room, and Bruce met me, my wife, Anne, and our sons and talked with us for about 30 minutes. He made a line of Houston celebrities wait while he talked to us about our son. I have learned that Bruce takes special interest in stories about people like Ward. I gave him a picture of my son and a bracelet with his name on it. We hugged and left," Tim Cox said.

"It was an unbelievably emotional experience, very powerful and heavy, to know that Bruce Springsteen honored my son from the stage like that. Terry's Song is special; the words have helped my family heal. I've always liked Bruce Springsteen and his music. Now I think of him more as a compassionate human being and a friend."
 
RIP Danny :(

Danny Federici, for 40 years the E Street Band's organist and keyboard player, died this afternoon, April 17, 2008 at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City after a three year battle with melanoma.


:sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad: :sad:


IMG_0727-1.jpg
 
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geez, what about the people who saw Indy, I'm kinda glad I didn't go to that show now, like I'd planned on.

That sounds bad, I mean, I don't know if I'd want to be at someone's last performance

Brucespringsteen.net:

DANNY FEDERICI

Danny Federici, for 40 years the E Street Band's organist and keyboard player, died this afternoon, April 17, 2008 at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City after a three year battle with melanoma.

The Federici family and the E Street family request that, in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the Danny Federici Melanoma Fund. A web site for the Fund is being established and we'll post its link when it is on line.

Bruce Springsteen's concerts scheduled for Friday in Ft. Lauderdale and Saturday in Orlando performance are being postponed. Replacement dates will be announced shortly.
 
bono_212 said:
geez, what about the people who saw Indy, I'm kinda glad I didn't go to that show now, like I'd planned on.

That sounds bad, I mean, I don't know if I'd want to be at someone's last performance

Indy was a strange place to make an appearance. He must've known at the time he wasn't going to make it, and wanted one last appearance with the guys.

Wow, this is so sad.
 
from msnbc.com
080417-DannyFederici-hmed-756phmedi.jpg

NEW YORK - Danny Federici, the longtime keyboard player for Bruce Springsteen whose stylish work helped define the E Street Band’s sound on hits from “Hungry Heart” through “The Rising,” died Thursday. He was 58.

Federici, who had battled melanoma for three years, died at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. News of his death was posted late Thursday on Springsteen’s official Web site.

According to published reports, Federici last performed with Springsteen and the band last month, appearing during portions of a March 20 show in Indianapolis.
Story continues below ↓advertisement

Springsteen concerts scheduled for Friday in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and Saturday in Orlando were postponed after news of Federici’s death.

An invite to Springsteen
He was born in Flemington, N.J., a long car ride from the Jersey shore haunts where he first met kindred musical spirit Springsteen in the late 1960s. The pair often jammed at the Upstage Club in Asbury Park, N.J., a now-defunct after-hours club that hosted the best musicians in the state.

It was Federici, along with original E Street Band drummer Vini Lopez, who first invited Springsteen to join their band.

By 1969, the self-effacing Federici — often introduced in concert by Springsteen as “Phantom Dan” — was playing with the Boss in a band called Child. Over the years, Federici joined his friend in acclaimed shore bands Steel Mill, Dr. Zoom and the Sonic Boom and the Bruce Springsteen Band.

Federici became a stalwart in the E Street Band as Springsteen rocketed from the boardwalk to international stardom. Springsteen split from the E Streeters in the late ’80s, but they reunited for a hugely successful tour in 1999.

“Bruce has been supportive throughout my life,” Federici said in a recent interview with Backstreets magazine. “I’ve had my ups and downs, and I’ve certainly given him a run for his money, and he’s always been there for me.”

Federici played accordion on the wistful “4th Of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)” from Springsteen’s second album, and his organ solo was a highlight of Springsteen’s first top 10 hit, “Hungry Heart.” His organ coda on the 9/11-inspired Springsteen song “You’re Missing” provided one of the more heart-wrenching moments on “The Rising” in 2002.

Content on the side
In a band with larger-than-life characters such as saxophonist Clarence Clemons and bandana-wrapped guitarist “Little” Steven Van Zandt, Federici was content to play in his familiar position to the side of the stage. But his playing was as vital to Springsteen’s live show as any instrument in the band.

Federici released a pair of solo albums that veered from the E Street sound and into soft jazz. Bandmates Nils Lofgren on guitar and Garry Tallent on bass joined Federici on his 1997 debut, “Flemington.” In 2005, Federici released its follow-up, “Out of a Dream.”

Federici had taken a leave of absence during the band’s tour in November 2007 to pursue treatment for melanoma, and was temporarily replaced by veteran musician Charles Giordano.

At the time, Springsteen described Federici as “one of the pillars of our sound and has played beside me as a great friend for more than 40 years. We all eagerly await his healthy and speedy return.”

Besides his work with Springsteen, Federici played on albums by an impressive roster of other artists: Van Zandt, Joan Armatrading, Graham Parker, Gary U.S. Bonds and Garland Jeffreys.
 
I'm really glad he was able to play in Indy, I'm sure it meant a lot to him and Bruce and all of the band. I had hoped it would be just the first of many returns....

Boston 2 will always be Danny's night...watching Nils play up next to Danny on his riser instead of out front, watching as the band all came over to watch him play, 4th of July, E St Shuffle, Kitty's Back....he played his heart out that night......and the crowd definitely let him know how much he was loved....
 
Bruce added a comment to the original Brucespringsteen.net post:

"Danny and I worked together for 40 years - he was the most wonderfully fluid keyboard player and a pure natural musician. I loved him very much...we grew up together."
—Bruce Springsteen
 
Nightsong said:
Boston 2 will always be Danny's night...watching Nils play up next to Danny on his riser instead of out front, watching as the band all came over to watch him play, 4th of July, E St Shuffle, Kitty's Back....he played his heart out that night......and the crowd definitely let him know how much he was loved....

It was indeed an amazing night.
 
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