28.09.2007
- NBC MORNING SHOW - Rockefeller Plaza
Promo-Auftritt Bruce Springsteen & The E-Street Band
Bruce Springsteen
hits stage for 'Today'
By RICHARD HUFF
DAILY NEWS TV EDITOR
Saturday, September 29th 2007, 4:00 AM
NYDAILYNEWS.COM
Bruce Springsteen, Patti Scialfa and Little Steven Van Zandt performing
on the 'Today' show.
Bruce Springsteen, Patti Scialfa and Little Steven Van Zandt performing
on the 'Today' show.
Rockefeller Center was rocking yesterday as thousands of die-hard Bruce
Springsteen fans jammed the plaza to catch The Boss perform on NBC's
"Today" show.
"How much did they have to pay you to come out this early?" Springsteen
asked fans who cheered during a full-scale rehearsal at 6 a.m.
"Thanks for being so lively at this hour in the morning," Springsteen
said.
With fans perched on balconies 10 stories up, gathered along several
blocks and peering from neighboring buildings, Springsteen and the E
Street Band performed seven songs; some new, some old. The fans sang
nearly every word.
"It was awesome. He's so intense," said Vincenza Corcoran, of Peekskill.
"It's Bruce."
"It's probably the closest I've ever seen him, that's what made me want
to come," said Linda Manzi, of Douglaston.
Manzi said she took a day off work just to be in Rockefeller Plaza for
the show.
"It's great," she said. "It's unbelievable he was even here."
To accommodate the overflow crowd, which stretched down parts of 48th
and 49th Sts. and into Rockefeller Center, producers installed a huge
video screen near the ice rink.
"This is the same crowd you get for the dancing bears," Springsteen
joked with Matt Lauer. "I appreciate it."
Fans held signs saying "Bruce, it's my birthday," and "Middlebury Vermont
Loves Bruce."
Noelle Iturbe, there with her husband Iker, held a sign that read: "Your
biggest fan, all the way from Spain, married to a Jersey girl."
Others shouted "We love you, Bruce!" And even more simply yelled "Bruuuuucce!"
Springsteen was on to get traction for his latest CD, "Magic," which
hits stores Tuesday. It was the second time the New Jersey native used
the top-rated morning show as a platform to showcase a new collection,
having done so for the 2002 release of "The Rising."
"We have but only one Boss today," said a guy named John who refused
to give his last name because he called in sick back in Pennsylvania.
The band appeared on stage a few times throughout the four-hour telecast,
starting at 8 a.m. with "Promised Land." They also sang the new songs
"Radio Nowhere," "Last to Die," "Long Walk Home" as well as the classics
"My Hometown" and "Night."
Before singing "Living in the Future," Springsteen said the song was
about "The things we love about America - cheeseburgers, French fries,
the Yankees battling Boston...the Bill of Rights, trans fat and the
Jersey Shore."
He also said it was about the Iraq war, and issues such as illegal wiretapping.
"We plan to do something about it," he said. "We plan to sing about
it."
Between songs, and off-air, Springsteen told an off-color joke and gave
a nod to a guy sitting alone in a window.
"I must really want to sell some records bad to be up this early," Springsteen
joked. "It's desperate."





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