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Bericht
vom 04. April 2001 / Washington Post
Neue Springsteen CD "Live in New York City
Live CDs: No Loss Of
Gloss For the Boss
By Britt Robson
Special to The Washington Post
Wednesday, April 4, 2001
Bruce Springsteen's "Live in New York City" is a predictably
magnificent concert recording. This two-CD set, taped last summer,
reminds us that Springsteen is the most heroic composer in modern pop
music and demonstrates that the E Street Band can still galvanize his
songs into rock-and-roll epiphanies.
It's been nearly 30 years since Springsteen became rock's first
post-counterculture icon by retaining the ambitious idealism and
dramatic intensity of the '60s while rebutting the class elitism and
lack of moral perseverance that hollowed the rhetoric of that era. After
initially aping the freewheeling poetics of '60s-vintage Bob Dylan (the
only living songwriter of comparably exalted status), he became
Hemingway to Dylan's Faulkner, honing his lyrics into resonantly pithy
narratives that linked big dreams with the smaller, if equally profound,
triumphs of retaining one's personal honor and dignity.
By reuniting with the E Street Band last year after more than a decade,
Springsteen put his own previously irreproachable honor and dignity at
risk. Now 51 and raising three children he fathered with his second wife,
he had to prove that the reunion tour could be something more than a
nostalgic traipse to a financial windfall. On that score, cynics can
point to a paucity of fresh material (just two of the 20 tracks are new)
and the airing of an abridged version of "Live in New York
City" -- including the last-minute addition of the popular but
overplayed touchstone "Born to Run" -- on HBO this Saturday
night, four days after the CDs were released. In addition, those who
attended any of the reunion gigs elsewhere on the tour will, when they
hear this recording, note just how little variation there was in the
staging and set list, down to the wording of Springsteen's sermon during
"Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out."
But the music itself keeps the faith. Springsteen combats banality by
juxtaposing songs from different points in his career and giving other
tunes strikingly different arrangements. For example, the first six
songs are grouped into a pair of thematic triptychs, the first a feisty
declaration of fidelity to family and friends ("My Love Will Not
Let You Down," "Prove It All Night" and "Two Hearts
Are Better Than One"), the second a poignant exegesis on
blue-collar dreams and desperation ("Atlantic City," "Mansion
on the Hill" and "The River"). Then the band takes off
into incandescence, catalyzed by a blistering guitar solo by Nils
Lofgren on the erstwhile ballad "Youngstown," which sets the
stage for stomping versions of "Murder Incorporated" and
"Badlands."
As always, the strength of the E Street Band resides in the piston-like
potency of its rhythm section -- drummer Max Weinberg, bassist Gary
Tallent and pianist Roy Bittan. The passage of time has been least kind
to saxophonist Clarence Clemons. Once Springsteen's most vital foil,
he's now relegated to the occasional clarion burst and some banging on
the tambourine.
Happily middle-aged and decades removed from his Jersey roots,
Springsteen continues to want it both ways, to be timeless or timely as
the situation warrants. This is reflected on the two new songs from
"Live in New York." The first, "Land of Hope and Dreams,"
is an obvious homage to the populism of Woody Guthrie. The second, which
closes the HBO concert, is the bitterly desolate ballad "American
Skin (41 Shots)," a requiem for Amadou Diallo, an unarmed man who
was shot to death in 1999 by New York City police officers. The composer
of "Born to Run" has grown to learn that sometimes you have to
stop traveling on those highway/river analogies, and make a stand,

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