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Springsteen Ends
Tour With Shows at Shea
Sun Oct 5, 4:36 PM ET
By DAVID BAUDER, Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK - Bruce Springsteen ended a 14-month concert tour near where
he began geographically — a quick pink Cadillac ride from his New Jersey
home — but in a markedly different climate.
Springsteen and his E Street Band, with Bob Dylan as a one-song guest,
wrapped it up Saturday on a Shea Stadium stage, across the Hudson River
from where their tour began in August 2002 in northern New Jersey. In
the intervening months, they performed for more than 2 million people
around the world.
"Welcome to the last dance," Springsteen said to nearly 50,000 fans.
"I'm getting a little misty right about now."
For the New York region, the epicenter of the Boss' popularity, the
Sept. 11 terrorist attacks were a fresher wound when the tour started.
Half of Springsteen's set that first night came from "The Rising," his
album inspired by the event, then approaching its first anniversary.
At the tour's end, it was the war in Iraq that fed a steely resolve
in Springsteen.
He opened with an infrequently performed song, "Code of Silence," featuring
the angry lyrics: "We keep pretending that there's nothing wrong. It's
a code of silence and it can't go on."
Later, Springsteen criticized leaders "playing with the truth during
wartime." Although in recent concerts he's flashed a video clip of President
Bush talking about weapons of mass destruction, Springsteen mentioned
no names Saturday, and carefully noted that such things had happened
in both Republican and Democratic administrations.
"It's a good time to be good, vigilant citizens, demanding accountability
from our leaders," he said. "Taking time to search out for the truth
is the American way. I learned that from Bob Dylan."
Dylan was a surprise guest during Springsteen's first encore, drawing
a huge roar from the crowd. He performed "Highway 61 Revisited" with
the E Street Band before disappearing offstage.
Springsteen seemed more at home with material from "The Rising" than
he had 14 months earlier. The album provided eight of the night's 30
songs. Particularly effective were "My City of Ruins," which Springsteen
began alone on the piano, and "Waitin' on a Sunny Day," which has become
an audience singalong favorite.
Upon reuniting a few years ago, the E Street Band stuck mostly with
material at least 20 years old. Now they're digging deeper into Springsteen's
songbook. Relatively rare cuts that made the setlist on the tour's last
night were "I Wish I Were Blind" and "Tunnel of Love."
Springsteen's tour is likely to fall just short of being the most lucrative
concert tour of all time in North America — a $121.2 million record
set by the Rolling Stones in 1994, according to Pollstar magazine.
It included a stunning 13 stadium dates this summer and fall in the
New York area alone — 10 at Giants Stadium and the final three at Shea
Stadium. The schedule was designed to ensure that anybody who wanted
to see the show could find a ticket.
The crisp autumn air added to Saturday's feeling of finality. A cold
rain ended just as Springsteen and the band took the stage.
The three-hour, 15-minute show ended with Springsteen's attempt to make
a stadium feel like a roadside bar. The stands shook during an old favorite,
"Rosalita," and singer Gary U.S. Bonds joined Springsteen for "Quarter
to Three" and "Twist and Shout." The latter was a nod to the Beatles,
for whom Shea Stadium was a memorable venue four decades ago.
The night ended a few minutes before midnight with band members lined
up onstage, holding hands, singing, "Blood Brothers."
"Til we meet again," Springsteen said, and left with a wave.
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