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#e-street-band — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #e-street-band, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. Protest songs at Nationals Park

    It’s been less than 14 years since I last saw Bruce Springsteen play a concert at Nationals Park, but it feels like decades have passed since those innocent days of 2012. The nation and the world have changed in unpleasant and unsettling ways, those years have left their wear on me… and somehow the Boss barely seems to have aged.

    Springsteen’s music, however, resonated in new ways Wednesday night against the backdrop of the second Trump administration’s cruelty, corruption and crime–and Springsteen’s up-to-the-minute denunciations of it, including commentary on this week’s abuses of power at ICE’s Delaney Hall prison outside Newark.

    So “No Surrender,” released in 1984 on an album I got on tape, sounded very much of 2026’s moment in this setting. As Springsteen said towards the end of the night: “No one is coming to save us. So we have to do it ourselves.”

    Likewise, the angry words in “The Promised Land” about being lied to (about what exactly is left to the listener’s imagination) hit in a way they hadn’t before when Springsteen and the E Street Band lit into that 1978 release right after “Streets of Minneapolis”–the song he wrote in January after government agents shot and killed Renée Good and Alex Pretti on those frozen streets.

    That reminder of the crimes committed by Trump’s Department of Homeland Security then made “American Skin (41 Shots)” more arresting than before. People in the Twin Cities probably have some words about how in Trump 2.0’s thuggish version of the United States, you can get killed just for living in your American skin.

    A cover of the Clash’s “Clampdown” on which Springsteen and Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello took turns on vocals itself picked up a little new relevance when heard in a neighborhood that has picked up a reputation, maybe undeserved, as a Republican hangout. As Mick Jones and Joe Strummer wrote in the late 1970s: “No man born with a living soul / can be working for the clampdown.”

    Hearing “Youngstown” later in the set, I had to think the protagonist would have voted for Trump three times in a row. Would that embittered man be rethinking those choices now that Trump’s promises to renew industrial America have proved as empty as his pledges to most people besides January 6 insurrectionists? Or would he still be looking for somebody to blame?

    When many other boldface names in American society keep pretending that this administration is just another presidency, Springsteen is calling out Trump’s regime with the vocabulary it deserves. That is called honesty, and it’s only one of the reasons why his work keeps speaking to me more than four decades after I started listening to it.

    #AmericanSkin #BruceSpringsteen #Clampdown #EStreetBand #lyrics #Music #NationalsPark #NatsPark #NoSurrender #Springsteen #StreetsOfMinneapolis #TheBoss #ThePromisedLand #Trump20 #Youngstown
  2. Protest songs at Nationals Park

    It’s been less than 14 years since I last saw Bruce Springsteen play a concert at Nationals Park, but it feels like decades have passed since those innocent days of 2012. The nation and the world have changed in unpleasant and unsettling ways, those years have left their wear on me… and somehow the Boss barely seems to have aged.

    Springsteen’s music, however, resonated in new ways Wednesday night against the backdrop of the second Trump administration’s cruelty, corruption and crime–and Springsteen’s up-to-the-minute denunciations of it, including commentary on this week’s abuses of power at ICE’s Delaney Hall prison outside Newark.

    So “No Surrender,” released in 1984 on an album I got on tape, sounded very much of 2026’s moment in this setting. As Springsteen said towards the end of the night: “No one is coming to save us. So we have to do it ourselves.”

    Likewise, the angry words in “The Promised Land” about being lied to (about what exactly is left to the listener’s imagination) hit in a way they hadn’t before when Springsteen and the E Street Band lit into that 1978 release right after “Streets of Minneapolis”–the song he wrote in January after government agents shot and killed Renée Good and Alex Pretti on those frozen streets.

    That reminder of the crimes committed by Trump’s Department of Homeland Security then made “American Skin (41 Shots)” more arresting than before. People in the Twin Cities probably have some words about how in Trump 2.0’s thuggish version of the United States, you can get killed just for living in your American skin.

    A cover of the Clash’s “Clampdown” on which Springsteen and Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello took turns on vocals itself picked up a little new relevance when heard in a neighborhood that has picked up a reputation, maybe undeserved, as a Republican hangout. As Mick Jones and Joe Strummer wrote in the late 1970s: “No man born with a living soul / can be working for the clampdown.”

    Hearing “Youngstown” later in the set, I had to think the protagonist would have voted for Trump three times in a row. Would that embittered man be rethinking those choices now that Trump’s promises to renew industrial America have proved as empty as his pledges to most people besides January 6 insurrectionists? Or would he still be looking for somebody to blame?

    When many other boldface names in American society keep pretending that this administration is just another presidency, Springsteen is calling out Trump’s regime with the vocabulary it deserves. That is called honesty, and it’s only one of the reasons why his work keeps speaking to me more than four decades after I started listening to it.

    #AmericanSkin #BruceSpringsteen #Clampdown #EStreetBand #lyrics #Music #NationalsPark #NatsPark #NoSurrender #Springsteen #StreetsOfMinneapolis #TheBoss #ThePromisedLand #Trump20 #Youngstown
  3. "Freeway of Love" is a song by American singer #ArethaFranklin. It was written by #JeffreyCohen and #NaradaMichaelWalden and produced by the latter for Franklin's thirtieth studio album, #WhosZoominWho (1985). The song features a notable contribution from #ClarenceClemons, the saxophonist from #BruceSpringsteen’'s #EStreetBand. #Sylvester, #MarthaWash, and #JeanieTracy provided backup vocals on "Freeway of Love". Released as the album's lead single on June 5, 1985.
    youtube.com/watch?v=Ip_pjb5_fgA

  4. "Freeway of Love" is a song by American singer #ArethaFranklin. It was written by #JeffreyCohen and #NaradaMichaelWalden and produced by the latter for Franklin's thirtieth studio album, #WhosZoominWho (1985). The song features a notable contribution from #ClarenceClemons, the saxophonist from #BruceSpringsteen’'s #EStreetBand. #Sylvester, #MarthaWash, and #JeanieTracy provided backup vocals on "Freeway of Love". Released as the album's lead single on June 5, 1985.
    youtube.com/watch?v=Ip_pjb5_fgA

  5. Hoy se inicia la gira de Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band, Land and Hope & Dreams. Reivindican la democracia perdida y luchan contra Trump.

    Mañana va a estar Youtube mejor que nunca, que hoy Nugs.net en los USA hace streaming en abierto a las 8:30 de Minneapolis, MN de los 2 primeros temas del show.

    Salud.

    #springsteen #EStreetBand

  6. Hoy se inicia la gira de Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band, Land and Hope & Dreams. Reivindican la democracia perdida y luchan contra Trump.

    Mañana va a estar Youtube mejor que nunca, que hoy Nugs.net en los USA hace streaming en abierto a las 8:30 de Minneapolis, MN de los 2 primeros temas del show.

    Salud.

    #springsteen #EStreetBand

  7. "Working on the Highway" is a 1984 song written and performed by #BruceSpringsteen. It was released on the album #BornInTheUSA and has remained a popular concert song for Springsteen and the #EStreetBand. As with some of the other songs on the Born in the U.S.A. album, including "#DownboundTrain" and #theTitleTrack, "Working on the Highway" was originally recorded on January 3, 1982, with the demo tracks that eventually became the #Nebraska album.
    youtube.com/watch?v=sVsIHcEg94U

  8. "Working on the Highway" is a 1984 song written and performed by #BruceSpringsteen. It was released on the album #BornInTheUSA and has remained a popular concert song for Springsteen and the #EStreetBand. As with some of the other songs on the Born in the U.S.A. album, including "#DownboundTrain" and #theTitleTrack, "Working on the Highway" was originally recorded on January 3, 1982, with the demo tracks that eventually became the #Nebraska album.
    youtube.com/watch?v=sVsIHcEg94U

  9. 𝗕𝗿𝘂𝗰𝗲 𝗦𝗽𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴𝘀𝘁𝗲𝗲𝗻 𝗲𝗻 𝗘 𝗦𝘁𝗿𝗲𝗲𝘁 𝗕𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗸𝗼𝗻𝗱𝗶𝗴𝗲𝗻 𝗔𝗺𝗲𝗿𝗶𝗸𝗮𝗮𝗻𝘀𝗲 𝘁𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗮𝗮𝗻

    Bruce Springsteen en de E Street Band hebben de Land of Hope and Dreams-tour aangekondigd. 'The Boss' en zijn band zullen dit voorjaar verschillende stadions en arena's in de Verenigde Staten aandoen. De politiek geladen concertreeks start op 31 maart in Minneapolis en eindigt op 27 mei...

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/55686

    #BruceSpringsteen #EStreetBand #AmerikaanseTour

  10. 𝗕𝗿𝘂𝗰𝗲 𝗦𝗽𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴𝘀𝘁𝗲𝗲𝗻 𝗲𝗻 𝗘 𝗦𝘁𝗿𝗲𝗲𝘁 𝗕𝗮𝗻𝗱 𝗸𝗼𝗻𝗱𝗶𝗴𝗲𝗻 𝗔𝗺𝗲𝗿𝗶𝗸𝗮𝗮𝗻𝘀𝗲 𝘁𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗮𝗮𝗻

    Bruce Springsteen en de E Street Band hebben de Land of Hope and Dreams-tour aangekondigd. 'The Boss' en zijn band zullen dit voorjaar verschillende stadions en arena's in de Verenigde Staten aandoen. De politiek geladen concertreeks start op 31 maart in Minneapolis en eindigt op 27 mei...

    rtl.nl/boulevard/artikel/55686

    #BruceSpringsteen #EStreetBand #AmerikaanseTour

  11. Video cube “Auf Schalke”

    June 2025

    This picture was made before a concert by Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band at the Schalke Arena.
    During the concert, a metal part fell from this cube into the audience.
    A few rock fans suffered minor injuries.

    Apart from that, the concert was great – like all Boss concerts I've seen so far (and there have been quite a few).

    #Schalke #SchalkeArena #BruceSpringsteen #EStreetBand #AufSchalke #Concert #VideoCube #Sky #Clouds #Konzert #Himmel #Wolken

  12. "When we play together, we are more than white and Black"
    From my song "Come Across the Tracks," inspired by the true story of 2 future E Street Band members coming together in de facto segregated Asbury Park in the mid-60s. 🎸🎷

    #BruceSpringsteen #AsburyParkNJ #EStreetBand #RacialIntegration

    youtu.be/-ZtH3Cvbj9I

  13. "When we play together, we are more than white and Black"
    From my song "Come Across the Tracks," inspired by the true story of 2 future E Street Band members coming together in de facto segregated Asbury Park in the mid-60s. 🎸🎷

    #BruceSpringsteen #AsburyParkNJ #EStreetBand #RacialIntegration

    youtu.be/-ZtH3Cvbj9I

  14. "We bought the illusion completely. We thought the Beatles were best friends, the Rolling Stones were best friends, The Who, the Kinks. We didn't know they were having fist fights," he says. "We made that illusion real — and I think that's the appeal of the E Street Band to this day, communicating that friendship." Steven Van Zandt.

    #StevenVanZandt #EStreetBand #BruceSpringsteen

  15. "We bought the illusion completely. We thought the Beatles were best friends, the Rolling Stones were best friends, The Who, the Kinks. We didn't know they were having fist fights," he says. "We made that illusion real — and I think that's the appeal of the E Street Band to this day, communicating that friendship." Steven Van Zandt.

    #StevenVanZandt #EStreetBand #BruceSpringsteen

  16. Today, in 1980, Bruce Springsteen scores his first No.1 U.S. album with 'The River', featuring the single 'Hungry Heart'.
    #BruceSpringsteen #EStreetBand #Music

    youtu.be/ZsADQpw-dD8?si=GeaNtv

  17. Bruce Springsteen (born September 23, 1949) and the E Street Band, February 1977. #BruceSpringsteen #musician #BOTD #EStreetBand

  18. Bruce Springsteen (born September 23, 1949) and the E Street Band, February 1977. #BruceSpringsteen #musician #BOTD #EStreetBand