
09.07.78 San Diego, CA, intro to ‘The Promised Land’ (following
‘For You’)
‘‘That song was written about 1973, it was on our first album....did
they ship the first album out here or not, ‘Greetings From Asbury Park’
? (?)....I asked my record company once how I was doing in San Diego....they
said ‘We don’t send ‘em out there, too far’ (chuckles)....I’ll
be right back (long pause)....here’s a song about waiting for that right
moment....to take your shot and uh....waiting for about.....15 years (?) (chuckles)....this
is, uh, this is for everybody who’s working all day in their daddy’s
garage, here’s ‘Promised Land’....”
09.07.78 San Diego, CA, intro to ‘Prove It All Night’
‘‘I got in a cab in New York City about....six months ago....and
in New York, the cab drivers....they got like....they have a running monologue,
don’t matter if somebody’s in the cab or if nobody´s in the
cab....and I got in with this guy who was about....I guess 45 years old....and
he started ranting and raving to me about....how all day long he’s gotta
prove it to his boss....at night he’s gotta go home and prove it to his
wife....on the weekends he’s gotta prove it to his kids....and uh.....you
just gotta prove it all night, I guess....”
09.07.78 San Diego, CA, intro to ‘Racing in the Street’
‘‘Tom...Tom Waits wrote a beautiful song called ‘San Diego
Serenade’....and if you haven’t heard it and you live in San Diego,
you ought to go out and hear it....it’s on an album called ‘The
Heart of Saturday Night’...and uh....this is for anyone’s ol’55
and for all the San Diego carboys, this is ‘Racing in the Street’....”
09.07.78 San Diego, CA, middle of ‘Growin’Up’
‘‘I went....to see, uh....my little sister, she´s 16 years
old, you know....and I said to her ‘Did you ever hear, did you ever hear
of Buddy Holly?’...and she said ‘Yeah (?), I heard some of his songs’,
so I said ‘Will you come with me ?’ and we went out, I took her
out to see a movie, it’s called ‘Buddy Holly Story’ and uh....if
you haven’t seen it, you should go and see it because, like, for me Buddy
Holly was always one of my...just one of the great inspirations, you know, and
I could never picture him doing anything but standing there smiling, holding
that Fender Stratocaster, with the little bowtie....he was singing ‘That’ll
Be the Day’.....(?)....and I went down to this movie and all of a sudden
Buddy Holly was moving, you know, and....it made him, it made him very, made
him....very real for me, made him much more human, you know, and there was a
scene where he was sitting at the table with his....with his parents and they’re,
uh, telling him, I guess this scene happened in every, in every household, every....kid
across the nation, I know it happened in mine, I’m sitting there with
my parents across the table and they’re saying ‘Bruce....it’s
time you put down that guitar and started doing something serious with yourself,
you know’...and they didn’t know that I was real serious, you know
(chuckles) ....they couldn’t figure out how you could do anything with
that, you know....and this went on and on and on until finally they moved away
from me (chuckles)....they moved out here to California and I stayed in New
Jersey (chuckles)....but I can always remember my father yelling at me, telling
me to turn down that goddamn guitar....he thought everything in my room was
the same make : I had a goddamn guitar, I had a goddamn stereo, ‘Turn
down the goddamn radio!’ and ‘Stop playing that goddamn record!’
(chuckles)....it was always like (?), I don’t know...so anyway...my mother,
she got real serious one day and she said ‘Well, you better, you better
go see the priest now because we can’t get through to you’, my mother
was like ‘Italian City’, you know, and my father was Irish...and
they sent me to, sent me over to the rectory, you know, and I go over to the
rectory and I talk with the priest and we talk for a little while....and uh,
my father wanted me to be a lawyer and my mother wanted me to be an author and
write books and stuff....and I said, I told the priest that I wanted to play
the guitar, he said ‘Well....you gotta forget about that, man, God, he
don´t dig no rock and roll, you know’ (chuckles), it’s like....you
better go talk to him about this because this is too big, I can´t make
a decision on this, so I remember it was late one night, Clarence drove me outside
of town ....and I went up on this hill...and I got down...on my knees and I
said ‘Now, how am I gonna talk to God about this ?’ and I said ‘Well’....I
said ‘God, now, my mother, she wants me to be an author and write books,
my father, he wants me to be a lawyer....and they both think, they think that
like....they say that I should get a little something, little something in my
life, I should have something to fall back on and get a little something but
I don’t think they understand that I don’t want a little something,
that I want it all, you know’....and then it was real quiet for a little
while and I heard some thunder (Max pounds his drums)...and there was a little
lightning....gimme some lightning....and then from out of the clouds came three
words....and it just said : ‘Let It Rock !’....”
Compiled by : Johanna Pirttijärvi