
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Adam Raised a Cain´
´´Tack....god kväll....det är trevligt att vara tillbak
i Stockholm.....that was it, that was all my Swedish right there (chuckles)
it wasn´t bad though (chuckles)....yeah, it´s nice to be back, uh,
this is where I usually give my little disclaimer, it´s probably not necessary
tonight but, uh, the music tonight´s real quiet so if anybody around you´s
making too much noise, it´s a community event, feel free to band together
and politely say ´Shut the fuck up´, alright (chuckles)....with
a smile on your face of course (chuckles)....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Straight Time´
´´Thank you....thanks a lot....this is, uh.....this next song is
a song about, uh....trying to be new, you know, trying to....oh, change the
way you´ve lived, lived a good deal of your life, it´s about a fellow
who gets out of prison and....he´s trying to find a way to fit himself
back into his family and, and back into the world at large and, uh....to do
that you gotta leave, leave a lot of what felt like you behind you....your old
habits....you know, this is, I guess, about how some, sometimes what´s
the worst in you is the thing that you think makes you feel most alive....this
is ´Straight Time´....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Highway 29´
´´Thank you....thanks a lot, this is a song about, uh, self-knowledge....which
is kind of a funny thing because....the less self-knowledge you have, the more
you think you have, you see....that´s its twisted blessing, you know (chuckles)
so, uh....this is a song about little self-knowledge coming too late.....also
one of the few pop songs with a shoesalesman as the protagonist....kind of proud
of it (people clap) that´s the shoesalesmen in the crowd out there, I
guess (chuckles) here we go....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´It´s the Little Things That
Count´
´´Alright, I got a question for you....uh, got a song coming up
here, gonna do a song about sex or a song about TV-commercials, what do you
think ? (yells) alright, let´s, let´s take a little vote here, uh,
a song about sex, let´s hear it (huge cheer) a song about TV-commercials,
let´s hear it (less cheer) that´s good, you see, in the United States
we think Swedish, Sweden is the home of wild and uninhibited sex so you´re
(chuckles) you´ve proven that one (chuckles) sex ! (huge cheer) TV-commercials
! (less cheer) now gimme the other guitar.... it´s good to know there´s
some things you can count on this world, goddamn, alright (chuckles)...alright,
so....so I´m in my mother´s Cadillac, alright, and I´m, I´m
in a town that I can´t mention....on a freeway that can´t be named....uh,
and I´m going to a buddy of mine´s, mine´s house for dinner,
he, uh, I´m gonna be late ´cause I´m stuck in traffic so I
have to pull off the freeway and practise some new-found maturity by calling
him on the phone and telling him I´m gonna be late, I pull off, uh, but
I´m in an industrial area, there doesn´t seem to be any, there´s
no, nothing, there´s no houses or, or apartments, it seems just an endless
street of factories but then on one little corner I see a little bar....I park
the Cadillac, I go in the bar....I say ´Where´s the payphone ?´,
they point me to the back but I go in my pocket and I only got 20 bucks so I
go to the bartender and I say ´Gee, I gotta use the phone, do you have
change for a 20 ?´ and he says, uh, ´Well, we don´t give any
change around here´...so I said, well, you know, ´Do you mean like
that you don´t or nobody in the bar gives change or do you mean like the
whole neighbourhood has gotten together somehow and said ´Fuck ´em,
no more change if they stop ?´...uh....so, uh.....watching this there´s
a, there´s a waitress watching this go down and she doesn´t say
anything, she just comes up to me and goes like this and in-between her fingers
she holds up a quarter....I take the quarter, I say ´Thank you´,
I go to the payphone, put the money in but it seems that I´m just a little
bit out of the area code and it´s a 50-cent call so (chuckles) so, uh.....I,
I turn to her and I say ´Gee, you know, it´s, it´s a 50-cent
phonecall´ and she just says ´Well, that´s too bad´,
you know (chuckles) but, uh....but, uh, but she says ´Gee, but I´ll
give you another quarter if you give me a ride home´ (first no crowd response,
then the crowd slowly gets it and Bruce chuckles) that´s the story (people
clap) wait a minute, you haven´t heard this song yet, it might be a piece
of shit, you don´t know (chuckles) alright....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Sell It and They Will Come´
´´Alright (cheers)(chuckles) alright, if you keep that up and I´ll
be forced to play the one about the TV-commercials, you see (chuckles) alright....there´s
a little sex in this one too....I don´t know if they have these commercials
over here, I think that they do and for that I have to deeply apologise....it´s
a national embarrassment but hey, that´s how we got where we are, alright
(chuckles) alright, so, uh....alright....I´m not even gonna explain this
one, it´s gonna all be pretty self-explanatory (chuckles)....it´s
very fitting that it goes from sex to television.... ´don´t you
think ? (chuckles)....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Brothers Under the Bridges´
(following ´Sell It and They Will Come´)
´´Yeah....yes indeed....that´s my latest masterpiece, goddammit
(chuckles) there it is, hey.... you´re being entertained now (chuckles)....this
is a song, it´s, uh....set in San Gabriel Mountains outside of Los Angeles
and there was a group of homeless Vietnam Vets that set, set a camp up out there....in
trying to get out of the city....and, uh.....one of them has a, it´s a
story about one of them that has a grown daughter that he hasn´t seen
and she comes looking for her father out there in the mountains and what he,
uh....and this is what he says to her, this is called ´Brothers Under
the Bridges´....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Dry Lightning´
´´Thank you....thanks, here´s another....here´s another
song about, uh....men and women, man och kvinna....love, sex....kärlek
(chuckles) yeah, mycket svårt (chuckles) men viktigt (chuckles)....you
know what I´m talking about there (chuckles)....this is a song about,
uh, everybody´s been in those relationships where you´re really
trying....you think you´re trying anyway....but you´re not quite
getting there....this is called ´Dry Lightning´....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Youngstown´
´´Thank you....about a month and a half ago we were in, uh....I
came through Youngstown, Ohio, which is, uh, was one of the big centers of the
steel industry in the States for the first part of the century....and uh....it
was a great night, it was, uh.....I guess the mills closed down around late
70´s, early 80´s, the town lost about two-thirds of its population,
thousands and thousands of jobs....and uh....you know, when you go there now
everybody had a brother and everybody had a father, everybody had a grandfather....that
all those shutdown affected so this is a song about, uh....people that, you
know, built the buildings that we lived in and the bridges that we crossed and,
and really what we....what we know of as America, gave their sons and daughters
to our wars and we´re considered expendable....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Sinaloa Cowboys´
´´That´s Kevin Buell....my, uh....guitar guy, financial advisor....sexual
counsellor, guru, uh, mystery keyboardist, yeah....we´re up here on the
Lonely Guy Tour (chuckles) we should´ve called it that (chuckles) uh....here´s
a song that, uh....the next four songs are actually set on the....uh....on the
California-Mexico border, out in Central California too, uh.....I was staying
in this little motel in this little Arizona town.....just spending the night
and it was one of those little four-corner desert towns where there´s
a gas-station, uh, a grocery store, a motel and, of course a bar and, and, I
was sitting outside....with some friends of mine and these two Mexican men came
in from the west and, uh, one was a young kid and one was a little older fellow....he
started looking over our motorcycles and we started talking and he, uh, he said
he´d had a younger brother who´d died in a motorcycle accident....in
Southern California a couple months earlier....and he sat and he talked about
his....brother for an hour....and uh, there was something in his voice that
always stayed with me....I think that particularly once you have your kids,
you know, that first line of family always feels like it´s to protect,
you know, you´re always thinking....to protect and to take care of them
and the ones that come after you....and when that breaks down.....that, uh,
I don´t know, the loss that you feel, that you must feel....so, uh, this
is a song about, uh, two brothers that get caught up in the Central California
drug trade, the Mexican drug gangs come up and hire migrant workers to work
in the drug labs, they´re the ones that usually get blown up or busted
by the DEA....so, uh.... when I wrote this, I had, I, I heard my mysterious
friend´s voice in my head so I dedicate this every night to him, this
is called ´Sinaloa Cowboys´....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´The Line´
´´Thanks, this is, uh, this is a song that set at the, uh....San
Diego border station where you get a lot of....young guys coming out of the
army and they go to work for the border patrol ....and uh....(?)....a Mexican
writer Carlos Fuentes said, you know, that California was Mexico till about
1840, 48 and so the border is more like a scar than a border, so these guys
go to work down there and I think it´s a real....it´s a hard job
knowing where the, where the line always is....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Balboa Park´
´´Thanks....thanks, this next song is a song about kids...kids are
funny, you know, before you have your own.....and your friends come over, if
they just had ´em and they come over and sit down and they go on and on
and on....and you gotta like, you know, you gotta feign amazement, you know,
they go ´Yeah, he took his first piss and it went right in the bowl´....
and you go ´Well, oh, quick, get Guinness Records on (chuckles) get ´em
on the phone´ (chuckles) so, you know, but what´s worse is sort
of if they bring ´em along, you know, like I
lived alone for 30 years....I don’t like people touching my stuff (chuckles)
you know, and, uh....so they bring ´em along and they start, like, you
know, running wild through your house or something and you don´t wanna
say anything because you know how it is yelling at somebody else´s kid,
you know, you don´t like to do that so it always ends up being ´Oh,
is that expensive ?....is that your guitar ?´ (chuckles) but then, you
know, then you have your own and you get to seek out your own revenge, you know
(chuckles) but, uh....aah, it´s funny, people always say ´Hey, what´s
the difference in your life between, you know, when you had ´em and you
didn’t have ´em ?´....and, uh, I guess the main difference
that I figured out....is sort of that kids are like, they´re like these
open, they have this open window onto the grace that´s in the world and....and
they sort of, they just have this access to it and they bring it into your life,
you know, every day, by just being there, I guess, and I think that as you grow
older that that, that grace, that window you have onto that grace, it closes
up, you know, either as the world sort of beats you up or, it seems to shut
down and shut down and for some people, I guess, closes entirely....which, I
think, iwhy people seek out, uh, you know, films and, and, and novels and go
to see art and, and unusual sexual practices, that also (?)(chuckles) to get
that grace back into your life (chuckles) so, it´s like, yeah, hey, it´sm
uh, so, but the kids, they bring it with ´em when they come, one fashion
or another...so this is a song about lost kids, kids 10,11, 12, 13 years old
down along the border, they come over the river from Tijuana and they´re
running dope or they end up selling themselves in this place called Balboa Park....sort
of what happens when, uh, that grace is violated....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Across the Border´
´´Thanks, uh, when I was about 20, 26 years old, a friend of mine
showed me John Ford´s Grapes of Wrath and uh....it was a film that really
resonated....throughout the whole rest of my life, you know, and I think it
was because it asked a real, real fundamental question that we sort of ask and
answer every day by our....you know, by our actions, by what we do, the way
we live, it was a question that, the basic question I thought was, you know,
are we all individual souls....you know, are we all sort....do we all hold our
own salvation, or whatever you wanna call it, separately from everybody else
or are we....or are all those souls linked together and that we rise and fall
collectively in some fashion....and what does that mean.....I think that....at
the end of the film there´s a scene where Tom Joad´s killed a security
guard and he´s....the police are coming for him and he knows he´s
gonna, he´s gonna have to leave his family, he´s gonna have to tell
his mother that after she´s lost her home, they´ve come thousands
of miles and they, they have nothing and he knows he´s gonna have to tell
her that, after all that she´s lost, that she´s gonna have to lose
her son now....but before this, before this scene there´s a dance scene
that´s really, it´s very lovely, very lovely....and for me, it was
always Ford holding out the possibility of beauty in sort of a brutal world
because where there´s beauty, there´s always hope and where there´s
hope, that leads to some idea of, whatever, divine love or brotherhood or whatever
you wanna call it....so after this dance scene....Tom slips into his mother´s
tent and touches her very gently and wakes her up and says ´Mama, I gotta
go´....and they step out underneath these trees....and she says ´Well,
Tommy, you know, I knew, I knew this day would come, uh....but how am I gonna
know how you are, how am I gonna know if you´re alive, you know, if my
son is well....will I ever see you again ?´....and he says, uh, says ´Well,
Ma, all I know is I gotta go out and I gotta kick around and I gotta see what´s
wrong and I gotta see if there´s anything that I can do to make it right....and
you´ll see me because at night, you know, I´ll be in that darkness
that´s all around you when you´re sleeping, you´ll see me.....and
I´ll be in the way that men´s voices sound when they´re angry
and when they´re yelling, you´ll see me....and I´ll be in
the way that kids sound when they´re coming in and there´s food
on the table and they have a home, someplace where they know that they´re
safe and they´re protected´, he says ´You´ll see me´
....then he disappears off into the darkness....and the next scene is the Joads
looking for work, heading north and, uh, the father says ´Well, Tommy´s
gone, what are we gonna do ?´ ....and the mother just says ´What
we´re gonna do....we´re just gonna keep on going....we´re
gonna keep on going´....uh, so this is a song, I guess, about the mystery
of human nature.... and about that question.....how people keep on going....and
what they find.....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´This Hard Land´
´´(tunes his guitar) There it is, alright, here´s a song about
faith, hope, brotherhood, sisterhood....the pursuit of happiness (chuckles)
uh, tequila, friendship, every Western I ever saw....´´
13.03.96 Stockholm, Sweden, intro to ´Galveston Bay´
´´Thank you....oh, thanks, let me just take a second and, and say
thank you, you´ve just been a fabulous audience, thank you very much,
uh....it´s, uh....this is music that, that means a lot to me and, and,
uh....uh, being able to come out here and do this like this is a, is a great
gift that you give me and I appreciate it very much, thank you....this is a....this
is a song that´s based on a, uh, based on an incident that happened in
the, uh, Gulf Coast of Texas in the mid-80´s, uh.....what you had was
at the end of....the Vietnam War, there was a....uh, a whole, large amount,
number of refugees that came over and settled in the Gulf Coast....and uh....they
went into the fishing industry and there ended up being a lot of tension between
the Vietnamese fishermen and the Texas fishermen....and.....I guess....part
of it´s a song about..... I don´t know, let the music do the talking
(chuckles)....´´
Compiled by : Johanna Pirttijärvi