
26.08.84 Largo, MD, intro to ´Open All Night´
´´Now this....this is a song about the golden roadway of the east,
the New Jersey Turnpike…
and uh, I used to work up in New York City all the time....so I’d always
have to drive home late at night....I had a girlfriend that lived down farther
in south Jersey....and uh.....I used to kind of like the ride, I’d get
out there around 3.30....just start driving, the window down a little bit....and....I
never had too much trouble on the Turnpike but if you get off at exit 8, that’s
the Freehold exit....you’ve gotta....you´ve gotta ride through Heightstown
down 33.... to the shore....out in Heightstown, those guys, they don’t
have nothing to do but sit around and wait for you all night long....so I was
driving home one night and I was thinking about seeing my girlfriend....thinking
about....raiding her refrigerator....seeing my girl....making a peanutbutter-and-jelly
sandwich....seeing my girl and.....making a ham-and-cheese sandwich and.....raiding
the refrigerator and....going back in the refrigerator again, no....and I know
I wasn’t speeding but I must’ve been going suspiciously slow....because
all of a sudden, I see them red lights....I get pulled over....and he comes
up and says ‘License and registration please´....now, I didn’t
have any (chuckles) see, I always forget my wallet....one of them people that
always leaves their wallet home....so I give my name and he goes back and sits
in the patrol car....and he calls me back in about five minutes and kind of
looks at me and he says ‘Uh, hey, uh….are you…are you that
rock ‘n roll singer ?’....so I said ‘Yeah, yeah,’ you
know, ‘That’s me, that´s me’, he says ‘You, uh....you
the guy tha, you wrote that, that, uh, you wrote that ´Born to Run´
song ?’....I said ‘Yeah, yeah, that’s me, yeah, I wrote that
one, that’s me’...he says ‘Yeah, well, you know,’ says,
‘I got some of your albums at home´, I said ‘Yeah ?’,
he said ‘Yeah, and Son, you’re in a lot of trouble’....wait
a minute !....so they took me in and....impounded my truck. and.....but the
weirdest thing about it was I had to go to traffic court.....and when you go
to traffic court, there’s generally three pleas that you can plead, one
is innocent, which hardly nobody pleads that.....the other one is ‘guilty,’
which not many people plead that but the one that almost everybody pleads is
‘guilty with an explanation’....if you sit in traffic court all
night, you figure out that the whole world is guilty with an explanation.....snd
what that means is that you really did what they said you did but now you’ve
got about five minutes to bullshit your way out.....so like I’m, I´m
sitting there and somebody, some guy recognises me and he comes over and he’s
one of them people that when they sit down, they sit so close to you that you
got to, like, lean away and he was drunk and he gets up before me and he was
caught doing 60 on a residential sidestreet and his explanation was that he
was drunk and thought he was on the main highway....is that what they do ?....I
don´t know....so anyway, my turn came up and I got up and they got a little
microphone and....you know, you got to stand there and everybody’s looking
at you, and you feel like a complete jerk....and I said ‘Well, Judge....now,
let me start at the beginning….
(....) So anyway....I thought it was a good story but it didn´t go over
to the judge....so I paid my fine....and then I went out and ran open all night....”
26.08.84 Largo, MD, intro to ´Nebraska´
´´Thanks....I guess, seems like one of the.....one of the big problems
that we´ve got....in the country today is people feeling isolated from
their, from their jobs....from their friends, from their government....you get
a sense of powerlessness sometimes.....I don´t know, some people just
explode....”
26.08.84 Largo, MD, intro to ´Glory Days´
´´This is a song about....old times....now, see....before I....knew
I wanted to play the guitar ....the only other thing I wanted to be was a baseball
player....and so, like, I followed the traditional route, I was in Colonial
League and then Little League and then Babe Ruth League....by the time I was
15, I had amassed.....a quantity of at least 25 hits....but when I got to be
about 15, I got interested in a couple of other things....one of ´em was
music....and so it wasn´t too bad because we used to play, play the gigs
on the weekend and then we used to have the ballgames during the week....but
we had a rain-out one day and they scheduled the ballgame for 8.30 Saturday
morning....that´s too early.... the only thing good about it was that´s
the last time I was up at 8.30 on a Saturday (chuckles)....but I´d been
out the night before and I did this gig and I didn´t wanna go so when
the guys came by house, I told my mother to tell ´em that I was sick and
that I couldn´t come.....and like, you know, every good mother, she goes
downstairs to lie for her son....they come to the door and she goes ´No,
Bruce, he, he got a cold and he can´t come today´, you know, ´He
can´t make it today´ (?) so they go away....I´m laying there
in bed....but then they come back 20 minutes later....and I hear ´em knocking
at the door, talking to my mother and they´re saying....´Oh, Mrs.Springsteen....if
Bruce don´t come to the game, we´re gonna lose because we´ve
only got 8 guys and we´re gonna forfeit the game, he´s gotta come´....so
I´m like laying up there in bed, you know, like this....I always sleep
with my guitar....my girlfriends don´t like it but they get used to it.....sometimes
it sleeps on the outside, though.....and so, so now I gotta make believe like
I´m really sick, you know, I gotta fake and you know do all that, so like
I´m (coughs) trying to make believe that I´m sick and they come
upstairs and they´re, you know, begging me and stuff and I´m one
of those people that ´soon as somebody starts that begging, I can´t
say ´No´.....I can never say ´No´ to people.....so I
get my uniform on and I go down.....and I get out there in rightfield and.....you
know, the game´s going along and I´m just praying that nobody hits
nothing to me.....I´m doing pretty good for about 8 innings.... and all
of a sudden.....gssshhh !....it was at the moment that I decided to give up
my sports career and dedicate the rest of my life to rock and roll....but when
you´re out, you always meet somebody in some bar who comes up and starts
telling you about all those times.... ´Remember the day you were in rightfield,
the ballgame was on the line, you dropped the ball ?´....anyway, are you
ready for it ?....”
26.08.84 Largo, MD, intro to ´My Hometown´
´´Thanks.....this is uh.....I guess everybody kind of.....ends up
in a, in a love-hate-relationship with the place that they grew up in a little
bit....I know when I was.....when I was 16, I couldn´t wait to....the
weekend´d come, I´d get on the bus and go up to New York City, just
to get out of my little town....as I got older, I guess I started to feel like
you can kind of run but you can´t hide and that, uh.....(?) we´re
all a part of something here.....and.....and what happens here in this, in this
country and in your town....happens in our names and we all kind of share the
shame and the glory of the best and the worst of it.....”
26.08.84 Largo, MD, intro to ´No Surrender´
´´Thanks, thanks a lot (chuckles)....oh, here´s a song about....about
trying to find something , I guess, that you can hold on to, that enables you
to make it through the night....I guess I always, I always considered myself
real fortunate ´cause when I was....when I was real young, I found something
that I really loved to do.....and uh.....I had this dream and I get to live
a little bit of my dream every night....so.....this is for Little Steven, wherever
he is out there....he´s got an album out called ´Voice of America´,
it´s a real good record, if you get a chance.....you should pick it up....”
26.08.84 Largo, MD, intro to ´Be True´
´´Here´s a song for, uh, Jackie and her friend (chuckles)
and for, uh, the girl that wrote the words down to this out there (chuckles)
this is the first time we´ll play this one....(chuckles) ....”
26.08.84 Largo, MD, intro to ´Growin´Up´
´´Now, once upon a time.....
(....) Now, there we were....it was a night just like tonight....except it was
a little hotter....and it was raining....and it was back in June....and it was
a long, long time ago....I’d just met Clarence.....he was working in the
gas-station, I was working in the bowling alley.....we had no direction in our
lives ....we were sitting around on the weekends down on Main Street... no place
to go, we were lost....we didn´t have any confidence, we didn´t
have any guidance, we didn´t know what we wanted to do with ourselves.....we
needed some faith....we needed some hope....we needed a couple of girls !....so
Clarence told me that he knew these two young ladies that lived not-too-far
outside of town and he thought he´d be a good buddy and pick up my spirits
and we´d go and visit....so we got in Clarence´s old Oldsmobile
and we started driving south down Route 9.....down through Freehold, down through
Lakewood, down through Toms River...down deep into the pines....we drove for
about two hours, I was wondering when we were gonna get there.....he kept telling
me it was just a little bit farther ....so there we were on this dark backroad,
trees all around us.....and all of a sudden we had a flat.....it happens....so,
it was so scary we didn´t know whether we were gonna just roll up the
window and stay in the car till morning or whether we should go out and check
and see if there was a spare....so we figured we´d do it the fair way,
we´d choose for it.....I won.....but I gave him a second chance to rebut....I
won again !....and then I went out to check to see if we had a spare....anyway,
the trunk was empty but Clarence said that he knew where there was a gas-station....just
on the other side....of those woods ....so deep into the forest we went ....it
was dark, we couldn´t see our hands in front of our faces.....there was
scary noises coming from every place (cheers)....Big Man, now, now you never
heard of no wild animals in New Jersey or nothing ? there ain´t no like
killer chipmunks or....are you sure ? you sure these woods ain´t....do
you think we´re safe walking through these woods here ?....I don´t
know....I think I hear something, I think I hear something.....I think I hear
something..... Big Man....hope it ain´t no Jersey Devil now....Clarence,
hey, Clarence, oh Clarence !....hey, Clarence, where are you, buddy ?....oh
man, was a good thing our fans couldn´t see us there, I´m telling
you (chuckles)....we were so scared....but then something came shooting out
of the sky....and the clouds pulled back from the moon.....and over in the middle
of the forest in the clearing, we saw the answer to our quest....and then.....when
we touched.....”
26.08.84 Largo, MD, middle of ´Rosalita´
´´Ladies and gentlemen....and children of all ages.....I´d
like to introduce to you the illustrious, the industrious, the impervious members
of the E Street Band....beginning at my far left....the only member of the band
with a complete high school diploma, a man who gave up a scholarship at Harvard,
with a PhD in unusual sexual practises to join this tour with the E Street Band,
the educated, the dedicated, Professor Roy Bittan....on the vocals, an alumni
of Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes, the lovely Miss Patti Scialfa....on
the bass guitar, the man that brings you the thunder from down under, who puts
the bass in your face, his mother was a Tallent, his father was a Tallent, Mr.Garry
W.Tallent on the bass....on the drums, we have author, drummer....the man who
wrote The Big Beat, Mighty Max Weinberg on the drums....on the organ, the inimitable,
the inevitable, (?), the irreversable, the unforgivable, the unimaginable, the
incredible, Phantom Dan Federici.....lookout girls, he hates to be alone.....and
on the guitar.... a hometown boy....drumroll, please....Mr.Nils Lofgren (Nils
does his stunt on a trampoline)....and last but not least.....he´s a mean,
lean lovemachine....the only thing I can say is gimme a C-L-A-R-E-N-C-E, what´s
that spell ? ....what´s that spell ?....what´s that spell ?....Clarence
Big Man Clemons on the saxophone ....”
26.08.84 Largo, MD, intro to ´Born to Run´
´´Oh, thank you, I´d like, I´d like to just take a minute
and thank everybody for coming down to the show tonight, thank you very much....yeah,
I know a lot of you guys had to wait in those lines for tickets and I want to
let you know we appreciate it....this is uh....when I was a kid and I grew up....I
heard the music of Elvis Presley, it was kind of....the first thing in my life
that´d ever set my mind free....and uh, I guess, allowed me to dream bigger
dreams than I normally would´ve, coming from where I was coming from....so
I guess his music always said to me ´Let freedom ring´ so that´s
what we´re here for tonight but remember we gotta fight for it every day
(?)....”
Compiled by : Johanna Pirttijärvi