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Review: Springsteen in legendary form in San Jose

By Jim Harrington
The Oakland Tribune
April 25, 2012


Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band perform at the HP Pavilion as part of the 2012 Wrecking Ball Tour on Tuesday April 24, 2012 in San Jose, Calif. (Susan Tripp Pollard/Staff)
So much has changed.

The set lists are different, as are some of the musicians performing them. The star has turned 62. Seventeen studio albums -- each seemingly representing a different musical vibe, style and approach -- have come and gone.

One thing, however, remains defiantly the same for Bruce Springsteen and the E Street band: their objective.

"We are here on the same mission we've pursued night after night, year after year," Springsteen said near the start of his band's show Tuesday in San Jose. "We are here to manifest the joyous power of rock 'n' roll music and shoot it straight into your heart. We want you to wake up tomorrow morning and say, 'What the (expletive) happened to me? I feel different.' "

What happened to the approximately 15,000 fans who filled HP Pavilion to capacity was nothing less than the full-throttle E Street Band experience. It was three hours of purely intoxicating rock, which likely did leave some people feeling a bit hung over the next morning -- in a good way.

The performance was remarkable basically from start to finish. It was one of those nights when Springsteen -- arguably the most acclaimed live act in rock history -- actually managed to surpass his own legend. He was fiery, passionate and very much in control, working the crowd with the conviction and focus of a preacher in a revival tent.

He accomplished all that despite the fact that longtime sideman Clarence Clemons, Springsteen's tenor sax player since 1972, wasn't there. Clemons died in June, leaving a major hole in the E Street Band that Springsteen wisely decided not to fill in conventional fashion. It would have been a disservice to everyone involved to hire just another saxophonist, so Springsteen enlisted a five-piece horn section that includes Clemons' nephew, Jake Clemons, as one of the group's two saxophonists.

The horn section provided plenty of punch to the 26-song set, which gave fans plenty of reasons to scream "Bruuuuuuuuce!" The star of the evening was feeling frisky -- far friskier than any 62-year-old rock star has the right to be -- as he led his locomotive of a band through such all-time fan favorites as "Badlands," "Thunder Road" and "Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)."

It's pointless to try to single out individual songs as highlights -- given that there were 26 worthy candidates. Yet, there were moments that just seemed like rock 'n' roll incarnate -- like when drummer Max Weinberg would propel an anthem to ridiculous heights or when Springsteen, Steven Van Zandt and Nils Lofgren would trade ferocious guitar riffs.

What a show.

In retrospect, we should have seen this coming -- and, no doubt, some fans did. Springsteen always seems to shine brightest when we need him the most. His ability to speak to the times -- such as on 1984's politically charged "Born in the U.S.A." and the post-9/11 effort "The Rising" -- is, perhaps more than anything else, why he deserves to be called "the Boss."

His latest album, "Wrecking Ball," is a pull-no-punches reaction to the hard times that surround us. It's a dark, brooding piece that many critics are hailing as one of the Boss' best.

Springsteen included a number of "Wrecking Ball" tracks in Tuesday's set, opening with a double shot of "We Take Care of Our Own" and the album's great title track, and the reception was tremendous. The last time we saw a batch of new Boss material so eagerly embraced was on 2002's The Rising tour.

After closing the main set with the immortal "Thunder Road," the whole 16-piece band returned for a six-song encore that seemed to get better with each number. Springsteen took no prisoners as he hustled his way through dynamic versions of "Out in the Street," "Born to Run," Dancing in the Dark" and others. The band ended the show with a touching video tribute to Clemons on "Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out," leaving concertgoers with the joyous power of rock 'n' roll still beating in their hearts.


Setlist:
We Take Care of Our Own
Wrecking Ball
Badlands
Death to My Hometown
My City of Ruins
Thundercrack
Jack of All Trades
Murder Incorporated
Johnny 99
My Love Will Not Let You Down
Shackled & Drawn
Waitin' on a Sunny Day
The Promised Land
Backstreets
American Skin (41 Shots)
Apollo Medley
The Rising
Lonesome Day
We Are Alive
Thunder Road
* * *
Rocky Ground (with Michelle Moore)
Out in the Street
Born to Run
Dancing in the Dark
Rosalita
Tenth Avenue Freeze-out

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