Bruce Springsteen Tickets
Find your Bruce Springsteen Tickets Here
Bruce Frederick Joseph Springsteen (born September 23, 1949), nicknamed "The Boss", is an American singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist who records and tours with the E Street Band. Springsteen is widely known for his brand of heartland rock, poetic lyrics, Americana sentiments centered on his native New Jersey and his lengthy and energetic stage performances, with concerts from the 1970s to the present decade running up to an uninterrupted 250 minutes in length.
Bruce Springsteen Tickets
Springsteen's recordings have included both commercially accessible rock albums and more somber folk-oriented works. His most successful studio albums, Born in the U.S.A. and Born to Run, showcase a talent for finding grandeur in the struggles of daily American life; he has sold more than 65 million albums in the United States and more than 120 million worldwide[3] and he has earned numerous awards for his work, including 20 Grammy Awards, two Golden Globes and an Academy Award. In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked him as the 23rd Greatest Artist of all time and the 96th Greatest Guitarist of all time on their latest list
1/3
Bruce Springsteen Video
Where to buy Bruce Springsteen Tickets ? You can buy it here :
Bruce Springsteen Tickets Concert News After all these decades, Bruce Springsteen can still make a collection of more than 19,000 fans in a harness racetrack's busy infield feel like the inside of a joyous revival tent. Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band were ready for a big, old time Wednesday night a Vernon Downs. When Springsteen made it to the stage at precisely 8:01 p.m., he signaled to his trumpet player to get things off on a traditional note. And so all were called to be ready by the familiar sound of the call to post. A near-full moon shined down from the rear side of the field as red lined the bottom of the sky from the setting sun to the right on the mammoth stage as New Jersey's famous rocker and his 15-piece band started the long, shining evening with his classic "Out in the Street." The Boss' voice was a tad craggy, but the crowd was ready to fill in with the requisite "oh-oh-oh-oh-ohs" when Springsteen got ready to belt "I walk the way I want to walk." Set against a stage big enough to fully feel the end of an NFL stadium, Springsteen looked to the naked eye like one of those little plastic electric football men set down on the 50-yard-line of a regulation field. The three huge video screens, the biggest of which filled in the entire stage backdrop behind the musicians, made sure he looked bigger than life to everybody in the joint. It was obvious that Springsteen was ready to have grand time. He quickly moved down to shake hands with fans in the pit in front of the stage before taking guitarists Little Stevie Van Zant and Nils Lofgren and the rest of the E Street crew into another golden oldie, "It's Hard to Be a Saint in the City." And, bam, all the rust was shaken off Springsteen's voice, and it could have been 1976 all over again. Then he began shaping the set list by the signs he spotted held by fans. "Hungry Heart" began with crowd lustily singing the entire first, wife-and-kids-in-Baltimore-jack verse all on its own. Before "Stand On It," Springsteen reminded the band, "I think we're in the key of D, boys." "I'm a Rocker" became an emphatic statement. And so it wasn't until song No. 6 that Springsteen led the band into a song from the this year's album. "We Take Care of Our Own" sounded sad yet hopeful. Title cut "Wrecking Ball" allowed Springsteen give voice to his pride, of his home state, of his spirit, of the way he refuses to give in an inch to age and the world that beats down relentlessly on everybody in this world of ours. Fiddler Soozie Tyrell added jump to "Death to My Hometown," and one and all amped up for the classic "Darkness on the Edge of Town." Then, finally, nine songs down, Springsteen paused to take off his guitar and deliver one of his trademark concert speeches. The E Street horns, including saxophonist Jake Clemons, played sweetly in the background as Springsteen talked about going on after losing people we love. "This is a song about living with ghosts," he said. "Which is part of the art of living." Of course, the E Street Band last year lost saxophone giant Clarence Clemons -- yes, Jake got to play some of his
2/3
uncle's sweetest lines throughout the evening -- and before that, keyboardist Danny Federici. From loss, Springsteen said, one learns to appreciate life, to make the most out of time, to never take a day for granted. Toward the end of "My City's in Ruins," drummer Mighty Max Weinberg gave everybody dancing under the stars plenty of space between beats to look to the sky and remember their own loved ones that have left this Earth." Then it back to the delicious stew of old favorites, delved from the signs Springsteen scarfed up from the pit -- including a helacious, revved up version of "Open All Night" -- and Springsteen's inner bandleader. "E Street Shuffle," all cranked up. "Prove It All Night," extra steamy. "Darlington County," in honor of Dodge's that go fast. Springsteen and all those great musicians were in top form. Before a dynamic one-two encore punch of "Thunder Road" and "Born to Run," the classy Springsteen made sure to compliment all the volunteers collecting donations for the Food Bank of Central New York. Bruce Springsteen concert leaves traffic bumper-to-bumper VERNON -Roads were inundated with some 30,000 people traveling to Vernon Downs for the Bruce Springsteen Band concert Wednesday evening. The New York State Department of Transportation even issued a travel advisory Tuesday warning drivers of the expected congestion in the area. Wednesday's Notah Begay III Foundation Golf Tournament at Turning Stone's Atunyote Golf Club on Route 31 also slowed traffic on routes 365, 31 and 5 and near exits 32 and 33 on the Thruway earlier in the day Wednesday. With parking lots opening at noon and concert-goers able to enter the venue at 5 p.m. for the 7:30 p.m. performance, traffic was slow-going and even stop-and-go at points on Route 5, Youngs Road, Peterboro Road and surrounding streets. Temporary no parking signs were posted along both sides of neighboring roads and Oneida County Sheriff's deputies and New York State Police officers were at intersections along routes to the venue to control traffic. Concert-goers were directed to park on Vernon Downs grounds surrounding their campus and in fields off Youngs Road. Pedestrian crossings were set up to allow them to cross the road to pathways leading to the concert area, which also slowed traffic on Youngs Road. Traffic on Peterboro Road as people traveled to Vernon Downs from Youngs Road was also slow moving. Several homeowners along Stuhlman Road offered parking for $10 and $20 even though concert parking on Vernon Downs grounds was included in ticket prices. Neighbors within earshot of the concert set up chairs on their lawns to listen in for free. State Police were set up at the intersection of routes 13 and 5 directing traffic. As it does with major events in its jurisdiction, the Oneida County Sheriff's Department set up a command post at Route 5 and Stuhlman Road for deputies to control traffic with the help of the State Police. Oneida County Sheriff Rob Maciol said the command post allowed deputies to coordinate the monitoring of traffic. The cost of their work will be reimbursed by the concert promoters, he said. Police presence was important to ensure motorists traveling through the area and those coming to and from the concert were able to do so safely, he said, and to make sure traffic flowed smoothly. Vernon Police were responsible for patrolling the actual event. With nearly 30 officers, some from its department and some brought in from others, they patrolled the crowds and the grounds.
Bruce Springsteen Tickets
3/3 Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)