for Storm & Grace
assorted musings, riffs, rants and editorials from a (Cree) wide-eyed warrior
Wednesday, June 6, 2018
Monday, February 26, 2018
Springsteen on Broadway
onstage at Walter Kerr Theater, November 17, 2017 |
The Set Up
My guy heads
into the autumn (if not winter) of his time onstage and headlines his first
Broadway show at the tiny (and I mean, TINY) Walter Kerr Theater. Not a bad
seat in the house in this ancient and refurbished theater nestled on 48th
Street, just off Times Square. I effectively won 2 lotteries to gain an access
code to use the morning tickets went on-sale and I still had to vie with everyone
else who made it that far. But, something about me and the Boss…we’re bound to be together!...I
scored tickets and lo and behold touched down at La Guardia air port 24 hours
before the Friday night performance. We took a room at the
distinguished Barclay Intercontinental Hotel (also on 48th and easy
walking distance to the venue). At last, The Champ sees the Boss in New York
City.
The Show
The performance
was not a concert proper but rather a scripted performance (it IS Broadway after all) compiled of spoken word
sections, inspired by, if not quoted directly, from Springsteen’s acclaimed
biography, released in September 2016 – and 15 songs played randomly on guitar
and piano. No accompanying band, no video screens, a stark and rough-hewn
backdrop set and basic lighting to augment mostly the songs. The audience was
treated to a one-of-a-kind performance quite unlike anything he’s ever done
before. The songs seemed chosen to accentuate the various themes Springsteen presented and were elegantly laid bare in stories with intimate insights on his
roots – familial, geographical and musical. Fans like me know most of the
superficial details of the Boss’s life on the Jersey shore and his meteoric
rise to super-stardom that continues unabated to this day, evidenced by
his sold-out worldwide River Tour of 2016/17 which filled North American arenas
and vast stadiums all over Europe – I saw his most recent show in
Seattle on that tour (and was back in Seattle half a year later to meet and
greet the Boss at a book launch promotion, where again I was lucky enough to be
among the limited few granted access). It was thrilling to see my guy in such
an intimate setting and to hear him tell stories full of poignant insight and
detail. There was even a point where I may have gotten a little choked up and teary,
maybe - I can’t really remember. But sublime versions of My Hometown (on piano), My Father's House, Growin' Up and of course Born to Run made one understand that a good song is timeless and a great performer breathes new life into such songs, every night.
Thanks Boss,
you always come through.
Oh yeah, New
York!...I’ll do a separate post on it later.
©2018 Champsteen Publishing
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