The
Working on a Dream Tour was a
concert tour by
Bruce Springsteen and the
E Street Band, which began in April 2009 and
ended in November 2009. It followed the late January 2009 release
of the album
Working on a
Dream.
Itinerary
The tour was envisioned by the Springsteen camp as not being "a
total marathon", and was thus considerably shorter than usual for
Springsteen, especially in
North
America, where only 26 stops were planned.
It did include a date
in Oklahoma
, where
Springsteen had not played in three decades and where officials at
Tulsa
's BOK
Center
had been trying to lure Springsteen for
years.
On
February 23, 2009, it was confirmed that Springsteen would be
headlining the Saturday night at Glastonbury festival
in June of the same year.Springsteen also
signed up for the Pinkpop Festival
in the Netherlands and the Bonnaroo Music Festival in the U.S.;
playing such festivals was a departure from his normal routing, and
challenged him with audiences that were not pre-selected with his
fans.
One
continuing subplot with the tour's scheduling was E Street drummer
Max Weinberg's availability vis à vis
his job as The Max Weinberg 7
bandleader for Conan O'Brien, given
that during the first half of 2009 Late Night with Conan
O'Brien in New
York
was ending and The Tonight Show with Conan
O'Brien in Los
Angeles
was beginning. The mid-January announcement
that
Late Night would continue until February 20 precluded
any notion of starting the tour immediately following Springsteen's
appearance at
Super Bowl XLIII, in
addition to the band feeling that they had just gotten off the
Magic Tour and "Wait, let’s stop a minute." Meanwhile, the June 1
start date of
The Tonight Show posed problems for
Weinberg's continued presence on the tour. O'Brien told a
Variety reporter at the
time of the announcement that he hoped that Weinberg would follow
him to Los Angeles and that he also hoped an arrangement could be
worked out to let Weinberg go on the road with Springsteen as had
been done for past tours. At
NBC, the
coexistence between the drummer's two bosses was known as the
Weinberg-Springsteen Rule, and was not typically extended to other
talent at the network. In a high-profile
Rolling Stone cover story interview,
Springsteen was vague about the matter: "All I know is this – it's
all gonna work out, one way or another. If people wanna come out
and see the E Street Band, they'll be able to come out and see the
E Street Band." And whether Weinberg would stay with O'Brien and
move or not was a subject of conflicting news reports until O'Brien
confirmed on February 18 that Weinberg and the band were indeed
coming with him. A few days later, E Streeter
Steven Van Zandt said of Weinberg's
availability for the post-June 1, European leg: “We’re still
figuring that out. We’ll see. I think Max will be there for most of
it. ... I know he was very much trying to figure it out.” Weinberg
had not missed an E Street Band show since joining the outfit in
1974, and Van Zandt said that no amount of rehearsal by another
drummer could replace Weinberg's intuitive understanding of
Springsteen's performance gambits.
As had
been the practice since the Reunion
Tour in 1999, Springsteen and the band began rehearsals at
Asbury Park
Convention Hall
. Beginning on March 11, some of the
Springsteen faithful listened outside closed doors for what songs
and arrangements the tour might bring.
The presence of Max
Weinberg's 18-year-old son Jay, a
freshman at Stevens Institute of Technology
and also a drummer, at rehearsals indicated that he
might be the one to replace his father for European leg shows where
Tonight Show duties came into play. On one occasion
on the
Magic Tour,
Jay Weinberg had sat in on drums for "
Born to Run". This was confirmed by
Springsteen on March 20, who said that Jay Weinberg would be
drumming at a small number of shows during the tour. Springsteen
added, "Once again, I want to express my appreciation to Conan
O'Brien, and everyone on his team, for making it possible for Max
to continue to do double duty for both us and for him. We promise
to return him in one piece." Van Zandt said, "I’ve been avoiding
this question for weeks! Thank God they finally announced it. We
already did three days of rehearsals. Jay's a fantastic drummer.
It’s in the Weinberg DNA."
By the time the American first leg was well underway, there was
speculation of more American dates to come in the late summer and
fall, but E Street guitarist
Nils
Lofgren said that Springsteen and wife
Patti Scialfa would make a decision later
on.
On May 21,
2009, while playing at the Izod Center
, Springsteen announced he would be playing three
dates at next-door Giants
Stadium
in late September and early October, saying the
band would "say goodbye to old Giants Stadium ... Before
they bring the wrecking ball, the wrecking crew is coming back!"
The video screens on stage showed a huge banner being hung on the
stadium, which was the forerunner of heavy advertising for the
shows on local television. They sold out quickly, and two more
dates were added, finishing on October 9. These were scheduled to
be the last concerts ever at the stadium. The final show sold out
quickly but not the one before it. Subsequent U.S. tour dates in
the late summer began to be announced as well, focusing on outdoor
amphitheaters in the Northeast. In
mid-July, a further extension to the U.S. tour was announced,
adding shows in indoor arenas through November.
The
November 22, 2009 performance in Buffalo, New York
was slated as the tour's last. After that
the E Street Band was expected to take a one to two year hiatus,
while Springsteen worked on another project.
The
October 26, 2009 show in Kansas City, Missouri
was canceled an hour before its scheduled start
time due to the death of Lenny Sullivan, Springsteen's cousin and
assistant road manager for ten years. It was not
rescheduled.
Ticket sales
Even
before any official tour announcement, tickets went on sale in
Norway
and Sweden
. The
heavy demand caused a crash in the Scandinavian ticketing system.
A similar
situation due to heavy demand occurred in Finland
with the Lippupiste ticketing system.
On January 27, 2008, the day of the
Working on a Dream release in the
United States, the official announcement of the tour came.
On February 1, 2009, Springsteen & the E Street Band performed
at halftime of
Super Bowl XLIII.
The following day, February 2, 2009, tickets for many of the U.S.
shows went on sale. Despite the ongoing
global financial
crisis of 2008–2009, demand was heavy, both due to
Springsteen's continued popularity and the high visibility from the
Super Bowl appearance. The two each New Jersey and Philadelphia
shows sold out in about an hour. East Coast online sales through
Ticketmaster, including the New Jersey
ones, were especially troublesome, as many customers endured long
waits or were in the middle of a purchasing transaction, only to be
hit with screens saying the site was down "due to routine
maintenance". Ticketmaster acknowledged that the technical problem
with the sales "wasn't our finest hour." Tickets for the New Jersey
shows were in limited supply to begin with, as some 27 percent
of them were held back from sale by the venue, the record company,
Springsteen's organization, and others. Indeed, for one of the
shows the Springsteen people held back all but 108 of the 1,126
seats in the four sections nearest the stage.
Frustration became a public outcry when many of Ticketmaster online
customers, upon being informed shows were sold out, were directed
to
TicketsNow, a Ticketmaster-owned site,
where tickets are sold on the
secondary market at extremely
inflated prices. Ticketmaster even pushed fans to TicketsNow even
when there were still tickets available for a given show.
Bill Pascrell, the member of the
U.S. House of Representatives from
New Jersey's 8th
congressional district, asked the Federal Trade Commission and the
U.S.
Department of Justice
to investigate the relationship between
Ticketmaster and TicketsNow, saying, "I am concerned that the
business affiliation between Ticketmaster and TicketsNow may
represent a conflict of interest that is detrimental to the average
fan. There is a significant potential for abuse when one
company is able to monopolize the primary market for a product and
also directly manipulate, and profit from, the secondary
market."
Springsteen issued a statement on his website where he chastised
Ticketmaster and made it clear that he has no affiliation with them
(the venues have the affiliation). Springsteen's organization, as
well as record companies and promoters, do hold back substantial
numbers of tickets from public sales and making supply of them even
tighter, especially for New Jersey shows. On the same day that
New Jersey State
Assemblymen Gary Schaer and
Wayne DeAngelo called for an inquiry,
New Jersey Attorney
General Anne Milgram also said that
her office and the
New Jersey Division of
Consumer Affairs would investigate the sale of Springsteen
concert tickets amidst a number of complaints. As the matter gained
national attention, it became what
The Washington Post described as a
"public relations nightmare" for Ticketmaster. On February 5,
Ticketmaster issued an "open letter of apology" to Springsteen and
his fans, saying that it would no longer link to TicketsNow from
Ticketmaster during high-demand sales and promising it would refund
customers who inadvertently bought secondary market tickets.
Pascrell, whose office received over 1,000 complaints on the
matter, and
Connecticut
Attorney General Richard
Blumenthal also used the sales tales to indicate concern with
the possible merger of Ticketmaster with
Live Nation. Springsteen also voiced his
objection to the merger, and his comments also gained national
attention.
On February 23, 2009, Ticketmaster agreed to an out-of-court
settlement with the New Jersey Attorney General. Ticketmaster
agreed to refund payments made to TicketsNow and reduce its
visibility, and made some 2,000 tickets to the New Jersey shows
available to complaints via random lottery, with promises of
additional reparations if Springsteen scheduled a third leg to
return to the U.S. in the summer. The company was not fined, but
did reimburse the Attorney General's office $350,000 for
investigatory expenses. Over 1,800 people qualified for the March
31 lottery, and those that got them eventually picked up their
tickets at an amusingly-named "Attorney General Will Call Line"
before the shows. In March 2009, Springsteen manager
Jon Landau emphasized that Springsteen never
directly releases tickets into the secondary market, in the wake of
revelations about other artists doing so.
In May 2009 – and on
the same day that Springsteen would perform at the local Xcel Energy
Center
– Governor of
Minnesota Tim Pawlenty signed into
law "the Bruce Springsteen bill", which forbade online ticket
sellers from sending frustrated customers to resale sites that
offer inflated-price secondary market tickets.
Different
but similar Ticketmaster drama occurred on March 20 when tickets
went on sale for Springsteen's two Asbury Park
Convention Hall
rehearsal shows a few days hence. Dozens of
fans said that the Ticketmaster automated lines gave messages that
no shows were on sale, while those using the human operator lines
were able to make purchases. Ticketmaster denied that anything had
gone wrong.
The
secondary markets ticket saga re-emerged in mid-May during the
first leg of the tour when TicketsNow announced they had oversold
by some 300 persons the date at Washington, D.C.
's Verizon
Center
. TicketsNow offered double refunds and
inferiorally-located tickets to other Springsteen shows, but
Springsteen manager Landau was quite unhappy: "We would like our
audience to know that this is a problem caused entirely by
Ticketmaster and its wholly owned subsidiary TicketsNow. Neither
Bruce nor his management have any control whatsoever over these two
troubled entities but we deeply resent the abuse of our
fans."
When
Springsteen's fall Giants
Stadium
shows were announced in late May 2009, secondary
market sellers began advertising steeply-marked up tickets before
they went on sale. This caused Attorney General Milgram to
file suit against three such sellers for fraudulent behavior,
especially given that some of the advertised seat locations did not
even exist. On June 1, Congressman Pascrell announced proposed
federal legislation, titled the "BOSS ACT" (Better Oversight of
Secondary Sales and Accountability in Concert Ticketing), which
would require primary ticket sellers to disclose how many tickets
were being held back from sale, prohibit ticket brokers from buying
tickets during the first 48 hours on sale, and prohibit primary
ticket sellers, promoters, and artists from entering the secondary
market.
The show
Planning and rehearsals
One idea under early consideration was to include a mini-set at
each stop, containing a full performance of one of Springsteen's
classic albums. Van Zandt predicted that they would play most of
Working on a Dream during the initial stages of the tour,
but what the rest of the show would be was uncertain. If the full
album idea did go forward, he thought 1980's double album
The River combined with
outtakes from those sessions would make a full show on its own.
Nothing came of the full album notion right away; it would have to
wait until the tour's U.S. third leg to materialize.
Per past
practice, Springsteen performed a couple of public rehearsal shows
at Asbury Park
Convention Hall
before beginning the tour proper. The
eight-minute "Outlaw Pete" from
Working on a Dream opened
and various other selections from the album were played, but the
show generally included patterns and staples of the early
Magic Tour and other previous
outings. Jay Weinberg did some of the drumming, and the band was
augmented by
Curtis King and
Cindy Mizelle (both veterans of the
Sessions Band Tour) as additional backing
vocalists.
North American first leg
Once the first leg of the tour proper began with the consistent
show opener "
Badlands" – whose ending,
or false ending, was framed with a recurrence of the Magic Tour's
question of "Is there anybody alive out there?" – several things
became apparent. Typical shows contained only three songs from
Working on a Dream: "Outlaw Pete" (initally accompanied by
a
fog machine), "
Working on a Dream", and "Kingdom
of Days". This was in stark departure from all previous Springsteen
tours, when material from newly-released albums was heavily
featured. One other recently-released Springsteen song, "
The Wrestler", was also included in
about half the set lists, although it did not share the new album's
romantic pop style. Of the other
Working on a Dream songs,
a couple were never attempted in private rehearsal; some others
were rehearsed privately but not publicly; "This Life" and
"Surprise Surprise" did not survive past the first Asbury Park
rehearsal show; "Good Eye" did not survive past the first proper
show; and "
My Lucky Day" was played in
the first three shows before being dropped. The disappearance of
"This Life" and "My Lucky Day" were especially notable, given the
former had an elaborate, extended multi-part
Brian Wilson-style "Ba ba ba" outro section
featuring the two added singers in its one rehearsal performance,
and that the latter was the album's second single. Nor was the
prior album
Magic given any due,
with only "
Radio Nowhere" included.
Set lists relied mostly upon Springsteen material up through 1984's
Born in the U.S.A.,
2002's
The Rising, and a
few scattered selections from any other period.
Commenting on the paucity of new material,
The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution suggested that the whole production
would more accurately be named the Havin’ a Blast Tour. The
Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette said that "The strange thing ... is that the
'Working on a Dream' tour no longer seems to be about 'Working on a
Dream'" and suggested that the album was unpopular among many fans
and as a result, "Springsteen, always the savvy showman, has chosen
not to shove it down anyone's throat." Springsteen fans instantly
discussed and analyzed setlists as shows happened on the
Backstreets.com BTX website, associated with which
Twitter and other sources were used to post, or in
some cases crudely broadcast, shows as they happened. E Street
bassist
Garry Tallent and guitarist
Nils Lofgren found themselves amused
that fans had complained on the previous Magic Tour of too much new
material being played, and were now complaining of too little.
Guitarist
Steve Van Zandt said that
the
Working on a Dream songs that were played were "big"
songs, so that made up for their lack of number.
One theme that
was apparent in the show was the ongoing
late-2000s recession. The early
part of shows contained a "recession pack" consisting of "Seeds"
(brought back from the 1980s), "
Johnny
99" (elongated with incongruous train "woo-whoo's"), and either
"Youngstown" or "
The Ghost
of Tom Joad" (both featuring fiery guitar solos from
Nils Lofgren). Encores began with a rendition
of
Stephen Foster's 1850s classic
"
Hard Times Come Again No
More" – which provided one of the few featured spots for King
and Mizelle, who otherwise played a lot of
tambourine – and later included
both of
Springsteen's reunion-era encore epics of American struggle,
survival and hope, "Land of Hope and Dreams" and "American Land".
Van Zandt said that the emergence of the recession theme was in
part what led the show in a direction away from showcasing the
Working on a Dream album.
One holdover from the latter stages of the Magic Tour was the
"Build Me a House" stage rap, now located in "Working on a Dream".
Springsteen would say: "We're not just here to rock the house
tonight. We're going to build a house.... We're going to use the
good news and we're going to use the bad news. We've got all the
news we need - on this stage and in those seats."
An even more visible holdover was the 'signs' segment. This would
begin when Springsteen collected request signs from the pit
audience as an extended introduction to "
Raise Your Hand" was played. Once that song
completed, Springsteen selected two or three numbers to play from
the requests. The first was often a
garage
rock classic such as "
Wild Thing", "
96 Tears", or "
Mony Mony"
or a
punk rock staple such as "
I Wanna Be Sedated" or "
London Calling". This activity was
billed as "Stump the Band", and led to impromptu arrangements being
worked out onstage.
Springsteen would sometimes taunt the
audience afterwards with declarations that the E Street Band could
not be stumped, such as saying in Atlanta
's Philips
Arena
, "...this is the greatest bar band in the land, and
if they don't think we know 96 fuckin' Tears!" The immediate
introduction of the signs segment surprised even E Street guitarist
Nils Lofgren, who thought Springsteen
would hold it off until later in the tour. The precise degree of
challenge in this segment was unclear, as lyrics were often loaded
into the
teleprompter that Springsteen
uses and in some cases the songs had been
soundchecked earlier. In any case, most of the
challenges were to the band's shared knowledge of
British Invasion,
Motown,
Stax-Volt, and
other 1960s material. Other honored sign requests were usually for
songs early or obscure in Springsteen's catalog.
Show lengths were generally between 2 hours 30 minutes to 2 hours
45 minutes.
Springsteen scheduled his two Philadelphia
shows at the soon-to-be-demolished Spectrum
, commenting that "They don't make arenas like this
anymore" and stating that the smaller size and lack of luxury boxes made the old venue "ideal for rock
shows." The Spectrum had seen Springsteen's first headlining
arena show in 1976 during the
Born to
Run tours, and now he said they would "fulfill our solemn vow
to rock the Spectrum one more time." Accordingly the band played
local act
The Dovells' 1963 hit
"
You Can't Sit Down" among other
Philadelphia-related selections.
Springsteen voiced similar sentiments
about the old-but-still-going Nassau Coliseum
, and selected The
Soul Survivors' 1967 hit "Expressway to Your Heart" as a
tribute to the nearby Long Island
Expressway.
Jay Weinberg appeared at a number of shows on the first, North
American leg, drumming on anywhere from four songs to half the
show. He had been a fan of
heavy metal
music for much of his life, and in playing with Springsteen he
integrated a
polyrhythmic approach
influenced by metal bands such as
Lamb of God,
Mastodon, and
Slipknot with the E Street drumming style
derived from
big bands and early
rock and roll. He received a very positive
reaction from both audiences and reviewers as a spark plug for the
band, with his vigorous, long-hair-flying style inviting
comparisons to
Dave Grohl and his
potential for replacing his father drawing allusions to
Wally Pipp.
Chicago Tribune critic
Greg Kot wrote, "All hail Jay Weinberg. ... With
[him drumming] the band’s chemistry was slightly unsettled for the
better. ... His fills during 'Radio Nowhere' kicked the song, and
the concert, into a higher gear, and galvanized a band that was
starting to pace itself." Jay Weinberg said "it's a summer job that
anybody would want," while Max Weinberg said Jay's segments allowed
him a "total out-of-body experience. For the first time in – I've
been with Bruce for 35 years – I've been able to go out in the
audience and enjoy a Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
concert."
Jay Weinberg played his first full show on
May 14 at the Times
Union Center
in Albany, New York
, as Max Weinberg was in California to prepare test
runs for the The
Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien start. Springsteen
said of the occasion, “This is the first night in 35 years that
somebody else sat at the drums.” Overall,
Modern Drummer magazine's editor said
that a college freshman playing on one of the year's biggest rock
tours was "certainly a unique story".
For the final
Meadowlands
Arena
shows of the first leg, Jay Weinberg did the first
but his father took a red-eye flight
back from Los Angeles to do the second.
European second leg
Once the show moved into its European second leg, more
Working
on a Dream songs began to sporadically appear, with "
My Lucky Day" becoming a regular for a while
and "Queen of the Supermarket" getting its first airing anywhere.
For Scandinavian shows, as band members walked on stage, Lofgren
opened with solo accordion performances of local summer-themed
specialties, "
Idas
Sommarvisa" in Sweden and "
Du skal ikkje sova bort
sumarnatta" in Norway. Jay Weinberg did the first seven shows,
as his father was now beginning
The Tonight Show with Conan
O'Brien.
Springsteen and the band returned to the U.S. to make their
first-ever appearance at the
Bonnaroo Music Festival, as the
headlining act on June 13,
2009. Playing before festival audiences who were not guaranteed
to be fans of his music was largely new to Springsteen, but after a
slow start the show captured over most of the Bonnaroo audience.
The following night, Springsteen joined the recently reunited and
headlining
Phish for three songs, "
Mustang Sally", "
Bobby
Jean", and "
Glory Days". Phish
guitarist Trey Anastasio said later, "I got to play with Bruce.
That's my hero." The Bonnaroo performance of "Outlaw Pete" was
included on a
Fuse TV show of festival
highlights, and the performance of "
Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out" included a
bit with
Triumph, the
Insult Comic Dog singing along that was included on a
Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien segment.
On June 25, Max Weinberg departed
The Tonight Show
temporarily for four weeks to join the band for the resumption of
its European leg, via a comedy bit that had his drum riser turn
into a
float that took him outside
and studio and purportedly to the airport. During this stretch, Jay
Weinberg did not appear during any of the shows until reappearing
during the Spanish shows at the end of the leg. While wife Scialfa
was nowhere to be seen in Europe, their son Evan appeared and
played guitar during encores of a number of shows, while Ali
Weinberg and Clarence Clemon's nephew also made playing appearances
and Springsteen's mother and aunt also took the stage.
Lofgren continued his practice of often opening shows with national
songs played on accordion. Set lists continued to loosen with many
tour premieres showing up in request slots or elsewhere, and shows
sometimes running to 30 songs in length. After a while, the encore
break was disposed with and the show ran continuously to the end
without the band ever leaving the stage. Springsteen ran past local
curfews at both Dublin shows and at Glastonbury. The Dublin
violations resulted in a potential €50,000 fine, but Springsteen
mocked the prospect by on-staging a bit: “We have to go, we have a
curfew!” with Van Zandt replying, “We don't care about the curfew,
this is the curfew breaking Boss and E Street Band!"
"American Skin " made unexpected
appearances in Dublin and at several stops in Italy, while
"My City of Ruins" was played at
Stadio
Olimpico
in Rome
in honor of
the victims of the 2009 L'Aquila earthquake
. The European leg ended with five shows in
Spain, at more out-of-the-way locations than in the past; the last
of these shows, at the Monte Do Gozo
in Santiago de
Compostela
, played "Rockin' All Over the World" but
concluded its encore with "Born in the U.S.A." after 1 a.m.
local time. Max Weinberg immediately flew back to Los
Angeles and resumed his role on
The Tonight Show later
that same day.
U.S. third leg
The American third leg began in mid-August with shows at outdoor
amphitheaters as well as indoor
arenas. Shows were often scheduled for
weekends, to allow Max Weinberg to play without missing any
Tonight Show time; Jay Weinberg played those shows held
during the week. Then on September 25, Max Weinberg took a two
month absence from the television show, to join Springsteen for the
final portion of the leg. Ticket sales were slower than normal on
this leg, partly due to
Ticketmaster's
new "paperless ticketing" system that may have come into effect due
to the earlier problems with Springsteen sales. In arenas that did
not sell well, management relocated the people who bought tickets
behind the stage to other sections and put up the screen used for
stadium and amphitheater shows behind the stage. In a hint to fans
to buy up, Van Zandt said, “You never know. This could be be the
last tour. We do every show like it’s our last show anyway.” In any
case, by September 2009 the tour had sold over two million tickets
overall. Even some shows in Philadelphia, long a Springsteen
bastion, were not sold out.
During the U.S. third leg, it was reported that
Born to Run would be featured in its
entirety during several shows, possibly in a scheme to boost ticket
sales.
The full-album idea took fruition with the
late September-early October set of five shows at Giants
Stadium
, which would be the final concerts ever in that
venue in Springsteen's home state. Born to Run was
played at two shows,
Darkness on the Edge of
Town at one show, and
Born in the U.S.A. at two shows. The
shows were opened with a new Springsteen song written for the
occasion, "Wrecking Ball", written from the point of view of the
stadium itself: “I was raised out of steel here in the swamps of
Jersey, some misty years ago ...” The stand featured several other
new touches as well, including Springsteen
crowd surfing during "
Hungry Heart", evocative behind-the-stage
upper-level lighting during "
The
Rising", and fireworks at the "E! Street! Band!" conclusion of
"American Land". The final show, which drew nearly 60,000 people,
concluded with the second playing on the stand of "
Jersey Girl", dedicated to “all the crew
and staff that’s worked all these years at Giants Stadium.”
The full
album versions continued, as well as a localized rendition of
"Wrecking Ball", at Springsteen's four shows to close out the
Philadelphia
Spectrum
as well. Born to Run remained the standard
choice for the rest of the tour, but the two shows at New York's
Madison
Square Garden
saw The Wild, the
Innocent & the E Street Shuffle and The River, with the latter's 20-song
length dominating the setlist.
Springsteen's show on November 13, 2009 at
The Palace
of Auburn Hills
outside Detroit, Michigan
became well known for Springsteen's multiple
statements to the crowd about being in Ohio
, the first
as he came on, the second during the lyric to "Wrecking Ball", and
the third in the "Build me a house" rap during "Working on a
Dream". (The band had played in Cleveland,
Ohio
, three nights earlier.) By now getting some boos
from the crowd, guitarist Van Zandt, who had hoped Springsteen
would stop making the mistake on his own, finally went over to
Springsteen and corrected him: "‘You don’t realize it, but you’re
saying Ohio and we’re in Michigan.’ He was like ‘What!?’"
Springsteen then told the crowd that he had committed "every front
man's nightmare," and made a show of saying "Michigan" from then
on. The
Spinal Tap-esque blunder
attracted worldwide television and print publicity. (The show
subsequently featured a rare performance of
Bob Seger's "
Ramblin' Gamblin'
Man", appealing to Seger's fan base in Detroit. After the song
Springsteen shouted "For Bobby – we love you!" and proceeded to
play "Detroit Medley".) Springsteen made joking references to being
in Ohio, or made exaggerated statements as to being in the correct
state, in subsequent shows.
During the final stretch of the tour, the final encores of many
shows presented a long, rousing, ebullient rendition of
Jackie Wilson's classic "
Higher and
Higher". Showcasing featured vocals from
Cindy Mizelle or
Curtis
King and trumpet solos from
Curt Ramm,
the song stretched to eight minutes with key changes, reprises, and
walks through the pit area by Springsteen and the singers, and
became recognized as one of the highpoints of the entire
tour.
The tour
concluded with the November 22, 2009, show at HSBC
Arena
in Buffalo, New York
. Fans came from far away and the show
dominated the feel of the city that day. The full album played was
Springsteen's first,
Greetings from Asbury Park,
N.J., which he wryly said "was the miracle. This was the
record that took everything from way below zero to ...
one." The performance of it was dedicated to his first
manager and producer,
Mike Appel, who was
present in the audience, and featured quite rare renditions of
"
Mary Queen of Arkansas" and
(the first ever with the E Street Band) "
The Angel". Other
rarities peppered the 34-song, nearly 3½-hour night, including
Chuck Willis's "(I Don't Want to) Hang
Up My Rock and Roll Shoes" and, to mark Steven Van Zandt's
birthday, totally obscure outtake "Restless Nights" (supposedly Van
Zandt's favorite Springsteen song) and a now-unusual second song
from the current album, "Surprise Surprise". Springsteen dispelled
any notion of this being the final E Street Band show or the last
for a long time, saying "So we're gonna say goodbye, but just for a
little while ... a
very little while ..." The tour
finished not with the emotional statement in song that some other
Springsteen tours have in the 2000s, but instead with
John Fogerty's "
Rockin' All Over the
World".
Critical and commercial reception
Newspaper reviews of the show often commented on the high level of
energy and stamina the nearly 60-year-old Springsteen brought to
the concerts.
The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution and the
Chicago Tribune favorably compared
Springsteen to the rest of the band in this regard, saying "Some of
the guys in the band look their age" and "they lack the
physicality, the sustained urgency of their prime."
The Philadelphia
Inquirer and the
San
Jose Mercury News both commented on the fundamental
problem that Springsteen seemed to be facing on the tour. The
former said "Bruce Springsteen may well have miscalculated earlier
this year when he released
Working on a Dream, one of the
most hopeful and downright happy sounding albums of his career just
as a cratering economy was rendering the songs of struggle and
strife that are his stock in trade more resonant than they have
sounded in years." The latter said, "As Don Rumsfeld might say, you
don't go on tour with the album you wish you had, you go on tour
with the album you've got. So Springsteen faces the tough task of
hyping a new romantic pop record while simultaneously offering hope
and support to a wounded nation – not an easy task."
Rolling Stone voiced a similar theory.
Chicago Tribune critic
Greg Kot wrote that "If there was a
disappointment, it was that Springsteen didn’t make a stronger case
for his latest album,
Working on a Dream. I’m not a fan of
the album, but I always look forward to how the singer reinvents
his studio work on the stage. In this case, however, he barely
touched the new material ..." Views on one the early-in-show,
eight-minute "Outlaw Pete", one of the few new material
centerpieces, varied considerably.
The
San Jose Mercury
News and the
Connecticut
Post both gave the show a mixed review, with the former
saying it was "decidedly subpar" and latter saying "the concert
itself wasn't as captivating as past visits to the state."
The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution and
The Philadelphia Inquirer
were unreserved in their praise, with the former saying Springsteen
"deliver[ed] a show that proves boomer-oriented rock ‘n’ roll can
still tear it up" and the latter saying Springsteen adapted to
circumstances "with an altered game plan that wisely plays to his
strengths."
The Greensboro, North Carolina
News
& Record said that "Springsteen and the E Street Band
were received like conquering heroes during an exhilarating
three-hour show that repeatedly drove the adoring, near-sellout
crowd into fist-thrusting, sing-along frenzies."
The Globe and Mail said
of the tour's sole Canadian show, "an evening with Bruce
Springsteen and the E Street Band still ranks as the epitome of the
rock concert experience."
Rolling
Stone said of the first leg's concluding New Jersey shows,
"Springsteen tours don’t usually hit highs like this until the end,
but the band has essentially been on the road since September of
2007."
Of the European shows, critical reaction was generally quite
favorable.
The Irish Times
said Springsteen showing no signs of age as he neared his 60th
birthday, despite taking a spill during his stage antics in rainy
Dublin, and remarked upon how "a set that features so many songs
about the toughness of life ... can be delivered with such
extraordinary verve that by the time you leave, you’re very glad to
be alive."
The Independent
echoed the sentiment in reviewing the Hyde Park show, writing that
he showed "the vigour of a frontman a third of his age" and that
"Springsteen's intensity was staggering from first powerful vocal
to final thrashed-out chord."
The
Bath Chronicle saluted Springsteen's performance at
Glastonbury, saying "As all the tickets were sold before
Springsteen was even confirmed on the bill, he must have known he
was facing something very rare for him – the musical equivalent of
a sporting 'away match' where not everyone was necessarily a
worshipper at the altar of Bruce." They concluded that Springsteen
gave "a performance of passion, exuberance, exhilaration and
musical majesty" while sticking with his standard tour set list and
not resorting to playing many of his better-known hits.
Of the final Giants Stadium stand, the
New York Daily News said that
"Wrecking Ball" was "a rousing declaration of defiance in the face
of destruction," and overall said that "Once again, this proved
[Springsteen] to be one of the few performers charismatic enough,
and anthemic enough, to use the stadium scale to his advantage."
Entertainment Weekly
called "Wrecking Ball" "an inspiring start to another of the
marathon three-hour shows Springsteen
still manages to put
on night after night."
The New
York Times said of the full performance of
Born in the
U.S.A. that "Springsteen sang with deeper nuance ... the songs
have not faded."
Through September 2009, the Working on a Dream Tour was in the top
five in grosses of 2009 tours worldwide, alongside the
U2 360° Tour,
Coldplay's
Viva la
Vida Tour, and
AC/DC's
Black Ice Tour. Unlike the past
Magic and
Devils & Dust Tours, the Working
on a Dream Tour failed to win any
Billboard Touring Awards.
Band members
- Bruce Springsteen – lead vocals, lead
guitar, rhythm guitar, acoustic guitar, harmonica
- Roy Bittan – piano, synthesizer,
accordion
- Clarence Clemons – tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone, percussion, pennywhistle, piccolo,
harmonica, whistling, background
vocals
- Charles Giordano – organ, accordion,
electronic glockenspiel,
rare piano, occasional background vocals
- Nils Lofgren – rhythm guitar, lead
guitar, pedal steel guitar,
acoustic guitar, accordion, background
vocals
- Patti Scialfa – background vocals, some duet vocals, acoustic
guitar, occasional tambourine
- Garry Tallent – bass guitar, rare background vocals
- Soozie Tyrell – violin, acoustic
guitar, percussion,
background vocals
- Steven Van Zandt – rhythm guitar, lead
guitar, mandolin, background vocals, occasional featured
lead vocal
- Max Weinberg – drums, rare tambourine
- Jay Weinberg – drums
- Curtis King – background vocals and tambourine
- Cindy Mizelle – background vocals and tambourine
- Curt Ramm – trumpet
Scialfa missed some shows on the first leg due to injuries received
from falling off her horse, then due to family responsibilities,
and was absent from all the shows on the European leg. She
continued to miss shows during the U.S. third leg, only making it
to two of the five final Giants Stadium performances. As on the
Magic Tour, Tyrell has assumed a more prominent role in shows that
Scialfa missed. Clemons continued to have a diminished physical
role on stage due to his multiple physical problems, and was
scheduled for spine surgery once the tour concluded with a 12-month
recovery period. As mentioned previously, Jay Weinberg substituted
for Max Weinberg on a number of dates, and the two alternated for
portions of the show on a number of other dates. Ramm, a veteran of
the
Sessions Band Tour, played on
several songs per show during much of the U.S. third leg.
Broadcasts and recordings
Several of the tour's festival appearances have been aired on
television or radio during 2009.
One song's worth of the June 13
Bonnaroo Music Festival appearance,
"Outlaw Pete", made it into a U.S. packaged broadcast of festival
highlights for television, "The Best of Bonnaroo 2009", that
appeared on
Fuse TV on June 20.
Portions
of the June 27 Glastonbury Festival
performance were aired live on BBC Television and BBC
6 Music radio.
In
conjunction with the Fourth of July
holiday in the U.S., E Street Radio
featured 45 minutes from the July 3 Frankfurt
Commerzbank Arena
show.
In the U.S., the
Hard Rock Calling
Hyde Park appearance was included in an
August 21 broadcast on the
VH1,
VH1 Classic, and
Palladia cable channels. Seven Springsteen and E
Street Band performances, including "
London Calling" to open the program,
were included in amongst other artists' performances.
Tour dates
| North America |
| Date |
City |
Country |
Venue |
Attendance |
Ticket grossing |
| Tickets sold |
Tickets on sale |
Percentage sold |
| April 1 |
San Jose, CA |
United States |
HP Pavilion |
16,713 |
17,196 |
97.2% |
$1,535,889 |
| April 3 |
Glendale, AZ |
United States |
Jobing.com Arena |
15,433 |
15,433 |
100% |
$1,377,875 |
| April 5 |
Austin,
TX |
United States |
Frank Erwin Center |
15,654 |
15,654 |
100% |
$1,302,672 |
| April 7 |
Tulsa,
OK |
United States |
BOK
Center |
12,382 |
12,382 |
100% |
$1,039,926 |
| April 8 |
Houston, TX |
United States |
Toyota Center |
12,488 |
12,488 |
100% |
$1,106,977 |
| April 10 |
Denver,
CO |
United States |
Pepsi Center |
17,202 |
17,414 |
99% |
$1,555,204 |
| April 15April 16 |
Los Angeles, CA |
United States |
L.A. Memorial Arena |
31,080 |
33,094 |
94% |
$2,807,010 |
| April 21April 22 |
Boston,
MA |
United States |
TD Banknorth Garden |
33,035 |
33,477 |
98.7% |
$3,006,655 |
| April 24 |
Hartford, CT |
United States |
XL
Center |
15,168 |
15,168 |
100% |
$1,405,050 |
| April 26 |
Atlanta, GA |
United States |
Philips Arena |
14,361 |
15,190 |
94.5% |
$1,324,980 |
| April 28April 29 |
Philadelphia, PA |
United States |
The Spectrum |
35,165 |
35,165 |
100% |
$3,389,857 |
| May 2 |
Greensboro, NC |
United States |
Greensboro Coliseum |
18,987 |
19,462 |
97.6% |
$1,573,072 |
| May 4 |
Uniondale, NY |
United States |
Nassau Coliseum |
16,223 |
16,223 |
100% |
$1,548,658 |
| May 5 |
Charlottesville, VA |
United States |
John Paul Jones Arena |
12,099 |
12,099 |
100% |
$1,058,115 |
| May 7 |
Toronto, ON |
Canada |
Air Canada Centre |
18,103 |
18,103 |
100% |
$1,438,244 |
| May 8 |
University Park, PA |
United States |
Bryce Jordan Center |
14,238 |
14,238 |
100% |
$1,305,880 |
| May 11 |
St. Paul, MN |
United States |
Xcel Energy Center |
18,369 |
18,369 |
100% |
$1,698,637 |
| May 12 |
Chicago, IL |
United States |
United Center |
19,828 |
19,828 |
100% |
$1,870,670 |
| May 14 |
Albany,
NY |
United States |
Times Union Center |
15,096 |
15,096 |
100% |
$1,377,450 |
| May 15 |
Hershey, PA |
United States |
Hersheypark Stadium |
29,745 |
29,745 |
100% |
$2,859,106 |
| May 18 |
Washington, DC |
United States |
Verizon Center |
17,859 |
18,261 |
98% |
$1,680,376 |
| May 19 |
Pittsburgh, PA |
United States |
Mellon Arena |
16,572 |
16,881 |
98% |
$1,367,577 |
| May 21May 23 |
East Rutherford, NJ |
United States |
Izod Center |
38,502 |
38,502 |
100% |
$3,559,260 |
| Europe |
| May 30 |
Landgraaf |
Netherlands |
Pinkpop Festival |
— |
| June 2 |
Tampere |
|
Ratinan Stadion |
31,402 |
31,402 |
100% |
$3,326,646 |
| June 4June 5June 7 |
Stockholm |
|
Stockholms Stadium |
97,024 |
97,024 |
100% |
$7,877,161 |
| June 9June 10 |
Bergen |
|
Koengen |
47,000 |
51,000 |
93% |
$4,613,805 |
| June 13 |
Manchester, TN |
United States |
Bonnaroo Festival |
— |
| June 27 |
Glastonbury |
United Kingdom |
Glastonbury Festival |
135,000** |
135,000** |
100% |
— |
| June 28 |
London |
United Kingdom |
Hard Rock Calling |
— |
— |
100% |
— |
| June 30 |
Bern |
Switzerland |
Stade de Suisse |
36,538 |
36,538 |
100% |
$3,816,416 |
| July 2 |
Munich |
|
Olympiastadion |
39,896 |
44,186 |
90% |
$3,723,108 |
| July 3 |
Frankfurt |
|
Commerzbank Arena |
40,471 |
40,471 |
100% |
$3,765,940 |
| July 5 |
Vienna |
Austria |
Ernst Happel Stadion |
37,798 |
42,380 |
89% |
$3,324,987 |
| July 8 |
Herning |
|
Herning MCH - Outdoor Arena |
49,947 |
49,947 |
100% |
$4,770,172 |
| July 11July 12 |
Dublin |
|
RDS
Arena |
80,428 |
80,428 |
100% |
$8,760,349 |
| July 14 |
Glasgow |
Scotland |
Hampden Park |
50,544 |
50,544 |
100% |
$4,378,752 |
| July 16 |
Carhaix |
|
Festival des Vieilles
Charrues |
— |
| July 19 |
Rome |
|
Stadio Olimpico |
37,834 |
42,479 |
90% |
$2,944,904 |
| July 21 |
Torino |
|
Stadio Olimpico di Torino |
32,774 |
32,774 |
100% |
$2,639,310 |
| July 23 |
Udine |
|
Stadio Friuli |
28,356 |
28,356 |
100% |
$2,104,035 |
| July 26 |
Bilbao |
|
San Mames Stadium |
36,318 |
36,935 |
99% |
$3,409,189 |
| July 28 |
Sevilla |
|
La Cartuja Olimpic Stadium |
24,030 |
36,724 |
68% |
$2,204,863 |
| July 30 |
Benidorm |
|
Estadio Municipal de
Foietes |
19,629 |
34,150 |
58% |
$1,722,842 |
| Aug 1 |
Valladolid |
|
Estadio Jose Zorrilla |
32.213 |
32.213 |
100% |
$2.510,720 |
| Aug 2 |
Compostela |
|
Monte Do Gozo |
— |
— |
100% |
— |
| United States |
| Aug 19 |
Hartford, CT |
|
Comcast Theatre |
15,745 |
24,729 |
76% |
$950,865 |
| Aug 22 Aug 23 |
Mansfield, MA |
|
Comcast Center |
31,842 |
39,800 |
82% |
$2,546,748 |
| Aug 25 |
Saratoga Springs, NY |
|
Saratoga Performing Arts
Center |
17,682 |
25,559 |
70% |
$1,047,945 |
| Sep 12 |
Tampa, FL |
|
Ford Amphitheatre |
13,763 |
19,144 |
71% |
$1,011,698 |
| Sep 13 |
Ft. Lauderdale, FL |
|
BankAtlantic Center |
11,586 |
13,836 |
82% |
$1,049,482
|
| Sep 16 |
Greenville, SC |
|
Bi-Lo Center |
10,281 |
10,938 |
95% |
$831,990 |
| Sep 20 |
Chicago, IL |
|
United Center |
18,249 |
18,249 |
100% |
$1,739,826 |
| Sep 21 |
Des Moines, IA |
|
Wells Fargo Arena |
8,451 |
15,448 |
59% |
$678,928 |
Sept 30Oct 2Oct 3
Oct 8Oct 9 |
East Rutherford, NJ |
|
Giants Stadium |
260,668 |
270,388 |
95,6% |
$22,570,336 |
| Oct 13Oct 14Oct 19Oct 20 |
Philadelphia, PA |
|
Wachovia Spectrum |
60,516 |
65,120 |
92.9% |
$5,972,428 |
| Oct 25 |
St. Louis, MO |
|
Scottrade Center |
11,178 |
15,048 |
74.3% |
$847,038 |
| Oct 26 |
Kansas City, MO
CANCELED
|
|
Sprint Center |
— |
— |
- |
— |
| Nov 2 |
Washington, D.C. |
|
Verizon Center |
17,545 |
17,545 |
100% |
$1,653,329 |
| Nov 3 |
Charlotte, NC |
|
Time Warner Cable Arena |
12,385 |
16,197 |
76.5% |
$855,357 |
| Nov 7Nov 8 |
New York, NY |
|
Madison Square Garden |
37,064 |
37,064 |
100% |
$3,459,026 |
| Nov 10 |
Cleveland, OH |
|
Quicken Loans Arena |
16,232 |
17,261 |
94% |
$1,426,330 |
| Nov 13 |
Auburn Hills, MI |
|
The Palace of Auburn Hills |
15,170 |
19,431 |
78.1% |
$1,169,764 |
| Nov 15 |
Milwaukee, WI |
|
Bradley Center |
— |
— |
- |
— |
| Nov 18 |
Nashville, TN |
|
Sommet Center |
11,044 |
14,297 |
77.2% |
$929,165 |
| Nov 20 |
Baltimore, MD |
|
1st Mariner Arena |
14,679 |
14,679 |
100% |
$1,295,766 |
| Nov 22 |
Buffalo, NY |
|
HSBC Arena |
18,665 |
18,665 |
100% |
$1,489,441 |
| TOTAL |
1,502,995 |
1,625,132 |
90% |
$158,607,801 |
References