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SXSW: Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band Rock ACL Live

Photos Courtesy of SXSW​Bruce Springsteen's Thursday started with a keynote speech in one of the big ballrooms at the Austin Convention Center, and ended with a mythic three-hour set at ACL Live across town, in front of a few thousand people cooing "Bruce". The keynote and the show went hand...
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Photos Courtesy of SXSW
​Bruce Springsteen's Thursday started with a keynote speech in one of the big ballrooms at the Austin Convention Center, and ended with a mythic three-hour set at ACL Live across town, in front of a few thousand people cooing "Bruce".



The keynote and the show went hand in hand. If you weren't there this morning at the crack of noon, then the show wouldn't have affected you the way it did those of us who dragged ourselves out of bed -- hey, it's SXSW -- to listen to the Boss speak.



- By Craig Hlavaty of Houston Press' Rocks Off

Touching on his influences, his craft, and only glancing at the state of

the industry, his hearty, hilarious and playfully profane speech was

the promise and the show nine hours later was the fulfillment of that

promise.



Three hours and more than two dozen songs still wasn't enough for any of

us in the crowd. And the special guests were the proverbial icing on

the cake, or using the preferred attitude of the event, a little whiskey

in your coffee.



Opening with Woody Guthrie's "I Ain't Got No Home" on the late folk

hero's would-be centennial birthday, the tone was set for Thursday

night: Stern, sturdy and totally Springsteen. "We Take Care Of Our Own"

from the recently released Billboard No. 1 Wrecking Ball lifted us off directly after.

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The title track of Ball

fits all too nicely among other Springsteen live bursts, leading us

into a pile-driving "Badlands" which made me leap out of my seat and

nearly over the railing in front of me.

My earlier misgivings about Ball melted away once I heard the

tunes in a live setting. The Boss' cringe-worthy Irish lilt on the

studio cut of "Death To My Hometown" wasn't there live, and all that

remained was the barroom brawler that I hoped it would be in person.



"This Depression" and "Jack of All Trades" are also way better in the

flesh, with the latter a haunting showcase for Springsteen's bare-bones Nebraska -era

voice.



Guest guitarist Tom Morello ratcheted up the volume of the E Street

Band, standing out on "The Ghost of Tom Joad," a song he previously

covered with his own Rage Against The Machine a decade or so ago. His

metallic coda to the song, half Neil Young rage and his own trademark

fretwork was what laymen call a "face melter".



Reggae great Jimmy Cliff arrived during ended up being the encore for

three of his own essentials, including "The Harder They Come" and "Many

Rivers to Cross" which gave all of us the opportunity to hear the E

Streeters tackle a ska beat. They pulled it off. So when is the Boss

roots-reggae album coming?



Earlier the day at the keynote, Springsteen sang -- literally, actually

-- the praises of The Animals and lead singer Eric Burdon. As luck would

have it, Burdon was in town and came up to the mike to "We've Gotta Get

Out of This Place." Springsteen had said that garage standard was the

template for his whole career. Burdon's pipes are still willing and

able.



Live dynamo "Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out" featured a minute-long moment of

tribute to the late Clarence Clemons, with the crowd clapping and

howling for 60 seconds to honor the fallen saxophonist. Jake Clemons,

the nephew of the late Big Man, has fit himself nicely into the mix,

handling his uncle's solos. Close your eyes, and you see the Big Man.



The night ended with the return of Guthrie's ghost for his "This Land Is

Your Land," featuring Texas troubadour Joe Ely, members of Arcade Fire,

openers the Low Anthem and Alejandro Escovedo, plus Morello and Garland

Jeffreys. We were all expecting Guthrie's own specter to appear

onstage, but maybe he was just being shy last night.



Or he was at a showcase across town.

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Personal

Bias: I got a "Born To Run"-inspired tattoo on my leg earlier in the

day, so maybe I am not the most unbiased person to have been covering

this one. But I did give Wrecking Ball a good beating last week upon its release so I think I can give the Boss an evenhanded shake.



The Crowd: The press gang and lucky-ass raffle winners. The mezzanine was mostly media types. I was in a row with Paste and NPR staff.



Overheard In the Crowd: "Bruuuuuuuuuuce," of course.



SET LIST:

I Ain't Got No Home (Woody Guthrie cover)


We Take Care Of Our Own


Wrecking Ball


Badlands


Death to My Hometown (With Tom Morello)


My City of Ruins


Seeds


The E Street Shuffle


This Depression

Jack of All Trades (With Tom Morello)


Easy Money


Shackled and Drawn


Waitin' on a Sunny Day


The Promised Land


The Ghost of Tom Joad (With Tom Morello)


The Rising


We Are Alive


Thunder Road



ENCORE


Rocky Ground (With Michelle Moore)


Land of Hope and Dreams


The Harder They Come (With Jimmy Cliff)


Time Will Tell (With Jimmy Cliff)


Many Rivers to Cross (With Jimmy Cliff)


We've Gotta Get Out of This Place (With Eric Burdon)


Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out


This Land Is Your Land (Woody Guthrie cover) (with Joe Ely, Arcade Fire, Alejandro Escovedo, Tom Morello and Garland Jeffreys)

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