Noticias e información en castellano sobre Bruce Springsteen

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Liner notes for Springsteen’s «We Shall Overcome»

Shorefire media has posted the following information:

A Note From Bruce Springsteen

In 1997 I recorded “We Shall Overcome” for Where Have All The Flowers
Gone: The Songs Of Pete Seeger. Growing up a rock n’ roll kid I didn’t
know a lot about Pete’s music or the depth of his influence. So I
headed to the record store and came back with an armful of Pete Seeger
records. Over the next few days of listening, the wealth of songs,
their richness and power changed what I thought I knew about “folk
music.” Hearing this music and our initial ’97 session for Pete’s
record sent me off, casually at first, on a quest.

Through Soozie Tyrell, violinist with the E Street Band, I met a group
of musicians out of New York City who played at a fiesta in the field
at our farm. Accordion, fiddle, banjo, upright bass, washboard, this
was the sound I was looking for, for the project for Pete. I wanted the
sound of a bunch of people just sitting around playing. After a few
phone calls we set up next to one another in the living room of our
farm house (horns in the hall). ‘Till that moment we’d never played a
note together. I counted off the opening chords to Jesse James and away
we went. It was a carnival ride, the sound of surprise and the pure joy
of playing. Street corner music, parlor music, tavern music, wilderness
music, circus music, church music, gutter music, it was all there
waiting in those songs, some more than one hundred years old. It
rocked, it swung, it rolled. It was a way back and forward to the
informality, the freeness and the eclecticism of my earliest music and
then some.

This is a LIVE recording, everything cut in three one-day sessions
(’97, ’05, ’06) with no rehearsals. All arrangements were conducted as
we played, you can hear me shouting out the names and instruments of
the players as we roll. This approach takes the listener along for the
whole ride, as you hear the music not just being played but being made.
So, turn it up, put on your dancin’ and singin’ shoes, and have fun. We
did. Here’s the Seeger Sessions. Pete thanks for the inspiration!

Bruce Springsteen
March 6, 2006

Bruce Springsteen & The Seeger Sessions band at rehearsals

Bruce and an assorted bunch of musicians (which include Soozie Tyrell, Patti Scialfa, Lisa Lowell, Ed Manion, Mark Pender, La Bamba, Mark Clifford, Charles Giordano and others not identified yet) have been rehearsing these past days at the Paramount Theatre in Asbury Park, and violin, banjo, mandolin, horns, organ, piano and other instruments were heard from those listening outside the theatre. Check out our Concerts page to know full song lists.

photo: Soozie Tyrell outside The Paramount Theatre after a rehearsal. © Kevin P. O’Keefe

European dates

Dates for the forthcoming european tour are nearly complete and will be announced in short. We’ve heard the cities for the tour will be London, Paris, Milano, Barcelona, Berlin, Rotterdam, Copenhagen and Stockholm. Watch out for an official announcement/confirmation in short.

(update 3/21: other sources indicate Berlin and Copenhagen might not be in that list)

First tour date announced


Bruce Springsteen and the Seeger Sessions Band have been confirmed to perform at this year’s New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival. It could be the very first date of the forthcoming tour, following by a two week tour of Europe with stops in London, Paris, Milano, Barcelona and possibly a city in Germany and another in Sweden.

Bruce will perform at the New Orleans Jazzfest on sunday April 30th. More info can be found at the festival’s site. Also performing at the Festival are The Meters, Allen Toussaint with Elvis Costello, Bob Dylan and Paul Simon.

Listening party in New York

As informed by Backstreets.com, there was a listening party last night in NYC held at BB King’s club. Bruce, Patti, Jon Landau and Sony chief Don Ienner were there and Bruce and Landau talked about the album. Several songs were heard and they sounded more upbeat and jovial than expected. The sounds of the new album have been described «along the lines of The Band and the collaboration between Wilco and Billy Bragg for the two volumes of Woody Guthrie compositions rather than Springsteen’s contribution for the covers of Seeger songs in 1998».

Check out Backstreets.com for more details. (Photo courtesy Backstreets)