Workin’ on a Dream

As some of you may have noticed, the activity on this blog has been very low for the past two months. That has to do with the server that this blog lies on. For some reason the surver got full, and I thought something had gone wrong with the program Word Press that I use. I had just updated it, so I figured I’d missed something. But when I tried to reinstall it, everything just got messed up because there was no space to reinstall… Anyway, it has taken some time to fix it, but now all should be back to normal again.

During this time Mr. Springsteen has presented a new song for us fans. Workin’ on a Dream was played during the wake for the now elected president Barack Obama. As the news tells us there will be a new record by the same name in January 27th. Of course there will be a tour, but the dates are yet to be official.

On Mr. Springsteen’s official site we are presented with the tracks of the upcoming album and the list reads like this:

“Working on a Dream” Song Titles:

1. Outlaw Pete
2. My Lucky Day
3. Working on a Dream
4. Queen of the Supermarket
5. What Love Can Do
6. This Life
7. Good Eye
8. Tomorrow Never Knows
9. Life Itself
10. Kingdom of Days
11. Surprise, Surprise
12. The Last Carnival

Bonus track:
The Wrestler

You can listen to Workin’on a Dream on You Tube.

This means it’s time for me to really get working on MY dream. If this Photo book about the Springsteen fans and our film should ever be finished, we better start working…

Jackson Cage

Nils Lofgren and Bruce Springsteen at Globen, Stockholm, december 10th 2007.

Nils Lofgren and Bruce Springsteen at Globen, Stockholm, december 10th 2007.

As I did this crazy list with statistics over the shows I’ve seen and the songs I’ve heard, I’ve been brooding over it. Although it’s the first time I’ve made such a list, it is a bit interesting to see the results even if it’s deathly boring making the stuff.

Anyway, of the 176 songs I’ve heard, there are 59 that I’ve heard only once. Among the nicer ones of those are 4th of July Asbury Park (Sandy), Be True, Dead Man Walking and Cover Me. Among the “not so good ones” are The Fuse and Big Muddy.

To my surprise I discovered that I only heard Jackson Cage twice. That’s strange, because I’ve had the feeling that the song has been hunting me, and that I’ve must have heard it at least half a dozen times. But I haven’t! 😀 It’s not a particular favourite of mine, thats for sure…

Anyway, beeing home from work waiting on a home delivery package, I’ve had the time to think about my list, sort through my pictures and think about this picture book of mine. It’s good to get to grips with the material. Got to do som more gripping and thinking, sorting and writing, so see you soon!

Big Muddy

After a tour it can get a bit lonely. No more travelling, no more shows, no more music and no more talking to Bruce friends. As the tour is still on, Springsteen and the band are back in the states now, there is still setlists to follow.

Some fans also go deep down in the vaults to dig out the statistics about the shows they’ve seen, the songs they’ve heard and how many times they’ve heard it.

I check in on the swedish fan forum www.springsteen.se regularly, and following a discussion there I decided to make my own statistics.

Funny enough I found out that I’ve actually seen 26 shows over the years instead of 24 as I asumed. Counting has never been one of my strong sides… 😀

I saw my first show in 1992 when Springsteen brought the Human Touch/Lucky Town tour to Stockholm and the Globe arena. In 1999 was the first year that I saw multiple shows (the two ones at Stockholm Stadium) and 2002 I saw my first show abroad, in Barcelona, Spain.

I haven’t really been touring that much, six shows is the most I’ve seen on a tour. That happened 2003 when I saw all the Nordic shows, in Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden. This year I also saw six concerts, in Milan, Copenhagen, Göteborg and Barcelona.

During these 16 years that I’ve been to Springsteen’s concerts I’ve heard 176 songs, if I’ve not counted wrong. The five most frequent songs I’ve heard are Badlands (20 times), Born to Run (20 times), The Promised Land (20 times), The Rising (19 times) and Bobby Jean (16 times).

It took some time to work this out, but thanks to Brucebase I made it. But I think I have to work out a better way to keep order on my statistics than this calculating sheet I used. I don’t think I’ve used the full potential of my computer programme for that. Now it’s to much of a Big Muddy…

Tougher Than the Rest

Magic Tour, Barcelona 19th July

I arrived in Barcelona last Thursday and settled in a room at the youth hostel Pere Tarrés that I shared with seven other women.

Later that afternoon I went over to Camp Nou, which was just 15 minutes walk from the hostel, to check out the arena. I looked at the gates and found the place for the line for the pit, but there was really nobody there. Then I went inside, walked around a bit, bought a t-shirt in the FC Barcelona souvenir shop and strolled back. I spent some time at a café, drinking ice coffee and planning what to do the next day.

On Friday I managed to get me a ticket to the Saturday show. A spanish guy that i met in line last year, helped me, his cousin sold me a seat, and that made me very happy! 😀

La Padrera, createdby Antoni Gaudi, Barcelona.

La Padrera, a building created by Gaudí­.

I walked around town, despite my sinus infection I felt strong enough to do it and I spent most of the day strolling about. I visited the Casa Batlló, one of the houses the famous architecht Antoni Gaudí created. It was very beautiful. I had hoped to visit La Pedrera, another Gaudí building, but there was to much people in the line. Then I walked over to La Sagrada Familia, which was also crowded, but I walked around it and it’s a very spectacular church.

Later that evening I visited some friends who were in line at Camp Nou and sold one extra ticket I had. When I came back to the hostel, a dutch woman had moved in. She was also in Barcelona for Springsteen, we shared memories, talked about the shows we’d seen during the European leg and amused our australian room mate with our “nerdiness”.

La Sagrada Familia is not finished yet.

La Sagrada Familia isn’t finished yet.

On Saturday I spent the day walking at Las Rramblas and in the old town, sightseeing and shopping. In the evening I picked up my ticket and went to the arena. Camp Nou is huge and the best thing with the show was the Spanish audience. they were on their feet, singing, dancing and enjoying every moment. I’ve never seen any crowdbe so into a show! The setlist was fairly standard, not as playful as in Scandinavia and Finland. The highlights for me was Brilliant Disguise, Tunnel of Love and The River. The encores with Glory Days and Twist and Shout was also incredible good. During Glory Days all the people on the field were jumping and the people in the stands was clapping and cheering almost in a frenzy. What a crowd! 😀

I was glad I had a seat the first night, though I felt better, my illness got the better out of me and I was very tired afterwards. The spaniards do smoke a lot and that’s not nice if you’re sick, I was coughing a great deal because of their poison sticks. After the show I talked with my dutch room mate and a Belgian women that we met in the lobby about the concert. It was great fun!

For the last show I had a GA ticket, so on Sunday I got up at nine, had breakfast and went over to Camp Nou about 10.30. I got number 904 and was told that the next roll call would be at noon. I met swedish friends, talked with them and just hung out. At noon they were trying to get people to stand in number order, apparently a very difficult thing since it took hours to arrange. But when it was our turn we also got our wristbands and at two o’clock we were done. Me and a finnish guy went for lunch, had some ice cream and got back by four. People had lined up, and we found us a spot in the line where number order was something long time forgotten.

Casa Batll�, created by Antoni Gaud�, Barcelona.

Casa Batlló is a beautiful house.

At six the gates opened, we walked calmly inside and got ourselves spots in the back of the pit, sitting against the fence and resting. We chatted with some dutch people and a lovely welsh couple.

The show begun with a very powerful 10th Avenue Freeze-Out, the crowd was roaring and the band was just electrified. One of the best openers I’ve seen! My favorites was Spirit in the Night, Light of Day, Tougher Than the Rest, Youngstown and Murder Incorporated. I’m Going Down was also a real treat as was the Detroit Medley, Rosalita and Twist and Shout that closed the show.

The trip to Spain was lovely, but being ill affects your capacity to appreciate a show very much. I wasn’t feeling very well and at the end I didn’t have the strenght to do much more than listen. That was a pity, but I’m glad I went to Barcelona anyway.

Dead Man Walkin’

Hopefully these medicines will get me well in time for the Barcelona shows.

After the shows in Göteborg I got a ride back to Stockholm with some fans, and then I took a week off touring to visit my family. That was all well, hadn’t it been for the fact that I had caught a really bad cold on my way. Most likely I must have gotten too close to som evil germs at Ullevi. Anyway the mean little fellows has made my life miserable, I cough, sneeze and when I went to the doctor he suspected that I might have developed a sinus infection. 🙁 So now I have all sorts of medicine to eat or spray in my poor nose.

Hopefully this will get this almost dead woman walking again, because tomorrow my flight for Barcelona and the last two shows of the European leg, leaves.

I don’t know why this happens to me. Last year, I got sick just when I got Christmas break from work and was about to go to Paris and London for two shows. In 2002 when I saw my first Springsteen concert abroad – in Barcelona as a matter of fact – I came home with a cold that turned into bronchitis. I don’t know if it’s air conditioning, too much work or just being among thousands of people where obviously somebody is always having a cold, that gets me. Anyway, it’s really frustrating to get ill when you’re about to go abroad to see your favorite artist.

Hopefully I’ll get a seat for the first show, and if the weather is not so hot I’ll make it. Maybe I should make a request for Dead Man Walking if I get the chance? 😉

I do wish that Springsteen and the band keep playing with the setlist, I do want something extra when the European leg wraps up this weekend.

Drive all Night

One of the fans who got her request.

After the amazing show the night before, everybody was wondering how Springsteen and the band would top that. But as it turned out, they had many surprises up their sleeves.

I felt a bit knocked about after the first gig, the weather had been hot and the show intense, so I was kind of tired on Saturday morning. I did my best to drink a lot of water and felt better when the tension in my muscles went away.

Ingela and I did some filming, talking to people about their requests and interviewing a young girl about being a newborn Bruce fan. A lot of folks at the swedish fan forum have noticed the generation gap and how the younger fans in their teens and twenties are starting to get out on the road. It’s fun to see that the music attracts the younger ones!

When it came to queing, there were a bit of confusion since the list from Friday was on for Saturday too, while others had formed another line. For most part of the day it was hard to know which list to stick to, so many people got numbers in both lines just to be sure. Apparently this also started a very animated debate on the web forum springsteen.se with fans discussing back and forth on the subject.

Finally, the leaders of the two lines and the security staff agreed to line people up. The ones that stuck to the first line and the 249 who was first on the second list were lined up in rows of seven. Then seven people from eachline were given wristbands. We sat down and when the gates opened everybody walked in just like the night before. The last procedure with the wristbands and the entrance went nice and smooth. It’s just a pity there had to be so much fuss before that.

During the sound check Drive all Night were played again, together with Roulette. When the show finally started two things were different from the night before. First, the people on the stands were much more active, clapping and cheering. The second thing was that EVERYTHING was different. 16 songs that weren’t played the night before! The first show had 27 songs, the second 28.

They opened with Night, No Surrender and Lonesome Day and then burst into Hungry Hearts where the crowd did ther singing part very well.The whole night was just an immense party. We got Summertime Blues, Waiting on a Sunny Day, Working on the Highway and Girls in their Summer Clothes. It seemed like the band wanted to bring out every song anybody possibly could want. We got Backsttreets, Janey Don’t You Lose Heart, and Roulette. But the one and true pearl was Drive all Night. After three sound checks and numerous signs they did finally play it! It was very moving and a great moment.

After Badlands it was all party again, the crowd couldn’s stop singing, hopping, shouting and enjoying themselves. After a set with Thunder Road, Born To Run, Bobby Jean, American Land the band said their thanks. But Springsteen came back with a sign and said “We couldn’t possibly play this. It is the stadium breaker…” But of course they played Twist and Shout and everybody went bananas. 😀

There was a whole lot of love in the air and during the show Springsteen thanked the crowd for their support over the years. This show sure was a beautiful reward for all that.

Independence Day

Fans waitng for the show to start.

The next shows on my mini tour was to be the double in Göteborg. Scheduled for the 4th and 5th of July this naturally brought high hopes concerning the setlists, and my – we surely got something out of the ordinary.

For the first show I arrived at the arena just before six in the morning. I got number 348 and it turned out to be a good one, since the first 419 people were the ones who first got the wristbands. The communication with the security staff went very well, we had our roll calls, and the usual stuff.

Ingela came around lunch time, she did some filming while I was being interviewed by the local tv for their news programme. Then we decided to leave the filming to the next day, because I soon had to take my place in the line.

It’s always fun to be in Göteborg for a big stadium show, last time in 2003 the two concerts were incredible. There were many people from the swedish fan forum, Springsteen.se. We chatted with friends and then got in line. Finally we got our wristbands and the first two hundred people were let in, they walked in number order. In my group, people weren’t that disciplined, but we all walked calmly and I got a very good spot anyway. I was in second row at the left corner of the right catwalk.

The waiting in the pit was not so boring, I spent time talking to a couple of forum friends next to me. Everybody in the pit was excited, we had heard Born in the USA and Drive all Night during the sound check. When the band came on stage they started with BITUSA and everybody just went nuts. For me it was a great moment, just being at Ullevi, hearing the 1985-version of the song and thinking about that those showes actually broke the stadium… Wow! I had goose bumps all over. 😀

Ingela was a bit further back, but we both had a great time. The band played Independence Day, 4th of July and This Hard Land in honor of the american National Day and they were truly beaming with joy. We also got Be True, Atlantic City and Cadillac Ranch. The encores brought Rosalita and Seven Nights to Rock, so it was a real house party.

Dancing in the Dark

The staff are handing out wristbands to the fans.

I got to Copenhagen the day before the show, I spent a few hours downtown, doing some walking and sightseeing. I enjoyed a nice meal and went early to bed to be prepared.

The next morning I took the bus to Parken, and I arrived just be fore six o’ clock. There were two lines for the GA folks, and I got number 15 in my line. That was incredible low. Everything went smoothly, we were handed wristbands around ten and then we just waited. After five o’clock the security staff started to make everything ready and we weregoing to be let inside. When we got frisked the staff discovered my little digital camera that I brought with me. I weren’t allowed to take it inside, so me and another swede who also had a camera with him were sent to the wardrobe where we werw to leave our stuff. Of course this was at the other side of the arena so we ran like crazy to get there and back. When we returned, the gates were closed and the people without wristbands were waiting outside.

We thought we had lost our spots, but then as if by magic the gates opened, we showed our wristbands and got inside. After another frisking we got back in line, and then all of us walked behind one of the security staff to the pit. All went very calm and I got a spot in the front row. I was a little to the left of the base of the middle catwalk.

It felt great to be front row for the first time and on my 20th concert too! 😀 I enjoyed the show very much. Since it was not so hot I had a lot of energy, and when you got songs like Two hearts, Blinded by the Light, Something in the Night, Trapped and Downbound Train you couldn’t complain. Though I liked to be front row I must say I prefer to stay a bit further back. When you are in second or third row you can see more of the audiences response, hear the others sing and wave their hands. The spirit of the community is stronger.

Anyway, it was a great night. I danced and sang my heart out and was quite exhausted after the show. I got back to my hotel very late, since the bus never came and I had to walk to the station to catch a train. The line for the ticket machine was very long, but I finally got a much deserved shower and some sleep.

I’ll Work For Your Love

San Sirostadion i Milan, eller Stadio di Meazza som den heter.

The show in Milan goes down as one of the hottest days in my life. The temperature was somewhere between 30-40 degrees and the humidity was awful. In short, it was hotter than any hell you can imagine.

After a lot of fuss about the que, it started with two ones that after half a day became one, a lot of arguments about when to have roll calls in the night, we lined up in groups of fifty and waiting for our wristbands. They were handed out around ten the day of the show and I managed to get one. I was number 460 and they gave out 800 wristbands at first, but apparently more were handed out later.

Finally they opened the gates at maybe twenty minutes to five and we got in. Although I had a bad number i managed to get a spot at the left little catwalk, I was about 3rd or 4th row. They had put some sort of metal floor to protect the fotball ground, a floor that was more like a frying pan since it was glowing hot. A little hard to sit on… I had been drinking a lot of waterin the heat, about seven litres, but I must have lost too much minerals and salt in the heat, because I got an awful headache. The three hours before the show started went very slow my feet wereaching, head hurting and at that point I was truly wondering why in God’s name I was doing this.

But it all went away as soon as Bruce and the band came on stage. The show was really greate, Bruce was very playful, but it was hard to appreciate the show as much as it deserved. It was simply too hot. The security handed out water, Bruce himself splashed people in front with a spnge and handed them water. It wasn’t bothering me that much, not as much as the pangs in my head. But anywat it was great. I especially enjoyed Rosalita, Racing in the Street, the surprise opener Summertime Blues and the Detroit Medley. And of course Twist and Shout. Although he must have felt the heat just as much as we in the audience, Bruce never hesitated to give us all he could.

Domen i Milano �r otroligt vacker.

I was totally worn out afterwards, but after some food, more water and a shower I felt better and fell asleep as soon as I put my head down on the pillow.

After one day at home, doing some laundry, I’m taking the train to Copenhagen in Denmark tomorrow morning. The next show is on Sunday, June 29th.


Back in Your Arms

I’m a bit nervous, tomorrow I’m going to fly to Milan, Italy, to attend the first of my hopefully six Springsteen concerts during this tour.

I’m going to see the shows in Milan, Copenhagen, Göteborg (both of them) and Barcelona, but I’m still missing a ticket for the first Barcelona gig. But I’ll hope I’ll get hold of one once I get to Spain.

Anyway, it’s my first trip to Italy and I’m very excited. I’ve heard that the italian audience is very enthusiastic, so my hopes are high for a good show. But I’m also anxious about getting a good spot, the stadio Meazza is so big… And I do want to be up front in order to see. What if I get to far back? Will it be terrible then?

The usual worries, what to wear, how to get enough to drink and to eat so I won’t faint, keep cool in the hot weather (it’s supposed to be around 30 degrees Celsius in Milan) and all that is also building up. But it’ll work out fine, I’m sure. I’m just a little rusty since last years queing. But a picture like this helps to get the spirits going. Now I just have to check my luggage all over again so I haven’t forgotten anything…

See you in Milan! 😀Magic tour Paris 2007

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