Bruce Springsteen’s “Dancing In The Dark” video was a straight-up performance clip of The Boss grooving on stage with a short-haired woman who would eventually become Courteney Cox. (She was probably still Courteney Cox back then, but now she’s The Courteney Cox.) As it turns out, that wasn’t the first treatment of the video — … More » Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : Idolator Discovery Date : 03/08/2011 22:30 Number of articles : 2
New Jersey will honor Clemons by flying flags at half-staff on Thursday. By Gil Kaufman Clarence Clemons Photo: Getty Images Bruce Springsteen paid tribute to his musical brother, late sax player Clarence Clemons , on Tuesday at a memorial service in Florida. The titanic 69-year-old musician died on Saturday at a Palm Beach hospital after complications from a recent stroke. The private two-hour funeral at a small church near Palm Beach was attended by Springsteen’s wife, Patti Scialfa, as well as fellow E Street bandmember Steven Van Zandt, singer Jackson Browne and Miami Heat general manager Pat Riley. “Clarence was a man of unconditional love, but his love came with a lot of conditions,” Springsteen said of his friend of more than four decades. His comments drew some knowing laughs and nods from the crowd of 150 packed into the small Royal Poinciana Chapel, according to the U2 to Coldplay and Slash, paid tribute to Clemons . “His partnership with Bruce Springsteen and the rest of the E Street Band brought great pride to our state and joy to every fan of this music around the world.” Clemons was born in Virginia in 1942, but moved to Jersey as a youth counselor before joining Springsteen’s band. “On a personal note, when I heard about the Big Man’s passing on Saturday night, I was struck with an overwhelming feeling that the days of my youth were now finally over,” Christie said in a statement. “My condolences to Clarence’s family and all the members of the E Street Band.” Related Photos Clarence Clemons: A Career In Photos Related Artists Bruce Springsteen
The iconic sax man for Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band (and Lady Gaga) towered over contemporary music for nearly five decades. By James Montgomery Clarence Clemons Photo: Getty Images Clarence Clemons was affectionately known as “The Big Man,” probably because, well, he was a big man. Standing six-feet, four-inches tall — and nearly just as wide — he towered over Bruce Springsteen, the E Street Band, and whomever else he shared the stage with during his five-decade career, casting a shadow as formidable as it was striking (it’s no wonder Bruce decided to lean on him, like some sort of lamppost, on the cover of 1975’s Born To Run ). But his physical size only told part of the story. Because Clemons was also a massive talent , a saxophonist as adept at filing an arena with his booming solos as he was providing a rock-solid backbone to Springsteen’s churning, yearning rock. He was the Big Man because everything ran through him, because he was capable of both taking the lead (like on “Jungleland”) and laying back in the cut (like on “10th Avenue Freeze Out,” where his presence definitely shapes the song, but at no point overshadows its other components), and because of the tones he charmed from his sax … crisp and clear-eyed, grandiose yet gritty, big yet decidedly blue-collar (just like he was), no one played like Clarence did. And when he died on Saturday at the age of 69 after complications from a stroke he suffered last week , not only did we lose a mountain of a man, but an icon as well. See photos of Clemons throughout his career. Simply put, Clemons was the most prominent sax player in popular music. And as proof, I’ll ask you to name any of his contemporaries. Chances are, you can’t; not because they don’t exist, but because they couldn’t begin to approach his stature. He was the go-to guy when the stars needed a session hand (recording with the likes of Aretha Franklin and Twisted Sister, and performing live with everyone from the Grateful Dead to Ringo Starr,) and, more recently, Lady Gaga tapped him to perform on her Born This Way album — he appears in her new “The Edge Of Glory” video , a move that no doubt introduced his sublime playing to a whole new generation of fans. Shoot, he even appeared on “The Simpsons,” “The Wire” and “Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure,” where he played, fittingly enough, one of the Three Most Important People in the World. Remember Clemons with us on Facebook. In passing, he leaves behind a catalog that’s nearly as massive as his frame: not only his notable guest appearances, but several solo albums (and records he cut with backing bands like the Temple of Soul and the Red Bank Rockers) and, of course, the myriad of albums he cut with Springsteen and the E Street Band. And it’s on those recordings — starting with 1973’s Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. and continuing right on through 2009’s Working on a Dream and last year’s reissue The Promise — where Clemons not only shone the brightest, but also showcased the reason why he earned his “Big Man” nickname. Sure, he burns on songs like “Badlands” and “Born To Run,” but listen to his work on songs like “Prove It All Night” and “Dancing in the Dark” (to name six dozen) … the times where he proves to be the Bigger Man, letting his fellow bandmates get their share, too. Rarely has there been a player so soulful and selfless … one so secure in his own status that he was willing to let others shine. It’s why Clarence Clemons will forever be known as “The Big Man,” and why, even in death, he still casts a formidable shadow over popular music and popular culture. He was the sax man’s sax man. To paraphrase Springsteen on “Freeze Out,” not only was the change was made uptown when the Big Man joined the band, but the mould was broken, too. Related Photos Clarence Clemons: A Career In Photos Related Artists Clarence Clemons Lady Gaga Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band Bruce Springsteen
His new record Heartless World hits stores May 31 – available now for digital pre-order on Amazon – and he has an upcoming summer tour with Bob Seeger and Earth Wind And Fire. The Boss is back – and this time he#39;s lending his voice to a new song about the war in Afghanistan. Musician Stewart Francke, who interviewed soldiers to help him write the song, says that having Bruce Springsteen featured on Francke#39;s track, “Summer Soldier (Holler If Ya Hear Me,)” is a dream come true. “This
Filed under: Justin Timberlake , Janet Jackson , Kid Rock , Bruce Springsteen , Photo Galleries , 2011 Bud Light Hotel Take a magical trip back in time and check out some of the past Super Bowl half time performances. Read more
Posted onNovember 17, 2010byBenny Hollywood|Comments Off on Jimmy Fallon, Bruce Springsteen Channel Willow Smith, Perform Acoustic "Whip My Hair"
The great Bruce Springsteen joined host Jimmy Fallon, who does an amazing Neil Young impression, for a cover of “Whip My Hair” on Late Night last night. It is nothing short of epic. Dressed as Young and evoking the crooner with each word and mannerism, Fallon’s ” Whip My Hair ” felt straight out of the ’70s, decades before Willow Smith graced this planet. The Boss rocked a Born to Run -era beard for the occasion, too: Jimmy Fallon Covers Whip My Hair
The problem with covering film festivals is that the things you have to see so often conflict with the things you want to see; bits of the latter have to be stuffed into the corners of the usual crazed festival going. There’s also the problem of making choices: The other day a new acquaintance tempted me, like a cartoon devil on my shoulder, to check out a Mexican film, Leap Year, that supposedly had, she said, “Lots of explicit sex.” Count me in! But after checking my schedule, I realized that if I went to see that, I’d miss the Alex Gibney documentary on Eliot Spitzer, Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer, which I was extremely curious about.
Bruce Springsteen is so Jersey, he met his alleged mistress at a gym, where he would stand behind her on the treadmill and watch her “nicest ass” churn, according to court papers from the woman’s divorce. More
Filed under: Music Not even The Boss, it would seem, is immune from the infidelity epidemic going around — allegedly.Bruce Springsteen was carrying on an affair with a married woman in New Jersey, according to the New York Post today, which cites legal docs in the … Permalink
So! The Hope For Haiti Telethon was last night, and if you’re like everyone else, it was Friday night, and you were out, you selfish fuck. Or all TEAM COCO. Either way, music happened.