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Springsteen To Treat Chicago Fans To ‘Born To Run’

Posted on Wednesday July 29, 2009 at 10:01 AM 4 |

Although Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band is four months into the "Working on a Dream" tour, it now appears The Boss has a few more tricks up his sleeve.

Like playing his 1975 album Born To Run in its entirety. According to the Chicago Sun-Times’ pop music critic, Jim DeRogatis, Springsteen and company will play it all for Chicago when the group lands in the Windy City for a gig at the United Center Sept. 20.

Unless he unleashes the album from start-to-finish sometime between now and the Chicago date, the upcoming show will mark the second time the album has been played on the concert stage by Springsteen and co. In May 2008 Springsteen and E Street performed the album, along with 1978’s Darkness at the Edge of Town, from beginning-to-end, at the Count Basie Theatre in Red Bank, N.J., during a fundraiser to help restore the classic venue.

Keep in mind, there has been no official word (so far) from Springsteen’s camp, and DeRogatis quoted Chicago-based concert promotion company Jam Productions as confirming the BTR performance.

In other Springsteen developments, the number of shows to help close out Philadelphia’s Spectrum has risen to four with the addition of Oct. 19 and 20 to the schedule. Springsteen is just one of the artists playing the venue before it closes its doors at the end of this year’s concert season.

Other acts helping to send the Spectrum out in style include Leonard Cohen Oct. 22 and Pearl Jam, which is the last band scheduled to appear at the venue – Oct. 28 & 30.

Click here to read the complete Chicago Sun-Times article.


4 Comments leave a comment RSS

  1. 5
    cincyconcertfan wrote:

    05:14 PM, Jul 29, 2009

    Who cares.  Bruce has priced his tickets out of the reach of the working class people.  Almost all of his tickets are $95 plus service charges so about $115 each or $230 a pair.   The cheapest tickets are $65 plus service charges so about $83 each or $166 for seats in one section at the far upper end of the arena and one upper section behind the stage.  Thanks Bruce and management for having affordable tickets to the working class who have supported you over the years.

  2. 125
    Trainarollin wrote:

    07:26 PM, Jul 29, 2009

    Considering there are 10 people on stage, actually playing instruments and actually singing $95 a ticket is reasonable. Shows are generally 2 1/2 hours. That's equivelent of seeing 2 fantastic bands in one night.

    He is also NOT scalping tickets (Ticketmasters Platinum Seats) for his own shows like Neil Diamond, Kenny Chesney, Billy/Elton, etc.

    Bruce, I salute you.

  3. 15
    frankwheeler wrote:

    08:31 AM, Jul 30, 2009

    Anyone who thinks the E Street Band is not worth $115 a ticket has not seen this band play for a while. As someone who's been at Springsteen shows since 74 {in Phoenix}, I can testify that this Dream tour ranks right up there with the best ever... by anyone. Worth every dime and then some. The only comparable bang for your buck I can think of is Pearl Jam.

  4. 39
    JohnnyCotts wrote:

    09:29 AM, Jul 30, 2009

    Quit complaining.  Don't go if it's too expensive.  He sells out arenas when he tours practically every year.  Apparently tens of thousands of people in each city don't think it's too expensive.  

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