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AUT: Springsteen Strikes a Chord with Have-Nots (fwd)
- Subject: AUT: Springsteen Strikes a Chord with Have-Nots (fwd)
- From: "Harry M. Cleaver" <hmcleave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 27 Jul 1999 07:28:44 -0500 (CDT)
---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Mon, 26 Jul 1999 21:07:14 -0400
From: exomike@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To: Dr. Harry M. Cleaver <hmcleave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Springsteen Strikes a Chord with Have-Nots
Monday, July 26, 1999
Springsteen Strikes a Chord with Have-Nots
Economy: He's back on tour with a reminder that, even in these robust
times, there are plenty of people hurting.
By THOM DUFFY
Bruce Springsteen's current reunion tour with his E Street Band, which
comes to Los Angeles this fall, will be a flashback for many. Fourteen
years have passed since Springsteen's most successful tour was accompanied
by this same group of musicians. Back then, his album, "Born in the USA,"
dominated pop culture and Billboard's pop album chart, selling more than 15
million copies.
However, this tour is no mere nostalgic fling for Springsteen and his
baby-boomer fans, no easy trip back to their glory days. While still giving
his fans three hours of roof-raising rock 'n' roll, Springsteen is
presenting an urgently needed perspective on the high-flying economy of the
'90s. He is singing about the darkness on the edge of boom town.
Springsteen also offered this uncompromising vision during his earlier
"Born in the USA" tour. Back then, Ronald Reagan was in the White House,
and it was morning in America--at least, if Reaganomics played in your
favor. But the characters in Springsteen's songs often had fallen through
the safety net. They were lucky to be working on the highway, laying down
the blacktop.
In the past decade, however, a lot of Springsteen's fans no doubt have done
pretty well for themselves. Their stocks are up. Unemployment is down, so
they've got jobs. Shelling out $37.50 to $67.50 for a seat at a Springsteen
concert--or bidding a lot more for tickets on the Internet--is no problem.
Yet Springsteen's songs of working life still echo the insecurity and anger
of many of his aging fans. They know the strength of today's stock market
doesn't mean they'll have a job tomorrow. A study earlier this year by
International Survey Research of Chicago found that anxiety about job
security is three times higher now than it was during the recession of
1980-81.
Springsteen's evocations of economic uncertainty have struck a chord with
his fans in Europe even more than in the United States, perhaps one reason
why he opened his concert tour abroad this spring. For example,
unemployment in Germany, Europe's largest music-buying market, topped 10.6%
in the past year, with joblessness rates even higher among the young.
Springsteen's socially charged acoustic album, "The Ghost of Tom Joad,"
released in 1995, has sold twice as many copies in international markets as
it has at home, despite its focus on dispossessed workers in America. Maybe
it's because his European fans, watching refugees cross nearby borders,
understand when they hear Springsteen sing: "Shelter line stretchin' 'round
the corner/Welcome to the new world order."
The insecurity of many American workers in the '90s boom can't compare. But
it is real. Jobs are relocated, redefined or eliminated. Rising sales and
profits are no guarantee against worker upheaval. Consider the music
business, where U.S. album sales rose 9.1% last year, yet an estimated
3,000 employees saw their jobs disappear in the merger of two major record
companies, PolyGram and Universal Music.
Those layoffs were not unique by any means. Major layoffs this year have
followed news of plant closings by Levi Strauss, a reorganization at
Proctor & Gamble, the purchase of Netscape Communications by America
Online, the BP Amoco oil company merger and more.
Now Springsteen is back on the road with a reminder that, even in this
robust economy, there are plenty of people who are not rolling in it, who
are a little bit scared, feeling as if the future is not quite in their
control. No popular artist of this day has given voice to the anxiety and
anger of workers--white or blue collar--as passionately as Springsteen:
"Now, sir, you tell me the world's changed/once I made you rich enough/rich
enough to forget my name!" howls an unemployed steelworker in Springsteen's
song, "Youngstown."
Another song which Springsteen has performed during his shows speaks to the
violence of America's gun-ridden culture. But it carries the double meaning
of business interests that kill a worker's spirit in its very title,
"Murder Incorporated."
But Springsteen also will offer his fans something more uplifting during
his concerts this summer: a blissful, cathartic escape for the moment and a
continuing belief in the possibilities of this promised land.
"So you're scared and you're thinking that maybe we ain't that young
anymore," sang Springsteen to his audience this spring, in a
well-remembered lyric. "Show a little faith, there's magic in the night ... "
When Bruce Springsteen performs, the magic and faith come easily--even to
those facing uncertain times.
Thom Duffy Is International Deputy Editor of Billboard
Copyright 1999 Los Angeles Times
--- from list aut-op-sy@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx ---
- Thread context:
- AUT: WT: Group will battle propaganda abroad (fwd),
Harry M. Cleaver Wed 28 Jul 1999, 18:36 GMT
- AUT: Book Review (fwd),
Harry M. Cleaver Wed 28 Jul 1999, 16:17 GMT
- AUT: NUCLEAR STATEMENTS,
Jan Heynen Tue 27 Jul 1999, 21:27 GMT
- AUT: TMC Web Page on 2nd American Encounter is Up,
Harry M. Cleaver Tue 27 Jul 1999, 18:34 GMT
- AUT: Springsteen Strikes a Chord with Have-Nots (fwd),
Harry M. Cleaver Tue 27 Jul 1999, 12:28 GMT
- AUT: EU-summit on immigration,
finlandia Tue 27 Jul 1999, 09:06 GMT
- AUT: Action Alert! New Amendment to Protect Local Democracy From WTO &,
Harry M. Cleaver Mon 26 Jul 1999, 17:28 GMT
- AUT: Re: GLOBAL WORKING GROUPS, II,
peoples Mon 26 Jul 1999, 07:18 GMT
- AUT: Re: more Negri on Althusser,
rc-am Mon 26 Jul 1999, 01:15 GMT
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