The heart-stopping, pants-dropping, house-rocking, earth-shaking, booty-quaking, Viagra-taking, love-making – Le-gen-dary E – Street – Band!
Because let’s face it, this celebration we’re about to have is about togetherness. It’s really about how one performer, Bruce Springsteen has shaped rock ‘n’ roll music over the last 35 years. But it’s also about how he has allowed everyone to come along on the ride.
I go to a few gigs now and then – probably not as many as you do – and someone will ask how it was. It will have been good, but, I hasten to add I saw Bruce Springsteen and The E St. Band last summer and it’s going to be hard for any gig to top that. It’s not that the Springsteen show is better played or better lit – though it’s not slack in these departments – and it’s certainly not that it’s got more energy or meaning or light and shade or emotion – though it has all these too. The difference is that you go in feeling one thing and you come out changed. As the man says, it’s a rock ‘n’ roll, baptism, exorcism, barmitzvah….”we’re going to do it all! ” And he does.
So we can’t take you to a gig but what we can do is give you a sense of why Bruce Springsteen’s music is so vital and in particular, why he’s made such a connection to country people. His songs have been cut by Travis Tritt, Waylon Jennings and Johnny Cash. Trisha Yearwood, Faith Hill and Emmylou Harris have all recorded songs and Patty Griffin has a particularly female take on an iconic Bruce song.
Bruce Springsteen is in the line that brought Chuck Berry,Woody Guthrie, Leadbelly ,Robert Johnston, Merle Haggard and Jimmy Rogers and that, my friends, is a great line. We welcome you if you love Bruce or if you’ve only ever heard the odd track on a car radio. If you think he was only good in the seventies and eighties we’ll try to bring you up to date and if you only came along when Born in The USA came out we’ll try to convince you that there’s a whole load of great things that went before. However as people in the music business always say, “It’s all about the songs.”
It’s a final show for this year tomorrow night. I’m taking a break and will leave you in the care of the wonderful Edith Bowman.
I know for a fact that Edith has great things in store for you on the albums show. I’ll be back over Christmas with a special show and Another Country proper will return in January.
On Sunday Morning.
It’s remembrance Sunday so we’ll talk to Army Chaplain, Donald Prentice. We find out more about The Heart of Midlothian players who went to France in 1914 and I discover what makes Portobello a Transition Town. (I’ll give you a clue: it’s no longer relying on fossil fuels and is trying to explore new alternatives) We’ll play music from Radiohead, Michael Marra, The Korgis....and Joni Mitchell too.
Ricky
Before I disappear up my own….thanks to you and Richard for some superb music again this series.
I am SO looking forward to your show tomorrow. its sure to be brilliant. I have just taken possession of my copy of the Darkness Box Set and it is utterly superb. I wish my Nephew had survived to enjoy this set….but I am doing enough for both of us. The DVD portions are incredible…….both the album played through in 2009 and the ’78 House cut Concert. Outrageously good.
I could go on…….
Yes, you deserve R & R…….don’t know how your head keeps from exploding with all of the good, broad, creative, thought provoking, fun and entertaining programming you guys turn out.
Love “Another Country” and the Springsteen program is a great idea. A Springsteen story:
I became REALLY aware of The Boss and the E-Street Band in 1983-84. OF COURSE IT HAD TO DO WITH POLITICS!!!!!! This me, InvincibleGrammie talking to ya’all. Mr. Reagan had picked up “Born In the USA” as his campaign song……..and as the “far right” is so wont to do over here……..they did not ask The Boss for permission. When they got around to that, said “NO!”
Then in 1983, late fall, Springsteen and the E-Street Band, came to Tempe, Arizona for a concert at Arizona State University’s Gammage Auditorium. This was at the height of a copper miners strike against Phelps Dodge. (See notes for backgroound.) The auditorium has seating for 3,000 and was sold out. Even the STO was sold out. Folks congregated outside of the auditorium just hoping to hear anything…..knowing this the guys and the Gammage managers set-up loud speakers so the folks could hear the concert, too.
The kicker was when the did “Born In The USA” and dedicated it to the miners striking in Bisbee, Arizona. At the end of the song, Springsteen told the crowd that a per cent of the proceeds from the concert and sale of the albums (yes, vinyl) and tapes sold at the concert, were going to go to the miner’s families. The crowd gave them a standing ovation just for that.
My dad was a Newspaper Guild negotiator and so was my husband so we were a happy household at the time due to those efforts.
Unfortunately, as you read the following notes, all did not go so well for the miners and unions in general:
On April 7, 1982, Phelps Dodge announced it would lay off 3,400 of its workers in Texas and Arizona.
Over one year later, in May 1983, the copper mining company began negotiations with the United Steelworkers and other unions in Phoenix, Arizona. The unions agreed to a freeze of their members’ wages for three years, but attempted to bargain for Cost of Living Adjustments (COLA) and to prevent job combinations. In recent years, similar agreements had been accepted by other mining corporations, including Kennecott, Asarco, Magma Copper, and Inspiration Consolidated Copper.
However, Phelps Dodge was facing competition from overseas producers during a particularly low period of metals pricing. Increased media scrutiny, highlighted by the July 1983 cover of Business Week, declaring a “Management Crisis at Phelps Dodge”, implicated chairman George B. Munroe in the company’s financial woes.
The subsequent negotiations with the unions failed to lead to an agreement, and on midnight of July 30 a strike began, including workers from Morenci, Ajo, Clifton, and Douglas, Arizona. Thousands of miners walked out and a picket line was formed at the Morenci Mine. The next day, Phelps Dodge increased security personnel in and around the mine. Within days miners were subject to unlawful arrests, firings, evictions, and undercover surveillance by the Arizona Criminal Intelligence Systems Agency[3].
At the beginning of August, Phelps Dodge announced that they would be hiring permanent replacement workers for the Morenci Mine. The company took out large employment ads for new workers in the Tucson and Phoenix newspapers. Meanwhile, the local government passed injunctions limiting both picketing and demonstrations at the mine.
On Monday, August 8, approximately 1,000 strikers and their supporters gathered at the gate to the mine in response. Phelps Dodge stopped production and, later that day, Arizona Governor Bruce Babbitt flew in to meet with the company. Phelps Dodge agreed to a 10-day moratorium on hiring replacement workers, and it was decided that a federal mediator would be called in for negotiations.
On the morning of August 19, military vehicles, tanks, helicopters, 426 state troopers and 325 National Guard members arrived in Clifton and Morenci as part of “Operation Copper Nugget” to break the strike.
Strikers at the gate were unable to prevent the replacement workers from entering the mine. Eight days later, 10 strikers were arrested in Ajo and charged with rioting. From this point on, the strike lost much of its momentum. (Told you I live behind the Cactus Curtain.)
After a series of confrontations and controversies, the strike “officially ended” on February 19, 1986, when the National Labor Relations Board rejected appeals from the unions attempting to halt de-certification.
Aftermath:
Shortly after the strike ended, world copper prices began to climb. This and the introduction of new mining technology led to a marked increase in profits at Phelps Dodge. While their annual profits in 1985 were just $29.5 million, profits rapidly climbed to $205.7 million in 1987 and $420 million in 1988. In 1989, the Wall Street Journal published a front page story describing how Phelps Dodge restructured and avoided bankruptcy[4]. The Arizona Copper Mine Strike would later become a symbol of defeat for American unions. The Economics of Labor Markets and The Transformation of American Industrial Relations singled out the Arizona strike as the start of overt company strikebreaking in the 1980s. Journalists referred to the miners’ strike as a precedent for subsequent labor failures.
Recall the words of Show of Hands recent release, “Arrogance, Ignorance and Greed.”
Will be listening Sunday morning……you and “Classics Unwrapped,” better than church……I talk to the “One Above” about these things all of the time.
Many thanks and Peace. ~ Nancy
Likewise, really looking forward to tonight’s finale! Should be a great show.
Enjoy the well-earned break, Ricky – although I’m sure you’ll be busy with other things! I’ve been remiss on finding the time to watch “No Direction Home”, but I’ll fix that over the next couple of months too…
Hi Ricky,
I will so miss your show! It’s up there with Whispering Bob’s (and that is a huge compliment).
Roll on January!
Best Wishes
Anna
Hey! Sparks were flying on E Street! Good show.