And
These Badlands Start Treating Us Good; Springstein Kicks off the
Vote For Change Tour
By
David Swanson
OpEdNews.com
A
tight spotlight focused on Bruce Springsteen after he'd entered the
stage in
Philadelphia
on Friday night and bent over his guitar without a word.
And without a word he gave new meaning to the Star Spangled
Banner. And on came the
E-Street Band, and the stage lit up, and they gave new meaning to
"Born in the
USA
." They picked the
tempo and the volume up a notch as they jumped into "
Badlands
" and gave a new meaning to every lyric.
The sold-out crowd didn't sit down or stop moving for the two
and a half hours that followed the two hours of opening acts (Bright
Eyes and REM). And not
a single song failed to find a new meaning for the upcoming
presidential election, because this was not just a concert to raise
money in the Wachovia Center ("A Comcast Venue," one in a
collection of luxury sports arenas sprawled outside a suffering city
and erected at the expense of the public that must be searched for
weapons when it enters them). This
was the Vote for Change tour the night after the first Kerry-Bush
debate, and we could taste the change coming.
When
Springsteen belted out "
Youngstown
" it was a song about seizing control and creating new jobs.
When John Fogarty joined the band these first words out of
his mouth were about positive political change:
"Well,
beat the drum and hold the phone - the sun came out today!
"We’re born again, there’s new grass on the field."
And
these needed no explanation:
"Some
folks are born made to wave the flag,
"Ooh, they're red, white and blue.
"And when the band plays "Hail to the chief",
"Ooh, they point the cannon at you, Lord."
There
was no need for commentary, and there were no media commentators
around to impose any on us, no commercial breaks, and no let-up in
the E Street Band's ability to amaze.
The most cheerful up-beat rocking tune to come shaking off
that stage was the tragic "Johnny 99."
And it was a song about life in the
United States of America
for those never interviewed about economic up-tics and jobless
recoveries.
A
strange thing happened to me during this concert.
I became capable of thinking of patriotism as not just
harmless, which is a major step for me in itself, but as something
positive, as a celebration and development of a culture of fairness,
decency, respect, peace, and art.
When
Bruce paused during "Mary's Place" and started preaching,
there can't have been too many people in the house who needed
saving. "The E
Street Band is rising up tonight," he shouted.
"Because we're here for a Purpose!
We're here for a Reason!
So, if you're on the line, if you're swinging, if you're
shifting, if you just can't decide, we're gonna bring you over to
the other side!" or words to that effect.
And a man came unto the Boss and got down on his knees, and
the Boss told him to say Halliburton three times real fast, and when
the Boss asked him where he stood, he said "I'm
switching!" and the people were amazed.
And
the people have the power, according to the Patti Smith lyrics that
all the acts in the show sang out together toward the close:
"The
people
have the power
"to redeem the
work of fools
"upon the meek the
graces shower
"it's decreed the
people rule
"The people have the power
"The people have the power
"The people have the power
"The people have the power"
This
was a populist gathering in a corporate palace, and Bruce, the E
Street Band, REM, John Fogarty, and Bright Eyes joined their various
styles together to ask a question that has never passed the lips of
Jim Lehrer. In the
words of an Elvis Costello song written by Nick Lowe:
"As
I walk through
"This wicked world
"Searchin' for light in the darkness of insanity.
"I ask myself
"Is all hope lost?
"Is there only pain and hatred, and misery?
"And each time I feel like this inside,
"There's one thing I wanna know:
"What's so funny 'bout peace love and understanding?"
David
Swanson's website is www.davidswanson.org