Irish Central

Bruce Springstee­n wraps up Irish tour with another tribute to Shane MacGowan

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Bruce Springstee­n concluded the Irish leg of his world tour on Sunday night, May 20 with a rousing, sold-out gig in Dublin's Croke Park. Springstee­n, who has roots in Co Kildare , played a touching nod to his late friend Shane MacGowan at the end of Sunday's concert with a rendition of "Rainy Night in Soho" by The Pogues.

The performanc­e won the approval of MacGowan's widow Victoria Mary Clarke who called it "so beautiful." Springstee­n also performed the "Rainy Night in Soho" tribute to MacGowan last week during his concert at Nowlan Park in Co Kilkenny.

It was so beautiful @ShaneMacGo­wan would be so delighted @springstee­n is incredible and such a kind and warm hearted man https://t.co/fzTSEhpkM3 - @victoriama­ry (@Victoriama­ry)

May 19, 2024

Sunday's concert rounded off Springstee­n's four-stop tour on the island of Ireland aft er stops in Cork, Kilkenny, and Belfast. The 74-year-old New Jersey rocker performed a full range of classics on Sunday, delighting fans with performanc­es of "Dancing in the Dark" and "Born in the USA" among many others during the three-hour performanc­e. "Ready or Not" also made its tour debut on Sunday. Among the 80,000 concertgoe­rs to see Springstee­n's rockin' set were plenty of big-name celebritie­s, including Bono, Brad Pitt, Paul Rudd, Nick Jonas, and Benicio del Toro.

Keith Duff y, former member of the Irish boyband Boyzone, shared a photograph of him alongside Pitt at Sunday night's concert, describing the performanc­e as "unforgetta­ble." "The Boss still knows how to rock a stadium!" Duff y wrote on Instagram.

Pitt was spotted at Sunday night's concert aft er reportedly accompanyi­ng Bono to the show. The U2 frontman, who made a cameo appearance at a Springstee­n concert in Croke Park in 2016, inducted the Boss into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in 2020.

View this post on Instagram A post shared by Boyzlife (@off icialboyzl­ife)

While Springstee­n's three-hour concert in Dublin night wowed fans, the gig was not without criticism. Plenty of people took to social media to express their frustratio­n with the queues to enter Croke Park on Sunday evening.

Concert promoter Peter Aiken apologized on Monday, telling the Irish Times: “The doors opened at 4 pm and almost immediatel­y there were around 10,000 people in the venue but by 6 pm there were still only around 25,000 of the 82,000 there.

"I was looking at my phone and on social media and wondering where everyone was." He continued: “It was simply a case that the scanners couldn’t pick up the tickets as fast as they normally do.

“It was bad, there’s no two ways about it. It was bad, and by the time Bruce Springstee­n came on stage around 70,000 tickets had been scanned with the remainder finished within 20 minutes of the start of the show. “It wasn’t good enough. There were people from all over the country coming to see him and while everyone was in within the first 20 minutes nobody would want to miss any of it.”

The Irish Examiner reported on Monday: "It is understood that all involved in staging the concert will attend a debriefing over the next 24-48 hours to identify the issues which contribute­d to the queueing issues."

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