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‘It was an unbelievab­le experience’ When Springstee­n came to Edinburgh in 1981

As The Boss heads to Murrayfiel­d, fans recall the excitement that surrounded his first ever gig in Scotland

- RUSSELL LEADBETTER

BRUCE Springstee­n and the E Street Band are currently on a barnstormi­ng tour of Europe, and are attracting some of their best reviews of their stellar careers.

The show arrives at Edinburgh’s Murrayfiel­d stadium on Tuesday, May 30, and all the signs are that the performanc­e will be similar to that at a recent show in Barcelona, which led one London newspaper to describe it as “one of the greatest shows ever” – even if there is speculatio­n that Springstee­n might not tour again on such an epic scale.

The Murrayfiel­d gig is in every sense far removed from Springstee­n’s first-ever show in Scotland, when he and the band played two nights at the Edinburgh Playhouse in May

1981. Queues stretched round the block when tickets for the concerts went on sale in the January.

One fan who was there on both nights was Ron Adam, from Edinburgh. He has become a Springstee­n superfan, having seen no fewer than 57 of his concerts in the intervenin­g years, including recent gigs in Barcelona and two in Paris. He did not buy the Born to Run album until 1977, two years after it came out, but it was enough to hook him for life.

“At that time I was living in Kilmarnock. I’d been a fan of his for many years and had been determined to get fantastic seats,” he said this week. “I completely miscalled the demand for tickets. I think I just thought he was a cult artist. I went to the Playhouse at 4pm on the

Saturday intending to queue overnight on a bitterly cold evening in January – they went on sale in the early hours of the following morning.

“I was shocked when I saw the queue. By midnight it was down in Princes Street. The queue got progressiv­ely longer and deeper. As it was becoming a potential traffic hazard, the police insisted the tickets go on sale many hours before the official sale time of 9am on the Sunday.

“I managed to get four tickets. They weren’t great but at least I was in. Only one night had been announced by that time. The concert was originally scheduled for March 30 but a week before the UK tour began I heard that the dates had all been postponed on the advice of his doctor as Springstee­n was suffering from exhaustion.

“I was absolutely gutted, but the tour was rearranged. A second date at Edinburgh was announced in the intervenin­g period.” After writing a heartfelt letter to the Playhouse manager, Adams managed to get a “stunning” ticket for the new show.

“The Edinburgh concerts were fullblown shows,” he recalls. “He did them in two halves; there were 27 numbers the first night and 28 the next. He dropped four songs from the first night and brought in six new ones for the second.

“At that time he was very laid-back in the way he interfaced with the crowd. I remember him coming down into the audience, with his long guitar lead trailing behind him – these were the days before guitars were equipped with radio mics – and he walked up one aisle and my seat was incredibly close. I was about two seats from him when he was playing his guitar. It was an unbelievab­le experience.”

“In all the shows that I’ve seen to date, the set-list has been quite dynamic and if you go to two consecutiv­e nights there are quite a lot of changes. The most changes I’ve seen are 17 from one night to the next. The set-list this time around has been very static and that has been a real departure for him.

“It’s an intense, powerful and

I was shocked when I saw the Playhouse ticket queue. By midnight it had reached Princes St

emotional show and as if he’s trying to put over a message – there’s a sense he’s playing this show as if he’s playing his last-ever gig with the E Street Band. The theme of the show is almost about him reflecting on growing old.

Ron Adam attained his “holy grail” in the context of Springstee­n when Bruce played one particular song, The Promise, at a Manchester concert in 2012. “It was a tremendous moment for me,” he says. But even better was to follow.

“I’d gone there with one of my friends. We had moved towards the exit before the final song, so that when Springstee­n played the final chord of the final number we would be close to the exit.

“We were walking down the road when these two people-carriers stopped at traffic lights just as we got there. We realised they were carrying the band when we saw Miami Steve in the vehicle closest to us. I wondered to my friend who was in the first car and I just saw an arm with all these bangles round it. I said to my mate, ‘That’s Bruce!’

“The traffic lights were still at red and I caught his attention. I indicated to put the window down, which he duly did, and I said, ‘Thank you for playing The Promise. That meant so much to me’. And at that point the lights went from red to green. It was just a fleeting, 10-second encounter, but it was a wonderful thing for me.”

ANOTHER fan who was at one of those epic Playhouse shows was Andy Stenton. In a Scotsman review of the concert he described it as “the greatest rock show Scotland has seen for at least a decade” – an opinion shared by many who were fortunate enough to secure tickets.

Said Stenton: “I’d been going to concerts since 1974 and had seen major acts such as The Who, the Rolling Stones and Elton John, all in small venues – the Stones at the Glasgow Apollo, Elton at the Usher Hall. When it got to Springstee­n in 1981 I wouldn’t even have considered going, however. I had heard about him through a good friend of mine, Ross, who was a real enthusiast.

“At that time I was fortunate to have something of an in with the Playhouse as I knew the manager,

Ted Way. When Ross continued to go on about Springstee­n I decided to investigat­e. There was a large queue when the tickets went on sale and I knew I couldn’t join it as I had work to do. Ross couldn’t either, for the same reason. But I did a story for The Scotsman about bewildered shoppers coming upon this huge queue outside the venue, and Ted gave me a couple of tickets.

“The show was absolutely superb, a knockout. It was great that it was in a place like the Playhouse, where there were only 3,000-plus seats.

“The place really was jumping. I’ve seen many such concerts but Springstee­n just brought that little bit extra to it. He was probably one of the first American rock acts I had seen.

“There were two things that stood out for me that night. One was Springstee­n’s guitarist, Nils Lofgren. I’d seen him previously on his own in Edinburgh, doing jumps with his guitar. The other was Clarence Clemons, the saxophonis­t, who blew me away. He was absolutely superb.

“That for me was the beauty of Springstee­n. Although he was the star he allowed the other musicians equal respect and allowed them to enjoy centre-stage.

“He is such a marvellous profession­al and I just cannot believe that it has been 42 years since we saw that concert. He’d been around a few years before then, of course.

“It was a privilege to see him in a venue such as the Playhouse. These were the days in the 1970s and early 1980s before the days of the big concerts in football stadia.

“What I would love to see is – and I don’t know if it will happen – is for eventually some of these big names actually going to the smaller venues. They’ve earned an awful lot of money over the years and whether they’d let the tickets go a wee bit cheaper for a certain group of people, I don’t know.”

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 ?? (GETTY IMAGES) ?? Clockwise from main image: ‘Superfan’ Ron Adam with his ticket stubs – he has seen nearly 60 Springstee­n gigs; the star playing live in the early 1980s; Springstee­n performs with the E Street Band at Hampden Park on June 1, 2016
(GETTY IMAGES) Clockwise from main image: ‘Superfan’ Ron Adam with his ticket stubs – he has seen nearly 60 Springstee­n gigs; the star playing live in the early 1980s; Springstee­n performs with the E Street Band at Hampden Park on June 1, 2016

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