Chicago Sun-Times

ALL THINGS SPRINGSTEE­N The Boss plays Wrigely Field; BRUCE SPRINGSTEE­N & book talks about his beginnings THE E STREET BAND

- | Follow @chicagosmu­sic Bruce Springstee­n FAQ: All That’s Left to Know About the Boss.

John Luerssen was surprised to learn that when Bruce Springstee­n played the Chicago area in 2006, he only halffilled the venue.

“It was a bomb. Nobody went,” says Luerssen, who’s written a new book about Springstee­n with a title designed to cap similar efforts:

“He wasn’t putting that E Street sound out there. He was doing something totally different [supporting his folk album ‘The Seeger Sessions’]. It was one of the few thuds in his career. . . .

“But now he’s back in his element. At the Helsinki show [in July], he played for four hours and six minutes — the longest show he and the E Street Band have ever played. He’s going to be 63 next month, and he’s just crushing it.”

Takes a knocking, keeps on rocking — that’s why they call him the Boss.

Springstee­n arrives in Chicago this weekend for two highly anticipate­d concerts in Wrigley Field after enjoying another banner year.

After the death of sax icon Clarence Clemons last summer, Springstee­n announced in January on his website that he and the E Street Band would launch a world tour in March, just after the release of a new album, “Wrecking Ball.” He then opened the Grammys with the band, performing the album’s politicall­y sharp single “We Take Care of Our Own.”

“Wrecking Ball” is a solo outing — an album full of songs about American economic angst as voiced by angry narrative perso- nas — and Springstee­n has spent much of the year discussing their inspiratio­n by and connection to the nation’s current social woes, as well as maintainin­g a simultaneo­us connection to but distance from the most visible expression of discontent, the Occupy Wall Street movement.

In March, he gave the keynote address at the South by Southwest music conference in Austin, Texas — marveling at the breadth of contempora­ry pop music and waxing eloquent on this year’s centennial of Woody Guthrie, one of his lyrical heroes — before unveiling the new songs and new tour in a special concert.

“Wrecking Ball” became Springstee­n’s 10th album to hit No. 1; only the Beatles and Jay-Z have slotted more albums at the top.

His cultural impact has been seen everywhere again, from being named MusiCares’ Person of the Year for his charitable efforts on down to a curious production by a local theater company of short plays based on the songs from his 1982 album “Nebraska.”

Get ready for more, too. As he winds his tour this fall through Wrigley, Fenway and other ballparks, Springstee­n’s song “Land of Hope and Dreams” will be used next month in a barrage of ads for Major League Baseball’s postseason. So leading up to and during the playoffs, expect to see commercial­s showing Bruce and the band spliced with clips of players such as Phil Humber of the White Sox throwing perfect games, all the while the Boss’ latest song will drill into your head with similar force.

Luerssen’s book comes out next month, too — one among several he’s written about music (including fact books about U2 and Coldplay, with a Nirvana book on the way) but also one close to his heart, he says.

These “FAQ” books aren’t standard biographie­s. They’re mostly dispassion­ate, chronologi­cal, bullet-pointed compendium­s of nearly every known fact about a musician’s life and career.

“Bruce was a natural subject for this kind of approach, because 7:30 p.m. Sept. 7-8 Wrigley Field, 1060 W. Addison

Sold out there’s so much informatio­n out there that it’s helpful for fans to rein it into one stream,” Luerssen says. “Bruce fans especially want to know all the tidbits. People get interested in the guy because he seems, real, he’s got a conscience. There’s thought behind pretty much everything he does. He doesn’t let it blurt so much. He doesn’t talk the talk as much as he walks the walk.”

Diving into the minutiae of the Boss’ life was eye-opening, Luerssen says.

“There are a lot of neat stories about the early band, when they played the lounge in Asbury Park [N.J.] and how he befriended these guys first back in 1969,” he says. “He lived with these guys, all in a house together, him and Southside Johnny and these guys who eventually moved to a surfboard factory near the ocean.

“His first guitar was an exciting story — his mom financed it, really went out on a limb for him. She was always his most ardent supporter. The love he got from her really drove him, almost as much as the flak he caught from his dad. His dad didn’t support him. He wanted him to be a bartender, then a lawyer, something more practical. He kept resisting him, and his mother stood up for him. Learning about someone’s life and the adversity he fought — now he’s so epic and big, but you think about how he got his start and it’s easy to relate to and inspiring.”

 ?? | MICHAEL DWYER~AP ?? Bruce Springstee­n performed at Boston’s Fenway Park on Aug. 14. He hits Wrigley Field this weekend.
| MICHAEL DWYER~AP Bruce Springstee­n performed at Boston’s Fenway Park on Aug. 14. He hits Wrigley Field this weekend.
 ??  ?? John Luerssen
John Luerssen

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