Tunnel Of Love Express Tour

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Coming on the heels of the massively successful  Born in the U.S.A. Tour , the Tunnel of Love Express was designed to disorient Springsteen's audiences. A theatrical entrance began the show, a full horn section appeared, band members were rearranged from their customary positions, and on-stage spontaneity was kept to a minimum. Set lists were unusually static, and many of Springsteen's most popular concert numbers were omitted altogether. Instead, the shows featured Springsteen B-sides and outtakes as well as renditions of obscure genre songs by others. Critical reaction to the concerts was generally favorable, with some mixed reviews, while audiences were sometimes baffled.

The show featured backup singer Patti Scialfa brought center stage and the object of sexually themed presentations unusual for Springsteen. That, combined with the dour nature of many  Tunnel of Love  songs, led to speculation that Springsteen's marriage to Julianne Phillips was troubled. Further visual evidence of Springsteen and Scialfa becoming a couple emerged as the tour progressed, his separation from Phillips was officially confirmed, and for the first time Springsteen became the subject of a tabloid fervor. Springsteen and Scialfa eventually married, and the Tunnel of Love Express shows were the last full-length ones Springsteen would play with the E Street Band for eleven years

  • 1 Broadcasts and recordings
  • 3.1 The E Street Band
  • 3.2 The Horns of Love

Broadcasts and recordings [ ]

MTV filmed the March 28 show in Detroit's Joe Louis Arena. Portions of several songs were aired as part of their special  Bruce Springsteen – Inside the Tunnel of Love  on April 30.

Much of the July 19 East Berlin concert was broadcast live on GDR state television and radio.

The first set of the July 3 show in Stockholms Olympiastadion was broadcast live on radio to an international audience. Distributed through DIR Broadcasting and available free to any station that wanted it, it was Springsteen's first live broadcast since 1978, and the first available nationwide. Some 300 stations broadcast it in the U.S., and it was also heard across Canada, Europe, Australia, and Japan. Proceeds from commercials that aired before and after the concert segment were to be divided between DIR and Springsteen, and after subtraction for costs, sent to charity. The set itself followed tour practice except for the addition of Bob Dylan's "Chimes of Freedom" at the close, as Springsteen announced his upcoming participation in Amnesty International's Human Rights Now! Tour later that year.The concert was subsequently issued through the Bruce Springsteen Archives in November 2017.

The  Chimes of Freedom  EP, released in August 1988, included that rendition, as well as documenting three other song performances from scattered dates on the Express, including the radical simplification of "Born to Run".

In July 2015, Springsteen released  LA Sports Arena, California 1988 , the first official full show live release from this tour. It captured the April 23 show performed at the L.A. Sports Arena and was available through his website. This would be followed by the release of the July 3 show at Stockholms Stadion in November 2017, the release of the May 23 U.S. leg finale at Madison Square Garden in January 2019, the above-mentioned March 28 show from Detroit in March 2020, the fifth and final show at the Los Angeles Sports Arena in April 2021 & the first night at Madison Square Garden in May 2022.

Personel [ ]

The e street band [ ].

  • Bruce Springsteen – lead vocals, guitars, harmonica
  • Roy Bittan – piano, synthesizer
  • Clarence Clemons – saxophone, congas, percussion, background vocals
  • Danny Federici – organ
  • Nils Lofgren – guitars, background vocals
  • Patti Scialfa – background vocals, some featured duet vocals, acoustic guitar, percussion
  • Garry Tallent – bass guitar
  • Max Weinberg – drums

The Horns of Love [ ]

  • Mario Cruz – saxophone
  • Eddie Manion – saxophone
  • Mark Pender – trumpet
  • Richie "La Bamba" Rosenberg – trombone
  • Mike Spengler – trumpet
  • 1 Cindy Mizelle
  • 2 Born In The U.S.A. Tour
  • 3 The River Tour

Tunnel Of Love Express Tour

The  Tunnel of Love Express  was a concert tour by Bruce Springsteen and featuring The E Street Band along with The Horns of Love that took place in 1988. It followed by four and a half months the release of Springsteen's 1987 album,  Tunnel of Love . Considerably shorter in duration than most Springsteen tours before or since, it played limited engagements in most cities, leading to tickets being in great demand. Shows were held in arenas in the U.S. and stadiums in Europe and included a historic performance in East Berlin.

BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN TUNNEL+OF+LOVE+EXPRESS+TOUR-347968

February 25, 1988 - Centrum In Worecester, Worcester, MA

February 28, 1988 - Centrum In Worecester, Worcester, MA

February 29, 1988 - Centrum In Worecester, Worecester, MA

March 3, 1988 - Dean E. Smith Center, Chapel Hill, NC

March 4, 1988 - Dean E. Smith Center, Chapel Hill, NC

March 8, 1988 - The Spectrum, Philadelphia, PA

March 9, 1988 - The Spectrum, Philladelphia, PA

March 13, 1988 - Richfield Coliseum, Richfield, OH

March 14, 1988 - Richfield Coliseum, Richfield, OH

March 16, 1988 - Rosemont Horizon, Rosemont, IL

March 19, 1988 - Rosemont Horizon, Rosemont, IL

March 20, 1988 - Civic Arena, Pittsburgh, PA

March 22, 1988 - The Omni, Atlanta, GA

March 23, 1988 - The Omni, Atlanta, GA

March 26, 1988 - Rupp Arena, Lexington, KY

March 28, 1988 - Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, MI

March 29, 1988 - Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, MI

April 1, 1988 - Nassau Venterans Memorial Coliseum, Unioundale, NY

April 2, 1988 - Nassau Venterans Memorial Coliseum, Unioundale, NY

April 4, 1988 - Capital Centre, Landover, MD

April 5, 1988 - Capital Centre, Landover, MD

Apriil 12, 1988 - The Summit, Houston, TX

April 13, 1988 - The Summit, Houston, TX

April 15, 1988 - Frank Erwin Center, Austin, TX

April 17, 1988 - St. Louis Arena, St Louis, MO

April 20, 1988 - McNichols Sports Arena, Denver, CO

April 22, 1988 - Los Angeles Sports Arena, Los Angeles, CA

April 23, 1988 - Los Angeles Sports Arena, Los Angeles, CA

April 25, 1988 - Los Angeles Sports Arena, Los Angeles, CA

April 27, 1988 - Los Angeles Sports Arena, Los Angeles, CA

April 28, 1988 - Los Angeles Sports Arena, Los Angeles, CA

May 2, 1988 - Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountain View, CA

May 3, 1988 - Shoreline Amphitheatre, Mountain View, CA

May 5, 1988 - Tacoma Dome, Tacoma, WA

May 6, 1988 - Tacoma Dome, Tacoma, WA

May 9, 1988 - Met Center, Bloomington, MN

May 10, 1988 - Met  Center, Bloomington, MA

May 13, 1988 - Market Square Arena, Indainapolis, IN

May 16, 1988 - Madison Square Garden, New York City. NY

May 18, 1988 - Madison Square Garden, New York City. NY

May 19, 1988 - Madison Square Garden, New York City. NY

May 22, 1988 - Madison Square Garden, New York City. NY

May 23, 1988 - Madison Square Garden, New York City. NY

June 11, 1988 - Stadio Olimpico Grande Torino, Turin, Italy

June 13, 1988 - Piazza di Spanga, Rome, Italy

June 15, 1988 - Stadio Flamino, Rome Italy

June 16, 1988 - Stadio Flamino, Rome, Italy

June 18, 1988 - Chateau de Vincennes, Paris, France

June 19, 1988 - Hippodrome de Vincennes, Paris, France

June 21, 1988 - Villa Park, Birmingham, England

June 22, 1988 - Villa Park, Birmingham, England

June 25, 1988 - Wembley Stadium, London, England

June 28, 1988 - Feyenoord Stadion, Rotterdam, Nehterlands

June 29, 1988 - Feyenoord Stadion, Rotterdam, Nehterlands

July 2, 1988 - Stockholm Stadion, Stockholm, Swenden

July 3, 1988 - Stockholm Stadion, Stockholm, Sweden

July 7, 1988 - RDS Arena, Dublin, Ireland

July 9, 1988 - Bramall Lane, Sheffield, England

July 10, 1988 - Bramall Lane, Sheffield, England

July 12, 1988 - Waldstadion, Frankfurt, Germany

July 14, 1988 - St Jakob Stadium, Basel, Switzerland

July 17, 1988 - Olympia Reitstadion Riem, Munich, Germany

July 19, 1988 - Radrennbahn Weissensee, Berlin, Germany

July 22, 1988 - Waldbuhne, Berlin, Germany

July 25, 1988 - Københavns Idrætspark, Copenhagen, Denmark

July 27, 1988 - Valle Hovin, Oslo, Norway

July 30, 1988 - Weserstadion, Bremen, Germany

August 2, 1988 - Vicente Calderon Stadium, Madrid, Spain

August 3, 1988 - Camp Nou Stadium, Barcelona, Spain

  • 1 Joan Armatrading UK Tour 1992
  • 2 Lollapalooza 1991
  • 3 John Mayall

Tunnel of Love Express Tour

Tunnel of Love Express Tour

1988 concert tour by Bruce Springsteen From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Tunnel of Love Express Tour was a concert tour by Bruce Springsteen and featuring the E Street Band with the Horns of Love that began at the end of February 1988, four and a half months after the release of Springsteen's October 1987 album, Tunnel of Love . Considerably shorter in duration than most Springsteen tours before or since, it played limited engagements in most cities which fueled the high demand. The tour finally grossed US$50 million not counting merchandise. Shows were held in arenas in the U.S. and stadiums in Europe. A historic performance in East Berlin took place on July 19, 1988.

The Tunnel of Love Express was designed to disorient Springsteen's audiences. A theatrical entrance began the show, a full horn section appeared, band members were rearranged from their customary positions, and on-stage spontaneity was kept to a minimum. Set lists were unusually static, and many of Springsteen's most popular concert numbers were omitted altogether. Instead, the shows featured Springsteen B-sides and outtakes as well as renditions of obscure genre songs by others. Critical reaction to the concerts was generally favorable, with some mixed reviews, while audiences were sometimes baffled.

The show featured backup singer Patti Scialfa brought to center stage as the object of sexually themed presentations deemed unusual for Springsteen. That, combined with the dour nature of many Tunnel of Love songs, led to speculation that Springsteen's marriage to Julianne Phillips was troubled. Further visual evidence of Springsteen and Scialfa becoming a couple emerged as the tour progressed, his separation from Phillips was officially confirmed, and for the first time Springsteen became the subject of a tabloid fervor. Springsteen and Scialfa eventually married, and the Tunnel of Love Express shows were the last full-length ones Springsteen would play with the E Street Band for eleven years.

The tour came four and a half months after the release of Springsteen's 1987 album, Tunnel of Love , which had sold well – although nowhere near the blockbuster levels of its predecessor, Born in the U.S.A. , which the album was partly a counter-reaction to – and already generated a hit single in " Brilliant Disguise ". [1] [2] [3] [4] In part, the unusual lag reflected the ambivalence of the album; Springsteen had first recorded it solely by himself, and then some E Street Band parts had been dubbed in. [2] Indeed, Springsteen and the band had started to drift apart over the previous two or three years, seldom speaking amongst themselves. [5] Springsteen had considered going out on tour solo, and his management had provisionally booked 3,000-seat halls around the country.; [3] however, he eventually decided against that approach, feeling the tone of the resulting show would be too dark. [3]

The tour was officially announced on January 6, 1988. [6] One of the few Springsteen tours to be formally named, the "Express" part came from its shorter duration – roughly half his typical length – and the shorter stays in any given location, generally just one or two nights.

The United States leg of the tour took place in arenas , [7] starting on February 25 at the Worcester Centrum and continuing for 43 shows. There were five-night stands in two major markets, at the Los Angeles Sports Arena and at New York City's Madison Square Garden ; the shows at the latter closed the American leg on May 23. The European leg commenced on June 11 at the Stadio Comunale in Turin , Italy, and continued for 23 shows in stadiums , concluding the tour on August 4 at Barcelona , Spain's Camp Nou . [8]

The tour became the first one in which Springsteen did not play his home state of New Jersey ; speculation that he would play a special series of dates there upon his return from the European leg proved unfounded. [9] [10]

Springsteen's concerts from his beginnings up through the massively popular Born in the U.S.A. Tour had been a linear progression of basically the same show, scaled to greater and greater heights. Apparently having achieved all he could along those lines, and feeling that the Born in the U.S.A. Tour had done too much of it, Springsteen sought to change directions. [3] [4] [11] As Springsteen later wrote in his 2016 memoir , " Tunnel was a solo album, so I wanted to distance the tour from being compared to our USA run." [12] The Tunnel of Love Express was, as rock author Jimmy Guterman later wrote, "a tour intended to disorient." [13]

Springsteen augmented the E Street Band with a five-piece horn section led by Richie "La Bamba" Rosenberg . [4] Generally known as The Miami Horns , they had recently been performing on the Jersey shore bar scene as La Bamba and the Hubcaps [4] and were billed on this tour as the Horns of Love. [14] [15] This addition to the band would be both highly visible and audible. (Springsteen had wanted to carry a ten-piece band with a horn section going back to his pre-E Street, Bruce Springsteen Band days, but had not been able to afford it heretofore. [16] )

The stage backdrop was a tapestry of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden . [17] The entrance of the band on the stage, heretofore a casual affair, was now elaborate and stylized. It was set up to mimic fairgoers entering a carnival ride, [11] with Springsteen assistant Terry Magovern playing a ticket-taker at the gate near an ominous and foreshadowing sign that said: [1]

This is a dark ride

(One of the tour T-shirts being sold proclaimed "This is not a dark ride", but as both a newspaper reviewer wrote at the time, and a fan who later became an author wrote later, that was a lie. [18] [19] ) Roy Bittan was already on synthesizer as an extended intro to " Tunnel of Love " was played. Band members entered the stage two by two, taking tickets from Magovern, each (with the help of a professional costumer) more sharply dressed than for previous tours: [2] Max Weinberg and Danny Federici , Garry Tallent and Nils Lofgren , the horn section. Next came Patti Scialfa in a tight mini-skirt , [20] big hair and carrying a bunch of balloons: more foreshadowing. Once in their positions, band members started their parts in the song. [21] Penultimately, Clarence Clemons entered with a single rose between his teeth. Springsteen appeared last, dressed in trousers, a jacket and white shirt that departed from his past denim-and-bandanas look, matched the Annie Leibovitz -photographed look from the Tunnel album cover, and emphasized the greater formality of what was about to come. [11] [22] [12] Once present, the band's traditional positions on stage were flipped: [13] now Clemons was on the right, Bittan on the left, and so on; Weinberg moved from the center to the side, and backup singer Scialfa from the back riser to the front where Clemons had been. [4] Springsteen declared this to be evidence of his desire to shake things up when rehearsals began: "The first thing I did was make everyone stand in a different place." [4]

The music of the show itself was a departure, and the show overall more subdued than in the past, [11] with the return to arenas making the show more accessible. [23] Yet at the same time the stage presentation was more stylized and choreographed than on any tour before. [21] The country-influenced rock and serious ballads of the new album were not ideal stage material. [22] Audiences expected the moody "Tunnel of Love" to open, but the second slot — which in past years was filled by well-known rousers such as " Badlands ", " Out in the Street " or " Prove It All Night " — now was " Be True ", an obscure, lightweight B-side [22] to the underperforming 1981 " Fade Away " single. The show's theme was quickly established — an examination of relationships, often of the failed, sour variety, much as the album had been. [1] A long spoken introduction to " Spare Parts " over a quiet piano backing by Roy Bittan reiterated the song's hardscrabble setting. [4] [24] Theatrics were up throughout A tortured rendition of the Biblical "Adam Raised a Cain", sitting on a park bench with Clemons in a long prologue to "All That Heaven Will Allow", [25] the horn section throughout swooping and swaying and doing every bit of stage shtick known to horn sections.

Plenty of songs (typically eight or nine) from Tunnel of Love appeared, [26] but the dominance of obscurities, of B-sides and outtakes, continued, [4] [27] with immediate audience response sacrificed for what might be a slower but deeper understanding. [20] Springsteen said, "The idea on this tour is that you wouldn't know what song was gonna come next. ... [The show feels] real new, real modern to me. I figure some people will wrestle with it a little bit. But that's okay." [4] Some fans worried that Springsteen looked like he was not having as much fun on stage as in the past. [28] The first set saw "Roulette", a previously unreleased number from The River sessions about the Three Mile Island accident , [27] (which was paired with the previous tour's "Seeds" to lend an element of sociological anguish to the personal). [29] The second set saw Springsteen assuming the manner of a televangelist or professional wrestler [25] delivering "I Am a Coward", a remake of Gino Washington 's little-known 1964 local Detroit hit "Gino Is a Coward", [30] [12] and "Part Man, Part Monkey", a never-before-heard, Springsteen-written quasi-reggae ode to the Scopes monkey trial by way of Mickey & Sylvia 's " Love is Strange ". [30] Audiences were bewildered. [17] [27]

Gone completely were several of Springsteen's most popular numbers and traditional concert warhorses: " Badlands ", " The Promised Land ", " Thunder Road ", " Jungleland ". [3] [14] Springsteen had said as the tour began, "when I went to put this show together, I said, 'Well, what were the songs that were the kind of cornerstones of what I had done? Those are the ones I automatically put to the side.'" [3]

The first set did close with a blockbuster pairing of " War " and " Born in the U.S.A. "; compared to the latter's opening of shows during the Born in the U.S.A. Tour , it now served to sum up a set's worth of personal struggles and counter any mistaken notions about the song's patriotic intent. [4] [30] The first hour and a half of the show featured no selections from Springsteen albums prior to Born in the U.S.A. other than "Adam Raised a Cain". [22] The main set closer, a position long held by " Rosalita " until cut during the Born in the U.S.A. Tour, was now held by the fairly obscure, roadhouse-flavored and hotly played, Springsteen-written-but- Joan Jett -recorded " (Just Around the Corner to the) Light of Day " (it would hold this position for band-based Springsteen tours through the end of 2000). [21] [23] [24]

The encores began with Springsteen's signature song , " Born to Run ", recast completely and slowly played solo by Springsteen on acoustic guitar and harmonica and with a melancholy feel, [23] [24] albeit with the band standing behind him, [21] sometimes with an audience sing-along of "whoa-whoa's" at the end. Springsteen prefaced these performances with an introduction along the same lines every night: [31] "Before we came out on tour, I was sitting around home trying to decide what we were gonna be doing out here this time. What I felt I wanted to sing and say to you." After detailing how he came to write "Born to Run" a decade and a half earlier, he would say that its overt theme of escapism had concealed a deeper search for connection and for a place its protagonists could call home. That, now, to Springsteen meant a place deep within oneself. [14] [31] He concluded by saying, "I wanna do this song tonight for all of you, wishing with all my heart that you have a safe trip to home." [4] [32]

After this, Springsteen finally retreated into normalcy, with the last half-hour of the show an upbeat, redemptive sequence that The New York Times described as a "rip-roaring, cinderblock-shaking jubilee." [18] [33] Presented were top hits such as " Hungry Heart " and " Glory Days " (both with heavy roles from the horn section) [17] and even, in the second encores, the resurrection of a couple of veteran numbers dropped midway through the Born in the U.S.A. Tour, "Rosalita" and the "Detroit Medley". [4] [17] Springsteen reasoned that the latter's " Devil with a Blue Dress On " was actually the ultimate moment of the show, as the 'trick' of juxtaposing serious, emotional content with exciting entertainment was pulled off. [4] But those last two would also be gone by the latter stages of the American leg, and the second encore would be filled with more regional obscurities such as The Sonics ' " Have Love, Will Travel " and unlikely attempts at Roy Orbison 's " Crying ". The encores also delved into Springsteen's longtime interest in soul music, showcasing Percy Sledge 's 1967 arrangement of Elvis Presley 's " Love Me Tender ", Arthur Conley 's " Sweet Soul Music ", and a longtime staple, Eddie Floyd 's " Raise Your Hand ". [27]

Overall, shows ran a little under three hours in length, up to an hour shorter than what audiences had become accustomed to with Springsteen. [22] Set lists were unusually static during the tour, [20] [21] [22] a deliberate decision by Springsteen, who saw the show as "focused and specific". [4] Not having to play multiple shows in many venues also helped, although some of the faithful [34] were travelling to multiple cities to see the tour. During the early weeks, often only one song changed per night; a two-night stand at the Philadelphia Spectrum saw no changes at all, highly unusual especially in Springsteen's home territories. [22]

During later shows on the European leg, setlists began to change with occasional surprise additions. [9] "Badlands" began appearing, and "Thunder Road" a couple of times, [22] while televangelist-styled song introductions were dropped due to lack of cultural context. [25] The many Americans at a West German show at Frankfurt 's Waldstadion waved flags as "Born in the U.S.A." was played, with U. S. Ambassador to Germany Richard Burt in attendance. [35]

Most unusual of the European shows was one in East Berlin on July 19, 1988, some 16 months before the Berlin Wall came down. It was organized by the socialist youth movement Free German Youth in an attempt to relieve some tension among the younger populations of East Germany by bringing in one of the most popular of Western musicians. [36] Other Western rock and pop stars, such as Joe Cocker , were brought in as part of this effort, which began in 1987. [37] Springsteen in particular was extolled by state newspaper Neues Deutschland as a working-class American who "attacks social wrongs and injustices in his homeland." [38]

The show was held at the Radrennbahn Weißensee cycling track, far away from the Wall (previous concerts held on the Western side of the Wall by Pink Floyd and Michael Jackson had given East Berlin security forces trouble in keeping youths away from the Eastern side to listen). [36] Initial news reports estimated that there were some 160,000 fans in attendance. [38] This was practically one percent of the German Democratic Republic's entire population. [39] It was the largest audience of Springsteen's career to that point [40] and the largest ever to see a rock concert in the GDR. [38] Much of the concert was broadcast live on both state television and radio, [39] although the television broadcast quality was shaky. [36] While some Western artists would not accept the local Mark der DDR currency and thus would not play in the GDR, [36] Springsteen did, and was paid 1,000,000 Mark der DDR for the performance, with another 340,000 Mark der DDR being paid for the television rights. [37]

Springsteen modified the set list for the occasion, opening with "Badlands" for the first time on the Express [41] and making a tour debut for "Promised Land". Before playing Bob Dylan 's " Chimes of Freedom ", Springsteen stated in phonetically recited German, "I want to tell you, I'm not here for or against any certain government, but to play rock 'n' roll for you East Berliners ... in the hope that one day, all barriers will be torn down." [39] GDR officials took advantage of a tape delay to delete Springsteen's words on the broadcast. [39] [42] The show became one of the most politically meaningful moments of Springsteen's career. [39]

Since the initial reports, some estimates of the crowd size have been increased, often to a figure of 250,000 [37] or 300,000. [36] [41] Internet posters have made claims as high as 500,000; German public broadcaster Deutsche Welle has written, "160,000 tickets were sold, but it's said that a crowd of 500,000 people celebrated ..." [43] In any case, the costs of putting on the event and other concerts with Western stars led to the Free German Youth running out of money and having to be subsidized by a special fund of the state. [37]

In 2013, Erik Kirschbaum, a Berlin-based journalist, published his book Rocking the Wall: The Berlin Concert That Changed the World , which argues that the Springsteen concert was a signal event in the process that led to the Peaceful Revolution , the fall of the Wall, and Die Wende . [36] Gerd Dietrich, a professor of history at Humboldt University , was quoted saying that "Springsteen's concert and speech certainly contributed in a large sense to the events leading up to the fall of the wall. It made people … more eager for more and more change … It showed people how locked up they really were." [36] [41] Thomas Wilke, who has studied the impact of popular music in East Germany, said "It was a topic of discussion for quite some time afterwards. There was clearly a different feeling and a different sentiment in East Germany after that concert." [36]

From the first release of Tunnel of Love , there had listeners who wondered if some of the gloomy portrayals of interpersonal relationships on the album indicated that Springsteen's 1985 marriage to actress and model Julianne Phillips was in trouble. [44] Others, however, cautioned against such interpretations, pointing out that Springsteen's 1982 album Nebraska had been full of intense tales of spree killers and other criminals, of which Springsteen clearly had no personal experience. [44] [45] Los Angeles Times music writer Robert Hilburn , interviewing Springsteen at the Worcester start of the tour, wrote that "Springsteen seemed extremely comfortable sitting on a sofa with his wife in the dressing room area – a picture that seemed to contradict the speculation that Tunnel of Love' s songs of troubled romance reflected signs of trouble in his own marriage." [3]

In addition to everything else, what was different about the Tunnel of Love Express was Springsteen's first go at explicit carnality, [27] from the opening "Tunnel of Love", where he and Scialfa sang cheek to cheek with lips nearly touching at the same microphone, to other numbers such as "Part Man, Part Monkey". [30] A centerpiece of the second set was an eight-minute reworking of one of The River ' s casual rockers, "You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)". Now it was recast into rockabilly mode, with a half-spoken, half-sung introduction detailing a youth's frustrations up to the iconic car parked with a girlfriend on a lovers' lane. Out come the horn section, sans horns, to do synchronized dancing [30] and sing call-and-response. Out come Scialfa and two women from backstage, three temptresses for the six assembled men. Around they circle each other, as Springsteen sings "You Can Look", resting the microphone below his belt in between lines. Finally the song winds down, as Springsteen and Scialfa stare at each other. Springsteen goes back to the drum kit, where a tray full of water and a sponge are. In tours past, this was a classic moment of Springsteen the relentless showman; he would sponge off his head, gulp down water and spray it over the stage, revitalizing himself to keep on playing for a few more hours. Now, however, he took the sponge, pulled his pants out by his belt buckle, and squeezed the water down into his crotch. Perhaps tame by the standards of Prince or Madonna at the time, but for Springsteen and his audience, a line had been crossed.

Newsday wrote, "Dripping wet during 'Part Man, Part Monkey' – which is as sexual a message as Springsteen has ever transmitted live – Springsteen was, literally, steaming." [27] Amplified deep breathing. [27]

This was all a big change for Scialfa, who had stayed in the background during the 1984–1985 Born in the U.S.A. Tour , her first. Early on the tour, she said in an interview about her new role: "Bruce coaxed me and urged me to reach. He was very patient, very willing to teach. He had a lot of confidence in me. ... I feel real complete working with him on stage. It's like for a moment nothing bad can happen to you. It's a wonderful give-and-take. You go through every emotion every night." [46] The tour soon proved sufficiently strenuous for her that she began gulping down milkshakes in an effort to restore lost weight to her 5-foot-8, 117-pound frame. [47]

But there was more to the Tunnel of Love Express than just what Springsteen had planned. [32] On stage, Scialfa had now become Springsteen's principal vocal partner (a role held in the past by the departed Steve Van Zandt ) as well as principal foil (supplanting Clarence Clemons ), [48] and in this number and others, the way Springsteen and Scialfa approached each other, and how they held their bodies as they sang together, made their byplay the center of the show right from the "Tunnel of Love" opener. [30] [46] [49] [50] Springsteen biographer Dave Marsh later wrote of the sparks flying from the interaction, "You could have written it off just to musical magic ... if you were dumb as a doorstop", and said that even those that oblivious could not have missed the meaning of the body language during their performance on " One Step Up ", in which a man lists metaphors for the failing love in his marriage, expresses his lack of desire to find it again, and starts casting a wandering eye about. [49]

Springsteen and Scialfa's involvement had thus been rumored since early on the tour. [40] Suspicion and confirmation came in stages. Phillips had traveled with the tour initially and even danced onstage during "You Can Look", but at times had looked lost and lonely backstage; she then left (apparently to try out for or shoot a film, variously reported as Sweet Lies with Treat Williams , Fletch Saves with Chevy Chase , or Skin Deep directed by Blake Edwards ). [46] [51] [52] [53] Springsteen and Phillips spent their May 13 wedding anniversary apart. [54] During the Madison Square Garden shows in mid-May, fans and the New York newspapers began noticing that Springsteen was not wearing his wedding ring on stage. [44] [51] [54]

A National Enquirer headline declared, "Bruce Springsteen's Marriage in Trouble", soon followed on June 9 by USA Today asking "Is Bruce on the Loose?". [44] Springsteen's management initially declined any comment. [44] The European leg of the tour started in Italy, with three shows in mid-June in Rome. Paparazzi caught Springsteen and Scialfa snuggling each other in their underwear (sometimes described as nightshirts) on a Rome balcony in one photograph and dressed but lounging together on a single deck chair with drinks in hand in another. [5] [40] [46] [55] An Italian paper wrote, "There are no doubts ... Patti and Bruce really love each other." [46] A tabloid fever was underway. [49] [56]

On June 17, Phillips' publicist officially confirmed that Springsteen and Phillips had split . [46] [54] Attention did not diminish; by the time the tour hit France, photographers were capturing Springsteen and Scialfa walking arm in arm through Parisian streets or lolling in the grass in one of the city's parks. [57] [58] When the show reached Wembley Stadium in London, the Fleet Street papers were preoccupied with judging whether the two really were an item: as USA Today reported, The Star and News of the World said yes, The Daily Mail was unsure, while the Sunday Mirror ran a photograph of Springsteen staring intently at his guitar and claimed it was the only love in his life. [59] The goings-on around Springsteen became fodder for jokes on late-night talk shows in the U.S. [60]

Later that month, Springsteen's management elaborated that the cause had been that they just grew apart, and explicitly denied tabloid reports that the needs of her career or disagreements about having children had played a role. [54] Phillips subsequently said the same thing in an interview in Us magazine. [53] On August 30, Phillips filed for divorce, which was made final in March 1989. [5] Scialfa later said of the period, "I just thought, I can't take this ... Bruce and I had gotten together, it was a very turbulent time." [56] Springsteen himself said, "My first wife's one of the best people I've ever met. She's lovely, intelligent – a great person. But we were pretty different, and I realized I didn't know how to be married." [61]

English fans interviewed had mixed reactions to the romantic developments, [59] while American fans interviewed, after expressing some sympathy and unease for those involved, generally felt that Springsteen's private life was his business. [45] Some belonged to a camp that had never seen Phillips as a good match for Springsteen from the start. [45] [53] [58] [62] Others were surprised that Springsteen would end up in the middle of a messy and indiscreet love triangle . [58] [60] Some married fans did not like Springsteen's seemingly cavalier behavior, even if they had not approved of Phillips, and some longtime fans did not like Scialfa's usurping of the Clemons stage role. [48] On the other hand, some female fans were happy to see their idol possibly available again. [60] There was no immediate drop in Springsteen album sales or radio airplay. [60]

The two primary organs of the Bruce faithful at the time, Backstreets Magazine and the "Springsteen party line" (a telephone-based precursor to Springsteen fan groups and mailing lists on the Internet), said nothing about the developments at all. [45] Music writer David Hinckley said that while Springsteen had never promoted himself as a hero or role model, he had nonetheless built a bond of faith with his fan base around the notion of doing the right thing. Hinckley wondered whether Springsteen could "win the faithful back". [28] Music writer Gary Graff said that because Springsteen espoused "hanging tough and solving problems" that made his marital failure "especially intriguing" to the public. [60] The affair continued to draw the attention of the celebrity and supermarket press, eventually including a long piece in Woman's World magazine that quoted Judith Kuriansky, a psychologist and television talk show host, to the effect that Springsteen was going through a midlife crisis . [58] Quasi-official Springsteen biographer Marsh would later write that the separation had occurred in early May at the end of the West Coast portion of the American leg, [49] while an Us magazine story based around a Phillips interview placed it sometime between the early stages of the tour and the couple's May 13 anniversary. [53] Regardless of exactly when the marriage ended and the new relationship began, the impression left upon the wider public was that Springsteen was a heartless man cheating on his wife an ocean away, Phillips was humiliated, and Scialfa was the "other woman". [49]

The search for a deeper personal connection that Springsteen had mentioned during his "Born to Run" introduction had left him, in an interview during the tour, comparing his fame and situation to that of Elvis Presley and Michael Jackson . [4] But his quest to undermine his Born in the U.S.A. -era fame with a more subdued album and smaller-scale tour had ended up in most unexpected fashion. [63]

Due to the limited number of dates in each city and the continuing popularity of Springsteen from the 1984–86 period, tickets were hard to come by. [64] Long waits for the chance to buy tickets were common. [64] [65] This was in the era of the "ambush sale", when often no advance word would be given of when tickets were going on sale (or bracelets for the rights to get tickets were being distributed). [34] [66] This was especially the case for this tour, as in some locations such as for Nassau Coliseum tickets went on sale much closer to the event date than usual. [67] Thus, for example, in the weeks preceding the New York area shows, several dozen fans would gather at major Ticketmaster outlets on Saturday mornings, listening on portable radios with the idea that something might be happening right then . Most often, nothing would happen, and a rock radio disc jockey would then confirm that no tickets were going on sale that day. Or fans would gather outside the box office at the Centrum in Worcester, hoping that ticket bracelets might suddenly be distributed that day, and be suddenly rewarded if they were. [34] The alternative of buying tickets over the telephone once they went on sale was often fruitless. [10]

The disparity between supply and demand meant high prices for scalpers, with $22.50 tickets to the Nassau Coliseum shows on Long Island going for anywhere from $100 to $400 [64] and other shows expensive as well. [10] [19] Undercover police worked venue parking lots to try to curb the practice. [64] Fans from all over Ohio and parts of Indiana attended the Richfield Coliseum shows in Cleveland , with some paying scalper prices. [23] Fans in Rockford, Illinois staged an (unsuccessful) petition drive to get Springsteen to add their city to the tour's routing. [68]

The three kickoff shows in Worcester sold out in two hours [66] (the site having been chosen for the tour opening, the venue manager thought, because the New England area had given a very favorable response to the Born in the U.S.A. Tour.) [34] Two shows in Cleveland's Richfield Coliseum sold out in four hours. [65] Indeed, there were quick sellouts all across the eastern U.S. and elsewhere. [67] [69]

How much the tour grossed overall is unclear. For the years 1987 and 1988 combined, Forbes magazine estimated that Springsteen earned $61 million from all sources, and for the years 1988 and 1989 combined, $40 million. [70]

Reviews of the Tunnel of Love Express were generally favorable, with some more mixed views.

The Associated Press found the opening Worcester shows full of "twists and turns" that at first "befuddled the crowd with an assortment of seldom-heard songs" before he "eventually put the crowd in a frenzy." [17] The Blade newspaper of Toledo, Ohio declared that "there is much new and much different about the 'Tunnel of Love' tour. There are new songs, and new insights to be gained from old ones." [23] The Milwaukee Journal found that the obscure and unexpected songs in the set list were the show's best moments, but also said that "at times, the new horn section proved to be unneeded baggage", either diluting or drowning out the rest of the band. [14]

Jon Pareles of The New York Times found the show undermined by the didactic, monochromatic nature of Springsteen's more recent songs. [33] Stephen Holden of the same paper, on the other hand, thought those same songs "wonderful", and wrote that "In concert, [Springsteen has] figured out how to string songs into extended journeys that take on a cumulative power as the evening proceeds." [29] He concluded that "Springsteen reconciles seemingly unreconcilable concepts: a sober awareness of social and erotic realities and a boundless faith in life." [29] (Holden's review itself became suspect due to his describing performances of songs not actually played. [71] )

The Spokane Chronicle said that with the addition of the horn section, "the always powerful E Street Band is more muscular than ever" and that thematically, the show takes the viewer "for a bleak ride before you reach the light of day." [18] Robert Hilburn of the Los Angeles Times assayed that Springsteen "stepped away from the two concert elements that have most been associated with him – spontaneity and celebration – to concentrate on artistic independence and growth." [20] The result, Hilburn stated, were Springsteen's "most studied, yet most radical and liberating appearances yet". [20]

The Glasgow Herald stated that the first-set performances of John Lee Hooker 's (by way of The Animals ) " Boom Boom " as well as the Bo Diddley -inspired "Ain't Got You"/" She's the One " were the high points of the Birmingham concert at Villa Park but that overall the show lacked genuine geographical or thematic connection with its British audience. [72] The Swedish newspaper Aftonbladet claimed that the second and third parts of the show were the greatest rock show ever put forth on Swedish ground. [73]

In all, the Tunnel of Love Express lacked the athletic, boisterous liveliness that Springsteen had been known for, and featured largely fixed and predetermined performances and on-stage banter. [9] Bassist Tallent would say a couple of decades later,

The Tunnel of Love Express tour was unlike anything we'd ever done in that so much of it was staged. The band had fixed positions onstage; unlike every other time we performed live, there was really no spontaneity. We had our parts and needed to stick to them if the show was going to make any sense. [11]

Springsteen biographer Marsh would write in 2006, "As a tour, Tunnel of Love Express presents the greatest puzzle of Springsteen's career." [1] In his 2016 memoir, Springsteen wrote of the tour, "After Born in the USA , it was an intentional left turn and the band was probably somewhat disoriented by it, along with my growing relationship with Patti." [12] Of the split with Phillips, he wrote, "I dealt with Julie's and my separation abysmally, insisting it remain a private affair, so we released no press statement, causing furor, pain and 'scandal' when the news leaked out. It made a tough thing more heartbreaking than necessary. I deeply cared for Julianne and her family and my poor handling of this is something I regret to this day." [74]

In any case, rearranging where the band members stood on stage did not change things enough for Springsteen. [75] The August 4, 1988, show in Barcelona that closed out the Tunnel of Love Express would be the last full-length Springsteen and E Street Band show for eleven years. Following the Human Rights Now! Tour later that year, which featured abbreviated sets and few performances of Tunnel of Love songs, Springsteen broke up the E Street Band. It would not tour again until the 1999–2000 Reunion Tour . [9] The staged aspects of the tour would not appear again, and its songs would remain infrequently performed.

MTV filmed the March 28 show in Detroit's Joe Louis Arena . Portions of several songs were aired as part of their special Bruce Springsteen – Inside the Tunnel of Love on April 30. [76] And as noted earlier, much of the July 19 East Berlin concert was broadcast live on GDR state television and radio. [38]

The first set of the July 3 show in Stockholms Olympiastadion was broadcast live on radio to an international audience. Distributed through D.I.R. Broadcasting and available free to any station that wanted it, it was Springsteen's first live broadcast since 1978, and the first available nationwide. [77] Some 300 stations broadcast it in the United States, and it was also heard across Canada, Europe, Australia, and Japan. [77] Proceeds from commercials that aired before and after the concert segment were to be divided between DIR and Springsteen, and after subtraction for costs, sent to charity. [77] The set itself followed tour practice except for the addition of Bob Dylan 's " Chimes of Freedom " at the close, as Springsteen announced his upcoming participation in Amnesty International 's Human Rights Now! Tour later that year. [78] The Chimes of Freedom EP , released in August 1988, included that rendition, as well as documenting three other song performances from scattered dates on the Express, including the radical simplification of "Born to Run".

Several shows from the tour have subsequently released via the Bruce Springsteen Archives or similar mechanisms. In July 2015, Springsteen released LA Sports Arena, California 1988 , the first official full show live release from this tour. It captured the April 23 show performed at the Los Angeles Sports Arena and was available through his website. [79] This would be followed by the release of the July 3 show in Stockholm in November 2017, the release of the May 23 U.S. leg finale at Madison Square Garden in January 2019, the March 28 show from Detroit in March 2020, the fifth and final show at the Los Angeles Sports Arena in April 2021 & the first night at Madison Square Garden in May 2022.

The E Street Band

  • Bruce Springsteen – lead vocals , guitars , harmonica
  • Roy Bittan – piano , synthesizer
  • Clarence Clemons – saxophone , congas , percussion , background vocals
  • Danny Federici – organ
  • Nils Lofgren – guitars , background vocals
  • Patti Scialfa – background vocals , some featured duet vocals , acoustic guitar , percussion
  • Garry Tallent – bass guitar
  • Max Weinberg – drums

The Horns of Love

  • Mario Cruz – saxophone
  • Eddie Manion – saxophone
  • Mark Pender – trumpet
  • Richie "La Bamba" Rosenberg – trombone
  • Mike Spengler – trumpet

Source: [80] [81]

  • List of highest-attended concerts
  • Cavicchi, Daneil (1998). Tramps Like Us: Music & Meaning among Springsteen Fans . New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN   0-19-511833-2 .
  • Derkins, Susie (2002). Rock & Roll Hall of Famers: Bruce Springsteen . New York: Rosen Publishing Group. ISBN   0-8239-3522-1 .
  • Guterman, Jimmy (2005). Runaway American Dream: Listening to Bruce Springsteen . Cambridge, Massachusetts: Da Capo Press. ISBN   0-306-81397-1 .
  • Marsh, Dave ; Bernard, James (1994). The New Book of Rock Lists . New York: Fireside Books. ISBN   0-671-78700-4 .
  • Marsh, Dave (2006). Bruce Springsteen On Tour: 1968–2005 . New York: Bloomsbury USA. ISBN   1-59691-282-0 .
  • Masur, Louis P. (2009). Runaway Dream: Born to Run and Bruce Springsteen's American Vision . New York: Bloomsbury Press. ISBN   978-1-60819-101-7 .
  • Santelli, Robert (2006). Greetings From E Street: The Story of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band . San Francisco: Chronicle Books. ISBN   0-8118-5348-9 .
  • Springsteen, Bruce (2016). Born to Run . New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN   978-1-5011-4151-5 .
  • Symynkywicz, Jeffery B. (2008). The Gospel According to Bruce Springsteen: Rock and Redemption, from Asbury Park to Magic . Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press. ISBN   978-0-664-23169-9 .
  • Wiersema, Robert J. (2011). Walk Like a Man: Coming of Age with the Music of Bruce Springsteen . Vancouver: Greystone Books. ISBN   978-1-55365-845-0 .
  • [1] Marsh, Bruce Springsteen On Tour , p. 172.
  • [2] Marsh, Bruce Springsteen On Tour , p. 175.
  • [3] Hilburn, Robert (March 2, 1988). "Springsteen plays few hits on 'Tunnel of Love' tour" . Anchorage Daily News . Los Angeles Times . p.   G-9.
  • [4] Pond, Steve (May 5, 1988). "Bruce Springsteen's Tunnel Vision" . Rolling Stone . Cover story.
  • [5] Symynkywicz, The Gospel According to Bruce Springsteen , p. 105.
  • [6] "Springsteen tour begins in February" . Milwaukee Sentinel . January 7, 1988. p.   3.
  • [7] Derkins, Bruce Springsteen , p. 70.
  • [8] "El primer concierto de Bruce Springsteen en España" . La Vanguardia (in Spanish). Barcelona. April 21, 2011.
  • [9] Derkins, Bruce Springsteen , p. 75.
  • [10] Cavicchi, Tramps Like Us , p. 48.
  • [11] Santelli, Greetings From E Street , pp. 76-77.
  • [12] Springsteen, Born to Run , p. 350.
  • [13] Guterman, Runaway American Dream , p. 173.
  • [14] Christensen, Thor (March 17, 1988). "Bruce grows up without growing old" . The Milwaukee Journal . p.   5B.
  • [15] McShane, Larry (November 24, 1991). "Jersey shore reunion for Southside Johnny" . Hudson Valley News . Associated Press . p.   A4.
  • [16] Marsh, Bruce Springsteen On Tour , pp. 45–46, 178.
  • [17] McShane, Larry (March 1, 1988). "Strange twists appearing in Springsteen's tour" . Spartanburg Herald-Journal . Associated Press . p.   D8.
  • [18] Adair, Don (May 6, 1988). "Springsteen in Tacoma: It's a ride in the 'Tunnel of Love' " . Spokane Chronicle . p.   5.
  • [19] Wiersema, Walk Like a Man , p. 87.
  • [20] Hilburn, Robert (May 10, 1988). "Springsteen opening new door with tour" . The Eugene Register-Guard . Los Angeles Times . p.   6A.
  • [21] Guterman, Runaway American Dream , p. 174
  • [22] Marsh, Bruce Springsteen On Tour , p. 178.
  • [23] Ford, Tom (March 20, 1988). "Bruce, Bruce, Bruce" . The Blade . Toledo. p.   E1.
  • [24] Marsh, Bruce Springsteen On Tour , p. 182.
  • [25] Marsh, Bruce Springsteen On Tour , pp. 179–180.
  • [26] Cavicchi, Tramps Like Us , p. 86.
  • [27] Williams, Stephen (April 1, 1988). "Springsteen a Steamy Hit in Detroit". Newsday .
  • [28] Hinckley, David (August 22, 1998). "How the Boss Lost His Halo". Us . p.   16.
  • [29] Holden, Stephen (May 17, 1998). "Springsteen at the Garden" . The New York Times .
  • [30] Guterman, Runaway American Dream , p. 175
  • [31] Masur, Runaway Dream , pp. 160–161.
  • [32] Marsh, Bruce Springsteen On Tour , p. 183.
  • [33] Pareles, Jon (February 27, 1988). "Springsteen Starts First Tour in 2 Years" . The New York Times .
  • [34] "Boss fans' patience rewarded" . The Bulletin . Bend, Oregon. United Press International . February 7, 1988. p.   E10.
  • [35] "Names in the News" . The Durant Daily Democrat . Associated Press . July 13, 1988. p.   2.
  • [36] Connolly, Kate (July 5, 2013). "The night Bruce Springsteen played East Berlin – and the wall cracked" . The Guardian . London.
  • [37] Purschke, Thomas (July 16, 2018). "Bruce Springsteen in Ost-Berlin im Juli 1988: Die Stasi hörte mit" . Leipziger Volkszeitung (in German).
  • [38] "More than 100,000 East German fans see Springsteen" . The Lewiston Journal . Associated Press . July 21, 1988. p.   8D.
  • [39] Alterman, It Ain't No Sin To Be Glad You're Alive , pp. 247-248.
  • [40] Derkins, Bruce Springsteen , p. 74.
  • [41] Ayed, Nahlah (November 6, 2014). "How a Bruce Springsteen concert helped bring down the Berlin Wall" . CBC News .
  • [42] A fan present is said to have written: "19th of July 1988: Bruce played over 4.5 hours in East Berlin, we're there to celebrate him, I paid lousy 19.95 east marks for my ticket but what I really bought and got was a glimpse to freedom. I smelled the American spirit that night and I'll never forget it!"
  • [43] Wünsch, Silke (November 6, 2019). "Bruce Springsteen: An icon of freedom in East Germany" . Deutsche Welle .
  • [44] Hilburn, Robert (June 19, 1988). "Does album really reflect if marriage is going down?". Asbury Park Press . Los Angeles Times . Date is approximate.
  • [45] Gundersen, Edna (June 23, 1988). "Fans: Affair only proves he's human". USA Today . p.   1D.
  • [46] Trebbe, Ann (June 20, 1988). "It's official: Bruce, wife no longer a duet". USA Today . p.   1D.
  • [47] "Patti pounds it out on tour with Bruce". USA Today . April 19, 1988. p.   2D.
  • [48] Infusino, Divina (November 18, 1988). "Springsteen Latest To Face Media Backlash" . Copley News Service . p.   21.
  • [49] Marsh, Bruce Springsteen On Tour , p. 187.
  • [50] Wiersema, Walk Like a Man , p. 92.
  • [51] "Are Bruce and Julianne splitting?". Toronto Star . May 29, 1988. p.   D2.
  • [52] Takiff, Jonathan (June 23, 1988). "The honeymoon is over ... Marriage no longer music to Springsteens' ears" . Boca Raton News . Knight-Ridder Newspapers . p.   1W.
  • [53] Van Buskirk, Leslie (August 22, 1998). "Starting Over". Us . pp.   12–16.
  • [54] Gundersen, Edna (June 28, 1988). "Finally, Bruce's official word on the breakup". USA Today . p.   1D.
  • [55] "Was Bruce really born to run?". USA Today . June 23, 1988. p.   1D. Photographs.
  • [56] Willman, Chris (July 11, 1993). "Speaking Up in Her Own Voice". Los Angeles Times . p.   4.
  • [57] "Boss' New Beat". New York Daily News . June 22, 1998. p.   19. Photograph.
  • [58] Byron, Ellen (August 1989). "The Boss and his midlife crisis". Woman's World . pp.   32–33. Date is approximate.
  • [59] Goldfarb, Michael (June 27, 1988). "Bruce and Patti? It's hard to tell". USA Today . p.   2D.
  • [60] Graff, Gary (July 3, 1988). "Springsteen marriage woes have some distraught, others ambivalent" . The Vindicator . Youngstown, Ohio. Knight-Ridder Newspapers . p.   D18.
  • [61] Dawidoff, Nicholas (January 26, 1997). "The Pop Populist" . The New York Times Magazine .
  • [62] Cavicchi, Tramps Like Us , p. 32.
  • [63] Guterman, Runaway American Dream , p. 176.
  • [64] Moyers, Cope (April 3, 1988). "Hey, What's $100?' Supply meets demand at Springsteen concerts". Newsday . p.   3.
  • [65] "Springsteen fans pack Coliseum" . The Bryan Times . Associated Press . March 16, 1988. p.   1.
  • [66] "Concert is 2-hour sell out" . The Modesto Bee . February 15, 1988. p.   A2.
  • [67] Moyers, Cope (March 4, 1988). "No Tickets, but Sales Are Hot". Newsday . p.   7.
  • [68] "Boss fanatics mount write-in" . Rome News-Tribune . Associated Press . March 4, 1988. p.   10A.
  • [69] Gundersen, Edna (March 14, 1988). "Bruce adds 6 new stops". USA Today . p.   1D.
  • [70] Marsh and Bernard, The New Book of Rock Lists , pp. 25–26.
  • [71] "Just a Tiny Detail" . Newsday . May 18, 1988. p.   6. Archived from the original on June 30, 2013.
  • [72] Belcher, David (June 23, 1988). "Villa Park, Birmingham: Bruce Springsteen" . The Glasgow Herald . p.   4.
  • [73] Peterson, Jens (July 3, 1988). "unclear". Aftonbladet (in Swedish). Stockholm. For a later use of this review, see Steen, Håkan (June 23, 1999). "Alla svenska gig" . Aftonbladet (in Swedish). Stockholm.
  • [74] Springsteen, Born to Run , p. 351.
  • [75] Masur, Runaway Dream , p. 160.
  • [76] "Rock News & Notes". Daily News of Los Angeles . April 29, 1988.
  • [77] Jensen, Elizabeth (July 1, 1988). "Boss says thanks in big way". New York Daily News . p.   98.
  • [78] Marsh, Bruce Springsteen On Tour , p. 188.
  • [79] "Los Angeles Sports Arena Los Angeles, CA" . Brucespringsteen.net . Retrieved July 20, 2015 .
  • [80] "Bruce Springsteen Setlists | Greasy Lake" . Archived from the original on October 26, 2012 . Retrieved December 14, 2013 .
  • [81] "Brucebase - home" . brucebase.wikispaces.com . Retrieved April 19, 2018 .
  • Brucebase 1988
  • Killing Floor's database of Bruce Springsteen setlists

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The East Berlin show

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Ultimate Classic Rock

Bruce Springsteen Releases ’Tunnel of Love’-Era Concert

Bruce Springsteen ’s Tunnel of Love Express tour is the subject of the latest concert from his archives to get an official release. Earlier this week, he put out his April 23, 1988 show from the Los Angeles Memorial Sports Arena.

You can see the setlist below, but the concert, the second from a five-night stand at the arena, is typical of shows from that tour. Tunnel of Love tracks have rarely featured in Springsteen's setlists since this tour, so having soundboard versions of songs like "Ain't Got You," "Two Faces" and “All That Heaven Will Allow,” as well as rarities "I'm a Coward" and "Part Man, Part Monkey" are vital for collectors of Springsteen concerts.

The Tunnel of Love Express tour is an outlier in Springsteen's history. There was little-to-no variance in the setlists from night-to-night and blue-collar anthems like “Thunder Road” and “Badlands” weren't played until very late in the tour and “Born to Run” was recast as a solo acoustic number. The E Street Band was now augmented by a five-piece horn section for the first time since 1977, and the last until 2012.

These changes were a deliberate attempt by Springsteen to shake things up after the massive success of Born in the U.S.A. But there were also problems behind the scenes. As the European leg was getting underway in June 1988, photos of him snuggling with backup singer Patti Scialfa hit the tabloids. Springsteen was forced to acknowledge that he and wife Julianne Phillips had separated. A year later, Springsteen fired the E Street Band and didn't tour with them again until 1999.

You can purchase the concert at his website . Previous installments include dates from New York's Apollo Theater (2012), Philadelphia's Tower Theater (1975), the Agora in Cleveland (1978), Long Island's Nassau Coliseum (1980) and the Brendan Byrne Arena in East Rutherford, N.J. (1984).

Bruce Springsteen April 23, 1988 Setlist

1. “Tunnel of Love” 2. “Be True” 3. “Adam Raised a Cain” 4. “Two Faces” 5. “All That Heaven Will Allow” 6. “Seeds” 7. “Roulette” 8. “Cover Me” 9. “Brilliant Disguise” 10. “Spare Parts” 11. “War” 12. “Born in the U.S.A.” 13. “Tougher Than the Rest” 14. “Ain’t Got You” 15. “She’s the One” 16. “You Can Look (But You Better Not Touch)” 17. “I’m a Coward” 18. “I’m on Fire” 19. “One Step Up” 20. “Part Man, Part Monkey” 21. “Backstreets’ 22. “Dancing in the Dark” 23. “Light of Day”

24. “Happy Birthday to Roy Orbison ” 25. “Born to Run” 26. “Hungry Heart” 27. “Glory Days” 28. “Rosalita (Come Out Tonight)”

Second Encore

29. “Have Love, Will Travel” 30. “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out” 31. “Sweet Soul Music” 32. “Raise Your Hand”

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Bruce Springsteen: ‘We Ain’t Doing No Farewell Tour Bull—-‘

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Tunnel of Love

By Steve Pond

So Bruce Springsteen met a girl, fell in love, got married and made an album of songs about meeting a girl, falling in love and getting married. And if you think it’s that cut and dried, you don’t know Springsteen. Far from being a series of hymns to cozy domesticity, Tunnel of Love is an unsettled and unsettling collection of hard looks at the perils of commitment. A decade or so ago, Springsteen acquired a reputation for romanticizing his subject matter; on this album he doesn’t even romanticize romance.

Tunnel of Love is precisely the right move for an artist whose enormous success gloriously affirmed the potential of arena rock & roll but exacted a toll on the singer. Born in the U.S.A. sold 12 million copies mostly because it was the best kind of thoughtful, tough, mainstream rock & roll record — but also because it was misinterpreted and oversimplified by listeners looking for slogans rather than ideas. When Springsteen hit the road to support that album, his sound got bigger, his gestures larger, his audience huger. The five-record live set that followed that tour was a suitably oversize way to sum up Bruce Springsteen, the Boss, American Rock Icon.

But where do you go from there? Trying to top Born in the U.S.A. with another collection of rock anthems would have been foolhardy artistically; on the other hand, to react the way Springsteen did after the breakthrough 1980 success of The River — with a homemade record as stark and forbidding as Nebraska — would have turned an inspired gesture into a formula. So Tunnel of Love walks a middle ground. The most intelligently arranged album Springsteen has made, it consists mostly of his own tracks, sparingly overdubbed; he uses the members of the E Street Band when they fit. It’s not, as was rumored, a country album, though Springsteen sings it in the colloquial, folkish voice he used on Nebraska , and it’s not a rock & roll album, though “Spare Parts” and “Brilliant Disguise” come close to the full-bodied E Street Band sound.

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Instead, this is a varied, modestly scaled, modern-sounding pop album; it is a less ambitious work than Born in the U.S.A. , but its simpler sound is perfectly suited to the more intimate stories Springsteen is telling. Although you could often hear the sweat on his previous records, this LP came surprisingly quickly and feels effortless and elegant rather than belabored. Crucially, it demystifies Springsteen’s often arduous album-making process.

But energy rather than elegance is what sold Born in the U.S.A. ; the scaled-down Tunnel of Love is thus a chancier commercial proposition. The songs are the kind that many of the fans at the last tour’s stadium shows talked through. Listeners who turn to Springsteen for outsize gestures and roaring radio rock may well be confused or even irritated by these more somber miniatures and may insist on reading a first-rate song collection as an aberration.

Initially, in fact, Tunnel of Love sounds not only modest but also playful, giddy and lightweight. “Ain’t Got You” is a funny, partially a cappella Bo Diddley-style rocker that jokes about Springsteen’s wealth (“I got a pound of caviar sitting home on ice/I got a fancy foreign car that rides like paradise”) but expresses yearning for the one thing money can’t buy (i.e., “you”). In the next two songs, “Tougher Than the Rest” and “All That Heaven Will Allow,” Springsteen is head over heels in love, convinced that the sun will shine as long as he’s got the right woman by his side. Those three songs are a light, romantic, lovely beginning, and then it all comes crashing down.

Bobby said he’d pull out Bobby stayed in Janey had a baby it wasn’t any sin They were set to marry on a summer day Bobby got scared and he ran away.

The song, “Spare Parts,” is a road-house rocker reminiscent of Dylan’s “Highway 61 Revisited”; the sound is abrasive and harsh; the story is bleak; and the moral is hard: “Spare parts/And broken hearts/Keep the world turnin’ around.”

From that point on, times are tough. In “Cautious Man,” the main character has “love” tattooed on one hand, “fear” on the other (Springsteen’s lift from the film The Night of the Hunter , in which Robert Mitchum played a preacher with “love” and “hate” tattooed on his knuckles). The relationships in “Two Faces,” “Brilliant Disguise” and “One Step Up” (“and two steps back”) are crumbling as trust gives way to betrayal and recrimination: “Another fight and I slam the door on/Another battle in our dirty little war.” In the title song, Springsteen voices a fear that underlies the entire album: “It’s easy for two people to lose each other in/This tunnel of love.”

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But these are not “Baby, you done me wrong” songs. They’re not about the outside forces that threaten relationships but about the internal demons that keep people uncertain of love, skeptical that they can ever truly touch another human being. It is an album about loneliness and solitude in the midst of what promised to be bliss. A pivotal moment comes halfway through “Brilliant Disguise,” when the singer stops questioning his lover and turns upon himself: “I wanna know if it’s you I don’t trust/’Cause I damn sure don’t trust myself.” More than any record since his first, it is an album in which you can hear Springsteen’s Catholic upbringing: again and again lovers pray for deliverance, romance is depicted as a manifestation of God’s grace, and love brings with it doubt and guilt.

Of course, the religious images and the frequent references to weddings will tempt those who want to think these songs tell us about Springsteen’s own recent marriage. But to read Tunnel of Love as a report from the marital front is far too facile and ignores the fact that Springsteen was telling similar stories as far back as Darkness on the Edge of Town , in 1978. Since then, he has written about the promises our country makes to its people and the way it reneges on those promises, about the dreams our land inspires and the things that stifle those dreams and about the glory in simply persevering. On Tunnel of Love , Springsteen is writing about the promises people make to each other and the way they renege on those promises, about the romantic dreams we’re brought up with and the internal demons that stifle those dreams. The battleground has moved from the streets to the sheets, but the battle hasn’t changed significantly.

And in “Valentine’s Day,” the last song on the record, Springsteen quietly reaffirms the glory of persevering. In the song, the singer drives a long, lonely highway and thinks about his girl, terrified of losing her and grappling with all the uncertainty that’s surfaced throughout the album. Finally, he shrugs aside the doubts and makes a final plea: “So hold me close honey say you’re forever mine/And tell me you’ll be my lonely valentine.” It’s a partial return to the touching naiveté of the album’s first three songs, but at this point it sounds like deliberate, hard-earned naiveté.

More than any other song, however, it is “Walk Like a Man” — the track that ends side one — that has the feel of outright autobiography. Yet another song about his father — sung from the vantage point of the son’s wedding day — it moves to as lovely an arrangement as Springsteen has ever crafted: a steady drumbeat with distant echoes of “Racing in the Street,” a gentle wash of synthesizer, a lulling melody. Every incident rings true, and every line seems open, genuine and artless (“So much has happened to me/That I don’t understand”). It is perhaps the most compassionate and affecting song Springsteen has written to his father, but at its center is a devastating question that reverberates through the entire album:

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I remember ma draggin’ me and my sister up the street to the church Whenever she heard those wedding bells Well would they ever look so happy again The handsome groom and his bride As they stepped into that long black limousine For their mystery ride?

There’s the heart of the album: an uncertain journey down a dangerous, dark highway. The album doesn’t make it sound like an easy trip — but then, it’s been a long time since Bruce Springsteen has written about free rides of any sort. One of the wonders of Tunnel of Love is that in the end, he convinces us that the mystery ride just might be worth the toll.

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2.The Tunnel Of Love Was Discovered About Ten Years Ago

3.one of the most romantic places in ukraine, 4.a lyrical drama movie was filmed at and named after the tunnel of love.

when was the tunnel of love tour

Film title from The Tunnel of Love trailer by screenshot – Wikimedia Commons

5.The Length Of The Tunnel Of Love Is Disputed

when was the tunnel of love tour

The Tunnel of Love by Msha at Ukrainian Wikipedia- Wikimedia Commons

7.The Tunnel Of Love Has Featured In Commercials For Famous Brands

8.tunnel of love is one of the most photographed places in ukraine, 9.the tunnel of love is part of an industrial railroad track near klevan, ukraine, 10.the tunnel of love is kept neatly trimmed by the odek plywood factory.

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when was the tunnel of love tour

IMAGES

  1. BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN Tunnel of Love tour 1987

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  4. The Story Behind Ukraine’s “Tunnel of Love”

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  5. Bruce Springsteen The Tunnel of Love express tour 1988, Musical concert

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  1. Tunnel of love 💖#вмоменте #travel #netherlands #almelo

  2. New Album In 1987. Tunnel of Love by Bruce Springsteen

  3. Tunnel Of Love

  4. Dire Straits Live in Sydney '86

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  6. Tunnel of Love ( Springsteen

COMMENTS

  1. Tunnel of Love Express Tour

    The Tunnel of Love Express Tour was a concert tour by Bruce Springsteen and featuring the E Street Band with the Horns of Love that began at the end of February 1988, four and a half months after the release of Springsteen's October 1987 album, Tunnel of Love.Considerably shorter in duration than most Springsteen tours before or since, it played limited engagements in most cities which fueled ...

  2. Tunnel Of Love Express Tour

    The Tunnel of Love Express was a concert tour by Bruce Springsteen and featuring The E Street Band along with The Horns of Love that took place in 1988.It followed by four and a half months the release of Springsteen's 1987 album, Tunnel of Love.Considerably shorter in duration than most Springsteen tours before or since, it played limited engagements in most cities, leading to tickets being ...

  3. Bruce Springsteen began his 'Tunnel of Love Express' tour...

    By JOHNS SWENSON. WORCESTER, Mass. -- Bruce Springsteen began his 'Tunnel of Love Express' tour Thursday night with a powerful set of rock 'n' roll in the Centrum Auditorium. The arena was jammed ...

  4. Tunnel of Love (album)

    Tunnel of Love is the eighth studio album by the American singer-songwriter Bruce Springsteen, released on October 5, 1987. ... The 1988 Springsteen and E Street Band Tunnel of Love Express tour would showcase the album's songs, sometimes in arrangements courtesy of the Miami Horns. [9]

  5. Tunnel Of Love Express Tour

    The Tunnel of Love Express was a concert tour by Bruce Springsteen and featuring The E Street Band along with The Horns of Love that took place in 1988.It followed by four and a half months the release of Springsteen's 1987 album, Tunnel of Love.Considerably shorter in duration than most Springsteen tours before or since, it played limited engagements in most cities, leading to tickets being ...

  6. Tunnel of Love Express Tour

    The Tunnel of Love Express Tour was a concert tour by Bruce Springsteen and featuring the E Street Band with the Horns of Love that began at the end of February 1988, four and a half months after the release of Springsteen's October 1987 album, Tunnel of Love. Considerably shorter in duration than most Springsteen tours before or since, it played limited engagements in most cities which fueled ...

  7. Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band: Los Angeles 4/28/88

    The Tunnel of Love Express Tour's five-show station stop in Los Angeles wraps with this peak '88 performance on April 28. The core Tunnel setlist, including "Be True," "Brilliant Disguise," "Tougher Than The Rest," "I'm A Coward" and "Part Man, Part Monkey," has never sounded better. An irresistible encore features Arthur Conley's "Sweet Soul Music" […]

  8. TUNNEL OF LOVE EXPRESS TOUR 1988

    Share your videos with friends, family, and the world

  9. Tunnel of Love

    Tunnel of Love. Springsteen's studio follow-up to Born in the U.S.A. ships double platinum. It's a profound song cycle dominated by what Springsteen will call his "men and women songs.". Richard Harrington reviews Tunnel of Love for the Washington Post: "It's not that Springsteen is the first writer to address the confusions of the ...

  10. Tunnel of Love Express Tour Archives

    Born in the USA. News. The Band. Store. Subscribe. Play Bruce on your smart speaker.

  11. Madison Square Garden 1988

    The final U.S. stop on the Tunnel of Love tour is a powerful showcase for the album along with rare Springsteen originals and covers. Bolstering core Tunnel tracks are non-album gems "Be True," "Seeds," "Part Man, Part Monkey" and "Light of Day," while Bruce taps his R&B, rock, blues and folk roots for covers of John Lee Hooker's "Boom Boom," The Sonics' "Have Love ...

  12. Average setlist for tour: Tunnel of Love Express

    Springsteen & E Street Band 2023 Tour (66) Springsteen On Broadway (235) Springsteen On Broadway 2021 (30) Springsteen & E Street Band 2024 World Tour (33) Summer '17 Tour (14) The Ghost of Tom Joad (133) The Rising (123) The River (145) The River Tour 2016 (75) The Wild, The Innocent & The E Street Shuffle (207) Tunnel of Love Express (68)

  13. Bruce Springsteen

    Official video of "Tunnel of Love" by Bruce Springsteen Listen to Bruce Springsteen: https://BruceSpringsteen.lnk.to/listenYD Pre-order the new album Letter ...

  14. Bruce Springsteen Releases 'Tunnel of Love'-Era Concert

    Bruce Springsteen's Tunnel of Love Express tour is the subject of the latest concert from his archives to get an official release. Earlier this week, he put out his April 23, 1988 show from the ...

  15. Bruce Springsteen Setlist at Wembley Stadium, London

    1. Covers 9. Tunnel of Love 7. Born in the U.S.A. 6. Born to Run 4. The River 3. Darkness on the Edge of Town 1. In Concert: MTV Plugged 1. Live/1975-85 1.

  16. Tunnel of Love

    Tunnel of Love. By Steve Pond. October 3, 1987. So Bruce Springsteen met a girl, fell in love, got married and made an album of songs about meeting a girl, falling in love and getting married. And ...

  17. Bruce Springsteen Setlist at Joe Louis Arena, Detroit

    Get the Bruce Springsteen Setlist of the concert at Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, MI, USA on March 28, 1988 from the Tunnel of Love Express Tour and other Bruce Springsteen Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  18. Tunnel of Love

    9 October 1987. The Boss' eighth studio album uncovers "an inner life and unresolved feelings," as Bruce turns his gaze inward for an entire record following the explosion of Born in the U.S.A. The end of a marriage and the beginning of a ten-year break with his long-standing band (who appear only spottily here) make for a powerful and ...

  19. Walk through the Tunnel of Love in Klevan

    Join our virtual walking tour to the most romantic place in Ukraine! Once the section of an industrial railway, the Tunnel of Love near the town of Klevan is...

  20. Bruce Springsteen Setlist at Bramall Lane, Sheffield

    Use this setlist for your event review and get all updates automatically! Get the Bruce Springsteen Setlist of the concert at Bramall Lane, Sheffield, England on July 10, 1988 from the Tunnel of Love Express Tour and other Bruce Springsteen Setlists for free on setlist.fm!

  21. Top 10 Astonishing Facts About The Tunnel Of Love, Ukraine

    9.The Tunnel Of Love Is Part Of An Industrial Railroad Track Near Klevan, Ukraine. The tunnel starts a few hundred meters from the Odek plywood factory in the village of Orzhiv. Wood from across Ukraine is trucked into the factory, where it is processed into plywood panels. The finished plywood panels are loaded onto large containers and ...

  22. Tunnel of love

    Tunnel of Love Express Tour, tour by Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band promoting the album "The Tunnel of Love" (song), a 1983 song by Fun Boy Three from the album Waiting "Tunnel of Love", a 1958 song by Doris Day "Tunnel of Love", a song by Westlife from the 2000 Platinum edition of Westlife; Other arts, entertainment, and media

  23. Bruce Springsteen Concert Map by tour: Tunnel of Love Express

    Springsteen & E Street Band 2023 Tour (66) Springsteen On Broadway (235) Springsteen On Broadway 2021 (30) Springsteen & E Street Band 2024 World Tour (37) Summer '17 Tour (14) The Ghost of Tom Joad (133) The Rising (122) The River (145) The River Tour 2016 (75) The Wild, The Innocent & The E Street Shuffle (207) Tunnel of Love Express (68)

  24. Tunnel of Love

    Tunnel of Love: Studioalbum av Bruce Springsteen; Utgivning: 9 oktober 1987: Inspelat: Januari - juli 1987: Genre: Rock: Längd: 46:25: Skivbolag: Columbia Records: ... Världsturnén "Tunnel of Love Express Tour" nådde Sverige och Stockholms Stadion för två spelningar, den 2 och 3 juli 1988. Turnén var den sista, fullskaliga med E Street ...