Setlist at Capitol Theatre Sydney, AUS on 2/12/1997

Set One
Tom Joad 444
Atlantic City 319
Straight Time 355
Highway 29 260
Darkness On The Edge Of Town 219
Murder Incorporated 205
Highway Patrolman 503
Freehold 534
Red Headed Woman 220
Two Hearts 256
Brothers Under The Bridge 257
Born in the U.S.A. 483
Dry Lightning 296
Long Time Comin' 427
Sinaloa Cowboys 330
The Line 320
The Ghost of Tom Joad 681
Across The Border 345
Working On The Highway 259
No Surrender 311
There Will Never Be Another for Me but You 296
If I Should Fall Behind 234
The Promised Land 437
Capitol Theatre
Sydney, AUS
2/12/1997

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Setlist at Capitol Theatre Sydney, AUS on 2/12/1997

Set One
Tom Joad 444
Atlantic City 319
Straight Time 355
Highway 29 260
Darkness On The Edge Of Town 219
Murder Incorporated 205
Highway Patrolman 503
Freehold 534
Red Headed Woman 220
Two Hearts 256
Brothers Under The Bridge 257
Born in the U.S.A. 483
Dry Lightning 296
Long Time Comin' 427
Sinaloa Cowboys 330
The Line 320
The Ghost of Tom Joad 681
Across The Border 345
Working On The Highway 259
No Surrender 311
There Will Never Be Another for Me but You 296
If I Should Fall Behind 234
The Promised Land 437

Show Notes

Where There’s A Fight Against The Blood And Hatred In The Air

Bruce Springsteen Solo Acoustic

Capitol Theatre, Sydney, Australia, February 12, 1997

By Erik Flannigan

Any reasonable interpretation of Bruce Springsteen’s disparate activities in the year 1995 could only lead one to conclude that he had reached a point where he didn’t know what the hell he wanted to do or where he wanted to go musically. That is, until the release of The Ghost of Tom Joad. Suddenly, everything came into focus and boy did he lock in. One might even say he never let go.

The Joad tour began in late 1995, crossed much of 1996, and was extended again into the first half of 1997, which included a ten-show Australian run and this fine fifth and final show in Sydney. Springsteen stayed on the road for two simple reasons: he immensely enjoyed the solo experience and the subject matter he was performing night after night. So much so that he continued writing songs in the Joad milieu during the tour: those songs would appear years later on Devils & Dust as well as on Tracks 2.

While the first leg of the Joad tour had a purity of purpose in bringing his new songs to the stage, the February 12 show in Sydney is equally fascinating for different reasons. The last time Australians had seen Springsteen on stage was peak Born in the U.S.A., 12 years prior. In 1997, he looked different, played by himself, and told the audience to shut up when they shouted requests. 

That wasn’t all. 

Springsteen’s confessional candor, a hallmark of Joad shows, was there to shock. Declaring himself an ambassador of cunnilingus and a frequent Freehold masturbator are but two buzzing examples that drove a figurative bulldozer into the pedestal upon which his previous persona stood. But there was a deeper and more important purpose: to make clear that we’re all only human, even global superstars.

Empathy requires humanity and the stories on Joad challenge us to apply a “there but for the grace of God go I” filter to its characters and their choices. In bringing those songs and like-minded ones to the Sydney stage, Springsteen presented a snapshot of marginalized America, and in doing so held up a mirror reflecting our values as Americans, Australians, or any global citizen: Who are we as a country? What do we stand for? What are the truths we hold to be self-evident?

By way of answers, Springsteen opens the show with Woody Guthrie’s “Tom Joad,” which recounts the story of the film The Grapes of Wrath, based on the book by John Steinbeck, and later performs his own song “The Ghost of Tom Joad.” While their songwriting narratives are distinct, the two compositions spiritually coalesce in the final verses with a pledge by the narrator “be there” on the front lines against injustice.

This moving Sydney performance doubles as a timely reminder of Springsteen’s origin story through its songs and, perhaps even more powerfully, what he says between them, which comes in at well over 3000 words — a lot, even by his heady standards.

In early Joad shows, Springsteen largely shared the backstories to the new songs he was playing. But by the time the tour got to Australia, he complemented songwriting explanations with more personal anecdotes, some funny, some bawdy, and one that sheds prescient light on present events.

He begins by talking about growing up in a household that wasn’t a haven for art or culture, save for the music that came through his mother’s kitchen radio. Young Springsteen fell in love with those songs and the suggestion of possibility they provided, but a deeper sense of purpose came later.

The song I started tonight with was ‘Tom Joad’ by Woody Guthrie. He wrote the song after seeing the movie [The Grapes of Wrath] back when it first came out. There was something in that film and in the book… the Steinbeck novel, that sort of provided me with the other piece to the puzzle: if there’s this world out there… that’s worth having, what are you gonna make of it when you get out there?... How are you gonna direct your energies?... That book sort of had [an] old-fashioned sense of heroism in it. The character risked what he had for an idea that was bigger than he was, and that’s the idea that people are connected, whether you always wanna cough to that idea or not…. [And] if that’s true, there’s some innate… basic responsibility everybody has to one another. That film and novel really stayed with me and has resonated throughout the rest of my life. It gave me an idea.” 


THE E STREET BAND

Bruce Springsteen - Lead vocals, acoustic guitars, harmonica

Additional Musician: Kevin Buell - Keyboards (off stage)


Production Credits

Recorded by John Kerns

Mixed and mastered by Jon Altschiller; additional engineering by Danielle Warman

Mix Advisor: Rob Lebret

Post Production by Brad Serling and Arya Jha

Art Design by Michelle Holme

Cover Photo by Neal Preston

Management: Jon Landau


File formats: HD files are 24-bit/192kHz; Audiophile DSD files are DSD64

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