&
Advertise Here with Today.com
 

Archive for the 'Estreet Band Members' Category

Aug 03 2007

TERRY MAGOVERN, REST IN PEACE

It is with great sadness that we report that longtime Springsteen associate and close friend Terry Magovern, 67, passed away in his sleep on Monday night. For the last 20 years, Magovern could be seen regularly at Springsteen’s side. An imposing figure, seemingly the walking embodiment of “You better be good for goodness sake” wherever he accompanied Springsteen, Magovern had a kind and gracious nature, one pleasantly at odds with his professional image. Magovern began working for Springsteen in 1987, but the two had already known each other for decades by that point. They met at the Upstage in Asbury Park in the late ’60s; “Right from the first time I heard [Bruce] play,” Magovern told journalist Robert Santelli, “I believed in him and his music.” In 1971, as manager of the Captain’s Garter in Neptune, Magovern hired the Bruce Springsteen Band to play.In the years that followed, Magovern managed a number of Shore clubs, including Clarence Clemons’ Big Man’s West in Red Bank. By the time he went on the road with Springsteen for the Tunnel of Love Express Tour in 1988, he had a wealth of experience in the music business. He has been an intergral part of Springsteen’s work life ever since.

It would be hard to overestimate the impact Magovern’s loss will have on those with whom he worked, just as it’s hard to pin down what his job actually was. Magovern was “Road Manager” on the Tom Joad tour, “Personal Assistant” on the Rising tour… but just as often his official role was no more (and no less) than being himself, as in the multiple tourbooks that list the credit, “Terry Magovern: Terry Magovern.” Personal aide, liaison, researcher, reconnaissance man, right-hand man, right arm… Magovern played a larger role than we can probably know in helping Springsteen navigate the demands of his profession and get his music to the masses. And he touched many other lives along the way. Our hearts go out to all those who knew and loved him.

Magovern’s death follows that of his fiance, Joan Dancy, from ALS in 2005; after Dancy passed away, Magovern established an organization in her honor to help others who suffer from ALS. Donations, in lieu of flowers, will help that group’s continuing work: The Joan Dancy & PALS Support Group, Riverview Medical

www.backstreets.com

Advertise Here with Today.com

No responses yet

Jul 02 2007

For you Patti Fans

NEW PATTI ALBUM COMING IN SEPTEMBER
Patti Scialfa took so long between her first and second albums — 11 years — that it became something of a running joke. Not so this time. Only three years after 23rd Street Lullaby, her third solo album has just been announced. Yep, her husband hasn’t been the only one hard at work on a new record lately… and hers drops first: Play It As It Lays is due September 4 from Columbia.

For full story go to

http://www.backstreets.com/news.html

No responses yet

May 29 2007

HAVE WE GOT A GUITAR TEACHER FOR YOU

Published by benz under Estreet Band Members Edit This

Happy Memorial Day! And a heads-up that a Nils Lofgren interview will be airing on “Andy Sedlak’s Back Door Radio Hour” tomorrow afternoon (Tuesday, May 29) at 3:00 p.m. Andy tells us, “We talked about his new solo album, Sacred Weapon, his new live DVD, Nils Lofgren & Friends Live Acoustic, the online guitar lessons available via his website, songwriting, a few stories behind songs on the new album, his work with Neil Young, the mentality before a Bruce Springsteen show and just what it’s like to play for 20,000 people on a nightly basis with Bruce, why he got kicked off his high school football team, and who he roots for now. We were busy, right?” The show airs on WWSU 106.9 in Dayton, OH; hear it online at listen.to/wssu.Andy mentioned the guitar lessons at nilslofgren.com, something we recently spoke with Nils about in-depth as well, for an upcoming issue of Backstreets magazine (new issue coming soon, we swear!). Fifteen bucks for each hour-long lesson from one of the true guitar greats? We figure that’s worth paying attention to. His latest virtual class is for the “Countin’ on a Miracle” solo… here’s Nils talking to Backstreets’ Roderick Jones about that solo’s genesis:

We were on a plane flying into Amsterdam after a great show. Bruce came up to me and said, “You know, for the show tomorrow night I’d like you to put together a little acoustic opener for ‘Counting on a Miracle.’”

I was up all night working on this thing, really being kind of ruthless. Like, look, tomorrow night I’m doing a show in Amsterdam. I want to have a piece that Bruce will sign off on that I can play.

I wound up being so excited that, even though I was tired, I stayed up all night long, played all day long. I was playing in the van to the soundcheck!  I’ll never forget, at the end of the soundcheck… they wanted to open the doors. So, we gotta stop, and we were walking off the stage, and I stopped Bruce and I said, “Bruce, I don’t know if I wanna play this ‘Miracle’ piece cold on you, but I got something that I think might work.”

He said, “Let me hear it.” So we stopped the doors from opening for another 45 seconds, and I played it quick. He said, “That might work, give it a shot tonight.”

And I did, and it worked, and I was able to use it every time that we played that song for the rest of the tour. That was literally a creation that was done in, like, 18 hours.

Check out the Nils Lofgren Guitar School for Lesson 1: “Keith Don’t Go”; Lesson 2: “Harmonics”; and Lesson 3: “Miracle Intro, Part One.” New lessons are added monthly

No responses yet

Apr 20 2007

WALK LIKE A (BIG) MAN

Published by benz under Estreet Band Members Edit This

Clarence Clemons was honored yesterday with a star on the Legends of Music Walk of Fame in his birthplace of Norfolk, VA. Clarence was the final inductee of the afternoon, making his entrance in a white stretch limo… and at the concert that followed last night he played four numbers, including “Paradise By the C” and “You’re a Friend of Mine.” Katherine Byrd, who took these photos and reported from the event, tells us, “I would say he looks ‘tour ready.’”

For the Big Man’s final song of the night, Byrd writes, “he asked for a stool, saying that he was 65 and deserved to be able to sit down. He stopped mid-way to dedicate the song to his late parents, saying how they were really with him tonight (along with about 50 other relatives). He said that his father taught him to always follow his heart, for the truth was in your heart, not your mind — because your mind will play tricks on you, but your heart will not. He also spoke about how his dad bought him a saxaphone when he was nine, but he wanted a train set — that got a lot of laughs. He was so very happy, and said something to the effect that meeting Bruce was the best thing to ever happen to him.”

Watch “Paradise by the C” on YouTube now, from Roper Performaning Arts Center in Norfolk, April 18.
-April 19, 2007

No responses yet

Mar 22 2007

A Hit Man In More Ways Than One

Published by benz under Estreet Band Members Edit This

image603548g.jpgCBS) Steve Van Zandt is one of the stars of “The Sopranos,”
Musician/Actor Steve Van Zandt Plays The Second Hand For Mobs And Rockers
but he started as Bruce Springsteen’s consigliore. Sunday Morning correspondent Anthony Mason spoke to the the secondhand man for mobs and rockers.

The infamous Bada Bing club is set in a real-life strip joint just off a hustling New Jersey highway. There, on the set of “The Sopranos,” Steve Van Zandt has just been given his script for the next scene.

As Silvio Dante, in his pompadour toupee, Van Zandt plays hit man and top lieutenant to mob boss Tony Soprano. But before he was Tony Soprano’s consigliore, he was Bruce Springsteen’s sidekick as a guitarist in the E Street Band.

Van Zandt is creatively restless, says his wife Maureen, who also plays his TV wife in “The Sopranos.”

“That’s what’s interesting about him,” she told Mason. “That he’s a real renaissance man. I know that sounds very cliché, but he is.”

His latest incarnation: music impresario and self-proclaimed savior of rock ‘n’ roll. It started with his syndicated radio show, “Little Steven’s Underground Garage,” which is now heard on 200 stations. From his New York production office, Van Zandt also books “Underground Garage” concerts that feature new and classic rock bands, as well as the underground garage go-go girls choreographed by Maureen.

Little Steven’s radio show now has two million listeners. But in the beginning he had to beg syndicators to get it on the air.

“They said, ‘Well, we can’t get that on the radio anymore,” Van Zandt said. “We sent out 350 pilot shows to every radio station in the country. And every one turned us down. Every one. It became, ‘Uh-oh, I’ve got a war here.’”

At a convention of radio programmers he went on the attack, leading a revolution to put rock back on the radio. For Van Zandt that revolution began on February 9th, 1964 when the Beatles played “The Ed Sullivan Show.”

“I saw hope for myself,” he said. “It was like, here is something I’ve never seen before, I didn’t even imagine existed. And suddenly, maybe there’s hope for my life. Because I didn’t fit in anywhere. And I was starting to get concerned, you know?”

So little Steven joined a band, the first of many. In 1970 he signed on as bass guitarist for a group called “Steel Mill.” The lead singer was a kid named Springsteen. The two teenagers from New Jersey found they were kindred spirits.

“I mean in the end everyone who had a choice to do something else did it, you know,” Van Zandt said. “And in the end, me and him were the only ones left standing. You know what I mean? We were the true freaks! The true misfits and the true outcasts.”
He later joined Springsteen’s “E Street Band” and co-produced the album “The River.” Then, amicably, Van Zandt decided to go his own way — missing out on the success of the next Springsteen album, “Born in the U.S.A.,” which sold 20 million copies.

“Oh yeah, it was brilliant,” Van Zandt said. “When I joined the band we were making $200 a week. And we finally are about to cash in. And I leave.”

As Little Steven, wearing the signature bandana that he says hides a scar from a car accident, Van Zandt recorded 5 albums and produced many more for other acts, but commercially nothing really clicked.

“You can’t look back with too much regret,” he said. “What little I know I’ve learned since I left the band. And one of the things you learn as you leave is - you shouldn’t have left!”

Even his best-known song of the period, “Sun City,” an anthem of protest against apartheid in South Africa, was no help to his career. By the early ’90s he felt like he was cast out into the wilderness.

“Oh, I was done,” Van Zandt said. “Because I was pretty much blackballed from the industry for being so political. It was not a cool thing to do. And I was a little too successful at it.”

Then in 1997, while appearing on the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremonies, his fortunes took an unexpected turn. Producer David Chase was dreaming up a new series for HBO.

“My wife and I happened to watch, happened to light on that induction ceremony with the Rascals and there he was,” Chase said. “He just had so much presence, was interesting and funny, and I thought, ‘Oh, I gotta bring that guy in.’ He looked penetrating, suspicious, you know, ready for anything.”

He asked Van Zandt to audition for “The Sopranos,” but Van Zandt had never acted before. He ended up moving into character quite easily.

“I spent my whole life trying to learn about who I am. Being somebody else is a vacation,” he said.

Just as “The Sopranos” began filming, Bruce Springsteen called. He was putting the E Street Band back together and wanted Van Zandt to tour with him again.

“You know, we grew up together and so I was his kind of righthand man for a long time and the guy he could trust,” Van Zandt said. “The guy who didn’t really have any ambition to be him, to be the Boss. I like being second in command. I like being behind the scenes. I like being an advisor, you know. I like being consigliore. I was born to do that. I don’t know why.”

But in his own production company, Van Zandt is the boss, promoting the music he loves. In a new animated series he’s developing, the government has outlawed rock. The hero is a familiar looking guy in a bandana.

“I actually lead the revolution below ground,” he said. “But above ground I’m a respectable businessman.”

No responses yet

Mar 19 2007

Bruce Springsteen Band Member Bill Chinnock Commited Suicide

Published by benz under Estreet Band Members Edit This

Founding E Street Band member Bill Chinnock committed suicide at his Maine home earlier this month. He was 59.

The guitarist/keyboardist killed himself in his Yarmouth home on March 7 after struggling to adapt to life with Lyme disease.

His sister Jodi Ireland tells the Sun Journal of Lewiston, “I don’t know how he did it, but he always stayed so positive.

“I can’t believe he gave up.”

Besides being one of the original members of Bruce Springsteen’s E Street Band, Chinnock won an Emmy for his song “Somewhere In The Night”.

(This news article provided by World Entertainment News Network)

No responses yet

Feb 09 2007

NILS LOFGREN

Published by benz under Estreet Band Members Edit This

Check out Nils Site
http://www.nilslofgren.com/
Pretty kool site
Lots of content updates and his tour Info

One response so far

Dec 10 2006

Little Steven’s Underground Garage”

Published by benz under Estreet Band Members Edit This

The Triangle’s commercial-radio climate will improve dramatically for two hours on Sunday night with the addition of “Little Steven’s Underground Garage” to the local airwaves. Hosted by Steve Van Zandt (who is as notable nowadays for playing a mobster on “The Sopranos” as he is for playing guitar in Bruce Springsteen’s E-Street Band), the show centers on the many permutations of garage rock — which Van Zandt defines, “It is what I say it is.” Recent shows have covered everything from Hanoi Rocks to Jerry Lee Lewis, Green Day to the Ronettes.

Link at

http://blogs.newsobserver.com/

No responses yet

Dec 02 2006

Breaking News: “The Boss” Seems Ready to Go!

Now that the most recent ‘tour’ has concluded, it looks like the following is in store for the next year and beyond:

1) Sometime early in 2007, look for the beginning of a new E Street Band (ESB) record to be recorded. As has been mentioned a number of times, the amount of material that has been written over the last year or so is quite extensive. Look for a number of ESB ‘worthy’ songs to be the focus of the recording session. If the recording meets with satisfaction:
2) Look for a new ESB tour to begin sometime during mid to fall 2007. Although illness has been overcome and hips have been replaced, look for this to be the last ESB tour. At present, this may go for approximately 18 months, at least!
3) Look for additional recorded material/videos to come to the market at regular intervals. Having learned from the Devils & Dust (D&D) video recording catasrophe of the two shows in Boston during October of 2005, which have mercifully been scrapped, the content of the Seeger Sessions Band (SSB) concerts recently taped in Ireland will result in a concert DVD and CD.
4) Work on an additional Tracks/Outtakes compilation continues. This is being treated more as a hobby than an active project, but it will see the light sometime in the future.
5) After the next and last ESB tour, look for additional CD(s) and tour(s) with at least some members of the SSB. During this last tour, a number of songs were written which have been determined to be perfect for this latest band. It is anticipated that at least some members of this band will form a core group which will be used to record and tour in the future.

During the SSB Tour, discussions concerning “the home stretch” took off. The priority was determined to be the ESB and the hope and desire is that in the breadth of work written during the D&D tour and the latest tour, that a core group of songs for the ESB to record and tour with exists and that this will become evident during the recording sessions in January 2007. Obviously, if what comes out in the recording sessions is not met with approval, this will throw off all of these plans. To note, members of the ESB have prepared both physically and with their schedules for this last ESB Tour.

Although these are the plans at present, what is interesting is the talk and planning for after the ESB tour. The desire to record and tour with another band, as well as another anticipated acoustic tour, are very likely. Based on what seems like an exciting upcoming five years, it is definitely amazing what a new recording contract will do

Info From
letitbleed.today.com

No responses yet

Dec 02 2006

E Street Band Tour On the Horizon?

Recently, rumors have been circulating that Bruce Springsteen, fresh off a tour of “folk” music with the Seeger Sessions Band, will be hitting the road in near future with his trusty E Street Band. In fact, E Street guitarist Steven Van Zandt has mentioned the possibility of a tour on many occasions beginning as early as last year. In recent interviews, Springsteen himself has confirmed that “my [his] next project will be with the E Street Band.” He claims to have been working on new songs at night in his hotel rooms. Insiders believe that an album will probably be released sometime around the Spring of 2007 with a tour to follow (most likely a Summer tour)

Submitted By
http://letitbleed.today.com

No responses yet

Next »

Advertise Here