Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band This Is A Ghost Story Madison Square Garden New York, NY December 18, 1980 2013 Transfer: Maxell UD-XLII 90 first-generation cassettes via CB > Nakamichi CR-7A (azimuth-adjusted) > Sound Devices USBPre2 (24/96 Audacity 2.0 capture) > Peak 6.0 with iZotope Ozone (speed corrected) > iZotope MBIT+ convert to 16/44.1 > FLAC 01 Born to Run 02 Out in the Street 03 Spirit in the Night 04 Who'll Stop the Rain 05 Darkness on the Edge of Town 06 Factory (first few seconds patched from Kiss Me, It's Almost Christmas) 07 Independence Day 08 Two Hearts 09 Prove It All Night (last few notes patched from Kiss Me, It's Almost Christmas) 10 The Promised Land 11 The Price You Pay 12 The River (first four seconds patched from Kiss Me, It's Almost Christmas) 13 I Fought the Law 14 Badlands 15 Thunder Road (applause and "we're gonna take a short break" outro patched from Kiss Me, It's Almost Christmas) 16 Cadillac Ranch (first 1:15 patched from Kiss Me, It's Almost Christmas) 17 Sherry Darling 18 Hungry Heart 19 Fire 20 Candy's Room 21 Because the Night 22 Sandy 23 For You 24 Growin' Up 25 Stolen Car 26 Wreck on the Highway 27 Point Blank 28 The Ties That Bind 29 Ramrod 30 Drive All Night (literally the last note and intro to Rosie patched from Kiss Me, It's Almost Christmas) 31 Rosalita 32 Santa Claus Is Comin' To Town 33 Jungleland 34 I'm a Rocker 35 Detroit Medley Holy crap, now that's a set list! The River tour has weathered some criticism lately for going too far, pushing past the perfection of the Darkness tour and into something that started to collapse under the weight of its own 30+ song sets and durations running up to and beyond three-and-a-half hours. Remember, this was the first all-arenas tour in the States (save for four dates at the start), and while Bruce had to prove it every night in 1978 to infect folks in every city with what fans in the northeast, Texas, Phoenix and a few other hamlets were already diagnosed with, on the River tour he had to make sure every fan, old and new, from the front row to the back of the rafters to behind the stage, got their money's worth. Different mission. Of course one man's overlong is another man's epic. One man's stretch of pure maudlin is another man's deepest and darkest ride. For me, the E Street Band matures circa 1980-81 and I would argue they have never played better than they do on the River tour. That is, if your idea of the ideal E Street sound has Roy's piano front and center (this would be the last tour where it was) and Steve's voice high in the mix. The arrangements that emerge on the tour are at times jaw-dropping, like the outstanding version of "The Price You Pay" in the first set. 1980-81 had many little touches of brilliance, scene setters like the wonderfully poignant intro that drops us into "The River" or Bruce's incredibly intimate story leading into "Stolen Car." His voice is also in fine form, and the set is littered with moments where he pushes a line or a note that extra mile to make sure it strikes deeply. The night also brings the first ever cover of Creedence Clearwater Revival's "Who'll Stop the Rain," starting the list of beautifully fitting covers that would go on to be a hallmark of this tour and point the way towards where Springsteen's music would go soon after. All that being said, let's focus on the second set. The ebb and flow of it is remarkable, starting light as can be with "Cadillac Ranch," "Sherry Darling," "Hungry Heart" and "Fire." The audience is lapping it up. Then we shift gears back to the Darkness era for the striking "Candy's Room" and "Because the Night." Things turn nostalgic as Bruce goes back to '73 for three songs from the first two albums, ending on the brightest possible note with "Growin' Up." But grow up we will. It seems no accident "the key to the universe" found in the "engine of an old parked car" is leading us into a very different vehicle. From the joys of youth to the sobriety of adulthood in two songs! And "Stolen Car" glides right into "Wreck on the Highway," and if you weren't low or lost enough, "Point Blank" shocks us back to life. My God, man. And Bruce shifts yet again, in the same set mind you, lifting us all the way back up with an ebullient "The Ties That Bind" into "Ramrod." And yet just when we think the party has returned and will carry us home the rest of the way, "Drive All Night." Are you kidding me? "Rosalita" restores normalcy and that's what you call a second set. Finally, any encore with "I'm a Rocker" is alright by me. This show is most widely available on the aforementioned Kiss Me, It's Almost Christmas. That recording has many many issues, including cuts, speed problems, clipping, distortion, wow and flutter, a lot of audience chatter, inconsistent mic positioning and overall thinness. JEMS was lucky to borrow first generation cassettes of this superior source from friend of the firm, CB. The tapes needed some work and also had several tiny bits missing, which we've patched as best we could from Kiss Me. While it may look like a lot of patching above (we were inspired by our new friend MJK5510, who has done such a fine job patching alternate tapes together into new and more complete sources), the total amount of audio from the Kiss Me sources is only two minutes or so. I'd call this one of the better 1980 audies. It has a bit of chatter and a very enthusiastic audience, but is otherwise quite full bodied, clear and punchy. Samples provided. Thanks to CB for loaning his first-generation cassettes for this project. The good news is, the recording from December 19 is even better. Wayne Darlington for JEMS