Current:Home > ContactRekubit-Bruce Springsteen talks 'Road Diary' and being a band boss: 'You're not alone' -CapitalSource
Rekubit-Bruce Springsteen talks 'Road Diary' and being a band boss: 'You're not alone'
TradeEdge Exchange View
Date:2025-04-10 03:31:49
TORONTO – Bruce Springsteen sums up his new documentary succinctly: “That's how we make the sausage.”
The RekubitNew Jersey rock music legend premiered “Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band” (streaming Oct. 25 on Hulu) at Toronto International Film Festival on Sunday night. Director Thom Zimny’s film – his 14th with Springsteen in 24 years, in addition to 40 music videos – follows the group’s 2023 to 2024 world tour, going back on the road for the first time in six years, and shows The Boss being a boss.
Through Springsteen’s narration and rehearsal footage, it covers everything from how he runs band practice to his crafting of a set list that plays the hits but also tells a story about age and mortality – for example, including “Last Man Standing” (from 2020’s “Letter to You”) about Springsteen being the last member of his first band still alive.
Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox
Patti Scialfa reveals multiple myeloma diagnosis in Bruce Springsteen's 'Road Diary' documentary
"Road Diary" also reveals that Springsteen's wife and bandmate Patti Scialfa was diagnosed in 2018 with multiple myeloma, and because of the rare form of blood cancer, her "new normal" is playing only a few songs at a show every so often. During a scene in which they duet on "Fire" and sing in a close embrace, she says via voiceover that performing with Springsteen offers "a side of our relationship that you usually don't get to see."
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
“We have the only job in the world where the people you went to high school with, at 75, you're still with those people,” Springsteen said in a post-screening Q&A about his longtime partnerships with bandmates. “The same people that you were with at 18, at 19, 50, 60 years later, you're still with those people. You live your life with them, you see them grow up. You see them get married, you see them get divorced. You see them go to jail, you see them get out of jail. You see them renege on their child payments, you see them pay up. You see them get older, you see their hair go gray, and you're in the room when they die.”
For producer Jon Landau, who has worked with Springsteen for 50 years, the movie showcases an innate quality about the man and his band that's kept them so vital for so long: “To me, what’s always attracted me to Bruce, going back to when I was a critic in the ‘70s, was his incredible vision, even in its earliest stages – that there was a clarity of purpose behind every song, every record, every detail.”
“Letter to You” and the current world tour covered in “Road Diary” marked a return to band mode for Springsteen after his New York solo residency “Springsteen on Broadway” and his 2019 album/film project “Western Stars.”
“I get completely committed to everything that I do. But the band is the band,” Springsteen said. “We've been good a long time. All those nights out on stage where you are risking yourself – because that is what you're doing, you are coming out, you are talking to people about the things that matter the most to you. You are leaving yourself wide open – you're not alone.
“That only happens to a few bands. Bands break up; that's the natural order of things. The Kinks, The Who. They can't even get two guys to stay together. Simon hates Garfunkel. Sam hates Dave. The Everly Brothers hated one another. You can't get two people to stay together. What are your odds? They're low.”
But the E Street Band has done it right, with what Springsteen called “a benevolent dictatorship.”
“We have this enormous collective where everyone has their role and a chance to contribute and own their place in the band,” Springsteen said. “We don't quite live in a world where everybody gets to feel that way about their jobs or the people that we work with. But I sincerely wish that we did, because it's an experience like none I've ever had in my life.
"If I went tomorrow, it's OK. What a (expletive) ride.”
veryGood! (1)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Sawfish in Florida are 'spinning, whirling' before they die. Researchers look for answers.
- The 10 best 'Jolene' covers from Beyoncé's new song to the White Stripes and Miley Cyrus
- Mega Millions winning numbers for March 29 drawing; $20 million jackpot
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- Bus in South Africa plunges off bridge and catches fire, killing 45 people
- AT&T informs users of data breach and resets millions of passcodes
- Kristen Stewart, Emma Roberts and More Stars Get Candid on Freezing Their Eggs
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- First they tried protests of anti-gay bills. Then students put on a play at Louisiana’s Capitol
Ranking
- New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
- Police fatally shoot Florida man in Miami suburb
- Police fatally shoot Florida man in Miami suburb
- Here and meow: Why being a cat lady is now cool (Just ask Taylor)
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Stamp Collection
- NC State guard Aziaha James makes second chance at Final Four count - by ringing up 3s
- Horoscopes Today, March 30, 2024
Recommendation
FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
Bus in South Africa plunges off bridge and catches fire, killing 45 people
Newspaper edits its column about LSU-UCLA game after Tigers coach Kim Mulkey blasted it as sexist
Latino communities 'rebuilt' Baltimore. Now they're grieving bridge collapse victims
Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
Majority of U.S. bridges lack impact protection. After the Key Bridge collapse, will anything change?
A mom's $97,000 question: How was her baby's air-ambulance ride not medically necessary?
NC State guard Aziaha James makes second chance at Final Four count - by ringing up 3s