
Adelaide, Australia - 11 Feb, 2014 FLAC 16bit/44.1kHz
Official live recordings of Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band's concert at The Entertainment Center Adelaide, Australia - 11 Feb, 2014.
Product Note: Once you purchase this product you will be able to download a 1.37 GB ZIP file containing 33 tracks. Tracks are in FLAC format which is not compatible with all mobile music players. FLAC sounds better than MP3 because it doesn’t suffer from compression artifacts, but it takes longer to download. ZIP files require that the user be able to extract the file, which the iPad doesn’t support. FLAC files need to be downloaded to a PC or Mac, and then they can sync to an iPhone, iPad, or andriod device or something that supports MP3s.Approximate time to download is 30-180 minutes depending on the speed of your internet connection.
Released: February 14, 2014
Track List
01 Summertime Blues
02 Detroit Medley
03 Badlands
04 My Love Will Not Let You Down
05 High Hopes
06 Just Like Fire Would
07 We Take Care Of Our Own
08 Wrecking Ball
09 Death To My Hometown
10 Jack Of All Trades
11 Human Touch
12 Spirit In The Night
13 Back In Your Arms
14 Heaven's Wall
15 Darkness On The Edge Of Town
16 Prove It All Night
17 Mary's Place
18 Bruce Talk
19 This Is Your Sword
20 Darlington County
21 Shackled And Drawn
22 Waiting On A Sunny Day
23 The Ghost Of Tom Joad
24 The Rising
25 Highway To Hell
26 Born To Run
27 Ramrod
28 Dancing In The Dark
29 Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out
30 Shout
31 Bruce Talk 2
32 If I Should Fall Behind
33 Thunder Road
Included "Highway To Hell" Official clip from YouTube in mp4 720p file. https://youtu.be/Z3AzXGXnGcs?si=ypVWKtKfGYlGBgAI
Copyright ©2014. All Rights Reserved.
©2014 Live Nation Merchandise is a division of Live Nation







Photographer Jo Lopez
Adelaide. The city of churches is melting. There’s a heatwave taking its toll on every man, woman and child in the region. As show time hits, Bruce Springsteen speaks for us all when he bellows into the microphone, ‘Why is it so fucking hot here?’
Then he kick starts the show with Eddie Cochran’s paean to teenage rebellion, “Summertime Blues.” When it’s over Bruce spots a sign requesting Mitch Ryder’s “Detroit Medley” for fallen comrades Danny and Clarence and duly obliges. The song with its’ exhilarating components such as “Good Golly Miss Molly” and “CC Rider” conjures up the glorious spirit of rock and roll past. Without missing a beat Bruce then turns up the heat with an anthem of his own, “Badlands“.
Next comes “My Love Will Not Let You Down“. LA critic Robert Hilburn once said that only Bruce and the E Street Band could make a relative obscurity sound as rousing as the national anthem. As Bruce and Stevie trade licks at the foot of the stage Bruce looks over his right should and gestures for Tom, and then Nils, to join them. Playing in unison the riff morphs into sheer sonic bliss.
The energy in the room maintains its’ upward trajectory as Bruce leads the band through new material, “High Hopes” and “Just Like Fire Would“. Then comes a four pack from the masterful Wrecking Ball album: “We Take Care Of Our Own“, the title track, “Death To My Hometown” and a still prescient “Jack Of All Trades“.
It’s Bruce’s first time in Adelaide and the artist is prepared to dig deep. “Human Touch“, with its’ thunderous finale, is next: then comes “Spirit In The Night“. Bruce provides a hilarious preamble recalling days from his youth where he’d park with a girl by the lake and invariably drive home with ‘blue balls’.
“Back In Your Arms” is courtesy of a fan request and Bruce takes an advisory stance before the song begins. ‘Has anybody here ever blown a good thing?’ he asks the audience. If you have, his sage like advice is ‘drop to your knees and beg brother. There’s no shame in it. Sometimes it works… and sometimes it don’t.’
“Heaven’s Wall” is next and, to this reviewer at least, it’s a Springsteen modern classic. “Darkness On The Edge of Town” follows and then comes a stunning “Prove It All Night” (replete with the famed ’78 intro). Nils adds an incredible solo and then Bruce is singing the gospel with “Mary’s Place“. “This Is Your Sword” is played as a dedication to a service woman, while “Darlington County” provides people at the back of the venue with a chance to see Bruce up close.
“Shackled And Drawn” remains something of a showstopper, as was the young boy that nailed his part on Sunny Day. Bruce borrowed the child’s bandana before then borrowing, possibly, the most famous line in music criticism, ‘I have seen the future of rock and roll.’
“The Ghost Of Tom Joad” was played with as much intent as ever, while “The Rising“, with its magnificent lyric, still brings the hair on the back of the neck to attention.
With the main set over, Bruce and the band re-started their engines with a knock-down-drag-em-out cover of AC/DC’s “Highway To Hell“. Bon Scott lived in Adelaide when he joined AC/DC and such seminal Australian rock bands as Cold Chisel and the Angels cut their teeth here.
The band then crashed into a thrilling “Born To Run” followed by “Ramrod” and “Dancing In The Dark” (where a fellow actually from Lillyhammer requested a ‘man dance’ with Steve). “Tenth Avenue Freeze Out” was next before Bruce asked if we’d had enough. The answer was a resounding ‘No’ and he called for ‘E-flat’. The resulting “Shout“, with the house lights up, took the roof off. As the song settled in for its final peak, Bruce called for his great friend, manager and ‘the man under the stairs’, Jon Landau, to grab a guitar and join him and E Street Band on stage. With the crowd behind him, Landau added the perfect amount of six-string muscle and panache to take the song into home run territory.
As the band left the stage, you could have heard a pin drop as Bruce delivered a solo/acoustic, “If I Should Fall Behind“. “Thunder Road”, equally mesmerising, finished the night. ‘We’ll be back tomorrow night for another spectacular,’ said the artist and, on current form, it should be nothing less.
–Sean Sennett