This perennial holiday classic holds special meaning for E Street Nation: it’s the last song Clarence Clemons ever performed with the E Street Band.
One time only: In 1998, Bruce joined Steve Earle on the song he inspired fourteen years earlier.
Perhaps the most carefully constructed song on Bruce’s Wrecking Ball album, “Jack of All Trades” is both musically and (sadly) lyrically timeless.
Now here’s a “Dancing in the Dark” cover like we’ve never seen before, from multi-talented looping violinist and guitarist Molly Healey.
From Bruce’s pre-E Street Days to just pre-pandemic, “Down the Road Apiece” has always been an epic, crowd-pleasing jam. Let’s watch and listen to some of the best inside.
Recorded during the freewheeling second Seeger Session, “Old Dan Tucker” led of Bruce’s 2006 album and became a nightly favorite on tour.
One time only: Bruce backs Paul McCartney, Billy Joel, Eric Clapton, and an all-star jam band for a closing cover of “Let it Be” at the 1999 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony.
Italian harpist transforms Bruce’s signature song without ever losing its rock and roll soul.
An anthem cloaked as an elegy, a gospel wrapped in rock, “The Rising” is one of Bruce’s finest, most important, and most superbly crafted songs.
When Bruce played the Apollo Theater for the first time, he worked up a special arrangement of The Temptations’ 1964 breakout hit for the occasion.