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Land Of Hope And Dreams (1999) | Bruce Unstrung
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" The Land of Hope and Dreams " is a 1999 song written by Bruce Springsteen and performed by Springsteen and E Street Band. After being toured and released on several live albums, studio recording was released for the first time at Wrecking Ball in 2012.

The song was written before the reunion tour of Band Street E 1999-2000, and appeared on the album Live in New York City from the tour. It was also used as the theme song of the MLB on TBS coverage for the postseason in the 2012 Major League Baseball season.


Video Land of Hope and Dreams



Histori

The origins of this song date back to 1998 or early 1999, when it was first written, although the mandolin riffs first appeared on the song "Labor of Love" on the 1994 Joe Gruscheky album "American Babylon" played by Springsteen. It happened for almost a decade where Springsteen had parted ways with E Street Band, remarried and had a child, and had released very little new music on the rock vessels. He then said, "I'm having trouble finding my rock sounds, I know I do not want to be like that, but I do not know... I've made some notes over the last few years, I made one in '94 that I did not release. Then I made a series of demos, kind of searched for the sound, and I had trouble finding it, and there was a point I said: 'Well, Gee, maybe I do not do that now Maybe it's something I do.' "But after writing" Land of Hope and Dreams ", he felt it was" as good as all the songs I've ever written. It's like, there's a voice I'm looking for. "

The song was first heard by outsiders in March 1999 during preparations for Bruce Springsteen and Band Street Reunion Tour. During a series of personal exercises at Asbury Park, the New Jersey Convention Hall, a few dozen loyal Springsteen, eagerly anticipating what might be awaited reunion, standing outside the hall on the cold, windy sidewalks and beaches to hear what happen. they can get inside the wall and report their findings on some Springsteen Internet forums. It is one of these exercises that fans first hear run-through from what they call "The Train Song" or "This Train". When the first public practice show at the Convention Hall was given on March 18, 1999, and then when the tour was actually opened on April 9 in Barcelona, ​​Palau Sant Jordi, the song became the epic closing tour of "Land of Hope and Dreams ".

Indeed, the newly written song to be displayed during most of the tour, and closing the show for the most part, is "Land of Hope and Dreams". Musical-based partly around The Impressions "People Get Ready", written by Curtis Mayfield, but is set to churn a loud guitar with a mandolin riff sometimes heard from Steven Van Zandt, lyrically it is inadvertently the opposite of the traditional American Gospel song first recorded in 1920, "This Railway", also known as "The Train Is Tied for Glory". (This song is often associated with Woody Guthrie, as the inspiration for his 1943 Boto for Glory autobiography, but for music writer Dave Marsh, the Springsteen song is more based on Sister Rosetta Tharpe's rendition.) In Springsteen's grab, all received on the train - not just "true and holy" from the original, but "saints and sinners", "losers and winners", "prostitutes and gamblers" - you just got on. Spanning up to eight minutes or so, with some fake ends, "Lohad" (as soon-known by fans in abbreviation) represents the culmination of a tour message about the rise of rock and roll.

Well, you do not know where you're going now
But you know you will not go back
I said this train...
Dreams will not be thwarted;
This train...
Faith will be rewarded

Entertainment Weekly called the pure secular gospel song, helping to promote the outing of as many tent trips as a reunion tour, and suggested that churches would be lucky to have a fever like audience responses when Springsteen is accepted at the concert. While it's not uncommon for almost every show on the tour to end with an unreleased new song, The New York Times feeling it "is a very precise and precise conclusion to the event, a happy ending of the kind- to the earlier stories of characters trying to navigate their way through a morally, financially and emotionally erratic world, weighing their dreams of their reality and trying to decide which path to follow. "

"Land of Hope and Dreams" represents the thematic tension in Springsteen's work. Writer Louis P. Masur writes that in the sense, the song represents a return to the 1975 album motif Born to Run with the line "But you know you will not back", but that Overall, the song has a view which is more optimistic. Author Jimmy Guterman traces it back further, to the forgotten universe of the magical 1973 "New York City Serenade" world, and progresses to the 2002 album The Rising. Writer Eric Alterman writes that the song "somehow seems to summarize the twenty-five years of Springsteen song writing" and in particular the morals of the "Badlands" 1978: "There is no sin to thank you alive."

Maps Land of Hope and Dreams



live recordings 2000

"Land of Hope and Dreams" was recorded during a performance at Madison Square Garden on July 1, 2000. With a duration of 9:22, this rendition is featured in the HBO movies Bruce Springsteen & amp; E Street Band: Live in New York City, first broadcasted on April 7, 2001. As an audio recording, it was included on the CD that accompanied the release of the same name, on March 27, 2001, which reached number five on < i> Billboard 200 US album charts. In reviewing its release, Entertainment Weekly said that the song "Springsteen is the most touching idealist, with the gospel chariot replacing the old and young promise to escape on a motorcycle."

Then, after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the same record was included in God Bless America's charity album, released on October 16, 2001. The album, consisting of various patriotic, spiritual, and inspiring songs, debuted at number one on the Billboard 200.

Finally, the show was included in the DVD release of Bruce Springsteen & amp; Band E Street: Live in New York City on November 6, 2001.

This live recording was re-published as B-side for the single "The Rising" in July 2002. Again, it was included as the last song on the November 2003 compilation of The Essential Bruce Springsteen, which reached number 14 on Billboard 200 and number 28 on the UK Albums Charts.

Mardi Gras - Land of hope and dreams - YouTube
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Next live performance history

At the 2002-2003 Rising Tour, the second re-show was thematic, usually centered around the "My Ruins City", "Born in the US," and the "Grace of Hope and Dreams" with blessings. An appearance of the song at Palau Sant Jordi from this tour on October 16, 2002, while not part of a live television broadcast from the first half of the show, was included in November 2003 Live in Barcelona Release DVD.

The song was not played during the 2007-2008 Magic Tour, but returned during the first, 2009 North American leg Working on the Dream Tour. The shows consistently featured "Land of Hope and Dreams" in the encore, soon followed by another Springsteen reunion era that repeated the American epic struggle, survival, and hope, "American Land". Right now the use of these songs has been so commonplace that the Philadelphia Inquirer wrote that the couple were together "excited, even if they began to feel like excessive food scraps from the previous tour." In the middle of the second trip, the European tour, "Lohad" was dropped from the setlist, and rarely appeared throughout the rest of the tour.

The song was performed during the final episode of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart as Jon Stewart's "Moment of Zen".

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First studio version

The studio version was probably originally recorded in 2002 during the sessions for the Rising album, though if so, it was never released.

Springsteen's 17th studio album, Wrecking Ball , was released on March 6, 2012. The previous three tracks are only available as live versions, including "Land of Hope and Dreams", appearing on the album. However, none of the studio work was able to include the old saxophonist Clarence Clemons, who died in June 2011. For "Land of Hope and Dreams", producer Ron Aniello used live recording of Clemon's solo saxophone and put it in a new studio recording.. Springsteen commented that when he first heard the combined version was played, "When the solo part hit, Clarence's sax filled the room.

That it may be Clemons' last appearance on the Springsteen album is seen as a tribute to the lost foil. Writer and broadcaster Will Hermes said, "This is an object lesson in a sort of hard-bitten pop optimism that Springsteen made a secular religion, and that is also a good fit for a friend."

This track contains religious themes and more hopeful views with elevated lyrics and choruses that use the broad train metaphor to express Springsteen's view of American dreams. "This car/dream will not be thwarted/this train/faith will be rewarded," she sang. The song ends with a gospel choir singing the quotes from The Bepressions "People Get Ready" and Springsteen repeats "You just got into the ship/you're just thankful to God." Compared to the previous live version, which has been done by E Street Band since 1999, it has been reworked in a slightly simpler version and is now equipped with an electronic drum and the use of the gospel voices mentioned above.

Not everyone is happy. The Washington Post wrote on the album's release that "Land of Hope and Dreams" appeared as a pose, and that "American cliché cartoon, it's all up!" Likewise, Entertainment Weekly sees the song having the same problem with the rest of the album: "The picture is so vast - every song gets an increased flood or a sinner's train or the moon dead - you'll die for details that are anchored in the real world, around 2012. "Likewise The Guardian:" There is something equally impossible about Wrecking Ball overall. many, and sometimes it is - a sense of 'oh, give it a break' set in about the sixth minute of overwrought 'Land of Hope and Dream'... ".

Land of Hope and Dreams (In the Style of Bruce Springsteen ...
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Political, charitable, and other uses

Back in 2004, John Kerry has used "The Land of Hope and Dreams" as the introductory music for his presidential campaign, including on the July 2004 rally where he introduced John Edwards as his partner.

It was also used as an MLB theme song on TBS coverage for postseason in the 2012 Major League Baseball season.

Springsteen and E Street Band performed "Land of Hope and Dreams" as the closing number of an hour telethon called Hurricane Sandy: Coming Together on November 2, 2012, which aired on NBC and many other channels. Rolling Stone commented that the song at that time "became the standard song of the rock & amp; roll ambassador to be captured." On December 12, 2012, Springsteen and E Street Band opened 12-12-12: The Concert for Sandy Relief benefited from the same song, presenting what the Associated Press called "a roar and a call to a weapon".

Springsteen rock writer and biographer Dave Marsh called one of his Sirius XM Radio shows a political talk show Live in the Land of Hopes and Dreams, airing Sunday afternoon on Sirius Left, channel 146 and America Left, channel 167 on XM Satellite Radio.

Springsteen and E Street Band performed the song in the last episode (Stewart's 'Moment of Zen') from The Daily Show with Jon Stewart in 2015.

The tape was played after the end of President Barack Obama's farewell speech in January 2017.

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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