It was the “big man” that Bruce Springsteen was inclined, both figuratively and literally, the soul and the heart of the legendary E Street Band. Now, it has that emerge. Clarence Clemons, the man bigger than life of SAX in s that the world’s largest backing band, died Saturday of complications from a stroke he suffered last week, said a spokesman. He was 69.
Clemons and Springsteen are together for 40 years, beginning with a rainy evening in Asbury Park in 1971, when the player of Horn with the unknown singer-songwriter and fighting sat in a local bar. Soon it was in the band of Springsteen and back was a part of their debut, “Greetings from asbury park.”n the E Street Band, playing his horn was an essential sound scrappy but often huge party registered as ‘ thunder road ‘ and ‘ land of the forest ‘. He is the head that Clemons ‘ in his most characteristic leaning album, ‘ Born to Run “and cheered them on the image in memoirs Clemons, ‘ Big Man: real life and stories.”
“To open and see of Clarence and together, the album begins to work its magic,” Springsteen wrote. “Who are these guys?” Where do they come from? What parts of the joke? “A friendship and a story immersed in the complex history of America starts to work and there is music in the air”.
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Bruce Springsteen
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Bruce,
Springsteen
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