JobsCarsHomesRentalsPlace an ad »
         E-mail          Print          Text
A look inside the E Street Band
memoir: Sax player recalls highs and lows of legendary N.J. band

DAVID SWANSON/PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER FILE
Bruce Springsteen, right, performs along side E Street Band member and author Clarence Clemons during a sold-out concert at the Spectrum in Philadelphia in April.

Similar Stories

Similar stories:
Published: 11/08/0912:05 am
Comments (0)

Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band played their last show at The Spectrum in Philadelphia late last month. The venue will close next week.

But Clarence Clemons – the band’s legendary saxophone player and venerable Big Man – says he doesn’t think it will be the last time they will play their beloved Philadelphia.

Because despite aging (Springsteen’s 60; Clemons is 67) and physical limitations (Clemons has had hip and knee replacement surgeries and back problems), Clemons says Springsteen “just seems to be getting stronger and stronger.”

“So I guess the stronger he gets, the stronger we’ll have to become, just to keep up with him,” Clemons said in a telephone interview.

“It’s an incentive to work, and it’s an incentive to keep yourself in good shape. And we seem to be getting stronger and stronger.”

That wasn’t always the case, as Clemons writes in a new book, “Big Man: Real Life & Tall Tales,” released in late October.

With co-author/friend Don Reo, Clemons writes he was so sure Springsteen’s tour for the CD “The Rising” in 2003 would be the last, he tearfully grabbed Springsteen’s hand after the final show and told him, “Thanks for everything.”

The book, the first memoir from a member of the E Street Band, is sprinkled with details you would expect. It touches on Clemons’ “serious recreational drug use.” Smoking pot with comedian Redd Foxx. Snorting cocaine during a high-speed ride on the Jersey Turnpike. A 1973 traffic stop after a show in Bryn Mawr, Pa., that terrified Clemons because he had a joint in his pocket and Springsteen had a no-drugs policy.

It also touches on the availability of sex not just for Clemons – “It was unbelievable. It was possible to have a different woman every five minutes. It actually was too much.” – but of other band members, such as keyboardist Danny Federici, who died of cancer in April 2008.

But the book is far from a tell-all, concentrating instead on revelations such as how the band got its name (from a Springsteen suggestion after a long wait for member David Sancious outside his mother’s home on E Street in Belmar, N.J.).

It also says Robert DeNiro copied his “You talkin’ to me?” line in “Taxi Driver” from a Springsteen phrase he shouted at audiences. It tells how Clemons, playing for Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band, got a comforting hug from Starr when Springsteen dissolved the band in 1989.

“Tell-all books are boring,” Clemons laughingly says in the phone call. “What you did, nobody wants to know about it, unless you did something exciting. … I’m an entertainer, and this book is very entertaining, I think.”

But the book freely talks about Clemons’ health problems, opening and closing with the October knee-replacement surgeries he feared would prevent him from playing the band’s Super Bowl show Feb. 1. He also has had two hip replacements and a mild heart attack that ended his smoking and drinking. And when the book was written, he faced back surgery.

But Clemons says that his health is improving, and doctors have told him his back bones are “fusing themselves” and he may not need surgery.

“I call the stage ‘the healing floor,’ because I walk out there and nothing hurts, nothing bothers me for the three hours,” he says with a laugh.

He says Federici’s death helped focus the entire band on caring for themselves, “because this is a big responsibility that we have as a band, to our fans.”

“We’ll all pass on eventually, but I hope that this band stays together until we do.”

Clemons says it saddens him the Spectrum will be razed.

“It’s sad to see these old buildings go because they have so many memories, and it’s a real personal kind of thing when you play these places,” he says. “It’s part of our history just gone.” Big Man: Real Life & Tall Tales

By Clarence Clemons and Don Reo

Grand Central, 384 pages, $26.99

 

Comments

JOIN THE DISCUSSION

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service.

Comments are displayed newest first. If you would like to read a thread from beginning to end, select "Oldest first" from the drop down menu.
Presented By
Previous Ad Next Ad
0/0
Homes By
Previous Ad Next Ad
0/0
A Single Man AAA Travel American Memorial Anderson Appliance Annual Tacoma Home & Garden Show At Your Service Plumbing AT&T Bergman Draper & Frockt Big 5 Sporting Goods Blue Mouse Theatre Boyle's Foreign Car Repair Broadway Center For the Performing Arts Brownie Morrison Charles Schwab Chevrolet Classy Chassis Coast Home Improvement, Inc. Comcast Corvette & High Performance Meet Crazy Heart CreditGuard CSC Brands, LP Deja Vu Dr. Thomas Young NMD, DC Early Bird Swap Meet EB5 Facial Cream Farmers Insurance Group Franciscan Health System Franciscan Medical Group Frank Tobey Jones Senior University Fred Meyer Galaxy Theatres Gene Pankey Motor Company Harbor Lights Harkness Furniture Homestead Restaurant Item House Warehouse Jane Thompson Russell Cancer Care Center Johnny's Dock Restaurant & Marina JP Morgan Chase Bank Kantor Diamond Company Kenneth P. Ring, DDS Lakewood Family Medicine & Chiropractic Lakewood Ford Les Schwab Macy's Memory Wellness Program Muckleshoot Casino MultiCare Orthopedics & Sports Medicine Museum of Glass Narrows Glen New Tacoma Cemeteries & Funeral Home Northwest Charity Donation Service Northwest Flower & Garden Show O'Loughlin Trade Shows / Washington Sportmen's Show Oreck Clean Home Store Pacific Northwest Ballet / The Sleeping Beauty Pacific Northwest Shop Party World Pfizer, Inc. / Lipitor Port of Tacoma U.S.A. Prostalex Plus Pulmonary Consultants, PLLC Puyallup Fairgrounds / Collectible Auto Swap Meet Radiant Research Red Canoe Credit Union Red Wind Casino Roof Therapy, Inc. Rush Custom Homes, Inc. Russ Dunmire Sears Seattle Boat Show Smith Alling Lane, P.S. Sonus Sound Credit Union South Tacoma Mazda Sprint Star Ice & Fuel State Farm Insurance Sterling Savings Bank Subaru of Puyallup Tacoma Athletic Commission / Annual Golden Gloves Championship Tacoma Boys / H & L Produce Tacoma Dream Home Raffle Tacoma/Valley Radiation Oncology Centers The Grand Cinema The Imperial Dragon Restaurant The Orthopaedic Center The Young Victoria Titus-Will Ford / Toyota / Scion Titus-Will Ford / Toyota / Scion / Pre-owned at Stadium T-Mobile USA, Inc. To Save a Life Tooth Fairy Toyota Truckcity CB, EV and Solar University of Puget Sound Van Lierop Bulb Farm Vargus & Associates, Inc. Verizon Wireless Video Only Walmart Washington Sportsmen's Show Washington State Department of Corrections Watson's Greenhouse & Nursery Wendover Resorts Western Air Defense Sector Yelm Cinemas Video Only Walmart Washington Sportsmen's Show Washington State Department of Corrections Watson's Greenhouse & Nursery Wendover Resorts Western Air Defense Sector Yelm Cinemas Video Only Walmart Washington Sportsmen's Show Washington State Department of Corrections Watson's Greenhouse & Nursery Wendover Resorts Western Air Defense Sector Yelm Cinemas Video Only Walmart Washington Sportsmen's Show Washington State Department of Corrections Watson's Greenhouse & Nursery Wendover Resorts Western Air Defense Sector Yelm Cinemas
Front page PDF