Skip navigation
advertisement

Springsteen delivers promised Super party

Boss urges viewers to ‘put the chicken fingers down,’ rocks stadium

Springsteen and Van Zant perform during the halftime show of the NFL's Super Bowl XLIII football game in Tampa
Super Bowl halftime entertainer Bruce Springsteen managed to pack all the energy of one of his famous concerts into just four songs.
Scott Audette / Reuters
  Interviews, performances  
  
  Seger tops charts
Dec. 16: Billboard magazine names Bob Seger's greatest hits album the number one catalogue album of the decade.

updated 9:20 p.m. ET Feb. 1, 2009

Bruce Springsteen looked into the camera Sunday night and told the people watching at home to “put the chicken fingers down and turn the television all the way up!”

Springsteen then threw himself into his four-song set, a highly anticipated series of songs that had Las Vegas oddsmakers taking bets on which tunes he’d select. He opened with “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out,” and worked in one of his trademark across-the-stage knee slides.

The move wasn’t without risk: He slid into one of the on-stage cameras, and seemed to be winded when he transitioned into “Born to Run.”

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Next up was his newest piece, “Working on a Dream,” which was backed by a choir. He then closed out with a playful version of “Glory Days” that fittingly altered the lyrics to fit the occasion: Springsteen’s old high school buddy was “a big football player” instead of “baseball,” and threw a “Hail Mary” instead of a “speed ball.”

He and guitarist Steven Van Zandt then toyed with the crowd as the show came to an end, looking at their watches as the clock wound down. Worried they were about to hit “penalty time,” (a referee even raced out and threw a yellow flag), they closed it out right on time.

“I’m going to Disneyland!” the 59-year-old rocker shouted at the end.

Springsteen is riding a new wave of exposure and popularity, playing for President Barack Obama in Washington before the inauguration, releasing his 24th album this week and winning a Golden Globe award for his song from the Mickey Rourke movie “The Wrestler.”

In 1988, Chubby Checker was the first popular musician to perform at halftime, and Michael Jackson raised the bar in 1993. His sister Janet provided the show’s most infamous moment with 2004’s “wardrobe malfunction.”

The show was directed by Don Mischer, who has directed opening and closing ceremonies for two Olympic Games, as well as last month’s inauguration concert at the Lincoln Memorial.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide