Sunday Nov 13 9:20 PM
on Main Stage
There
is a signature richness and power to the music that Bob Seger has been making
for four decades, and as succeeding generations have discovered those
qualities, his reputation as an artist and songwriter has only grown. His work
represents the honest best of what rock & roll can be. It's passionate,
unpretentious, uplifting and true to itself and its audience. Perhaps most of
all it is distinctly American, a plainspoken testament to the dignity, hopes
and aspirations of ordinary working people. In a time as obsessed with glamour,
celebrity, fame and materialism as ours, his songs remain a bracing tonic, an
emblem of the belief that everyone's life is a worthy subject of art. That's
one of the reasons why Seger's songs have lasted so well and continue to be so
well-loved. His Greatest Hits collection has sold more than seven million
copies, and albums like Beautiful Loser (1975), Live Bullet (1976), Night Moves
(1976), Stranger in Town (1978), Against the Wind (1980) and Nine Tonight
(1981) have all enjoyed multiplatinum sales. In March of 2004 Seger was more
than deservedly inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Seger's songs
tell stories about characters with whom listeners can readily identify. They
are often about people who are trying to find their way through a world that
has proven more complex, challenging and perhaps even dangerous than they could
have imagined. Innocence drains away, and what's left is a combination of
knowledge, experience and an aching nostalgia for something that has been lost
along the way and must be recovered. His characters cross a line, frequently
without realizing it, like a car passing over an invisible borderline at night.
By the time they figure out that they are no longer in the world they knew,
that world is simply a receding image in the rear-view mirror. Getting back to
it isn't always easy. Sometimes it's not possible. As Thomas Wolfe wrote,
"You can't go home again." That road is one that Seger has traveled
himself, though he has fortunately always proven able to find his way back
home. One of Michigan's finest, he grew up outside the media's spotlight and
soaked up the muscular rock & roll and seductive soul sounds for which
Detroit remains famous. Drawing on those sources, he defined a musical voice
for the American heartland years before John Mellencamp and Bruce Springsteen
or any of the other artists who have mined similar territory. But, while
rollicking statements of hell-raising intent like "Ramblin' Gamblin'
Man" and "Heavy Music" earned him a reputation among hardcore
music fans, he struggled for many years to break out of his regional scene. Bad
luck and bad timing conspired to keep him a secret from audiences outside
Michigan, Florida and a few other hotbeds of support. When people heard and saw
Seger, they fell under his spell. It just seemed for a time as if he would have
to personally perform in front of every single person he wanted to win over.
Finally, he more or less found a way to do that. The album that brought Seger
significant national attention was Live Bullet, a double-vinyl-record set that
was recorded live in Detroit in 1975 with the Silver Bullet Band, which he had
formed the year before. Whatever recognition Seger had garnered to that point
was based on two elements: the emotional power of his songs and the intensity
of his live shows. Riveting performances of such soon-to-be classics as
"Beautiful Loser" and "Turn the Page" combined those two
virtues on Live Bullet. The mood was further heightened by the make-or-break
ardency that Seger and the band palpably felt. Happily, the album broke and
perfectly set the stage for the moment of Seger's true dramatic rise: Night
Moves. That album's title track, needless to say, ranks with the likes of
American Graffiti, the film that inspired it, in its evocative depiction of
sexual discovery and the bittersweet passage from adolescence into adulthood.
The album's virtue is that its other songs - like "Mainstreet,"
"The Fire Down Below" and "Rock and Roll Never Forgets,"
for example - each isolate an aspect of that journey (lust, yearning, the
search for lost youth), which lends it a satisfying sense of unity. It is one
of the seminal records of the Seventies, and the ongoing life that "Night
Moves" has found on the radio attests to how strongly listeners of all
ages have felt their lives represented in it. But Seger was only beginning to
find his voice - or, more accurately, to have his voice heard. He was a
superstar now, even if an unusually grounded one, and each of his albums
routinely gathered the sort of attention (and often sales) that he had sought
so futilely early in his career. The six studio albums he has recorded since
that time have generated a catalogue of songs that have entered the pantheon of
contemporary popular music: "Hollywood Nights," "Still the
Same," "Old Time Rock and Roll" (which is not a Seger original),
"Fire Lake," "You'll Accomp'ny Me," "Against the
Wind," "Like a Rock," "American Storm," "The Fire
Inside" and "Lock and Load," to compile a list that is by no
means complete. Now Seger is back with Face the Promise, an album that extends
his legacy into the 21st century. His raw, rough-edged voice still seethes with
the conviction that charged it decades ago, but the years have lent him the
stature of experience and authority. Not that such authenticity was ever a
quality that either Seger or his songs lacked. He has expressed the
frustrations, hopes and dreams not simply of people like himself, but that he
himself has felt. When he sings, you believe it. The breadth, energy and
cinematic beauty of Bob Seger's music speak eloquently for themselves. His
struggle for recognition may have been fought and won long ago, but the battle
to convey his vision precisely as he experiences it within himself goes on
unabated. Not giving up until he's satisfied that he's gotten it right fulfills
the promise he has made to his fans and to himself. He faces it every time he
steps into the studio, and he delivers on it every time people hear one of his
songs and respond, as they so often do, "Yes, that's exactly what it felt
like."
This will be our 8th time rocking to Bob Seger and the Silver Bullet Band! I will be singing along like the crazing 17 year old I was the first time I saw him IN THE SAME STADIUM...in those days it was the Tangerine Bowl!!! I sure hope the sickness that cancelled the NC concert last night is gone by tomorrow night!!!
firsthonk , over 1 year agoI have seen Bob Segar at Pensacola Florida in 82 And hope i can make it to Orlando to see him 1 more time, I have an air brushed shirt I would love to give to him ,It is now 29 yrs old, looks awesome I had it made for me.Rock N Roll never forgets.This shirt looks just like you when you had long hair. Betty In the Panhandle. Please come here incase i cannot make the road trip there.
boop266 , over 1 year agoFrom Detroit area and have seen him a few times, always great! Can't wait to see him in Orlando with my dad next to me.
kacollins1970 , over 1 year agoI am taking my husband to Orlando to see Bob Seger for his 5oth Birthday. My husband has been a fan since 1973 adn knows all Bob Seger's songs and sings all of them. I would like to get a picture of Bob Seger with my husband Del is would make his 50th birthday very special.
vygraff , over 1 year ago