Current:Home > StocksBruce Springsteen 'literally couldn't sing at all' while dealing with peptic ulcer disease -Infinite Edge Capital
Bruce Springsteen 'literally couldn't sing at all' while dealing with peptic ulcer disease
View
Date:2025-04-13 08:46:42
Bruce Springsteen's bout with peptic ulcer disease made him doubt whether he'd ever sing again.
The Boss said as much on SiriusXM's E Street Radio with Jim Rotolo in an interview that aired Thursday.
“I had the stomach problem and one of the big problems was I couldn't sing,” Springsteen, 74, said. “You sing with your diaphragm. You know, my diaphragm was hurting so badly that when I went to make the effort to sing it was killing me. So I literally couldn't sing at all. That lasted for two or three months.”
In September, the legendary rocker announced the E Street Band's shows that month would be postponed so he could treat his symptoms from peptic ulcer disease. A few weeks later, he rescheduled shows for the remainder of the year.
“During the course of it before people told me 'Oh, it's going to go away' and 'You're going to be OK,'" Springsteen told the radio station.
“You're thinking like, 'Hey, am I going to sing again?' This is one of the things I love to do the best, the most, and right now I can't do it. I found some great doctors and they straightened me out, and I can't do anything but thank them."
Things may have been straightened out, but not before Springsteen's health issues came to a head at the Foxborough, Massachusetts, and East Rutherford, New Jersey, shows in late August and early September.
“The last four shows, I was playing really ill,” Springsteen said. “So that was Foxborough, which was a great show, and the three Meadowlands shows, which were all, really, the band playing at its best and in front of a great New Jersey audience and a great Boston audience. But I was really not well.
“I had a little medication in me that got me up there and kept me up there for the rest of the night. You know, once you’re onstage, you’re letting it go, no matter what. You’re playing as hard as you can and they ended up being great shows. But I knew, when I came off after the last Meadowlands show, that’s the last one while I’m sick.”
Bruce Springsteen 2024 setlist:Every song he sang at the world tour relaunch in Phoenix
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band's rescheduled 2024 shows mark 'a new tour'
The Springsteen and E Street Band tour last year was marked by several postponements.
Two shows at Citizens Bank Ballpark last August were postponed due to the Boss “having been taken ill,” according to Springsteen's social media handles. Three other 2023 shows — March 9 at the Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio; March 12 at the Mohegan Sun Arena in Connecticut; and March 14 at the MVP Arena in Albany, New York — were also postponed due to an undisclosed illness.
All the shows have been rescheduled.
The 2023 tour was also marked by the illness of band members due to COVID-19. Steven Van Zandt, Nils Lofgren, Jake Clemons, Soozie Tyrell and Lisa Lowell all missed shows.
“When we first started that tour, every night somebody else was out. So I go into soundcheck and I have to find out who's missing and then I have to rearrange the stage or all of the arrangements of the songs to cover for that person,” Springsteen said. “Eddie Manion stepped up and covered for Jake Clemens on the saxophone. I brought Anthony Almonte to the front when Steve (Van Zandt) couldn't make it. Nils (Lofgren) couldn't make it another night. Susie (Tyrell) missed another night, Lisa (Lowell) — I mean it was just one after another.
"The only thing, we were blessed was Max (Weinberg) didn't fall. Garry (Tallent) didn't fall. Your rhythm section. And our two keyboardists were there. So as long as we had those people we could do a show.”
Springsteen is viewing the 2024 tour as a new tour and not an extension of the 2023 tour. That means more flexibility with the setlists, he said.
“There will be some things from last year's tour that will hold over some of my basic themes of mortality and life and those things I'm going to keep in the set, but I think I'm going to move around the other parts a lot more. So there’ll be a much wider song selection going on," he said.
Springsteen and the E Street Band relaunched the tour March 19 in Phoenix; the tour has 52 shows scheduled through November 2024.
veryGood! (1912)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Ex-NFL star Adrian Peterson's trophy auction suspended amid legal battle
- West Virginia bill banning non-binary gender designations on birth certificates heads to governor
- The problem child returns to the ring: What to know for Jake Paul vs. Ryan Bourland fight
- What do we know about the mysterious drones reported flying over New Jersey?
- Here's how much money you need to make to afford a home
- NYPD chief misidentifies judge in social media post condemning bail decision
- Prince Harry loses legal case against U.K. government over downgraded security
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Oprah Winfrey to depart WeightWatchers board after revealing weight loss medication use
Ranking
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Stock market today: Asia stocks track Wall Street gains, Japan shares hit record high
- New York launches probe into nationwide AT&T network outage
- NFL could replace chain gangs with tracking technology for line-to-gain rulings
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Summer House: Lindsay Hubbard's Bombshell Drug Accusation About Ex Carl Radke Revealed
- 50 years ago, 'Blazing Saddles' broke wind — and box office expectations
- Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin testifies before Congress about his hospitalization: I did not handle it right
Recommendation
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
Girl walking to school in New York finds severed arm, and police find disembodied leg nearby
Journalism leaders express support for media covering the Israel-Hamas war, ask for more protection
Navalny’s family and supporters are laying the opposition leader to rest after his death in prison
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Crew aboard International Space Station safe despite confirmed air leak
As NFL draft's massive man in middle, T'Vondre Sweat is making big waves at combine
Caitlin Clark declares for the 2024 WNBA draft, will leave Iowa at end of season