Clarence Clemons, the beloved saxophonist of Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band, left an indelible mark on music and lives on ...
The change was made uptown when the Big Man joined the band but bass player Garry Tallent had already crossed the tracks of ...
The "Tribute to the Late, Great Clarence Clemons" show Sunday night at the Wonder Bar in Asbury Park had an extra headliner: Bruce Springsteen. The Boss joined J.T. Bowen, lead singer of Clemons' '80s ...
In his new book, Tonight in Jungleland, Peter Ames Carlin says that Bruce Springsteen chose to have Clarence Clemons on the cover of Born to Run with him in part to stand against racism Carlin spoke ...
Clarence Clemons and Bruce Springsteen spoke about each other with a level of love and tenderness that is not only rare in male friendships, but in platonic relationships as a whole. They acknowledged ...
The infamous sax solo Clarence Clemons plays on Bruce Springsteen’s rock classic “Born To Run” is so vibrant and exhilarating that it seems like a moment of pure inspiration on Clemons’ part. In truth ...
Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band closed their 1975 LP “Born to Run” with the grand opus that sonically and lyrically exploded Springsteen into fame. It’s a majestic send-off to the early era of ...
It is one of the enduring images of rock history: a black and white portrait of a tousle-haired, leather jacket-wearing Bruce Springsteen, his Fender Telecaster slung over his shoulder as he leans ...
This story originally appeared in the Asbury Park Press on July 19, 2011. The "Tribute to the Late, Great Clarence Clemons" show Sunday night at the Wonder Bar in Asbury Park had an extra headliner: ...