Bruce Springsteen Isn’t Just Doing Protest Songs — With His ‘Land of Hope and Dreams’ Trek, He’s Embarked on a Whole Protest Tour: Concert Review
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First of all, let’s dispense with some Bruce Springsteen mythology: It is a fallacy that all his concerts last three hours. Opening a fresh tour Tuesday night at the Target Center in Minneapolis, Springsteen and the E Street Band turned in a performance that lasted exactly 2 hours and 54 minutes, stem to stern, with […]
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Apr 1, 2026 2:27pm PT Bruce Springsteen Isn’t Just Doing Protest Songs — With His ‘Land of Hope and Dreams’ Trek, He’s Embarked on a Whole Protest Tour: Concert Review Springsteen's opening night show in Minnesota felt like a reinvention of the way a concert can be shaped to tell a story, even if it's a story about how awful American politics have become. By Chris Willman Plus Icon Chris Willman Senior Music Writer and Chief Music Critic ChrisWillman Latest Bruce Springsteen Slams Trump, ‘the Richest Men in America’ and Pam Bondi in Fiery Speeches at Minneapolis Tour Opener: ‘We Have a President Who Can’t Handle the Truth’ 18 hours ago ‘Noah Kahan: Out of Body’ Trailer: Netflix Doc Looks to Show Breakout Singer’s Self-Doubt as He Becomes a Stadium Act 1 day ago Taylor Swift Releases ‘Elizabeth Taylor’ Music Video Featuring Clips of the Screen Icon 1 day ago See All First of all, let’s dispense with some Bruce Springsteen mythology: It is a fallacy that all his concerts last three hours. Opening a fresh tour Tuesday night at the Target Center in Minneapolis, Springsteen and the E Street Band turned in a performance that lasted exactly 2 hours and 54 minutes, stem to stern, with no real encore break. Accuracy is important, right? Here’s something else that’s accurate: You will probably never see a better rock ‘n’ roll show than the one that Springsteen and company gave to kick off the “Land of Hope and Dreams American Tour.” Unless maybe it’s one of the 19 remaining concerts on this relatively short run, which was conceived as something fairly close to an actual pop-up arena tour. At 76, Springsteen has lost virtually nothing, apart from a willingness to destroy his knees. What he’s gained is considerable, and isn’t measured in pure physicality, although the pure endurance factor of still seeming in the prime of his performing life is awfully impressive. Minneapolis knew it was in good — no, great — hands early in Tuesday’s show when, singing “Darkness on the Edge of ...
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