"12-12-12" Sandy benefit: Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi rock out for cause
By
Lauren Moraski /
CBS News/ December 12, 2012, 7:35 PM
Updated: 1:05 a.m. ET
Music filled New York's Madison Square Garden Wednesday night for the
"12-12-12" gig all in the name of helping superstorm Sandy victims.
Bruce Springsteen kicked off the star-studded concert, a fitting
start for the benefit, which will aid hard-hit storm areas such as the
rocker's native New Jersey. The Boss launched into "Land of Hope and
Dreams" as audience members rose to their feet, before singing "Wrecking
Ball," a track he wrote about Jersey and Giants Stadium at The
Meadowlands. He changed a lyric to "My home is on the Jersey shore."
And it's no surprise Springsteen performed "My City of Ruins," a song
that has taken on various meanings through the years, especially having
debuted around the 9/11 attacks. But Wednesday night, it meant
something different to many people watching.
"This was a song I wrote for my adopted hometown -- Asbury Park,
which was struggling through hard times," he said, later adding,
"Tonight this is a prayer for all of our struggling people in New York
and New Jersey."
After slipping in a few lines of "Jersey Girl," Springsteen
brought out his friend Jon Bon Jovi for a New Jersey-rocker musical
mash-up of "Born to Run."
"The size of the destruction was
shocking," said Springsteen in a taped interview with concert organizers
prior to the show. "It took days and days to even understand the level
of destruction that occurred along the Jersey shore."
After Springsteen and Bon Jovi left the stage, Billy Crystal took the
reins, injecting some humor into the night, mixed with touching remarks
about the devastation that Sandy brought along with it.
"You
can feel the electricity in the building, which means that Long Island
power isn't involved," said Crystal, a Long Beach, Long Island, native,
before rattling off a series of other jokes that took jabs at New York
City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Gov. Chris Christie.
Roger Waters took the stage next, playing Pink Floyd classics,
including "Us and Them," "Another Brick in the Wall" and "Money."
Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder joined Waters for a collaboration of "Comfortably Numb," a highlight for Waters.
Waters described the Vedder collaboration as "magical" when speaking with reporters in the press room backstage.
"Eddie
was absolutely amazing. It was like a dream come true...It was magical.
I think I stopped singing to kiss him [Vedder] at one point, which is
weird," Waters said laughing.
The evening managed to have some other lighter moments. Adam Sandler
performed a very different version of Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah,"
swapping lyrics out for the occasion, singing: "Halleluja/Sandy screw
ya/We'll get through ya."
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