Es war am 19. Juli 1988, als Bruce Springsteen sein legendäres Konzert in Berlin-Weissensee gab. Das Buch zum Konzert schrieb Erik Kirschbaum. Er sprach mit Fans und Konzertveranstaltern, darunter Jon Landau, Springsteens langjähriger Freund und Manager. Mit Augenzeugenberichten, Zeitungsausschnitten, TV-Aufnahmen und sogar Stasi-Akten sowie Fotos und Erinnerungsstücken versetzt dieses fesselnde Buch den Leser und die Leserin zurück zu einem der aufregendsten Rockkonzerte aller Zeiten, wo The Boss live auf der Bühne eine Rede gegen die Mauer hielt, vor mehr als 300.000 jungen Ostdeutschen.
Pressestimmen:
“Dieses Buch belegt die Macht der Musik so klar wie niemals zuvor.”
Dave Marsh, Musikkritiker des Rolling Stone
“Eine beeindruckend detaillierte Betrachtung eines kaum bekannten Zusammentreffens von Rockmusik und politischer Befreiung.”
Eric Alterman, Autor von The Promise of Bruce Springsteen
“Der Boss inspirierte eine ganze Generation, für Freiheit zu kämpfen."
David Crossland, Spiegel Online
“Springsteen ist immer noch bei uns—das Regime der DDR nicht.”
Stephen Evans, BBC Kultur
“Für Springsteen war es ein Konzert, an das er sich immer erinnern würde."
Kate Connolly, The Guardian
“Der Moment, auf den manche von uns ein Leben lang gewartet hatten.”
Michelle Martin, Washington Post
Wir haben das Buch — die englischsprachige Ausgabe — nun neu herausgebracht, mit einem Vorwort von Mike Spengler, der damalige Hornbläser der E Street Band, in einem etwas größeren Format, und auf farbigem Glanzpapier. Es ist in jedem Buchladen bestellbar. Gedruckt wird es von der Firma Zeitfracht.
Today in 1988—Bruce Springsteen's Legendary Concert in Berlin
On July 19, 1988, The Boss gave his legendary concert in East Berlin that helped bring down the Wall. This is the story Erik Kirschbaum tells in Rocking The Wall, a book that explores how this changed concert the world. Kirschbaum spoke to scores of fans and concert organizers on both sides of the Berlin Wall, including Jon Landau, Springsteen's long-time friend and manager. With lively behind-the-scenes details from eyewitness accounts, magazine and newspaper clippings, TV recordings, and even Stasi files, as well as photos and memorabilia, this gripping book transports you back to those heady times before the Berlin Wall fell and gives you a front-row spot at one of the most exciting rock concerts ever. It takes you to an unforgettable journey with Springsteen through the divided city, to the open air concert grounds in Weissensee, where The Boss, live on stage, delivered a speech against the Wall to a record-breaking crowd of more than 300,000 delirious young East Germans full of joy and hope.
Now back for sale everywhere were books are sold.
"It was cultural forces, not merely political or military ones, that won the Cold War for the West, and which may yet spring more oppressive regimes from the tyranny of the old and joyless. Young East Germans wanted their rock and roll;
—Tris McCall, The Star Ledger, New Jersey
"...a glorious example of the influence that rock ‘n’ roll can have on people who are hungry and ready for change."
—Michelle Martin for The Washington Post
Kirschbaum is convinced it was the most politically important rock concert ever held. His book makes a strong case that historians should explore Springsteen's impact in fuelling the revolution.
—David Crossland, Der SPIEGEL, Germany
Springsteen is still with us. The regime of the German Democratic Republic is not.
—Stephen Evans, the BBC
In telling the back story of how the concert came to be, “Rocking the Wall” also offers a fascinating historical snapshot of East German Communist cultural officials scrambling to contain the brewing political restlessness all around them.
—Vanessa Fuhrmanns, The Wall Street Journal
"Once in a while you play a place, you play a show that ends up staying inside of you, living with you for the rest of your life," he said. "East Berlin in 1988 was certainly one of them."
—Kate Connolly, The Guardian
"What was intended by East Berlin’s hard-line leadership as a pacifier for their people, Kirschbaum argues, had the opposite effect and turned into a powerful agent for change."
—Derek Scally, The Irish Times
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