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 ...
When Bruce Springsteen and Clarence Clemons performed together, they often kissed each other on the mouth in front of their audience. The pair had a unique and intense bond that was clear to anyone ...
When Bruce Springsteen introduced Clarence Clemons to audiences, he announced him with such titles as the Emperor, the King of the World, the Minister of Soul. As if to match the rhetoric, Clemons ...
The cover of Bruce Springsteen’s Born to Run is just as iconic as the songs it contains, and a new book is shedding insight into how it came together. Peter Ames Carlin writes in his book Tonight in ...
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 ...
Clemons’ entry into the E Street Band is the stuff of rock mythology. As the story goes, Clemons nearly broke down a door at a club in Asbury before begging to become part of Springsteen’s band.
Appearance alone is enough to label Clarence Clemons, saxophone player in Bruce Springsteen's E Street Band, the Big Man. But the bigness of Clemons goes beyond his physical proportions. An example of ...
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 ...