Setting The Scene... 50th Anniversary of "Greetings From Asbury Park" Symposium at Monmouth College. |
The Making Of The Album... 50th Anniversary of "Greetings From Asbury Park" Symposium at Monmouth College. |
FORMER BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, E STREET DRUMMER OPENS UP ABOUT 'GREETINGS FROM ASBURY PARK' NEW JERSEY 101.5 |
E STREET BAND MEMBERS TALK BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN, 'GREETINGS' 50TH ANNIVERSARY AT MONMOUTH U. The road to music immortality is often not a pretty one — just ask the E Street Band. Members shared their reminiscences about the early days of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band on Saturday, Jan. 7, at a daylong symposium titled "The 50th Anniversary: Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.," presented by the Bruce Springsteen Archives and Center for American Music at Monmouth University in West Long Branch. Chris Jordan: Asbury Park Press READ ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE |
WHEN I MET SPRINGSTEEN IN SING SING It was 50 years ago today....before his first record, and only two of us accepted the invitation. And then we caught his first gig in NYC with the band. Here's my full account, and a video recap. Greg Mitchell Dec 7, 2022 READ ENTIRE ARTICLE HERE |
NY POST: How Bruce Springsteen became 'The Boss' — 50 years ago When Mike Appel — Bruce Springsteen's first producer and manager — initially heard the 22-year-old baby Boss in November 1971, he wasn't impressed. |
THE SPIRIT OF '73: ARCHIVES SYMPOSIUM CELEBRATES GREETINGS
Mike Appel, Garry Tallent, David Sancious, Vini Lopez [below, L-R] and many more on hand for the debut album's milestone 50th anniversary On Saturday, January 7, 2023, approximately 600 fans from around the world gathered at Monmouth University to celebrate the golden anniversary of Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J., Springsteen's debut studio album. |
HOW BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN GOT HIS FIRST- EVER RECORD DEAL
Bruce Springsteen tells Howard Stern about his fateful meeting with music producer John Hammond and performs the acoustic track that got him signed by the Columbia Records executive. |
Mike Appel - THE DAVID CASSIDY CONNECTIONS
This week my special guest is talking about his amazing life journey which took him from being a songwriter for The Partridge Family to discovering, producing and managing Bruce Springsteen. |
Mike Appel - Set Lusting Bruce: A Bruce Springsteen Podcast
Mike Appel is one of the founder fathers of the E Street Nation. In a candid discussion of his life pre and post Bruce, Mike shares his journey with Jesse over the next two episodes
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Mike Appel - Dystopia Tonight With John Poveromo 1 Hour 20 minute interview Mike Appel is an American music industry manager and record producer, best known for his role in both capacities in the early career of Bruce Springsteen. |
ON THE RECORD: BORN TO RUN: HERE’S WHAT THE CLASSIC BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN ALBUM MEANS TO FANS, SONG BY SONG Chris Jordan, Asbury Park Press Springsteen was on the verge of being left behind by the record industry. His first two albums for Columbia Records, “Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J.” and “The Wild, the Innocent & the E Street Shuffle,” were not hits. “(If) we miss this one, contract’s up and in all probability we’ll be sent back to the minors deep in the South Jersey pines,” Springsteen said in his “Born to Run” memoir. But Springsteen’s third album was a hit, first with the single “Born to Run,” then with the LP, released on Aug. 25, 1975. Produced by Springsteen, Mike Appel and Jon Landau, it was majestic and vital rock ’n’ roll, both sweeping and intimate, written from the perspective of a hot Jersey Shore summer night. |
MIKE APPEL INTERVIEW ON RADIO AWARENESS Mike Appel talks about this early experiences with |
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN IN CONVERSATION Bruce Springsteen, an American music legend for more than four decades, published his autobiography, “Born to Run,” in 2016. David Remnick called it “as vivid as his songs, with that same pedal-to-the-floor quality, and just as honest about the struggles in his own life.” In October of that year, Springsteen appeared at the New Yorker Festival for an intimate conversation with the editor. (The event sold out in six seconds.) This entire episode is dedicated to that conversation. Springsteen tells Remnick how, as a young musician gigging around New Jersey, he decided to up his game: “I’m going to have to write some songs that are fireworks. . . . I needed to do something that was more original.” They talked for more than an hour about Springsteen’s tortured relationship with his father, his triumphant audition for the legendary producer John Hammond, and his struggles with depression. As Springsteen explains it, his tremendously exuberant concert performances were a form of catharsis: “I had had enough of myself by that time to want to lose myself. So I went onstage every night to do exactly that.” This episode originally aired in 2016. |
SNIPPET FROM INTERVIEW: |
AFTER 48 YEARS, BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN HAS FINALLY RELEASED THE SONG THAT LAUNCHED HIS CAREER "Bare guitar in my hands, Mike and I walked into John Hammond's office and came face-to-face with the grey crew cut, horn-rimmed glasses, huge smile, grey suit and tie of my music business hero," Springsteen wrote in his autobiography Born to Run. Mike is Mike Appel, Springsteen's recently-signed manager at the time who finagled the appointment with Hammond. |
MIKE APPEL IN THE HOUSE Mike Appel is not a man of few words. Ask him to recall a story from 1974 and you're going to get all the details as if it happened yesterday. Speaking in front of an audience in Staten Island, New York, on Sunday, May 19, Bruce Springsteen's first manager and producer shared colorful memories of Springsteen's rocky start and rise to stardom. The nearly two-hour conversation, moderated by Backstreets Associate Editor Jonathan Pont, was part of the Hamilton Park House Concert series at the home of Ray Heffernan and Maureen Campbell. While there were many areas that could have been covered, Pont focused on 1974: the events and music of the year that shaped Springsteen leading up to Born to Run and the simultaneous covers of Time and Newsweek in 1975. |
ROCK IMPRESARIO MIKE APPEL PITCHES BROADWAY MUSICAL, |
1974 IN FOCUS: MIKE APPEL WITH BACKSTREETS' JONATHAN PONT On Sunday May 19, 2019 Mike Appel will be appearing as part of The Hamilton Park House Concert Series in Staten Island with Backstreets Co-Editor Jonathan Pont for and in-depth discussion about the year 1974 & all of the pivotal changes that took place with Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band... May 19 event in NYC looks back on the lead-up to Born to Run "There are years that history tends to obscure, and 1974 is one," Pont says. "So much went into setting up the success that Born to Run became." Appel, of course, served Springsteen from 1972 to 1976, and they formally parted ways in the spring of 1977. "Mike tells the story as only he can," Pont says. "He was there for everything, from the business and the creative side." "In Conversation: Mike Appel" takes place on Sunday, May 19, at 3pm as part of the Hamilton Park House Concerts: 29 Harvard Ave, Stat |
Doors open at 2:30PM. |
Bruce ...If anyone should be surprised at this latest turn in Springsteen’s career, it’s Mike Appel, who was The Boss’ first manager. |
Bruce Springsteen's 'Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J.': 10 Things You Didn't Know
... singer-songwriter, Springsteen had faith in Appel. "The bottom line was I liked Mike and I knew he understood what I wanted to do musically," Springsteen wrote in Born to Run. "We were aiming for impact, for influence, for the top rung of what recording artists are capable of achieving. We both knew rock music was now a culture shaper. I wanted to collide with the times and create a voice that had musical, social and cultural impact. Mike understood that this was my goal." |
SPRINGSTEEN’S BROADWAY DEBUT Springsteen’s first manager, Mike Appel, tells The Post. “Even I thought a band would be distracting because he was such an extraordinary lyricist. Without the band playing, you’re less likely to miss those lyrics and realize, ‘Wow, that’s powerful stuff.’” When legendary record producer and talent scout John Hammond signed Bruce Springsteen in 1972, the scraggly Jersey kid was envisioned as a lyrically intricate singer-songwriter, who might be New Jersey’s answer to Bob Dylan. |
BORN TO RUN: Springsteen reflections on Mike Appel: Page 169: The bottom line was I liked Mike and I knew he understood what I wanted to do musically. We weren't aiming for a few successful records and some modest hits. We were aiming for impact, for influence, for the top rung of what recording artists are capable of achieving. We both knew rock music was a culture shaper, I wanted to collide with the times and create a voice that had musical, social and cultural impact. Mike understood that this was my goal. In the end, I would have signed Mike's jockey shorts, if he'd presented them to me, to get my foot in the door. Page 170: The next thing Mike finagled-and I couldn't believe it- was an audition with John Hammond. John Hammond! The legendary producer who signed Dylan, Aretha, Billie Holiday-a giant in the recording business. The motor mouth of Mike Appel was a fierce and surgical instrument when put to proper use. Mike could've talked Jesus down from the cross, Santa Claus out of Christmas and Pam Anderson out of breast augmentation. He talked us off the street and into the inner sanctum of John Hammond's office. My man was a managerial genius. Page 258: Along with Jon and Steve, Mike was my musical brother in arms. He knew everything about the great groups, the fabulous hit records, every important nuance of the great singers' voices, the greatest riffs, the heart and soul that were in our favorite music. When we talked, he could finish my sentences. He was a fan with all the beauty and import that word carries for me. Mike was funny, cynical, dreamy and profane, and when you were with him, you were always laughing. Page 258: We had been someplace special together, someplace unique, a place where we had to depend upon each other and nothing else, where things that meant something were at stake. I could never hate Mike; I can only love him. The companion album 'Chapter in Verse' has four songs produced by Mike Appel: 'Henry Boy', 'Born to Run','4th of July (Sandy)' and 'Growin' Up' and it is top five in 16 different countries of the world as of January 2017 |
THE TIMES OF ISRAEL INTERVIEW WITH MIKE APPEL Why Springsteen never made another album like ‘Born to Run,’ and other questions only Mike Appel can answer The Boss largely stopped pushing music’s boundaries after his epic third album, which happened to be around the time he fell out, spectacularly, with his original manager. Coincidence? |
MAKING OF A ROCK STAR'S COVER COUP
Forty years ago, the face of a young Bruce Springsteen — "Rock's New Sensation!" — landed simultaneously on the covers of both Time and Newsweek magazines. With Springsteen's star on the rise following Born to Run, Jay Cocks interviewed him for Time, and Maureen Orth for Newsweek; either cover story alone would have been astounding publicity, but both at once — a first for a rock musician — caused shockwaves. For Springsteen to go, in a year, from fears of being dropped from his label to the covers of both leading national news magazines... you have to chalk it up to not only the strength of Born to Run and his live performances, but to the indefatigable efforts of his Producer / Manager Mike Appel. - |
Mike Appel's radio interview on Mad Dog Radio SiriusXM on the 40th Anniversary of Born To Run. |
Streaming Audio Link SiriusXM - Mad Dog Radio |
Streaming Audio Link SiriusXM - E Street Radio |
Bruce Springsteen’s Former Manager Mike Appel Talks ‘Born To Run’ 40th Anniversary.
Bruce Springsteen's former manager joined the Bruce Brunch this past weekend to help celebrate the 40th Anniversary of the historic 'Born To Run' album. |
Streaming Audio Link - 105.7 The Hawk By Tom Cunningham August 24, 2015 |
How ‘Born to Run’ turned Bruce Springsteen into the Boss Featured article and interview with Mike Appel. |
Springsteen's 'Born to Run' born 40 years ago. Featured article and interview with Mike Appel. |
Springsteen's 'Born to Run' born 40 years ago. Featured article and interview with Mike Appel. |
Rockin' Rich Lynch Join your host Rockin' Rich Lynch as he brings you another amazing independent radio show. The show opens with a brand-new track "All Rights Reversed" from the RICH LYNCH BAND. This episode also features great interviews with NILS LOFGREN, MIKE APPEL, KIRK MCFEE, and JULIA OTHMER. Brought to you by the SoundPress.net Radio Network (http://www.soundpress.net) - get in touch with us today if you would like to add this show to your station or syndicate!!! |
Streaming Audio Link - Rockin' Rich Lynch |
REMEMBERING CLARENCE CLEMONS. Mike Appel, who managed Bruce Springsteen and his band from the early- to mid-1970s, calls Clarence “the member of the E Street Band that I was closest to.” Their bond extended to later years, the two men reconnecting long after Appel and Springsteen’s acrimonious post-Born to Run split. In 2011, Mike shared with Clarence his vision of the Big Man entering E Street Heaven: “Can you imagine me actually saying this to this freaking guy, a week or two before his actual death?” Click here to see and read entire article with with pictures. |
Mike Appel interviewed by Tom Cunningham on Bruce Brunch 105.7 The Hawk. Mike discusses the 40th anniversary of Springsteen's first 2 album's "Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ" and "The Wild, The Innocent, & The E Street Shuffle" Click the play button to the right to hear the entire interview. > |
Streaming Audio link from September 25, 2013 - 105.7 The Hawk |
Recent book releases that feature interviews with Mike Appel. |
TODAY IN ROCK: ... but Springsteen had no experience with record companies or serious recording studios. He was also at a crossroads in his career. Although he’d had local success, he was unsure of his future direction. He signed a management contract as a solo artist with Mike Appel, who encouraged him to develop his songwriting, in hopes of possibly having Springsteen emerge in the popular singer-songwriter mold. |
THE GEOGRAPHY OF OUR YOUTH The first Backstreets talk with former Springsteen manager Mike Appel in more than 20 years. Interview by Eric Meola. In 1975, photographer Eric Meola captured an image of Bruce Springsteen and Clarence Clemons that would become one of the most iconic album covers of all time. That album, Born to Run, was the last that manager and “stone-cold believer” Mike Appel would have a hand in producing with Springsteen before their infamous legal rift. Some 34 years later, Meola was astounded to discover that the rift, somehow, appeared to have healed. Springsteen dedicated the 2009 Buffalo, NY performance of Greetings From Asbury Park, NJ to his former manager: “the man who got me in the door. Mike Appel is here tonight—Mike, this is for you.” At first, Meola honestly thought it was a joke. Since they clearly had some catching up to do, we asked Meola to take the wheel for the first Backstreets interview with Mike Appel in 20 years. Click here to see and read entire spread with pictures. |
Mike Appel interviewed and featured in the March 2012 issue of South Jersey Magazine “We had a lot of concerts in South Jersey, Cherry Hill in particular,” says Appel. “It didn’t matter if Bruce was playing Mafia-tinged clubs or not. Everybody treated us very well and paid us what we needed to be paid. We only have good memories of those Cherry Hill dates. Any shows we did down there were way stronger than in New York City. I always say that the Philadelphia area is the epicenter of fanaticism for Bruce and the E Street Band. We had a great deal of support down there. They were great places for Bruce to keep performing and building his live show resume.” Click here to see and read entire spread with pictures. Click here to read the on-line version. |
Mike Appel featured in the new Bruce Springsteen Documentary
The Promise: The Darkness On The Edge Of Town Story Bruce Springsteen, Mike Appel and others discuss details of the legal issues that took place after the Born To Run album and tour in 1976-77. |
Mike Appel featured in the Bruce Springsteen Documentary
Wings For Wheels: The Making of Born To Run Bruce Springsteen, Mike Appel and others take a look back to 1975 to talk about the writing and recording process and other events surrounding one of the greatest albums in the history of Rock n' Roll... Born To Run |
Mike Appel Guest DJ on E Street Radio
- Sirius XM Radio http://www.sirius.com/estreetradio Mike Appel Guest DJs on E Street Radio Mon 11/30 4:00 pm ET Catch Bruce's former manager Mike Appel playing his favorite Springsteen songs and talking about how he got Bruce on the covers of Time and Newsweek at the same time and much more om Bruce's early career. (1 hr) |
Final show of Springsteen's "Working On A Dream Tour" dedicated to Mike Appel From backstreets.com But up next, they plowed forward, doing something they'd never done before — "Tonight! One time only!" — the Greetings From Asbury Park, N.J. album, start to finish. Whatever particular significance the night's album choice might wind up having — in terms of ending where they began, if tonight was indeed any kind of ending — went unspoken. Springsteen merely put the record in context, as he has with other album performances on this fall leg. "This was the miracle," he said, "This was the record that took everything from way below zero to... one." That got a big laugh. Bruce went on to speak of John Hammond, "one of the great legends of music production," and of manager Mike Appel, whose "incredible talking" got him a crucial audition with said legend. Tonight's album performance was dedicated "to the man who got me in the door. Mike Appel is here tonight — Mike, this is for you." He added, "We've never done it... hope we can do it!" CLICK HERE TO PICTURES FROM MIKE'S SPECIAL NIGHT IN BUFFALO, NY |