CHICAGO
Steven Van Zandt was working the backstage dining room at the United Center like he owned it.
After hobnobbing with Cheap Trick's Rick Nielsen and his entourage, Van Zandt settled into an oversized semicircular booth in the corner. Fresh from a sound check with Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band, the guitarist had one topic on his mind: performing Springsteen's 1980 double-album "The River" in concert that night and for 51 performances on tour, including St. Paul on Monday.
"It's my favorite [Springsteen] album, including the outtakes," said Van Zandt, who has known the Boss since they were teenagers on the New Jersey rock circuit in the 1960s. "It's the most rock 'n' roll band album we ever did. I like it as much — or more — now than I ever did."
The idea of a classic act playing one of its old albums in its entirety is not new. Brian Wilson, Van Morrison, Cheap Trick and Springsteen, among others, have all done it. The practice, which became trendy a few years ago, isn't the province solely of classic rockers; Snoop Dogg, Lucinda Williams, Weezer and Nine Inch Nails have done it, too. Phish has made a tradition of offering a different album in concert every Halloween. The 1990s alt-rock acts Soul Asylum, Big Head Todd & the Monsters and Matthew Sweet built an entire tour together around the concept in 2013.
But the notion of doing a double album live in concert? It's daunting.
The Who delivered their two-LP rock operas "Tommy" and "Quadrophenia," and Roger Waters pulled it off masterfully with Pink Floyd's theatrical "The Wall." But those are landmark concept albums.
The same could be said of Stevie Wonder's "Songs in the Key of Life," which he presented in concert in 2014 and '15. That album was not only his biggest seller, but it captured a Grammy for album of the year in 1976 and included such smashes as "Sir Duke" and "I Wish."