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Bruce Springsteen has always been able to put on a great live show. In his decades of live performances, Springsteen has stretched the limits of how long a concert can be. He puts on electric performances that thrill fans. While this has kept his career moving, it was once a bad thing for him. He put on a show so successful that the venue fired him.

Bruce Springsteen put on such a good show that he got fired

In the early days of Springsteen’s career, he heard New Jersey musician Southside Johnny was playing a show with Steven Van Zandt at a local bar. Springsteen took his guitar to the bar to join them.

“The place was packed and we rocked the joint like old times, with the crowd cheering, everyone glued to the stage and the music,” Springsteen wrote in his book Born to Run. “It was a great night all around. At the end of the evening, Steve and I headed back to the manager’s office to pick up our money and obviously solidify some future bookings. We’d just turned this club inside out and we were expecting some kudos and work.”

A black and white picture of Bruce Springsteen standing on stage in a spotlight. He holds a guitar.
Bruce Springsteen | Lester Cohen/Getty Images

The bar owner, Terry Magovern, surprised them with his reaction. Though it was a successful show for the musicians, it hadn’t been for the bar.

“Expressionless, he stood on the far side of his desk and did not offer kudos,” Springsteen wrote. “We asked what the prospect for future bookings would be and he calmly explained to us that there would be none. He said that yes, the crowd was large and enthusiastic, but no one was drinking. They were too busy listening to the music. He then added, as if we hadn’t noticed, ‘It’s a bar, you idiots.’ They made money by selling liquor. The bartenders made money from selling liquor. No liquor sales meant no money.”

Magovern would go on to work as a longtime assistant to Springsteen, but their relationship began when he fired the musician.

Bruce Springsteen said he couldn’t see himself playing shows in bars for the rest of his life

Clearly, Springsteen could put on a good show at a bar. When asked if he thought he could have lived a life where he never became famous and was just “just the greatest bar-band leader” in New Jersey, he said he wouldn’t have wanted that.

“You can be very, very good and miss,” he told Rolling Stone. “But do I personally envision a scenario where that could have happened? No [laughs]. Or maybe I just prefer not to.”

Springsteen said he was so aggressive in his pursuit of success that it would have crushed him not to make it.

“I was a lion in pursuit of the things that I needed,” he said. “And as I traveled around, I don’t see that many people that are better than me. I’ve seen some, you know. Now of course you were very isolated in New Jersey at that time. Sometimes some sort of B-level rock star passing through town catches your band and says, ‘Oh, man,’ but nothing happens.”

He finds an escape through live performances

In the years since his show at the New Jersey bar, Springsteen has put on hundreds of successful shows. He said he sees most live performances as a period of clarity, an escape from the pressures of regular life.

A black and white picture of Bruce Springsteen crowd surfing.
Bruce Springsteen | Lester Cohen/Getty Images
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“If you work yourself physically to the point of near exhaustion, you’re too tired to be depressed, and that may be one of the reasons I’ve done it my whole life,” he said. “Your mind is not on overdrive – it doesn’t have the energy to start looking for trouble in the weeds. Instead it’s a very mind-clearing, centering experience, and you don’t have the kind of space that depression thrives in.”