Bruce Springsteen at London’s Wembley Stadium: check out the stage times
Bruce Springsteen is set to perform two gigs at London’s Wembley Stadium this week – Check out the stage times below.
The Boss is set to perform at Wembley tonight (July 25) and on Saturday (July 27). The two gigs at the famous stadium will wrap up the UK & Ireland leg of his 2024 tour. He will play a career-spanning set including hits such as ‘Thunder Road’, ‘Born To Run’, ‘Hungry Heart’, ‘Badlands’ and more.
Springsteen & The E Street Band will not have any acts serving as opening support at these shows. It comes after the rock icon did not have any kind of opener/special guests at his previous gigs in the UK and Ireland this year. A limited number of tickets are still available for fans who are searching for any last-minute admissions. Visit here to purchase any tickets that are still available.
Set times for Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band at London’s Wembley Stadium 2024 are:
5pm: Gates open
7.15pm: Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band
10.30pm: Curfew
Though it is not exactly known what The Boss will be playing as part of his setlist, he has averaged a total of 31 songs every night. Check out his most recent setlist for his show on July 21 at the Dokken in Bergen, Norway.
Bruce Springsteen July 21 at the Dokken in Bergen, Norway setlist is:
‘Waitin’ on a Sunny Day’
‘Lonesome Day’
‘My Love Will Not Let You Down’
‘No Surrender’
‘Ghosts’
‘Letter to You’
‘The Promised Land’
‘Hungry Heart’
‘Working on the Highway’
‘Atlantic City’
‘Youngstown’
‘Long Walk Home’ (introduced with “This is a prayer for my country”)
‘The E Street Shuffle’
‘Nightshift’ (Commodores cover)
‘My Hometown’
‘The River’
‘Last Man Standing’ (acoustic; with Barry Danielian on trumpet)
‘Backstreets’
‘Because the Night’ (Patti Smith Group cover)
‘She’s the One’
‘Wrecking Ball’
‘The Rising’
‘Badlands’
‘Thunder Road’
‘Born in the U.S.A.’
‘Born to Run’
‘Bobby Jean’
‘Dancing in the Dark’ (followed by band introductions)
‘Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out’
‘Twist and Shout’ (The Top Notes cover)
‘I’ll See You in My Dreams’ (solo acoustic)
In other news, Springsteen has officially reached billionaire status, with his net worth accelerating in the past few years.
According to a recent estimate by Forbes, The Boss is apparently worth $1.1billion, following a six-decade career that’s seen him release 21 studio albums, seven live albums, and five EPs, selling over 140million albums globally.
NME caught Springsteen’s Hyde Park shows in July last year, giving it a full five stars: “A force of personality like no other, if Springsteen’s ultimate goal really is to change lives by night, then it’s mission accomplished here. Punctuated with lessons of life, love and loss, he’s hit another home run at Hyde Park.”
Springsteen’s forthcoming documentary Road Diary: Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band, has been confirmed to release on Disney+ and Hulu in October, although a firm release date has yet to be announced. The concert film will focus on Springsteen’s ongoing tour.
Springsteen also recently became the first international Fellow of the Ivor Novello Academy, following in the footsteps of Elton John, Kate Bush, Annie Lennox and Paul McCartney.
In his speech, the New Jersey rocker admitted “while I was stone-cold born in the USA, at 16 I desperately yearned to be British”: “I had a pretty good fake British accent – that’s what the checkout girls at the local supermarket thought. But I have had a lot of wonderful history here.”
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Anagricel Duran
NME