Let’s remember when Bruce Springsteen dropped in to the Old Timer’s Cafe to jam with a bar band, on this day in 1980 (October 23)

Chris Burlingame
Journal of Precipitation
3 min readOct 23, 2019

This is one of those rock and roll stories I love to learn about.

From Peter Blecha of HistoryLink:

On the evening of October 23, 1980, American mega-rock-star Bruce Springsteen (b. 1949) pops into a Pioneer Square tavern, the Old Timer’s Café (620 First Avenue), and winds up borrowing a guitar to jam a few rockin’ tunes with the Lost Highway Band.

In town one day ahead of his E Street Band’s scheduled concert at the Seattle Center Coliseum, Bruce “The Boss” Springsteen had checked in to the downtown Seattle Olympic Hotel (411 University Street) and was out strolling the streets when he happened to cross paths with a fan named Phil Hamilton. Gushing that he was in town to attend Springsteen’s show, but that his pals were still short a few tickets, Hamilton got his first surprise of the evening. The Boss said no problem: he would make sure there were enough extra tickets waiting for Hamilton’s friends at the door.

That’s when Hamilton also mentioned that they’d come all the way from Montana that same week to attend the concert. And furthermore, to make that trip more feasible, his own rock group, the (otherwise obscure) Lost Highway Band, had planned way ahead and booked its own two-night local gig, which coincidentally would be just blocks away at Seattle’s Old Timer’s Café. As a parting thought Hamilton then invited Springsteen to drop in and have listen. Yeah, right …

The Old Timer’s Café — a shoebox of a tavern in Seattle’s old Pioneer Square neighborhood — had for years been an unfashionable, utilitarian, blues and rock ’n’ roll dive. It was also the type and size of a joint where nobody could really slip in unnoticed. Especially The Boss. But, in fact, Springsteen chose to venture out solo from the Olympic that evening, walking seven blocks southward and three blocks westward, paying the café’s $1 cover-charge, and bellying up to the bar for a cold beer.

As Hamilton would soon tell Rolling Stone magazine, “He came in and sat at the end of the bar, and after each song we saw him moving closer.” As the Lost Highway Band was a seasoned old-school “tavern rock” band that featured plenty of good-timey standards in their sets — exactly the sort of tunes that Springsteen’s E Street Band had come up playing in the clubs along the New Jersey shore — Springsteen clearly felt at home.

As he described it to The Seattle Times, Springsteen finally approached the band and inquired, “Can I play?” — and a bandmember who didn’t even recognize the star responded, “Sure, if you can stay in tune.” Performing on a borrowed guitar for perhaps 15 patrons, he provided the typically sparse crowd that night with the musical surprise of their lives: witnessing The Boss sit in with a “local” band and blow everybody away with red-hot renditions of such universal rock classics as the Chuck Berry hit “Route 66” (penned by Bobby Troup [1918–1999]), Them’s 1966 garage-rock gem “Gloria,” and Wilson Pickett’s immortal 1965 soul hit “In the Midnight Hour.” And The Boss truly enjoyed himself, later laughing that “Half the people didn’t think it was me,” and adding about his hosts that “They were real nice guys, Lost Highway. I had a good time.”

Awesome.

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Chris Burlingame
Journal of Precipitation

Seattleite, (mostly) retired arts/culture blogger. Come for the Seinfeld references, stay for the Producers references.