Bruce Springsteen ‘on the Mend’ but Won’t Return to Tour Until 2024 

Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band perform on tour at MetLife Stadium on Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2023, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP)
Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band perform on tour at MetLife Stadium on Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2023, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP)
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Bruce Springsteen ‘on the Mend’ but Won’t Return to Tour Until 2024 

Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band perform on tour at MetLife Stadium on Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2023, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP)
Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band perform on tour at MetLife Stadium on Wednesday, Aug. 30, 2023, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP)

American rock legend Bruce Springsteen announced Wednesday that he will postpone the remainder of his 2023 tour dates until next year, as he recovers from treatment for peptic ulcer disease.

The 74-year-old singer "has continued to recover steadily" and will continue treatment for the rest of the year on doctor's advice, the statement said.

"Thanks to all my friends and fans for your good wishes, encouragement, and support, I'm on the mend and can't wait to see you all next year," he said in a statement.

The artist beloved as "the Boss" has been on tour with his E Street Band since the start of the year.

But earlier this month he announced he was postponing his September concert dates in the United States due to his illness. He also postponed two shows in August due to an unspecified illness.

"Rescheduled dates for each of the 2023 shows, including those postponed earlier this month, will be announced next week, all taking place at their originally scheduled venues," the statement said Wednesday.

Anyone unable to attend on the new dates will be able to request a refund, it added.

The artist behind mega hits like "Born to Run" and "Dancing in the Dark," Springsteen has sold more than 150 million records.

Peptic ulcers are open sores that develop on the inside stomach lining and the upper portion of the small intestine. The most common symptom is abdominal pain.

Speaking to AFP at the Manhattan film premiere of Martin Scorsese's "Killers of the Flower Moon," Steven Van Zandt -- a guitarist in the E Street Band -- said his longtime friend Springsteen "was doing better every day."

Still pulling marathons

Springsteen's current tour is the first he's gone on with the E Street Band since 2017, and he's been on the road most of 2023.

He traversed the United States before taking on Britain and Europe, then returned stateside in August.

Just before announcing his ulcer, the Boss played a nonstop three-hour set in his home state of New Jersey under a full late-summer moon.

Springsteen is famous for his marathon shows, with the longest clocking in at more than four hours, a performance he pulled off in Helsinki in 2012.

At his final show before going on leave earlier this month, Springsteen performed the hits -- including a majestic rendition of "Jungleland," a Jersey favorite -- and the deep cuts, including his rarely performed "Detroit Medley."

The artist also injected the show with his newer music off his most recent studio album "Letter To You," a meditation on loss and mortality from one of rock's ruminative stars.

The album fits neatly into his canon, with the layered guitars, dramatic percussion and glockenspiel swelling into the signature sound he coined with his E Street Band, the group he's performed with since 1972.



Groundbreaking Latin Jazz Pianist-composer Eddie Palmieri Dead at 88

(FILES) US pianist Eddie Palmieri performs on August 2, 2009 at the Theatre de la Mer in Sete southeastern France, during the music Festival Fiest'A. (Photo by RAYMOND ROIG / AFP)
(FILES) US pianist Eddie Palmieri performs on August 2, 2009 at the Theatre de la Mer in Sete southeastern France, during the music Festival Fiest'A. (Photo by RAYMOND ROIG / AFP)
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Groundbreaking Latin Jazz Pianist-composer Eddie Palmieri Dead at 88

(FILES) US pianist Eddie Palmieri performs on August 2, 2009 at the Theatre de la Mer in Sete southeastern France, during the music Festival Fiest'A. (Photo by RAYMOND ROIG / AFP)
(FILES) US pianist Eddie Palmieri performs on August 2, 2009 at the Theatre de la Mer in Sete southeastern France, during the music Festival Fiest'A. (Photo by RAYMOND ROIG / AFP)

Eddie Palmieri, a Grammy-celebrated pianist, composer and bandleader widely recognized as a leading figure in the Latin jazz and salsa music scene, died on Wednesday at his home in New Jersey, according to his Facebook page. He was 88.

No cause of death was given.

Born in the Spanish Harlem section of Upper Manhattan to Puerto Rican parents, Palmieri began studying piano as a youngster and made his musical debut performing at Carnegie Hall at age 11.

Two years later, he grew fascinated with percussion and joined his uncle's Latin jazz orchestra on timbales at age 13, but soon switched again to piano and never looked back, according to a biography posted on AllMusic.com.

Still, his early infatuation with percussion went on to inform his dazzling, thunderous piano style, and compositions that transcended the boundaries of Afro-Caribbean music, jazz, funk and soul, Reuters reported.

As described by AllMusic, his technique as a pianist incorporated bits and pieces from contemporaries ranging from McCoy Tyner to Herbie Hancock and recycled them through a dynamic, Latin groove.

"His approach can be compared to Thelonious Monk's for its unorthodox patterns, odd rhythms, sometimes disjointed phrases and percussive effects played in a manner that is always successfully resolved," AllMusic wrote.

In 1961, Palmieri founded the ensemble La Perfecta, redefining salsa by introducing trombones in place of trumpets for a deeper, heavier brass sound that became his signature. The band's self-titled debut album is universally regarded as a Latin music classic.

His 1965 album "Azucar Pa' Ti" ("Sugar for You") became a dance-floor favorite and Palmieri's most successful release. It was added to the US National Recording Registry by the Library of Congress in recognition of its cultural significance.

Palmieri's 1971 album "Harlem River Drive", also the name of his second band, showcased a genre-crossing, politically charged collection of songs blending Latin jazz, funk and soul that is still considered a hallmark of musical activism.

That same year, he also recorded the album "Vamanos Pa'l Monte" ("Let's Go to the Mountain"), featuring his older brother, Charlie Palmieri, playing organ. His elder sibling, known as the "Giant of the Keyboards," died in 1988.

Other groundbreaking releases from among a body of work spanning seven decades include the albums "Justicia Sun of Latin Music" (1974) and "The Truth: La Verdad" (1987).

Palmieri is the recipient of 10 Grammy Awards, the National Endowment of the Arts' Jazz Master Award and a lifetime achievement award from the Latin Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, among other accolades.