They played Chuck Berry’s “Sweet Little Sixteen,” Little Richard’s “Long Tall Sally,”Berry’s “Carol,” Sam Cooke’s “Shake” and an early hit for Wilson Pickett, “Land of a ThousandDances.”
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Sonny and his band didn’t usually play songs like those. Their sets featured originalsand covers like “Jack the Ripper,” by Link Wray. But that night was different. Bruce was there.Based on what happened that evening -- July 23, 1982 -- it wasn’t a complete surprise tolearn that Bruce wrote and recorded a song called “County Fair” the following year.
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These lines,included in the third verse, rang true to my experience: “At the north end of the field they set upa stand / And they got a little rock and roll band / People dancin’ out in the open air.”
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While there isn’t any record of Bruce playing at the Monmouth County Fair again, heeasily could have attended the event when he wasn’t on tour. He owns a house in Rumson that’sabout half an hour’s drive from the fairgrounds, now known as East Freehold Park. He also has ahouse, recording studio and horse farm in Colts Neck, just 12 minutes away by car.
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Assuming that Bruce made the trip at least once wouldn’t be unreasonable. He hasreturned again and again to Freehold, where he lived, attended school and found his musicalcalling in the 1950s and 1960s. He has revisited his hometown just as regularly in his lyrics.“Springsteen is not just from Freehold, but is of and in it,” Kevin Coyne, the town’shistorian, once wrote. He drew a parallel between Bruce and William Faulkner, a Nobel Prize-winning writer whose works were often set in his native Mississippi -- “the ‘postage stamp of native soil,’ as Faulkner called it, in which he found the whole world.”
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