
The 45th anniversary of Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band's "Against The Wind" album is being celebrated by the syndicated radio show In The Studio With Redbeard: The Stories Behind History's Greatest Rock Bands.
Redbeard shared this synopsis for the episode: By the time of Against the Wind's February 1980 release, Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band had elevated to one of America's most popular recording and touring acts. It certainly was a long way from 1968's "Ramblin' Gamblin' Man" first toss of the rock'n'roll dice, yet we talked for hours mere miles from where it all started for Seger in Ann Arbor, MI. "I think of all the albums I've ever done, 'Against the Wind' is the easiest for me to listen to," Bob says thoughtfully. "It's probably the most fulfilled I ever was as a songwriter."
With the Bob Seger & the Silver Bullet Band release Against the Wind, I can easily recall the moment when I first realized that, at that time, Bob Seger had become the biggest American rock star. It was just after sunrise on a chilly late winter Saturday morning in Memphis in 1980, and about a thousand people had camped out overnight at the city's main ticket outlet to be among the first to buy Bob Seger concert tickets for his upcoming stop on the Silver Bullet Band's Against the Wind tour. The album had debuted at #1, and in anticipation of this turnout for tickets, my Memphis radio station ROCK 103 was serving free hot breakfast to the first 103 people in line.
As I gazed out over the long line of humanity as it snaked around the building across the crowded parking lot, boom boxes blaring out Bob Seger songs from his entire career including Against the Wind to serenade the bleary-eyed throng, my mind drifted back nine years earlier to my first time seeing Seger perform. It was another Saturday about mid-afternoon in Summer 1971 in a cornfield in Northwest Ohio, where Bob was about fifth down the bill of mostly regional Detroit acts. As it turned out, he was on sabbatical from rock'n'roll, accompanying himself with just an acoustic guitar. Many years later Bob would explain to me that it was his journeyman period for becoming a better songwriter because, unlike with a band, when you perform solo there's no place to hide. Every phrase, every chord, every note is laid bare.
Apparently Bob Seger learned his lessons well. That Memphis concert sold out in advance, as did practically every stop on the 1980 tour. Against the Wind , released forty-five Februaries ago, was one of his seven Top 10 multi-platinum albums in a row. And by the way, Seger didn't forsake rock'n'roll very long: he ended that acoustic set in 1971 by calling out his friends David Teegarden and Skip "Vanwinkle" Knape for a rousing rendition of " God, Love, and Rock'n'Roll "!
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