‘Jersey 4 Jersey’ With Bruce Springsteen, Jon Bon Jovi, Halsey, Tony Bennett, More

Jersey 4 Jersey’ Makes The Garden State Proud With Uplift from Bruce Springsteen, Jon Bon Jovi, Halsey, Tony Bennett, More

Team India Forums

Team India Forums

View Profile
Jersey 4 Jersey

A throng of New Jersey’s most celebrated musical talents; including Bruce Springsteen, Jon Bon Jovi, Charlie Puth, Halsey, SZA and Fountains of Wayne (plus one adopted son from New York) Tony Bennett; came together this Wednesday for “Jersey 4 Jersey,” 

The show was a benefit webcast to raise funds to fight the medical, social and economic impact of the coronavirus on local communities

“Welcome to Jersey 4 Jersey,” Springsteen said in opening the show, organized by the recently-launched New Jersey Pandemic Relief Fund (NJPRF). “We are here tonight dedicated to our healthcare workers and all of those who lost loved ones who are suffering and dying with this terrible disease right here, right now, in our beloved state.”

Accompanied by his wife and E Street Band member Patti Scialfa, the Freehold local delivered, for the first of his two numbers on the telecast, an inspiring rendition of “Land of Hopes and Dreams.” Springsteen’s voice is the one people listened to feel better in times of uncertainty, and the choice of the song with the lyrics “Leave behind your sorrows / Let this day be the last / Tomorrow there’ll be sunshine / And all this darkness past” was a perfect way to begin the show on a hopeful note.

Also in line to perform was Bon Jovi, who recently cancelled his band’s summer tour, rather than choose to postpone indefinitely, so fans can get full refunds. 

The singer took a moment to praise “everyone on the front lines” fighting the pandemic and debuted a stunning new song meant to catch this moment in time, “Do What You Can.” A particularly touching line addresses the youth affected, as Bon Jovi sang “they had to cancel graduation, it’s not fair to Skype the prom.” But he flashed a smile after delivering the assuring closing line, “We’re gonna get through this together until I see you once again.”

“Located between the metropolis of Manhattan and Philadelphia is the state of New Jersey… so we’ll say it’s a state of mind. Others will say it’s a mythical place. Well, it’s my home, the place where I was born and I was raised,” Bon Jovi said. “Tonight we are here to entertain you; we’re all looking for that virtual hug.”

The telethon gave special nods to New Jerseyans working hard in hospitals, grocery store employees, bus drivers for seniors and teachers working on remote learning lessons for students. Governor Phil Murphy and first lady Tammy Murphy made sure they got their proper due. “There is no question New Jersey has been hit really, really hard,” said Murphy, who took a moment to recognize heroic healthcare workers, first responders, and others “out there every single day” fighting the virus. “We are New Jersey and we will all get through this together as one extraordinary family as we always have before,” he said.

Actress and “View” host Whoopi Goldberg echoed that sentiment, praising heroes working to give the ill a “last goodbye,” while comedian Chris Rock encouraged the importance of social distancing. 

It wasn’t all sad, as Jon Stewart, taping from what appeared to be a playroom, joked that New Jersey was the “land of Jersey Freeze (a popular ice cream parlour and restaurant in Freehold) and a good haircut.”

“I have been in quarantine for 30 days. I look like Doc Brown in ‘Back to the Future,'” he said, adding that he is ”always proud of Jersey, but I am never more proud of this state than when our backs are against the wall.”

Danny DeVito lightened the mood with a story about riding his bike through Asbury Park past the swans and up to the casino towards the ocean — “What keeps me sane is thinking about Asbury,” he said — and jumping onto the beach when the “old” guy wasn’t looking.

Chelsea Handler donned a Whitney Houston shirt and cracked that she was self-medicating in California with cannabis. On a more empathetic level, she said she’d had it after seeing images of workers without the protective gear, masks and equipment they need, but expressed pride that her home state is doing something about it. 

She also had an epiphany and demonstrated for those without a mask on how to fashion one. “We have had a lot of great inventors in New Jersey. Edison created the light bulb. Einstein is from New Jersey, I didn’t find that out until this morning,” she said as she unveiled her latest invention, a face mask created from a bra.

New York Giants running back Saquon Barkley took a moment to clarify that although the team is billed as “New York,” “we play in New Jersey… New Jersey is no joke… we are tough, and we are strong, and right now we need all that strength, just like in football.”

Barkley was on hand to introduce “Ashley Frangipane of Edison, better known as Halsey.” Accompanying herself on guitar, the pop singer chose “Beautiful Stranger” for the occasion, a song that contains the lyric “dancing in my living room.” The pop star was joined by several other musicians, including a violinist, performing in socially distant locations for an effectively beautiful piece.

SZA, filmed in black and white and comfortably seated on her couch, referred to herself by her first name, “Solana from Maplewood, New Jersey,” before delivering a soulful and genuine message of love to the younger generation with her song “20-Something” (co-written by Carter Lang) from her 2017 album, “Ctrl.”

In one of the sweetest moments of the special, Charlie Puth, dressed in his finest white undershirt, performed “live from my parents’ house” in New Jersey to play his favourite Bruce Springsteen song, “Growin’ Up,” on a keyboard set up on a desk by his bed. The Rumson native’s smooth, breathy, subtle vocals, combined with his nuanced tickling of the ivories, melded the past and the present beautifully in one moment.

Tony Bennett — who was actually born in Astoria, New York but lives in New Jersey — added a touch of class and a sweet nod to his musical soul mate, Lady Gaga, by choosing to perform Charlie Chaplin’s “Smile,” which Gaga soulfully delivered five nights earlier in opening the “One World: Together at Home” telecast. 

At 93, Bennett has never felt more like a treasure than he does now, and his delivery of the line “Life is still worthwhile if you just smile” was comforting.

Stephen Colbert gave a shout to all the “subs, hoagies… WaWas… and Quick Checks, Pork Rollers, Taylor Hammers, Giants fans, Eagles fans, even the Jets fans (that last one stung)” that are “all coming together” before poignantly paying tribute to the late Adam Schlesinger of Fountains of Wayne, who had won awards for writing songs for Colbert’s Christmas special years back. 

Schlesinger died from complications of COVID-19 on April 1.

The surviving members of the band, including Jody Porter and Brian Young, reunited from remote locations for the occasion, with singer Chris Collingwood taking a moment to honour his memory. “This is for Adam, his parents, his children and New Jersey,” he said before the band came together — with Sharon Van Etten filling in for Schlesinger on bass — for Schlesinger’s New Jersey-set song “Hackensack,” a fitting farewell to a friend.

The special finished on the most Jersey of notes with its two most famous rock ‘n’ roll sons returning for encore appearances. Springsteen and Scialfa took their last bow by delivering a love letter to the shore with Tom Waits’ “Jersey Girl.” less universal lines. 

This was followed by what Stewart described as a “New Jersey lullaby” with Bon Jovi wrapping it all up, singing from the gut, with “Livin’ On a Prayer.”

Your reaction

Nice
Awesome
Loved
LOL
OMG
Cry
Fail

Comments (0)

Latest Stories