Bruce Springsteen helped turn Music America: The Songs that Shaped Us into a two-night celebration of American music history at the OceanFirst Bank Center at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey, on June 4 and 5, 2026. The event was built around 250 years of American music, moving from early roots figures like Robert Johnson, Hank Williams and Woody Guthrie to later icons such as Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, Dion DiMucci and Public Enemy.
The concerts also doubled as a celebration of the newly renamed Bruce Springsteen Center for American Music, which opens to the public next week and was described as reflecting the centerâs expanded mission of preserving Springsteenâs legacy while also honoring the broader history and diversity of American music. Executive director Robert Santelli said the event is âa journey through American music historyâ and emphasized that it reflects the centerâs goal of bringing people together through music.
Night one featured Springsteen alongside Trombone Shorty, Kebâ Moâ, Valerie June, Brian Fallon, Shemekia Copeland, Rosanne Cash, Kenny Chesney and Dropkick Murphys, with tributes to artists including Son House, Billie Holiday, Johnny Cash, Pete Seeger, the Carter Family and others. One of the standout moments came when Dropkick Murphys played their own âIâm Shipping Up to Bostonâ and then joined Springsteen for âAmerican Band.â Valerie June performed âI Ainât Got No Home In This World Anymoreâ and then covered Billie Holidayâs âStrange Fruit.â
Night two brought an even wider mix of artists, including Jimmie Vaughan, Mavis Staples, Public Enemy, David Sancious, Dion, Sheryl Crow, Jon Bon Jovi, Jackson Browne, Will Calhoun, Gary Clark Jr., Little Steven and the Disciples of Soul, Nils Lofgren and Darlene Love. Springsteen covered Elvis Presleyâs âJailhouse Rockâ and âBurning Love,â then teamed with Sheryl Crow on âI Shall Be Released,â Gary Clark Jr. on âFarther Up the Road,â Stevie Van Zandt on âRaise Your Hand,â and Van Zandt, Jon Bon Jovi and Public Enemy on âI Donât Want to Go Home.â
The full night-two setlist showed how broad the eventâs concept really was. Among the songs performed were âJohnny B. Goodeâ by Jon Bon Jovi, âBye Bye Johnnyâ by Stevie Van Zandt, âI Fall to Piecesâ by Sheryl Crow, âCatfish Bluesâ by Gary Clark Jr., âThe Wandererâ by Dion, âA Hard Rainâs a-Gonna Fallâ by Sheryl Crow, âThe Weightâ by Mavis Staples, âTexas Floodâ by Jimmie Vaughan, âFight the Powerâ by Public Enemy, and âLand of Hope and Dreamsâ as the closing Springsteen solo number. The show was presented as a performance of landmark songs from across rock, blues, hip-hop, country, folk, jazz, bluegrass and gospel.
By the end of the second night, Music America had become more than a concert series. It was a large-scale statement about the connections between genres and generations, with Springsteen, Bon Jovi and the rest of the lineup using familiar songs to trace the roots of American music in front of a Jersey Shore crowd.
