Azariaās acclaimed Springsteen tribute is a ālabor of loveā, and coverage continues to grow, including via USA Today, Relix and more. A new interview via GuitarWorld highlights a custom guitar gifted to Hank by Bruce Springsteenās guitar-maker, Dave Petillo.
In a new interview via The New York Times Arts & Leisure Azaria describes the tribute as āa communal experience. People ask me, āDo you feel like a rock star?ā No. I feel like what I am, which is a Bruce superfan. At every Bruce show, everybodyās singing along with every word. I just feel like one of those people who grabbed the mic.ā
For Immediate Release April 2026
Hank Azaria Arts & Leisure Interview in The New York Times, as āLabor of Loveā Bruce Springsteen Tribute is Lauded by Mainstream as Well as Music Industry Media
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Summer Festival Concert Dates are Set
New Interviews in USA Today, GuitarWorld, Relix
āA Springsteen Celebrationā Raises Funds for Charity, with Net Proceeds Benefiting The Four Through Nine Foundation, Founded by Azaria and Committed to Social Justice, Education and Recovery Causes
Azaria told Rolling Stone, āI think of it as a theatrical performanceā ⦠āIām staying in character as Bruce even though Iām telling stories about myself. Itās a performance piece, but Iām not a Bruce impersonatorā
āRelentlessly Joyfulā - Observer
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In a new interview via The New York Times Arts & Leisure section, six-time Emmy Award winner, Screen Actors Guild Award winner and Tony Award nominee Hank Azaria describes his Bruce Springsteen Tribute as āa communal experience. People ask me, āDo you feel like a rock star?ā No. I feel like what I am, which is a Bruce superfan. At every Bruce show, everybodyās singing along with every word. I just feel like one of those people who grabbed the mic.ā 9k=.jpeg
The article, entitled When Bruce Springsteen (Hank Azaria) Met Michael Stipe (Michael Shannon), features an engaging conversation between Azaria and Oscar-nominated actor Michael Shannon (who fronts an R.E.M. tribute,) moderated by NY Times Culture reporter Melena Ryzik. Full text is below.
Azariaās acclaimed Springsteen tribute is a ālabor of loveā, and coverage continues to grow, including via USA Today, Relix and more. A new interview via GuitarWorld highlights a custom guitar gifted to Hank by Bruce Springsteenās guitar-maker, Dave Petillo.
Summer Festival dates are confirmed for Hank Azaria & The EZ Street Band, with more touring news to be announced in the weeks ahead. Visit http://ezstreetnyc.com to be kept up-to-date. Azaria has released two new official music videos - click to view: Prove It All Night, Thunder Road.
The ever-expanding tour is very much A Springsteen Celebration, and the in-concert performance is a joyful, full-tilt rock ān roll event. Azariaās physicality and flair are a wholly unique homage to Bruce ā And itās all for charity, with net proceeds benefiting The Four Through Nine Foundation, founded by Azaria and committed to social justice, education and recovery causes. Z.jpeg
When Bruce Springsteen (Hank Azaria) Met Michael Stipe (Michael Shannon)A1GQcNj2jatHAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC.png
Both actors pay homage to rock ānā roll greats onstage. But their relationships to their muses ā and how they perform their songs ā are very different. 1/28/26 By Melena Ryzik - Link
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Hank Azaria and Michael Shannon are both actors (very different kinds of actors) and they are both frontmen for tribute bands (paying homage to very different frontmen).
Azaria, the protean performer best known as the voice of āSimpsonsā characters like Moe the Bartender, put together the EZ Street Band, a Bruce Springsteen cover act. For the last year, he has been fine-tuning his rasp; he sings as the Boss, whom he has idolized since he was growing up in Queens. āA lot of my mimicry as a young man came out of hero worship,ā he said.
Shannon, the Oscar-nominated character actor turned leading man, has been handling Michael Stipeās vocals in a long-running R.E.M. covers project with the veteran guitarist Jason Narducy and other indie-rock stalwarts. āThe whole band is just blown away by how hard he works at this,ā said Narducy, who also plays with Superchunk and Bob Mould.
Making their way through R.E.M.ās discography, Narducy and Shannon attempt to recreate each albumās sound. They began in 2023 with āMurmurā (1983) and, starting Feb. 11, will tour with āLifes Rich Pageantā (1986).
R.E.M.ās members, including Stipe, have joined them onstage. But Shannon, a native of Lexington, Ky., who fronted and released one album with a Brooklyn indie trio, Corporal, has his own style. āItās almost like heās balancing something compelling with something thatās agitating as a performer,ā Narducy said, āand it keeps eyes on him.ā
Azaria, whose next show is Friday, wants the live Springsteen experience, complete with audience singalongs and personal anecdotes ā he tells his own stories, but in Springsteenās voice. āIt just sounded better and more poetic,ā he said. (Proceeds from his performances go to his foundation, 4 Through 9, with funding going to education and other initiatives.)
Shannon, 51, and Azaria, 61, who once jointly did a Zoom play reading but had never met in person, came together recently to talk about their musical sidelines. Over coffee in Azariaās Upper West Side apartment, they sat in the living room in their socks, Azariaās terrier mix Truman between them on the couch. Azaria asked questions about Shannonās artistry; when he broke into the Springsteen voice, Shannon grinned. They discussed nerves, meeting their idols and the unlikely trajectory and appeal of their new gigs.
These are edited excerpts from the conversation.
Iām interested in your choice to turn these private obsessions into public performance. How did you get there?
HANK AZARIA Iāve been imitating Bruce since I was a teenager. I had a difficult relationship with my father as well, and it actually really comforted me a lot to hear Bruceās music about that, and the stories heād tell about it.
I was turning 60 and feeling kind of bummed about it. It felt sad to ignore, but I also didnāt want to just throw a party. I was like, I know; Iāll invite everyone, a reunion ā high school, college, camp, Broadway ā and tell them I had a Springsteen tribute band coming. But didnāt tell them Iād been working to front it.Z.jpeg
I just really did it as a very personal thing, to cheer myself up.
MICHAEL SHANNON Did it work?
AZARIA Absolutely. It was one of the happiest nights of my life. Which is why I didnāt want to stop.
SHANNON Itās never been my ambition to be a touring musician. [The R.E.M. bassist] Mike Mills actually played bass on an album that Jason made. So doing the first āMurmurā show, Mike Mills came to see it.
AZARIA Oh, wow. Did that freak you out?
SHANNON He was very sweet. Jason asked him, āDo you want to participate?ā And he said, āNo, Iām sure you guys have been working really hard, and I just want to enjoy it; Iāll see you afterward.ā Then about six songs into it, he was up onstage. He just kept coming up, all night long, and singing. And Iām sure that has something to do with why weāre still doing it. When word got out, people started inquiring.
AZARIA Thatās amazing. I met Max Weinberg [the E Street Band drummer] at āConan OāBrienā [where he was the bandleader] years before. So I invited him to that party, and he came and did two or three songs. He told me the secret of musicians is theyāre all dying to be asked to jump in.
I was so nervous the day of, by noon, I would have given anything to get out of it. I actually threw up from nerves. Never before, or since. And then once it started, it was really fun. Maybe I sensed that part of me was taking this very seriously and it meant a lot to me, but I didnāt realize it yet.
SHANNON A lot of times the first question people ask is, āIsnāt that fun?ā And itās really serious.
AZARIA Whatās your routine around it?
SHANNON I obsess over it. If Iām playing President Garfield, like I did recently, then I just read, read, read everything I can get my hands on. Doing this R.E.M. show, Iām just constantly listening to the music, watching concerts theyāve done, appearances. I just bombard myself with it.
The first show, I was terrified, not because Mike Mills was there, but just because the audience is, and they have really high expectations. āMurmurā is not a record thatās easy to play. Thereās a lot of magic in it. Thatās why these people are geniuses and in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and Iām not.
Do you have a different connection to this music, or do you identify with the artists differently, now that youāve stood in their shoes?
SHANNON Iāve always thought that one of the reasons R.E.M. is such a beloved band is because of how deeply human they are. Theyāre making music about being a person, and how hard that is.
AZARIA We do āBackstreets,ā and Bruce wrote that when he was like, 22, about a teenage heartbreak. When I got my heart broken as a teenager, I ate a lot of ice cream and learned how to drink whiskey; Bruce writes [expletive] āBackstreets.ā In trying to learn that growl of his, that youāll hear especially live ā that rock ānā roll scream ā I started to cry one day after doing it, because I was like, oh, thatās the sound of teenage anger and sadness. I felt it: That can only be expressed that way. And I understood the song a little deeper.
SHANNON When I was starting to listen to R.E.M., I was a young teenager in complete despair, completely lost. It wasnāt just like, āI didnāt get the shoes I wanted for Christmas.ā It was heavy stuff. And I would walk around my hometown with my Walkman, listening to R.E.M. It was how I soothed myself.
AZARIA Yeah, I can relate.
I have a feeling weāre very different performers. As a mimic, I started outside in. When I was first learning to act, I was like, well, how would De Niro do this? A lot of that was because I had very low self-esteem and didnāt really believe in myself.
So, mimicking Bruce, I had come up with all these stories for my party, including the night that I met my wife; totally love at first sight for me.
I ran it by my wife: Should I say these as me, or as Bruce? She was like, āYou should tell them as yourself.ā And then I told it as Bruce. And sheās like, āYou know ⦠you should tell that as Bruce.ā Itās more comfortable for me to speak about myself as Bruce than it is to just walk up there and tell a story about myself.
SHANNON I played Elvis in a movie, āElvis & Nixon,ā when Elvis goes to the White House. They came to me about doing it, and I said, oh, hell no. They were persistent, and I went down to Memphis, and I met with Jerry Schilling, who was probably one of Elvisās closest friends. Jerry wanted me to do the movie. He said, āThere are a lot of people on Earth who try to look like my friend, and sound like my friend. Thereās hardly anybody that tries to understand my friend. And you can do that.ā
Itās kind of a similar thing with this. Michael is one of the most captivating frontmen. For me, the puzzle is not necessarily, can I sound like him? Itās, what is he up to? Why did he do this, write all these songs?
AZARIA So my instinct was correct. Youāre much more of an inside-out actor and performer. And I tend to come from the other end.
SHANNON The audience is probably much more into you being as close to the thing as possible. I think thatās exciting, if you can do that.
AZARIA Because Iām known as a mimic and a comedian, I was deathly afraid that Bruce would think this was parody of some kind. It was meant to be a loving ā beyond a homage, like an expression of how much it had affected me, and a celebration of music. I was glad to hear that they know that now.
You both have stage experience, and Tony nominations. How does touring compare to eight shows a week on Broadway?
AZARIA I had to work my way up to doing two nights in a row. Singing like Bruce, part of the vocal training was to make that sound and not destroy myself. And then Iāve got to go on vocal rest. If itās back to back, Iāve got to mostly not talk.
SHANNON Yeah, itās a weird life. Youāre in a van, being silent like a monk. I have the goofiest notebooks at home, when Iām having conversations with people but not talking.
AZARIA How long will you play?
SHANNON In four different cities, weāve done three hours sometimes.
AZARIA That hurts my throat, even him saying that. Four in a row! The fourth one mustāve been a little intense.
SHANNON I thought I was going to cry before I went on. I thought, I canāt do it ā and then it was time to walk out onstage and I was like, oh just go do it. Thankfully it was the last show. And someone who had seen quite a few said that it was their favorite of the whole tour.
These are obviously passion projects for you. Are they meaningful as career moves in any way?
SHANNON No. If anything, itās slightly irresponsible in terms of my day job. When Iām on tour, Iām not available. I donāt think itās going to lead to more lucrative opportunities. And the idea that sometimes people float past me that I would do some sort of R.E.M. biopic is, I think, insane. Thatās never going to happen.
AZARIA Iām really fortunate that I donāt have to do a lot of things. When I do get offered things, I go, would I rather do that or sing with the band? And unless itās an extraordinarily great job, Iād kind of rather do the band.
SHANNON I concur. Iāve loved doing it very deeply. We go to Athens and play at the 40 Watt Club, and thatās when R.E.M. as a whole usually shows up. And before the show, Michael walks into the green room, and heās like, well, youāre bringing joy to the world. Thatās a nice way of putting it.
AZARIA Itās a communal experience. People ask me, āDo you feel like a rock star?ā No. I feel like what I am, which is a Bruce superfan. At every Bruce show, everybodyās singing along with every word. I just feel like one of those people who grabbed the mic.+kVaEZwAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==.png
USA TODAY - INTERVIEW FEATURE & VIDEO2Q==.jpeg
'Simpsons' actor Hank Azaria on fronting a Springsteen cover band ā and if Bruce knows
By Ralphie Aversa 1/9/26
Excerpt: Both Springsteen and his wife, Patti Scialfa, are aware of Azaria's band. No one enlisted the actor's help for "Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere," a film that Azaria calls "amazing." But the impressionist did get a chance to headline the iconic Stone Pony in Asbury Park, New Jersey, where the "Born to Run" singer cut his teeth as a musician. No E Street Band members were there, but Springsteen's guitar maker, Dave Petillo, showed up. Petillo presented Azaria with a custom handmade guitar that included nods to the actor's career, like a picture of Moe the bartender.
"It was kind of freaky," Azaria says. "It was like being in the mecca and we've sold it out. It was a thousand people jammed in there. And it did feel like it was a rite of passage if there is such a thing for a Bruce Springsteen tribute person. But I'm a genuine Bruce fan and I had never been to the Stone Pony. So even just walking in there was like entering some magical realm, let alone to sing Bruce songs in there. It meant a lot to me. Full article here.
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GUITAR WORLD - INTERVIEW FEATURE
āIt's exactly Bruceās guitar to his specifications. He just made it purple in honor of Moeās Tavernā: Simpsons icon Hank Azaria on his Springsteen tribute ā and his custom Moe guitar from the Bossā own builder
By Daryl Robertson 3/21/26
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Excerpt:
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Preview YouTube video Hank Azaria and The EZ Street Band - "Prove It All Night" (Official Performance Video)Preview YouTube video Hank Azaria and The EZ Street Band - "Prove It All Night" (Official Performance Video)
Preview YouTube video Hank Azaria and The EZ Street Band - "Thunder Road" (Official Performance Video)Preview YouTube video Hank Azaria and The EZ Street Band - "Thunder Road" (Official Performance Video)
Preview YouTube video Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band - Backstreets (Live in Houston, 1978)Preview YouTube video Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band - Backstreets (Live in Houston, 1978)




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