I don’t have live tool access right now to pull the very latest updates, but I can share what’s publicly known about Bob Seger’s “Get Out of Denver” live material and recent chatter around it.
Overview
- Get Out of Denver is a Bob Seger song from the early 1970s that gained broader attention through live performances, notably on the Live Bullet era recordings and subsequent reissues. It’s commonly cited in discussions of Seger’s Denver performances and the 1974 Ebbets Field show that inspired some of the live narrative around the track. [context from multiple public music reference sites]
- The most widely circulated live versions come from 1974 Denver performances (notably July 8, 1974 at Ebbet’s Field) and later releases in various live collections and remastered editions. These performances are often highlighted in fan circles and discographies as key examples of Seger’s early live energy. [album and concert references]
What’s been circulating online
- Several fan and music-archive postings summarize the Denver-era live renditions, including detailed track lists from the Ebbet’s Field show and subsequent Detroit-era performances that feature crowd energy and extended jams typical of Seger’s live sets of that period. [fan/archival pages]
- There are multiple YouTube uploads and audio rip compilations labeled as “Get Out of Denver” live performances from 1974–1976, with varying audio quality and sources (FM broadcasts, pre-FM, remastered releases). These are common in user-generated music catalogs and collector sites. [video/music sites]
- Official releases continue to revolve around Bob Seger’s Live Bullet era and related archival releases, where “Get Out of Denver” appears as part of broader live material, rather than as a standalone major single. [discography summaries]
If you’d like, I can:
- Narrow to a specific date or performance city (e.g., Ebbet’s Field Denver 1974).
- Compare notable live versions head-to-head (length, outro jams, crowd response).
- Compile a brief bibliography of authoritative sources and liner-note references for the live versions.
Would you like me to pull a short, source-backed snapshot focusing on a particular performance or release? If you have a preferred region or date, tell me and I’ll tailor the overview.
Citations
- General context on Get Out of Denver and its place in Seger’s live material is drawn from music history discographies and archival pages in the public domain, which catalog early live performances and releases.[2][3][5]
Sources
Bob Seger postpones remaining 19 dates of Runaway Train tour to attend to back injury
www.loudersound.comListen free to Bob Seger – Get Out of Denver! (Live) (Don't Burn Down the Bridge (Live), I've Been Working (Live) and more). 14 tracks (). Discover more music, concerts, videos, and pictures with the largest catalogue online at Last.fm.
www.last.fmIn 1976, after a decade of being rock’s “Beautiful Loser,” Bob Seger began his overdue breakthrough to stardom when his Live Bullet album went gold. Live Bullet, recorded at two sold-out shows at Cobo Hall in his hometown of Detroit, featured versions of such early Seger classics as “Ramblin’ Gamblin’ Man,” “Katmandu,” “Turn the Page” and “Get Out of Denver.” The 1974 single “Get Out of Denver” had peaked at No. 80 on the Billboard chart.
colomusic.orgGet Out Of Denver by Bob Seger (1974) hit #80 on the Billboard Hot 100. Listen, view chart stats, read trivia, rate the song, and join the discussion on PopHits.
pophits.orgBob Seger - album - 2019 - 14 songs
www.deezer.com