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Why We Can’t Stop Arguing About Bruce Springsteen’s 'Nebraska'
Music

Why We Can’t Stop Arguing About Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Nebraska’

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Bruce Springsteen’s Nebraska was always an album that people loved to argue about. So it makes sense that we’re arguing about it now. Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere underwhelmed at the box office, pulling in $16.1 million in its opening weekend. That might seem like a colossal success to you or me, except the budget was somehow $55 million, for a movie about an album made on a $400 tape deck. The reviews have been wildly mixed. Electric Nebraska has given fans a whole new perspective on this classic 1982 acoustic album, and how it could have been different if he’d gotten the E Street Band involved. That’s why the Springsteen arguments are blowing up like the Chicken Man.

Just like Radiohead’s Kid A, an extremely similar move that dropped 18 Octobers later, Nebraska gave great entertainment value whether you loved it or hated it, because it was so intensely fun to debate. In the movie’s funniest scene, we hear Jimmy Iovine over the phone, screaming at manager Jon Landau over how idiotic it is to release this folk record. (Iovine plays himself, which is brilliant.) There’s also a moment where Landau says he’s going to play it for Iovine and Stevie Nicks; tragically, the movie does not depict Stevie’s reaction.

The movie has Oscar-bait performances from Jeremy Allen White as the Boss and Jeremy Strong as Landau. But it’s a divisive movie, as befits a divisive album, and even those of us who loved Deliver Me From Nowhere can find plenty to bitch about. It’s a whole movie of men talking about Bruce Springsteen’s problems, one of whom is Bruce. There’s also a couple of women for empathetic nodding. The mastering guy gets more lines than the entire E Street Band. The message is that men will literally make acoustic concept albums about psycho killers instead of going to therapy.

There’s an old-school show-biz melodrama at the heart of the Nebraska story — the evil corporate suits screaming, “It’ll never sell,” while the renegade rocker replies, “An artist’s gotta do what an artist’s gotta do.” But that’s why it makes such a great legend. That’s why there’s a movie about Nebraska and not the Grammy winner for Album of the Year, which was Toto IV. (I, for one, would watch the hell out of the “You know what this song needs? Wild dogs crying out in the night” scene.)

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But the movie only gives tiny little tastes of 1982 rock culture, and why Nebraska was so comically unsuitable for airplay. In the movie, Springsteen drives listening to Foreigner’s “Urgent” and Santana’s “Winning,” two ubiquitous radio hits in 1981. The whole album is full of sweaty men driving around alone at night, praying for some rock & roll salvation on the radio. But Nebraska is definitely what they were NOT hearing.

The biggest new star of 1982, as far as rock radio was concerned, was John Cougar, with American Fool, giving the kind of basic crowd-pleasing Springsteen moves that Springsteen himself was refusing to deliver. “Hurts So Good” and “Jack and Diane” were obvious (but effective) Boss-esque hits from the Coug, with more from Bryan Adams and John Cafferty soon on the way. (He was still a year away from reclaiming his name “Mellencamp.”) American Fool was six months old when Nebraska came out — but still in the middle of a nine-week run at Number One. For guys like Mellencamp and Adams, hearing Nebraska must have been one of the happiest moments of their lives.

But it was Billy Joel, more than anyone, who reaped the benefits of Nebraska. He’d just made his own uncommercial art album with The Nylon Curtain, which dropped a week earlier, with the same radio-unfriendly premise, on the same label, and probably inspired the same screaming fits from the label suits. But ironically, The Nylon Curtain became a hit anyway, because Billy ended up filling the Springsteen void — the main reason “Pressure” and “Allentown” became such big hits was they were the next best thing to the AOR-friendly Springsteen songs that the Boss wasn’t serving. 

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A full-page magazine ad from Rolling Stone in late 1982: just Billy Joel’s name, a fist clutching a wrench, and the complete lyrics of “Allentown.” No way would he have gotten away with that ad if Springsteen had thrown his base a bone or two on Nebraska. “Pressure” was pretty damn uncommercial by Billy’s standards — an ode to the struggles of rock stars to get their dealers on the phone, with the singer gnashing his teeth like he’s trapped in the final half-hour of Goodfellas. (The excellent five-hour Billy Joel doc And So It Goes doesn’t mention cocaine once, so he probably did his research by asking the big shots at Elaine’s.) But compared to Nebraska, this song was “Just the Way You Are.” 

Rock radio wouldn’t touch Nebraska at all, which was genuinely shocking at the time, considering that it was (after all) the new Bruce album. “I think it’s gonna do one of two things,” a radio tip-sheet expert predicted in Rolling Stone. “Either it’s gonna continue a trend toward softer, more personal music being accepted by radio, or it’s gonna be a complete bomb.” 

My local rock station WBCN, in the Springsteen stronghold of Boston, played “Open All Night” for about a week and then gave up. The song had an electric guitar and a Chuck Berry riff, plus an anomalously upbeat mood (it’s the twin of “State Trooper,” like an alternate-universe version of the guy’s life), but no chorus, sounding dim on the radio. It fizzled at #22 on the Billboard rock “Top Tracks” chart, a certified dud, with even lower placements for “Atlantic City” and “Johnny 99.” That week, the top albums at rock radio were Rush (their controversial synth move Signals), Billy Squier, the Who (their awful farewell It’s Hard), Don Henley (his first solo album), Bad Company, Kenny Loggins, Steve Winwood, and Men at Work. 

When a star blows up into a superstar, as Springsteen did with The River, the cliched joke is that they could get a hit by breaking wind into the microphone — but Nebraska is the all-time test where that theory fails. He couldn’t get this played on the radio even though people were buying it. After debuting at #29, it zoomed right to #4 the next week, a fast seller by 1982 standards. (It was the year’s second-fastest rising album, behind Paul McCartney’s Tug of War.) It peaked at #3, behind Cougar, Fleetwood Mac, and Steve Miller, just ahead of Michael McDonald. But radio wasn’t biting.

The movie has a brief mocking glimpse of MTV, just for a cheap laugh, when Springsteen is flipping channels between Badlands reruns. But it turned out to be MTV that embraced Nebraska after rock radio completely rejected it. The fledgling network picked up on “Atlantic City,” which had a gritty video that Springsteen (wisely) didn’t appear in. At MTV they played “Atlantic City” like it was a monster hit, just because they were so grateful to have any Bruce product at all, but it fit in surprisingly well with all the weirdo Brit synth-pop acts of 1982/1983 — rock radio wasn’t touching those artists either. Hearing it between Soft Cell and the Human League made so much more sense than hearing it between Rush and Journey. What made Nebraska all wrong for rock radio made it perfect for MTV, and it’s fitting the New Wave kids were the ones who took “Atlantic City” to heart, especially considering how Springsteen was inspired by the avant-garde electro of Suicide and “Frankie Teardrop.”

But the key reason Nebraska was a hit with staying power is that people heard themselves in these songs. Ronald Reagan is bizarrely never mentioned in the movie, not even a news clip in the background between reruns of Badlands. Virtually everything said or written about Nebraska in the Eighties, including by Springsteen himself, framed it as the dark side of Reagan’s America. By the end of 1982, unemployment was 10.8 per cent, the highest since the Depression. Springsteen had already written a hit protest song about it, “Out of Work,” for Sixties rocker Gary U.S. Bonds, which (incredibly) went Top 40 that summer, with a third verse aimed right at “Hey Mr. President,” taunting, “Maybe you got a job for me just driving you around?”

Then as now, the president did not care. As Reagan asked in March 1982, “Is it news that some fellow out in South Succotash someplace has just been laid off, that he should be interviewed nationwide?” But Nebraska portrays those losers in South Succotash as real people. As he told Rolling Stone, “Nebraska was about that American isolation: what happens to people when they’re alienated from their friends and their community and their government and their job. Because those are the things that keep you sane, that give meaning to life in some fashion. And if they slip away, and you start to exist in some void where the basic constraints of society are a joke, then life becomes kind of a joke. And anything can happen.”

Nobody now wants to admit they scoffed at Nebraska at the time, just as nobody admits booing Bob Dylan at the Newport Folk Festival, as in the year’s other big rock biopic, A Complete Unknown. But people sure did. As a reader complained on the Rolling Stone letters page, “I liked him a whole lot better as a Fifties remake.” This wasn’t the Broooce people wanted, the guy who was already an affectionate caricature all through pop culture, as in Robin Williams doing his “Elmer Fudd Sings Springsteen” routine, or the great Dr. Demento Show parody where Bruce Springstone sings the Flintstones theme. 

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That’s why this album opened the door for all the Eighties bar-band faux-Bruce clones. Hell, Hollywood was in the middle of making Eddie and the Cruisers, an E Street fan-fic movie that got wildly popular on cable TV in the long wait between Nebraska and Born in the U.S.A. (The flick even has its own Nebraska-esque subplot where Eddie sticks it to the Man with his uncommercial art album, A Season in Hell.) 

But then as now, people cherished the underdog aspect of the album — the artist taking a stand, defying the odds, staying hungry. As people were so fond of saying in 1982, Bruce got back to the eye of the tiger. That’s why the album has gone down in history, the ultimate case of a superstar ripping it up to start again, in the mode of Kid A or Achtung Baby, Bowie in Berlin or Neil Young heading for the ditch. In 2007, when it was time for Kelly Clarkson to follow up “Since U Been Gone,” she pissed off her label with the deeply personal My December and called it her Nebraska — definitely a sign that this cultural myth had entered new territory. But that’s what makes Nebraska one of the all-time great rock & roll arguments.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Bruce Springsteen Unearths Fabeled Electric Nebraska Sessions: Stream
Music

Bruce Springsteen Unearths Fabeled Electric Nebraska Sessions: Stream

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Bruce Springsteen has revealed Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition, a deluxe box set of his seminal 1982 album Nebraska featuring a variety of never-before-heard material — including songs from the fabled Electric Nebraska sessions (order here).

The massive box set is a five-disc collection comprised of a remastered version of the original Nebraska album, solo outtakes from the era, and a newly-shot performance film of the album captured at the Count Basie Theatre in Red Bank, New Jersey.

The box set also notably features Electric Nebraska, eight alternate, never-before-heard versions of Nebraska-era tracks recorded with E Street Band members Garry Tallent, Max Weinberg, Danny Federici, Roy Bittan, and Stevie Van Zandt. The tracks had been stashed away for years, and after being heavily rumored for so long, Springsteen has finally unearthed them from the vault. In addition, the box set also includes Springsteen solo outtakes, like “Losin’ Kind,” “Child Bride,” and “Downbound Train,” and tracks from a one-off 1982 solo studio session, including “Gun In Every Home” and “On the Prowl.”

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Announced back in early September, Springsteen previewed the box set by sharing a previously unreleased version of “Born in the U.S.A,” originally written alongside Nebraska. Regarding the new collection, The Boss said in a statement, “It’s radically different from anything I’d remembered… I think the box set is going to be a real surprise … because it surprised me. It’ll be fun for the fans to get a chance to hear it.”

The new set arrives as Deliver Me from Nowhere, the new Springsteen biopic starring Jeremy Allen White and focusing on the making of Nebraska, hits theaters today, October 24th. The set marks Springsteen’s second major archival release of the year, having shared the sprawling collection Tracks II back in June. Stream Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition below, and pick up physical editions of the box set in vinyl and CD formats.

Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition Artwork:

Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition Tracklist:
Disc 1: Nebraska Outtakes
01. Born in the U.S.A.
02. Losin’ Kind
03. Downbound Train
04. Child Bride
05. Pink Cadillac
06. The Big Payback
07. Working on the Highway
08. On the Prowl
09. Gun in Every Home

Disc 2: Electric Nebraska
01. Nebraska
02. Atlantic City
03. Mansion on the Hill
04. Johnny 99
05. Downbound Train
06. Open All Night
07. Born in the U.S.A.
08. Reason to Believe

Disc 3: Nebraska (Count Basie Theatre, Red Bank, NJ)
01. Nebraska
02. Atlantic City
03. Mansion on the Hill
04. Johnny 99
05. Highway Patrolman
06. State Trooper
07. Used Cars
08. Open All Night
09. My Father’s House
10. Reason To Believe

Disc 4: 2025 Remaster
01. Nebraska
02. Atlantic City
03. Mansion on the Hill
04. Johnny 99
05. Highway Patrolman
06. State Trooper
07. Used Cars
08. Open All Night
09. My Father’s House
10. Reason To Believe

Disc 5 (Blu-Ray): Nebraska (Count Basie Theatre, Red Bank, NJ)
01. Nebraska
02. Atlantic City
03. Mansion on the Hill
04. Johnny 99
05. Highway Patrolman
06. State Trooper
07. Used Cars
08. Open All Night
09. My Father’s House
10. Reason To Believe

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Miss USA Winner 2025 Is Miss Nebraska Audrey Eckert
Celebrity News

Miss USA Winner 2025 Is Miss Nebraska Audrey Eckert

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

She’s beauty and she’s grace, she’s officially Miss USA. 

Miss USA crowned Miss Nebraska, Audrey Eckert, as its 2025 winner at Nevada’s Grand Sierra Resort on Oct. 24, marking the state’s second winner in the nationwide competition after Sarah Rose Summers triumphed in 2018.

Following her victory, Eckert will travel to Thailand in November to compete for the coveted title of Miss Universe 2025.

The 23-year-old beat out 50 other contestants representing each state for the title of Miss USA during the pageant, which was co-hosted by Emmanuel Acho and Olivia Jordan. She faced off against the other women in the state costume competition, preliminary competition and final round before judges Nia Sanchez, Jade Tolbert, Sasha Farber, Kenneth Barlis and Hannah Edwards gave her the highest overall score, earning her the coveted crown. 

And while 73 other beauty contestants before her have worn the iconic tiara, there was one notable difference this year for the winner’s ceremony. 

Hours before the final round took place, Miss USA 2024 winner Alma Cooper revealed she would not be attending the final show to pass down the sash and crown as it’s been done in previous years. 

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Bruce Springsteen Takes Us Back With ‘Nebraska 82: Expanded Edition'
Music

Bruce Springsteen Takes Us Back With ‘Nebraska 82: Expanded Edition’

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The Boss flicks the switch on the time machine, taking us back to a moment when E.T. was flying high at the box office, Michael Jackson’s Thriller was hot, and Ronald Reagan had the top job.

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At the stroke of midnight, Bruce Springsteen shared Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition (via Sony Music), a treasure chest stuffed with previously unseen and unheard cuts. It’s the stuff of fans’ dreams.

Released both digitally and as a five-disc box set, Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition gathers solo outtakes from back in the day, and the fabled “Electric Nebraska” sessions; a newly-shot performance film of Nebraska in its entirety; a recently-released version of “Born in the U.S.A.”, recorded back in April 1982 with Springsteen backed by Max Weinberg and Garry Tallent; plus a 2025 remaster of the original album.

“We threw out the keyboards and played basically as a three-piece,” Springsteen reflects of the unearthed “Born in the U.S.A.” cut, a song penned during the Nebraska era. “It was kinda like punk rockabilly. We were trying to bring ‘Nebraska’ into the electric world.”

In a separate promo video accompanying the release, Springsteen admits he’s often asked about “Electric Nebraska,” which features Tallent, Weinberg, Danny Federici, Roy Bittan and Stevie Van Zandt. “There is no ‘Electric Nebraska’. It doesn’t exist,” he says, thinking out loud.

Wrong.

He checked, revisited the vault. “There it was,” he remarks. “And radically different than anything I’d remembered.”

The album was pushed back a week to coincide with the cinematic rollout of Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere. Directed by Scott Cooper and released through 20th Century Studios, the biopic chronicles the making of Springsteen’s Nebraska, and served as the opening film at AFI Fest in Hollywood on Wednesday.

Springsteen was on hand for a brief performance inside the TCL Chinese Theater after the screening, according to The Hollywood Reporter, where he thanked guests for “supporting our movie” and quipped “this is my last night in the movie business, I’m sticking to music.”

The Rock And Roll Hall of Fame-inducted artist used the opportunity speak out once more against Donald Trump, offering up a “prayer” for “no kings” in his speech. “I’ve spent 50 years traveling as kind of a musical ambassador for America and I’ve seen firsthand all the love and admiration that folks around the world have had for the America of our highest ideals. Despite how terribly damaging America has been recently, that country and those ideals remain worth fighting for. I want to send this out as a prayer for America, for our unity. No kings,” he remarked, before hitting a rendition of “Land of Hope and Dreams.”

Jeremy Allen White stars as Springsteen in Deliver Me From Nowhere, which is in cinemas from today. Stream Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition below.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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Bruce Springsteen ‘Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition' Review
Music

Bruce Springsteen ‘Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition’ Review

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

There are good albums and great albums, and then there are holy records — worlds you enter as if into a dream and emerge with spirit and neurochemistry changed. Bruce Springsteen‘s 1982 classic Nebraska is one of those. Conceived at the crest of the Reagan years when the singer was in a dark place and rethinking his purpose, it was a pause and a hard reboot, a lo-fi set of home recordings that sounded like nothing in his catalog, and a calm before the storm of Born in the U.S.A. “I was after a feeling,” he wrote of Nebraska in his memoir, “a tone that felt like the world I’d known and still carried inside me.” The result was a hauntingly unsettled piece of art that many people hold very dear. 

But people always crave more, and given that A) Nebraska is mostly an album of spruced-up demos, B) it came from same writing sessions that later produced Born in the U.S.A., and C) superfans and E Streeters alike have been fueling rumors for years about a shelved Electric Nebraska LP, it’s amazing that it’s taken this long for said mythic lost album to surface. Clearly, we have Jeremy Allen White and Deliver Me From Nowhere to thank.

Anyway, here it is. Does it support the myth? Yes and no. Yes, in that there were indeed recordings made in 1982 of some Nebraska songs in fuller arrangements with Bruce’s E Street bandmembers. And no — because strictly speaking there is no Electric Nebraska per se, notwithstanding Springsteen’s equivocations on the point (as reported in this magazine) and the fact that one disc in this five-disc set is titled Electric Nebraska.

Nevertheless: as art history, theological inquiry, and a secular deep dive into the Brucebase rabbit-hole, Nebraska ‘82 is rich material, and for serious Springsteen fans, an essential listen. The first two discs are flecked with revelations. One disc contains outtakes from the original 4-track demos, made by Springsteen in his house in Colts Head, NJ, with extras from a follow-up acoustic studio session at The Power Station that tried, and failed, to better those recordings.

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The keystone is the demo of “Born in the U.S.A., which appeared on 1998’s epic loosie compilation Tracks. It opens this set and resonates differently here, showing how much of a piece it was with Nebraska’s vision and where Springsteen’s narrative songwriting was at. It also shows how wrong it would’ve been for Nebraska’s final tracklist — its anthemic chorus, yearning to be free, would’ve felt misplaced. The song’s next iteration, a raw guitar rocker on the Electric Nebraska disc, shows its evolution. Both versions showcase the song’s sharp social critique and conflicted pride more effectively than the final megahit version. But musically, neither is quite as compelling.

Similarly, at least in hindsight, you can hear the party jam in a softly insinuating draft of “Pink Cadillac,” the future Natalie Cole hit and Born in the U.S.A. b-side. It’s sexy and vaguely creepy, a weirdly intimate voice message. Elsewhere, the addition of corner-church piano and bass cloak the exquisite chill of Nebraska’s title track, while a stiff groove and overheated vocals diminish the articulate desperation “Atlantic City” (Levon Helm and The Band would pull off a more convincing band arrangement years later, as would Springsteen & Co.) Two feral punk-rockabilly versions of Born in the U.S.A.’s seething “Downbound Train” speak to Springsteen’s admiration of The Clash. 

But a pair of never-issued songs on the outtakes set are the set’s standouts. “Child Bride” is a disturbing draft of what would transform into Born in the U.S.A.’s “Working on the Highway,” which turned the narrative’s moral thicket, presumably involving an underage girl, into a sort of landlocked sea shanty that, like the album’s title track, drowns out its own narrative. (An early version of “Highway” here obfuscates the narrator’s transgression.) As America attempts to reclaim its pride by whitewashing its unflattering histories, Springsteen’s struggle to balance light and dark on these pointedly American recordings is tremendously poignant. “Gun in Every Home” is another balancing act, a striking outtake that ended up shelved. “I moved to the suburbs yeah, just me and my family/ On the block I live, you got everything that a man would need to want/ Two cars in each garage and a gun in every home,” Springsteen sings flatly. (“When I wrote it, I thought it was a little hysterical,” he admits in the liner notes. “Now of course it seems totally natural.”)

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The third and fourth discs — audio and video, respectively — document a (mostly) solo acoustic full-album performance of Nebraska, recorded this past summer sans audience at the Count Basie Theatre, Red Bank, NJ. The film, by Thom Zimny, is about what you’d expect: b&w, moody lighting, the artist striding in slo-mo onto the stage of the empty theater (trigger warning: may spur Covid lockdown flashbacks), then sitting down to play the songs straight through. There’s no attempt to hide the staging, although the accompanying musicians are mostly unseen. You can catch a fleeting glimpse of Larry Campbell in the wings offstage during “Atlantic City,” playing mandolin in the shadows; on “Used Cars,” Charlie Giordano adds glockenspiel fireflies in silhouette.

In the liner notes, Springsteen says he came to this latter-day performance fairly cold, and was struck anew by the songs, by how “their weight impressed upon me.” It’s a powerful performance, though 40-plus years on, as a dude in his 70s, he delivers them as a storyteller outside the story — a bit like Springsteen performing Springsteen on Broadway. On the original Nebraska LP, remastered for the set’s final disc, the performances felt more like method acting by a man possessed, physically inhabited by the stories he told.

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Springsteen has said Nebraska is his greatest work, and it’s interesting that, in surveying the original LP and the other vault recordings included here, he seems amazed at what his young self was channeling back then. He uses the word “shocked” more than once in the liner notes. He says “I don’t know where I was coming from for those arrangements,” and “I don’t know what was influencing me at the time.” He concludes: “Most of this stuff is pretty mysterious to me.”

Indeed, mystery is at the core of Nebraska’s magic — the mystery of what drives human beings toward darkness and self-destruction, the mystery of a rich country disrespecting its people, the mystery of an artist reinventing himself with a coal-hot songwriting hand, whispering in his own ear to make the mystery manifest. It did, and when you hear the final Nebraska, the set’s early takes and re-recordings, even the good ones here, are blown away like leaves in a punishing autumn wind. The falsetto howls at the end of “Atlantic City” become ghostly again, not vocal effects deployed variously across the sessions. Many of Nebraska’s songs would become American classics, and it says a lot that Levon Helm’s “Atlantic City” is one of his greatest performances, ditto Emmylou Harris’ version of “My Father’s House.” It says a lot, too, that their versions hewed close to those on the finished Nebraska album. Because Bruce got them dead right.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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