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Bruce Springsteen, Steven Van Zandt Perform at the Stone Pony: Watch
Music

Bruce Springsteen, Steven Van Zandt Perform at the Stone Pony: Watch

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The musicians also performed “I Don’t Want to Go Home” at the benefit for Van Zandt’s non-profit TeachRock

On Sunday, Steven Van Zandt held his Party at the Pony, a benefit in support of his non-profit music education organization TeachRock. The star-studded event promised “special appearances from some of Stevie’s Disciples [of Soul] and E Street Band family,” and it delivered with an unannounced appearance from Bruce Springsteen.

Held at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, New Jersey, the night included performances by Jesse Malin, Darlene Love, Gary U.S. Bonds, Marc Ribler, Anthony Almonte of the Funky Mofo’s, Curtis King Jr., Ozzie Melendez, Eddie Manion, and Barry Danielian. It was also billed as a birthday celebration for Van Zandt and his wife Maureen’s birthdays.

In a clip from the night, Van Zandt and Springsteen performed “I Don’t Want to Go Home,” the Van Zandt-penned title track to Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes’ first album, which was produced by Van Zandt and features two Springsteen compositions.

The night also featured them performing Born to Run’s “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out,” bolstered by a robust audience sing-along.

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Fans reported that they also performed Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band live staple, “Raise Your Hand.”

Fittingly, in the same weekend Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere opened, in which Jeremy Allen White’s Springsteen plays unannounced shows at the Stone Pony (just like Springsteen actually did back in 1982), Springsteen played an unannounced show at the same venue in real life once again.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Bruce Springsteen Performs For Steven Van Zandt’s Fundraiser
Music

Bruce Springsteen Performs For Steven Van Zandt’s Fundraiser

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The Boss is very much back.

Just days after walking the red carpet (and delivering a typical powerhouse performance) for Disney’s biopic Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere, Bruce Springsteen made another surprise appearance, this time for Steven Van Zandt’s Party at the Pony.

Per Rolling Stone, Springsteen joined his decades-long bandmate on stage Sunday, Oct. 26 at Asbury Park, New Jersey, for several performances, including “I Don’t Want to Go Home,” the opener and title track to Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes’ first album from 1976, which was produced and arranged by Van Zandt and includes contributions from Springsteen.

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Guests were also treated to a rendition of “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out” from Springsteen’s third album, 1975’s Born to Run, and, reportedly, a performance of Eddie Floyd’s “Raise Your Hand,” a staple of Springsteen shows since the 1970s.

The evening’s program was billed as featuring members of the “E Street Band Family” with appearances by Jesse Malin, Darlene Love & Gary US Bonds, and musical guests Marc Ribler, Anthony Almonte, Curtis King Jr., Ozzie Melendez, Eddie Manion, and Barry Danielian.

The concert benefited TeachRock, a not-for-profit founded by Van Zandt which aims to improve “students’ lives by bringing the sound, stories, and science of music to all classrooms.”

Springsteen has been front and center in recent days, thanks to the theatrical release of the biographical drama, Deliver Me from Nowhere, and the well-timed arrival of Nebraska 82’: Extended Edition.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Deliver Me had to settle for fourth place in its debut after coming in behind expectations with $9.1 million domestically and $7 million internationally from 28 markets for a global start of $16.1 million, though it has yet screen in a number of major markets. The film which had been on track for an open in the $10 million-$12 million range domestically and $20 million globally.

Springsteen doesn’t have any concerts on the slate. But he has hinted at another tour Down Under. Speaking with Rolling Stone earlier this year, the Rock Hall-inducted legend admitted he was long-overdue a long haul to Australia. “I’m doing my best as we speak to get down there, hopefully next year sometime. And I feel bad,” he remarked. “I apologize to my Australian fans for not getting down on this stretch, but I want them to know that we are planning to get down there as soon as feasible, probably in the next year sometime.”

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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'Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere' Marketing: Who's the Movie for?
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‘Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere’ Marketing: Who’s the Movie for?

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Sometimes, even the Google AI Overview gets it right. Sometimes. In searching out confirmation as to when Scott Cooper‘s Bruce Springsteen film, “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere,” first tacked on that “Springsteen,” a quick Google search helped, as did the AI Overview leering at me from the top of the page.

Important findings reigned. First up: “The initial title of the film was ‘Deliver Me from Nowhere,’ based on Warren Zanes’ book” (true!). Next: “The title was officially changed to ‘Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere‘ in June 2025, according to news reports and the movie’s production status updates” (well, really, it was a new trailer, but OK). Finally: “The change was made to make it clear to the audience that the film is a biopic about Bruce Springsteen.” Ah, well.

Jeremy Strong at the 97th Oscars held at the Dolby Theatre on March 2, 2025 in Hollywood, California.

Except, well, it’s not really. At least, not in the way that a potential movie-goer who is not already a fan of The Boss would expect to see if they’re hitting the multiplex to check out the “Springsteen biopic.” Adding his name to the front of film’s title — again, a title pulled directly from a much-loved and well-known book on the subject — was the first sign that the 20th Century Studios powers that be were getting a little squirrelly about their big fall feature.

What is “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere” really about? As our own David Ehrlich wrote in his review out of Telluride, it “is a semi-desolate sketch of a biopic about a depressed 32-year-old man” who is also “haunted by unresolved childhood trauma and suffering from a depression that he knows how to sing about but lacks the words to diagnose” and “is at its best during the frequent stretches when it finds Bruce staring at the walls of his isolated rental home in Colts Neck.”

Trailers for the film — which has now screened at Telluride, New York Film Festival, and AFI Fest, to name a few, so it’s certainly not hiding — play up the more glitzy and recognizable moments of Springsteen’s career. These are also moments that have relatively little to do with the film itself. If moviegoers are taking marketing on its face, who could blame them for expecting to see a film about Bruce and the E Street Band on the road? That’s what this trailer opens with.

Or, consider this clip, the only one on 20th Century Studios’ dedicated “Deliver Me from Nowhere” YouTube page, which is entirely comprised of a performance of “Born to Run.” For those keeping track, Cooper’s film is about the creation of Springsteen’s album “Nebraska.” “Born to Run” is not a track that appears on that album. And while this performance is indeed part of the film, it’s a very weird pick to represent the entire feature.

Look, I’m the last person to think that a film about a depressive episode in a global superstar’s early career makes for the easiest of sells. (Well, small note here, I think most musical biopics should probably be about a depressive episode in a global superstar’s early career, but I don’t run a film studio.) I get the impulse to try to make this look like something more broad, but that’s a mistake.

(L-R) Jeremy Allen White as Bruce Springsteen in 20th Century Studios' SPRINGSTEEN: DELIVER ME FROM NOWHERE. Photo by Macall Polay. © 2025 20th Century Studios. All Rights Reserved
‘Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere’Macall Polay

I worry that when even casual Bruce fans show up to see the movie, they’ll expect to see what they’ve seen in the trailers: The Boss jumping around on stage, playing “Born in the U.S.A.,” celebrating another smash hit show with the E Street Band. Hell, they’ll expect to see significantly more of the E Street Band in general.

This is not that film. It’s better for it, and it’s also a much tougher sell.

Other marketing, the kind of stuff that people who would need to seek out (like, oh, big fans of Bruce) is more honest, like this featurette all about Cooper’s approach to this specific time in The Boss’ life and career. Cooper isn’t shying away from what sort of film he’s made, even if audiences might be surprised. As he told IndieWire earlier this week, “So many people have preconceived notions about a music film about Bruce Springsteen. Or a film that they want to see, like the ‘Born in the U.S.A.’ or ‘Born to Run’ story. … This is probably the most unexpected story that folks will get about a music icon. … I’m realizing this film is not what people expected. Now, whether it’s what they wanted is another thing.”

If it’s not clear: I am a huge Springsteen fan. I’ve seen him live over a dozen times — that includes actual concerts, performances at premieres (like the NYFF premiere), and quite literally live in his own home studio when I interviewed him for “Western Stars” in 2019 — and the prospect of a biopic uniquely tailored to some of Springsteen’s continuing obsessions, interests, and neuroses is particularly appealing to me. And, based on the general queries I’ve made of other Bruce fans, that holds true for them, too.

(Fun fact: Ehrlich’s older brother is a Springsteen freak who has seen him in concert so many times that he’s pushing triple digits with his count. When I asked David if Steven is excited to see the film, he said he was “frothing at the mouth.”) Now that’s an audience to bank on and appeal to.

Those are not the people who need a trailer or a clip or a title that simplifies what they’re going to see (or, if we’re being more candid about it, just kind of lies about it). Those are the people who will come multiple times, tell their fellow fans to check it out, to champion it. They’re Bruce fans; dedication is part of their DNA. Don’t ever count them out. Like the Boss, they’re tougher than the rest. Selling this film to them does not have to be.

A 20th Century Release, “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere” hits theaters on Friday, October 24.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Sony Crunchyroll Anime Rules Box Office Again With ‘Chainsaw Man’ Powering To $17M+ Opening, ‘Springsteen’ Plays Low With $9M+ – Sunday AM
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Sony Crunchyroll Anime Rules Box Office Again With ‘Chainsaw Man’ Powering To $17M+ Opening, ‘Springsteen’ Plays Low With $9M+ – Sunday AM

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

SUNDAY AM: Sony/Crunchyroll’s Chainsaw Man: Reze Arc is landing at the high end of where we were seeing it yesterday with $17.2M after a $5.2M million Saturday in a weekend where the Toronto Blue Jays and LA Dodgers were a complete distraction in the World Series, now with 1-1 tied streak. Universal/Blumhouse’s second weekend of […]

October 26, 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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Jeremy Strong on 'Springsteen' and Mark Zuckerberg
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Jeremy Strong on ‘Springsteen’ and Mark Zuckerberg

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

While Oscar nominee Jeremy Strong (“The Apprentice”) could be back at the Oscars for the second year in a row for his subtle, moving performance as manager Jon Landau in “Bruce Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere,” he’s neither rooting for himself nor for another character actor he admires, Sean Penn in “One Battle After Another.” As a member of this year’s Cannes jury, Strong is an unabashed fan of Norway’s Cannes prize-winning Oscar entry, “Sentimental Value.” “Give Stellan Skarsgård the Oscar, please,” he said as we sat down at the Four Seasons in Los Angeles.

I can’t help but notice his rusty, close-cropped haircut. He’s in prep to play Mark Zuckerberg in writer/director Aaron Sorkin’s sequel to 2010’s “The Social Network,” “The Social Reckoning” (October 9, 2026), set 17 years later and without Jesse Eisenberg. It covers a stretch between 2018 and 2021, when Facebook moved from “move fast and break things,” said Strong, to “move fast with stable infrastructure. This also tells the story of the Wall Street Journal’s reporting on the Facebook Files.” (He reunites with Jeremy Allen White, who plays Springsteen in “Deliver Me from Nowhere.”)

Linda Blair in 'Exorcist II: The Heretic'

As soon as Strong got wind of a follow-up to “The Social Network,” he told Sorkin that he had always wanted to play Zuckerberg. Strong played Jerry Rubin in Best Picture nominee “The Trial of the Chicago 7,” which Sorkin wrote and directed, and starred in Sorkin’s directorial debut “Molly’s Game.” “The Social Reckoning” screenplay is “one of the best scripts I’ve ever read,” said Strong. “It touches the third rail, the axis of much of the issues and maladies of our time.”

Per usual, Strong is hoovering up everything he can about Zuckerberg. His prep, influenced by early mentor Daniel Day-Lewis, involves a “deep dive on everything,” he said, “trying to understand and defend a point of view of a character, what it is they believe in, what they’re fighting for, maybe understand what might be blind spots. But the most important thing for me is an empathic connection to a person. We live in an age when there’s a lot of judgment, a lot of maligning of people. We would all do well to walk a day in anybody’s shoes before casting aspersions and judgment.”

Jeremy Strong Mark Zuckerberg
Jeremy Strong and Mark ZuckerbergGetty Images

Zuckerberg, who at 41 is still running Facebook, is “a real person with a family,” said Strong, who is 46 and has three kids. “He is someone who has shaped the world we live in. I feel an enormous responsibility for accuracy and understanding.”

Zuckerberg is just one of a gallery of real people that Strong has taken on, including powerbroker Roy Cohn, one of the most maligned figures in New York, who Strong not only made believable but empathetic in “The Apprentice.” “I find Roy’s journey a tragic journey,” he said. “I find Kendall Roy’s journey [in the Emmy-winning ‘Succession’], even though he’s a composite character, a tragic journey.”

Day-Lewis gave Strong “a kind of permission,” he said, “by witnessing a level of commitment and a level of preparation and courage and a willingness to just go way the fuck out on the limb,” he said. Strong also admires Anthony Hopkins, his co-star on James Gray’s “Armageddon Time,” who has played Richard Nixon, Adolf Hitler, Pablo Picasso, C.S. Lewis, and John Quincy Adams. Strong is drawn to historic characters, he said: “Those are the best stories with the most complex stories and the highest stakes.”

'The Apprentice'
‘The Apprentice’Briarcliff Entertainment

In “Deliver Me from Nowhere,” Strong plays a real person, Jon Landau, an influential music critic who proclaimed Springsteen as the future of rock in the pages of Rolling Stone and quietly and firmly, behind the scenes, helped his friend to manage his career and recover from debilitating depression. The film is set during the 1982 recording of “Nebraska,” a bare-bones acoustic album of dark songs that Springsteen needed to get off his chest before he could publish such rock anthems as “Born in the U.S.A.,” which he had already written, that would make him a rock legend.

Having gotten to work closely with Springsteen on “Deliver Me from Nowhere,” Strong is a fan: “I’ve just come out of this press conference with Bruce, who gives 10,000 percent. I admire him perhaps more than I admire anyone on this earth: his humility, his devotion, his commitment. It’s about how much he gives, his sincerity, his generosity of spirit.”

Movingly, “Deliver Me from Nowhere” shows how Landau cares for Springsteen and stands up for him at a time when he needs support. “At this moment in time, 1982, it is not a given that Bruce would go on to be the Bruce Springsteen we know him to be today,” said Strong, “simply because of his struggles with mental health and depression, as William Styron said, ‘a darkness visible,’ and that darkness was pressing down on him, and he did not have the equipment internally to handle it. It’s not something anyone can handle on their own.”

A few years older than Springsteen, Landau “was a father figure to Bruce at this time,” said Strong, “had been in therapy, had had a broader education, was steeped in literature and the history of art and the history of music, and he was able to help Bruce take this step to getting professional help. He was almost like a therapist himself, and he understood that the only way out is through. This movie that Scott Cooper has made is the story of Bruce shaking hands with his own past, his trauma, the wounds that we all carry and that often remain untreated or buried. And so this is about the album ‘Nebraska,’ the unearthing of that trauma and the repairing of trauma through art.”

SPRINGSTEEN: DELIVER ME FROM NOWHERE, (aka DELIVER ME FROM NOWHERE), Jeremy Strong as Jon Landau, 2025. © 20th Century Studios / Courtesy Everett Collection
Jeremy Strong in ‘Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere‘©20th Century Studios/Courtesy Everett Collection

“Nebraska” also marked a moment in time before Springsteen was about to hit big. “James Baldwin once used the phrase ‘trying to find an honest place to stand,’” said Strong. “Bruce was looking to find that honest place to stand. He was lost in the vortex of this world that we’re in, the pressures and expectations of success, fame. And Bruce needed to locate. Bruce said once that all of his songs are about a person trying to find and save some part of himself. And Bruce, at this time in 1982, needed to find and save some part of himself. And Jon Landau had the compassion, love, devotion, depth of understanding, and insight to support and enable that.”

Landau also had to be savvy enough to manage CBS Records. It’s surprising the executives went along with “Nebraska” at all. Landau had to coax them into it. “‘The River’ was a massive album,” said Strong, “but he wasn’t yet in the stratosphere that he then went on to be. When Jon Landau goes into Columbia Records and sits down with Al Teller, people listen to Jon Landau. He had an authority, but he also was a bodyguard for what is sacred. Jon was perceiving what was essential in that record and why it was essential for fertilizing the growth of Bruce Springsteen, the artist. He was not perceiving in a calculated way why this would or wouldn’t be a savvy career move — not that he didn’t give a shit about career, because he did.”

Strong and Jeremy Allen White as Springsteen bonded effectively to create this close relationship. “Easily and almost without words,” said Strong. “I’ve admired Jeremy for a long time. Part of what you do is you create a dynamic that mirrors a dynamic, and it was easy for me to feel a devotion and a love for Jeremy, also given what was at stake, similar to Sebastian [Stan] having to play Donald Trump, a character that is an iconic, monolithic character. You are vulnerable. You are up there like Philippe Petit, walking on that high wire. So it was easy for me to feel a solicitude, a protectiveness, and an empathy and care for him. You look after him a bit without words, let him know that you’re there for him, which is what Jon does. They don’t talk a lot.”

SPRINGSTEEN: DELIVER ME FROM NOWHERE, (aka DELIVER ME FROM NOWHERE), Jeremy Strong as Jon Landau, 2025. © 20th Century Studios / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere’©20th Century Studios/Courtesy Everett Collection

One key scene between the two men involves a piece of music, instigated by Strong. “In the early ’70s, they used to come over to each other’s house and listen to records,” said Strong. “They would play each other music all night. And it was the night before we were shooting this scene, where Jon goes over to Bruce’s house in Colts Neck, a beautifully scripted scene where they say the things that they’re feeling to each other. Jon expresses his deep concern for Bruce, his wish for what the road trip will be. I felt a sense that the Jon that I had come to understand might not have worded all those things as overtly, and I had an instinct that maybe I should play him a song in the scene. I sent Bruce and Jon some texts. I asked them: ‘I’m thinking of playing a record for you in the scene tomorrow. If you were going to play a song, if you were trying to save your friend’s life, what song would you play?’”

The three men exchanged texts for three hours. Strong listened to each song suggestion. Springsteen went to bed. About 45 minutes later, he texted Strong and Landau: Sam Cooke and the Soul Stirrers’ “Last Mile of the Way.” “I listened to it,” said Strong, “and was floored. It’s emotionally huge, and it’s the story of the movie. It’s about passing through a dark valley before you get to arrive somewhere.”

The next day, Scott Cooper shot the scene as scripted. Strong had secretly asked the sound mixer and prop department to prepare a cassette with the song on it and have the boom box in the room. And after they shot the scene, he said, “Scott, can I try something?” And Cooper said, “Can you tell me what it is?” And I said, “No, I’d rather not.”

Strong also asked White if he wanted to know what he was going to do. He said, “No.” “That’s what’s in the movie,” said Strong. “It’s a big-budget Disney studio movie, but it has a Cassavetes soul. There’s a spiritual dimension to that song and that sequence in the movie. It captured something about them and their essence and their journey.”

Next up: Strong plays the lead in the remake of “The Boys from Brazil,” a limited series written by Peter Morgan (“The Crown”). “It’s a five-hour film that Bob Elswit is shooting, an allegory of the rise of fascism in the world.” Also in the works is a Paramount six-hour limited series created by Tobias Lindholm about September 11 first responders. “There’s an embarrassment of riches right now,” said Strong, “and I don’t take it for granted.”

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Clarence Clemons and Bruce Springsteen in 1981. (Chris Walter)
Music

Deep Cut Friday: ‘State Trooper’ by Bruce Springsteen

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Each week, SPIN digs into the catalogs of great artists and highlights songs you might not know for our Deep Cut Friday series.

Bruce Springsteen’s sixth album Nebraska was a pivot away from the spotlight, released in between two hit-filled blockbuster albums, 1980’s The River and 1984’s Born in the U.S.A. Living in relative seclusion in Colts Neck, New Jersey, in 1981, Springsteen documented his new songs with a four-track recorder, making stark acoustic demos that he decided could be an album unto itself. Nebraska was critically acclaimed and modestly successful, eventually going platinum, and became a cornerstone of Springsteen’s artistic legacy. In the last few weeks, Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere hit theaters, with Jeremy Allen White playing the Boss during the creation of Nebraska, and Springsteen released an expanded reissue of the album.

Bruce Springsteen’s affinity for the New York punk scene may have surprised a few people at the time. The Phil Spector-inspired maximalism and romance of Born to Run was a far cry from the grit of the CBGBs bands, but he did take note of what was happening across the Hudson River. In 1978, Patti Smith and Springsteen co-wrote her biggest hit “Because the Night,” and two years later Springsteen nearly gave away one of his signature songs, “Hungry Heart,” to the Ramones. The CBGBs band that inspired Springsteen the most, though, was Suicide, the duo of Martin Rev and Alan Vega. One of Nebraska’s darkest tracks, “State Trooper,” was directly influenced by “Frankie Teardrop,” the 10-minute centerpiece of Suicide’s 1977 self-titled debut.

“Frankie Teardrop,” built on Rev’s eerie synthesizers and ticking drum machine, is about a suicidal factory worker. “State Trooper,” with a simple guitar-and-vocal arrangement, is about a man driving a stolen car and hoping not to get pulled over. Despite the very different instrumentation, the two songs share an eerie, paranoid atmosphere and intense, heavily reverbed vocal performances. “Deliver me from nowhere,” Springsteen softly sings before “State Trooper” ends with a startling howl reminiscent of Alan Vega’s vocal on the climax of “Frankie Teardrop.”

In 2005, Springsteen began covering Suicide’s 1979 single “Dream Baby Dream” in concert, eventually recording it for his 2014 album High Hopes. Vega died in 2016, and last year, Springsteen wrote the foreword for Laura Davis-Chanin and Liz Lamere’s biography Infinite Dreams: The Life of Alan Vega. “‘Frankie Teardrop’ – that was incredible. That might be his greatest piece of work right there,” Springsteen wrote. “It was something I really related to. And definitely inspired the way I wrote ‘State Trooper.’”

Three more essential Bruce Springsteen deep cuts:

“It’s Hard to Be a Saint in the City”

The closing track on Springsteen’s 1973 debut Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J. was the song that convinced Mike Appel to be the young singer’s manager and was part of the audition that got him signed to Columbia Records. One of Springsteen’s earliest famous fans was David Bowie, who recorded a cover of “It’s Hard to Be a Saint in the City” in 1973, though it wouldn’t be released until 1989.

“Candy’s Room”

The fourth track on Darkness of the Edge of Town is the E Street Band at its most cinematic, Max Weinberg’s 16th note hi-hats and Roy Bittan’s surging piano constantly driving the song’s energy further and further upward.

“Bobby Jean”

One of Springsteen’s oldest friends, Steven Van Zandt, left the E Street Band shortly before the release of Born in the U.S.A. to focus on his solo career. The album featured “Bobby Jean,” a bittersweet song about friendship that’s been widely interpreted as a tribute to Van Zandt.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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How accurate is Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere? True story explained
TV & Streaming

How accurate is Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere? True story explained

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

There tends to be two distinct approaches a director can take when making a music biopic: a career-spanning story that touches on every aspect of the musician’s life or a more focused tale honing in on one particular chapter in extra detail.

Scott Cooper’s new film Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere – which stars Jeremy Allen White – opts for the latter option, chronicling the recording of Bruce Springsteen’s 1982 album Nebraska and exploring some of the personal issues he was facing at that time, some of which were rooted in childhood trauma.

“I wanted to keep the timeframe as tight and narrow as possible,” Cooper explained during an exclusive interview with RadioTimes.com. “It’s really only a few months of Bruce’s life.

“But I felt if I told the story well, then people would get a better understanding of Bruce Springsteen, paradoxically, then if I had told a cradle to kind of present day narrative.”

Read on to find out just how accurate the portrayal of this period is.

How accurate is Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere? True story explained

Cooper based his script on the non-fiction book of the same name by Warren Zanes, and so the film largely sticks to true events as they happened – albeit with the usual condensing (and a couple of fictional additions) that we usually see in films of this time.

The bulk of the narrative presents events truthfully: it is true that Springsteen recorded Nebraska in cassette tapes in his home and wanted to keep this stripped back sound for the finished record, while it’s also true that the record label – Columbia – had some reservations about the album and had to be persuaded of its merits by Springsteen’s manager Jon Landau (Jeremy Strong).

Meanwhile a number of other small details are true. For example, Springsteen really did get the title of his landmark hit Born in the USA from a Paul Schrader script and recorded the song in the middle of the Nebraska sessions before initially shelving it.

Furthermore, the scene in which Bruce breaks down in a therapist’s office after being told by Landau he needed to seek professional help is based on a story Springsteen himself told in his 2016 memoir Born to Run.

Jeremy Allen White as Bruce Springsteen and Jeremy Strong as Jon Landau in Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere 20th Century Studios

Springsteen also at times had a difficult relationship with his father – who was an alcoholic and bipolar – and he has gone on the record to praise Stephen Graham’s performance in the film, telling BBC Radio 2: “Stephen’s such an incredible actor and he just immediately inhabited my father’s physicality and inner emotion. He captured my dad’s struggles and spirit really well.”

Indeed, Springsteen has generally been very enthusiastic in his praise for the film, suggesting that it is – on the whole – a fairly accurate portrayal of his life.

However. one fictional aspect is the character of Faye Romano (Odessa Young), Springsteen’s lover in the film who is not based on any one real person but is rather a composite character inspired by various women in the singer’s life.

“I kind of just approached her like any fictitious character,” Young explained of Faye during an exclusive interview with RadioTimes.com. “There were some references in Deliver Me from Nowhere – in Warren Zanes’s book – and there were some references in Bruce’s memoir to people that he dated, or women that he knew – no one specific but just like little mentions.

“So I kind of mined that for some information, and also just Scott’s script. You know, Scott had a vision of Faye, and that was very real on the page. So I got really lucky that I just got a good script and a well-written character.”

Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere is now showing in UK cinemas.

Check out more of our Film coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere Review: A Curveball Music Biopic
Music

Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere Review: A Curveball Music Biopic

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

After giving us the image of Bruce excitedly flipping through microfiche articles about Starkweather at the library, the film settles in as White patiently begins to put the song “Nebraska” together. Much is made throughout the movie about the pitch-black nature of the songs Springsteen was recording; at one point, Landau—who went from writing about Springsteen to managing him—tells his wife that the songs sound like they’ve been made by a guilty man. The scene from Badlands hangs over the songwriting like a dark cloud; Spacek’s bedroom in the scene looks quite a bit like the bedroom in which the young Springsteen hides from his own angry father.

His father, Dutch Springsteen, isn’t portrayed as the lightly comical foil of the dad in the “Growin’ Up” tape. In flashback scenes shot in black and white, Stephen Graham does a lot of sitting at the kitchen table smoking, a lot of sitting on a barstool smoking, and a lot of yelling at his family. At one point, he drunkenly forces Bruce into sparring practice in the middle of the night.

But the relationship between Bruce and his father is the film’s true dramatic crux, far more so than his romance with the invented Faye Romano, who exists primarily as a mirror for Springsteen’s many issues. Rather than reduce the father-son relationship to fodder for Nebraska’s songs or overall mood, Cooper positions it as the primary issue of Springsteen’s life at the time and the source of a depression that grows more and more crippling as the film unfolds. White is at his best when he gives himself over to psychic pain.

While some of Nebraska is drawn from Springsteen’s personal life, most of the album is populated by nervous criminals, broken-down factory workers, fatalists, and racket boys. “Mansion on the Hill” carries a whiff of the Hank Williams classic of the same name, but where the country standard uses the titular image as a symbol of a woman who was “alone with her pride” after rejecting the singer, Springsteen eyes the mansion like it’s Jay Gatsby’s house across the water, a promise of abundance that’s held out but never delivered. Despite his claim that he had “no conscious political agenda or social theme” while making the record, it’s impossible not to also hear it as a critique of the “city on a hill,” the avatar of American exceptionalism first coined by John Winthrop in 1630 and repeated ad nauseam by Ronald Reagan.

October 24, 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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