Bruce Springsteen Has Stunned Fans With A Shocking Reveal — After Decades Of Rumors, The Long-Whispered “Electric Nebraska” Sessions Will Finally See The Light Of Day In A Massive Box Set, Complete With Never-Before-Heard Outtakes, Lost Songs, And Even A Fierce Full-Band Version Of “Born In The U.S.A.” That He Once Claimed Didn’t Exist. “I Found Magic Buried In Those Songs,” Bruce Confessed, His Voice Heavy With Emotion As He Admitted The Vault-Protected Tracks Had Even Moved Him To Tears While Performing Them Live Again. With A Biopic Hitting Theaters The Same Week, The Boss Has Turned One Of Rock’s Greatest Mysteries Into Its Most Explosive Comeback…..
Bruce Springsteen to Release ‘Electric Nebraska’ — and More — in Surprise Box Set

Bruce Springsteen’s new ‘Nebraska’ box set will include outtakes and a live performance. Sergione Infuso/Corbis via Getty Images
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission.
Bruce Springsteen originally intended the home-recorded, solo-acoustic performances that became Nebraska to be demos for the E Street Band, and at New York City’s Power Station studio in 1982, he and the band laid down versions of most of its songs. The so-called Electric Nebraska tracks have never been heard, even on bootleg — but Springsteen is about to change that with a new box set, Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition, due Oct. 17, a week before the Springsteen biopic Deliver Me From Nowhere hits theaters.
The Electric Nebraska disc includes six E Street Band takes on the album’s material, plus a wild card — a fierce, guitar-dominated electric version of “Born in the U.S.A.,” a song originally recorded acoustically as part of the Nebraska sessions. That track, which features Springsteen playing with only drummer Max Weinberg and bassist Garry Tallent, is available for streaming now. “We threw out the keyboards and played basically as a three-piece,” Springsteen said in a press release. “It was kinda like punk rockabilly. We were trying to bring ‘Nebraska’ into the electric world.”
Over four discs and a Blu-ray, the set, available to preorder now, also includes acoustic outtakes (among them “Child Bride,” which became “Working on the Highway”), and audio and video of a brand-new solo live performance of all of Nebraska, recorded at Red Bank, New Jersey’s Count Basie Theater. The set also includes a new remaster of Nebraska itself. Also among the outtakes are the never-bootlegged songs “Gun in Every Home” and “On the Prowl” — Springsteen did play the latter song live at Jersey Shore club appearances circa ’82.
In a press release, Springsteen said his live performance of the album reminded him of its power. “I think in playing these songs again to be filmed, their weight impressed upon me,” he said. “I’ve written a lot of other narrative records, but there’s just something about that batch of songs on ‘Nebraska’ that holds some sort of magic.”
Even the E Street Band themselves were anxious to hear their full-band takes on Nebraska. “I’m dying to hear the recordings from the studio,” keyboardist Roy Bittan told our Rolling Stone Music Now podcast last year. “It’s eluded us. Maybe, Bruce, at some point, will get into that.”
“I remember recording all of that [Nebraska] material, and it was very much in the E Street Band style and very similar to what we do now when we play those songs, and it was great,” Weinberg told the pod last year. “Jon Landau, during the writing, suggested that I listen to John Wesley Harding, the Bob Dylan record. And he said, Bruce seems to be going more in this kind of direction. And there were some takes like that, with brushes, just a bare minimum rhythmic approach. And there were also rock versions of [some of] the Nebraska material. ”
Earlier this year, Springsteen told Rolling Stone‘s Andy Greene in an interview that the Electric Nebraska sessions “didn’t exist,” but a month later, texted him with a correction: “Just wanted to give you a heads up. I checked our vault and there IS an electric Nebraska record, though it does not have the full album of songs.”
Oct. 24’s Deliver Me From Nowhere, starring Jeremy Allen White as Springsteen and Jeremy Strong as his manager Jon Landau, is a cinematic version of the Nebraska story. Springsteen “was drawing inspiration from all these places, but he didn’t really know what he was doing for a while with this record,” White recently told The Associated Press. “He didn’t know if it was going to be a record. As an actor, hopefully you’re doing that sort of thing all the time. That artistic curiosity is something I related to.
News
Bob Dylan and Joan Baez closed the show with one last run of Blowin’ In The Wind, their voices weaving together perfectly.
THIS IS HISTORY IN THE MAKING.”Bob Dylan and Joan Baez closed the show with one last run of Blowin’ In…
THIS IS HISTORY IN THE MAKING.
THIS IS HISTORY IN THE MAKING.”Bob Dylan and Joan Baez closed the show with one last run of Blowin’ In…
There’s something different about Christmas music when it comes from a place of real love — not just talent, not just tradition, but the kind of warmth that lives inside a family home.
There’s something different about Christmas music when it comes from a place of real love — not just talent, not…
At the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremony, a truly unforgettable moment unfolded when pop-punk icon Avril Lavigne
At the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame ceremony, a truly unforgettable moment unfolded when pop-punk icon Avril Lavigne…
Hollow Man” brings that punchy, unstoppable energy, while “Red, White & Jersey” hits deep with pride and nostalgia for anyone from the Garden State.
MUSIC LEGENDS UNITE!Bon Jovi and Bruce Springsteen are finally joining forces, and it’s electric. “Hollow Man” brings that punchy, unstoppable…
Tim Conway and Harvey Korman: “The Old Sheriff” — A Lesson in Laughter and Timing
Tim Conway and Harvey Korman: “The Old Sheriff” — A Lesson in Laughter and Timing Last night, we revisited one…
End of content
No more pages to load





