What business can learn from Bruce Springsteen's seminal album Nebraska
Every so often, a film comes along that reminds us that the essence of creativity whether in art or in business comes not from scale or noise, but from honesty and quiet reflection.
Released last month, Deliver Me from Nowhere - based on Warren Zanes’ remarkable book about the making of Bruce Springsteen’s 1982 album Nebraska - is one of those films. It captures the moment when one of the biggest rock stars in the world turned his back on fame, pressure and expectation, and instead went back to his roots to create one of the most remarkable works of his career.
By the early eighties, Springsteen had everything an artist could want. His fifth studio album The River had made him a global superstar and his iconic tours were sell-outs but he felt lost with the scale of his success drowning out his sense of purpose.
So he went home to New Jersey, picked up a simple four-track tape deck and recorded an album by himself in the bedroom of a rented house.
There was no band, no studio and no producer, just the hum of the tape, the strumming of his guitar and the sound of his voice. It was meant to be a set of demos for his next recording sessions at the Power Station studio in New York but instead it became Nebraska, one of the most influential albums of the 1980s.
As the film and the........





















Toi Staff
Gideon Levy
Tarik Cyril Amar
Stefano Lusa
Mort Laitner
Andrew Silow-Carroll
Sabine Sterk
Robert Sarner
Ellen Ginsberg Simon