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Butthole Surfers, August 1996: (L-R) Guitarist Paul Leary, drummer King Coffey, and lead vocalist/keyboards Gibby Haynes of the American rock band the Butthole Surfers in New York, New York. (Credit: Bob Berg/Getty Images)
Music

New Butthole Surfers Documentary Cements the Psych-Punk Heroes’ Experimental Legacy

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Butthole Surfers: The Hole Truth and Nothing Butt, Tom Stern’s bio-doc chronicling the chaotic yet culturally significant career of San Antonio, Texas’ Butthole Surfers, was much-lauded at South By Southwest earlier this year for its revelatory examination of the band—which lives up to its title with a humorous, heartfelt, and unflinchingly honest approach. It’s also a rollicking look at one of the most brilliant, experimental, and misunderstood collectives in music history. 

The documentary made its West Coast debut September 23, kicking off Beyond Fest—the popular alternative genre movie series hosted by Neon and the American Cinemateque inside Hollywood’s Egyptian Theatre. 

Friends, famous fans, and a multitude of bassists and drummers throughout Butthole Surfers’ trajectory are interviewed, but the spotlight is mostly on its founders, vocalist Gibby Haynes and guitarist Paul Leary. Their relationship started off as a creatively charged stoner bromance and ended up distanced, if not estranged, with both men recalling certain parts of their journey differently. 

Lol Tolhurst and Robert Smith of the Cure in 1983. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns)

Gibby Haynes poses at Sneekwave in Sneek, the Netherlands on August 9, 1987. (Credit: Frans Schellekens/Redferns)

Of course, that’s mostly due to drug use. The band members were known not just for drinking and toking themselves silly while touring across the country in their early years, but for dropping LSD and mushrooms right before live performances, which made their sets unpredictable and often volatile. 

These noisy freakouts became the stuff of underground legend, but their ground-breaking album releases on labels like Alternative Tentacles, Touch and Go, and Rough Trade in the ’80s, and later Capitol Records (where they scored a mainstream hit, “Pepper,” off of Electriclarryland in ’96) influenced the musical landscape for years to come.  

The band has been due a proper cinematic biography and this one delivers in a fittingly frenetic way, highlighting both the madness of the past and reflective regrets of today. 

After the Hollywood screening, Talking Heads’ Jerry Harrison conducted a Q&A, but it was clear that the band didn’t want to talk too much about the film, with Haynes going off on tangents about Tex Mex food and jokingly calling music docs in general “bullshit.” About three questions were asked and answered (sort of) when Haynes gestured toward a set-up behind them. Then Butthole Surfers played a surprise mini-set of three songs including “Cherub,” “1401,” and “The Shah Sleeps in Lee Harvey’s Grave.” 

(L-R) Gibby Haynes, Teresa Nervosa, and King Coffey perform at the 7th St. Entry in Minneapolis, Minnesota on November 24, 1985. (Credit: Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

SPIN messaged the filmmaker afterward to ask about the challenges of documenting such a tempestuous crew. “A big advantage I had is that I knew from the outset I would just keep shooting until I thought I had enough no matter how many years that took,” Stern says. “Production line-style documentaries like the ones you see on Netflix have a limited timeframe to shoot in, so they either get the goods or they don’t on the first couple tries, but I interviewed Gibby at least 20 times over five years and ultimately got the emotional vulnerability I was hoping for. He’s such a complicated guy and I felt the audience would want to understand him on a deeper level than what you see in the typical rock doc.” 

With hilarious puppet reenactments, wacky animation, awkward but illuminating edits, and outrageous archival footage, including the band’s infamous 1986 NYC Danceteria club show (which featured simulated sex on stage), The Hole Truth may not be a typical rock doc, but it is a highly entertaining one. 

Everyone from Dave Grohl to Keith Morris share fond memories, recalling the rhythmic rituals of dueling drummers King Coffey and Teresa Taylor, Leary’s astounding psychedelic riffage, and Haynes arresting presence as he trampled the stage in a bloody dress or completely naked, with fire, strobe lights, and graphic medical films adding to the spectacle.

The doc has a massive roster of famous commentators, too. And while some of them question the band’s choices—both live and on record—all of them tout B.S.’s transcendence and talent. Eric Andre, Flea, Ian MacKaye, Steve Albini, Donita Sparks, Henry Rollins, Thurston Moore, Wayne Coyne, Ice-T, Al Jourgensen, Richard Linklater, John Paul Jones, and many more share their thoughts and recollections, but two appearances in particular stand out. 

Gibby Haynes and Paul Leary, September 23, 2025. (Credit: Hadley Gustafson)

Johnny Depp (who befriended Haynes during the “Hollywood years” as it’s referred to in the doc) marks a low point, when the pair dabbled with heroin. He speaks somberly of the era, when he and Haynes formed a supergroup with the Red Hot Chili Pepper’s Flea and John Frusciante called P., which headlined Depp’s Sunset Strip club The Viper Room the night River Phoenix died there. 

He’s followed up with Thelonious Monster’s Bob Forrest, now an addiction recovery advocate, reflecting on Haynes’ guilt over Phoenix’s passing and bad advice he gave Kurt Cobain before his death. Forrest also helps the frontman revisit suppressed memories of childhood sexual abuse, which may have led to his self-destructive tendencies. 

Then we learn that Taylor, one of the most charismatic characters in the movie (she also starred in and became the poster girl for Linklater’s Gen-X classic Slackers after she left the band) was dying of lung disease and perished before it was completed, as did Coffey’s husband, who battled brain disease. Both figures are important reminders that the Surfers’ brought queer representation to the punk community (in Texas no less) before it was actually accepted. Their personal struggles are heart-wrenching and make for a pretty heavy last act. 

But ultimately, The Hole Truth takes fans on a wild ride filled with lots of laughs, vivid visuals, and thoughtful perspectives. It’s an amalgamation that captures the irreverent spirit and visionary madness of the group itself. 

“My goal was to cement a place in music history for this amazing band because they deserve it,” Stern shares. “They were singular artists, each one an amazing character, and they evoked such strong, emotional responses from audiences, including, obviously, me.”

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Cardi B Sends Shots Young Thug "On The News" Guest Verse
Music

Cardi B Sends Shots Young Thug “On The News” Guest Verse

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Young Thug‘s highly anticipated UY SCUTI album has finally made landfall, and its feature verses are also making headlines. The 20-track body of work boasts appearances from names like Travis Scott, Mariah The Scientist, T.I., Ken Carson, Sexyy Red, Lil Baby, 21 Savage, and more, including a scathing verse from Cardi B on “On The News.”

Although her assist begins with general shots towards her counterparts, the disses get more specific as the bars go on. She pokes fun a someone’s man being too broke to afford a vacation and also make allegations of domestic abuse: “How you knowin’ when you got these b**ches laughin’?/ But how the f**k you laughin’ when I heard you gettin’ beat on?/ Gotta pay a n**ga way every trip y’all be on (Hah). I’m like, nah, that couldn’t be I/ That couldn’t be me, no, that couldn’t be C.” Listen below.

Many listeners automatically ran to the conclusion that Cardi was speaking about Nicki Minaj, her rap nemesis in recent years. The Barbz quickly worked to shut that notion down, but the debate raged on between the two fanbases.

UY SCUTI and its release date was a hot topic among Thugger fans over the last few months, as this marked the first full project since his release from jail on Oct. 31, 2024. Prior to that was BUSINESS IS BUSINESS, which dropped in 2023 while the YSL rapper was still behind bars facing his RICO case. Last week, the “Bad Bad Bad” rapper abruptly announced he was pushing back his original release date of Sept. 19, 2025, specifically to clear the way for Cardi B to have her moment to shine on that day with AM I THE DRAMA?.

The soon to be mother of four has been busy promoting her sophomore album, announcing a tour and hosting a string of meet and greets across the country. She even dropped a deluxe version today, which features a remix from Latto. Listen to the upgraded LP below and check out the chaos that ensued at Cardi’s meet and greets here.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Yasmin Williams Says Organized Republican Group Heckled Her at Kennedy Center
Music

Yasmin Williams Says Organized Republican Group Heckled Her at Kennedy Center

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Last week, on September 18, Yasmin Williams performed at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. Despite having previously had a heated email exchange with Kennedy Center president Richard Grenell, Williams said that she felt it was important to play “the show for all the Kennedy Center staff who formed their own union and are still working there, fighting to maintain the institution’s integrity.”

During the concert, which took place at the Washington, D.C., center’s Millennium Stage, Williams was heckled by an organized group of Log Cabin Republicans, she said online. “During my Kennedy Center show on Thursday night, a group of Tr*mp supporters boo’d me when I mentioned Ric Grenell and seemed to be there to intimidate me,” Williams wrote on social media. She also shared screenshots of an apparent email sent out by Andrew Minik, the president of the group’s Washington, D.C., chapter, imploring members to “make sure the audience is filled with patriots!”

During her show, which is available to watch in full below, Williams reiterated her support for Kennedy Center staff and criticized the organization’s board of trustees, a group that was put together by President Donald J. Trump after he made himself the center’s new chairman.

“I do not support the new board at all; I don’t support anyone affiliated with them; I don’t support anyone affiliated with the Trump administration at all—especially you, Ric Grenell,” Williams said. “I am not a fan of yours at all.” Applause and boos can be heard in the video, too.

After the show, Williams wrote on social media that her “safety was threatened” and that security “escorted [her] to [her] car to keep [her] safe.” She also told Washingtonian about the apparent hecklers. “They booed and heckled me,” she said. “They tried to derail my concert, but fortunately they were outnumbered.”

In an email to The Washington Post, Kennedy Center spokesperson Roma Daravi disputed Williams’ claims about the organized efforts to disrupt her performance. “This is an absolutely ridiculous claim,” Daravi wrote. “There was no coordinated effort by the Kennedy Center. Grenell had no involvement. We did not even know they were coming.”

Daravi also claimed that Log Cabin Republican members “did not heckle and frankly it is defamation of character for her [Yasmin Williams] to say that—she however bashed Grenell and the Center from the Kennedy Center stage. Republicans are patrons too and they are welcome at the Kennedy Center just like anyone else.”

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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"Don’t wait for the world to give you the green light to do what is inside you"
Music

Don’t wait for the world to give you the green light to do what is inside you

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Wolf Alice drummer Joel Amey has spoken to NME about the band being ambassadors for this year’s National Album Day, being the most nominated act for the Mercury Prize ever, the power of the format and the importance of expression in these fractured times.

The band, fresh from becoming the most-nominated band for the Mercury Prize ever after being shortlisted for their recent fourth LP ‘The Clearing’, were asked along with Nova Twins, Architects and Iron Maiden to be ambassadors for National Album Day 2025 – with this year focussing on rock music.

“We’re never shy of the fact that we love albums,” Amey told NME of their role. “I don’t know if it’s a generational thing but I remember going out and buying them, and there’s a romance about the importance of them. I also live with the great privilege that I can go into the studio for a few months and make one. I love that and feel very lucky.

“I’ve got nothing against the ‘singles’ culture and mixtapes are so important, but records mean a lot to me, that’s why I’m selfishly thinking they’re very important. They’re snapshots of where your artist’s head is at. It’s a moment of time. In an age when music is being treated as so disposable by corporations that shall not be named, it’s still important to put albums at the forefront because they’re your lifeblood and your connection to your audience. They’re what make you real.”

He added: “We’re lucky to be able to get up on stage, but we only got there because of our albums.”

Wolf Alice. CREDIT: Press

National Album Day returns on Friday October 18, with events to celebrate the format alongside vinyl re-releases of classic records by the likes of Liam Gallagher, Iggy Pop, Manic Street Preachers, Patti Smith, Hole and many more.

Check out the rest of our interview with Amey below, where he told us about why the album still matters as a body of work, the importance of speaking out and making your voice heard, as well as advice for young artists, and his own favourite new and all-time records.

NME: Hello Joel. You recently received your fourth Mercury Prize nomination – making you the most shortlisted artist ever, as well as having won it already. How does that feel?

Joey Amey: “That’s what someone told me the other day. I was like, ‘That can’t be right? What about Arctic Monkeys?’ I Googled it, and apparently we are. That’s cool! I didn’t realise it. The Mercury Prize has a history with it, and it’s still hard to believe we won it [in 2018 for ‘Visions Of A Life’]. It puts the spotlight on a lot of different genres and some underground stuff alongside the mainstream. It’s cool to see all of that presented together.”

What do you make of your chances of winning this year?

“I reckon I’d put £500 on CMAT. I love that album [‘Euro-Country’]. I think she’s awesome. When I listened to that album, it just really connected to me. Ellie [Rowsell, singer] was telling me about the title track, and it’s such a brilliant song. The way she approaches sonics on that record is so fucking brilliant. I wouldn’t be putting money on us.”

What would you spend the prize money on if you won again?

“We still haven’t spent the last lot! We have plans on what to do with it and what it should be invested in. We want to make sure that we don’t spend it frivolously. Can it help somebody else make an album? It would be nice. If we won again, not that we should, it would be great to put it with the last lot and use it to help people that maybe aren’t at that stage of their career but could be.”

It’s hard to keep people’s attention in playlist culture. How do you respond to that? How do you break through the noise?

“I’m part of playlist culture; I’ve discovered some of my favourite new albums from playlists. It’s really hard. It’s a push and pull. We’ve just got to keep supporting new artists and outlets for them to express themselves and create a career. There will be a certain song that becomes massive because it was playlisted in a certain way, but making an album is how you evolve as a writer, a lyricist, a poet, a drummer, whatever. It’s so important to culture and the evolution of the artists we have today.”

A good album is a world you can jump into. How would you describe the world of ‘The Clearing’? Did that reveal itself as you were making it?

“We had more conversations about it than we’d ever done before. It felt like an experiment to me because we chose to write differently to how we’d done in the past. Our previous records are all quite different, but it’s quite ‘Wolf Alice’ to go away, everyone writes, then we pull together what we think is exciting. That has really benefitted the band before. But with your fourth album, you ask, ‘What’s going to be exciting for us?’ It was this idea of making a cohesive body of work where the songs come together more coherently than before. That was a challenge for us. It really made us focus on our songwriting and every single chord change. ‘Do we need to stack 85 guitar tracks to get the same point and emotion across? Joff [Oddie] is an incredible guitar player, why don’t we just challenge him to do that?’

“We wanted all the parts to be chosen and more bespoke to the song. It was about honing in on what was important. It was a really fun thing, but we evolved out of our limitations. ‘The Clearing’ is our most experimental album in that sense, because we’ve never made one like it.”

Wolf Alice live at Glastonbury 2025, photo by Andy Ford
Wolf Alice live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Andy Ford for NME

As you said, albums are a capsule of a time and a very important mode of expression. That becomes a more important vehicle when the world is on fire. Wolf Alice have been vocal supporters of Palestine and said that doing so should allow others to feel less afraid and alone. Do you feel like the backlash is lessening through so much artist solidarity, and that the focus is shifting from the culture war to the atrocities themselves?

“I don’t know, because I’ve seen certain people use their platform and gone to see what kind of response they’ve had, and it can be volatile and violent. There are artists who screenshot DMs they’ve received just for speaking out. I don’t know. I just know that I’ve learned a lot from seeing people use their platform. It doesn’t mean that you have to agree exactly with what they say, but it’s about having a conversation. That conversation matters. We need to remind ourselves that it’s OK to have a conversation with someone with different opinions to yours. It’s OK to use your platform if you feel comfortable to do that and you see a moral cause. You learn that privilege as an artist.

“I applaud anyone who’s using their platform in today’s day and age to try and get a resolution to what people are experiencing.”

Wolf Alice have also been staunch in fighting for artist rights and the grassroots. Do you feel as if some good may come about now that the industry seems more open to that conversation?

“It will only get better with action. Everything seems to fall on the responsibility of the artist sometimes, which can be quite overwhelming. It’s got to pan out on so many different levels: from labels to government to music being taught in schools more, so people can find a love and respect for it. We’re gonna do our bit, I hope more people do theirs, and that’s where the hope comes from.”

What advice would you give to a young artist who might think that ever making an album is a pipe dream?

“You can make an album, fine! Don’t wait for the world to give you the thumbs up to be creative. Don’t wait for the world to give you the green light to do what is inside you. I applaud anyone who has time to make something any way they can. What is a conventional method these days? They’ve all been completely chewed up and spat out and rightly so. Good art always finds a way. Just have fun with it. Make a band with your friend. Make art on your own. There’s no right or wrong way to do it. I used to sit in my teenage bedroom and dream about what I’m doing now.”

Is there an album that gets played on the Wolf Alice tour bus without any skips or arguments?

“My favourite record that’s just come out is that new Die Spitz album [‘Something To Consume’]. I think they fucking rock. ‘Throw Yourself To The Sword’ is my favourite song at the moment. We’re also touring with a songwriter called Willy Mason who we’ve all been fans of forever and ever. We just reached out to him and he agreed to do it. That made me rediscover his record from 2007, ‘If The Ocean Gets Rough’. Everyone in the band listens to that record. There’s a track called ‘Save Myself’ and it’s incredibly poignant. People should go listen to that.”

What three albums would you take to a desert island?

“Oh shit. I’m gonna take ‘Surf’s Up’ by The Beach Boys, the first self-titled album by The Bronx, and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young’s ‘Déjà Vu’.”

National Album Day 2025 is on Friday October 18. Visit here for more information. 

‘The Clearing’ by Wolf Alice is out now, with the band currently on tour in North America before returning to the UK and Europe for an arena run in the winter and Australia and New Zealand in the new year. 

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Rose Covers Lana Del Rey, Paul Simon on 'The Howard Stern Show'
Music

Rose Covers Lana Del Rey, Paul Simon on ‘The Howard Stern Show’

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

The singer pulled from Lana Del Rey’s “Norman Fucking Rockwell” and Paul Simon’s “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover” to create the bluesy “50 Ways to Leave Your Norman”

Rosé stopped by the Howard Stern Show for a solo showcase. The Blackpink singer brought her own hit single, the Bruno Mars-assisted “APT.,” but also whipped up a fusion of two songs from two distinct artists. In a medley performance, Rosé pulled from Lana Del Rey‘s “Norman Fucking Rockwell” and Paul Simon‘s “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover” to create the bluesy cover record “50 Ways to Leave Your Norman.”

The two songs share a loose narrative thread. Rosé started off singing about a pretentious poet in her less explicit version of “Norman Fucking Rockwell,” crooning, “You talk to the walls when the party gets bored of you/But I don’t get bored, I just see it through/Why wait for the best when I could have you?” As she transitioned into “50 Ways to Leave Your Lover,” a sudden realization comes to light thanks to some much needed advice.

“You just slip out the back, Jack/Make a new plan, Stan/You don’t need to be coy, Roy/Just get yourself free,” Rosé sang with an edge of funk from her band in the studio. “Hop on the bus, Gus/You don’t need to discuss much/Just drop off the key, Lee/And get yourself free.”

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While on the show, Rosé also shared the original demo for “APT.” before Bruno Mars contributed his feature. In the original verses, she encouraged a similar exit strategy, only with different motives. “We’ve been talking seven days a week/But you can’t hold my body through a screen/So you should leave your friends back at the bar,” she sang on the recording. “The night is still young, I got what you need/You can go and call yourself a car/Don’t tell anyone that you gon’ meet me at the…”

“APT.” appeared on Rosé’s debut solo album Rosie, which arrived in December. This weekend, she’ll perform the record at Global Citizen Festival in New York City.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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AI Music Detection Tech Company Partners With UMG and Sony
Music

AI Music Detection Tech Company Partners With UMG and Sony

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

SoundPatrol has entered a partnership with Universal Music Group and Sony Music to protect artists from copyright infringement coming from AI music models.

According to a press release, SoundPatrol specializes in using a “forensic AI model for audio-video fingerprinting.” Through neural fingerprinting, SoundPatrol claims it can analyze fully (or partially) AI generated songs to identify influences and traces of human-made music.

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For the music industry, finding out ways to fingerprint, track and attribute traces of copyrighted material in AI songs is the key to properly compensating and crediting talent for their work when it’s used to influence AI models. In recent months, AI companies like Udio and Music AI have proactively announced partnerships with Audible Magic to help fingerprint their works.

But UMG and Sony’s approval of SoundPatrol’s “neural fingerprinting” approach represents a major co-sign for this type of technology, which SoundPatrol claims is “a significant advancement beyond traditional audio fingerprinting techniques”

“Traditional audio fingerprinting… primarily rel[ies] on matching exact audio snippets. Neural embeddings capture semantic relationships to identify covers, remixes and generative-AI derivatives,” the press release states. SoundPatrol also has future plans to develop tools and models that will “proactively help third-party platforms and research labs prevent copyright violations,” the press release reads.

SoundPatrol is a company that originated in a Stanford University lab and was founded by top AI, machine learning and cybersecurity academics. This includes Walter De Brouwer Ph. D., SoundPatrol’s co-founder and CEO, and Percy Liang Ph. D. (director of the Center for Foundation Models and leading Stanford’s Marin, the Open Lab for Building Foundation Models), Chris Re, Ph. D. (Stanford AI Lab, Director of FactoryHQ), and Dan Boneh, Ph. D. (Director of the Applied Cryptography Lab and Co Director of the Cybersecurity Lab).

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Xania Monet

Lucian Grainge, UMG’s chairman and CEO, says of the deal: “We’re constantly focused on enabling AI — bringing to market the many commercial and creative opportunities that will benefit our artists while establishing effective tools to protect them. Bringing solutions to the table that support the entire industry is at the heart of our relationship with SoundPatrol, who share our commitment to safeguarding our artists’ creative integrity and work.”

“The possibilities of AI present opportunities for artists and creators when used the right way,” says Dennis Kooker, president of global digital business at Sony Music. “We’re committed to navigating this developing landscape by protecting their work while also exploring the innovative potential of these technologies. Our collaboration with SoundPatrol is about respecting artists’ rights to build a sustainable and equitable ecosystem for everyone.”

“Generative AI is transforming music in extraordinary ways, but if we abandon copyright, we risk severing artists from ownership of their own work,” says Walter De Brouwer, SoundPatrol co-founder and CEO. “It is compulsory to proactively feed deep embeddings of these neural signatures into streaming infrastructures so that owners can maintain control, authenticity, and monetization of their intellectual property in the generative AI era. Eliminating copyright to accelerate AI is like changing the speed of light to advance physics — it misunderstands the fundamental laws that sustain creativity.”

Michael Ovitz, SoundPatrol co-founder and chairman of the board, adds: “This is a huge victory for all artists in the creative universe.” He continued: “One of the premier issues affecting artists has always been the protection of their intellectual property rights. SoundPatrol has answered the long-standing problem of IP theft by creating a frontier lab with neural fingerprinting capabilities that can identify all pipelines of directly transmitted content, whether on its own or intermixed, in real time. This is the first of-its-kind technology implemented to protect all copyright holders and creators of any type of intellectual property.”


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September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Wife of Weezer Bassist Avoids Jail Time After Shooting at LAPD Officers
Music

Wife of Weezer Bassist Avoids Jail Time After Shooting at LAPD Officers

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

A judge has granted a mental health diversion to Jillian Lauren, wife of Weezer bassist Scott Shriner, allowing her to avoid jail time after she fired a gun at LAPD officers.

Lauren was charged with attempted murder after allegedly firing a gun at police who were pursuing three suspects in a hit-and-run chase in April 2025. Although she was not connected to the incident, she opened fire on officers when they entered her property during the manhunt. Body camera footage captured officers repeatedly ordering Lauren to drop her weapon; when she racked her gun, they returned fire and wounded her.

According to the Los Angeles Times, L.A. County Superior Court Judge Susan J. DeWitt granted Lauren’s mental health diversion under the condition that she must not own firearms, avoid the use of drugs and alcohol, and attend therapy. If she successfully complies with the terms for two years, the charges against her will be dismissed.

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Lauren and Shriner have been married since 2005 and have two adopted sons together. She has penned two New York Times best-selling books, including Some Girls: My Life in a Harem, an autobiographical account of her experiences as a former call girl for the Prince of Brunei.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Bitchin Bajas Switch on and Bitch Out
Music

Bitchin Bajas Switch on and Bitch Out

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

The list of “bitchin’” things in music is select: Camaros, summers, pretty lives. Meditative, drone-filled music built on synths, drum machines, and woodwinds usually does not fit the bill. Yet the Chicago trio Bitchin Bajas (possibly named after the late, lamented Subaru coupé utility vehicle) makes a strong case for the bitchin-ness of their aggressively subdued sound. Cooper Crain, Rob Frye, and Dan Quinlivan may not shred, but they can carve, shaping layers, loops, and live instruments into dazzling, dizzying constructions. 

Inland See, the Bajas’ ninth album not counting some collaborations and a soundtrack, continues the band’s heavy-duty minimalism, with closing track “Graut” clocking in at over 18 minutes while barely breaking a low boil. But immersive, deep-focus grooves have always been just one part of the Baja arsenal. Switched On Ra from 2021, a sleek tribute to avant-garde pianist Sun Ra, made the group’s ties to jazz explicit, while 2022’s Bajascillators contoured and condensed their spacious abstractions into tight, descriptive shapes. Inland See, with its suggestively meditative title, continues this process of elaborations by winnowing down. “Graut” may be long, but it uses its time efficiently, shifting from airy synth chords, fluttery flute, and glassy glissandos to a bright, beat-driven workout that has the sprightly pulse of classic kosmische (its name is a pun on “kraut” and the substance that glues tile together) bands like Neu! The floaty, slow section lasts under four minutes but stretches out with delicious languor, while the percussive, poppy portion whizzes by in three times that duration. 

Opening track “Skylarking” might be the most accomplished Bajas track yet, with a slow, violinlike opening giving way to a snappy rhythmic pulse, a nodding bass line, a goofy repeated synth motif that almost sounds like computerized vocals, and several layers of overlapping melodies, including an impressively moody sax line. It’s an exquisitely mixed array of colorful textures that weave together while also remaining separate from each other, secure in their own zones but prone to promiscuity. Bitchin Bajas songs often invite or evoke trancelike states conducive to deep inner contemplation; “Skylarking,” its name suggestive of playful tomfoolery, an old Hoagy Carmichael torch song, and a bird in flight (it’s also possible the Bajas are referencing another defunct car, this one by Buick), directs its gaze outward and upward. 

“Reno” continues that brightness, building off a steady rhythm with a hiccup on the final beat that began in “Skylark.” It starts with clean, almost acoustic-sounding keys that lay down quietly deliberate chords that gradually bloom into a stubborn, tender melody. The band recorded these songs in the same room, which gives them a directness that should be at odds with the Bajas’ drifty aesthetic. Instead, they found a new kind of immediacy. Even the most charmingly lugubrious track on the album, “Keiji Dreams,” moves with a warped strut, recalling the silicon verve of Vangelis, but woozier. Bitchin Bajas may not rock the party, but they’ve found a way to make the chillout tent the hottest place to be.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Serena Williams On The Runway In Gucci At Milan Fashion Week: Photos
Music

Serena Williams On The Runway In Gucci At Milan Fashion Week: Photos

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Serena Williams made a striking impression at Milan Fashion Week, turning heads at Gucci’s Spring/Summer 2026 show held at the historic Palazzo Mezzanotte.

The tennis legend and fashion icon arrived in a dramatic semi-sheer black gown, complete with feather trim embellishing the neckline, sleeves, and hem—an ensemble that effortlessly blended elegance with bold flair.

The event not only featured Gucci’s latest runway looks but also premiered The Tiger, a short film co-directed by Spike Jonze and Halina Reijn, underscoring the fusion of fashion and cinematic artistry.

Williams later took to Instagram to share a carousel of images from the evening, captioning the post with her signature wit: “Only playing the cards I was dealt. @gucci.”

A regular front-row fixture, Serena joined fellow A-listers Gwyneth Paltrow, Lila Moss, Alia Bhatt, and BTS’ Jin at the show.

Her deep-rooted ties to fashion include launching her own clothing line, Serena, in 2018, walking for Balmain in 2022, and making history in 2023 as the first athlete to receive the CFDA Fashion Icon Award.

From opening the Vogue World show in NYC in 2024 to attending Paris Fashion Week’s top labels, Williams continues to redefine what it means to be both a champion and a fashion trailblazer.

VIBE gathered a collection of Serena Williams’ finest looks from Gucci’s Spring/Summer 2026 show.

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Red Carpet – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Daniele Venturelli/Getty Images for Gucci

    Luca de Meo and Serena Williams attend the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 event during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Red Carpet – Milan Fashion Week

    Luca de Meo, Serena Williams and François-Henri Pinault attend the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 event during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy.

  • Gucci – Front Row – Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Saira MacLeod/WWD via Getty Images

    Serena Williams at the Gucci fashion show as part of Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week held at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci – Front Row – Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Saira MacLeod/WWD via Getty Images

    Serena Williams at the Gucci fashion show as part of Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week held at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci – Front Row – Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Saira MacLeod/WWD via Getty Images

    Serena Williams at the Gucci fashion show as part of Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week held at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci – Front Row – Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Saira MacLeod/WWD via Getty Images

    Serena Williams at the Gucci fashion show as part of Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week held at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci – Front Row – Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Saira MacLeod/WWD via Getty Images

    Serena Williams at the Gucci fashion show as part of Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week held at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci – Front Row – Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Saira MacLeod/WWD via Getty Images

    Serena Williams at the Gucci fashion show as part of Spring/Summer 2026 Milan Fashion Week held at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Front Row – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Victor Boyko/Getty Images for Gucci

    Anna Wintour and Serena Williams attend the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 event during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Front Row – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Victor Boyko/Getty Images for Gucci

    Luca de Meo, Serena Williams and François-Henri Pinault attend the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 event during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Red Carpet – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images for Gucci

    Serena Williams attends the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 red carpet during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy.

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Red Carpet – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images for Gucci

    Serena Williams attends the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 red carpet during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy.

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Front Row – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Victor Boyko/Getty Images for Gucci

    Serena Williams attends the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 event during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy.

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Front Row – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Victor Boyko/Getty Images for Gucci

    Serena Williams attends the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 event during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy. 

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Front Row – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Victor Boyko/Getty Images for Gucci

    Serena Williams attends the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 event during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy.

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Front Row – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Victor Boyko/Getty Images for Gucci

    Serena Williams attends the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 event during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy.

  • Gucci Spring Summer 2026 – Front Row – Milan Fashion Week

    Image Credit: Victor Boyko/Getty Images for Gucci

    Serena Williams attends the Gucci Spring Summer 2026 event during the Milan Fashion Week at Palazzo Mezzanotte on September 23, 2025 in Milan, Italy.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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Geese: Getting Killed Album Review
Music

Geese: Getting Killed Album Review

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Desperation looks good on Geese. In the past four years, the New York band has demonstrated an ability to rock out and sprawl out with the best of them, but it took until vocalist Cameron Winter’s understated solo album, Heavy Metal, for the emotional core to surface. Part of this breakthrough can be attributed to Winter’s voice: a slurred, straining warble whose cryptic delivery can feel like both sides of an argument you’re overhearing through apartment walls. He gets your attention in jarring ways, then turns around and breaks your heart. No artist has muttered the phrase “fuck these people” so meaningfully in a piano ballad.

As evidenced by this moment, occurring just under a minute into his tender 2024 solo single “$0,” Geese can give the impression of an ambitious band skeptical of its own ambition, fitting for a group formed when its members were in high school. Like a lot of precocious young people, they seem energized by the possibility of an audience recognizing their potential before they do, a tension they have used to subvert their more crowd-pleasing turns. This is how “Cowboy Nudes,” a highlight from 2023’s 3D Country, winds up with a soulful chorus that could have landed on any generation’s FM rock radio alongside a series of exclamations that might be edited out by any generation’s record executives.

With the surprise success of Heavy Metal, a less imaginative band might choose to follow some of this industry wisdom, taming their eccentricities and building on the classic songcraft and heart-wrenching lyrics that made their singer a star. Thankfully, Geese are not this type of band. Their third album, Getting Killed, is their strangest and strongest work. This is anxious, fragmented music as liable to erupt in a paranoid shriek as a bald declaration of love. The first chorus on the record is a gravelly, haywire scream: “THERE’S A BOMB IN MY CAR.” The second makes a meal out of the two most eternal words in pop music: “baby” and “forever,” each delivered with the swagger of a karaoke singer pretending not to notice his crush has entered the room.

Working with producer Kenneth Blume (the hip-hop luminary formerly known as Kenny Beats), the quartet explores a clattering, groove-based sound, denying the structures of traditional rock music while following the same volleys of tension and release. Where their music once felt clouded by a history of hip NYC forebears, they now cast their future wide open. It’s a style that favors cyclical repetition over crafted hooks, ecstatic bursts of melody that inspire some of Winter’s most commanding writing. In an ominously funky track called “100 Horses,” he assumes the perspective of a general during wartime: “All people must die scared or else die nervous,” he announces. In the context of the song, the news is delivered as something of a comfort; in the context of the record, it’s one of the more obvious choices for a single.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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