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Addison Rae Stars in New Trailer for 'Monster: The Ed Gein Story'
Music

Addison Rae Stars in New Trailer for ‘Monster: The Ed Gein Story’

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Addison Rae is on her way to scream queen status. As showcased in a new trailer for Ryan Murphy’s upcoming Monster: The Ed Gein Story posted Tuesday (Sept. 16), the TikTok sensation is set to appear in her latest horror project, playing the victim of a brutal murder.

The latest installment of Murphy’s true-crime anthology series, as the title suggests, will focus on serial killer Ed Gein, who was suspected of killing women and robbing graves in the 1950s. Rae reportedly plays one of his alleged victims, teenager Evelyn Hartley, with the trailer showing a disturbing scene in which she is tied to a chair wearing nothing but her underwear while the titular character (portrayed by Charlie Hunnam) forcibly shoves her head downward.

At one point, the camera zooms in on Rae’s face, and she looks properly terrified as Hunnam lurches toward her.

Premiering Oct. 3, The Ed Gein Story will mark the third edition of Murphy’s Netflix show. Previous subjects have been Jeffrey Dahmer and Lyle and Erik Menendez.

Rae has previously tested out her horror acting chops by starring in Eli Roth’s 2021 slasher film Thanksgiving. Before that, she made her acting debut in 2021’s He’s All That.

The social media star has also been growing her music career this year, unleashing debut album Addison in June. The LP reached No. 4 on the Billboard 200. In an August Billboard cover story, Rae told senior writer Kristin Robinson about embracing new adventures, from music to acting. “I really just never give up and never quit, no matter what,” she said. “Really, what it comes back to is that I’m fearless — I’m not afraid of much. It doesn’t really take me much to try something new and go all in, and here, I went all in.”

Check out Rae in the trailer for The Ed Gein Story above.



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September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Phish Set 2025 New Year's Eve Shows at Madison Square Garden
Music

Phish Set 2025 New Year’s Eve Shows at Madison Square Garden

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Phish are once again set to close out the year at New York City’s Madison Square Garden, as Trey Anastasio and co. have announced their 2025 return to The World’s Most Famous Arena.

The four-night run, an annual tradition from Phish, is set for December 28th-31st, 2025. This year’s dates will bring the jam band’s total number of shows at The Garden to 91.

Get Phish Tickets Here

A ticket request period is ongoing at Phish’s website through Monday, September 22nd at noon ET. Tickets will then go on sale to the general public beginning Friday, September 26th at noon ET via Ticketmaster.

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Phish are currently wrapping up their late summer tour (get tickets here), with remaining multi-night stands in Alpharetta, Georgia, and Hampton, Virginia. In 2026, they will return to Cancún, Mexico, for their 9th annual Phish: Riviera Maya, taking place January 28th-31st.

For more on Phish, see where their 1997 “Phish Destroys America” tour landed on our list of the 100 best tours of all time.

Phish 2025-2026 Tour Dates:
09/16 – Alpharetta, GA @ Ameris Bank Amphitheatre
09/17 – Alpharetta, GA @ Ameris Bank Amphitheatre
09/19 – Hampton, VA @ Hampton Coliseum
09/20 – Hampton, VA @ Hampton Coliseum
09/21 – Hampton, VA @ Hampton Coliseum
12/28 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
12/29 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
12/30 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
12/31 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden
01/28 – Cancún, MX @ Moon Palace Cancun
01/29 – Cancún, MX @ Moon Palace Cancun
01/30 – Cancún, MX @ Moon Palace Cancun
01/31 – Cancún, MX @ Moon Palace Cancun

Note: If you’re planning a trip to New York City to see Phish, you can save 15% off travel and accommodations through Booking.com.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Kayla Nicole Revels In Frisky Onstage Moment With Chris Brown
Music

Kayla Nicole Revels In Frisky Onstage Moment With Chris Brown

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Kayla Nicole got her entire life this week as a guest on the Breezy Bowl stage, becoming Chris Brown‘s chosen paramour during his performance of crowd-favorite slow jam, “Take You Down.”

While Brown, 36, has invited plenty of women on-stage for the performance throughout the tour, Nicole’s appearance at his Los Angeles stop has become a hot topic, thanks in part to her past relationship with football star Travis Kelce, who is currently engaged to pop superstar Taylor Swift. Nicole was involved with Kelce from 2017 to 2022.

It also caught fans’ attention due to Nicole’s uninhibited stage presence, as she matched Brown’s sensual energy with her own.

Nicole, 33, has since taken to Instagram to share her experience with followers, posting a clip of her night out at Breezy Bowl alongside a lengthy caption.

“Well, that was fun,” she began, adding a coy emoji. “Had to really do it for the teenage me blasting CB in her bedroom. For the mini me who saw him at one of her first concerts. For the woman who sometimes feels like she has to be a monolith instead of multi-layered. I did it for the smart girls, the cool girls, the sexy girls, the fun girls— for all of us who are all of those things at once.

“And I OVERLY did it for my brown girls, tthhhhaankya,” she concluded the note, adding a brown heart emoji. See the post below.

Brown’s Breezy Bowl is still scheduled to hit San Diego before venturing out to Las Vegas, Denver, Orlando, Atlanta, New Orleans, and his final tour stop in Memphis.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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At the Gates’ Tomas Lindberg Dies at 52
Music

At the Gates’ Tomas Lindberg Dies at 52

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Tomas Lindberg, the lead singer of the Swedish death metal band At the Gates, died “this morning following complications related to his ongoing cancer treatment,” his bandmates wrote on social media. “You were an inspiration to us all,” they added. “A true friend, both compassionate and sympathetic. You will always be remembered for your generosity and your creative spirit.” Lindberg was 52 years old.

Born in Gothenburg, Sweden, Lindberg came up in the city’s metal scene, trading tapes with fellow teenagers and designing the logo for Norwegian band Darkthrone. He adopted the pseudonym Goatspell upon joining his first band, Grotesque, who helped spearhead Gothenberg’s emerging death metal scene in the late 1980s. He co-founded At the Gates in 1990, and the band’s 1992 debut, The Red in the Sky Is Ours, became a death metal landmark, twisting wiry melodies into the genre’s backbone of piston riffs and bludgeoning rhythms.

In 1995, the band’s fourth album in as many years, Slaughter of the Soul, elevated At the Gates’ status both at home—alongside Stockholm compatriots like Entombed and Dismember—and internationally, where fans were drawn in by Lindberg’s surrealist, scream-along lyrics and the band’s labyrinthine songwriting. Adulation and influence ensued, but At the Gates’ whirlwind first phase was coming to an end. The band parted ways in 1996, primarily citing burnout, and Lindberg side-quested with an array of extreme-music voyagers including Lock Up, Disfear, Skitsystem, and the Great Deceiver.

At the Gates reunited for a tour in 2007 and embarked upon a second era as a studio band in 2014. They have since released three albums: At War With Reality, To Drink From the Night Itself, and The Nightmare of Being. Lindberg remained a friendly presence in the heavy-music world and taught social studies in a Gothenberg middle school during respites from touring.

Last month, At the Gates and Lindberg told fans that the singer was diagnosed, in December 2023, with adenoid cystic carcinoma, a rare cancer that was detected in his mouth. Lindberg said he underwent surgery to remove “a big part of the roof of the mouth” and also had two months of radiation therapy, but remains of the cancer were found early this year. A day before going in for surgery, he recorded all the vocals for a new At the Gates album, the statement noted.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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“His influence on heavy music is timeless”
Music

“His influence on heavy music is timeless”

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Tributes have been paid following the death of At The Gates frontman Tomas Lindberg.

The death of the 52-year-old Swedish singer was announced today (September 16) by former Opeth vocalist, David Isberg. He shared a collection of photos of Lindberg and wrote some of his lyrics in the caption: “It is cold out here/ And lonely is my journey/ I walk the trail of broken souls/ The darkest path through infinity.”

News of the passing was then confirmed by Arch Enemy guitarist Michael Amott. The two bands are closely tied as Arch Enemy drummer Daniel Erlandsson is the brother of At The Gates’ drummer, Adrian Erlandsson.

“I first met him when he was 15 and I was 18 — just two kids completely dedicated to underground music,” Amott wrote. “Life took us in different directions, but we’d bump into each other from time to time. Reconnecting properly in 2019 when we toured together was really special. Today we’ve lost one of the true OGs of the Swedish death metal scene.”

Lindberg had been diagnosed with adenoid cystic carcinoma – a cancer of the mouth and pallet – in December 2023, but did not publicly share the news until this year. Last month it was revealed that the diagnosis had worsened, and he was “being closely monitored around the clock” (via Louder).

In his statement that he penned back in March but didn’t make public until August, he said that 2025 had “been a very tough year” due to the health issues, and that he would be undergoing “some form of chemotherapy to keep the cancer in check”.

Among those paying tribute is Opeth frontman Mikael Åkerfeldt, who shared, “It’s with overpowering shock that I write this, having just received the news that he has passed on.” He went on to recall his time meeting Lindberg in the ‘90s and being “blown away” by his performances.

“Tomas, my friend. You were a pioneering musician. A fantastic frontman and singer. A lovely human being! You’ve always had my endless respect. A respect that will flow effortlessly, even now that you’re no longer with us.”

Peaceville Records took to X/Twitter to share: “We extend our condolences upon hearing of the passing of At The Gates’ Tomas Lindberg, our deepest sympathies to those near & dear. Greatly gifted writer, fiercest of vocalists making an indelible mark on Death Metal forever, gone too soon to ‘join with the pulse of the universe’.”

Japanese band MONO shared a picture with Lindberg and wrote: “We’re saddened to hear about the passing of Tomas Lindberg from At The Gates today. When he curated Roadburn Festival in 2019, he kindly invited us to perform and we became friends. Thank you for the love, and our sincere condolences go to his family and loved ones. ATG forever.”

We extend our condolences upon hearing of the passing of At The Gates’ Tomas Lindberg, our deepest sympathies to those near & dear. Greatly gifted writer, fiercest of vocalists making an indelible mark on Death Metal forever, gone too soon to “join with the pulse of the universe” pic.twitter.com/OxNGB0Zraw

— Peaceville Records (@PeacevilleRecs) September 16, 2025

We’re saddened to hear about the passing of Tomas Lindberg from At The Gates today. When he curated Roadburn Festival in 2019, he kindly invited us to perform and we became friends. Thank you for the love, and our sincere condolences go to his family and loved ones. ATG forever. pic.twitter.com/UhUnwDUmZO

— MONO (Japan) (@monoofjapan) September 16, 2025

Unearth shared a touching tribute too, writing on X: “RIP Tomas Lindberg. Without him and At The Gates, metal would not sound the same. His influence on heavy music is timeless, shaping the NWOAHM and metalcore we play today. Unearth is forever grateful. Condolences to his bandmates, friends & family.”

Find more tributes below.

RIP Tomas Lindberg. Without him and @Atthegates_Swe, metal would not sound the same. His influence on heavy music is timeless, shaping the NWOAHM and metalcore we play today. Unearth is forever grateful. Condolences to his bandmates, friends & family. pic.twitter.com/YWrNDG6O1Y

— UNEARTH (@Unearthofficial) September 16, 2025

Shocked and saddened to hear about Tomas Lindberg. A really nice guy taken far too soon. 🙁 #atthegates

— 𝐍𝐢𝐜𝐤 𝐇𝐨𝐥𝐦𝐞𝐬 (@NickHolmesPL) September 16, 2025

This is terrible news. Tomas Lindberg was an A-1 indisputable metal icon and legend w a perfect voice. A crust punk that changed the entire landscape of heavy music. So glad I got to see At The Gates a few times and he’s definitely one of our generation’s best metal frontmen. RIP pic.twitter.com/4ZazRYQMJw

— Myke C-Town Ⓥ (@mykectown) September 16, 2025

Forever remembered for his art, friendship, and inspiration! RIP to the best to ever do it, Tomas Lindberg💥 @AtthegatesGBG pic.twitter.com/Ok5fOkrA5U

— DARKEST HOUR (@darkesthourrock) September 16, 2025

Rest In Peace Tomas”Tompa”Lindberg. Another Death Metal Legend gone to soon. Great human being and vocalist. pic.twitter.com/IVPXDcTahi

— Malevolent Creation Official (@PhilFasciana) September 16, 2025

Lindburg co-founded the Swedish metal pioneers At The Gates with guitarist Alf Svensson in Gothenburg in 1990 after the breakup of their previous band, Grotesque. They shared their debut EP ‘Gardens Of Grief’ in 1991 and debut album ‘The Red In The Sky Is Ours’ the following year.

Their sophomore album, ‘With Fear I Kiss The Burning Darkness’, arrived in 1993, and that same year saw Svensson replaced by guitarist Martin Larsson. This line-up released ‘Terminal Spirit Disease’ in 1994 and ‘Slaughter Of The Soul’ in 1995, before splitting up in 1996.

Lindberg then performed with other groups including Disfear, Skitsystem, and Lock Up, and reunited with At The Gates in 2007 to release a further three albums, with the last arriving in 2021. Outlets including Louder report that he completed recording vocals for another album with the group before his death.

Outside of music, the singer also worked as a social studies teacher to English-speaking students, and joked in a 2014 interview that his students were not fans of his band. “They are not into heavy metal music but they are aware of what I do,” he told Cryptic Rock.

“They see the Facebook likes and the YouTube hits. My students are actually about 80 percent Muslim immigrants and they are not into the music, but they think it is cool.”

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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How The Black Music Action Coalition is Boosting Black Communities
Music

How The Black Music Action Coalition is Boosting Black Communities

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Since June 2020, the Black Music Action Coalition, or BMAC, has alchemized moments of tragedy and controversy into opportunities to improve the material conditions of artists and their communities, distributing a reported $4 million in direct relief. One of their latest efforts includes a newly launched guaranteed income and support program for Altadena, California residents affected by the fires that ravaged the historic Black haven outside of Los Angeles. BMAC will top the $400,000 in aid they’ve already distributed since January with a dedicated $500,000 towards their new efforts. “When the fires first erupted, I was watching like everyone else,” says Willie “Prophet” Stiggers, a BMAC co-founder who serves as president and CEO. “The beauty of that town, the creative energy that sort of moves through the streets of Altadena is really unmatched. When we watched the whole community get wiped out, my heart sunk and I couldn’t believe it. So we had a call with the team, I’m like, ‘We need to do something and something immediate.’”

This sort of rapid response has been a BMAC specialty. Formed in the shadow of the murder of George Floyd, the killing of Breonna Taylor, and the racial justice uprisings that followed, BMAC became a watchdog as corporations across the music industry made promises to improve conditions for workers of color to the tune of hundreds of millions of dollars. In 2021 and 2022, they issued comprehensive “report cards” analyzing the reality of those commitments. After country star Morgan Wallen was caught on video hurling a racial slur in 2021, they released another report – this time, on how Black artists both forged and were deliberately pushed out of country music. “He got caught saying the N-word, and it was this big uproar, and a lot of people came to BMAC like, ‘What are you going to do about this?’” Stiggers remembers. “So for us, we thought that that spoke to a bigger issue within country.” 

On the heels of their report, BMAC then challenged Nashville to make a change, and the Academy of Country Music stepped up. Together, they created a program called OnRamp that supported 20 Black, aspiring country artists and executives with a guaranteed monthly income of $1,000 and access to work and mentorship from Music Row. BMAC created a similar program with the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame after the institution’s co-founder Jann Wenner claimed that Black and female artists hadn’t been “articulate” enough to be considered “masters” of the genre. (Wenner also co-founded Rolling Stone and led the magazine for most of its tenure.) Stiggers says BMAC’s guaranteed income programs are a hallmark of his vision. “At the end of the day, economics is the issue, right?” he says. “When you start removing the economic barriers that sometimes have prohibited artists in our community from thriving, what happens is so beautiful and so brilliant.” 

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However, BMAC is not just about showing up when bad news breaks – in fact, much more of its programming is proactive, Stiggers explains. The industry relationships among its many members and supporters – who, at its inception, included Billie Eilish, Lil Nas X, Miley Cyrus, Travis Scott, Cardi B, Harry Styles, and Lady Gaga – has led to incubators with Live Nation to advance Black touring and events specialists, activations at Rolling Loud to promote their policy efforts against the use of rap lyrics in court (which predates the high-profile incarceration of Young Thug, Gunna, and other Young Stoner Life records affiliates in 2021), and more grants and guaranteed income programs with Atlanta rapper Gunna, R&B legends Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, and budding superstar Victoria Monét. “She took it to another level,” Stiggers says. “She brought these young women into her life in a very real way – in studio, meeting with them, helping give them creative ideas and really pouring into them.” Their latest grant program honors late A&R Chubbie Baby who helped launch the careers of rap giants like the Diplomats and Future, with the winner, a recent Yale graduate named Maxx Shearod, just announced on Sep. 15. In a busy week, BMAC will also hold its annual gala on Sep. 15, honoring streamer Kai Cenat, singer John Legend, industry titan Irving Azoff, HarbourView Equity Partners founder Sherrese Clarke and publishing company Primary Wave Music. Country star Mickey Guyton and executive Kenny Burns will host. 

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While Stiggers has spent over two decades as a music executive himself, heading management, consulting, and publishing company 50/50 Music Group out of Atlanta, he’s been a social justice worker for much longer, earning the nickname “Prophet” while in community with Reverend Al Sharpton as a kid in the Bronx. Around 13 years old, Stiggers was himself a victim of police violence, fueling his lifelong work in advocacy. “When I was attacked by the police in my neighborhood, up until that point, I just had a regular sort of life going on,” he says. “Black pride and Black history was always taught in the household, but I never really applied it or had to really speak to it, especially at that young age. But when I went through this police brutality scenario in my hood, my mom called everyone. She called all of the news, every activist you could think of. We had a rally outside the precinct. I didn’t want any of this, but they gave me the megaphone. Once I calmed my spirit down, I started to speak. This sort of energy – I guess some in the church would call it the Holy Spirit – took over me and I’ve been living in that.” 

Here, Stiggers explains how BMAC’s work is shaped by GLAAD’s, why white ally Irving Azoff is being celebrated at this year’s gala, and the Coalition’s international ambitions. 

In January, Terry Lewis, Stiggers, and Jimmy Jam celebrated the their third annual Music Makers grant program while fundraising for fire relief in Los Angeles

Courtesy of the Black Music Action Coalition

What BMAC advocacy efforts have you been particularly proud of over the past five years? 
Just the idea of a beacon of accountability, the industry feeling and knowing that there is a body of people that took those public pledges that they made very seriously and are prepared to hold them extremely accountable to that. The work that we have done policy-wise – if you don’t change policy, nothing happens. BMAC led the working group that developed the Restoring Artistic Protection Act, also known as the RAP Act, the first federal bill to prohibit the use of lyrics to prosecute artists. That bill was able to have state implications. California was the first state to sign the bill that derived from [it] and there’s been three or four other states that have adopted similar measures. I chair an organization now called Free Our Art, which specifically is around state legislation prohibiting the use of lyrics weaponizing art and criminalizing artists. And then [BMAC’s] pipeline programs – we’ve been able to impact almost 6,000 young people in a very direct way over the last five years, create real opportunities for them. The barriers of entry sometimes in this industry for our people are tall. Unless you have the resources or go to the country clubs or have a parent or someone that’s been in the business, it’s very difficult to sort of penetrate this wall in front. [I’m proud of] our ability to put young people directly in the rooms that led to hundreds of jobs, paid internships, and the ability to deploy close to $4 million in direct relief to people, be it supporting artists, supporting emerging talent, supporting aspiring executives or the community at large.

What is the function of a gala, then, in the context of this work? 
It’s not a victory lap, our galas, but it’s our rallying point. It’s an opportunity for the music industry to come together and for once, not celebrate record sales, not celebrate streaming numbers, not celebrate those sort of accolades, but how people are using their platform to actually impact society in a meaningful way.

When we first started BMAC, it was imperative to me that we model the organization [after] organizations that have success. One of the issues with leadership is sometimes the wins are not visible and almost not even expected – we just allow people to sit in leadership positions without a real strategy of how to put W’s on the board. And so for me, I have watched [the LGBTQ+ community] take a social issue and create such a level of urgency around it that not only changed policy, [but it] changed public perception. So we sat down with GLAAD. When I was a child, you could say certain words, and now as an adult, you try, your whole career is over. How do we take that sort of urgency and implement that with the issues that face Black artists and Black creators and Black America as a whole?

Our report card came from those conversations with GLAAD. They issue a GLAAD report in which they measure LGBTQ+ representation front and behind the camera, and then they have the GLAAD Awards. [A GLAAD representative] said, “We have to put up the mirror so the public and people can see what this looks like. Let’s remove the veil and really look at it. But at the same time, we have to honor and celebrate those who are getting it right.” So we took those two strategies and implemented them with BMAC. 

I’ve watched leaders come and go and although there have been some real advances from the Civil Rights Act to various wins, I’ve also watched the movement sometimes get complacent. [There’s] a checks-and-balances system that I use for myself, that I use for the organization. If we don’t have solutions, if we don’t have anything to add to the conversation, then it’s time for us to step aside. I didn’t jump in this to have a career in BMAC. Actually, the goal is to not need to be here. The goal is to become obsolete at some point. That is why I think many people appreciate how active we are. If you look at our newsletters, there’s major movements that [are] going on monthly, consistently. It’s because that is the bar that we have set for ourselves. 

This year, Irving Azoff is being honored at the Gala. What has his partnership been like? That’s a huge figure in the industry, especially as a white ally. 
Irving was one of the founding advisory board members of Black Music Action Coalition. He actually was able to bring the late great Quincy Jones and the late great Clarence Avant to the table, and the three of them are our founding board advisory members. Even the Rock Hall of Fame [mentorship program], that came because [Rock Hall chairman] John Sykes and Irving sit on the board together. When John came to them asking, “What are some of the ideas?” Irving and Jeff Azoff immediately pointed him to me. I mean, we stood with Irv when we were challenging the seven-year statute with the Fair Act  three years ago, which we still haven’t got off the table. We didn’t get it passed, but that’s still on the table. I just think someone of that magnitude [advocating] for the artist community the way he has throughout his career is something that should be honored and should be modeled [after]. The way he has been an ally to issues that the Black Music Coalition has brought forth has been remarkable.

When I wrote about Gunna’s guaranteed income program, people were fascinated with the concept of universal basic income implemented by a rapper. Tell me about getting that off the ground in partnership with Gunna, especially because those beneficiaries aren’t in the music industry; they’re just folks in his community.
Ebonie Ward, who is Gunna’s manager, is on our executive leadership council. So she came to me right after Gunna was released, and I think they were very impressed with the work that we were doing around the RAP Act – which was prior to Gunna and Thug being arrested. So she came to me: “What can we do?” I was always impressed with what Gunna had already been doing in his community. To me, authenticity is the key, not posturing [some] sort of idea of solidarity. I watched him create Gunna’s Great Giveaway in South Fulton, I watched him create the pantries in schools for people to get food to eat, the Drip Closet where you can go get clothes to wear. The guy was already doing the work. We had success with our ACM program in Nashville, we had success with the Rock Hall program. My goal has always been to get artists to create [guaranteed income] programs. That’s the ultimate goal.

By the way, 90% of the money, a half-million-dollar program, he donated himself. He went on tour and created revenue and got partners and BMAC kicked in a very small amount. But we designed and ideated, and now I’m happy to say we are three months into the program right now. The lives that are being affected are so overwhelming. You would think $1,000 isn’t necessarily life-changing money, but for some people it’s a difference between their lights on and off, the difference between groceries in that refrigerator or not, gas in that car, the ability to pay for your daughter’s senior pictures. That pressure that exists in our neighborhoods, and sometimes our industry is removed from the understanding what “I’m down to my last five dollars” means.

Equally as important is the community that we build around them. There’s people who have legal issues that we are able to get lawyers to help them with. Mental health is a big thing, and we’re able to have therapists connecting with them. Financial empowerment. In our community, financial literacy is when your lights get cut off and you realize, “Shit, how do we budget to get this back on?” [Now] you’re able to sit down with someone that can help you work within what you have and develop a system that works for you, not just show the cookie-cutter idea of what financial empowerment looks like, but say, “Okay, listen, let’s take this thousand dollars and let’s figure out how we stretch this, how we move this here, how we prioritize this.” Just watching that transformation happen is extremely powerful and gratifying.

My parents are deeply philanthropic people, too, from a poor West African country. Even as a Black music journalist, at the center of my work is how all these structural issues impact our lives and the art that’s made. Congratulations on being able to marry the entertainment to real social impact.
I thank you for that. You triggered one thing I want to say before we hang up. As we look to expand our work, it is definitely global. In 2026, we’ll launch a lot of our global initiatives. So many of the programs that we have here in terms of our Music Maker grants, even BMAC Live, we’ll be doing in the UK and in parts of the continent. In addition to that, we have a serious focus on educating our artists and executives on the continent about IP protection. With the rise of Afrobeats and Amapiano music, if we don’t educate and wrap our arms around the creative community on the continent, the same cultural appropriation that happened with Black musicians and Black artists here since the 1920s [will] happen over there.

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We have symposiums and we are partnered with many organizations where we are going to bring this information and really start bridging this gap between our people here and the people throughout the diaspora. What we’ve realized is that the same fights that we have here, the same issues that we have here and the ceiling that is put on Black executives happens globally.

So, we pool our resources, our energy, and our conversations to come up with strategies [that] could be effective across the globe.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Internet Archive & Labels Settle Lawsuit Over Digitizing Old Records
Music

Internet Archive & Labels Settle Lawsuit Over Digitizing Old Records

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Universal Music Group, Sony Music Group and Concord have reached a settlement to end their lawsuit  against the Internet Archive over a project to digitize old vinyl records from Frank Sinatra, Ella Fitzgerald, Bing Crosby and other iconic artists.

In a motion filed Friday in Manhattan federal court, both sides say they have a deal to resolve litigation over the “Great 78 Project,” in which thousands of physical records have been digitized and made available to users for free.

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Terms of the agreement were not disclosed, and neither side immediately responded to requests for more details on the settlement. The Recording Industry Association of America, which represents the major labels, said in a statement: “The parties have reached a confidential resolution of all claims and will have no further public comment on this matter.”

The labels sued in August 2023, calling the Great 78 Project the “wholesale theft of generations of music” under the guise of historical preservation: “The Great 78 website is a massive, unauthorized, digital record store of recordings.”

The Internet Archive fired back that its project was no such nefarious effort – and that it had “preserved hundreds of thousands of recordings that are stored on shellac resin, an obsolete and brittle medium.”

“When people want to listen to music they go to Spotify,” Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle said in the statement at the time. “When people want to study sound recordings as they were originally created, they go to libraries like the Internet Archive. Both are needed. There shouldn’t be conflict here.”

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Though the lawsuit claimed that “hundreds of thousands” of songs had been illegally copied, the labels specifically sued over 2,749 songs, including iconic tracks like Crosby’s “White Christmas” and Sinatra’s “I’ve Got the World on a String.” They later added thousand more to the case.

In the two years since the case was filed, it has chugged slowly along. In May 2024, a federal judge refused the Internet Archive’s request to dismiss the lawsuit, allowing it to move into discovery and toward an eventual trial. Earlier this year, the non-profit accused the labels of “gamesmanship,” claiming they were “stonewalling” on key evidence and unfairly trying to add more songs to the case.

But in April, the case was halted after the two sides said they had made “significant progress in settlement discussions.” It has remained largely on ice ever since, leading to Monday’s settlement notice.


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September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Robert Redford Dead, Legendary Actor, Director, and Cinephile Was 89
Music

Robert Redford Dead, Legendary Actor, Director, and Cinephile Was 89

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Robert Redford, the award-winning actor known for films like All the President’s Men, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, and The Natural, as well as the director of Ordinary People, has died at the age of 89.

The New York Times reports that Redford died in his sleep at his home in Utah early Tuesday morning.

Charles Robert Redford Jr. was born on August 18th, 1936 in Santa Monica, California. He briefly studied at the University of Colorado Boulder before moving to New York City, where he studied at the Pratt Institute and the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. He began his acting career in theater, making his Broadway debut in Tall Story in 1959. In 1963, he starred alongside Elizabeth Ashley in the original Broadway production of Barefoot in the Park. 

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Redford began guest starring on television shows like The Twilight Zone, Naked City, The Untouchables, Rescue 8, and Alfred Hitchcock Presents in the 1960s. In 1962, he was nominated for an Emmy for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in The Voice of Charlie Pont.

Echoing his Broadway debut, Redford’s first movie role was a small part in the 1960 film adaptation of Tall Story. Soon enough, he began appearing alongside Hollywood’s biggest stars: Alec Guinness in Situation Hopeless … But Not Serious, Natalie Wood in Inside Daisy Clover, Jane Fonda and Marlon Brando in This Property Is Condemned. Redford and Fonda would collaborate again in the 1967 film adaptation of Barefoot in the Park. In 1969, he starred in George Roy Hill’s Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, which helped cement him as a leading man.

Redford starred in a slew of classic films in the 1970s. In 1972, he portrayed the titular mountain man in the western Jeremiah Johnson, while 1973 saw him star alongside Barbra Streisand in the romantic drama The Way We Were and reunite with Paul Newman in the crime caper The Sting. Redford was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor for his role in the latter. The next year, he portrayed Jay Gatsby in Jack Clayton’s adaptation of The Great Gatsby. 

In 1976, Redford played the Woodword to Dustin Hoffman’s Bernstein in Alan J. Pakula’s All the President’s Men, the dramatic retelling of the Watergate scandal. He also served as executive producer for the film, which earned eight Academy Award nominations.

In 1980, Redford made his directorial debut with Ordinary People, a tale of an upper class family dealing with the aftermath of a son’s death. A critical success, Redford won Best Director for the film, while the movie itself won Best Picture. He reunited with This Property Is Condemned-director Sydney Pollack for 1985’s Out of Africa, an Oscar-sweeping film that also starred Meryl Streep.

Redford’s success continued in the 1990s. He directed 1992’s A River Runs Through It, which brought a young Brad Pitt to prominence, and in 1993, he suggested the infamous Indecent Proposal. Two decades later, he starred as Alexander Pierce in Captain America: The Winter Soldier, officially entering the canon of one of the 21st century’s biggest franchises.

Redford worked consistently almost up until his death. In 2015, he portrayed Dan Rather in James Vanderbilt’s historical political drama Truth, and in 2017, he reunited with Jane Fonda for the fourth time to appear in the Netflix film Our Souls at Night. He received a Golden Globe nomination for his work in 2018’s The Old Man & the Gun, which would end up being his final role besides a brief cameo in 2019’s Avengers: Endgame. He announced his retirement from acting in 2018, after both films had been shot. Still, he continued to work as a producer: in 2021, he and George R.R. Martin produced the AMC crime drama Dark Winds.

Ever the cinephile, Redford founded the Sundance Film Festival in 1978, which became America’s largest festival for independent films. The name, of course, was a nod to Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. The Sundance Institute, Sundance Cinemas, Sundance Catalog, Sundance Productions, and the Sundance Channel followed. He was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 1996, while President Obama presented him with the Presidential Medal of Freedom 20 years later.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Clipse Become First Hip-Hop Artists To Perform At The Vatican
Music

Clipse Become First Hip-Hop Artists To Perform At The Vatican

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

In a groundbreaking and reverent moment for both music and culture, Clipse—the legendary hip-hop duo comprised of Pusha T and No Malice—became the first hip-hop artists in history to perform at The Vatican.

The Virginians made the trek overseas to put forth a moving performance during the Grace for the World concert held in St. Peter’s Square on Saturday (Sept. 13).

Not only did Clipse shatter boundaries by stepping onto one of the most sacred stages on Earth, but they also took part in a historic first: Grace for the World marked the first-ever concert to be held in St. Peter’s Square, located at the heart of Vatican City in Rome, Italy.

Alessandra Benedetti – Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images

The duo performed their soul-searching track “The Birds Don’t Sing” with a surprise appearance from John Legend, whose soaring vocals added depth and spiritual resonance to the already heartfelt set. The powerful collaboration left attendees in awe, blending the raw lyricism of hip-hop with gospel-infused soul.

“This is a rare cultural moment where the world stops and collectively tunes in. It is a message of unity and grace for all of humanity,” said Pharrell Williams, whose company Something in the Water co-produced the event alongside Nova Sky Stories and the legendary Andrea Bocelli.

The star-studded concert also featured performances from Jennifer Hudson, BamBam, Jelly Roll, Karol G, and Teddy Swims, a lineup that transcended genre, language, and faith.

Clipse

Julien M. Hekimian/Getty Images

For Clipse, the moment is another peak in a year of reinvention and resurgence. The duo’s long-awaited fourth studio album, Let God Sort ’Em Out, debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200, powered by singles like “Ace Trumpets” and “So Be It.” Their first release in over 15 years has already been hailed as one of 2025’s best hip-hop albums.

In a performance that bridged the sacred and the street, Clipse not only made history—they brought hip-hop to one of the holiest stages in the world.

Watch the Clipse’s performance at the Grace for the World concert below.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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Jens Lekman: Songs for Other People’s Weddings Album Review
Music

Jens Lekman: Songs for Other People’s Weddings Album Review

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Lekman had long corresponded with author David Levithan, who co-wrote the 2006 novel Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist, before they collaborated on songs for a novel, also called Songs for Other People’s Weddings, about a fictional but familiar wedding singer. But then, rather than just recording the songs he wrote for the book, Lekman went further, delving into the characters’ POVs to create a Sinatra-inspired standalone musical. Appreciating the resulting album isn’t contingent on the book—it’s pure Lekmanalia. But it’s contingent on how much pleasure you can stand. If the record has a defect besides the preciousness that Lekman, to his devotees, turns into an indispensable virtue, it’s the whopping length. My nervous system just can’t endure 17 tracks of uncut Jens at once; it’s a giddy squee! sustained for 80 minutes. But it has variety and inspiration throughout, and it works great when taken in two chunks, one spinning a relationship together and the other gently tugging it apart.

The story traces the arc of the romance between J, the Lekman proxy, and V. They meet at a wedding where all the guests are dressed as songs (he’s “Raspberry Beret,” she’s “Crazy in Love”), and after taking a pill that tastes like hairspray, they fall into the playful connection that will define their intimacy. It’s about being in love while also being love’s outsider, both participant and observer, a split that blurs the line between life and music—as Lekman adores doing. When V moves overseas, seeking space, J starts booking gigs just to be near her. Throughout, V is powerfully sung by Matilda Sargren, whom Lekman recruited through a youth orchestra in his hometown. V has the last word on their relationship, and J learns that his music’s purpose is not to bottle permanence but to celebrate connection, however fleeting.

The music has as many moods as love does: now light and irrepressible, now crackling with an erotic charge, then turning tentative or questioning, cozy or desolate. Duets peel off into monologues; what was joyous returns as profound. Lekman’s storytelling is exceptionally detailed and funny, kind of like a Swedish David Sedaris, and his wedding-singer avatar gives him a chorus of toothsome characters and milieus to weave through J and V’s evolving dynamic. “GOT-JFK” kicks off an ingenious suite set at a performance-art wedding in Brooklyn; later J finds himself at a singles table in Leipzig with “two sisters who look like Patty and Selma from The Simpsons/An elderly man whose lungs sound like a broken whistle/And a man who’s the embodiment of a full blown incel.” We come to realize that Lekman’s side hustle, rather than taking away from his songwriting, must inestimably feed it.

September 16, 2025 0 comments
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