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Luther Vandross Smiled After Turning Down This Babyface Hit Record
Music

Luther Vandross Smiled After Turning Down This Babyface Hit Record

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Babyface‘s hit 1996 ballad “Every Time I Close My Eyes” was almost part of Luther Vandross‘ catalog.

The crooner took to Instagram on Monday (Sept. 8) sharing a photo of “the exact moment Luther said no to singing ‘Every Time I Close My Eyes.’”

Babyface admitted, “[It was] probably the best rejection I ever got because it became one of my biggest records…. But I still wish he would have sung it!”

Fans were tickled at the thought of Vandross saying no with a huge grin on his face— which would be very fitting. In light of the fun fact, one fan requested, “I’d love for you to one day release all the demos of you singing hits you gave to other artists!”

Meanwhile, others agreed that “[‘Every Time I Close My Eyes’] had Luther written all over it!”

“Every Time I Close My Eyes” was written, produced, and performed by Face. Mariah Carey was the featured artist along with Kenny G, who played saxophone. It was the second single from his fourth studio album, The Day. The Grammy-nominated record peaked No. 6 on the Billboard Hot 100 and No. 5 on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts.

Years later, Babyface co-wrote “Grown Thangs” with Jon B for Vandross’ eponymous 2001 LP. Jon B produced the record and both men appeared on its backing vocals. That album was Vandross’ J Records label debut, but his 13th overall studio album. It also featured his hit modern-day single, “Take You Out.”

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Dead Body Found in Impounded Car Registered to D4vd, Police Say
Music

Dead Body Found in Impounded Car Registered to D4vd, Police Say

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

A vehicle registered to D4vd, the Houston singer-songwriter who became an internet sensation with the 2023 EP Petals to Thorns, is under police investigation after a chopped-up, decomposing body was found in a bag in its front trunk, TMZ and Los Angeles news outlets report. The Tesla is registered in Hempstead, Texas, but had been impounded for a couple of days at a tow yard in Hollywood, California, according to police. D4vd, a 20-year-old whose legal name is David Anthony Burke, has been on tour across North America since August 1.

The human remains have not been publicly identified. When reached by Pitchfork, a representative for D4vd directed all inquiries to the musician’s attorney, Blair Berk, who has not responded to requests for comment.

D4vd is touring behind Withered, his full-length debut, released via Darkroom and Interscope in April. His date in Minneapolis tonight (September 9) is set to go ahead at the time of writing.

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Bob Vylan announce ‘We Won’t Go Quietly’ 2025 UK tour as they hit back at “spineless” BBC chief for condemning “deeply disturbing” Glastonbury set to MPs
Music

Bob Vylan announce ‘We Won’t Go Quietly’ 2025 UK tour as they hit back at “spineless” BBC chief for condemning “deeply disturbing” Glastonbury set to MPs

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Bob Vylan have announced some UK headline dates for 2025, and hit back at the BBC director-general for condemning their Glastonbury set to MPs.

The punk rap duo will hit the road for their ‘We Won’t Go Quietly’ tour this November, following a summer of controversy surrounding their slot at Worthy Farm in June.

  • READ MORE: Bob Vylan: “We’ve been screaming about these topics at the top of our lungs for years. Why has it taken this long?”

“After all the attempts to silence us, we’re about to be louder than ever. We won’t go quietly!” the band wrote when confirming the upcoming shows this morning (September 9).

Kicking off at the O2 Academy in Leeds on November 4, the trek also includes stops in Manchester, Glasgow, London, Bristol and Birmingham.

Tickets go on general sale at 10am BST this Friday (September 12) – you’ll be able to buy yours here. An O2 Priority pre-sale will begin at the same time tomorrow (Wednesday September 10).

Check out the announcement post below, along with the full schedule.

Bob Vylan’s 2025 ‘We Won’t Go Quietly’ UK tour dates are:

NOVEMBER
04 – O2 Academy, Leeds
05 – Academy, Manchester
06 – O2 Academy, Glasgow 
11 – O2 Kentish Town Forum, London
20 – The Prospect Building, Bristol 

DECEMBER
04 – O2 Academy, Birmingham 

Bob Vylan have also called out Tim Davie, the BBC director-general, after he called the corporation’s decision to broadcast the duo’s Glastonbury 2025 set live “a very significant mistake” (via The Independent).

When facing questions from MPs on the Culture, Media and Sport Committee today, Davie branded Bob Vylan’s slot at the event “anti-Semitic” and “deeply disturbing”.

“I don’t think I misread it, I just got there [to Glastonbury] when I heard about it [at] about five o’clock,” Davie recalled. “The performance was well done by then, and at that point, I knew absolutely that it was an anti-Semitic broadcast.

“So, my decision was to get that off on demand, simple as that. I mean, it wasn’t too complicated in my mind […] I do think it was deeply disturbing.”

Bob Vylan at the BandLab NME Awards 2022. Credit: Zoe McConnell for NME

In response, the band labelled Davie a “spineless puppet” and denied any wrongdoing once again: “There was nothing anti-Semitic or criminal about anything I said at Glastonbury. Why do you think @metpoliceuk @ASPolice are taking so long?

As well as being dropped by their agency, Bob Vylan have had their US visas revoked and are currently under criminal investigation over the performance. The gig saw the duo voice their support for Palestine, criticise Israel, and lead the crowd in chants of “death, death to the IDF [Israel Defence Forces]”.

In July, it was reported that police were still investigating Bob Vylan’s Glastonbury set. However, it was confirmed at the time that they had dropped their inquiry into Kneecap’s performance at the festival.

“Tim Davie is doing his best to continue throwing others under the bus and cling on to power at the BBC but we see him and the institution for what they are,” Bob Vylan wrote this afternoon.

“Bought and paid for, complicit in the Gaza genocide and a leading force in the silencing of those speaking up against it.”

They went on to claim that “the reason [their Glastonbury set] wasn’t cut immediately is not because of some oversight at the BBC as they keep making out, but because there was nothing anti-Semitic about the performance”.

Davie said today that “the BBC made a very significant mistake in broadcasting” the show. “The fact that those words were broadcast to that broad audience […] frankly, it was disturbing,” he added.

Bob Vylan responded: “As a matter of fact I know there were staff at the BBC that loved the performance and saw nothing wrong with it until they were told there was something wrong with it. I also know some other bits and pieces but let me just 🤐.”

Following the broadcast, a spokesperson for the BBC said: “The team were dealing with a live situation, but with hindsight we should have pulled the stream during the performance. We regret this did not happen.”

Lorna Clarke, a Black woman, was so quickly dismissed from her duties after Glastonbury. Why? Someone had to fall and who easier to take it than a Black woman. But now he’s getting grilled and is showing just how incompetent and bought HE is.

— Bob Vylan (@BobbyVylan) September 9, 2025

They continued: “The BBC respects freedom of expression but stands firmly against incitement to violence. The anti-Semitic sentiments expressed by Bob Vylan were utterly unacceptable and have no place on our airwaves.”

Bob Vylan have also today addressed Lorna Clarke stepping down from her role as the BBC’s director of music following the backlash.

“Lorna Clarke, a Black woman, was so quickly dismissed from her duties after Glastonbury,” they wrote. “Why? Someone had to fall and who easier to take it than a Black woman. But now [Davie is] getting grilled and is showing just how incompetent and bought HE is.”

Bob Vylan have spoken out to defend their Glastonbury 2025 performance numerous times now. They’ve claimed it was vital to “teach our children to speak up for the change they want”, and reiterated that they were wanting the “dismantling of a violent military machine” – not calling for “the death of Jews or Arabs or any other race or group”.

In a statement, Glastonbury organisers said they were “appalled by the statements made from the West Holts stage by Bob Vylan”.

Shortly after the festival, the BBC said it would no longer broadcast performances it deemed “high risk”. Around the same time, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy accused the BBC of having a “problem of leadership”.

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Mark Ronson
Music

Mark Ronson Talks New Memoir ‘Night People,’ Nineties New York

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84


G
hosts of late nights past haunt the streets of downtown New York. Mark Ronson can see them everywhere: In Tribeca, there are remnants of New Music Cafe, where Ronson made the jump to flyer-billed headlining DJ at a party called Sweet Thang in his early twenties. That same address, where Brooklyn legends Jay-Z and Notorious B.I.G. heard him play — and where he became the first DJ to drop “Hypnotize” before its official release — became an oyster restaurant a few years back. That’s gone now, too. But Ronson remembers it all. 

“I have so many memories of pulling up to the club and seeing everybody already on line, excited for the night ahead,” the DJ turned Grammy Award-winning producer recalls. Night after night, he came to understand the difference between people who enjoy a night out and night people — and he writes about it in his memoir Night People: How to Be a DJ in ’90s New York City. 

These days, Ronson is a bit of both. Now 50, a husband, and a father of two, he carries the memories in his bones quite literally: He has chronic neck problems and inflamed joints from countless nights spent hunched over turntables. It’s in the music, too. 

“I hear Busta Rhymes ‘Put Your Hands Where My Eyes Could See,’ and I’m instantly back in this club called Rebar on 16th and Eighth. I can smell the fucking stale beer on the floor,” Ronson says. “Music, even more than other forms of art, stays in your body because the bass and things like that somehow change the molecules in your body.” 

You have so many memories tied to these locations that shuttered or that don’t exist in the same capacity that they once did.
The book is about a lot of things. It’s about DJing, and it’s about going out and partying and the ups and downs of that. And then it’s all about New York in the Nineties. But it’s very much like a ghost story in some ways, because it’s a New York that doesn’t exist anymore, especially downtown New York. It was so different in those days. Some of those clubs opened and shuttered five times, even in the course of the Nineties when I was DJing. 

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New Music Cafe was the first place where I DJed, and Biggie would come down. I remember the first time he brought Jay-Z down, and Jay-Z only had, like, two songs to his name. He was the prince of New York, Biggie was the king. It was all these amazing things. I was a 21-year-old kid and the people from my record sleeves are coming to life and just populating the party. Whenever I walk past that building, it’s really crazy because I have so many memories from it, no matter what’s in there now. I’ve lived in Los Angeles for a little while, I’ve lived in London. Whenever I lived in New York, I’ve never lived more than 10 blocks from this one place. It’s always in my life. The very end of the book is me walking around downtown with my two-year-old daughter strapped to me in a BabyBjorn, seeing all these shuttered places and trying to remember names. Whenever I walk past that place I get a charge. It’s like when you have that static cling and your T-shirt lifts. There’s something about it.

What’s it like when you recognize someone, but you can’t place the face or the name? Are there people you wish you kept in touch with?
For the book, I interviewed like 150 people, because I knew that there was so much exciting shit going on around me, but I was stuck in this fucking booth most of the time. Some of the clubs were just some weird ass thing where you’re in the corner and you can’t even really see past there. That] night Biggie came in the club,  I could feel the energy, because it’s almost like the whispers would just become deafening. And then I was straining my neck trying to fucking see where he is. Frank, who was at the door, [told] me this insane story that Biggie rolled up with 50 dudes  and they’re holding all sorts of stuff. He’s like [to Biggie’s crew] “Put that in the car” — guns, swords, whatever the fuck. But Biggie was just so cool. 

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He knew that he wasn’t gonna get 50 of his boys in right away, but he stood there for like an hour with a big wad of cash he’d give Frank every five minutes to let a guy in. He waited till his entire crew was in. I wanted to paint that scene as vividly as possible. That meant talking to whoever was at the club that night. So I did reconnect with a lot of people from that era while writing the book, and it was nice. But yes, there’s people that I walk past on the street and I’m like, “I remember that person, or do I even know them?  Do I just remember that they were dancing there all the time?” It’s a bit of a ghost story. 

One of the standout scenes in Night People is when you dropped “Hypnotize” for the first time in a club. What was that moment like?
It was so crazy. Part of the reason I think that I wrote the book was because kids kept coming to me like, “You were in New York in the Nineties?” This was maybe five to seven years ago, before Tyler, [the Creator] and a lot of people paid homage in their own ways. But I was just like, “Why are these kids obsessed with the Nineties?” I was in the Nineties, and we thought the Eighties sounded so cool. The Nineties didn’t even sound that great. But then I understand why it’s fascinating, why it’s important, in hindsight, because it was this era in New York of Wu Tang, Biggie, [A] Tribe [Called Quest], Lil’ Kim. Even Missy and Timbaland, who were from Virginia, Pharrell and Chad [Hugo], they were all in the clubs and they were coming to New York to make records — oh, and this guy Jay-Z. New York was the epicenter at that moment. It was a really exciting place to be.

Biggie would be in the club sometimes because I was playing. It was at that same party on Canal Street. There was a promotion guy from Bad Boy Records. Because I had the hot party on Tuesday, he came through with this acetate — which is a straight-from-the-factory piece of vinyl that could only be played 10 times and fucking self-destructs or something. He was like, “I got the new Biggie. You can’t keep it, but I can let you play it right now and then I have to take it to [Funkmaster] Flex.” I put it on, heard a tiny bit of it in the headphones, and then just dropped it. The whole club was just like it had been hit by a meteor. There was something so sacred and special about this thing. It was maybe on the radio once, but for the most part, 400 or 500 people are hearing this song all at the same time for the very first time. When it’s a fucking incredible song like that, you could feel the molecules in the room change. It was like this fucking 500-person orgasm or something.

What was the catalyst for wanting to do this book in the first place? 
I was worried that the longer I held on to these stories, the hazier they would get. Blu Jemz — my great friend who passed away four or five years ago, who the book is dedicated to — used to hang and DJ at this place called Le Bain. After he passed away, Le Bain wanted to throw a party. I was gonna DJ that night, and I remember sitting around in my room with all the records around. I’m like, “Why do I even keep these things?” There’s something that’s still meaningful to me about these old hip-hop 12-inches. They were just instantly conjuring stories.

Early in the book, there’s a moment where you mention your first club experience, which was Keith Haring sneaking you and Sean Lennon into Area.
There was this really iconic club in downtown New York called Area in the Eighties, and it was where the art world and hip-hop and everything came together. I don’t know how much they “snuck us in” — we weren’t in his coat, but obviously we’re 12 years old and not supposed to be there. Sean’s mom, Yoko, was good friends with Keith. I do remember just being in this very dark room, this ashy carpet, crawling around on the floor, running in between grown ups — just doing shit that we weren’t supposed to be doing, but feeling the fun, mischievous energy of what nightclubs do. I wasn’t sneaking cocktails and downing them or anything, but it just felt a little electric. 

You describe Sean moving away as your first heartbreak, in a really sweet way. What was the significance of being able to share these memories with him?
Because the book is really about clubs and stuff, when I was writing I was like, who cares about my fucking childhood? Like, just skip to the club shit. But I realized I had to give a little bit of context, because I grew up in this crazy house. My parents were, God bless them, kind of party animals. I remember being a kid in England and waking up in the middle of the night, and there’d just be 50 grown ups in the house. Waking up to go to school at seven in the morning, my dad is still up playing chess with fucking Darryl Hall or some shit. When we moved to New York when my parents split, my mom married a musician, my stepdad, Mick [Jones], so kind of the same thing. I realized, I didn’t just get this suddenly, this fucking draw to the night by myself. Part of the book being called Night People is exploring that. What makes us all drawn to the night? 

I used to play music with Sean, he was my best friend growing up. He went to go to this fancy boarding school in Switzerland and I was kind of like, what the fuck do I do now? I’d put together this other band, and we just played high school parties and bars on Bleecker Street. But I wanted to get us this big gig for this thing called the New Music Seminar that used to happen in New York. It was a week-long showcase where all the big bands would play. I ran up to this guy who threw this big night, he had Arrested Development and all these other people. I was like, “Yo, you should have my band play.” We had the worst band name. It was called the Whole Earth Mamas. And he was like, “What’s your band called? Mother Earth Garden Bistro or some shit? No, sorry, you can’t play our thing.” And I [said], “What if I get my friend Sean?” “Sean who?” I was like, “Sean Lennon.” So he came up, but actually the gig was a bit of a disaster. I always felt bad because I sold out my friend to get this gig and whatever else happened. I realized I never told Sean this story. He was like, “I don’t remember if you really told me, but it’s vaguely familiar, and I love you. It’s so obvious why we’re friends.” So Sean forgave me. 

When New York Magazine put you on its cover in 2000 and called you “The King of Spin,” the profile mentioned a moment where Sean is telling this story about you both hanging out with Michael Jackson. The way that he tells it is so different from the way that you tell it in Night People.  
Really? What does Sean say?

He’s like, “He was in town during the Bad tour and we got him to record this melody. We turned it into this song and we showed it to Roberta Flack.” It was this whole thing, and you’re like, “Michael Jackson wanted to throw wet tissue at the walls.” 
He did. Michael Jackson was friendly with Sean, because Sean was Sean Lennon. He was so sharp and witty. He had this magnetism. People were drawn to him and he had all these cool friends. I remember Steve Jobs would come over to the house and be like, “I have to show Sean this new computer that I designed.”

Michael Jackson was over during the Bad tour, slept over at Sean’s, and he was running up and down the hallway at the Dakota. He just wanted to throw soggies out the window. Soggies are when you take a giant mound of wet toilet paper and then just chuck. Sean lived on the seventh floor. He wasn’t chucking [them] at people, but it was hitting the street and sounding like bombs were going off. In my mind, I was like, “This is all really fun, but I just need to get a hit song out of Michael Jackson. That’s all I care about. I was already, I guess, at that age more producer-minded.” I remember me and Sean being like, “Michael, Michael, sing us a bass line!” I’ll never forget, he did the whole thing, like the hand out with the snap, and started to sing this bass line. That’s how he wrote music. He usually didn’t write stuff down. He would have somebody come and he’d sing them all the parts, at least that’s what I heard. We went back to my studio the next day — my stepdad had his home studio — and we made this song. It was pretty much just seven minutes of [Michael singing the bassline]. Thinking about it now and while I was writing the book, I was like, “Oh, he just kind of gave us some ‘Smooth Criminal’ leftover.” But whatever, it’s still a bassline from Michael Jackson. We put some horns on it, some sample Eighties horns. That night, we went to the Michael show. And because Sean also lived in the same building with Roberta Flack, she took us to the show. I know these stories sound so fucking crazy. Sean was like, “Roberta, listen to this song that we made! Michael gave us this bass line!” After the third minute, she’s just like, “I mean, it’s the same thing for a while, but James Brown did that. So you never know!” She was just trying to be friendly. And I think after like one more minute, she [hit] eject.

Photograph by Sacha Lecca

There are definitely certain moments throughout the book where it sounds like a Mad Libs, where you’re just filling in the craziest name in the most ridiculous scenario. 
I didn’t even tell anyone at school the night that we hung out with Michael, because even I knew, at 13, at some level, that kids are just gonna fucking hate me. Even the fact that when the book started, Q-Tip is this hero, and DJ Premier is his hero, and I maybe brush shoulders with them in a record store or something. But they’re just these gods. Then somehow, by the end of the Nineties in the book, Q-Tip and I are friends and DJing together. And DJ Premier, my producer hero, comes in the booth while I’m playing this song — the first record I produced, Nikka Costa — and he was like, “What is this?” I really thought he was coming in to be like, “Who made this? Who stole my whole style? What is this fucking shit?” Because he was so influential to me, in my mind, it sounded like a disciple of his. And he’s like, “This shit is hard.” For three minutes he was bobbing his head. To even have those experiences that I had, even at that age, is really, I understand it’s very lucky.

You mention feeling like the elder people within this scene thought that you hadn’t paid your dues because your rise happened so quickly. But then you get a moment where Kid Capri is DJing and they want to take him off so you can get back on. What was that dichotomy like? 
I started around 18, playing five nights a week and just being so devoted to it and ambitious. By the time I was 21 or 22, Puffy had completely changed the face of New York. There was no way not to talk about it, even with everything going on. To try and just pretend that that didn’t exist and Puffy didn’t have something to do with how New York changed at times, and even how it helped my career, would have been insincere, even though I didn’t have a lot of personal interaction with him. I was hired by his guys and as long as he was dancing, I knew I was good. [Ronson opened for Kid Capri at Sean “Diddy” Combs’ 29th birthday party at the former Manhattan’s Merchants Exchange.]

There was this moment that happened in New York, Jay-Z and Damon Dash just coming in. All these clubs downtown that were these kind of exclusive, boring, model-type hang spots just suddenly were on fire and so many hip-hop parties. I was there at that moment. The biggest DJ before my era was Stretch Armstrong, and then after me, there was this incredible DJ that a lot of people know, DJ AM. There was just this little moment in1997 to 2001 or whatever the fuck. This was my zone. It was amazing to be playing sets with Grandmaster Flash and Funkmaster Flex and DJ Enuff and Kid Capri — legends, you know. I kind of forgot all about it, really, because I’ve done a lot of other shit since then. I’ve drank a lot, and I did drugs and my brain is a cloudy mess at times. But to go back and relive that thing and be like, “Oh, that was fucking cool.”

What was the process of going back and putting yourself into that headspace of these heavier moments? There’s one scene where you’re 20 and you think you’re having a stroke.
There’s a lot of memories that I remember quite well. There’s some that are a little more hazy. Luckily, all the ones where you think you’re about to die stay in your head a little bit more. I would have this thing where I was so ambitious, I could keep all my partying under control to some extent. I never was fucked up at the gigs. I cared too much about it. But four o’clock, lights on, I was off to the after hours to fucking, — not every night — but definitely get fucked up and party. I started to have these weird, insane anxiety attacks. Especially because of family history and stuff like that, I’d do drugs but then instantly have this weird guilt and shame and anxiety around it. I remember one night, some friends had drugs, and we all did it. I thought I was, 30 seconds later, having a heart attack. I found out the next day that it was talcum powder. 

I was clearly aware that this was psychosomatic. I didn’t set out to make the book that personal. When I started, I was like, this is just a DJ book and it’s gonna be about this time. Then I was like, I can’t call this book Night People and talk about all the shit that makes us want to go out at night — not everyone was going out to get fucked up. People were going out to commune and be around other people. Some people just loved the music. They wanted to dance. But there were a lot of us who were going out because we were broken. Night gave some people an extra coat of armor, or swag, or whatever you want to call it. If your life was kind of fucked up, you could leave all your daytime shit behind and go out at night. I try to say in the book, there’s people who enjoy a night out, and then there’s night people. There’s the balance. But for the people that I knew that really became my crew and my family at that time, we were all lovingly sort of derelict and a little cracked in our own ways.

There’s a lot of grief attached to that, as well. Before you decided to put all of this in a book, how often were you sitting around and catching up with people and telling these stories? 
Because each chapter is a different era, different people, I remember being like, “Oh, I’m gonna call [this person] when I get to that chapter.” And two or three people that I was really close to in that time passed away while writing the book. The book is dedicated to AM and Blu Jemz, who was the best night person I ever knew. He had a label called Night People, and the spirit of him is in this book. Fatman Scoop, DJ Neva, there’s lesser known DJs like my friend Paul Nice, Mister Cee — all these people that come in and out of the book were alive when I started it. There’s something obviously sad about it. Hopefully, there’s a way that they’re celebrated and remembered through their music and what they did and maybe this book. 

There’s one scene in the book where you throw a track on so that you can go see Missy Elliott and Timbaland with Aaliyah for a moment and then run back. Take me back to that and thinking, “Do I risk messing up the flow of this crowd just to have this moment?”
When I met Aaliyah for the first time on a Tommy Hilfiger shoot, she had already made “One in a Million,” and it was already one of my favorite records. I remember just being like, “Holy shit, I’m not even really gonna look at her.” Even for the people that I had been around, she felt like another world. It wasn’t someone I knew from the clubs around New York that happened to be famous. She was just so sweet and just radiated this amazing [energy]. 

We started talking and a little bit later, we did the pictures. It’s that one where she’s behind the booth. We took a lunch break, and she came over and she wanted to fuck around with the turntables. They were still hooked up, so she was scratching. I think there’s a picture of it that’s an outtake. I just remember being like, “I’m gonna use this moment to ask her a thousand questions about Missy and Timbaland.” I had started to make beats and stuff. I had no idea what I was doing, but they were like heroes. She was just like, “They’re just cool,” as if she’s talking about her favorite aunt and uncle or some shit, not amazing alien geniuses. 

So one time, a year later — I got to be friends with Aaliyah, we hung out on other occasions — I was DJing this party at the Manhattan Ballroom. I was on the balcony, and I see these two towering dudes coming towards me with this little person in the middle. And I was like, “Oh my God, it’s Aaliyah.” I was like, “What are you doing here?” She’s like, “Oh, I’m going up to the studio.” The studio that Missy and Timbland worked at that time was in Manhattan Center in that building. She was like, “Come upstairs!” I was looking down at 300 people dancing on the floor at some party I’ve been paid to play, not just go take a 20-minute bathroom break to go meet some famous people. And I was like, “I’d love to, I can’t.” She walks away and she turns back and gives me this one last look like, “What are you doing?” 

So I’d put the longest record that I had on. I think it was Donna Summer, or Diana Ross. something. I was like, “Fuck it. I don’t know if it’s gonna be long enough, but I’m not missing this opportunity.” I ran up and she took me in, just really briefly. It was my first time in a really big, fancy recording studio like that, like a modern one, other than maybe being with my stepdad. Timbaland was on a StarTech and there was a beat playing super loud. Missy was on the couch, and Aaliyah just went and sat next to her. She started singing something in her ear, whatever the melody was. And then I was just like, this is fucking crazy. I hung for three minutes and ran back downstairs. I got back in time. No one knew. It is crazy to think that these people who feel so present — Aaliyah, you walk around New York and there’s no way you’re gonna make it to Fifth Avenue without seeing her on a T-shirt and her music has just never been more relevant. Of course, we all wish she was here. It’s amazing to think what she would still be doing if she was, but because of her music and how larger than life her legacy has been, it’s like she also does still feel here.

You appeared in Aaliyah’s “More Than a Woman” video. What do you remember about shooting it?
I just remember I’m wearing these really kind of cheesy tinted shades, but that I thought looked so cool at the time. I remember Aaliyah calling me and being like, “I want you to come be in the video.” I just remember being like, “I really don’t want to fly out to L.A. for the day, but it would be nice to see her. Fuck it. Why not?” I think it was maybe a week or two later that the plane crashed. I’m obviously so grateful that I did, because that was the last time that we got to hang out.

What was it like revisiting the music from that time?
Music was almost my best friend and tool creating this. Some of these things are from 30 years ago. Some of the memories are hazy, but music just does something to your body. When I was trying to was trying to remember things, I’d listen to a certain song, a Tribe song, or Busta song, and it was instantly like, “Oh, right, it was in that room, and there was this guy down there smoking a cigarette looking up at me when I dropped the record, and then he dropped his drink because he put his hands in the air.” The records were so important. I didn’t put the celebrities or the famous people stories in as a hook to draw people in. It was more just like, those are things that happened on that night. But the music was the most important thing. 

With this book, there’ll be people who will pick it up and be like, “Where’s Amy? Where’s Gaga? Where’s Bruno? What is this fucking Mark Ronson book?” It’s obviously about a time before I was really successful in some ways, or certainly before I had any celebrity — I mean, at least outside of a little circle of New York. I really wanted it to be about the music. I remember some DJ said something funny that was like,  “When I try to talk to my grandmother about DJing, all she understands is a wedding DJ or Calvin Harris.” But there’s also this thing in between of what I was back then, which was a gigging DJ, going to work playing shit because you love music, and you need the check, and you’re dealing with all the hassles and fucking cokehead club owners and lunatic drunk people making requests. But you just do it because you love it. And then some nights you go home having the best energy. Some nights you go home as lonely as you could ever feel. And just to get across that feeling of being a DJ, the music side was important to at least try and paint as well as I could. 

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Is there an album coming? A Late Night Feelings follow-up? 
I’ve been working, so hopefully something. 

How much were you thinking about legacy while writing, or your oldest daughter and reading these stories?
I didn’t really think about that till I was nearly done, and then I was like, “God, is this something that I would want her to read?” I’m sure for her teenage years, she’ll just be like, “My dad’s lame, I’m not gonna listen to or read anything he did.” But I don’t know. She’s just obsessed with music now. She has a little record player with her 45s that she listens to. She’s so into putting her records on, and she’s transfixed by the whole thing. But, yeah, definitely not trying to breed a whole crew of DJs.

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter's 'Man's Best Friend' Is No. 1: Here Are the Numbers
Music

Sabrina Carpenter’s ‘Man’s Best Friend’ Is No. 1: Here Are the Numbers

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

At this point, Sabrina Carpenter is one of pop music’s biggest A-listers in the 2020s. After a breakout year in 2024 that delivered both her first No. 1 album (Short n’ Sweet) and No. 1 song (“Please Please Please”), she just leveled up again thanks to her new album, Man’s Best Friend. The new project doesn’t just debut at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 this week, it also posts some major numbers on the charts. Let’s dive in.

Billboard 200 Breakdown

Man’s Best Friend debuts at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 (chart dated Sept. 13) with 366,000 equivalent album units earned in its first week, according to Luminate. That’s not only her biggest week ever, it’s also the third-largest of the year, behind only Morgan Wallen’s I’m the Problem (493,000 in May) and The Weeknd’s Hurry Up Tomorrow (490,000 in February).

The album earns Carpenter her second No. 1, following Short n’ Sweet in September 2024 — that album debuted with 362,000 units. Here’s a look at her full Billboard 200 track record so far:

Title, Peak Date, Peak Position

  • Eyes Wide Open, May 2, 2015, No. 43
  • Evolution, Nov. 5, 2016, No. 28
  • Singular: Act I, Nov. 24, 2018, No. 103
  • Singular: Act II, Aug. 3, 2019, No. 138
  • Emails I Can’t Send, July 30, 2022, No. 23
  • Fruitcake, Dec. 21, 2024, No. 10
  • Short n’ Sweet, Sept. 7, 2024, No. 1
  • Man’s Best Friend, Sept. 13, 2025, No. 1

Vinyl was a huge contributor to Man’s Best Friend’s big first week. The album sold 160,000 copies in vinyl alone — boosted by 13 different vinyl variants, including two signed by Carpenter. That makes it the ninth-biggest vinyl sales week since Luminate starting tracking sales in 1991.

Top 10 Biggest Vinyl Sales Weeks in Modern Era (1991-Present)

Vinyl Number, Artist, Title, Chart Week

  1. 859,000, Taylor Swift, The Tortured Poets Department, May 4, 2024
  2. 693,000, Taylor Swift, 1989 (Taylor’s Version), Nov. 11, 2023
  3. 575,000, Taylor Swift, Midnights, Nov. 5, 2022
  4. 258,000, Taylor Swift, Speak Now (Taylor’s Version), July 22, 2023
  5. 191,000, Taylor Swift, The Tortured Poets Department, Dec. 14, 2024
  6. 182,000, Harry Styles, Harry’s House, June 4, 2022
  7. 164,000, Taylor Swift, The Tortured Poets Department, Dec. 21, 2024
  8. 161,000, Taylor Swift, Lover, Live From Paris, Jan. 25, 2025
  9. 160,000, Sabrina Carpenter, Man’s Best Friend, Sept. 13, 2025
  10. 149,000, Travis Scott, Days Before Rodeo, Sept. 28, 2024

Billboard Hot 100 Recap

Carpenter’s big chart week isn’t limited to just sales — the album’s tracks also took over the Billboard Hot 100, too. All 12 songs from Man’s Best Friend land on the latest chart, led by new single “Tears” at No. 3. “Manchild,” which debuted at No. 1 in June, also rebounds to No. 4.

Here’s the full rundown:

  • No. 3, “Tears”
  • No. 4, “Manchild” (up from No. 7; peaked at No. 1)
  • No. 12, “Nobody’s Son”
  • No. 15, “My Man on Willpower”
  • No. 17, “When Did You Get So Hot?”
  • No. 20, “Sugar Talking”
  • No. 24, “Go Go Juice”
  • No. 27, “House Tour”
  • No. 30, “Never Getting Laid”
  • No. 31, “We Almost Broke Up Again Last Night”
  • No. 33, “Goodbye”
  • No. 39, “Don’t Worry I’ll Make You Worry”

Thanks to these debuts, Carpenter’s career totals now stand at:

  • 5 top 10s (“Espresso,” “Please Please Please,” “Taste,” “Manchild,” “Tears”)
  • 12 top 20s
  • 25 top 40s
  • 31 total entries

Carpenter also joins Taylor Swift, SZA and Olivia Rodrigo this week as the only women in history to chart at least 12 songs in the Hot 100’s top 40 simultaneously.

This article was originally published on Billboard’s Substack channel. Subscribe to the free daily newsletter for exclusive insights about the Billboard charts by clicking here.



September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Lady Gaga Performs "Vanish Into You" on Colbert: Watch
Music

Lady Gaga Performs “Vanish Into You” on Colbert: Watch

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Lady Gaga stopped by The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Monday night to perform “Vanish Into You,” a song from her 2025 album Mayhem.

For her performance, Lady Gaga opted for a more intimate, scaled down presentation of the Mayhem track. She sang in front of the piano alongside two guitarists (one acoustic and one electric), and only began playing the piano at the start of the second verse; throughout, the projections behind her ranged from black-and-white portraits of Gaga performing to images of cloudy skies in a thunderstorm. Meanwhile, Gaga provided a mesmerizing, heartfelt vocal performance (as usual). Watch the rendition below.

Get Lady Gaga Tickets Here

Gaga’s Colbert appearance arrived in the midst of a busy few days — last weekend, the star closed out her final New York performance of her lauded “Mayhem Ball” tour, won Artist of the Year (and performed) at the VMAs on Sunday, and made her much-anticipated appearance as Rosaline Rotwood in Netflix’s Wednesday, for which she offered the new song “The Dead Dance” last week.

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Lady Gaga will return to her “Mayhem Ball” this week with show dates to come in Toronto and Chicago; afterwards, she’ll head to the UK, Europe, Australia, and Asia to close out the tour. See her tour dates below, and get tickets to see Lady Gaga on tour here. Plus, revisit our review of Mayhem.

Lady Gaga 2025-2026 Tour Dates:
09/10 – Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
09/11 – Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
09/13 – Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
09/15 – Chicago, IL @ United Center
09/17 – Chicago, IL @ United Center
09/18 – Chicago, IL @ United Center

09/29 — London, GB @ The O2 Arena
09/30 — Manchester, GB @ Co-op Live
10/02 — Manchester, GB @ Co-op Live
10/04 — Manchester, GB @ Co-op Live
10/07 — Manchester, GB @ Co-op Live
10/08 — Manchester, GB @ Co-op Live
10/12 — Stockholm, SE @ Avicii Arena
10/13 — Stockholm, SE @ Avicii Arena
10/15 — Stockholm, SE @ Avicii Arena
10/19 — Assago, IT @ Unipol Forum
10/20 — Assago, IT @ Unipol Forum
10/28 — Barcelona, ES @ Palau Sant Jordi
10/29 — Barcelona, ES @ Palau Sant Jordi
10/31 — Barcelona, ES @ Palau Sant Jordi
11/04 — Berlin, DE @ Uber Arena
11/05 — Berlin, DE @ Uber Arena
11/09 — Amsterdam, NL @ Ziggo Dome
11/11 — Antwerp, BE @ AFAS Dome
11/13 — Décines-Charpieu, FR @ LDLC Arena
11/14 — Décines-Charpieu, FR @ LDLC Arena
11/17 — Paris, FR @ Accor Arena
11/18 — Paris, FR @ Accor Arena
11/20 — Paris, FR @ Accor Arena
11/22 — Paris, FR @ Accor Arena
12/05 — Melbourne, AU @ Marvel Stadium
12/06 — Melbourne, AU @ Marvel Stadium
12/09 — Brisbane, AU @ Suncorp Stadium
12/12 — Sydney, AU @ Accor Stadium
12/13 — Sydney, AU @ Accor Stadium

01/21 — Osaka, JP @ Kyocera Dome
01/22 — Osaka, JP @ Kyocera Dome
01/25 — Tokyo, JP @ Tokyo Dome
01/26 — Tokyo, JP @ Tokyo Dome
01/29 — Tokyo, JP @ Tokyo Dome
01/30 — Tokyo, JP @ Tokyo Dome

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Marlon Wayans Or Mike Epps? Fans Debate Star Of Richard Pryor Biopic
Music

Marlon Wayans Or Mike Epps? Fans Debate Star Of Richard Pryor Biopic

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

One thing people on the internet will do is debate a topic, even if there isn’t actually anything to argue over. Marlon Wayans‘ screen test for a Richard Pryor biopic recently surfaced online, and some fans rallied behind Mike Epps as the person who should play the late comedian.

A screenwriter shared the leaked footage on X, including a little over two minutes of Wayans depicting the Peoria, Ill. legend. “The first scene, if you close your eyes, sounds just like Pryor,” one fan commented. “You will most likely have to watch the whole movie to wash out Marlon’s face from your mind and replace it with Richard. Like Denzel Washington for Malcolm X or Jamie Foxx for Ray Charles.”

The screenwriter replied, “His standup voice in this is spot on I think.” There were many mixed reviews for Wayans’ performance, which gave way for the Epps coalition to start boosting their guy. “Marlon Wayne Playing As Richard Pryor Instead Of Mike Epps,” one fan wrote with a clip of the classic The Breakfast Club interview where Safaree freestyled and Charlamagne Tha God said “Nah, that aint it, y’all.”

Another fan quoted Wayans’ clip and wrote “Sh*t look like [Marlon] playing Damon Wayans playing my drunk dad. They better get Mike Epps on the phone.” Another fan admitted he enjoyed Marlon’s performance, but there was a better choice. “Idk man. I like this but i still think Mike Epps is the man for the job.” One user created a criteria for why Epps deserved the role over Wayans. “You can’t play Richard Pryor if you’re not as funny as Richard Pryor,” they wrote. “Mike Epps not only looked like him back then but comedically was much closer to Richard Pryor than Marlon was.”

Here’s the thing: the screen test everyone is reacting to isn’t tied to any Richard Pryor biopic coming out soon. In fact, Wayans auditioned for the role back in 2010, and it was a completely different movie based on Pryor. A fan of Twitter confirmed that Epps got the role for the particular biopic they are well referencing, and a quick Google search revealed that the project has been in limbo since 2014 due to casting issues and an issue between Epps and Pryor’s widow. Lee Daniels was the director of that film, and Eddie Murphy and Damon Wayans were reportedly also involved.

Fortunately for fans interested in seeing a reimagining of the legendary actor’s life, Kenya Barris is currently working on a 10-episode series covering all of his experiences from birth until death. “It is my baby,” Barris told Variety. “I love it. He is my comedy god. A super flawed guy, but who everything, to this day, the comedy that we remember — even including [Dave] Chappelle — is derivative of what he started. That honest, reflecting, observational look at what the world is and the differences between us that actually make us more similar than we are apart.”

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Ghostface Killah: Supreme Clientele 2 Album Review
Music

Ghostface Killah: Supreme Clientele 2 Album Review

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

You would be forgiven if the first couplet had you fooled. On “Iron Man,” the opening song from Supreme Clientele 2—the titles of two masterpieces leveraged, diminished, thrown into the SEO fire—Ghostface Killah headfakes like he really has something. “The stamp on the dope was Ronald Reagan with fronts,” he raps, the kind of absurdist and hyperspecific detail that dotted the crime vignettes from the illustrious first half of his career. “My man ran over his legs, all we heard was the crunch,” the last word accentuated by Foley work you might have heard in a 1950s radio play. It’s enough to recall the rumbling Jeeps, spilled tartar sauce, and glass caskets that launch his oddest, most engrossing stories.

That the rest of “Iron Man,” and the rest of Supreme Clientele 2, falls far short of this standard should not be a surprise; it’s an extraordinary image. And the album is certainly not the nadir for late-period Ghost, who over the last decade has frequently sounded strained and depleted, and who has spent significant time of late writing in staid formats that are poor vehicles for his once phantasmagoric style. It’s sturdy, at times truly fun. But this is also an album that—even when stripped of cynical readings of its commercial proposition and taken on its terms as a creative work—is doomed by the backwards gaze that doubles as its premise.

The one thing that prevents the Reagan-with-fronts line from sounding as if it could be lifted from the original Supreme Clientele is the voice in which it’s delivered. Whether the result of marathon nightclub tours, working with different engineers in new recording software, or simply aging, the “Tasmanian Devil who knows where you can get PCP” vibe of Ghost’s youth is gone, replaced by something gruffer, scratchier, more evocative of your blowhard uncle. Compounding those qualitative changes is the decision, not uniform but frequent enough across SC2, to double his vocals. This all has the effect of making Ghost’s music sound the one thing it never did before: effortful.

From 1995 through 2006—that would be Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx… through Fishscale and the wildly underrated More Fish—Ghost was the most singular writer in hip-hop, perhaps in its history. The verses could be dense, even labyrinthine, but all carried the energy of ecstatic, impulsive imagination. In the 2010s and early ’20s, this has been replaced by a flood of painfully ordinary material that includes a pair of LPs with Adrian Younge, a half-baked concept record on Tommy Boy, and a smattering of forgettable single-producer collaborations. In addition to the thinning out of his syntax, Ghost’s narrative writing drifted toward longform character sketches scrubbed of nearly all eccentricity and mapped onto predictable plot beats.

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Jasmine.4.t shares new single 'I Can't Believe I Did This Without You'
Music

Jasmine.4.t shares new single ‘I Can’t Believe I Did This Without You’

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Jasmine.4.t has shared a new single called ‘I Can’t Believe I Did This Without You’. Listen below.

The song will feature on the deluxe edition of the Manchester singer-songwriter’s debut album ‘You Are The Morning’, which arrives this Friday (September 12) via Phoebe Bridgers’ Saddest Factory Records.

It’ll appear alongside four more new tracks: ‘Please Can We Hold Each Other Yesterday’, ‘Find Ur Ppl’, ‘I Don’t Think Anyone Else Could Hold The Same Place In My Heart’ and ‘Did U No’.

“‘I Can’t Believe I Did This Without You’ and ‘I Don’t Think Anyone Else Could Hold The Same Place In My Heart’ are two new songs on this release that I wrote during the LA recording sessions for the album, up on the roof of Sound City Studio between takes,” explained Jasmine.4.t (real name Jasmine Cruickshank).

“I recorded five songs as demos and sent them as a thank you to my bandmates and producers after returning home to Manchester from LA. It’s nice to have more polished versions of these two.”

Cruickshank described ‘Please Can We Hold Each Other Yesterday’ as “a more recent ode to lost time with loved ones”. She added: “I demoed this track on my phone and Steph Marziano (the awesome producer of these new tracks) liked it so much, as it was, that she suggested we didn’t re-record it and release it as is.”

‘Find Ur Ppl’ is about meeting political prisoner Yulia Trot (aka YBT) – who “this deluxe version of my record is dedicated to”.

“I met Yulia at the first queer event I ever attended,” Cruickshank said. “It was six months after I had come out, and I was still living in Bristol but staying with friends in Manchester.”

She added: “‘Find Ur Ppl’ is a song about meeting Yulia and the Manchester community, which feels vitally important given how many young trans people are in danger, isolated and in need of the safe haven of queer camaraderie.”

‘Did U No’, meanwhile, is YBT’s “favourite”. Jasmine.4.t recalled: “I visited Yulia in prison during the recording session for this track, and I remember crying, screaming, and channelling my rage at the state into the vocals when I returned to the studio that evening.

“We had planned to record “Did U No” for the album originally, as it was also a favourite of Phoebe’s, but sadly we ran out of time in LA. It is such a joy, now, to be able to finally get it down.”

She continued: “I love how these tracks have turned out, with the help of Steph and the incredible band line-up that I have been playing live with this summer – Phoenix Rousiamanis on violin and keys, Maeve Westall on drums, and Emily Abbott on bass.

“Now when I sing these songs, I am singing them to my best friend, my mother, my sister, my daughter – the political prisoner Yulia Trot. Of all the things that I have lived through, nothing has felt as big as losing her. I hope that one day she will be able to hear these recordings. I hope that one day she, all of her co-defendants, and all of Palestine, will be free.”

The full tracklist for Jasmine.4.t’s ‘You Are The Morning (YBT Deluxe)’ is:

1. ‘Kitchen’

2. ‘Skin On Skin’
3. ‘Highfield’
4. ‘Breaking In Reverse’
5. ‘You Are The Morning’
6. ‘Best Friend’s House’
7. ‘Guy Fawkes Tesco Dissociation’
8. ‘Tall Girl’
9. ‘New Shoes’
10. ‘Roan’
11. ‘Elephant’
12. ‘Transition’
13. ‘Woman’
14. ‘Please Can We Hold Each Other Yesterday’
15. ‘Find Ur Ppl’
16. ‘I Can’t Believe I Did This Without You’
17. ‘I Don’t Think Anyone Else Could Hold The Same Place In My Heart’
18. ‘Did U No’

The original version of ‘You Are The Morning’ was produced by Bridgers and her Boygenius bandmates Lucy Dacus and Julien Baker.

Yulia Trot previously toured with Jasmine.4.t as a roadie/security. “One evening in November 2024, while we were recording a live session for 6 Music, we heard news that Yulia had been arrested that day in a violent raid on her home,” Cruickshank remembered.

“She is one of the Filton 24, arrestees alleged to be connected with a group of actionists entering the UK headquarters of Israeli weapons manufacturer Elbit systems in August 2024, where £1million worth of damage was said to be caused. This included killer Israeli drones that have been reported to target Palestinian children in Israel’s genocide in Gaza.”

She went on: “Our beloved Yulia was initially arrested under terrorism law in a gross misuse of legislation that allowed heavy-handed police powers. She was then charged with the non-terror offences of burglary and trespass, but transferred as a political prisoner to a maximum security private prison on the other side of the country, away from her family and friends, where she will be held on remand for a total of two years until her trial.”

Jasmine.4.t live at Reading 2025. Credit: Andy Ford for NME

Jasmine.4.t is calling on fans to support Trot’s friends and family with visit costs. You can read more at freeyulia.com and follow @freethefilton24 on Instagram.

Speaking to NME earlier this year, Cruickshank said: “What more could you want as a queer musician? To be signed to Saddest Factory is a dream come true.

“Phoebe has fought my corner and has gotten me so many opportunities. It comes from a place of friendship but also a place of solidarity. I feel like those guys really get how shit is for trans women, especially in this country. I think they are kind of unsung heroes.”

Since releasing her debut album, Jasmine.4.t has supported Lucy Dacus and made appearances at festivals such as Green Man, Reading & Leeds and End Of The Road.

She’ll soon embark on a run of headline shows in North America, Europe, Australia and the UK. See the full list of UK/Ireland dates below, and find any remaining tickets here.

NOVEMBER 2025
11 – Scala, London
12 – Thekla, Bristol
13 – The Art School, Glasgow
15 – Academy 2, Dublin
16 – Gorilla, Manchester

In a review of Jasmine.4.t’s Reading 2025 slot, NME said it was “the latest in a long line of completely deserved highlights” for the artist. The round-up also praised the “searing, joyous and moving set that did everything from encouraging community and care, to reminding us to use our voices against the injustices in the world”.

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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Lady Gaga on 'The Late Show'
Music

Watch Lady Gaga’s Perform ‘Vanish Into You’ on ‘Colbert’

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Lady Gaga stopped by The Late Show to perform her song “Vanish Into You.” Hot off her win for Artist of the Year at the MTV VMAs on Sunday night, Gaga performed an intimate, emotional rendition of the piano-led ballad.

“Vanish Into You” appeared on Lady Gaga’s most recent LP, Mayhem, which dropped in March. The song was written by Gaga alongside Andrew Watt, Henry Walter, and Michael Polansky, and produced by Gaga with Watt and Cirkut. The track was notably the first song she wrote for the album and seemingly references her fiancé Michael Polansky. “In ‘Vanish Into You,’ I imagine that I just want to disappear into the person I love most,” the singer told ELLE.

Lady Gaga recorded Mayhem at Rick Rubin’s Shangri-la Studios. “The album started as me conquering a fear: to return to the pop music my earliest fans loved,” she said in a statement. “This record allowed me to reclaim a huge part of myself. It’s about enjoying everything I am and sharing that joy with my fans.”

She told Rolling Stone that she wanted to harness some of the darker sound and imagery from The Fame Monster and Born This Way. “I wanted to traverse old ground while breaking new ground, which I think is hard to do,” she said. “There are a few moments on the album where some people might say, ‘Oh, that reminds me of this,’ because I do have a style, but I made an effort musically to push myself to a new place.”

Trending Stories

Not only did Gaga take home the award for Artist of the Year at the VMAs, she also performed live from her show at Madison Square Garden for the televised ceremony. Gaga joined the broadcast for a performance of “Abracadabra” and “The Dead Dance.”

While accepting Artist of the Year, Gaga spoke about the importance of artistry. “Being an artist is an attempt to connect the souls of people all over the world. Being an artist is a discipline, a craft meant for reaching into someone’s heart, where it grows its roots and reminding them to dream,” she says. “Being an artist is a responsibility to make the audience smile, dance, cry, release at any turn. It is a method of building understanding and celebrating community. I hope as you navigate through the mayhem of daily life, you are reminded of the importance of the art of your life that you can count on yourself and your simple skills to keep you whole, your rehearsal, your discipline, your craft, deserves to be rewarded for its passion.”

September 9, 2025 0 comments
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