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Getting Killed By AI – Stereogum

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

When I started this music publication almost 24 years ago the number one was song was “How You Remind Me” (it’s an 8) and, much like Nickelback, stereogum.com is somehow still around. But things are gonna look different and work better starting today.

In 2020, upon taking back control of this site from the company that acquired it from another company, I did all things you’re supposed to do to diversify revenue, which had come 100% from advertising: writing a newsletter, building a merch shop, adding affiliate links, partnering on live events, and most importantly launching a paid subscription program. Things were looking great, with Stereogum becoming the most popular standalone music website in America according to Comscore. Traffic and revenue increased every year.

We would not be in business without our community of paying members (thank you!) but a lot has changed in five years, and some new obstacles have made the outlook for web publishers particularly dire. Advertising still accounts for the vast majority of Stereogum’s revenue (hit us up if you would like to advertise!) but starting this year the so-called “media traffic apocalypse” caused by Google’s pivot to AI search has cut our ad revenue by 70%. Prior to that, Facebook and X’s deprioritization of links hurt too, but I can’t downplay the brutal impact of AI Overview.

We don’t want to rely on these AI-riddled platforms for referral traffic, and fortunately we still have millions of monthly readers who visit directly. But we need more of you to pay to sustain this operation. Today’s relaunch was done with that as its goal. Before I tell you about the new user experience, here are some of our wins since relaunching as an independent publication:

  • As mentioned, we hit new a traffic record every year since 2020.
  • We introduced nearly 200 new voices to the site, most of whom had never written for us before. We pay all freelancers within one week of receiving their invoice. No one is allowed to contribute to Stereogum for free.
  • For the first time we licensed Stereogum IP for a streaming pilot currently in development with a well-known production company. (This doesn’t mean it’ll get picked up, but heyyy.)
  • We produced or partnered on new events in Brooklyn, Los Angeles, Austin, and other cities.
  • We nabbed a key endorsement from Linkin Park.

The new website you’re looking at is powered by Lede, Alley’s publishing platform behind thriving reader-funded sites like Defector, Racket, and Racquet. Lede offers the kind of all-in-one toolset that we wanted for our last relaunch but didn’t exist yet. We’d been struggling with an archaic, piecemeal tech solution that had been the bane of my existence. Now we are ready for a big paid membership drive.

Go ahead and subscribe right now! It’s much easier than before, since we are no longer using multiple software programs that didn’t always work nicely together. Unfortunately there are many of you whose credit cards were not saved in Stripe when we moved to this new system. So if you were already a subscriber, make sure your payment details migrated. If you already paid for an annual subscription within the past year, the system will recognize that and you won’t be charged double. (Related: if you received an email from us within the past day with the subject “Thanks for signing up, Jane!” please ignore it. I forgot to change a default in our new email provider when we imported everyone.)

Stereogum Membership will get you an invite to the world’s best music Discord, where everyone is very kind and funny. Gumcord users share music recommendations and industry intel, meet up at concerts, and play Music League. They post only the most esoteric Autechre memes and, on Fridays, photos of their pets.

You’ll also get access to members-only Stereogum articles as a paid subscriber, and going forward more of our content will be exclusive for these readers. Along with the popular series The Alternative Number Ones, our Album Of The Week will now be members-only, as will our monthly genre columns for pop, metal, jazz, rap, and electronic music. One programming change: While The Number Ones will remain free for all readers on Mondays, it will now alternate weeks with The Alternative Number Ones column on Wednesdays. We are doing this so we don’t too quickly reach the present day and the Shinedown era, respectively, and because our small staff is currently overloaded.

Subscribers also get access to the Members Only playlist, an expanded version of our Favorite New Music playlist that lives on Spotify and Apple Music. We listen to hundreds of new songs every week and put the best ones there.

And subscribers will be able to comment on our articles. Commenting privileges are now for paying readers only. With Lede’s help we went to great lengths to not only reformat 20+ years of articles, but imported your ancient comments about Passion Pit. Paywalled commenting was overdue — it will prevent spambots and jerks from ruining conversations and save me time attempting to moderate them. The commenting software is different now, and will work better.

The VIP tier is the same as the Member tier, except it also removes all ads from the site. This is the reading experience you want imo! If you were previously a Member, today is a great day to upgrade to VIP: That is now a totally seamless process.

The monthly Member tier and VIP tier prices are now $1 more than they were when we introduced them five years ago. The cost for running this site and for paying its contributors has gone up since 2020 — we actually increased our rates for all freelance submissions early this year — and $6/$11 per month is more in line with the cost of membership on sites/newsletters/podcasts that offer a lot less for your money. We published over 120 longform artist interviews last year, for example. This year we interviewed everyone from Agriculture to Raekwon to Lady Gaga.

We are also adding a third tier for big spenders. It’s called All Access and it costs $99/month. We were advised to have an expensive tier in case any of you are rich admirers who want to give your money away, shorties support independent music journalism. You can see the perks for that here.

On all tiers, you’ll get a discount if you sign up for annual membership instead of monthly. There’s also now a tip jar linked in the main menu that you can click anytime you’re feeling generous. And we now finally offer gift subscriptions, which many of you asked for.

If you already spent all your money on 34 The Life Of A Showgirl variants, you will still be able to access this site. After a certain number of articles, however, you’ll be asked to register with an email address and, eventually, to subscribe to lift the paywall.

Your money enables us to pay the writers, photographers, videographers, and designers who produce work for Stereogum. We have other expenses too. Sometimes we are hit with SLAPP lawsuits or threats over copyrighted images our old sister site Videogum (R.I.P.) posted 15 years ago. Sometimes scammers test stolen credit cards on our merch site and then we have to deal with penalty fees for chargebacks.

Since it is 2025 we do a lot more than publish written features. We are producing more videos these days and hope to do more and bigger live events. I recently hired an on-camera correspondent to star in vertical videos and get us more coverage on TMZ. Making social videos cost money, but increasingly it’s the only way to get access to artists outside of Cameo.

Our mission has always been to discuss all kinds of new and old music in a knowledgable and irreverent voice. With a very small staff, we publish 365 days a year, and we write whatever we want. Stereogum receives thousands of unsolicited music pitches a week, so I cannot reply to them all, but mostly we spend our days championing emerging artists no one has heard of yet. I am frequently told about artists getting signed because we covered them here. If we write about established pop stars, it’s because we want to (no major labels advertise on Stereogum). We have never accepted money to write about an artist.

We don’t chase algorithms and our writers don’t even have access to traffic reporting. We don’t advertise Stereogum and we don’t buy followers. We don’t do random product recommendations.

Stereogum does not use generative AI. But these days we compete for readership with AI-generated articles while our content gets scraped by LLMs. It sucks, but we think there is still a future for journalism made by human music nerds.

I tried to make the new site look similar to the last iteration so as not to hit you with too much change at once. But now all the bugs are gone and it loads faster. If you ever emailed Stereogum about a technical problem with the website, you got a response from me, usually within an hour, and hopefully I’ll get fewer of those emails now. The navigation is better and you won’t have to log in over and over or deal with the CAPTCHA we had to deter spambots. A few modules (like Heavy Rotation and The Number Ones year pulldowns) had to be discontinued for the new platform, but there’s also added functionality like a dark mode option.

I hope you like the new user experience and choose to support us. I’ll be in the comments answering questions!

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Rosalía, MIKE, Hayley Williams, and More: This Week’s Pitchfork Selects Playlist
Music

Rosalía, MIKE, Hayley Williams, and More: This Week’s Pitchfork Selects Playlist

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The staff of Pitchfork listens to a lot of new music. A lot of it. On any given day our writers, editors, and contributors go through an imposing number of new releases, giving recommendations to each other and discovering new favorites along the way. Each Monday, with our Pitchfork Selects playlist, we’re sharing what our writers are playing obsessively and highlighting some of the Pitchfork staff’s favorite new music. The playlist is a grab-bag of tracks: Its only guiding principle is that these are the songs you’d gladly send to a friend.

This week’s Pitchfork Selects playlist features Rosalía, Hayley Williams, Grace Ives, Oneohtrix Point Never, a Smerz edit featuring MIKE and Zack Sekoff, and more. Listen below and follow our playlists on Apple Music and Spotify. (Pitchfork earns a commission from purchases made through affiliate links on our site.)

Pitchfork Selects: November 10, 2025

Smerz: “You Got Time and I Got Money” [ft. Elias Rønnenfelt & Fousheé] [MIKE + Zack Sekoff Edit]
Rosalía: “Mio Cristo Piange Diamanti”
Grace Ives: “My Mans”
Hayley Williams: “Showbiz”
Oneohtrix Point Never: “D.I.S.”
Hydroplane: “Houdini’s Plane”
Wata Igarashi: “Shockwave”
JT: “Girls Gone Wild”
Lerado Khalil & Surf Gang: “Nobody Calls”
WNC Whopbezzy & 70th Street Carlos: “WTF”

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Oasis end Australian reunion tour as Liam Gallagher tells fans: "See you again"
Music

Oasis end Australian reunion tour as Liam Gallagher tells fans: “See you again”

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The Australian leg of Oasis’ huge ‘Live ‘25’ tour came to an end on Saturday (November 8) in Sydney.

  • Read More: Oasis live in Cardiff review: a supersonic reunion for a new generation

Over 320,000 fans saw the Britpop icons on their stops in the country as part of their reunion tour. They played three nights at Melbourne’s Marvel Stadium on October 31 and November 1 and 4 before two nights at Sydney’s Accord Stadium on November 7 and 8, supported by Brisbane indie rockers Ball Park Music on all dates. 

“Thanks for putting up with us. We know we were dickheads sometimes,” Liam Gallagher told the audience in Sydney (via Billboard). “Your support has put us back on the map. Respect! You’ve got a lovely fucking country. See you again.”

While no shows for 2026 have been announced yet, Liam has previously teased the potential for more gigs. On September 27, he told gig-goers at Wembley Stadium – near the end of their most recent UK show, “I wanna thank you lot for keeping the faith and putting this band back on the map. See you next year.”

Oasis have almost finished touring for the year with a few South American dates remaining. And rumours of more shows have been rife in recent months – particularly that the band could play Knebworth or the Etihad Stadium next year, with the 30th anniversaries of their huge Knebworth and Maine Road falling in 2026.

Remarkably, a British peer in the House of Lords seemed to accidentally reveal that Oasis would play Knebworth next summer last month before backtracking. On October 22, Lady Taylor of Stevenage stood up and claimed that the band would play five back-to-back anniversary gigs at Knebworth House next year.

She then told The Guardian, “I was speaking hypothetically following speculation that they would play Knebworth again as they did in August 1996. I understand the band have not confirmed this.”

The Australia tour, meanwhile, became one of the highest-attended in Australia this year, and sensors at the Seismology Research Centre in Melbourne reportedly even picked up tremors during the shows (per 7NEWS Melbourne).

James Young, the owner of Cherry Bar, one of Melbourne’s most iconic music venues – which Noel Gallagher reportedly wanted to buy himself in 2002 (per The Age) – praised the band on social media too, calling the week of Oasis’ Melbourne dates the bar’s “biggest weekend and biggest week on record.”

He said: “The darkest hour is before the dawn, Melbourne and Cherry Bar needed a hero and who knew that it would come in the shape of a couple of ‘no f#cks given’ Mancunian larrikins?!”

A moment at the first Melbourne show, however, caused controversy with a fan launching a flare into the crowd. Liam later took to X (Twitter) to call the fan in question a “massive c**t”, adding: “You are 1 seriously fucked up individual and you will get yours trust me.”

Oasis are off to South America later this week, with two shows at Estadio Mâs Monumental in Buenos Aires, Argentina on November 15 and 16. They’re then playing Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos in Santiago, Chile, on November 19, before two gigs at MorumBIS in São Paulo on November 22 and 23 to round off the year.

Bonehead will be rejoining them after the guitarist, real name Paul Arthurs, took a break from the tour to continue his cancer treatment. He was given the all-clear from tonsil cancer back in 2022, but shared at the start of October that he was diagnosed with prostate cancer earlier this year, and would sit out of Oasis’ Asia and Australia shows so he could have “the next phase of care”. 

During those shows, the band performed with an honorary cut-out of Bonehead. In his absence, Mike Moore from Liam’s solo band filled in.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Charli XCX Teams Up With John Cale in Trippy 'House' Video: Watch
Music

Charli XCX Teams Up With John Cale in Trippy ‘House’ Video: Watch

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Charli XCX has teamed up with Velvet Underground’s John Cale to create a trippy video for their new collaborative song “House,” which will appear on the soundtrack to director Emerald Fennell’s upcoming big screen adaptation of Wuthering Heights.

The idea was sparked a few years back when Charli saw the the 2021 Todd Haynes documentary The Velvet Underground. “One thing that stuck with me was how John Cale described a key sonic requirement of the Velvet Underground,” she wrote in a note to fans. “That any song had to be both ‘elegant and brutal.’ I got really stuck on that phrase. I write it down on my notes app and would pull it up from time to time and think about what he meant.”

“When working on music for this film, ‘elegant and brutal’ was a phrase I kept coming back to,” she continued. “One day whilst on tour in Austin, Finn [Keane] and I went to the studio and wrote the bones for a song that would eventually become House. When the summer ended I was still ruminating on John’s words. So I decided to reach out to him to get his opinion on the songs that his phrase had so deeply inspired, but also to see whether he might want to collaborate on any.”

They wound up chatting on the phone, and Charli sent over several songs, including her initial take on “House.” “We spoke about the idea of a poem,” she added. “He recorded something and sent it to me. Something that only John could do. And it was… well, it made my cry.”

The unsettling video shows Charli and Cale isolated together in a remote house, creating the vibe of a horror movie. It includes a spoken-word poem by Cale. “Can I speak to you privately for a moment,” he says. “I just want to explain/Explain the circumstances I find myself in/What and who I really am/I’m a prisoner/To live for eternity.”

“House” is one of several Charli XCX songs that will appear on the Wuthering Heights soundtrack. The project began a year ago when Fennell reached out to see if she’d write a single song for the movie, which stars Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi.

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“I read the script and immediately felt inspired so Finn Keane and I began working on not just one but many songs that we felt connected to the world she was creating,” Charli wrote. “After being so in the depths of my previous album I was excited to escape into something entirely new, entirely opposite. When I think of Wuthering Heights I think of many things. I think of passion and pain. I think of England. I think of the Moors, I think of the mud and the cold. I think of determination and grit.”

The Wuthering Heights soundtrack is one of many projects that Charli XCX has in the works. She’s also star to star in Daniel Goldhaber’s Faces of Death, Gregg Araki’s I Want Your Sex, Cathy Yan’s The Gallerist, Julia Jackman’s 100 Nights of Hero, Romain Gavras’s Sacrifice, and Pete Ohs’s Erupcja.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Billboard Global Power Players Interview
Music

Billboard Global Power Players Interview

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Billboard honors leaders driving the success of the music business outside the U.S. through its Billboard Global Power Players list. Among the industry figures recognized this year is Taeko Saito, Senior VP of business development and strategies, Asia Pacific at EMPIRE, marking her first appearance on the list. To commemorate the achievement, Billboard Japan spoke with Saito about EMPIRE’s business strategy, the growth of streaming markets across different countries, and the challenges facing Japan’s music industry today.

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Could you tell us a bit about your background?

Taeko Saito: I spent most of my childhood in the U.S., and after graduating from university, I began my career as an assistant at AAM, a music producer management company. I later joined the publishing company SONGS Music Publishing as an A&R, where I handled deals with artists like Diplo, Lorde, and The Weeknd. After that, I moved to Downtown Music Publishing, where I helped establish its Japan office, and since 2023, I’ve been working at EMPIRE.

Tell us about EMPIRE’s business operations.

EMPIRE was founded in 2010 as a music distribution company. At the time, there were very few distributors specializing in specific genres, but we focused on hip-hop from the start. From there, the company expanded into label and publishing operations, leading to where we are today.

What led EMPIRE to focus on hip-hop?

It comes from a desire to share music from underrepresented communities with the world. Our CEO, Ghazi (Shami), comes from an immigrant background, which may have influenced that vision. He grew up in San Francisco surrounded by street culture, so in many ways, the focus on hip-hop was a natural extension of that. These days, though, we’re not limited to hip-hop — we’ve expanded into regions like Africa and Asia. One of the fastest-rising artists on our roster right now is Shaboozey, a Black country artist.

With streaming now the dominant form of music consumption, artists no longer need to be signed to a record label to release their work. They can do everything independently, though many still don’t fully understand the options available to them or the finer details of how to navigate that process. That’s where we come in: we offer independent artists a range of contract structures and opportunities tailored to their needs. Our goal is to show that there’s more than one way to succeed, and that artists can take flight in ways beyond the traditional system.

Your work focuses on the Asia-Pacific region, is that right?

Yes, mainly Asia. Aside from myself, we have staff based in Singapore and Indonesia, and we work closely together. Also, EMPIRE’s workforce is culturally diverse, with people from many different countries. This mix of cultures makes it reassuring to have headquarters collaborating with us as part of the same team.

The streaming market is slowing but still growing, with particular attention on Asia, Africa, and South America. How does EMPIRE view this situation?

Expectations for growth in Asia are very high. For example, a recent deal I handled was with a label in Cambodia. Spotify only became available there four years ago, in 2021.

That’s quite recent.

Yes. The music business there is still very young. Among the labels we’ve signed, the most successful artist is VannDa, whose videos have racked up hundreds of millions of views on YouTube and who’s seen remarkable growth just over the past year. Countries like Myanmar and Laos also have predominantly young populations, which makes them especially eager to embrace new services.

That said, there are still challenges on the business side in that royalty rates remain low. Japan has the highest rates in Asia, but in other countries, they’re significantly lower compared to regions outside Asia. It’s a complex issue that involves negotiations between nations, but I believe continued dialogue will help drive further growth.

Japan is often seen as a rare example of a country where CD sales and streaming coexist in its music market. What are your thoughts on this situation?

I think it’s wonderful how Japanese artists place such great importance on quality and on treating each fan with genuine care. However, I’m not sure the same approach would necessarily be accepted in the U.S. in exactly the same way. There are cultural differences and what people embrace or don’t, what they find easy or difficult to digest. That’s why I feel the way music is presented varies greatly from country to country. 

I also think that what “success” means can differ from artist to artist. For example, say an artist wants to go global and win a Grammy. But is the goal simply to win a Grammy, or to earn the recognition of the Recording Academy members and to have them feel that this artist deserves a Grammy? Those may sound similar, but the narratives are very different.

And if the goal is to top the Billboard charts, that’s another story altogether. Grammy-nominated artists or works aren’t always those with the greatest commercial success — cultural impact, musicality, and message often carry more weight. So sometimes, winning a Grammy and achieving commercial success don’t necessarily go hand in hand.

So in terms of differences between Japan and other countries, I think the definition of success itself is different. In Japan, there’s a strong focus on nurturing lifelong bonds with each fan — the kind of fan who will buy CDs and cherish that artist for years. The approach is completely different overseas, and I think that gap is part of why the two worlds haven’t always connected. Still, many have continued to take on new challenges, and with the precedent set by K-pop, there’s now a growing sense of optimism across Japan’s music industry. I think what’s most important going forward is to stay adaptable and keep pushing forward with that spirit of challenge.

Have you noticed any major changes in the U.S. music scene over the past ten to twenty years? 

The biggest shift has been in the independent music scene. Twenty years ago, “independent label” mostly brought to mind alternative bands, but now artists of all kinds own their rights and release their music on their own. Seeing that change makes me think Japan can move in the same direction. For idol groups and similar acts, where producers lead the projects, it’s natural for those producers to claim ownership of the rights. But for singer-songwriters, bands, or rappers who write their own material, I’m not sure that same structure always fits. Some artists may thrive under that traditional setup, while others might prefer to manage their own work and release independently. I believe that the latter market will only continue to grow, and when that happens, it’ll be crucial for major labels and agencies to adapt accordingly.

When you look at organic reactions online, you often see artists who go viral once but fade quickly afterward. In those moments, what really matters is an artist’s ability to build their brand and develop a lasting fan base. Today’s younger audiences move fast and shift to the next trend almost instantly. In that kind of environment, understanding what makes an artist someone you want to keep following is where labels and management teams can really make a difference.

And because artists now have the right to choose their own path, I want them to think carefully about what approach best suits them. When I sign an artist, I always make it clear that EMPIRE isn’t a one-size-fits-all label. The artists we work with are business owners in their own right — people who can think about how to evolve and expand their own ventures. Only a small number of artists are truly the right fit for EMPIRE, but for those who are, we’re confident we can help them grow more than anywhere else.

Are there any Japanese artists currently signed to EMPIRE?

Yes, we recently signed an artist named Litty. She only began releasing music last year, so she’s been active for about a year now. She also took part in a songwriting camp we hosted recently, where she collaborated with overseas artists for the first time. She absorbed everything like a sponge, and it was inspiring to see.

Billboard recently launched in Africa, signaling growing global attention on music scenes outside the West. What are your thoughts on that trend?

It’s hard to say definitively why African music has become so deeply rooted in the U.S., but I think part of it comes from a desire within the Black community to reconnect with their roots. Looking at trending charts, there are moments when I sense a similar response among Asian listeners in America — almost as if they’re reacting to how Asian artists haven’t always been fully recognized in the past. Seeing the global success of artists who weren’t traditionally part of the mainstream, especially in K-pop, feels like a reflection of more people embracing their own roots and identities.

The U.S. is the world’s largest music market and a multicultural nation. Do you think it’s because of that diversity that music from so many different countries is being heard there and spreading globally through social media and streaming?

Exactly. The music industry is undergoing a fascinating transformation right now. Music is being heard across borders more than ever, and listeners have become increasingly open to that diversity. For us, Asia still has so much untapped potential. Going forward, we want to build on EMPIRE’s strengths while exploring how best to adapt them to each country’s unique landscape.

—This interview by Naoko Takashima first appeared on Billboard Japan

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Dave Matthews' Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026 Lineup Breakdown
Music

Dave Matthews’ Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026 Lineup Breakdown

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Come January, a beach’s worth of fans of Dave Matthews and his longtime collaborator/guitar virtuoso Tim Reynolds will be dancing on Mexico’s Caribbean shores  — eating, drinking, and being merry. Why? Well, we’re glad you asked: Dave & Tim Riviera Maya, the duo’s annual destination festival.

Going down from January 21st through January 24th at the beautiful Moon Palace Cancún resort, Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026 will mark the ninth edition of the sandy event. More than a simple music festival, the multi-night jubilee offers an all-inclusive experience complete with luxury accommodations, food and drink, access to world-class resort amenities, off-site excursions, and more. It’s a musical vacation set to Matthews’s life-affirming tunes.

Get Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026 Tickets

While the setting offers heaps of eye-catching opportunities and adventures, it’s all brought together by the music. Dave and Tim will perform three headlining sets, each acoustic, intimate, and under the stars. They have also seen fit to bring a host of other great artists to round out the fest, including Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, Trampled by Turtles, Joy Oladokun, and Say She She.

Related Video

Die-hard Dave Matthews Band fan, but unfamiliar with one or more of these additional acts? Fear not — we’ve got your back. Here’s a complete breakdown of all of the artists performing at Dave & Tim Riviera Maya 2026, including what to expect from their respective sets, which songs to start out with, and their overall vibes.

Check out all of our recommendations below. You can also enter to win a festival package for two (2) here, or ensure your trip by exploring packages here.

Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats

Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, photo by Ben Kaye

Vibes: Folky, soulful in a Southern way, gruff but with swagger

Pull Track for DMB Heads: “Still Out There Running,” which features carefree guitar lines, sweet as honey melodies, a soft but shuffling rhythm, and a sprinkle of woodwinds — all things DMB fans should be well familiar with.

What to Expect: Nathaniel Rateliff and his band The Night Sweats might have a little more Southern twang to them, as well as a little more swaggering soul baked into their full-band folk, but their core sound should be more than appealing to a majority of Dave Matthews fans. Rateliff’s songwriting often derives from a similarly tender place, and while he frequently takes his compositions in different directions, his sonic interests and timeless sensibilities ring similar to Matthews’. Expect a soulful performance that features both moments of quiet, folky introspection and dance-worthy, country-tinged jams.

Trampled by Turtles

Trample by Turtles

Trample by Turtles, photo by Zoe Prinds

Vibes: Bluegrass-ish, awesome mandolin playing, twangy vocals, crazy musical chops

Pull Track for DMB Heads: Even though it is kind of cheating to pick a cover, we’re going with Trampled by Turtles’ wonderful rendition of the Radiohead classic “Fake Plastic Trees.” Dave Matthews fans, especially those who like to catch the band in person or who have explored their extensive catalog of live recordings, know that nailing a cover is a thing of beauty, and TbT’s stripped-down, string-backed take is well worth a listen. Plus, call us crazy, but the soft wails of falsetto almost, almost sound Dave-esque.

What to Expect: Trampled by Turtles’ set is bound to paradoxically be both one of the more unique sets of the festival and one that makes complete and utter sense. Their bluegrass sensibilities and lineup of musicians make them stand out among the rest of the bill, but their approach to the style is heartfelt, fun, and squarely of the 21st century. So, get ready for flurries of mandolin solos, banjo breakdowns, and fiddle frenzies. For anyone who will be missing the rest of Matthews’ band during his acoustic performances, Trampled by Turtles’ set is not one to miss.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Rise Against. (Credit: Mynxii White)
Music

Rise Against’s Musical Dystopia – SPIN

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

“And” is the first word Rise Against frontman Tim McIlrath sings on “Nod,” the opening track from Ricochet, released in August. It’s also the first word he sings on the next song, “I Want It All.” But that wasn’t a deliberate strategy, judging from McIlrath’s surprise when I point it out.

“Oh yeah, I didn’t think about that. That’s funny,” McIlrath says via Zoom outside his Chicago home, wearing a sweater on a brisk autumn morning after returning home from a tour. “That is a good device, especially considering that I think of all the Rise Against records as, like, one big ongoing story. This is just like the latest chapter of it. It’s like, ‘Oh, let’s pick back up, where did we leave off?’”

Since forming Rise Against in Chicago’s hardcore scene in 1999, McIlrath has consistently written socially conscious lyrics about the military industrial complex, climate change, animal rights, and class struggle. And as many of the problems he’s written about have continued to worsen in America and abroad, McIlrath sees Rise Against as less a political band than a “dystopian musical project,” and many of the lyrics he wrote years ago sound remarkably prescient.

“Going back to 1984, Fahrenheit 451, or Margaret Atwood, these things that become timely are almost not an accident, like this is what we were talking about. If we keep going down this road, this is what it could look like, and then sometimes we do keep going down that road,” the singer-guitarist says.

(Credit: Mynxii White)

Ricochet was written before the 2024 election, but songs like “Gold Long Gone” and “Damage is Done” resonate deeply with the parade of grim 2025 headlines. “Sometimes the things that we talk about end up sadly coming to fruition by the time an album actually finds its way to a release.” McIlrath adds, with a self-deprecating laugh, “I would love to have all these songs be irrelevant and I could go be unemployed and have the world be a perfect place.”

Rise Against has sold millions of copies of albums that have spun off more than 20 rock radio hits, making McIlrath the rare straight-edge vegetarian who’s shared stages and radio playlists with the likes of Metallica. That’s led Rise Against to turn down shows or opportunities that any other band at their level would eagerly agree to if they weren’t comfortable with a sponsor, and the band remains aligned on those values. “What I love about my band and the three guys and even our manager and our team is that we never sweated that shit,” McIlrath says. “Having that compass of punk and hardcore made it easier to navigate the murky waters of commercial music and still hold onto our identity and feel good about it. And then in the end, as a lesson to other bands, it didn’t limit us.”

McIlrath has become friends with one musician who’s very familiar with those murky waters. “I was just with Tom Morello last weekend at the Blackhawks game,” McIlrath says. “Tom was talking about Rage Against the Machine fans, and splitting them into different categories—the ones that are deeply involved in the politics of Rage, love it, and the ones that are just kind of like banging their heads along to the song—and just talking about how we need all those fans. We want all of them in the room together, they are all necessary.”

Rise Against's new album, Ricochet.
Rise Against’s new album, Ricochet.

As consistent as McIlrath’s lyrical perspective has been over the last 25 years, he saw the tenth Rise Against album as an opportunity to experiment with the band’s sound. “Most of my favorite bands never made it to 10 records. And so what business do you have making the same exact record a tenth time?” he says. “If you wanna change the meal, you gotta change the recipe.”

The majority of Rise Against’s previous albums were produced by Bill Stevenson, the legendary Descendants and Black Flag drummer, at his studio the Blasting Room. For Ricochet, however, Rise Against chose to work with someone new: Australian producer Catherine Marks, who’s won Grammys for her work with boygenius and has a resume full of indie and alternative bands like Manchester Orchestra and Wolf Alice.

“Catherine just stood out as someone that was I think so far removed from, like, a Rise Against world that it sounded exciting to us,” McIlrath says. “And she brought a female energy to the studio that’s not often there. A little peek behind the curtain of Rise Against, 90% of our personnel is female—our managers, agents, lawyers—those are the people that have always kinda run our team. And that’s been successful, so to recreate that dynamic in the studio was fun and felt pretty natural.”

McIlrath, drummer Brandon Barnes, guitarist Zach Blair, and bassist Joe Principe still play fast and loud for most of Ricochet, but the album is more densely layered and musically varied than any previous Rise Against release, with McIlrath’s voice woven into the guitars rather than shouting above them. Marks’s mentor, veteran British producer Alan Moulder, mixed Ricochet, and the subtle electronics on the title track recall his work with Nine Inch Nails and U2.

McIlrath has always toed the line between singing and melodic screaming, and over time he found it harder and harder to perform some of Rise Against’s songs. “I came out of a punk and hardcore world, which almost by definition is an untrained world,” he says. “I didn’t anticipate doing this on big stages at 46 years old. I was, like, in a Knights of Columbus Hall with my friends, playing and screaming into a RadioShack microphone on a shitty PA.”

Deciding to start meeting with the Chicago-based vocal coach Davin Youngs was a game-changer that helped McIlrath avoid issues like vocal polyps and laryngitis that seem to afflict more and more touring singers these days. “For years, I relied on my adolescence and youthful exuberance to pull it off. And then probably five, six years ago, I hit a point where I was like, ‘This is really fucking hard to do, and I don’t know how I’m gonna keep doing it,’” McIlrath admits. Now, he feels ready to sing any song in the Rise Against catalog and hit any note. “I’m actually a far more competent singer today than I’ve ever been. It honestly changed my life.”

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Music Declares Emergency launch new ‘Hope Over Fear’ t-shirt campaign with IDLES, Yard Act, Enter Shikari, Maisie Peters, jasmine 4.t and Music Venue Trust
Music

Music Declares Emergency launch new ‘Hope Over Fear’ t-shirt campaign with IDLES, Yard Act, Enter Shikari, Maisie Peters, jasmine 4.t and Music Venue Trust

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Music Declares Emergency have launched a new ‘Hope Over Fear’ t-shirt campaign with IDLES, Yard Act, Enter Shikari, Maisie Peters, jasmine 4.t and many more artists.

  • READ MORE: IDLES tell us about “the end of an era” and working on “more driven” new material

In support of their ‘No Music On A Dead Planet’ campaign to establish regional climate hubs across the UK, a host of acts including Sleaford Mods, The Pogues, Editors, Declan McKenna and more will join with the charity to promote the launch by wearing one of three campaign t-shirts and “sharing messages of hope with their fans” throughout November.

The charity partner and Music Venue Trust will see each hub bring fans, artists, and organisers together to create, collaborate, and take action through gigs, workshops and local organising.

The campaign for government action on climate change is spearheaded by three new designs from Anthony Burrill, with profits from the sale of the t-shirts going to “directly fund the creation and maintenance of the groups across the UK & Ireland”.

They can be purchased here from today (November 10).

Beak, jasmine 4.t, Enter Shikari and The Pogues’ Spider Stacey wearing ‘Hope Over Fear’ t-shirts CREDIT: Press

Lewis Jamieson, CEO of Music Declares Emergency said of the campaign: “Five years since our launch of NO MUSIC ON A DEAD PLANET, a slogan that has come to encapsulate the commitment of artists, music businesses and fans to making a positive contribution to acting on the climate emergency, we felt it was time to bring a new message.

“By bringing our message into towns and cities across the UK through the amazing grassroots venues that are the starting point for so many musical journeys and the creative hubs that underpin UK music, we will strengthen the bonds between music fans, music promoters, and artists who are committed to making a positive difference in their communities. In doing so, we will build a roadmap from declaring an emergency to creating the alternative.”

Mark Davvyd, CEO of The Music Venue Trust added: “Grassroots Music Venues are a fundamental part of their communities and play a key role in bringing people together through music.

“By partnering with Music Declares Emergency for HOPE OVER FEAR, we aim for those venues to be at the centre of an initiative that offers spaces for innovation, discussion and collaboration and celebrates the cultural power of music to bring positive change for the benefit of everyone.”

It comes after WWF and Music Declares Emergency teamed up with huge names from across the music industry to create a new British Isles music nature map earlier this year.

In the past, ‘No Music On A Dead Planet’ has been backed by the likes of Billie Eilish and Foals as well as having shirts designed by Thom Yorke, Joy Division artist Peter Saville and others.

Previously to mark Earth Day and Turn Up The Volume Week, a number of artists spoke out in support in No Music On A Dead Planet’s campaign for government action on climate change.

Savages drummer and Music Declares Emergency co-founder Fay Milton also previously spoke out about the need for the industry as a whole to change its habits to help beat climate change.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Norah Jones, Leon Bridges Team Up on 'This Christmas I’m Coming Home' 
Music

Norah Jones, Leon Bridges Team Up on ‘This Christmas I’m Coming Home’ 

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Bridges will follow the release with “A Merry Black Christmas” on Nov. 14

Norah Jones and Leon Bridges teamed up for a holiday single, “This Christmas I’m Coming Home.” The song was written by Jones and Leon Michels, and produced by Michels, and nods to Bridges’ 2015 track “Coming Home.”

The festive song sees Jones and Bridges trading verses about returning home for the holidays. “I wanna leave the world behind for now/ And forget about the trouble on my mind,” the pair sings. “I can sit by the fire and lose myself for a while/ And remember what was so hard to find.”

The track is the first of two holiday singles from Bridges. The musician will release “A Merry Black Christmas” on Nov. 14. His most recent album, Leon, arrived in 2024. Earlier this year, Jones teamed up Charley Crocket for with the Crooner & the Cowboy Tour, which wrapped in September.

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Jones has shared numerous Christmas tunes over the years. In 2021, she dropped her first holiday album, I Dream of Christmas, a collection of both classics and originals. The LP was produced by Michels, who also worked on this new collaboration.

“I’ve always loved Christmas music but never had the inclination to make a holiday album until now,” Jones said at the time. “Last year I found myself listening to James Brown’s Funky Christmas and Elvis’s Christmas Album on Sundays during lockdown for a sense of comfort. In January 2021, I started thinking about making a Christmas album of my own. It gave me something fun to work on and look forward to.”

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Austin Music Club Antone’s Signs 50-Year Lease, Set to Open Museum 
Music

Austin Music Club Antone’s Signs 50-Year Lease, Set to Open Museum 

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Independent music venue Antone’s has been guaranteed another 50 years in downtown Austin.

On Monday (Nov. 10), the club’s owners announced they had signed a 50-year lease for the venue’s current location on East 5th Street, which will see the iconic space through to its 100th anniversary in 2075.

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The Antone’s brand has been in several locations throughout its history, with its most recent ownership group landing on a former glass depot on the busy East 5th Street. The venue’s current edition, which opened on New Year’s Eve 2015, includes the 400-capacity concert hall, a record shop called Big Henry’s and an event space on its upper floor. The long-term lease includes all three spaces, while the event space and bar will be transformed into an Antone’s museum.

This summer, the venue, which originally opened in 1975, celebrated its 50th anniversary with a commemorative merch collection, a touring show and an anniversary box set that included live recordings from the blues club’s history.

“We’ve got to use this milestone and the achievement of the 50th to switch from surviving to thriving,” Antone’s co-owner Will Bridges tells Billboard. “It’s crazy to think that Antone’s would have a 100th anniversary and by having that long of a term, to just be able to think and plan long term.”

When Antone’s took over its current space, the owners signed a 10-year lease with two five-year options, with Bridges noting the landlord has been nothing but supportive of the venue. However, the ownership group saw an opportunity to receive a grant from the local Iconic Venue Fund if Antone’s had a secure position in the city, such as land ownership or a long-term lease agreement. Other Austin venues that have benefited from the fund include Hole in the Wall and Empire Control Room & Garage.

Thanks to the 50-year lease, Antone’s has been selected to receive a $1.3 million investment from Rally Austin (home to the Austin Cultural Trust that controls the Iconic Venue Fund) to create a museum called Antone’s “World Famous” Museum of the Blues. The museum, which will be housed permanently on Antone’s upper level beginning in 2027, will celebrate Austin’s blues heritage and foster educational and community programming. It will donate a portion of its proceeds to the city’s Rally for Live Music Fund.

On Monday (Nov. 10), Antone’s will also launch the Antone’s Forever Fund as part of the Clifford Antone Foundation, to ensure the museum’s educational, cultural and community initiatives are continually advancing.

The museum will be open both during the day and in the evenings, providing additional revenue to support the venue and the Clifford Antone Foundation. The Iconic Venue Fund grant also includes a five-year operating stipend to help grow museum operations.

Given the response to the Antone’s 50th All Stars shows in Los Angeles, New York and Nashville, Antone’s creative and musical director Zach Ernst believes these new developments will help cement the venue’s legacy.

“All this extra activity we did this year under the banner of the 50th really reminded us how important Antone’s is outside of Austin,” Ernst tells Billboard. “We really do deserve this kind of [support] as an institution. It’s hard for worker bees like me and Will to think that way. But it is all thanks to Clifford Antone and his vision back in ‘75.”


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November 10, 2025 0 comments
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