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Playboi Carti Preps Massive Fall Tour
Music

Playboi Carti Preps Massive Fall Tour

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Rapper Playboi Carti will embark on a nearly two-month North American Antagonist tour this fall, beginning Oct. 3 in Salt Lake City and wrapping Dec. 1 in Atlanta. Carti’s Opium Collective, consisting of Ken Carson, Destroy Lonely and Homixide Gang, will serve as opening acts.

The artist will be on the road in support of his latest album, MUSIC, which debuted earlier this year at No. 1 on the Billboard 200. He spent the bulk of this spring and summer opening for the Weeknd’s After Hours Til Dawn stadium extravaganza, which concludes Sept. 3 in San Antonio.

Visit Carti’s web site for ticket on-sale details.

Here is Playboi Carti’s Antagonist tour itinerary:

Fri Oct 03 – Salt Lake City, UT – Delta Center
Sun Oct 05 – Portland, OR – Moda Center
Wed Oct 08 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena
Fri Oct 10 – San Francisco, CA – Chase Center
Sun Oct 12 – Sacramento, CA – Golden 1 Center
Tue Oct 14 – Los Angeles, CA – Crypto.com Arena
Fri Oct 17 – Phoenix, AZ – PHX Arena
Sat Oct 18 – Las Vegas, NV  – MGM Grand Garden Arena
Mon Oct 20 – Denver, CO – Ball Arena
Thu Oct 23 – St. Paul, MN – Xcel Energy Center
Fri Oct 24 – Kansas City, MO – T-Mobile Center
Sat Oct 25 – St. Louis, MO – Enterprise Center
Tue Oct 28 – Columbus, OH – Nationwide Arena
Thu Oct 30 – Chicago, IL – United Center
Fri Oct 31 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena
Sat Nov 01 – Pittsburgh, PA – PPG Paints Arena
Tue Nov 04 – Boston, MA – TD Garden
Thu Nov 06 – Brooklyn, NY – Barclays Center
Fri Nov 07 – Newark, NJ – Prudential Center
Sat Nov 08 – Hartford, CT – PeoplesBank Arena
Mon Nov 10 – Philadelphia, PA – Xfinity Mobile Arena
Tue Nov 11 – Washington, DC – Capital One Arena
Thu Nov 13 – Raleigh, NC – Lenovo Center
Fri Nov 14 – Charlotte, NC – Spectrum Center
Sun Nov 16 – Sunrise, FL – Amerant Bank Arena
Fri Nov 28 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
Sun Nov 30 – Tampa, FL – Benchmark International Arena
Mon Dec 01 – Atlanta, GA –State Farm Arena

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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A$AP Rocky Receiving Oscar Buzz For Best Supporting Actor
Music

A$AP Rocky Receiving Oscar Buzz For Best Supporting Actor

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

A$AP Rocky is making serious waves in Hollywood as his performance in Highest 2 Lowest garners early awards-season attention, including consideration for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor.

According to Variety’s Oscars Prediction List, Rocky’s performance has landed him in the running for a Best Supporting Actor nod, putting him in rare air for a recording artist breaking into Hollywood.

Known primarily for his genre-defining work in music, Rocky’s latest turn as Yung Felon — a sharp-witted, ambitious rap artist — places him directly alongside screen legend Denzel Washington in some of the film’s most talked-about scenes.

A$AP Rocky, attends the 2025 Met Gala Celebrating “Superfine: Tailoring Black Style” at Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 05, 2025 in New York City.

Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

In the film, directed by Spike Lee, Rocky’s character Yung Felon finds himself in Denzel’s orbit, setting the stage for a powerful and unexpected alliance. Their chemistry is electric, and critics have taken notice of Rocky’s ability to hold his own against one of the most revered actors of our time.

“Yeah, don’t sleep on A$AP,” Spike Lee said during an appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon in July. “In this film, Denzel and A$AP go toe to toe.”

Lee went on to highlight the uncanny resemblance between the two stars, suggesting it added a layer of unspoken depth to their scenes.

A$AP Rocky

(L-R) Denzel Washington and A$AP Rocky attend the “Highest 2 Lowest” New York Premiere at Brooklyn Academy of Music on August 11, 2025 in New York City.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

“What’s interesting is, even before I got involved with this film, I always thought that A$AP looked like he could be Denzel’s son. There’s a big resemblance. So when you see it on the screen, it adds an element of father and son. Don’t sleep on A$AP. Don’t sleep on A$AP,” he emphasized.

Lee added, “I’ve done five films with Denzel, and when he’s in a scene with somebody, they just get overwhelmed. He’s one of the world’s greatest living actors. But A$AP wasn’t having that. Toe to toe. I mean, they were going at it.”

While Highest 2 Lowest marks Rocky’s most significant acting role to date, he’s no stranger to the screen. His previous film credits include Dope, Monster, Zoolander 2, and the indie short If I Had Legs I’d Kick You.

A$AP Rocky

A$AP Rocky at A24’s “Highest 2 Lowest” New York Premiere held at the Brooklyn Academy of Music Harvey Theater on August 11, 2025 in Brooklyn, New York.

John Nacion/Variety via Getty Images

Rocky’s musical contributions to the film, including the moody single “Trunks” and the introspective “Both Eyes Closed,” have also added to the film’s cultural weight, reinforcing his versatility as both an artist and performer.

With names like Mahershala Ali (Jurassic Park: Rebirth), Chiwetel Ejiofor (The Life of Chuck), Miles Caton (Sinners), Delroy Lindo (Sinners), Damson Idris (F1), and Idris Elba (A House of Dynamite) also in the Best Supporting Actor mix, A$AP Rocky’s inclusion speaks volumes about the impact of his performance — and his undeniable presence on screen.

ASAP Rocky

A$AP Rocky at Apple Original Films And A24’s “Highest 2 Lowest” Los Angeles Premiere held at The Academy Museum on August 13, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty Images

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Vote Now for Your Favorite Rap Albums of All Time
Music

Vote Now for Your Favorite Rap Albums of All Time

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

What are your favorite rap albums of all time? Tell us below. To make sure your vote is counted, please submit it by Sunday, September 7 at 11:59 p.m. ET. Check back for the results in the coming weeks. Thanks for participating—and thanks for reading.

If you’re unable to see the survey below, you can also take it here.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Kneecap cancel 2025 US tour due to "close proximity of next court hearing"
Music

Kneecap cancel 2025 US tour due to “close proximity of next court hearing”

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Kneecap have cancelled their sold-out 2025 US headline tour. Find all the details below.

  • READ MORE: Kneecap on the cover – giving peace, protest and partying a chance

It comes after member Mo Chara’s terrorism case was adjourned until next month at his second court hearing at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London last Wednesday (August 20).

“To all our US-based fans, we have some bad news. Due to the close proximity of our next court hearing in London on September 26 – as the British government continues its witch-hunt – with the start of the US tour, we will have to cancel all 15 US tour dates in October,” the Irish rap trio wrote.

“With every show fully sold out, this is news we are sad to deliver. But once we win our court case, which we will, we promise to embark on an even bigger tour to all you great heads.”

They continued: “Canadian shows are NOT affected and we will be playing our 4 sold out shows in Vancouver and Toronto.”

Kneecap went on to tease some upcoming “good news” for those in the States.

“We will be sharing something very special for US fans next week so that we can still link in with you all in October,” they said. “It’s top secret for now but all will be revealed next week – stay tuned.

“And remember… ‘The revolution will be no re-run, brothers. The revolution will be live’.”

Ticketholders for the US dates can get a refund from their point of purchase. See the post below.

Chara (real name Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh) first appeared in court in June, when he was released on unconditional bail.

The terrorism charges were levelled against him in May for allegedly displaying a Hezbollah flag onstage at a London show last November. The rapper is yet to enter a plea, but has denied any wrongdoing.

His lawyers are seeking to throw out the case, arguing that the terror charge against him was brought outside the time limit. They claim that it was brought a day after the six-month limit for such charges.

However, prosecutors say the charge was brought exactly within the required time limit.

Responding to the terror charge in May, Kneecap denied the offence and vowed to “vehemently defend ourselves”. “This is political policing,” they wrote. “This is a carnival of distraction. We are not the story. Genocide is.”

Speaking outside the court following last week’s hearing, Chara thanked supporters for coming. “We know this story is more than just about me. It’s more than Kneecap; this is a story about Palestine and us as a distraction from the real story,” he told those gathered.

“We know, unfortunately, this story will end up in the media today, while Israel commits genocide at the same time. So, everybody, continue to speak about Palestine, free Palestine. Thank you all for coming.”

Kneecap have since returned to the stage for a defiant set at Rock en Seine, where pro-Israel protestors attempted to disrupt the performance.

Earlier this month, the trio led chants of “fuck KKR” at Øya Festival 2025 before condemning the “hate-filled” Hungarian Prime Minister in a video broadcast at Sziget in Budapest.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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John Prine's Early Nashville Years, In His Own Words
Music

John Prine’s Early Nashville Years, In His Own Words

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

John Prine never had a chance to write his own memoir. But in the late 2010s, he’d begun working on one with the author Tom Piazza. After Prine died in 2020 — from complications due to Covid-19 — Piazza revisited the series of trips, encounters and conversations he’d had with the legendary singer-songwriter and began turning them into a book. 

“This isn’t a biography of John Prine, or a chronicle of John’s musical development, a critical assessment, an oral history, or a study of his influence on American culture,” Piazza writes in the book. “What started as a memoir, in his voice, changed, inevitably, into a book about friendship, and loss…a portrait, the best I can deliver, of John, and of our friendship, as he made the most of the final two years of his life.”

That book, Living in the Present with John Prine — out September 9th — is a mix of memoir and reportage about Prine’s life and later years. But the most thrilling sections, written by Piazza in Prine’s own voice, are snippets and previews of what Prine’s never-completed memoir would have been. These chapters of the book are both revelatory for what they reveal about Prine’s early life and heartbreaking in that they reinforce that the complete book he should’ve had the chance to write will never exist. 

But in the chapters that do exist, Prine’s voice jumps off the page. Here, in this exclusive excerpt, Prine discusses some of his earliest experiences in his future hometown of Nashville, including what would end up becoming a fateful meeting with the legendary producer Cowboy Jack Clement.

The first time I came to Nashville, in the early 1970s, my buddy Lee Clayton took me to the Grand Ole Opry and brought me backstage. The Opry was still at the Ryman then, and there was so little room backstage that you bumped into everybody – literally! Ernest Tubb was here, on my right, Roy Acuff on my left. We were standing between the back curtain and the brick wall, and Dolly Parton walked by and all the men had to suck their guts in to let Dolly get by. And I thought, “I’m in hillbilly heaven.” I grew up listening to country radio at my Dad’s feet, and all the people I’d heard on radio were there in front of me. And they were friendly as could be. If you were introduced to them they stopped and said your name back to you – “Great to meet you. What are you doing here? Welcome to Nashville.” It was heaven to me.

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In either late ‘76 or early ’77 I came down from Chicago with a group of songs I had that eventually became Bruised Orange. I had most of the Bruised Orange songs written – “Chain Of Sorrow,” “There She Goes” – I didn’t know my marriage was falling apart, and I had already written a divorce song – “Fish and Whistle,” “Sabu Visits the Twin Cities Alone,” “Iron Ore Betty.” And “That’s The Way The World Goes Around.”

I came to Nashville to meet with a producer named Ray Baker. Ray Baker had produced a record on Moe Bandy that I really loved – “Hank Williams, You Wrote My Life.” It just had a great sound to it. So I’d called up my manager, Al Bunetta, and told him I wanted to work with Ray Baker. That’s what I wanted my next record to sound like. Al set up a meeting, and I came down to Nashville. I got here in the evening, and I was supposed to meet Ray Baker the next day.

That was the night I met Cowboy.

A friend of mine who ran the Atlantic Records office in Nashville met me that evening when I got here, and the first thing he says is, “You gotta meet the Cowboy.” I didn’t know what he was talking about. I always thought Jack Clement was either a hit songwriter, or the name of a publishing company, because I’d seen it so many times on records. My friend said, “He’s both.” I went because my friend insisted. I didn’t have an appointment. He brought me over, introduced me, and left.

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Jack took me to Sperry’s for dinner that first night, and we hung out for the next two days. Me and Jack just hit it off. He took me all around town. We went everywhere. And I never made it to Ray Baker’s. Way up in the next evening I had a plane booked to go home and Jack took me to the airport. Back then, the airport was so small, you could leave your car parked in front and walk in to the gate. Jack walks me to the gate, and we stop for a beer – I had about a half hour before my plane left.

So Jack says to me – we’d been together hanging out for two days and one night – he goes, “So what do you do, John?”

I looked at him. “Jack, I write songs and make records.”

He goes, “Really!”

I said, “Yeah.”

He says, “How many records?”

I said, “I’ve made four records, for Atlantic. I just left them, and I signed with Asylum.”

He goes, “How many records didja sell?”

I said, “I don’t know… maybe sixty, sixty-five thousand.”

He goes, “Really.”

I said, “Yeah.”

He goes, “So what’s your problem?”

I said, “What…?”

He says, “What’s your problem?”

I said, “What do you mean?”

He says, “Exactly. What’s your problem?”

I said, “I ain’t got no problem…”

Courtesy of W. W. Norton & Company, Inc

It’s time to get on the plane. “Jack, it’s great to meet you. Can’t wait to see you again.” And all the way home, I’m going, “What is my problem?” It stuck with me. When I got home I started looking up who Jack Clement was.

I find out Jack had been Sam Phillips’ right-hand man at Sun Records. Jack was the one who was there when Jerry Lee Lewis walked in off the street and sang “Whole Lot of Shakin’ Going On.” Sam Phillips was out of town and Jack called him, said, “You got to get back to Memphis, you won’t believe what I just cut!”

The year before I met him Jack had produced Waylon Jennings’ Dreaming My Dreams record, which was a big game changer for the Outlaw country movement. It was a huge record, and great sounding. Today when I put that record on it sounds brand new. The whole album is incredible, from beginning to end. And they had just reissued Elvis’ first Sun recordings, and I’d never heard all ten recordings that Elvis did at Sun when he first came there. And it was all just like an explosion.

I told Al Bunetta, “I’m sorry; please give Mr. Baker my apologies, but I want to go back down and talk to Jack Clement. I want to sing some of my songs for Jack and see what he thinks.”

I never had a mentor, a musical mentor, except my brother Dave, because he taught me. Jack was the first person I admired like him since my Dad died. The impact that he made on me – it wasn’t just musical. Every time Jack talked to me, he got my total attention. Everybody else might as well have been my English teacher. My attention would be everywhere but on who was talking to me. The mind of a songwriter: I’m not thinking about what I’m doing here; I’m thinking about the next song! When Cowboy would talk he would get my attention. That’s how I knew, you know? It wasn’t just producer-artist relationship; it was more than that.

Cowboy took time to teach me how to not be scared of a microphone in the studio. He knew that I was scared without asking me. He knew that was part of my problem, that that was why I didn’t like listening to myself. Because of how nervous I was. I couldn’t listen to those first albums; I hated my voice. I didn’t know anything about a microphone, didn’t know how to approach it. I was totally scared; I could hear the fear in my voice. Especially that first album. I heard my voice quivering.

He told me, “I’ve seen you perform live, and you know how to connect with those people. Somehow you have to look at that microphone and know that they’re on the other end. That you’re not alone in the studio. The same people you’re playing to live are listening to you in the studio.”

Nobody ever took time to do that with me.

That he was a producer was kinda beside the fact. Cowboy’s business was fun. “We’re in the fun business. If we’re not having fun, we’re not doing our jobs.” That was his motto. “If this is work, why the fuck did we become musicians? To work for a living?” He couldn’t stand musicians that just read music and did it for the money. In that Shakespeare movie there’s one scene where Jack is sitting right here, behind his desk, and Waylon is there, George Jones over here, Johnny Cash, all in one room. You could walk in here any given day of the week and there would be Cowboy and Frank Ifield. Cowboy and Waylon. Cowboy and Johnny Cash.

He’d sit here and leave that window open in the spring and summer, and a squirrel would come and visit him. Jack would leave food here for the squirrel. He had two cats, named Fred and Ginger, and they’d eat ham out of his pocket. He’d keep this piece of ham in his breast pocket and they’d sit on his shoulder and reach down. It was a circus, of sorts. He called it the Cowboy Arms Hotel and Recording Spa. He planned on turning this into a place where when people came from out of town, they’d stay here instead of a hotel. Whoever was recording here would be able to stay here, wake up here, have their breakfast here, and then go right upstairs into the studio.

He also had Jack Clement Recording Studio a few blocks away from here. JCRS was the hottest studio in town. Over half the Number Ones in Nashville in the late sixties were cut there. Jack came up with things like church pews with microphones built into the pew so four women could sit down like they were in church and sing backups and not have any microphones in their faces, just pick them up with indirect mikes. I mean, such a cool place, just down the street.

He had to sell it in the early seventies, because he made a movie called Dear Dead Delilah. It was kinda like one of those Bette Davis horror movies – What Ever Happened To Baby Jane? – it was kinda like that. With Agnes Moorehead. Jack directed it. He had never been in a movie, let alone directed one. About halfway through the movie the backers dropped out, and Jack made the fatal decision to back his own movie. He was making millions off of JCRS. But he had to sell the place at the height of its popularity to pay for the movie. I saw the movie once – I fell asleep twenty-five minutes into it. He finished it, and also paid for the distribution! Not just the production. Everybody dropped out on him. He was stubborn, and he was crazy. People warned him about other things like that, and he would always just go ahead.

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But his instincts with music were always dead on. Johnny Cash called him up himself, about “Ring of Fire.” A different producer had cut the song. He said “Cowboy, I had a dream last night I heard mariachi horns on my new single, and I can’t get my producer to put ‘em on there.” Jack said, “I can do it.” So Jack put the mariachi horns on “Ring of Fire,” which was the hook. That’s what sold the song.

Excerpted from Living in the Present with John Prine. Copyright © 2025 by Tom Piazza. Used with permission of the author. All rights reserved.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Conan Gray's 'Wishbone' Debuts at No. 1 on Top Album Sales Chart
Music

Conan Gray’s ‘Wishbone’ Debuts at No. 1 on Top Album Sales Chart

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Conan Gray’s latest studio album, Wishbone, bows at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Album Sales chart, marking his first leader there. Simultaneously, the collection arrives at No. 3 on the overall Billboard 200, granting the singer-songwriter his highest-charting project yet on the latter list. Both tallies, dated Aug. 30, will be posted in full to Billboard’s website on Tuesday (Aug. 26).

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Also in the top 10 of the Top Album Sales chart, Billie Eilish, Niall Horan, Maroon 5, Chevelle, Chance The Rapper and Selena all make waves.

Billboard’s Top Album Sales chart ranks the top-selling albums of the week based only on traditional album sales. The chart’s history dates back to May 25, 1991, the first week Billboard began tabulating charts with electronically monitored piece count information from SoundScan, now Luminate. Pure album sales were the sole measurement utilized by the Billboard 200 albums chart through the list dated Dec. 6, 2014, after which that chart switched to a methodology that blends album sales with track equivalent album (TEA) units and streaming equivalent album (SEA) units.

Wishbone sold 53,000 copies in its first week (Gray’s best sales week ever) with physical purchases comprising nearly all of its sales. Vinyl sales accounted for just over 30,000 sold — Gray’s best week ever on vinyl. Wishbone also bows at No. 1 on the Vinyl Albums chart, marking his second leader. The set’s opening-week sales were bolstered by its availability across seven CD variants (including signed editions) and seven vinyl editions (some signed).

On the Billboard 200, Gray has charted five entries overall, with three of them reaching the top 10 (Kid Crow in 2020, No. 5; Superache in 2022, No. 9 and Wishbone in 2025, No. 3). On the Top Album Sales chart, he’s also notched five entries, with four hitting the top 10 (Kid Crow, No. 2; Superache, No. 22; Found Heaven in 2024 at No. 2 and Wishbone, No. 1).

Elsewhere on the latest Top Album Sales chart, Billie Eilish’s HIT ME HARD AND SOFT surges 44-2 with 18,000 copies sold (up 988%), following the release of a one-year anniversary vinyl variant. Vinyl purchases made up nearly all of its sales for the week. (The 18,000 figure is the total sales of all the versions of the album, old and new, combined.) The anniversary edition of the vinyl was pressed on bio-vinyl dark blue and orange splatter with its cover printed on silver mirror foil board and contains a poster.

Another anniversary helps Niall Horan’s chart-topping Heartbreak Weather reenter the chart at No. 3, as a suite of five-year anniversary products help push the album back onto the ranking. Collectively, all the versions of the album, old and new, sold 12,000 copies in the tracking week (up from a negligible sum the previous week).

Heartbreak Weather was reissued for its fifth anniversary in two new vinyl variants (an opaque baby blue color variant with new cover art, and a deluxe double-LP set pressed on sea-blue and white splatter vinyl with expanded packaging and nine bonus tracks), a CD variant (with new cover artwork and eight bonus tracks) and a digital download (with eight bonus tracks).

Maroon 5 collects its eighth top 10 on the Top Album Sales chart as its latest release, Love Is Like, arrives at No. 4 with nearly 11,000 copies sold. TOMORROW X TOGETHER’s chart-topping The Star Chapter : TOGETHER climbs 7-5 (8,000, down 18%) and Chevelle nabs its sixth top 10 with the No. 6 debut of Bright as Blasphemy (nearly 7,000).

Chance The Rapper’s new studio effort Star Line starts at No. 7 with nearly 7,000 sold, scoring the third top 10 for the artist. Selena’s former No. 1 Dreaming of You reenters the chart at No. 8 with 6,000 sold (up from a negligible sum in the week previous) after a number of 30th anniversary reissue products were released. Dreaming of You was remastered for its 30th anniversary, and reissued across four vinyl variants, a CD and a digital download.

The KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack climbs 15-9 on Top Album Sales with its best sales week yet (nearly 5,500 — up 3%). The album has only been available to purchase as a digital download, but will see the impact of its release on CD (on Aug. 22) in the tracking week ending Aug. 28 (as reflected on the Sept. 6-dated Top Album Sales chart).

Closing out the top 10 of the latest Top Album Sales chart is TWICE’s THIS IS FOR, which is steady at No. 10 with 5,000 sold (down 22%).

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Oasis Launch First American Tour in 16 Years with Rain-Soaked Set in Toronto
Music

Oasis Launch First American Tour in 16 Years with Rain-Soaked Set in Toronto

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Oasis kicked off the North American leg of their 2025 reunion tour on Sunday night with a rousing, rain-soaked show at Toronto’s Rogers Stadium. A sold-out crowd of 50,000 turned out for the Gallagher brothers’ first North American show in 16 years, and despite rain showers drenching most of the night, the band powered through.

Playing the same 23- song setlist featured in the earlier UK leg of the tour, Liam and Noel ran through greatest hits and fan favorites, including “Acquiesce,” “Morning Glory,” “Cigarettes & Alcohol,” “Live Forever,” “The Masterplan,” “Don’t Look Back in Anger,” and “Champagne Supernova.” See the full setlist and fan-captured video below.

Get Oasis Reunion Tour Tickets Here

For their part, Oasis didn’t seem bothered by the rain: “It’s only a bit of rain, man,” Liam told the crowd at one point. “We’re from Manchester.” Later in the set, he exclaimed, “Don’t you just love it? A little bit of chaos when the weather comes. All that sunshine. Not good for ya!”

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Oasis will play another show in Toronto on Monday night, before making their way to Chicago; East Rutherford, NJ; Los Angeles, and Mexico City. Look for last-minute tickets here.

Last week, Noel gave his first public comments about Oasis’ reunion during an appearance on talkSPORT, a UK sports radio program. He shared that he’s feeling “on top of the world” and has been “blown away” by the overwhelming reception the band’s concerts have received thus far. “It’s been truly amazing. I’m not usually short for words,” he noted.

Live Forever in the rain was the most beautiful experience.
byu/Rad10headlover inoasis

Oasis Reunion Tour Setlist in Toronto, August 24th, 2025:
Hello
Acquiesce
Morning Glory
Some Might Say
Bringing It On Down
Cigarettes & Alcohol
Fade Away
Supersonic
Roll with It
Bring It On Down
Talk Tonight
Half the World Away
Little By Little
D’you Know What I Mean?
Stand by Me
Cast No Shadow
Slide Away
Whatever
Live Forever
Rock ‘n’ Roll Star
The Masterplan
Don’t Look Back in Anger
Wonderwall
Champagne Supernova

Oasis 2025 Tour Dates:
08/25 – Toronto, ON @ Rogers Stadium
08/28 – Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field
08/31 – E. Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium
09/01 – E. Rutherford, NJ @ MetLife Stadium
09/06 – Los Angeles, CA @ Rose Bowl
09/07 – Los Angeles, CA @ Rose Bowl
09/12 – Mexico City, MX @ Estadio GNP Seguros
09/13 – Mexico City, MX @ Estadio GNP Seguros
09/27 — London, UK @ Wembley Stadium
09/28 — London, UK @ Wembley Stadium
10/31 – Melbourne, AU @ Marvel Stadium
11/01 – Melbourne, AU @ Marvel Stadium
11/04 – Melbourne, AU @ Marvel Stadium
11/07 – Sydney, AU @ Accor Stadium
11/08 – Sydney, AU @ Accor Stadium
11/15 – Buenos Aires, AR @ Estadio River Plate
11/16 – Buenos Aires, AR @ Estadio River Plate
11/19 – Santiago, CL @ Estadio Nacional
11/22 – Sao Paulo, BR @ Estádio Morumbis
11/23 – Sao Paulo, BR @ Estádio Morumbis

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Deftones Debut New Songs At Vancouver Tour Opener
Music

Deftones Debut New Songs At Vancouver Tour Opener

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

On the eve of the release of their new album, private music, Deftones debuted three new songs from it last night (Aug. 22) at their fall tour opener in Vancouver. The Chino Moreno-led group also dedicated another rarity to late Mastodon member Brent Hinds, who died this week in an Atlanta motorcycle crash.

Deftones unveiled “my mind is a mountain,” “infinite source” and “milk of the madonna” in Vancouver, a day after airing them for the first time during an audience-free livestream. About halfway through the set, they dusted off “Entombed,” a song from the 2012 album Koi no Yokan that hadn’t been played live since 2017.

Moreno told the audience they were playing the song in honor of “a very dear friend” in Hinds, who with Mastodon toured in tandem with Deftones and Alice in Chains back in 2010. During the encore, Deftones also played “Engine No. 9” from 1995’s Adrenaline for the first time this year.

private music is expected to score a high debut on the Billboard 200 this coming week. Deftones are supporting it on the road throughout the fall at a mix of headlining shows and appearances at such festivals as Louder Than Life in Louisville, Ky., and Aftershock in their Sacramento, Ca., hometown.

The group will also host its annual Dia De Los Deftones blowout on Nov. 1 at San Diego’s Petco Park in tandem with Clipse, Rico Nasty and Deafheaven. A European run will follow early next tear.

See fan-shot footage of the Vancouver performances below.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Serena Williams Opens Up About Using Weight Loss Medications
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Serena Williams Opens Up About Using Weight Loss Medications

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Serena Williams is opening up about her health journey and hopes to do her part in alleviating the stigma around using weight loss medications. The GOAT tennis player spoke about her 31-pound transformation and detailed how embracing GLP-1’s is exactly the solution she needed, especially after having children and exhausting her other options.

“I felt it was important for me to come out and say it,” she began during her TODAY Show interview, emphasizing the shame that may come from people who opt for GLP-1’s. “Is it a lazy way? Is it a shortcut?” The Grand Slam champ shared that after having her two daughters, she wasn’t able to “be at a healthy” weight due to her joints, blood sugar levels, age, and other factors no matter what she did. She felt her body was missing something and learned many other women related.

“As an athlete and as someone that has done everything, I just couldn’t get my weight to where I needed to be at a healthy place, and believe me I don’t take shortcuts. I do everything but shortcuts,” Williams said.

Despite playing professional tennis and “literally training five hours a day,” she considered GLP-1’s but was extremely skeptical, initially even saying “don’t sign me up.”

“I literally was playing a professional sport, and I could never go back to where I needed to be for my health, for my healthy weight, no matter what I did,” she said. “I would always lose a lot of weight, and then I would stay. No matter what I did, I couldn’t go lower than that one number.”

There were other health considerations too besides just weight loss; diabetes runs in her family and she also was struggling with pressure on her knees post-partum.

Finally, she changed her mindset and “looked at it as a sport.” She started viewing weight loss as her “opponent.” “I can’t beat this opponent no matter what I do, I have to try something different… I tried it, and it actually worked,” she said.

Williams is the latest celebrity to open up about their use of weight loss medications. Fat Joe, Oprah Winfrey, Whoopi Goldberg, Charles Barkley, and plenty more have publicly co-signed GLP-1’s and how they have changed their lives, with Fat Joe even gushing that it’s the “greatest invention ever.”

Earlier this week, the mother of two launched a campaign with Ro, a company that prescribes GLP-1 medications through telehealth.

August 25, 2025 0 comments
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Mac DeMarco: Guitar Album Review
Music

Mac DeMarco: Guitar Album Review

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The most affecting moment on Guitar comes 45 seconds into the fourth tune, “Nightmare.” The song begins mid-meter, DeMarco’s voice arriving so ahead of the beat that it’s like he has been searching for someone he can tell his troubles to. Maybe there’s been an argument, and his partner is still sleeping it off in the next room. It is a miracle, he confesses, that she sticks around at all. “Roll up those sleeves, boy,” he sings in a diminutive falsetto, cuddly as a teddy bear. “Smoke the whole pack/There’s no turning back from this one.” In a few perfect lines, this is the war of always trying to get your shit together, of trying to be good enough for the life into which you have wandered. By all interview accounts, DeMarco’s partner, Kiera McNally, possesses a saintly forbearance, sticking with him from those rough-and-tumble salad days to these idyllic times of pruning olive trees on an island; here he is, waking up bummed, then rolling up his sleeves to try and deserve her.

In two minutes, “Nightmare” bottles both sides of Guitar—DeMarco’s bummer survey of what he has been and his grim commitment to what he may still be. The past comes back to haunt him on “Knockin’,” a simple country-funk number where regrets he thought he’d overcome arrive like uninvited guests for a housewarming party at the spot where he hopes to spend the rest of his life. Evoking George Harrison on a morphine drip, “Home” finds him contemplating the places and people he’s already left, how seeing them again would feel like finding a ghost whose sole purpose is to remind him of his failures. Each beat is another towering speedbump that DeMarco is willing himself over and beyond, forcing himself into the future.

And DeMarco’s songs about that future are what make Guitar so endearing, what makes it land like a long hug from an old friend you assumed you’d never see again. “Sweeter” seems like a catatonic bummer, a from-the-brink testimonial of someone who has supremely fucked up, repeatedly breaking a lover’s heart until she vanished. But DeMarco’s promise—“This time, I will be sweeter/I can be much sweeter/Some things never change”—is so plainspoken and earnest that I find myself pulling for him like he’s some hapless sports team, one play away from saving the franchise. He searches for his core on “Punishment,” a sort of secular prayer about trying to find the thing that animates you, the thing that can serve as a safeguard against your worst instincts. Plodding in a way that suggests a daily ritual, “Holy” is more direct still, a plea to be cut free from the “curse from down below.” DeMarco can see the tether to his old ways starting to fray; just maybe it will finally snap.

DeMarco’s first album arrived the month I got engaged, his second a month or so before I turned 30 and got married. When his songs were daily reckonings with nights of excess, I was trying to get over inherited bacchanalian patterns of my own, to ease into some version of adulthood. His music made me feel like I was staring into some cracked rearview mirror. I get the sense from Guitar that DeMarco now knows what that’s like, as one tries to leave the pernicious habits that extend from a lineage of addicts. But these songs—soft lullabies and blues for himself about the hard places he’s been—make me think he’s getting somewhere new by being honest and at least a little optimistic. “All those days of trying to run/What a waste of breath,” he sings at one point, like he’s letting out a sigh he’s suppressed for 35 years. Maybe no matter the struggle, you could still be a little like this version of Mac DeMarco, too.

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August 25, 2025 0 comments
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