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Charli xcx, John Cale Team For 'Wuthering Heights'
Music

Charli xcx, John Cale Team For ‘Wuthering Heights’

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Charli xcx has let the cat out of the bag regarding her contributions to the upcoming remake of Wuthering Heights, for which her songs will also double as her next album. The first single from the project is “House” featuring 83-year-old Velvet Underground co-founder John Cale, which will be out Monday (Nov. 10). The film, which stars Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi, hits theaters on Valentine’s Day (Feb. 14),

“I got a call from Emerald Fennell last Christmas asking whether I would consider working on a song for her adaptation of Wuthering Heights,” Charli wrote on Instagram. “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. After being so in the depths of my previous album [2024’s massive hit brat], I was excited to escape into something entirely new, entirely opposite.”

The artist had separately become “really taken” with Todd Haynes’ 2021 self-titled Velvet Underground documentary and said she kept coming back to a phrase uttered therein by Cale: “any song has to be both elegant and brutal.” “I got really stuck on that phrase. I wrote it down in my Notes app and would pull it up from time to time and think about what he meant,” she recalled.

The opportunity to set it to music came in late April when Charli was on tour in Austin, Texas. “Finn 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,” she said.

After the pair spoke on the phone (“wow … that voice, so elegant, so brutal”), Charli sent Cale sone of the songs. “We started talking specifically about ‘House.’ We spoke about the idea of a poem. He recorded something and sent it to me. Something that only John could do. And it was … well, it made me cry.”

Wuthering Heights is the first of several high-profile film projects in the works for Charli, led by the A24 film The Moment, which is based on her original idea by Charli and will also star the U.K. pop maven. It will feature Alexander Skarsgård, Rosanna Arquette, Jamie Demetriou, Kylie Jenner, Rachel Sennott, Kate Berlant, Arielle Dombasle and Hailey Benton Gates and is due in theaters next year.

She has additional acting roles in Cathy Yan’s The Gallerist, Gregg Araki’s I Want Your Sex and a remake of the 1978 schlock horror classic Faces of Death.

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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Bangladesh Gives A Deep Dive Into His Catalog
Music

Bangladesh Gives A Deep Dive Into His Catalog

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Hailing from Atlanta, Bangladesh stands as one of the most accomplished yet criminally unsung producers in Hip-Hop and R&B of the new millennium. Known for his explosive, bass-heavy sound and infectious rhythmic style,

Bangladesh’s fingerprints are embedded across some of the genre’s most defining records. But long before his beats became staples of club speakers and car stereos worldwide, he was a barber—steady-handed behind a chair, but with his heart firmly set on music. Eventually, he decided to go all in on his passion, a move that would not only change his life, but save it.

Reflecting on how producing became a guiding force, Bangladesh once explained, “So, say I might be thinking negatively. I might be thinking, ‘Man, I’m going to go do something negative,’ which it’s not like I am but every night when you’re around whatever you’re around at the time, you can fall victim to it.

“Just growing up in the in the in the hood, you can start going down the wrong path, thinking negatively [due to] what you’re seeing and sh*t.

“So, when I would think like that, I would get these feelings [from producing] kind of showing me what I’m going to be doing or where I’m going. Giving me the example of the feeling just so I don’t go do the sh*t that I’m thinking about.”

Courtesy Of Bangladesh

His path took a pivotal turn after a chance encounter with Ludacris—then a radio personality hungry to prove himself as a rapper. The two hit it off creatively, and Bangladesh went on to produce a major portion of Luda’s independent debut Incognegro and his breakout major label release Back for the First Time.

Those early records didn’t just help launch Ludacris into superstardom—they introduced Bangladesh’s rambunctious, high-energy production style to the world.

From there, his sound became one of the most sought-after in the industry, shaping hits that blurred the lines between grit and groove.

Yet, despite his undeniable impact, Bangladesh remains a figure who often chooses substance over spotlight—a quiet architect of modern rap and R&B’s evolution.

In this wide-ranging conversation for VIBE‘s Views From The Studio series, we explore his journey from the barbershop to the boards, the stories behind his signature hits, his candid views on today’s musical landscape, and the collaborations that lie ahead for one of music’s most brilliant, if underappreciated, sonic innovators

VIBE: You’ve had an illustrious run. created many hits, and worked with many artists. How did you first get into music production?

Bangladesh: I would say I was kind of called to it. It was just calling me to do it through the spirit. I guess that’s how I first started, I just bought me a beat machine one day. I was cutting hair, I was a barber [at the time].

So, I saved my money up to get this beat machine that I seen all the producers, all the relevant producers at that time was using, it was called a MPC 2000. I bought that and I invested in myself so I took it seriously.

It’s like something that I really saved my money up to buy so I was really into it. I think anything that you actually invest in or buy with your own money that you work hard for, I think you’re going to take it seriously ’cause you could do anything with your money.

Things like that as a teenager, kids are typically going to purchase something that they could show off in the neighborhood or go outside with, whether it’s a car, clothes, or something that you can get instant validation for. Buying a beat machine, nobody’s around you to see what you bought with your money.

So it was a big deal as far as progressing and and maturity to say, “Save $2,500 up, just buy it”. This is before people understood the music business. Back then, it was more like ‘You can’t do that. You’ll never make it.’ It was more that attitude. You didn’t really see examples of [people] making it into the music business back then, it wasn’t around you like that. You were lucky to to be a part of something like that. Nowadays, there’s more avenues to independently get into it.

And there’s more technology that’s accessible and easy to learn to do it. So yeah, I just was called to it and I just invested in myself.

Who were some of your early influences?

I would have to say Timbaland, definitely. I would definitely have to say Organized Noize. You know, Outkast had just came out, so I was drawn to their production. I think Organized Noise was the first Southern Hip-Hop production crew.

They created Southern Hip-Hop. They were the first ones to make Southern Hip-Hop records with sample loops. And not just sample loops, but like samples that they actually dug through the crates to find, certain loops and sh*t.

The first Hip-Hop production crew to bring a rap group that had substance. At the time, music in Atlanta was more booty shake and uptempo dance music. We didn’t have rappers or rap groups that was Hip-Hop, had the relevancy, had the the song titles, the substance, the lyrical ability.

We didn’t have that before then, so definitely Organized Noize. I would say go back to Teddy Riley, Rodney Jerkins, [R.] Kelly, DeVante [Swing], but Timbaland and Organized Noize were making the production that I was inspired by at the time the most.

What’s the backstory behind your production tag?

My company was called Bangladesh Records and that’s why I first established my company with that name. That was a time that I didn’t have a producer name, I was just going by my government name.

I was just going by my government name ’cause I didn’t want to come up with nothing that I wouldn’t like in a year. My production took off so quick, I wasn’t big, I didn’t have a stage name, I had the company name. I was working on a personal project and on one of the songs I just would shout out, ‘Bangladesh.’

I was doing that a whole bunch of times. I just took a sample of one of them and ran it through this filter. I just started putting it in front of my beats and people just started calling me Bangladesh.

It really wasn’t no science to it, I was just doing something. I wasn’t thinking like, ‘Oh, I’m going to tag my beats.’ It wasn’t really like that. It was just something unconsciously being done that actually was a tag that created the familiarity of who I am and my sound and that’s really where it came from.

I think prior to that, listening to Rodney Jerkins production with his Darkchild tag. I heard Just Blaze shoutout [his tag].

I just looked at they was like shouting out their production on their beat. But yeah, Rodney Jerkins, I think with the Darkchild tag kind of unconsciously birthed that type thing.

What was the production gear that you were using?

As far as the production, my first piece of equipment was a MPC 2000. That was just something that I would see everybody using. That was like the standard thing. Either you had a MPC 2000 or MPC 3000 at that time. Then I went to a MPC 2000XL. That’s the heart and the brains of the operation.

I just wanted to learn how to sample inside the machine and put the sounds in the pads and sequence. Everything else, I don’t know nothing about that sh*t, I just want to know how to make a beat and chop up sounds. So, then I had a Casio keyboard.

It was my cousin’s keyboard, but I would sample sounds out of there. For example, “What’s Your Fantasy,” I took one note of it, sampled it into the MP, put it on all the pads and I’m not playing that on a keyboard, I tapped that on the pads. So yeah, that’s what I was using.

See, “What’s Your Fantasy” was actually like a three-part beat. It was like three beats in one beat. The “What’s Your Fantasy” beat was the intro to another beat. So, it will come on, you hear it without the hi-hat. It would It would come on like that, play for like eight bars, then it’ll switch into another beat. Then, that main beat will go into the outro. I used to do that sh*t all the time.

It’s kind of doing too much, but I was really just mad creative. So, when I gave Ludacris the beat, he was loving the intro. So, he was like, “Man, make this a beat.” So, I just extended the beat and put a hi-hat on it. And, sh*t, probably a week later when I seen him, he was like, ‘Yeah I got a hook to that song.’

Then he he told me the hook. So, when he’s telling me the hook, I’m new to this, I wasn’t really thinking about that part. The songwriting part.

It was new to me, so I didn’t have much of an opinion when he’d tell me his ideas. I’d just be listening. I wouldn’t be having an opinion about that. When I heard that [hook] ,I really didn’t think nothing.

I wouldn’t think, “Oh that’s hard,” or, “Oh that’s weak,” I didn’t think nothing. I just thought it was different, but to know what it was going to be, I didn’t really. I wasn’t really focused on that part of it. But that’s how “What’s Your Fantasy” came about.

You helped Too $hort score his first Top 40 hit with Kelis‘ “Bossy” record. What was it like working with those two?

Yeah, that was dope. That beat actually went through a couple of people’s hands. I played that beat in sessions for a lot of different people. Everybody gravitated to that beat when I played it. I can’t remember who I sent it to, but it might have been Mark Pitts. He was A&R of Kelis’ album at the time. But I didn’t make that for Kelis. Somehow she heard it then Sean Garrett wrote the hook.

Then a couple of people wrote the verses, Jasper being one of those people. He wrote a lot for Lloyd. He’s the reason how I knew what was going on with it ’cause he called me. He was excited. He’s like, “Man, we got some dope. We got something dope to that beat you made. It’s hard, man.” I ain’t know nothing about it till he told me.

So there was creative process going on with the production already that I didn’t even know until he called me about it. But it was dope for me, it was a monumental time for my career due to the fact that Kelis just was on a run with the Neptunes. They produced the whole first joint then she’s doing something else [sonically] on her sophomore album.

It’s hard to outdo the first time, you know what I’m saying? I stepped up to the plate so it’s like I felt like I belonged again ’cause she’s coming off of Pharrell and Neptunes and now she got the Bangladesh joint.

It’s different, she came back with 808s and and little bells and sh*t. So that was a dope experience and dope time and it was an R&B song.

I really wasn’t thinking R&B when I made the beat, so that was different. Too $hort getting on it was just like the icing on the cake. We all grew up Too $hort fans so yeah. It was different for him too to get on something like that and just those two together, Kelis and Too $hort, was like a different look. So that was a dope time, man. It’s a classic song that still be rocking till this day.

In 2004, you produced 8Ball & MJG’s track, “You Don’t Want Drama,” which is one of their biggest crossover hits and help introduce them to a new generation. What’s the backstory behind that track?

That was probably the first production I did outside of Ludacris in the beginning. It was the first time I’ve got outside and connected with or pursued to connect with artists in the music business. I was backstage at [Atlanta] Birthday Bash, I think, when I met 8Ball.

And I kind of just introduced myself. I just would use whatever [beat] was relevant at the time, which I had “What’s Your Fantasy.”

“What’s Your Fantasy” being a song that actually broke an artist kind of was a little more than actually just making a hit record ’cause breaking artists or introducing a new artist to the world was looked at way different than just making a hit song.

So, that’s how I would introduce myself, as Shondrae, Bangladesh, I did “What’s Your Fantasy,” Ludacris. So, that will get the conversation going, but that’s how I met him. I was in New York. I had been calling him already, but I was in New York. It was probably two weeks after I got his number.

He had me answering the phone every time I called him. I just happened to be in New York for some other business. I had a Bad Boy meeting on Friday with an A&R. This is a Monday. So I called 8Ball, he answers. He at the hotel, he told me to pull up.

I pulled up, played him some beats. He picked “Don’t Make.” I actually did three songs on that project. He picked a a song called “Don’t Make” that Friday. I was going to the meeting and the A&R was already raving about the beats that I gave him on that Monday. I guess they had recorded some ideas between those days.

So he took me into the studio and started playing me the ideas and that’s what 8Ball came in. That’s when Puff came in, kind of going over the songs and trying to complete them and stuff like that. That’s really how that came about.

You also worked with Beyoncé on “Diva,” one of her most empowering records. What was that experience like?

“Diva,” that was a blessing. That was a record that “A Milli” created. You know, it was like whatever your relevant song is at the time is what people kind of be after. ‘A Milli’ was a smash.’

So I think it was dope for Beyoncé to just be open to what I’m doing. “Diva” is something that I had made already. I had made this beat already. That’s me actually saying “Diva” on the beat. So when I was working with Sean Garrett, he was going in [to work] on Beyoncé.

He’s a fan of “A Milli.” He’d always tell me how much we love “A Milli” and if he had “A Milli,” what he would have did to it. So, I had this “Diva” beat, which I felt like if we’re working on Beyonce, there’s really nobody else that could do this beat but Beyoncé, so it just worked out. I feel like “Diva” is Beyoncé’s “A Milli.”

Another record from that time period that I think may have been spawned from “A Milli” was “Did It On’em” by Nicki Minaj. What was it like working with Nicki?

Working with Nicki, it was fun. Again, she was a new artist, too. That was the first album. “Did It On’em” went through several hands, it actually was Lil Wayne‘s beat first. He recorded that song first, not “Did It On’em” song but he recorded the song to that beat. He was in love with this beat. Well, he was in love with this song that he recorded.

I never heard the song, but the source that I got the beat to him through called me. I gave him this beat. I gave him some beats and it probably two months later he called me about this, but at that point I had already recorded the song on somebody else. The Game had recorded the song, too, within those two months.

I was kind of geeked about The Game song. I feel like at at that time, the game hadn’t had a song like that. It was dope. Best The Game song I’ve ever heard at the time.

So I was feeling like that was the move. Like I said, I had gave Lil Wayne his beat like too two months prior. I didn’t hear from him so I didn’t know if he was doing his beat. So nothing happened from The Game sh*t. I was still shopping the beat.

Lil Wayne had got locked up at that time. That was the time he had did a year. Puff was managing Nicki Minaj. Puff wanted me to play him beats for his project, so I played him some beats.

That “Did It On’em” beat was one of the beats that I left for him. Sh*t, some weeks went by and I think he called me. I think Puff called me telling me that Nicki Minaj liked the “Did It On’em” beat and he was apologizing because he didn’t know that I had issues with Cash Money.

So he was kind of calling me to apologize because he didn’t know that I had these issues prior to him playing her my beats. So, I just linked up with her. I already had a relationship with her prior to this, she had did something for me.

We had been meaning to work already so it worked out. She played me the song over the phone. I told her that was Wayne’s beat. So I was just making sure that she knew that and she got his okay to to use the beat.

‘Cause last I knew, they was part of the same team, so I know he had did something to the record. I asked her about my royalties, you know, it was like little issues that I had over there, making sure like these things were were being handled at this point to move on. And she said that she asked Wayne for the beat.

He said, “Yeah.” And my royalties will be paid out, so, I moved forward with it. Come to find out when Wayne got out of prison that he didn’t know how she got the beat. Like using interview telling this story how when he was locked up how one of his artists fucked this girl and and Nicki stole his beat. Damn.

What would you say are your most underrated beats?

I would have to say “Jefe” by T.I. and Meek Mill. I feel like the production on that is outstanding. I did another one called “Classic” for Meek Mill. If you hear it, I don’t know if people would know it’s me, but if you know my style, it’s not like outside of [that].

It’s not like I’m reaching for something else, but it’s definitely more Hip-Hop, more real Hip-Hop type driven. There’s a whole bunch, man, ’cause I remember songs that come out and they weren’t doing nothing [commercially]. I’m like, “Man, that sh*t hard as hell, why it ain’t catching fire?”

I did this sh*t for Dem Franchize Boyz called “Talking Out the Side of Your Neck,” I ain’t like that hook though. I think the hook kind of prevented that record from going somewhere, but that beat hard. I did a whole bunch on Brandy‘s Two Eleven album. She put out the video to “Put It Down” featuring Chris Brown. I did that but I did like four more (“Let Me Go,” “So Sick”) that’s incredible.

All [of] them jamming. I did this group called One Chance. It was Usher’s group back in the day. A song called “Emotional,” an R&B joint. People don’t know my range .And I did that early, like 2001. So, that beat’s dope. It’s like one of them underground classics, it’s one of them. There’s a few of them though, but those those are the ones that stuck out.

Do you prefer for analog or digital?

Analog. Analog all day. Digital is too digital. It’s too futuristic, it’s too clean, it’s too perfect. Analog is dirty, it’s more like street, it’s more like it touches the spirit a little different. There’s imperfections there that create the balance, gives it character.

Digital, it’s not too much character there. Then, anything digital kind of sounds the same even if it’s different, you know what I’m saying? It just sounds the same. And if you’re using analog and you got your your own style, it don’t sound the same. You got more room to just give off your personality and character in. Digital is too much like A.I.

What are your thoughts on A.I. and music production?

I’m not rocking with it. I ain’t. Not to you know be an old ni**a type, but there’s it’s like science trying to be you. It’s like technology that’s trying to emulate you.

I mean, who’s going to rock with that? As a creative, you’re not. I don’t want nobody to be like me. So yeah, I don’t really rock with it. I think it could be useful for certain things if you utilize it in certain ways.

But for the inexperienced people that are just trying to do music that didn’t go through the process to get to where they’re going. The ones that ain’t practicing and exercising to perfect their craft, you can just learn A.I. and do what you can do or try to do what you can do. No, I ain’t cool with that.

What would be your advice to producers trying to get in the game?

My advice, it’s cliche but just believe in yourself and always try to create your own style. A lot of creatives emulate things, and that’s cool in the beginning. There’s something that inspires you to do what you’re doing and you tend to emulate what you’re in love with, but you have to get to a place where you create your own style so, can’t nobody really do what you do.

And you want people to come to you for what you do, you know what I’m saying? If you sound like everybody else, there’s nothing that makes you unique and stand out. Just a lot of crabs in the barrel. It’s not unique or nothing.

So, for me, I stand out because like I have a sound and a style. All the greats have sounds and styles. If you want to be great, then that’s what you need to do.

Are there any producers that’s on the rise that you check for?

I think Cash Cobain is having his run. He got a little sonic style that he’s sticking with, I like that. I like the fact that people come to you for what you do. And he’s owning it and and running with it and having success with it.

I mean, there’s production that I hear but I might not know who it is. Or stuff that I hear that I might like but I don’t really know who it is. But he sticks out, for the most part, Cash Cobain.

Yeah. That goes back to what you were saying about having your own sound. What do you have coming up that the people can look out for moving forward?

Recently, I’ve been in the studio with Young Dro, LaRussell, Fredo Bang. Rick Ross. Yeah, that’s about it. I’ve been in there with a lot of new artists but that’s about it.

I’m in my creative bag right now. I’m making clothes. I got a clothing line. It’s a lot of leathers, it’s some fly sh*t. It’s like lifestyle sh*t, I got the music to to match with it. I’m just in my designer lifestyle mode, things that I’m into, that’s what I’m trying to give off.

That’s really it, you know. You can go to my website superproducerbangladesh.com, I got some merch pieces on there.

I haven’t put the clothing line up there yet, but I just got the boxes here so you know it’ll be up on the internet. But yeah, just check me out. I just want to get into that world.

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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Listen to Gorillaz and Idles’ New Song “The God of Lying”
Music

Listen to Gorillaz and Idles’ New Song “The God of Lying”

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Damon Albarn has released another song from the forthcoming Gorillaz album The Mountain. The new single, “The God of Lying,” features Idles. Check it out below.

Albarn wrote “The God of Lying” with Idles frontman Joe Talbot. He recorded it in London and Devon, England, and Mumbai, with bansuri player Ajay Prasanna and percussionist Viraj Acharya. In a statement, Gorillaz’s fictional frontman, 2D, said, “Can I tell you a secret? Doubt is very tiring but questioning things is really good for you.”

The Mountain is out March 20. The follow-up to 2023’s Cracker Island includes recent singles “The Happy Dictator” (featuring Sparks) and “The Manifesto” (featuring Trueno and the late D12 rapper Proof).

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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‘Grand Theft Auto 6’ has been delayed again
Music

‘Grand Theft Auto 6’ has been delayed again

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Grand Theft Auto 6 has been delayed again, developers Rockstar Games have confirmed.

Originally Grand Theft Auto 6 was due to launch in late 2025 but in May it was announced that the long-awaited follow-up to 2013’s GTA 5 would be delayed until May 26, 2026. 

“The interest and excitement surrounding a new Grand Theft Auto has been truly humbling for our entire team,” Rockstar said in a statement. “With every game we have released, the goal has always been to try and exceed your expectations, and GTA 6 is no exception. We hope you understand that we need this extra time to deliver at the level of quality you expect and deserve,”

Tonight, Rockstar Games confirmed that they’re pushing the launch of Grand Theft Auto 6 back even further. “We are sorry for adding additional time to what we realise has been a long wait” they explained in a short statement. “But these extra months will allow us to finish the game with the level of polish you have come to expect and deserve.”

Grand Theft Auto 6 will now release November 19, 2026. 

Hi everyone,

Grand Theft Auto VI will now release on Thursday, November 19, 2026.

We are sorry for adding additional time to what we realize has been a long wait, but these extra months will allow us to finish the game with the level of polish you have come to expect and… pic.twitter.com/yLX9KIiDzX

— Rockstar Games (@RockstarGames) November 6, 2025

Back in August, Strauss Zelnick (boss of GTA publishers Take Two) said he was convinced that the game wouldn’t be delayed again. “My level of conviction is very, very high.” In a new interview with IGN, Zelnick said he was “highly confident” Grand Theft Auto 6 will actually be released next year. “There have been limited circumstances where more time was required to polish a title and make sure that it was spectacular and that time has been well-spent,” he added. “When our competitors go to market before something was ready, bad things happen.”

Fans had been hoping the third Grand Theft Auto 6 trailer would be released this month. Some were also tricked by a fake movie adaptation announcement that went viral on social media. 

Rockstar hasn’t revealed much about Grand Theft Auto 6 beyond a number of screenshots and location descriptions, but a fan-led mapping campaign has revealed the game will be much larger than GTA 5. 

In other news, Football Manager fans aren’t impressed with the “unbelievably bad” Football Manager 26 which launched earlier this week after being delayed by a year.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Lawsuit Over Kiss Guitar Tech's Covid Death Officially Over
Music

Lawsuit Over Kiss Guitar Tech’s Covid Death Officially Over

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

The wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of the Kiss guitar tech who died from Covid-19 while quarantining on the band’s End of the Road World Tour in 2021 ended Wednesday with an official dismissal by the court. The family previously filed a notice of “conditional settlement” involving the band and concert promoter Live Nation, but the court set a hearing for Friday, Nov. 7 to check on the status of the pact. That hearing was cancelled on Wednesday.

No terms of the private settlement were released. Stueber’s widow, Catherine, and lawyers on both sides did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday. Francis Stueber, 53, worked as the guitar tech for Kiss co-founder Paul Stanley for 20 years before his death on Oct. 17, 2021, Stanley previously confirmed in a social media post.

My dear friend, buddy and guitar tech for 20 years, Fran Stueber died yesterday suddenly of Covid. Both on and offstage I depended on him for so much. My family loved him as did I. He was so proud of his wife and 3 boys as they were of him. I’m numb. pic.twitter.com/RvwUGpFt0X

— Paul Stanley (@PaulStanleyLive) October 17, 2021

Catherine and several family members filed the underlying lawsuit against Stanley, his Kiss co-founder Gene Simmons, and Kiss’ longtime manager Doc McGee in October 2023, alleging negligence and wrongful death. Live Nation was also named as a defendant.

Stueber died two days after he was “abandoned” alone in a “random hotel room” as his conditions worsened, the lawsuit alleged. It said the band had “absolutely no recommendation, information, policies, procedures, or safety measures of any kind” in place to deal with staff who contracted Covid-19 on the road.

The lawsuit followed nearly two years after a Rolling Stone investigation detailed claims from several Kiss roadies who claimed lax Covid-19 protocols contributed to Stueber’s death. The roadies said the band didn’t regularly test the crew and that several crew workers fell ill with the virus before Stueber died. 

“I couldn’t believe how unsafe it was, and that we were still going,” one roadie told Rolling Stone at the time. “We’d been frustrated for weeks, and by the time Fran died, I just thought, ‘You have to be fucking kidding me.’”

The band refuted the allegations, saying its safety protocols “met, but most often exceeded, federal, state, and local guidelines.” It said, “ultimately this is still a global pandemic and there is simply no foolproof way to tour without some element of risk.”

In his post mourning Stueber’s death, Stanley called the guitar tech his “dear friend.” He said the death was sudden. “Both on and offstage I depended on him for so much. My family loved him as did I. He was so proud of his wife and 3 boys as they were of him. I’m numb,” he wrote.

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Kiss previously settled a related wrongful termination lawsuit brought by the band’s longtime wig stylist. In that case, plaintiff David Mathews said he was with the band in Illinois in October 2021 when Stueber started showing severe Covid-19 symptoms. Mathews claimed he alerted McGhee to Stueber’s dire condition, but no “timely” action was taken.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online
Music

Tame Impala’s Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.

After releasing his fifth studio album Deadbeat, Tame Impala is setting sail on a global tour. Already kicking things off in October in New York, Kevin Parker and the gang played most of their new album – and plenty of old favorites to a sold-out crowd at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center. In case you missed the show, here are our favorite moments from the inaugural show as well as the setlist.

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For the remaining of Tame’s brief national leg of the tour, he will hit four major cities, including Austin, San Diego, Oakland and Inglewood, Calif. Afterward, Parker will head oversees stopping in Spain, France, Italy, London, Germany and many more before concluding the tour in Dublin on May 13.

Keep reading for a roundup of how to secure last-minute tickets to Tame Impala and how much you can expect to spend.

How to Get Tickets to Tame Impala

Now that the tour is underway, tickets are going faster than usual. Luckily, with a few resell sites, fans can grab affordable tickets and their preferred venue seating with a breeze. Tickets are available on sites such as Seat Geek, StubHub, Vivid Seats and Ticketmaster to browse online now.

How to get tickets to Sabrina Carpenter's Short n' Sweet Tour with StubHub.

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StubHub has Tame Impala tickets available. Stubhub’s Fan Protect Guarantee ensures valid tickets or your money back. And if your event is canceled and not rescheduled, you’ll receive 120% in credit or be given the option of a full refund.

Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

You can find Tame Impala tickets online at Vivid Seats for as low as $194. The ticket site lets you search by price, location and “Super Sellers,” which denotes reputable sellers with the best deals on tickets.

Vivid Seats is great for group tickets: the site has a rewards program that gives you your 11th ticket free (in the form of a credit) after you buy 10 tickets online. And as a bonus, you can use our exclusive promo code BB30 to take $30 off your purchase at VividSeats.com.

Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

One of the lowest prices we’re seeing for Tame Impala tickets is at SeatGeek, which has stubs from $199 and up. Use our discount code BILLBOARD10 to save an additional $10 at checkout.

Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

Courtesy of Gametime

For more affordable tickets, Gametime is offering ticket options for as low as $197. Purchasers will receive the Gametime Guarantee, which includes event cancellation protection, a low-price guarantee and one-time ticket delivery. Bonus offer: Get $20 off orders of $150+ when you use the code SAVE20 at checkout.

Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

TicketNetwork has tickets to Tame Impala’s concerts with all-in pricing that lets you see exactly what you’ll pay up front (fees included). For a limited time, you can use our exclusive code BILLBOARD150 to save $150 off $500 or BILLBOARD300 to save $300 off orders of $1000 and up.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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The Jewish Immigrant Song » PopMatters
Music

The Jewish Immigrant Song » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

The famous poem that sits at the base of the Statue of Liberty, “The New Colossus”, was written specifically for that massive sculpture and referred to Lady Liberty as the “mother of exiles”. The poem, by Emma Lazarus, speaks of the “wretched refuse from the teeming shores” as that collection of souls whom the great lady’s torch was meant to guide to America, preferring it over the “ancient lands” and “storied pomp” of the Old World of Europe.

It seems Lazarus knew that the folks at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder would bring the greatest vitality and creativity to her young country. Indeed, Lazarus lived in New York in the late 1800s and was active in welcoming Jewish refugees escaping genocide in Eastern Europe. It is to these people in particular that American popular song owes so much.

The Jewish Immigrant Song

Nearly everything that makes America’s music exceptional came from those “homeless, tempest-tost” who arrived with no chance or inclination of ever going back if things didn’t work out in their newly adopted homeland. Terrible circumstances beyond their control had uprooted them and brought them to these strange shores. That made for some very intense and conflicted emotions: desperate to make it work in the New World, but also longing for what was familiar and comfortable in the place they’d been forced to leave.

From that cauldron of emotional turmoil – not overlooking the millions of enslaved peoples who are also a critical part of America’s formation – rose some of the most remarkable music on the planet: ragtime, blues, jazz, Broadway, R&B, soul, gospel, hip-hop, country and western, rock ‘n’ roll, and all of them stewed into an amalgam known as “American pop”.

It is one thing to be down on your luck and in need of starting over, but it’s quite another to be on the run for your life. While it’s true that many immigrants got off the boat seeking greener pastures, others disembarked on American soil with a gun to their head or simply because it was their last and only stop to escape annihilation. The latter circumstances tend to take the immigrant spirit to a whole other level; survival was at the forefront of their experience, and this imbued their toils and creativity in their adopted country with great soul and earnestness.

My great-grandfather, an Armenian, escaped genocide at the hands of the Turks by the skin of his teeth, tumbling out of steerage onto the docks of New York harbor in the late 1800s with nearly nothing to his name and no way to communicate with those around him. The Methodists offered to clothe and teach him, but only if he was willing to attend their seminary. Before he knew it, he was a member of their clergy, founding a church in Salem, Oregon. Perhaps not his first choice as an Armenian to spread the gospel in the Willamette Valley, but he did so with zeal for the rest of his life.

That’s what life or death choices bring out in people: zeal and lots of it. That’s the secret sauce that American immigrants have been bringing to the table from even before the nation was founded, and it is reflected in much of the music that emerged as a result.

Photo: Roberto Silva | Unsplash

If it is true that the immigrants most miserable and afflicted upon arrival offered the most creative energy to America’s wellspring of popular song, then this is especially so for the African/Caribbean slave populations. Despite their abduction to North America and all the myriad traumas of enslavement, they have had a rich impact on nearly every aspect of American creative expression, and that influence for the better has never let up.

To mark this cultural gift his people were so inclined to bestow to the US, jazz great Duke Ellington posited ironically in a speech he gave in 1941, “I contend that the Negro is the creative voice of America, is creative America, and it was a happy day in America when the first unhappy slave was landed on its shores.” (Dumain)

Not to minimize the magnificent contribution made by this earliest immigrant wave, there are two other groups of subsequent arrivals who also had a significant impact on American music and perhaps don’t always get the credit they deserve: the Scots-Irish and their offerings to American folk and country music, and the Russian Jews. Here, we focus on celebrating the latter group and their particular contribution to the birth of American pop music.

The Russian Jewish Diaspora and the Birth of American Pop

“In the twentieth century, America would remake the world, the whole world, and popular music would remake America.” – Sidran There Was a Fire

It was named the “American Century” because of the indelible cultural stamp the nation put on the 1900s. The notion of popular music as such had existed for as long as a particular piece of music could be repeated and handed down to an appreciative audience, which is to say, for time immemorial. However, the terms “pop music” or “hit songs” connotes a purely American phenomenon which had its beginnings around the turn of the 20th century, when technology and copyright laws permitted music for the first time to be profitably mass-produced and marketed.

The production of consumer goods was beginning to hit its stride, and so too was the notion of music as a mass commodity to be promoted relentlessly to the buying public, originally through piano sheet music and live performances, and later by way of recordings and radio. Something that had been around for a long time – the appreciation of music – was for the first time being “streamlined and intensified by the industrialization of culture,” and it was happening for the most part in America. (Stanley)

At the same time, a wave of Jewish immigrants was arriving from Russia, and their abrupt influx was at the vanguard of this critical shift in American character, taste, and creativity. They were not only in the right place at the right time to bring about this transformation, but they were also naturally driven to do so.

Irving Berlin (1888 – 1989) was arguably America’s first pop music superstar, and his earliest memory was as a child watching the Cossacks burn his village in Russia. Born Israel Beilin, his family escaped to the US when he was five years old, and he would become one of the nation’s most prolific and influential early songwriters at a time when the Great American Songbook’s first chapters were written.

Jews throughout Europe had been experiencing antisemitism in one form or another since ancient times, but a severe brand of hate emerged in Russia in the late 19th century for a variety of reasons. Despite having populated the Eastern borders of Russia for centuries, Jews were aliens in their own homeland, never accepted by the rest of its citizenry. Once the bigotry against them reached a fever pitch and the pogroms – state-sanctioned riots of killing – began occurring in every Jewish village, it became brutally clear that the place they had called home for generations would no longer tolerate them.

There were no options in the matter. They had to either pull up and abandon everything for someplace different that would take them or stay and be wiped out. They weren’t emigrating for advancement; they were emigrating for survival. That journey would begin and end not with a hopeful yearning as much as an existential anxiousness that would be matched by many of the migrants of today on our own borders and those of Europe.

At the time of Russia’s ethnic cleansing campaign, America was beginning to be known throughout the world as a place where one could begin life anew. The Jews of Eastern Europe, in dire need of a complete reboot, ended up on that singular path to a new world.

This Jewish migration began just as the United States was developing a national persona, finally regarding itself by the late 1800s as something more unitary as opposed to a mere collection of disparate states or regions. Out of this evolving sense of national unity emerged a nascent post-industrial American culture, especially in the growing cities swelling with immigrants eager to thrive. It was a rapidly evolving ethos that celebrated change and exuberant freedom and was best represented in the arts.                

Two million Jews fled Russia between 1880 and 1920, many ending up in impoverished parts of New York City. They arrived desperate to assimilate, having been traumatized by their abrupt ouster from their homeland due to their perceived otherness. They arrived in America to stay, with no ticket back and only looking forward, bringing with them nothing but who they were. They were weary of their status as outsiders in their own land, as had been the case for centuries in Russia.

Within a single generation upon arriving in America, they shaved their beards, Anglicized their names, and stopped teaching their children the Yiddish language, all in an effort to adopt an American image as soon as possible. Because they were eager to be perceived as entirely American, and because the American persona was in flux at that moment in history, Jewish immigrants leapt to the forefront in defining modern Americanism, and in so doing, helped to build the inaugural template.

The Jews of Russia saw popular music not only as a delight to partake in but also as a ticket to inclusion in the American dream. Entertainment was becoming an industry as well as the most efficient means of social advancement for the underclass. Once off the ship, you might end up in the slums, but write a few hit songs and you’re the toast of the town. This became abundantly clear to these Russian emigres, who promptly realized they could have written songs all day in “the motherland” and still find their village burning around them.

In the end, they would not only be participants in the art and industry of the American popular song, but their main purveyors, originators, and innovators to a degree that far outweighed their number in the new urban demographic. This strong Eastern European Jewish elixir has continued to flow through the lifeblood of popular American song with the likes of Bob Dylan, Barbra Streisand, and Neil Diamond, all of whose grandparents were part of the Russian diaspora.

Jewish Immigrants’ Songline through American Popular Music

This Jewish population surge was poised to both join and advance American culture, particularly its nascent entertainment industry, which was emerging in cities at the turn of the 20th century. They were a people with the innate gifts for taking American popular song to an entirely new level. In a matter of years, they abandoned the garment trades they knew from the old country to jumpstart the American hit parade, starting with the songwriting sweatshops of New York’s Tin Pan Alley and later the vaudeville stage, Broadway musicals, and then moving on to radio and the movies.

Freshly minted American Jews were not only yearning to find their niche but also well inclined to transform the country’s entertainment model. They brought with them a culture ready-made for the stage, in terms of both the sacred as well as the secular worlds they inhabited. Their music-saturated synagogues, as well as their rich theater traditions, flavored throughout with the sweet and sour dual sentiments of humor and lament, were a magical formula for popular songcraft.

For a people who defined themselves so much by their faith, music was already at the center of their spiritual practice. Daily religious services were built around song, with the role of the Cantor, a singing church officiant, serving a key role in the congregation. These singing preachers of Judaism had no set musical program to accompany the copious text they recited daily in the temple from their holy book, the Torah. Consequently, they were masters at improvisation. Once ensconced in the US, the Cantor’s unique gift of musical creativity was passed on to their congregation, composed mainly of first-generation Jewish Americans who would take those gifts and apply them to the burgeoning trade of hit-making.

Like Irving Berlin and famed performer Al Jolson (1886 – 1950), Harold Arlen (born Hyman Arluck) (1905 -1986), who wrote iconic songs for stage and screen such as “Stormy Weather” and “Somewhere over the Rainbow”, was the son of a Cantor. He said of his formative years, “I was jazz crazy. I don’t know how the hell to explain it – except I hear in jazz and in gospel my father singing. He was one of the greatest improvisers I’ve ever heard.” (Kapilow) Arlen gave further props to his singing rabbi dad when he said in an interview with The New Yorker, “[My Dad] had a perfect genius for finding new melodic twists. I know damned well now that his glorious improvisations must have had some effect on me and my own style.” (Stanley)

Even Louis Armstrong, arguably the most influential American musician during this most influential time in American musical history, attributes a significant aspect of his performing style to the Jewish culture of faith and song. A black waif growing up on the streets of New Orleans, he had been taken in by a Jewish family during his formative years. Armstrong cites, for example, his experience at the dinner table with swaying Hebrew prayer as his inspiration for improvisational or “scat” vocalization in his early jazz work.

Beyond their faith practices, the traditional Yiddish Theater that they brought with them from the old country – stage productions of great variety featuring the Jewish secular language – easily transitioned into what was becoming a major entertainment industry in cities throughout the States. Vaudeville, a uniquely urban medium for the performing arts derived from the French expression voix de ville or ‘voice of the city’, was where America’s melting pot identity could be seen on stage by the masses multiple times a day.

Vaudeville theaters featured variety shows where any act that could hold an audience’s attention —musical, comedy, or otherwise—was given free rein. The Jewish arrivals soon made up most of the acts on Vaudeville stages, as well as the majority of the audience. When a new form of casual opera – what would later be called the American Broadway Musical – evolved the stage genre further, Jewish immigrants were already well-positioned to excel in this, as well, because of their strong theatrical roots.

With these deep traditions of song and stage, Jewish immigrants had no problem throwing themselves into the entertainment industry for immediate socio-economic advancement, while others in America looked down on such pursuits as lowly professions not worthy of their energies.

Artfully Tuned Yiddish Irreverence

As the country sped toward the 20th Century, its citizens, and much of the world for that matter, began to sit up and take notice when America’s creatives started speaking in their own voice. Mark Twain led with the publication of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn in 1884. It was a breakthrough work because it was written in the American vernacular, using ordinary everyday speech. (Ernest Hemingway credited the novel with being the source for all modern American literature.) The same was true for American popular song during this period, and the recently arrived Jewish immigrants were apt to contribute in ways no one could have anticipated.

Due to the relentless march of modern industrialization and commercialism at the turn of the century, American rural farming towns, with their slow-paced lifestyles, were quickly being subsumed by cities, which were becoming the arbiters of contemporary American culture. These urban centers were where the pace of life catered to an evolving culture that was glib, fast-talking, irreverent, and casual.

Having come from an urban-oriented culture already, the Russian Jews were naturally inclined to thrive in the “go go” cultural landscape of the growing American cities. Once off the boats, they took to the busy streets hawking their wares without missing a beat. If those wares were now the songs of Tin Pan Alley and Broadway Musicals instead of those of the garment districts, so much the better. The new American colloquialism of the quick-witted urbanite was easily adopted by Jews since their speech was well-suited to an emerging urban voice.

Their original language, Yiddish, was also irreverent, with little regard for convention. It was highly adaptable, emphasizing flexibility and the ready adoption of slang (e.g., Chutzpah, klutz, kvetch, schmooze). This permitted them to easily slide into the nation’s urban slang and cadence and incorporate it into their songwriting for quick appeal. Jewish immigrants were thus able to both adopt and innovate the American vernacular, both on the street and in the music that the new cities were spawning. They helped form a peculiarly American dialect both in sound and spirit, using it to launch a style of popular song that would swing and resonate with the listener.

The American hit parade was suddenly more interesting. The bland lyrics of 19th-century parlor tunes like “I love you in June by the light of the moon” were summarily replaced with ear-popping phrases that incorporated street slang, the likes of “You Ain’t Heard Nothin Yet” and “Oh, ma honey…Ain’t you goin’?” As the US hit parade spread via records and radio to the rest of the world, other countries “finally got to hear the natural, conversational, confident, and friendly American voice,” and they liked the sound of it. (Stanley)

Jewish Songwriters’ Integration of Black Musical Influence

Besides a unique drive and a ready voice to influence the new American sound, Jewish songwriters had an affinity for parlaying cutting-edge black rhythms into something palatable for evolving American tastes. Black American musicians had been drawn to the cities during the same period as this Jewish migration, and they were making a beautiful noise to complement the urban soundscape. Ragtime, followed by the blues and jazz, was incorporated into the works of Jewish songwriters who immediately grasped its liberating tendencies.

In doing so, they shifted popular music in the US away from an otherwise moribund musical landscape. By the turn of the century, popular music in America had been on a fairly dreary course with a staid Eurocentric Victorian flavor. Dreary and insipid tunes dripping with sentimentality and scored for the piano parlors of the middle class ruled the day. (Think Stephen Foster’s “Beautiful Dreamer”)

It was music characterized by comfort and elitism, which is exactly what young immigrants sought to challenge. A blend of the romantic and exotic laments of their Yiddish theater and temple cantors with the bold, complex, and cocky exuberance of jazz, as well as the emerging city swagger, all contributed to a sophisticated and vibrant sound that woke the country up.

As recent immigrants, Jewish artists were positioned to serve as intermediaries, showcasing black culture for wider American audiences. Their symbiotic affinity with the black underclass promoted the latter’s musical strengths and, in doing so, introduced black styles into popular music like never before. Sharing the basement of the social ranks in the cities, they were able to readily embrace and co-opt the powerful emerging black sound, mixing their own version of soul in a minor key with brash, exotic rhythms and in the process creating a whole new infectious sound for the new American pop charts.

This Jewish style of hit-making – rhythmic, soulful interplay between major and minor keys – became the currency for all songwriters. Even Gentile song masters such as Cole Porter acknowledged in private that the key to his success was to “write Jewish”. (Sidran).  Some of his greatest hits – “Night and Day”, “Begin the Beguine,” or “I Love Paris” – were marked by an eastern Mediterranean flavor of traditional Jewish music.

The Jewish Immigrant and American Pop Culture: One in the Same

Music that celebrated the street culture of urban America, and the broader national identity that went with it, naturally had to distance itself first from the Eurocentric. The Jewish immigrants approached the music at their level, no longer recognizing the old European highbrow sound that had ruled tastes in both America and the rest of the Western world up to that point.

Again, this was an affront to the establishment, which any new underclass would appreciate. They were pulling the American arts down to street level, where they existed, and, in doing so, making a statement that was dismissive of the old world and open to rapid change. “To be this free with the language was to own it; to own the language was to own the world.” (Sidran). The modern urban Jew became one and the same with the new voice of American song and culture that was taking the world by storm.

Jewish refugees may have arrived in the US predisposed to blend in, but to the extent they saw barriers, they were naturally inclined to make their own version of American culture to speed their assimilation. While they abandoned their traditions, they simultaneously used them to carve out a place in the arts. The harder they ran from their Jewishness towards greater assimilation and upward mobility, the more they imbued popular culture with their ethnicity.

It was all too ironic: in a mad rush to disappear into whatever was distinctly American, they instead created a fresh American voice in mass culture and the arts that was attributable to their Jewish roots. That genius to adapt and augment will forever be a big part of the marvel of the iconic 20th century and the soundtrack to American exceptionalism.

Pop music remains a key attribute of Americanism, culturally and beyond. It still reigns throughout the globe in the 21st century, both in terms of influence and favor. The fact that the very thing that came to define America to the rest of the world beginning in the 20th century was, for the most part, the construct of a people who had only recently landed on its shores in a distraught and alienated state, is a testament not only to the Russian Jew but to all immigrants, American or otherwise.

America became the center of the world’s cultural attention during the last century, largely because millions of people were forced to either reach its shores or face oblivion. Blessed are all those wretched and tormented souls tossed across the borders by dire circumstances, for only with their influence has America made the glorious noise that the whole world still echoes today. Perhaps it is because the US absorbed so many diverse souls during its formative years that the rest of the world can hear a natural universal appeal in the music it creates.

In the case of the Eastern European Jew, Russia’s loss was surely America’s gain: the country absorbed into its cultural fabric one of the most expressive, inventive, and exuberant peoples ever to wash up on any nation’s shore. Like the Afro-Caribbean and Scots-Irish, the Jewish people were a bottomless blessing of artistic spirit that, in a very short time, reinvented and reintroduced an American persona to the world through an intoxicating blend of music that conveyed genuine exuberance and bravado.

The Jewish immigrant helped to give the new world a national identity with its own soundtrack, as well as a badge of honor and bragging rights to go along with it. This was all achieved within one vibrant generation.


Works Cited

BBC Walk on By: The Story of Popular Song. Documentary.2001

Dumain, Ralph. The Autodidact Project: Quotes: Duke Ellington: “We, Too, Sing ‘America’”.

Sidran, Ben. There Was a Fire: Jews, Music and the American Dream. Nardis Books and Unlimited Media, Ltd. 2012.

Stanley, Bob. Let’s Do It: The Birth of Pop Music: A History. Pegasus. 2022.

Yagoda, Ben. The B Side: The Death of Tin Pan Alley and the Rebirth of the Great American Song. Riverhead Books. 2015.Kapilow, Rob.. Listening for America: Inside the Great American Songbook from Gershwin to Sondheim. Liveright Publishing. 2019.

“Yiddish Language and Culture (Judaism 101)”. JewFaq.org.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Maya Hawke Reveals Uma Thurman’s Tarantino Advice: "Keep Your Shoes On"
Music

Maya Hawke Reveals Uma Thurman’s Tarantino Advice: “Keep Your Shoes On”

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

It seems like Quentin Tarantino isn’t beating the foot fetish allegations anytime soon.

During a recent episode of Amy Poehler’s Good Hang podcast, Maya Hawke was asked whether her mom, Uma Thurman, shared “any advice about working with Quentin” going into her role in 2019’s Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood.

The Stranger Things star had a quick answer, simply responding, “Keep your shoes on,” causing them to laugh in unison.

“Keep ’em on, baby. Keep those shoes on,” Poehler joked in response. “Perfect advice. Perfect.”

As one of Tarantino’s most frequent collaborators, Thurman has a fair share of experience with the filmmaker’s predilection for foot scenes. In 1994’s Pulp Fiction, there are multiple close-ups of her character Mia Wallace’s bare feet.

More infamously, there’s a scene in 2003’s Kill Bill: Vol. 1 that zooms in on both of Thurman’s feet as she wiggles her toes to regain feeling in her body after coming out of a coma. Revisit it below.

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More recently, Margot Robbie’s soles were featured in a Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood scene for which Tarantino reportedly instructed her not to wash her feet. Margaret Qualley and Dakota Fanning’s bare feet were also seen in the film.

Another frequent Tarantino collaborator, Brad Pitt, actually called him out on it while accepting a SAG Award for his supporting role as Cliff Booth in Once Upon a Time, saying, “I want to thank my co-stars, [Leonardo DiCaprio], Margot Robbie, Margot Robbie’s feet, Margaret Qualley’s feet, Dakota Fanning’s feet. Seriously, Quentin has separated more women from their shoes than the TSA.”

For his part, Tarantino has defended his camera’s obsession with women’s feet. “There’s a lot of feet in a lot of good directors’ movies. That’s just good direction,” he told GQ in 2021. “Before me, the person foot fetishism was defined by was Luis Buñuel, another film director. And Hitchcock was accused of it and Sofia Coppola has been accused of it.”

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Khruangbin Discover A New 'Universe'
Music

Khruangbin Discover A New ‘Universe’

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Khruangbin offer a completely new take on their 2015 debut album, The Universe Smiles Upon You, with a re-recorded version out now digitally through Dead Oceans. Work on the project commenced on the actual 10th anniversary of sessions for the original album and was tracked in the same central Texas barn owned by guitarist Mark Speer’s parents.

To commemorate the album’s birthday, the Grammy-nominated trio of Speer, bassist Laura Lee and drummer DJ Johnson initially considered digging through their archives for Universe outtakes or recasting the songs with orchestral arrangements. Instead, they opted to present the songs in different and updated forms while also reconfiguring the track list, which omits opener “Mr. White” and substitutes in the contemporaneous bonus track “Bin Bin” (in turn, “Mr. White” replaces “Bin Bin” on the Japanese edition of The Universe Smiles Upon You ii, titled M. Blanc).

“Getting to the barn is a mission,” Johnson told SPIN of the studio in 2024. “It’s not close. When we’re there, we stay there, which is why it’s good because it puts us away from things. You can really lock into the task at hand. Logistically, it’s harder to do things out there.”

Elsewhere, the shimmering “People Everywhere (Still Alive)” is extended to triple its original running time, while “White Gloves” borrows a newfound disco beat and a seven-minute-plus “Two Fish and an Elephant” coasts on Johnson’s brush-stroked drums and warm atmospherics. The result is both psychedelic and spiritual, and filled with happy accidents such as a meadowlark’s birdsong captured by the microphones during “August Twelve.”

A Khruangbin-produced new video for “White Gloves” is out now. Those desiring The Universe Smiles Upon You ii in physical form, which will be released Dec. 5, can pre-order it by clicking here.

“Mark’s a stickler about, if we did it before, let’s try to do something different,” Johnson told SPIN about Khruangbin’s modus operandi in the studio. “Even in the way I approach something that seems so simple as a drum fill, he’s always listening. He’s always challenging: what can you do differently? How can you go deeper? We realize the more popular this thing gets, it is influential and there may be things that pop up that kind of sound like what we’re doing. It pushes us forward and makes us have to switch it up. You can’t keep doing the same thing and expect it to be fresh, exciting and new. Mark’s really keyed into that. He’s always looking for combinations of things that have never been thought to be put together. That’s what keeps things fresh.”

Khruangbin began a small venue 10th anniversary Universe tour last night (Nov. 5) in Houston, and have dates on tap through Nov. 24-25 in Los Angeles.

Here is the track list for The Universe Smiles Upon You ii:

Little Joe and Mary
Balls and Pins
White Gloves
The Man Who Took My Sunglasses
People Everywhere
Bin Bin
August Twelve
Dern Kala
Two Fish and an Elephant
Zionsville

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Summer Walker Pays Tribute To Anna Nicole Smith On New Album Cover
Music

Summer Walker Pays Tribute To Anna Nicole Smith On New Album Cover

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Summer Walker has taken inspiration from late cultural icon Anna Nicole Smith for the cover art for her forthcoming studio album Finally Over It, recreating the infamous photograph of Smith at her wedding ceremony with J. Howard Marshall.

Walker unveiled the album’s cover art via social media on Wednesday (Nov. 6) evening, announcing that the project will be released on Friday, Nov. 14.

The cover is a coy reference to the R&B star’s disenchantment with traditional romantic relationships and prioritization of financial and material gain in her dealings with men, an accusation levied upon Anna Nicole Smith regarding her own love life.

Summer Walker (L) attends the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards at UBS Arena on September 07, 2025 in Elmont, New York.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

In June 1994, Smith, who was 26-years-old at the time, married Marshall, an 89 year-old millionaire and former government official, in a wedding held at the White Dove Chapel in Houston, TX.

Marshall, a stakeholder in notably Koch Industries with an estimated net worth of $550 million, would pass away of pneumonia in August 1995, with Smith eventually losing a lengthy legal battle with Marshall’s family and estate regarding his fortune.

Anna Nicole Smith

American model, actress and television personality Anna Nicole Smith (1967-2007), poses for a portrait during the Video Software Dealers Association Convention on July 11, 1993 at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Ron Davis/Getty Images

Walker, whose tumultuous relationships have been addressed in her music and bled over into tabloid fodder, has been vocal about her newfound attitude towards men, an admission the 29-year-old recently made in a clip that went viral on social media.

“Men are providers, and that’s it,” the hitmaker told journalist Speedy Morman during an interview. “I’m not attracted to them.” When asked whether that meant “bleeding them dry,” she chuckled while confirming, “Yes. As soon as I get everything, you’re off.”

Prior to those comments, life seemingly imitated her art, as Walker showed up to the 2025 MTV VMAs with an older Caucasian man as her “mystery guest.”

Summer Walker

Summer Walker performs onstage during Hot 107.9 Birthday Bash 2024 at State Farm Arena on June 22, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Prince Williams/WireImage

Following her 2019 effort Over It and its 2021 sequel Still Over It, Finally Over It arrives a full four years after the previous offering in the series and marks the songstresses most anticipated release to date.

With high-profile features alongside Usher (“Good Good”), Odeal (“You’re Stuck), and Cardi B (“Dead,” “Shower Tears”), her own 2024 hit single “Heart of a Woman,” and her most release solo release “Spend It,” the GRAMMY-nominated artist has managed to keep her voice on the airwaves and increase her popularity despite sporadic releases, an admirable task in today’s content-hungry landscape.

See Summer Walker’s Finally Over It album cover below.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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