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Watch Olivia Dean perform ‘Man I Need' and ‘Let Alone the One You Love’ on 'SNL'
Music

Watch Olivia Dean perform ‘Man I Need’ and ‘Let Alone the One You Love’ on ‘SNL’

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Olivia Dean sang ‘Man I Need’ and ‘Let Alone the One You Love’ on Saturday Night Live – check out clips of both performances below.

  • READ MORE: Olivia Dean – ‘The Art of Loving’ review: musings on love from a star risen

Following the release of her second album, ‘The Art of Loving‘, the musician made her debut on the show last night (November 15) with a pair of tracks from the record. Fresh off the back of a Grammy nomination for Best New Artist at next year’s ceremony, she kicked things off with ‘Man I Need’.

Performing in front of a shimmering gold backdrop, a jubilant Dean sang backed by a band, who then joined her in slowing things down with ‘Let Alone the One You Love’.

Both tracks come from her highly acclaimed latest album, the success of which saw her become the first female solo artist to ever have four singles in the Official Charts UK Top 10 simultaneously late last month.

The songs in question were ‘Man I Need’, which at that time was sat at Number Two, ‘So Easy (To Fall in Love) at Number Six, ‘Nice To Each Other’ at Number Eight, and ‘Rein Me In’, her collaboration with Sam Fender, at Number 10.

It followed after ‘The Art of Loving’ reached Number One in the album charts upon its release, marking the biggest opening week for a British female artist since Adele in 2021.

Dean’s latest record scored a four-star review from NME, with Hannah Mylrea comparing her to musicians like RAYE and Sam Fender: “British artists who’ve ascended to bigger and bigger stages, crafting music that while sonically is in their own lanes, is filled with honest lyricism coming from a distinct voice.

“As Dean prepares for her own sold-out arena tours – and with her tracks soaring up the UK charts – this record comes to cement her place. With it, marks the next chapter in Dean’s career, one as a popstar risen.”

Next year, she’s headed on a UK and European tour, which includes four dates at London’s O2 Arena. You can find a full list of dates, as well as all ticket information, here.

Ahead of the album’s release, Dean shared the lead single ‘Nice To Each Other’ back in June, and told fans it was about the push and pull of exploring your independence in dating.

In other news, earlier this summer, Dean played a surprise set at Glastonbury and released the duet version of ‘Rein Me In’ with Sam Fender, after the two performed his ‘People Watching’ track during his huge London Stadium show.

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Olivia Dean Performs 'Man I Need,' 'Let Alone The One You Love'
Music

Olivia Dean Performs ‘Man I Need,’ ‘Let Alone The One You Love’

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

British singer-songwriter Olivia Dean debuted on Saturday Night Live by performing two songs from her second studio album, The Art of Loving, which came out in September.

Dean, who was just nominated for Best New Artist at next year’s Grammys, led off with “Man I Need.”

The song “is about knowing how you deserve to be loved and not being afraid to ask for it,” Dean said in statement upon its release earlier this year. “It’s forward, sexy, fun! It’s made for dancing!”

Dean wrote “Man I Need” with Zach Nahome and Tobias Jesso Jr., the winner of the 2023 Grammy for Songwriter of the Year. He is nominated for that award again this year.

Dean’s second performance was of “Let Alone the One You Love,” the sixth track off her latest album.

“We made most of this album in a studio we built in a house in East London,” the 26-year-old wrote on Instagram teasing it. “For 8 weeks we lived in the house of loving! I brought my piano from home and all my favourite people and tried to create things that felt like warmth. Here you have a piece of my heart!”

 The Art of Loving has been widely praised.

“Dean’s star power is radiant and fueled by more than just charisma. She grooves in perfect time with an expertly assembled band, navigating through blaring trumpets, trombones, and saxophones with a delicate attention to detail and synchronicity,” Rolling Stone‘s Larisha Paul wrote in a review of the follow-up to 2023’s Messy.

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On Friday, Dean announced dates for her 14-city The Art of Loving tour, which begins next July in San Francisco, California. She’ll work her way to the east coast before wrapping up in Austin, Texas in late August.

In the last few weeks, Dean was the opener on Sabrina Carpenter’s Short n’ Sweet tour. Before that, she opened for Sam Fender’s People Watching tour, having previously collaborated with Fender on the single “Rein Me In.”

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Metallica Honour AC/DC and Rose Tattoo During M72 Tour Finale
Music

Metallica Honour AC/DC and Rose Tattoo During M72 Tour Finale

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Metallica closed out the Australian leg of their M72 World Tour with a tribute to two of the country’s most influential rock acts, performing covers of AC/DC and Rose Tattoo during their Nov. 15 concert at Sydney’s Accor Stadium.

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The gesture came during the band’s signature “doodle” segment — the stripped-back interlude led by guitarist Kirk Hammett and bassist Robert Trujillo — which has become a staple of the current tour.

The pair launched into an instrumental version of AC/DC’s “For Those About to Rock (We Salute You)” before shifting into Rose Tattoo’s “Nice Boys Don’t Play Rock ’n’ Roll,” drawing loud approval from the sold-out crowd. The moment carried added resonance as AC/DC were performing their own Power Up tour the same night in Melbourne, creating a rare split-city convergence of two generations of rock royalty.

The Sydney show capped a five-city Australian run in which Metallica incorporated local tributes at every stop. In Perth on Nov. 1, Hammett and Trujillo performed John Butler Trio’s “Zebra.” Adelaide received a rendition of The Angels’ “Am I Ever Gonna See Your Face Again,” while Melbourne fans heard a nod to The Living End’s “Prisoner of Society” with hints of INXS’ “Don’t Change.” Brisbane’s Nov. 12 show featured The Chats’ punk anthem “Smoko,” a moment that sent the audience into full-throttle chaos.

Metallica performed to roughly 70,000 fans in Sydney, supported by Evanescence and Suicidal Tendencies. Their 360-degree stage design once again featured the Snake Pit walkway, robotic cameras and drones — a production approach that has defined the visual identity of the M72 tour and pushed the stadium experience into new territory.

The timing of the show aligned with a major period for Australian rock audiences. Oasis had wrapped their Australian stadium run one week earlier, and AC/DC’s return created back-to-back landmark moments for fans across the country.

Next, Metallica will continue the M72 World Tour in Auckland on Nov. 19 before heading to Qatar.

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November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Todd Snider, Alt-Country's Wandering Troubadour, Dead at 59
Music

Todd Snider, Alt-Country’s Wandering Troubadour, Dead at 59

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Todd Snider, a driving force of the alt-country scene over the last two-plus decades, has died at the age of 59.

The news of his passing was confirmed by Snider’s label, Aimless Records, which wrote a lengthy post in honor of their “Vice President of the Abrupt Change Dept.” The post when on to say that Snider was someone “who could almost always find the humor in this crazy ride on Planet Earth,” and that he created “rhyme and meter that immediately felt like an old friend or a favorite blanket.”

A cause of death was not immediately shared. However, prior to his passing, Snider had been receiving extensive treatment for walking pneumonia that had only recently been diagnosed.

Todd Daniel Snider was born on October 11th, 1966 in Portland, Oregon. By the mid-80s, he’d relocated to the San Antonio, Texas region, where he met his future mentor in songwriting legend Kent Finlay (who also founded the venerated Cheatham Street Warehouse venue). For years, Snider packed clubs across both San Marcos and Austin, Texas, delighting fans with his earnest, heartfelt approach to country and folk.

By the early ’90s, Snider had relocated to Memphis and signed a deal with Capital Records. Though that agreement fizzled out before any music was released, he did briefly join Jimmy Buffett’s Coral Reefer Band — a stint that led to a separate deal with Buffett’s own Margaritaville Records. That period produced Snider’s earliest and most foundational work, including his 1994 debut, Songs for the Daily Planet (which yielded a modest Billboard hit with “Talkin’ Seattle Grunge Rock Blues”), as well as 1996’s Step Right Up.

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By the time he released 1998’s Viva Satellite, Snider embarked on something of a career pivot, stepping away from Margaritaville and sharpening his own distinctive musical voice. That shift led to a deal with John Prine’s Oh Boy Records, where Snider further made a name for himself with records like 2000’s Happy To Be Here and 2002’s New Connection. But it was 2004’s East Nashville Skyline where Snider where Snider truly came into his own, a record now regarded as a cornerstone of 21st-century alt-country.

Snider continued to perform and release records over the next several years, eventually leading to the launch of Aimless Records in 2008 to manage this steady stream of music. Though he would work with Aimless for the rest of his career, he partnered with Yep Roc for 2009’s The Excitement Plan. The album was warmly received and climbed to No. 6 on Billboard’s Heatseekers Albums chart. Meanwhile, Aimless’ first release, 2008’s Peace Queer EP, also made an impact, earning strong placement on Billboard’s Americana charts.

Into the 2010s, Snider maintained his schedule of regular performances and releases. That included 2011’s Live: The Storyteller; a pair of albums in 2012 (Agnostic Hymns & Stoner Fables followed by the tribute LP Time As We Know It: The Songs of Jerry Jeff Walker); co-founding the supergroup Hard Working Americans (alongside Widespread Panic bassist Dave Schools); 2016’s Eastside Bulldog (which was more in line with the ’50s-era rock of Snider’s alter ego, Elmo Buzz); and 2019’s Cash Cabin Sessions, Vol. 3, where Snider returned in glorious fashion to his folk roots.

Snider’s final official release was 2023’s Crank It, We’re Doomed. Even so, he remained active over the years with a variety of projects and side ventures outside of country and folk. He collaborated frequently with filmmakers Brad and Todd Barnes, resulting in two mockumentaries: 2009’s Peace Queer: The Movie and 2013’s East Nashville Tonight. He also appeared in and narrated 2014’s The First Waltz, a documentary chronicling the formation of Hard Working Americans; made several cameo appearances on Squidbillies as Lobster Freak; and published his own “quasi-memoir,” 2014’s Never Met a Story I Didn’t Like: Mostly True Tall Tales.

It’s worth noting that Snider’s death followed a stretch of troubling news. Per Rolling Stone, he’d been arrested in Utah in early November for causing a disturbance at Salt Lake City’s Holy Cross Hospital, where he was reportedly seeking treatment following a “vicious attack” on Halloween night.

Tributes and eulogies for Snider have already begun popping up online. Writer/rock critic Steven Hyden called him “one of the greats,” and an “unheralded songwriters’ songwriter.” Hyden went on to write that Snider was a guy “not only influenced by [John] Prine/[Kris] Kristofferson/Jerry Jeff but he seemed to come out of the same world.”

On a personal note, go listen to “Just Like Old Times,” which has a perfect line that sums up not only Snider’s art but his singular way of living: “Your goal was always the same as mine/You didn’t want to throw a fishing line in that old main stream.”

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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 Hot Takes & Cold Truths About The Grammys
Music

 Hot Takes & Cold Truths About The Grammys

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

On November 7, the nominations were announced for the 68th Annual Grammy Awards. The event takes place on February 1, 2026 in L.A. at Crypto.com Arena. The industry is fragmented and watercooler moments are fewer and farther between. There was no “song of the summer” this year, let alone a clear-cut song of the year. It’s more and more an uphill battle to “name that tune” and I’m not sure the Grammys is still the right board to make the call, despite the progress they’ve made. I’m impressed with their website, though, which has cool commentary, fun ways of laying out the nominees, and even a Grammy Music IQ game powered by IBM Watson. 

As a culture marketer, I believe that if it’s in the paper today, it’s yesterday’s news. Real-time data is a crucial commodity when it comes to staying on the pulse of culture, and the Grammys are focused on celebrating the year that was, not the year that’s coming. Here are my main takeaways from this year’s nominations: 

Who is more relevant: Grammys or TikTok?  

With 95 categories, it’s hard for the Grammys not to have some hits. But who do you think wins in terms of media, impressions, and overall relevance? The first ever TikTok Awards this year or the Grammys? TikTok killed the video star of the MTV days, but I don’t think it will have the influence to upend the entire music business.

Grammy Ecosystem is a System 

Once you are a Grammy darling, it’s a gift that keeps on giving. Does Billie Eilish deserve to be here for songs she released in 2024? Doechii, last year’s breakout star from the show, was nominated for song of the year with “Anxiety,” even though the track was originally released in 2019 (I’ll admit, the track sums up 2025 quite nicely, though). Kendrick is off cycle and still dominating. On the whole, there may be too many familiar Grammy faces for my taste.

Good Year for Hip-Hop at the Grammys, but Not On The Charts 

The Grammys gave hip-hop its biggest look yet this year and I’m excited about that. I remember when they didn’t even televise the category. For years, the Academy was out of step with rap’s dominance of culture, so I’m loving the fact that Clipse is getting the respect they deserve with nominations for album of the year, best rap song, best rap album, and more. If “marketing rollout of the year” was an award, they would be a shoe-in for that, too. Don’t miss their new GQ Men of the year interview either. 

But in terms of real-time data, the Academy is a little late. Last week, for the first time in 35 years, there were no hip-hop songs in the Billboard Top 40. At least they won’t get hit with the #GrammysSoWhite hashtag like 2017. 

It Takes 10 Years To Be Best New Arist 

The best new artist category is always an exciting way to highlight up-and-comers, and the curse of best new artist has been dispelled in the past decade. I mean, you can’t really have a sophomore slump when you get nominated for your fourth project, right?

See, talent like Addison Rae, Leon Thomas, and recent SNL musical guest Sombr have all been around for many, many years. Music executive Riggs Morales summed it up nicely with this emotional post about the Marias, who he signed in 2017. Sometimes overnight success takes 10 years. It just seems like the Grammys have lost the plot a bit with this category.  

Snubs! 

My personal favorites all got the cold shoulder this year. I’m bummed to not see Role Model get nominated (“Sally…” is my jam). Maybe he jinxed himself saying he’d rather be People’s Sexiest Man of the Year than win a Grammy. He got that award, but took his eyes off the prize.

Speaking of eyes on the prize, Slick Rick’s Victory is a visual masterpiece and a major miss by the Academy. There is no better visual album than this project he put out with Idris Elba and Nas’ Mass Appeal. 

BigXthaPlug is my favorite rapper right now. I know he was nominated in 2024 as the XXL Awards’ Best New Artist, but he’s been feeding us hits all year and deserves a look when you talk about artists of the year in 2025. 

Perhaps the ultimate snub was of the Grammys themselves. Morgan Wallen, arguably the biggest artist in the country right now, didn’t submit his smash hit album this year, returning to his 2022-2024 stance after last year’s collab with The Weeknd.

Sinners Is Actually The Music Moment of The Year 

As someone who doesn’t like scary movies or period pieces, I can say Sinners was one of the best movies ever made on so many levels. There’s a reason it’s got a 97 on Rotten Tomatoes. One of my go-to jokes at cocktail parties is to try to point out the three people who didn’t give it a perfect score. There are two scenes in this movie that will stick with me forever as some of the greatest music scenes in movie history. This film is set up for not only a monstrous Grammy outcome, but major Oscar love around the bend. 

The Stage is Set for Bad Bunny 

Speaking of around the bend, Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, better known as Bad Bunny, is up in all the top all-genre categories for his latest album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos, which mixes traditional Puerto Rican styles like plena with his more familiar reggaeton and trap. The stage is set for a BIG political statement in California if he crushes the Grammys just a week before he‘ll make history with the first all-Spanish performance at the Super Bowl halftime show This is a story worth telling in America right now and I think can be a storybook win if it plays out the way we hope.

Critical opinions aside, The Grammys are an awesome week for the industry with the parties, brunches, meetings, and music. There are so many tentpole moments to tie in brands and enhance storytelling, and many artists will have their “moment” that will live on for a lifetime. The Clios Music awards take place that week as well, celebrating the best ads and music collaborations. Nue’s very own Alex Kirshbaum is a juror this year, so he’s seeing all of the best in class and is thoroughly inspired. 

This is the last year the Grammys will be broadcast with CBS and Paramount. Starting in 2027, they move over to the House of the Mouse, which presents an exciting world of possibilities in which music stars and their stories can be enhanced with the magic of Disney. I wonder with amusement how things will play out over the next few years…

Beats + Bytes goes out each week to a capacity larger than Crypto.com’s arena. Packing out stadiums is one thing, but even more so, I hope this information can inform your job, feed your passion for music, and inspire you in one way or another. It’s a music industry love letter each week. Sharing is caring. If you feel inclined, please send to some friends and colleagues by clicking here: https://nueagency.com/beatsbytes/

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Todd Snider Dead At 59
Music

Todd Snider Dead At 59

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Todd Snider has died. News arrived yesterday that the Americana singer-songwriter was diagnosed with walking pneumonia, and this morning the musician’s official accounts posted that he has “departed this world.” He was 59.

Earlier this month, Snider canceled his tour in support of his latest album High And Lonesome And Then Some, citing that he was “violently assaulted” outside his hotel and needed medical treatment. Shortly after, it was reported that he was arrested upon leaving the hospital because he did not believe he should be discharged and subsequently cursed out the staff. Yesterday, Snider’s friends and family shared the following statement on his social media:

Hello friends, family, and members of the Shithouse Choir.

We have some difficult news to share. After Todd returned home to recover last week, he began having trouble breathing and was admitted to the hospital in Hendersonville, TN. We learned from his doctors that he had been quietly suffering from an undiagnosed case of walking pneumonia.

Our beloved brother’s condition has become more complicated, and he’s since been transferred for additional treatment. His care team and those closest to him are by his side and doing everything they can.

Right now we’re asking everyone who loves Todd to hold him in your thoughts in whatever way feels right to you. Say a prayer, light a candle, roll one up, send strength, or just keep him close in your heart. You’ve carried him through so much over the years, and he needs that from all of us now more than ever.

We’ll share more when there is more to tell. Thank you for surrounding him with so much love, support, and compassion.

Today, the same accounts shared the news of his passing, writing:

Aimless, Inc. Headquarters is heartbroken to share that our Founder, our Folk Hero, our Poet of the World, our Vice President of the Abrupt Change Dept., the Storyteller, our beloved Todd Daniel Snider has departed this world. Where do we find the words for the one who always had the right words, who knew how to distill everything down to its essence with words and song while delivering the most devastating, hilarious, and impactful turn of phrases? Always creating rhyme and meter that immediately felt like an old friend or a favorite blanket. Someone who could almost always find the humor in this crazy ride on Planet Earth.

He relayed so much tenderness and sensitivity through his songs, and showed many of us how to look at the world through a different lens. He got up every morning and started writing, always working towards finding his place among the songwriting giants that sat on his record shelves, those same giants who let him into their lives and took him under their wings, who he studied relentlessly. Guy Clark, John Prine, Kris Kristofferson, Jerry Jeff Walker.

How do we move forward without the one who gave us countless 90 minute distractions from our impending doom? The one who always had 18 minutes to share a story. We’ll do it by carrying his stories and songs that contain messages of love, compassion, and peace with us. Today, put on one of your favorite Todd Snider records and “play it loud enough to wake up all of your neighbors or at least loud enough to always wake yourself up.” We love you Todd, sail on old friend, we’ll see you again out there on the road somewhere down the line. You will always be a force of nature.

“Like A Force of Nature”

If we never get together again
Forgive me for these fools I’ve been
See if you can remember me when
I was listening to my better angels

It’s like a force of nature
Coming over me
I can’t keep myself from moving
It’s like a force of nature

May your hope always outweigh your doubt
Until this old world finally punches you out
May you always play your music
Loud enough to wake up all of your neighbors
Or may you play at least loud enough
To always wake yourself up

Todd Daniel Snider
10/11/66-11/14/25

Todd Snider was born in Portland, Oregan in 1966. In the ’90s, he moved to Tennessee and released his debut album Songs For The Daily Planet, which came out on Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville label and hit #23 on the Billboard Heatseekers Albums chart. He released 16 total albums, blending together folk, blues, rock, alt country, and funk. Despite having deals with majors like Capitol Records and MCA Nashville, he remained a DIY icon throughout his career.

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Watch Bad Bunny Perform “Weltita” at 2025 Latin Grammys
Music

Watch Bad Bunny Perform “Weltita” at 2025 Latin Grammys

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Bad Bunny took the stage at the 2025 Latin Grammy Awards in Las Vegas, Nevada, tonight to perform “Weltita,” from his latest album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos. Encased in a transparent box with images of palm trees projected on the sides, he was joined by members of the Puerto Rican band Chuwi, who also feature on the track. Watch the performance on X.

At this year’s Latin Grammys, Bad Bunny was up for nine awards, including double nominations in the Record of the Year, Song of the Year, and Best Urban Song categories. He took home five trophies in total—Album of the Year, Best Urban Music Album, Best Reggaeton Performance, for “Voy a Llevarte Pa’ PR,” and both Best Urban Song and Best Urban/Urban Fusion Performance, for “DTMF.”

Bad Bunny shared Debí Tirar Más Fotos in January. The Puerto Rican superstar is set for a banner 2026: he’ll perform the halftime show at Super Bowl LX in the midst of his upcoming world tour, and is nominated in six categories at the 2026 Grammy Awards, including Album, Song, and Record of the Year.

Read about Bad Bunny’s 2020 album YHLQMDLG at No. 67 in “The 100 Best Rap Albums of All Time.”

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Todd Snider, influential alt-country singer-songwriter, dies aged 59
Music

Todd Snider, influential alt-country singer-songwriter, dies aged 59

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Todd Snider, the influential alt-country singer-songwriter behind hits such as ‘Alright Guy’, has died at the age of 59.

The news was confirmed today (November 15) by a statement on Snider’s social media accounts. No cause of death has been given, but his family have said he had recently been hospitalised with pneumonia.

“Aimless, Inc. Headquarters is heartbroken to share that our Founder, our Folk Hero, our Poet of the World, our Vice President of the Abrupt Change Dept., the Storyteller, our beloved Todd Daniel Snider has departed this world,” read the message on Instagram.

“Where do we find the words for the one who always had the right words, who knew how to distill everything down to its essence with words and song while delivering the most devastating, hilarious, and impactful turn of phrases?”

It continued: “He relayed so much tenderness and sensitivity through his songs, and showed many of us how to look at the world through a different lens. He got up every morning and started writing, always working towards finding his place among the songwriting giants that sat on his record shelves, those same giants who let him into their lives and took him under their wings, who he studied relentlessly. Guy Clark, John Prine, Kris Kristofferson, Jerry Jeff Walker.”

Snider had recently cancelled the remainder of a US tour due to “severe injuries as the victim of a violent assault outside of his hotel” in Salt Lake City.

Snider was born in Portland, Oregon and relocated to Texas in the 1980s, where he began his music career. He later became associated with the Nashville alt-country scene, with his 2004 album ‘East Nashville Skyline’ particularly well remembered.

He was renowned for his witty, poignant lyrical style, deeply influenced by the likes of John Prine, Guy Clark and Kris Kristofferson, and his work helped to define the modern sound of Americana.

Among those to pay tribute to Snider were Jason Isbell, who wrote on Threads: “Freak flags at half-staff for the Storyteller and all the songs he still had left to write. I sure did love him.”

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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From 'Beer Run' to 'Play a Train Song'
Music

From ‘Beer Run’ to ‘Play a Train Song’

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

From “Alright Guy” and “Play a Train Song” to his rollicking “Talking Seattle Grunge Rock Blues”

In his own shambolic way, Todd Snider was a master songwriter — a follower of John Prine and Jerry Jeff Walker who specialized in sharp, often hilarious, story-songs about all manner of down-and-out characters, himself very much included. Over more than 30 years, Snider wrote about everything from the Kingsmen to pitcher Dock Ellis’ acid-aided no-hitter, always with empathy, self-awareness, and a winning stoner drawl. (Some of his best moments were not even songs — see the long, rambling, funny-as-hell monologues he’d tell onstage.) Here are 12 highlights. 

  • ‘Talking Seattle Grunge Rock Blues’

    LOS ANGELES, CA - NOVEMBER 20: Singer-songwriter Todd Snider performs at the Gimme Shelter benefit concert at the Palace Theatre in Los Angeles, California on November 20, 1995. (Photo by Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

    A minor hit in 1994, this talking blues is an early example of Snider’s humor, which was by turns stoner-friendly and biting. Snider satirizes the commercialization of alternative rock with a rollicking song about a struggling band that relocates to the Northwest and discovers a novel trick: refusing to play at all. (Or, as Snider puts it, “silence: music’s original alternative.”) In the song, the band blows up, gets rich and even lands a spot on MTV Unplugged: “We went right out there and refused to do acoustical versions/Of the electrical songs we had refused to record in the first place/Then we smashed our shit.”  —Christian Hoard

  • ‘Alright Guy’

    (MANDATORY CREDIT Ebet Roberts/Getty Images) American singer Todd Snider in a posed portrait in view of the Arrigoni Bridge, 1996. (Photo by Ebet Roberts/Redferns/Getty Images)(MANDATORY CREDIT Ebet Roberts/Getty Images) American singer Todd Snider in a posed portrait in view of the Arrigoni Bridge, 1996. (Photo by Ebet Roberts/Redferns/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Ebet Roberts/Getty Images

    One of Snider’s catchiest, most radio-friendly songs, “Alright Guy” found the innate troublemaker owning up to his proclivities. He liked to look at nude pics of Madonna, enjoyed his weed, and wasn’t averse to mouthing off at the police. But, hey, that was nothing, Snider countered. “I know I get wild and I know I get drunk/but it ain’t like I got a bunch of bodies in my trunk,” he sang. “I think I’m an alright guy.” The country singer Gary Allan recorded his own version of the song in 2001 and even titled his album after it, but not before tweaking one of Snider’s punchiest lyrics about “tearing up pictures of the Pope.” —Joseph Hudak

  • ‘Can’t Complain’

    American Folk musician Todd Snider plays guitar as he performs onstage at Medinah Temple, Chicago, Illinois,  November 27, 1997. (Photo by Paul Natkin/Getty Images)American Folk musician Todd Snider plays guitar as he performs onstage at Medinah Temple, Chicago, Illinois,  November 27, 1997. (Photo by Paul Natkin/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Paul Natkin/Getty Images

    Snider turned an awful early gig in Phoenix (“A little out of place/A little out of tune,” the song begins) into one of his most beautiful meditations. The song, as much as any other, exemplifies the Tao of Todd, a mix of stoner mishap, zen acceptance, radical gratitude, and dry humor: “We’re all waiting in the dugout wishin’ we could pitch,” Snider sings, “How you gonna throw a shutout, if all you do is bitch?” — Jon Bernstein

  • ‘Long Year’

    SANTA ANA, CA - JUNE 12: Singer Todd Snider performs at the Galaxy Theatre in Santa Ana, California on June 12, 1998. (Photo by Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)SANTA ANA, CA - JUNE 12: Singer Todd Snider performs at the Galaxy Theatre in Santa Ana, California on June 12, 1998. (Photo by Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

    Rarely did Snider get more vulnerable, and more honest, than he did on this haunting portrait of addiction from 2000’s Happy to Be Here. The best versions are live, just Todd by himself on guitar, with Todd telling the story that begins with a man trying — and struggling — to engage with twelve-step recovery and ends with him taking a shot of liquor. It’s always been a devastating portrait of isolation and the pain of recovery; Snider conjures worlds of emotion in his plainspoken tale of feeling alienated from the others in recovery: “Everyone was telling everyone how they felt,” Snider sings. “It felt like so long since I’d been young.” —J.B.

  • ‘Beer Run’

    American Folk musician Todd Snider plays guitar as he performs onstage at Medinah Temple, Chicago, Illinois,  November 27, 1997. (Photo by Paul Natkin/Getty Images)American Folk musician Todd Snider plays guitar as he performs onstage at Medinah Temple, Chicago, Illinois,  November 27, 1997. (Photo by Paul Natkin/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Paul Natkin/Getty Images

    This well-turned story-song focuses on two kids with fake IDs who run afoul of a store clerk in the pursuit of cold ones, but find redemption (and brews) in time to see a Robert Earl Keen show in Santa Cruz. The song is catchy-as-hell and all good vibes, right down to the “B-double-E-double-R-U-N” chorus. A prime example of the hippie bonhomie that Snider gravitated toward in his lighter moments, not to mention one of the great beer songs ever. —C.H.

  • ‘Play a Train Song’

    Todd Snider during 2006 Park City - Todd Snider Portraits at HP Portrait Studio in Park City, Utah, United States. (Photo by J. Vespa/WireImage)Todd Snider during 2006 Park City - Todd Snider Portraits at HP Portrait Studio in Park City, Utah, United States. (Photo by J. Vespa/WireImage)
    Image Credit: J. Vespa/WireImage

    Snider’s tribute to East Nashville’s fast living unofficial mayor Skip Litz soon became his signature song. It’s trademark Todd, full of pathos, hillbilly humor, and raise-your-beer melodicism. Rarely did Snider play a show without performing this one, which, of course, was as much about himself as it was Litz (to hammer that home, Snider switches from first-person to third-person at times). “I was depressed because my friend had died,” Snider writes of the song in his memoir. “And my depression started to rhyme.” —J.B.

  • ‘Conservative Christian, Right-Wing Republican, Straight, White, American Males’

    Todd Snider during 4th. Annual AMERICANA Music Association Honors and Awards at Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, TN, United States. (Photo by Rick Diamond/WireImage)Todd Snider during 4th. Annual AMERICANA Music Association Honors and Awards at Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, TN, United States. (Photo by Rick Diamond/WireImage)
    Image Credit: Rick Diamond/WireImage

    Todd Snider didn’t mince words, and he left nothing to the imagination in this wild ride off 2004’s East Nashville Skyline that compared and contrasted two political ideologies. While the song is an indictment of the type of person spelled out in its lengthy title — dudes who are likely “gay bashin’, Black-fearin’, poor-fightin’, tree-killin’ regional leaders of sales” — it’s also a celebration of the community in which Snider counted himself. The hippies, Todd suggested, had it right all along, with their “tree-huggin’, love-makin’, pro-choicin’, gay weddin’” beliefs. Twenty-one years since Snider released the tune, it still resonates today across America’s great divide. —J.H.

  • ‘You Got Away With It (A Tale of Two Fraternity Brothers)’

    PARK CITY, UT - JANUARY 23:  Musician Todd Snider poses for a portrait at the Getty Images Portrait Studio during the 2006 Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2006 in Park City, Utah.  (Photo by Mark Mainz/Getty Images)PARK CITY, UT - JANUARY 23:  Musician Todd Snider poses for a portrait at the Getty Images Portrait Studio during the 2006 Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2006 in Park City, Utah.  (Photo by Mark Mainz/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Mark Mainz/Getty Images

    There were few more pointed critiques of George W. Bush than this account, inspired in part by Snider’s attempt to crash rugby parties he wasn’t invited to in his youth in San Marcos, Texas, of a rich unaccountable young college student wreaking havoc on campus who’d later become the President of the Free World. The song was released in 2006, at the height of the Iraq War, and though the song never mentioned the current president by name, it ends with a sharp jab: “You’ll get away with this new thing, too.”  —J.B.

  • ‘The Devil You Know’

    Todd Snider performs during The Drop: Todd Snider at The GRAMMY Museum on October 8, 2009 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Rebecca Sapp/WireImage)Todd Snider performs during The Drop: Todd Snider at The GRAMMY Museum on October 8, 2009 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Rebecca Sapp/WireImage)
    Image Credit: Rebecca Sapp/WireImage

    Snider tells a harrowing story-song of an armed bank-robber on the run and making a detour at the narrator’s house in Nashville. The music is intense — more rocking and harder-edged than almost anything else in Snider’s catalog — and the narrative keeps you on the edge of your seat, as the singer tosses the crook his car keys and helps him get away. But it’s not just a story; it’s a musing on systemic poverty, culminating in one of the more definitive political statements of Snider’s career: “There’s a war going on that the poor can’t win.” —C.H.

  • ‘Just Like Old Times’

    hardly09_177_mac.jpg   Todd Snider plays the Rooster stage.  Day 2 of The (Hardly) Strictly Bluegrass Festival .    Event in, San Francisco, Ca, on 10/7/06.   Photo by: Michael Macor/ San Francisco Chronicle Ran on: 10-09-2006 Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, left, drew Saturday's only main stage encore. Emmylou Harris, top, played and sang every evening of the three-day free festival, which police estimated may have drawn up to half a million people. (Photo By Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)hardly09_177_mac.jpg   Todd Snider plays the Rooster stage.  Day 2 of The (Hardly) Strictly Bluegrass Festival .    Event in, San Francisco, Ca, on 10/7/06.   Photo by: Michael Macor/ San Francisco Chronicle Ran on: 10-09-2006 Gillian Welch and David Rawlings, left, drew Saturday's only main stage encore. Emmylou Harris, top, played and sang every evening of the three-day free festival, which police estimated may have drawn up to half a million people. (Photo By Michael Macor/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Michael Macor/San Francisco Chronicle/Getty Images

    The story starts dodgy and gets dodgier: “There’s a Coke machine glowing through the parking lot/Call it a room with a view.” From there, Snider’s protagonist reunites with a sex worker he knew from growing up before they both get hassled by the police. So much happens in Snider’s perfect, three-verse country song that it ended up becoming the basis for a 2020 feature film starring RZA. “I say the guy’s a pool hustler, but it’s just me,” Snider said in 2019. “I was just sick of singing about guys with guitars, so I gave him a pool cue.” —J.B.

  • ‘Greencastle Blues’

    SAN FRANCISCO, U.S.A - OCTOBER 04:  Todd Snider and band perform on stage on the last day of Hardly Strictly Bluegrass at Speedway Meadow, Golden Gate Park on October 4, 2009 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Anthony Pidgeon/Redferns)SAN FRANCISCO, U.S.A - OCTOBER 04:  Todd Snider and band perform on stage on the last day of Hardly Strictly Bluegrass at Speedway Meadow, Golden Gate Park on October 4, 2009 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Anthony Pidgeon/Redferns)
    Image Credit: Anthony Pidgeon/Redferns/Getty Images

    Snider was nothing if not self-aware about his shortcomings, and in this 2009 song, he takes stock of chronic fuckups with wry honesty. It was inspired by a true story: Snider got picked up for weed possession in Greencastle, Indiana, and found himself wondering why a man in his forties should keep ending up like this. The lyrics are sweetly funny, while also asking questions that point toward something darker. “Some of this trouble just finds me,” Snider sings. “Most of this trouble I earn/ How do you know when it’s too late? How do you know when it’s too late? How do you know when it’s too late to learn?” —C.H.

  • ‘Working on a Song’

    INDIANAPOLIS, IN - APRIL 18:  Todd Snider performs at The Vogue on April 18, 2019 in Indianapolis, Indiana.  (Photo by Keith Griner/Getty Images)INDIANAPOLIS, IN - APRIL 18:  Todd Snider performs at The Vogue on April 18, 2019 in Indianapolis, Indiana.  (Photo by Keith Griner/Getty Images)
    Image Credit: Keith Griner/Getty Images

    ​​Snider stripped down his sound for 2019’s Cash Cabin Sessions: Vol. 3, a record of mostly solo acoustic songs recorded at Johnny Cash’s cabin studio in Hendersonville, Tennessee, the Nashville suburb where Snider would eventually move later in his life. He revisited his gift for humorous talking blues on the track “Talking Reality Television Blues,” but it’s “Working on a Song” that revealed the magic of his songwriting. It’s a gorgeous ditty about chasing the muse, in which he chronicles his failure to finish a song, all in the midst of singing a great one. It ends with a very Snider question: “Where will I go now that I’m gone?” —J.H.

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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Jennifer Aniston, Max Greenfield Help Alex Warren Announce Arena Tour
Music

Jennifer Aniston, Max Greenfield Help Alex Warren Announce Arena Tour

by jummy84 November 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Alex Warren is hitting the road on his first arena tour in the United States and Canada — with Jennifer Aniston’s approval. Aniston portrays a judge in a comedic sketch promoting Warren’s upcoming concert trek, the Little Orphan Alex Live Tour.

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Warren — who just received a Grammy nomination for best new artist — appears in court in a short video premiering alongside an announcement of new tour dates on Friday (Nov. 14); his co-stars include Aniston, Max Greenfield and a child acting as a particularly entitled version of little orphan Annie. The clip is a continuation of a bit he started when announcing the European leg of the tour.

“You are here today because little orphan Annie is suing you, preventing your U.S. tour from happening,” Judge Aniston says to Warren in the scene’s opening, which then has a young redhead going by “Annie” accusing “that little b—-” (Warren) of “stealing my whole brand.”

“I can’t control the fact that both my parents are dead,” Warren says.

Not to worry — the tour will go on! Parodying a dramatic twist, Greenfield strolls in to reveal some pertinent information that’s in favor of Warren’s defense.

“MY FIRST ARENA TOUR!!! presale wednesday and general sale next friday at 10am… see you soon,” Warren wrote in an Instagram post that features the promo clip.

Warren’s 2026 tour begins at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena on May 25 and runs through July 15, when he’ll take the stage at New York City’s Madison Square Garden.

Ticket presales for Verizon customers and for Citi cardmembers both launch at 10 a.m. local time on Tuesday, Nov. 18 for select shows. For the Verizon presale, more information is available in the MyAccess section of the My Verizon app, or can be found here. For details on the Citi presale, visit the Citi Entertainment website here. (Citi is the official card of the Alex Warren Presents: Little Orphan Alex Live Tour.)

There will be an artist presale on Wednesday, Nov. 19. Fans should register in advance here for access to this presale, and set an alert for 10 a.m. local time to get tickets. VIP packages will be available at this time.

In partnership with PLUS1, Warren is giving $1 from every ticket sold to Camp Kesem, which provides free camp and programs to children whose parents are fighting cancer.

Warren’s debut album, You’ll Be Alright, Kid, reached No. 5 and charted in the top 10 on the Billboard 200 for 13 nonconsecutive weeks this year. The set features his Hot 100 No. 1 hit “Ordinary,” plus his singles “Eternity,” “Bloodline” featuring Jelly Roll, “On My Mind” featuring Rosé and “Burning Down” with Joe Jonas.

More information on purchasing tickets can be found on Warren’s official website.

See the full list of dates below.

Alex Warren Little Orphan Alex Live tour

Alex Warren’s Little Orphan Alex Live Tour kicks off in Nashville on May 25, 2026.

Courtesy Photo

November 16, 2025 0 comments
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