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11 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Snocaps, Florence and the Machine, and More
Music

11 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Snocaps, Florence and the Machine, and More

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

While touring behind her last album, Dance Fever, Florence Welch was hospitalized for an ectopic miscarriage; the singer channeled the effects of that life-altering, traumatic event into work for a follow-up. For the resulting Everybody Scream, Welch dove into medieval and renaissance studies and the history of witchcraft and mysticism, shrouding her characteristically vivid chamber pop with even deeper pathos and psychodrama. Welch worked on the new Florence and the Machine LP with Idles’ Mark Bowen, Danny L Harle, the National’s Aaron Dessner, and Mitski, who helped pen the title track.

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KeiyaA: Hooke’s Law [XL]

KeiyaA’s second studio album is named after the law of elasticity, which states that the extension of a spring is directly proportional to the load applied to it. The Chicago-born, New York–based singer and producer puts that law to the test with an expansive, head-spinning collage of R&B, electronic, jazz, and experimental music that threatens to uncoil at any minute. KeiyaA wrote, recorded, and produced the new material over the past five years, playing every instrument on the album, with one feature from rapper Rahrah Gabor. Hooke’s Law is “an album about the journey of self love, from an angle that isn’t all affirmations and capitalistic self-care,“ KeiyaA explained in press materials. “It’s not a linear story with a moral at the end. It’s more of a cycle, a spiral—it’s Hooke’s law.”

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Epiphone celebrate Oasis ‘Live '25’ tour with run of new Gem Archer and Bonehead guitars
Music

Epiphone celebrate Oasis ‘Live ’25’ tour with run of new Gem Archer and Bonehead guitars

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Epiphone is celebrating Oasis’ mammoth ‘Live ‘25’ tour by sharing a run of new Gem Archer and Bonehead guitars.

Both new models come inspired by the original guitars still wielded by Gem Archer and Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs on stage today, as they return to the live stages worldwide with Liam and Noel Gallagher for their first tour dates since 2009.

For Gem Archer, the model replicated and now on offer from the guitar manufacturer is the Sheraton – an Epiphone design first introduced in 1958, and has been used during the musician’s time in Oasis, Beady Eye, and Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds.

Dubbed the Masterbilt Gem Archer Sheraton, the new model is a semi-hollowbody, five-ply layered maple/poplar construction model, that comes with the signature etched Double Diamond on the rear of the headstock. It also features elegant mother-of-pearl block and abalone triangle inlays, a large 60s-style Sloped Dovewing headstock, pair of USA-made Gibson Mini Humbucker™ pickups, gold hardware and more.

It is available in both right-and left-handed versions, and comes with an Epiphone hardshell guitar case.

Discussing the history he has with his own model, Archer said: “The Epiphone Sheraton first came into my world when I borrowed Noel’s for Oasis tours and recording. When I started playing with him again in the High Flying Birds in 2017, this was the guitar I asked if he still had. I’m playing it again together with my signature model based on his ’66 original, on the Oasis ‘Live ’25’ tour.

“It’s got a ring and a clang to it, with loads of definition and clarity that I haven’t found in any other model.”

Gem Archer with his Sheraton guitar. CREDIT: Epiphone

Gem Archer's Epiphone Sheraton guitar. CREDIT: Epiphone
Gem Archer’s Epiphone Sheraton guitar. CREDIT: Epiphone

For Bonehead, the guitar replicated for the new Epiphone run is the Riviera, which he used everywhere from the early Oasis shows at The Water Rats in London to their era-defining nights at Knebworth.

His model is from 1984, and was used by him during the sessions for the landmark albums ‘Definitely Maybe’ and ‘(What’s The Story) Morning Glory?’, as well as the band’s tours throughout the ‘90s.

The new replica made by Epiphone features a five-ply layered maple body with a solid maple centerblock, Epiphone Sloped Dovewing headstock, a Gibson Crown inlaid in mother-of-pearl, Alnico Classic PRO™ pickups, Black witch-hat knobs and more.

“Epiphone Rivieras have been with me from the early rehearsals at the Boardwalk in Manchester all the way up to those historic shows at Knebworth and on into Liam’s solo career,” Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs said. “I’m still playing my original 1984 guitar on the Oasis 2025 tour, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

“I’m excited to bring this new guitar to audiences who experienced it back in the day, as well as those coming out to see us on this tour. It plays great and sounds massive; you’re gonna love it.”

Both the Masterbilt Gem Archer Sheraton and Bonehead Riviera are now available at authorised Epiphone dealers, online, and at the Gibson Garage locations in London and Nashville.

Bonehead with his Riviera guitar. CREDIT: Epiphone
Bonehead with his Riviera guitar. CREDIT: Epiphone

Bonehead's Epiphone Riviera guitar. CREDIT: Epiphone
Bonehead’s Epiphone Riviera guitar. CREDIT: Epiphone

The Sheraton model is priced at £1,199, and the Riviera is priced at £849.

“2025 is turning out to be quite the year for live music, and we’re thrilled to play a small part in paying tribute to one of the greatest reunions of the 21st century!” said Lee Bartram, Head of Commercial and Marketing EMEA at Gibson. “The first time I remember seeing Gem playing that Cherry Red Epiphone Sheraton was on July 2, 2005, in Manchester—what a show!”

He added: “Gem was such an important part of the Oasis sound in the 2000s, and to see him carry that on with Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds makes it a privilege to be part of this project.

“Spotting that Epiphone Riviera on stage during the ‘Be Here Now’ tour in 1996 is something that stuck with me and inspired me to get my first Epiphone guitar. Nearly 30 years later, I’m honoured to have played a tiny part in bringing the Epiphone Paul ‘Bonehead’ Arthurs Riviera to life.”

This is far from the first time that a new run of guitars has been launched to celebrate the long-awaited Oasis reunion. Towards the start of the year, it was confirmed that Noel Gallagher had joined forces with Gibson to create a limited-edition run of Gibson ’78 Les Paul Customs. In August, he launched a new Gibson Les Paul, designed specifically for the Oasis ‘Live 25’ tour, which came with handwritten lyric sheets.

Earlier this month, Gibson shared details of another guitar being shared to mark a cultural phenomenon – an exclusive, limited edition ES-345 guitar designed for the 40th anniversary of Back To The Future.

Oasis are currently out on the Asia leg of their mighty Oasis Live ‘25 comeback tour, which kicked off in South Korea earlier this month and has seen the members perform with an honorary cut-out of guitarist Bonehead. The guitarist announced that he would be taking a planned break from the tour to continue with “the next phase of care” of his prostate cancer treatment. Mike Moore from Liam’s solo band has filled in in his absence.

Dates will continue tonight (Friday October 31) with a show at Marvel Stadium in Melbourne, before the band play two more shows there on November 1 and 4. Two shows in Sydney are planned for November 7 and 8, before Oasis wrap up their 2025 dates in Buenos Aires, Santiago, and São Paulo at the end of that month.

While the ‘Live 25’ tour may be coming to a close, rumours are swirling that Oasis may announce more dates for 2026. Liam teased more to come at their final Wembley gig, with him announcing: “‘Champagne Supernova’, see you next year.” He then playfully slapped himself on the wrists to scold himself for letting it slip.

The frontman then went on to claim that “it’s not even half time yet”, potentially suggesting there may be a second half to the reunion tour soon to come. There’s been additional speculation that Oasis may return to celebrate the 30th anniversaries of their legendary Maine Road and Knebworth gigs by playing Etihad Stadium and Knebworth next year.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Orville Peck Teases Forthcoming EP With Reflective Single 'Drift Away'
Music

Orville Peck Teases Forthcoming EP With Reflective Single ‘Drift Away’

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Orville Peck will release a new EP, Appaloosa, on Nov. 14 via Warner Records. The country artist previewed the release with “Drift Away,” a reflective, nostalgic anthem.

The song showcases small-town ennui in the post-pandemic era as Orville croons, “Watch the kids ridin’ shotgun roads/ In ’21 all the movies closed/ High and dry they got nowhere else to go.” He adds, “It’s not about gettin’ out/ It’s about lettin’ go, don’t ya know?/ Drift away with me/ Drift away with me.”

Appaloosa will feature seven tracks, including a collaboration with Noah Cyrus titled “Atchafalaya.” The pair previously teamed up on the recent “Love Is a Canyon” and last year’s “How Far Will We Take It?”

Next month, Orville will hold his 7th Annual Rodeo. The event runs Nov. 14-16 in Pioneertown, California, at Pappy & Harriet’s. It will feature performances from Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats, Joy Oladokun, Hurray for the Riff Raff, Allison Russell, and more. Peck will play a different set each day, including a headlining set on Saturday, Nov. 15.

Peck’s last album, Stampede, arrived last summer. It followed his EP, Stampede Vol. 1, a collection of duets he has recorded with Willie Nelson, Elton John, Noah Cyrus, Midland, Allison Russell, Nathaniel Rateliff, and Bu Cuaron. Since then Peck has unveiled several tracks, including “Tennessee,” a collaboration with Kesha.

After making his Broadway debut in Cabaret, Peck recently wrapped filming on 2026 film Street Fighter. The musician is playing masked assassin Vega.

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Appaloosa Track List:

1. Dreaded Sundown
2. Drift Away
3. Atchafalaya (ft. Noah Cyrus)
4. Maybe This Time
5. Oh My Days
6. My Side of the Mountain
7. It’s the End of the World

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Taylor Swift Extends Double ARIA Chart Reign for Fourth Week
Music

Taylor Swift Extends Double ARIA Chart Reign for Fourth Week

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Taylor Swift continues her domination of the ARIA charts this week, locking in her fourth consecutive double-header as The Life of a Showgirl and “The Fate of Ophelia” remain at No. 1 on the Albums and Singles charts, respectively.

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The feat marks yet another high in a standout year for Swift, with both her re-recordings and original material continuing to perform strongly in Australia. Her latest chart-toppers have held steady across Halloween week — a fitting flex for a pop sorceress who’s made chart magic her signature move.

Meanwhile, Australian country artist James Johnston celebrates a new career high, debuting at No. 5 with his sophomore album Where You’ll Find Me, which also lands at No. 1 on the ARIA Australian Albums Chart. It follows the success of his debut Raised Like That, which peaked at No. 7 in 2023.

British pop icon Lily Allen returns to the top 10 with West End Girl, her first album in seven years. The project opens at No. 6, becoming her fifth top 10 ARIA album. Her previous efforts include 2009’s chart-topping It’s Not Me, It’s You and 2014’s Sheezus, which peaked at No. 4.

UK rapper Dave also makes a strong entrance with The Boy Who Played the Harp, debuting at No. 7. It follows his 2021 project We’re All Alone in This Together, which reached No. 5.

Melbourne’s Paul Dempsey claims the No. 8 spot with Shotgun Karaoke Vol. II, a covers record that features renditions of songs by R.E.M., Patti Smith, Cher, and more. The Something for Kate frontman also lands at No. 2 on the ARIA Vinyl Albums Chart. Dempsey has a long history of top-charting albums, both solo and with his band, including No. 1 albums The Official Fiction (2003) and Desert Lights (2006).

On the Singles Chart, Olivia Dean continues her Australian ascent. “Man I Need” holds firm at No. 2, while “So Easy (To Fall In Love)” jumps to No. 7 from No. 22. Former hit “Nice To Each Other” climbs from No. 16 to No. 12. Dean now has five tracks in the top 50 as she gears up to perform at the ARIA Awards on Nov. 19.

Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours holds the No. 1 spot on the On Replay Albums Chart, while Teddy Swims’ “Lose Control” continues its reign atop the Hitseekers Singles Chart.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Ruel Creates Sunny, Self-Assured Pop Creates Happiness » PopMatters
Music

Ruel Creates Sunny, Self-Assured Pop Creates Happiness » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

The Australian singer-songwriter Ruel is a savant of musical styles. 2019’s “Painkiller” was a compact mix of funk and pop, and 2023’s 4th Wall blended acoustic and electronic elements. Discovered by the Grammy-winning producer M-Phazes at age 12, Ruel van Dijk achieved stardom in his native Australia after signing with RCA Records at 15 and performing as an opening act on Shawn Mendes’ 2019 tour. His second studio album, 2025’s Kicking My Feet, proves he is ready to continue ascending the music industry ladder. “If everything comes, I’m gonna say yes to it,” he told Rolling Stone.   

In the music video for “Wild Guess”, Ruel plays himself, a musician acting in a movie. “Singers shouldn’t be actors,” says his co-star in the video. Through this self-reference, he calls attention to the fact that, since the dawn of social media, musicians have become multi-media celebrities. In 2023, he told The Guardian that the album title 4th Wall was inspired by The Truman Show, a film about a reality television series. As a rising star himself, he related to Truman’s constant surveillance. 

Kicking My Feet is a joyful record that portrays messy emotions as building blocks for newfound happiness. In “Not What’s Going On”, Ruel gives in to a new romance, as glossy harmonies enhance an ecstatic chorus. “I Can Die Now” conveys a similar sentiment: “But since I found you, I can die now.” “Only Ever” calls back to the funk influences of his previous records, but uses crisp guitar riffs to express devotion in a laid-back manner. Elsewhere, “The Suburbs” leans into rock, as a raucous sound contrasts peaceful lyrics: “Always drivin’ under 35,” Ruel says, imagining a settled-down life with a partner. 

At other points, Kicking My Feet takes a break from bliss. “Destroyer” brings the record’s rock homages to a crescendo, as Ruel contemplates his agency in the breakdown of a relationship. In “Even Angels Won’t”, the singer appreciates a friend who stuck by him during tough times, as haunting harmonies blend with a chilling acoustic piano riff. When he says to a friend, “You go where even angels won’t,” the tension of this moment might have, in the hands of another artist, warranted production theatrics. However, his husky vocals and songwriting mastery create a compelling composition that draws on pop’s core elements. 

Kicking My Feet is a shiny, highly-produced album, but it stands out in a crowded field of male pop stars. In 2024 and 2025, Shawn Mendes and Justin Bieber returned from extended breaks, and the odd former member of One Direction always threatens to release a solo album. Meanwhile, newcomers Sombr and Role Model blend rock and country to contrast the glitzy bubblegum pop that boy bands espoused in the 2000s and 2010s. 

After exploring acoustics on 4th Wall and incorporating R&B and funk on previous EPs and singles, Ruel made his foray into synths and electric guitars. Kicking My Feet is a sharp take on an existing formula. While most pop stars could spend an entire album cycle deciding how confessional they want to be, he has struck an innate balance between fame and privacy as he has gradually ascended to stardom. This personal assurance allows him to focus on the music. Like a painkiller, the songs are quick shots of dopamine, small experiments with sounds that use lyrics to ensure tidy moral resolutions. 

“Two tickets for a funeral / When you blow up the hand that feeds ya,” Ruel says on “Destroyer”. Although personally content, the singer understands that pop works best when grounded in reality, conveniently or not. In an interview, he told Rolling Stone, “The goal is not extreme happiness or extreme success. My goal is to be comfortable and sustainable.” As expressed in the song “The Suburbs”, Ruel will maintain stability when he finds it, even if its soundtrack continues to change. 

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Florence + the Machine Bring Brutal Honesty and Cathartic Transformations to Everybody Scream: Review
Music

Florence + the Machine Rise Again on Everybody Scream: Review

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

“The closest I came to making life was the closest I came to death,” Florence Welch told The Guardian last month. She was referencing a miscarriage that she experienced in August 2023, flush in the middle of a European tour with Florence + the Machine; an ectopic pregnancy forced Welch into emergency surgery, which saved her life. “I felt like I had stepped through this door, and it was just full of women, screaming.” This formed the basis of Everybody Scream, Florence + the Machine’s latest effort.

For six albums and 15 years now, Welch has built her artistry on a kind of ritual self-destruction: the barefoot sprinting across stages, the operatic wailing, the physical and emotional exorcism that defines a Florence + the Machine performance. She broke her foot at Coachella in 2015, pushed through it, kept going. The emergency surgery finally forced her to stop. And yet, the new album born from the stillness of recovery is about the irresistible pull back to the very thing that nearly killed her. Everybody Scream isn’t just Welch processing her trauma — it’s Welch realizing she might not be able to stop performing it.

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That thin line between life and death also speaks to a larger battle in Welch’s life and career: the threshold between her body and its limits, the tension of being a woman and an artist in a world that regularly discounts both. On Everybody Scream, Welch interrogates herself with newfound specificity and higher stakes, resulting in some of the most honest epiphanies and sharpest writing of her career. In a strange way, though, the album does not present Florence + the Machine reborn. It still functions as a ritual of bloodletting, a summoning, a desperate quest for cathartic release through operatic force and mythological imagery — the same function as every album before it. What’s different is that Welch has become more self-aware about this cycle.

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Instead of using every song as a means to reach a full-throated catharsis, she lets the words tumble out of her in a sheer outpouring of thought. The lyrics on Everybody Scream often arrive in torrents, skating across syllables with barely a pause for breath. She’s always a line away from something cutting, devastating, evocative, or deeply revealing. Welch invokes unified imagery like dirt, witches, trees, fruit, critters, wind, divine intervention, killing and crushing, and, most of all, screaming.

She does scream and howl, certainly on the title track, but this time, Welch opts for a more understated way of expressing a carnal, teeming desire for release. The lyrics consistently build in dramatic tension, exemplified by a couplet in “One of the Greats” where Welch spits the words “You’ll bury me again, you’ll say it’s all pretend/ That I could never be great being held up against such male tastes,” chewing on “such male” and letting her rhythm fall slightly behind the beat for the sake of emphasis. She really lets it rip a few lines later, sneering “Now don’t get me wrong, I’m a fan/ You’re my second favorite frontman.”

In a truly exciting way, Welch is unstoppable on Everybody Scream. She likens her body to both alien and sea monster on “Kraken,” but rather than frame her experience as that of someone who is damaged, she’s empowered by the feeling, conjuring a kraken’s astonishing power with enveloping harmonies and a driving rhythm. “You Can Have It All” is a late album highlight, Welch performing a seance with the album’s rolodex of witch-y imagery to fuel an awe-striking ‘rise from the ashes’ moment in the chorus. “Am I a woman, now?,” she asks with a wink after the song’s final transformative climax.

Welch’s exploration of gender and the body is another way that she advances upon prior themes in her discography. Much of Everybody Scream is a way for Welch to reframe the trauma around her pregnancy, miscarriage, and recovery from surgery. The idea of ritual and ceremony has been important to Welch on prior albums (she literally put out a record called Ceremonials), and this time, Welch uses performance (i.e. seances, spells, commands) as a way to explore an outsized, complex portrayal of womanhood. She employs language of body horror-esque transformation, possession, and rebirth; she rails against the trappings of being seen by the public as “too feminine to function” and contrasts meditations on womanhood with unshakeable notes of violence, decay, and destruction. On her last album, Welch sang “I am no mother, I am no bride, I am king.” Now, post-operation, body forever changed, Welch can’t quite figure out what she is, which she seems to find both horrifying and empowering.

She reaches some unsettling epiphanies on “Drink Deep,” a slow-burning folk-horror cut that appropriately brews and stews as Welch describes imbibing a potion she was given to drink. But at the song’s climax, she reveals that the drink came from her all along. After an album spent processing what her body endured (the pregnancy, the emergency surgery, the forced reckoning with physical limits), “Drink Deep” suggests that she’s always been feeding on her own destruction, that the catharsis she seeks requires her to continuously offer up pieces of herself.

She continues with this interrogation on the outstanding “Music by Men,” a companion to “One of the Greats” in its unflinching exploration of her status as a woman in music. Rarely has Welch written so overtly about her own career and doubts, referencing a lackluster experience in couples counseling, the ways in which her job makes it impossible for her to maintain a relationship, and the contempt it leads her to develop for the men in her life. There are about 14 lines you could easily classify as ‘absolutely brutal,’ but for its concluding bridge, Welch parts the storm clouds to offer an important plea: “Let me put out a record and have it not ruin my life.” That line, right there, is the thesis for Everybody Scream: How can she possibly keep making art like this if it’s destroying her?

On closing track “And Love,” Welch assures us that “peace is coming,” but Everybody Scream has spent too much time interrogating itself to let that promise land without skepticism. This is, after all, an album about someone who nearly died, recovered, and promptly made a record about wanting to return to the stage — something Welch will certainly do, with a massive 2026 tour already planned. Everybody Scream poses questions about whether being aware of self-destructive patterns is enough to break them completely, and Welch leaves them mostly unanswered. It’s also, overall, a reprisal of the same musicality that she’s employed throughout her catalog.

But Welch has always been both the hurricane and its eye, capable of summoning awe-striking force while observing it with crystalline clarity. On Everybody Scream, she’s simply turned that gaze inward with uncompromising honesty. If she can’t escape the ritual, at least now she understands what it costs. And even if she’s still paying for it, it’s clear that the closest she’s come to death has resulted in some of her most vital, illuminating work yet.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Melissa Auf Der Maur Looks Back With 'Good' Memoir
Music

Melissa Auf Der Maur Looks Back With ‘Good’ Memoir

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Melissa Auf der Maur will chronicle her unique experiences playing bass during formative eras for both Hole and Smashing Pumpkins in her memoir, Even the Good Girls Will Cry, which will be released March 17 through Da Capo.

“This book is about the decade that defined me and my generation, 1991-2001, and my life in the rock bands which allowed me to have a front row seat to an incredibly visceral and unforgettable moment in the counterculture,” says the Montreal-born musician. “It’s a love letter to the power of music and one-of-a-kind voices that make the world a cooler place. It’s also an ode to the analog, and what magic has been lost. Sharing what our generation witnessed, and what the world once was, in my hope of building a more livable future together.”

Auf der Maur famously joined Hole for the band’s 1994 tour in support of the album Live Through This, mere weeks after the deaths of both frontwoman Courtney Love’s husband Kurt Cobain and Hole bassist Kristen Pfaff. She remained in the group for five years and was featured prominently on its 1998 album Celebrity Skin.

In 1999, Auf der Maur replaced D’arcy Wretzky in Smashing Pumpkins and played with the Billy Corgan-led group for a year before its dissolution. She went on to release a riff-heavy, self-titled 2004 solo album and its follow-up, Out of Our Minds, six years later. Auf der Maur and her husband, filmmaker Tony Stone, now own the upstate New York venue Basilica Soundscape.

“All my musical friends know I’ve loved heavy music since 1990, but I guess I look more like an art teacher than a person who loves hard rock,” Auf Der Maur told SPIN in 2004. “What’s so crazy is that I grew up so androgynous and so one of the guys. I started playing bass because I wasn’t that cute. I used to work as a DJ in a bar, and my guy friends were like, hey, do you wanna comedown and play live music and drink beer?’ That’s how I got into this.”

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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The Most Influential Rappers Of The 21st Century: Drake, Ye, And More
Music

The Most Influential Rappers Of The 21st Century: Drake, Ye, And More

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Drake

Image Credit: (Photo by Simone Joyner/Getty Images for ABA)

Drake‘s influence stands as one of the most transformative in music history — not just in Hip-Hop, but in global popular music.

His early tapes and albums brought melodic confession to Hip-Hop with a potency we hadn’t seen before his arrival. While not the first to do so, Drake’s particular execution of melody-laden bars has become thee standard, with that hybrid cadence becoming the template for artists like Bryson Tiller, Rod Wave, Toosii, and A Boogie. His emotional tone helped birth sub-genres like emo rap, alt-R&B, and trap soul, while Noah “40” Shebib’s production — muted drums, ambient pads & reverb, dreamy piano melodies — provide a warm, but distant vibe for the listener that feels almost irresistible to the ear, leading to its appeal and infinite replication as the sound of modern introspection, particularly after 2011’s Take Care.

Drizzy also brought the multiculturalism of his hometown to the mainstream, incorporating Afrobeat, UK grime, dancehall, and more into hits that redefined how rap was perceived globally. While often accused of being a “culture vulture” for it, artist including Vybz Kartel and Skepta have not only co-signed his embrace of their culture, but thanked him for bringing it to broader audiences, believing he did so respectfully, not exploitively.

Vybz Kartel and Drake perform at Scotiabank Arena on October 26, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Robert Okine/Getty Images)

His adaptability is studied by genre-fluid artists who see him weave between R&B crooner and MC without losing respect in either regard. He also influenced artists like The Weeknd, Post Malone, Ed Sheeran and the Biebs to occasionally lean into rap cadences while showcasing their vocals. He’s ultimately affected how modern artists sound, drop music, emotionally connect, and exist as superstars, with a Graham’s number of offspring to prove it.

Artistic Descendants: Tory Lanez, Bryson Tiller, Rod Wave, PARTYNEXTDOOR, Post Malone, Latto, Russ, Jack Harlow, 6LACK, The Weeknd, A Boogie wit da Hoodie, NAV, Yung Bleu, Jhené Aiko, Tee Grizzley, Cash Cobain, Brent Faiyaz, Dave, Giggs, Headie One, J Hus, etc.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Snocaps: Snocaps Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Snocaps: Snocaps Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

The record is split equally between the two sisters, with each writing and taking lead vocals for half the songs. They frequently sing in harmony, their voices blending to produce a kind of magic that seems unique to sibling pairs. Katie and Allison aren’t just identical twins but mirror twins; the term comes to mind when hearing their voices—nearly indistinguishable but flecked with individuality—singing together. Allison’s songs—like “Over Our Heads,” all rollicking percussion and sunny riffs—lean toward bouncy indie rock. Katie’s make fruitful use of her newer songwriting habits: Her syncopated cadence on “Wasteland” and the triumphant twang of “Cherry Hard Candy” make the songs feel like they could be demos for last year’s Tigers Blood. But some tracks hark back to her past: The forlorn and minimal “I Don’t Want To” sounds unguarded compared to the artful poise of her recent releases, a reminder of the directness and vulnerability that made her early records such a revelation.

Both Katie and Allison can be skilled profilers of the moments when introspection verges on action, or the ways too much self-interrogation can paralyze us. But these are songs that refuse to be pinned down, with lyrics about having “the pedal to the floor,” driving down any number of numbered roads—“22,” “40 East,” “29th”—or taking “a walk down Sunset.” (This comprises another throughline from their earlier collaborations, filled with songs of restless searching: “I’ve got a racing mind and enough gas to get to Tennessee,” Katie sang on P.S. Eliot’s first album; “Planes and trains and 95 straight up” on their second.)

These are also songs of tangled relationships and messy self-regard, common themes for both songwriters. Katie has been forthright about her experience with addiction and sobriety; in a long, moving profile published earlier this year, she spoke at length about her and Allison’s relationship with the youngest Crutchfield sister, who also struggles with addiction. These lyrics seem animated by questions of care and codependency, too: “When you go down,” they sing on “Heathcliff, “You’ll take me down with you”; or later, on “Wasteland,” Katie sings of a “willful bottom line,” of abandoned “lines in the sand.” More explicitly, the album’s last full song is called “You in Rehab.” “Can’t imagine you getting better,” Allison sings, “But I never give up.” The song’s pop-punk buoyancy betrays its heartbreaking premise: “I watch myself split in two,” she sings, “One loves me/And the other loves you.” Seen through the light of this shared struggle, it’s especially moving to hear Katie and Allison backing each other up here.

Since their last album-length collaboration, Katie and Allison Crutchfield have worked with scores of different artists, lived in different cities, triumphed over personal difficulties—but likely, many of the same challenges of love and relationships and family and identity still persist. There’s something therapeutic, then, about hearing them return to each other on a record that sounds genuinely fun, even as they continue probing these core questions. “When Katie and I feel really inspired by something,” Allison once said, “we can build each other up in this way where we have complete courage in ourselves and complete confidence.” As young songwriters, those qualities made them sound brash and fearless. But here, their candor sounds hard-earned and their uncertainty feels honest. Above all, they sound rooted: ready to head out in their own directions, confident of what they’ll find when they come back home again.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Kanye West's daughter North West has dressed up as BABYMETAL for halloween
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Kanye West’s daughter North West has dressed up as BABYMETAL for halloween

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Kanye West‘s and Kim Kardashian’s daughter North West and her friends have dressed up as BABYMETAL for halloween – check out clips of them in costume below.

Earlier this week, North West took to TikTok to share several looks for halloween, one of which sees her and two other friends dress up as Japanese kawaii-metal icons BABYMETAL. Over the course of several posts, West and her friends are seen posing for photos, and dancing along to BABYMETAL’s songs like ‘Chocolate’ and their Lil Uzi Vert collaboration ‘The End’.

Check out the girls in full BABYMETAL regalia below.

@kimandnorth Halloween 2025 @BABYMETAL_JAPAN ♬ The End (feat. BABYMETAL) – Lil Uzi Vert

@kimandnorth @BABYMETAL_JAPAN ♬ som original – Naty🫶🏻

While comments have been turned off on North West’s shared account with Kim Kardashian, the official BABYMETAL page on TikTok has reposted all of the teenager’s videos.

North West’s tribute to BABYMETAL shouldn’t come as a surprise though, as her mother Kim Kardashian in 2021 revealed to Ellen DeGeneres that North is a “goth girl” who “listens to Black Sabbath.”

“North is like goth. She’s into Hot Topic,” Kim told Ellen. ​“She puts fake tattoos on her face and she listens to Black Sabbath. She’s just, like, a full goth girl.”

Back in March 2024, North West announced her debut album ‘Elementary School Dropout’, though the record has yet to be released. An official single has also not been released yet, but the teenager has previously West recorded a rap verse for ‘Vultures’ track ‘Talking’, which she performed with her father in Paris.

In May last year, she was one of several performers at Disney’s live production ‘The Lion King at the Hollywood Bowl’, where she performed ‘I Just Can’t Wait to Be King’ from the 1994 Disney film.

As for BABYMETAL, the metal trio released their fourth album ‘Metal Fourth’ back in August. The record scored a three-star review from NME, with Liberty Dunworth writing: “There is no doubt that BABYMETAL are looking to make their biggest statement to date with ‘Metal Forth’, and no one can accuse them of playing it safe. The choice to join forces with so many artists was always a huge risk, and unfortunately, it sometimes ends up dampening the charm that first set them apart from the masses. But in the moments where it does come together, it’s both epic and intriguing as hell. If there is one thing to take from album four, it’s that, even 15 years into their discography, BABYMETAL are not afraid to push boundaries and are still looking to rewrite the rules of metal.”

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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