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Demi Lovato Finds the Right Frequency on New Album » PopMatters
Music

Demi Lovato Finds the Right Frequency on New Album » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Demi Lovato began the promotional cycle for her seventh studio album, It’s Not That Deep, by pretending to tease an upcoming documentary. The announcement was false, revealed to be a self-mocking joke about the number of documentaries Lovato has released in the past. 

Although repetitive output becomes ripe for satire, Lovato has endured hardships worthy of documentation. In 2018, the singer experienced a near-fatal drug overdose after six years of sobriety. Additionally, while a Disney Channel star, Lovato struggled with addiction and body-image issues. “I’m sorry for the burnout,” she says on “Sorry to Myself”, an It’s Not That Deep track where she reflects on the amount of pressure placed on child stars. “Hustle culture sometimes does pay off, but it comes with a price,” Lovato said in a 2025 interview with Paper magazine. 

While snippets of It’s Not That Deep allude to the singer’s tumultuous past, most of the album stays true to its name. “Popvato is back,” said its creator, who aimed to return to the lighthearted nature of her early work. Lovato’s recent output, the albums Dancing with the Devil and Holy Fuck, explored the angst of her addiction and sobriety journey.

Produced by Zhone, a collaborator of Kesha, It’s Not That Deep is a sleek collection of club pop, with a variety of sounds that diversify a record of singular purpose. The atmospheric chorus of “Frequency” resembles Lovato’s early hits: radio pop that showcased her vocal range. However, in the post-chorus, “Frequency” transitions into an autotuned EDM haze, where Lovato claims, “No one can f*** up the vibe,” as a bass fluctuates beneath her vocals. 

The record also hits mellower notes without deviating from an upbeat sound. “Let You Go” has a sing-along chorus, but the synths throughout convey a melancholy mood. “In My Head” is a fast-paced yet ethereal attempt at moving on, with a catchy melody that distracts from its cliché lyrics. “Before I Knew You” calls back to the empowerment pop of Lovato’s first few albums but is reimagined in a breathy, confessional mode indicative of the present. 

The main pitfall of It’s Not That Deep is that it risks being derivative of Charli XCX‘s brat, 2024’s contemplative hyperpop smash. While Charli XCX used club-ready tracks to contemplate the nature of her own celebrity, Lovato uses a similar sound to argue that there is currently nothing to think about at all, hence the album’s title. However, even that assertion conveys an important change. It’s Not That Deep is a reversal of the meaning Lovato tried to create on previous records to varying degrees of success. 

In 2021, after the release of Lovato’s third documentary, The Atlantic ran an article titled: “Stars Now Understand That Their Destruction Is Our Entertainment.” By turning her life into reality television, Lovato lost the ability to control its narrative. Instead, the medium for sharing that life became its own narrative for public consumption, where fans decided that the new entry point to Lovato’s work—an investigation of heavy subjects—overshadowed the frothy pop she sang. 

It’s Not That Deep strikes a new balance between work and play, as Lovato accomplishes an adult version of the task given to her as a Disney star: providing escapism. Self-references on this album feel liberating and humorous. The music video for “Fast” features Lovato’s internet memes: snippets of interviews in which the singer made ridiculous comments that fans never forgot. By embracing the outlandishness of these moments, Lovato supports the mission of It’s Not That Deep, approaching a lighthearted task with seriousness. 

On the record’s cover, Lovato tries on a dress still wrapped from the dry cleaner. A tag on the garment reads, “We [Love] Our Customers”. Holding up the dress, Lovato stands amid a bustling crowd of young and old, referencing the cover of Billy Joel’s 1976 album, Turnstiles. To remain relatable to their audiences, pop stars must have one foot in everyday life, while turning the mundane aspects of that life into a spectacle. Completing this act requires an audience’s willful ignorance and a celebrity’s ability to manipulate reality. In this case, then, It’s Not That Deep has depth in one regard: it makes the hustle look easy, which is no small feat. 

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Saba Unveils New Project C0FFEE!: Stream
Music

Saba Unveils New Project C0FFEE!: Stream

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Consequence cover star Saba has released his latest project, C0FFEE! Listen to it below.

The release arrives one day after the lead single, “Today Years Old,” and its accompanying music video. Watch it below.

C0FFEE! is described as “capturing the raw, unfiltered energy of a single week in [Saba’s] life,” and follows the artist’s most recent release, From the Private Collection of Saba and No ID, which landed on our list of the 30 Best Albums of 2025 So Far. Saba supported that release with a US tour over the summer featuring special guest Ovrkast.

Earlier this month, Saba teased C0FFEE! with a medley of From the Private Collection of Saba and No ID cut “Stompin” and the opening track of C0FFEE!, “How Many X?” The performance is available to watch here.

Related Video

Read our own Wren Graves’ cover interview with Saba and producer No ID here.

Saba has a handful of US dates in Chicago and Los Angeles (get tickets here) to close out the year, followed by an early 2026 tour of the UK and Europe (get tickets here). See the full schedule below.

C0FFEE! Artwork:

C0FFEE! Tracklist:
01. How Many X? (feat. Ogi)
02. “don’t be long”
03. LOOKING FOR PARKING
04. my bro (feat. Senite)
05. Today Years Old
06. high tides (feat. Maxx Moor)
07. supplier interlude
08. Itachi
09. TICTACTOE (feat. FELIX!)

Saba 2025-2026 Tour Dates:
11/28 – Chicago, IL @ John Walt Day
12/02 – Los Angeles, CA @ Blue Note LA
12/03 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Blue Note LA
01/16 – Lisbon, PT @ B.Leza
01/17 – Madrid, ES @ Mon Madrid
01/18 – Barcelona, ES @ La Nau
01/20 – Paris, FR @ Le Trabendo
01/21 – Antwerp, BE @ De Roma
01/23 – Cologne, DE @ Club Bahnhof Ehrenfeld
01/24 – Amsterdam, NL @ Melkweg
01/25 – Copenhagen, DK @ Pumpehuset
01/27 – Oslo, NO @ John Dee
01/28 – Stockholm, SE @ Kägelbanan
01/30 – Hamburg, DE @ Bahnhof Pauli
01/31 – Berlin, DE @ Modus
02/01 – Warsaw, PL @ TBA
02/02 – Prague, CZ @ Rock Café
02/04 – Vienna, AT @ WUK
02/06 – Milan, IT @ Santeria Toscana 31
02/07 – Zurich, CH @ EXIL
02/09 – Leeds, UK @ Project House
02/10 – Manchester, UK @ Manchester Academy
02/12 – London, UK @ HERE at Outernet
02/14 – Dublin, IE @ The Green Room

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Video Premiere: Sitting on Saturn's "Ghouls"
Music

Video Premiere: Sitting on Saturn’s “Ghouls”

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Just in time for the scariest of holidays, and fresh off the road with 311, Sitting on Saturn are bringing the Halloween vibes home with a bone-chilling, guitar-thrashing video for their track “Ghouls.” The video is a truly legit cinematic work and the track brings a wild, wreckless heft that shows that the band threw their full creative might at it.

Check out the premiere of the video below, as well as the behind the scenes edit for a deeper dive into the making of “Ghouls”.

“Ghouls started as this wild jam one night that just kept getting crazier until it felt like something out of a horror movie— it had that heavy, eerie energy that felt straight out of The Twilight Zone. We grew up on old Halloween movies, so we wanted to capture that campy horror vibe but create a funny original story. The video is like a nightmare that turns into a monster concert — We storyboarded it together, and Hoyt handled the directing and editing to bring it all to life.” – Sitting On Saturn

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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20 Of TV/Film's Most Random Musical Guest Appearances
Music

20 Of TV/Film’s Most Random Musical Guest Appearances

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

The golden era of TV and film partially gained its descriptor because of the surprise musical guests that appeared on your favorite sitcom.

Typically, we’d see an artist at their peak become an even bigger household name when they popped on the silver screen. From Lena Horne and Tupac on A Different World to Tevin Campbell on The Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air and the Notorious B.I.G. on Martin, the list of musical guest appearances that live rent-free in our minds is a lengthy one.

Most notably, that nostalgia was evoked when Jill Scott appeared on Abbott Elementary back in April. She played herself and performed “Golden” to raise money for the school. Barbara Howard (Sheryl Lee Ralph) was the one to secure the headliner while Mr. Johnson (William Stanford Davis) was revealed to be Scott’s crazed fan who steals her things as memorabilia.

This feeling was also conjured up during the era of Insecure as stars like Gallant, Aminé, and Vince Staples all made cameos. So, VIBE strolls down memory lane to reflect on 20 of the best and sometimes random guest appearances by a musical artist on a TV show or movie.

  • Lil Kim in ‘Juwanna Mann’

    Miguel A. Nuñez Jr. and Lil Kim in 'Juwanna Mann'
    Image Credit: Warner Brothers/Courtesy ofEverett Collection

    As news of the Juwanna Mann sequel gets confirmed, let’s reminisce on Lil Kim‘s brief albeit memorable role in the 2002 original. The Brooklyn-bred pioneer played the girlfriend of Jamal Jefferies (Miguel A. Nuñez Jr.), prior to his Juwanna Mann transformation. During Jefferies’ downfall after disgracing the league, Kim let it be known that he wasn’t a mediocre lover and she was only using him for her own come-up—an unapologetic Queen.

  • Bow Wow on ‘Moesha’

    Ray J and Bow Wow on 'Moesha'Ray J and Bow Wow on 'Moesha'
    Image Credit: Everett Collection

    Season 6, Episode 15: “That’s My Mama”

    When Ray J joined formally the Moesha cast as her cousin-turned-brother, Dorian, he went on a mission to piece together the parts of his life that were kept hidden from him including meeting his birth mother and other siblings. Bow Wow appeared during the sitcom’s final season as Dorian’s half-brother. The episode also connected Mara Brock Akil‘s cinematic universe because Maya from Girlfriends played their aunt.

  • Busta Rhymes On ‘The Steve Harvey Show’

    (L-R): Daphnee Lynn Duplaix, Steve Harvey, Wendy Raquel Robinson, and Busta Rhymes on 'The Steve Harvey Show'(L-R): Daphnee Lynn Duplaix, Steve Harvey, Wendy Raquel Robinson, and Busta Rhymes on 'The Steve Harvey Show'
    Image Credit: Everett Collection

    Season 3, Episode 8: “Everybody Loves Regina”

    Busta Rhymes‘ guest role on The Steve Harvey Show came during the series’ third season when Kenan Thompson and Kel Mitchell reprised their guest roles as boys being mentored by Steve and Cedric. The Brooklyn rapper played Thompson’s older brother, Zack, who briefly dated Regina (Wendy Raquel Robinson) to make Steve jealous while he dated a younger woman who worked at the local coffee shop.

  • Boyz II Men On ‘The Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air’

    (L-R): Nathan Morris, Wanya Morris, Will Smith, DJ Jazzy Jeff, Michael McCary, and Shawn Stockman on 'The Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air'(L-R): Nathan Morris, Wanya Morris, Will Smith, DJ Jazzy Jeff, Michael McCary, and Shawn Stockman on 'The Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air'
    Image Credit: NBC/Everett Collection

    Season 4, Episode 13: “‘Twas The Night Before Christening”

    For Baby Nicky’s Christmas Eve Christening, the family was determined to gift the youngest Banks with the ultimate present. In true fashion, Will set out to out-gift everyone by having Boyz II Men sing at the gathering. He snuck into their recording session, and like any sitcom, even the most outlandish wishes get granted in the spirit of the holidays.

  • W.C., Ice Cube, And Mack-10 On ‘The Jamie Foxx Show’

    (L-R): W.C., Jamie Foxx, Ice Cube, and Mack-10 on 'The Jamie Foxx Show'(L-R): W.C., Jamie Foxx, Ice Cube, and Mack-10 on 'The Jamie Foxx Show'
    Image Credit: Warner Brothers Television/Courtesy of Everett Collection

    Season 1, Episode 17: “Westside”

    The Jamie Foxx Show is one of the most underrated sitcoms and its slew of guest stars remains undefeated. During this episode, Jamie finds it hard to follow Junior and Helen’s hotel rule to not host wild parties while they’re out of town and Westside Connection—W.C., Ice Cube, and Mack-10—comes to stay.

  • Bobby Brown In ‘Two Can Play That Game’

    Wendy Raquel Robinson and Bobby Board in 'Two Can Play That Game'Wendy Raquel Robinson and Bobby Board in 'Two Can Play That Game'
    Image Credit: Sony Pictures/Courtesy of Everett Collection

    When most people reference Two Can Play That Game, they usually highlight Gabrielle Union’s villain origin story within Vivica A. Fox and Morris Chestnut’s love story. However, a lot don’t acknowledge the hilarious moments at the hands of Bobby Brown. The Don’t Be Cruel crooner played the boyfriend of Shanté’s (Fox) best friend, Karen (Wendy Raquel Robinson), who went from a scrub to a stud and became a playboy after realizing how attractive he was after she upgraded him. Yet, with Shanté’s help, Karen walked away with a ring in the end.

  • Tyrese On ‘The Parent ‘Hood’

    (L-R): Robert Townsend, Tyrese, De'Aundre Bonds, and Tyrone Burton on 'The Parent 'Hood'(L-R): Robert Townsend, Tyrese, De'Aundre Bonds, and Tyrone Burton on 'The Parent 'Hood'
    Image Credit: Warner Bros. Television/Courtesy of Everett Collection

    Season 4, Episode 22: “‘Hood Sweet ‘Hood, Part 1”

    Pre Baby Boy, Tyrese made a guest appearance on Robert Townsend’s hit sitcom, The Parent ‘Hood. After taking in a teenager with a rough upbringing, his past comes to haunt him and the Black Rose crooner is one of the thugs who robs and assaults the boy. He may not have said much, but his presence was felt in the jaw-dropping season four finale.

  • Too $hort On ‘The Game’

    Too $hort and Hosea Chanchez on 'The Game'Too $hort and Hosea Chanchez on 'The Game'
    Image Credit: Scott Humbert/© CBS Paramount/Everett Collection

    Season 1, Episode 7: “Mi Casa Es Su Casa”

    Malik (Hosea Chanchez) and Tasha (Wendy Raquel Robinson)’s living arrangements come to a screeching halt after she returns early from a relaxing vacation to a raging house party. Too $hort was one of his guests who got a bit too comfortable in Mama Mack’s humble abode.

  • TLC On ‘Living Single’

    Lisa 'Left Eye' Lopes, Rozanda 'Chilli' Thomas, Tionne 'T-Boz' Watkins, and John Henton on 'Living Single'Lisa 'Left Eye' Lopes, Rozanda 'Chilli' Thomas, Tionne 'T-Boz' Watkins, and John Henton on 'Living Single'
    Image Credit: © Warner Bros. Television/Everett Collection

    Season 3, Episode 12: “The Following Is A Sponsored Program”

    As Synclaire (Kim Coles) gets doubtful about her acting career, Overton (John Henton) gets concerned about ongoing intimate dreams with TLC. The acclaimed trio hilariously offer fleeting advice and pillow talk during their hilarious appearance.

  • Kelly Rowland On ‘Girlfriends’

    (L-R): Jill Marie Jones, Kelly Rowland, Golden Brooks on 'Girlfriends'(L-R): Jill Marie Jones, Kelly Rowland, Golden Brooks on 'Girlfriends'
    Image Credit: Ron Tom/© Paramount Television/Everett Collection

    Season 6, Episode 15: ‘Oh, Hell, Yes: The Seminar’

    The Destiny’s Child alum has a three-episode arch on the sitcom where she played Tammy Hamilton. She begs Toni (Jill Marie Jones) to be her mentor. Toni ends up in a “single, Black female” situation where Rowland’s character nearly winds kidnapping Toni’s daughter and was a conspirator in getting her car stolen.

  • New Edition On ‘One On One’

    ONE ON ONE, Flex Alexander, New Edition (Ronnie DeVoe, Ricky Bell, Johnny Gill, Bobby Brown),ONE ON ONE, Flex Alexander, New Edition (Ronnie DeVoe, Ricky Bell, Johnny Gill, Bobby Brown),
    Image Credit: Michael Yarish/© Paramount Television/Everett Collection

    Season 4, Episode 14: “Lock Blockin”

    Flex (Flex Alexander) finds himself fighting a deep depression after discovering his ex-fianceé, Natalie, is now married and pregnant. Considering the pair broke up because she didn’t want to have children, Flex was devastated by the revelation, so Danielle and Duane decide to cheer him up with the help of his favorite band, New Edition in a very comical performance.

  • Dru Hill On ‘Moesha’

    Dru Hill on 'Moesha'Dru Hill on 'Moesha'
    Image Credit: ©Paramount Television/courtesy Everett Collection

    Season 3, Episode 1: “Labor Day Jammy”

    In the season 3 premiere, Moesha is gearing up to start at Bridgewood Academy after her father decided to separate her from her ex-boyfriend, Quinton “Q” Brooks (Fredro Starr). She learns through her friends that Crenshaw High’s final summer blowout will have Dru Hill as the guest performer, but the event is the same time as the annual fundraiser at her new school.

    Despite being dragged to the dull shindig, she befriends Haley Dillard (Dru Mouser) and Mo’s two worlds blissfully collide as they get permission to attend the “Jammy” together.

  • Chris Brown On ‘One On One’

    Musical guesgt appearancesMusical guesgt appearances
    Image Credit: Randy Tepper / © Paramount Television / Courtesy: Everett Collection

    Season 5, Episode 17: “Recipe For Disaster”

    In an effort to get over Arnaz (Robert Ri’chard), Breanna (Kyla Pratt) attends a party with their housemates. While there, she meets Chris Brown who portrayed himself. She gently turned him down because he was a minor, but he gave her his number anyway.

  • Tweet On ‘The Parkers’

    Musical guest appearancesMusical guest appearances
    Image Credit: © UPN / Courtesy: Everett Collection

    Season 4, Episode 7: “Kim’s 21st Birthday”

    All Kim (Countess Vaughn) wanted for her 21st birthday were tickets to see Tweet in concert. However, after Andell (Yvette Wilson) accidentally lost the tickets, Nikki (Mo’Nique) had to get creative about making her daughter’s wish come true. She ends up sneaking into Tweet’s hotel room to ask her directly if she’d make a surprise appearance at Kim’s birthday party.

    Spoiler alert: She does— thanks to some finesse and a white lie.

  • Snoop Dogg And Diddy on ‘The Steve Harvey Show’

    Diddy and Snoop Dogg Steve Harvey ShowDiddy and Snoop Dogg Steve Harvey Show
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Everett Collection

    Season 1, Episode 20: “I Do, I Don’t”

    At the height of the East Coast-West Coast rivalry— the episode aired in February 1997— Snoop Dogg and then-Puffy made guest appearances on Harvey’s sitcom.

    They both wanted to sample his character, Steve Hightower’s hit song, “When The Funk Hits The Fan.” Despite everyone’s concerns, Snoop and Puff called the rivalry “a bunch of media hype” and express that it’s all love between them. Hightower then asked them to “drop some knowledge” on his students.

    “We ain’t come here to talk about nothing behind us. We came to talk about what’s ahead of us […] We’re the future, so it’s on us to make a change,” Snoop stated later in the episode. To add a bit of comedic relief, the men decide to not sample Hightower’s record and instead opted for a song from Ohio Players.

  • Will Smith On ‘All Of Us’

    Musical guest appearancesMusical guest appearances
    Image Credit: Warner Bros./Courtesy of Everett Collection

    Season 1, Episode 9: “Johnny Comes Marching Home”

    Will Smith co-created All Of Us and gave himself a recurring role as Johnny, Robert’s (Duane Martin) best friend. When Johnny comes to visit, he ends up dating Neesee (LisaRaye McCoy). He does propose to her, but they ended up calling it off elsewhere in the series.

  • Ginuwine On ‘Moesha’

    musical guest appearancesmusical guest appearances
    Image Credit: Everett Collection

    Season 6, Episode 1: “On The Rebound”

    Ginuwine appeared on three episodes of Moesha during its sixth season as Khalib. She had gotten back together with Q (Fredro Starr) and was on tour with him. His friend, Khalib, expressed romantic interest in Moesha and she briefly entertained it until Q proposed.

  • Heavy D On ‘Living Single’

    Musical guest appearancesMusical guest appearances
    Image Credit: © Warner Brothers/courtesy Everett Collection

    Season 2, Episode 12: “Thanks For Giving”

    Heavy D guest-starred on Living Single across three episodes as Darryl. He first appeared in season two as Regine’s (Kim Fields) love interest— much to the surprise of her friends. Despite their romance being short-lived, they remained friends and he returned in season four with his fiancée, Tina (Vivica A. Fox). He’s now wealthy and Regine learns that Tina is only with him for his money. She later catches Tina making out with the best man and the wedding gets called off.

  • Gladys Knight On ‘Star’

    Gladys Knight, TyreseGladys Knight, Tyrese
    Image Credit: Carin Baer/ ©Fox/Courtesy of Everett Collection

    Season 1, Episode 4: “Code Of Silence”

    Alex (Ryan Destiny), Star (Jude Demorest), and Simone (Brittany O’Grady) paid homage to Gladys Knight for their showcase performance and much to their surprise, she introduced them since her niece, Danielle (Jasmine Burke), worked at Carlotta’s (Queen Latifah) salon.

    Knight returned to the show a few episodes later after Danielle became a victim of police brutality. Star has a lot of musical cameos including Patti LaBelle, Brandy, and Tyrese.

  • A Tribe Called Quest on ‘Moesha’

    Musical guest appearancesMusical guest appearances
    Image Credit: Everett Collection

    Season 2, Episode 9-10: “A Concerned Effort”

    Moesha wins a radio contest and scores four tickets to the MegaFest after venting to the radio host about her troubles with Q. A Tribe Called Quest were among the performers at the fictional festival. During the two-part episode, Slim and Mike of 112 guest starred as Q’s cousins who were trying to get a record deal. Montell Jordan also appeared on the arch as Moesha’s date.

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Tortoise: Touch Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Tortoise: Touch Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

There’s a lot of dirt in the gears: distortion, static and other distressed sounds. That might be illustrative: The band members—Dan Bitney, John Herndon, Douglas McCombs, McEntire, and Parker, multi-instrumentalists all—have variously noted the album’s difficult, lengthy, sometimes frustrating creation. Logistics made it the first long-distance Tortoise album, one not centered on folks making music together in a room. There are moments you sense that detached process, an airlessness that flattens some details. It rarely lasts long: One instrument or another will make a grand gesture, or get punched up in the mix Lee Perry-style, pushed through a filter and/or into the red. The destructive energy in some of the creative decisions speak to the detachment of the recording process—a shouting over the transom—and it makes for a less comforting, more unstable record.

“Promenade à deux” finally eases into something like a classic Tortoise chill-out space, albeit with a more widescreen approach, uncharacteristically graced by viola and cello. From there, beginning with “A Title Comes,” the LP’s second half finds perfect balance between signal noise and cinematic sweep, with signature vibraphone pulses and swooning guitar progressions rubbing against blissed-out Terry Riley organ tones and motorik chug. The interstitial “Rated OG,” which might easily run double its length without losing steam, hurtles into a splatter groove, tag-teaming “Oganesson,” which maintains the propulsion, locking focus with a spidery bass line that ends with another plunge into gritty discord.

“Night Gang” is the big finale. It opens like an abstracted Shangri-Las ballad, but vocals never come. There are self-consciously anthemic synths and super-sized surf guitar that suggest David Lynch directing Ben-Hur, and the song goes out on a tease of lighters-up rock-god jamming just before the fade. It’s pretty funny, actually, and moving, too. You sense the in-jokes, the teenage pleasures dusted-off and sincerely lensed through distance and accrued wisdom. You feel the miles and styles these guys have traversed over 30-plus years of music making. And while the darkness of the record’s first half doesn’t get resolved, the frame has widened and you see the bigger picture. There’s some comfort in that.

All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Prince Andrew reportedly spends his days playing 'Call Of Day'
Music

Prince Andrew reportedly spends his days playing ‘Call Of Day’

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Prince Andrew allegedly now spends his days playing Call Of Duty after giving up his royal titles earlier this month.

Prince Andrew, the younger brother of King Charles The Third, stepped back from being a working royal in 2019 after he was accused of sexual assault and having a close relationship with billionaire sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Andrew “vigorously denies” the allegations, but earlier this month gave up his royal titles including Duke Of York. “In discussion with the King, and my immediate and wider family, we have concluded the continued accusations about me distract from the work of His Majesty and the Royal Family,” he said in a statement (via the BBC).

However Prince Andrew is still refusing to leave the 30-bedroom Royal Lodge after he took out a 75-year lease on the property in 2003. The situation is currently being investigated by Parliament’s spending watchdog.

According to a new report shared earlier this week, the disgraced Prince Andrew spends all day playing Call of Duty on a wall-to-wall television and “clinging to the piles of teddies in his bedroom.”

The Sun’s source went to claim Andrew “loves games like Call Of Duty [and] war games with helicopters. He certainly doesn’t play FIFA, he’s got no interest in football.” He also really enjoys “war films and watching golf on TV.”

‘Call Of Duty: Black Ops 6’ screenshot. CREDIT: Activision Blizzard

Royal author Ingrid Seward added: “His life is very empty, he’s very lonely and I think he’s probably extremely bored. I remember Fergie telling me way back that Andrew always loved video games and he’s an aficionado of television.”

“Personally, I think the only future available to Andrew is for him to go and live away from Windsor and start a new life, somewhere that he can’t be extradited to America,” she continued. “Otherwise, he’s just stuck in a rut where every day will be the same and he will be pilloried at every turn.”

Earlier this week it was also revealed that Prince Andrew hosted Jeffrey Epstein at the Royal Lodge in 2006 as part of his daughter Beatrice’s birthday celebrations in 2006, two months after a US arrest warrant had been issued for Epstein for the sexual assault of a minor (via the BBC).

Next week a posthumous memoir by Ms Giuffre, one of the girls who accused Andrew of sexual assault, will be released after she took her own life earlier this year. “All the years of work that she put in is now coming to some sort of justice, and these monsters can’t escape from it,” her brother Sky Roberts told the BBC. “The truth will find its way out.”

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Steve Martin, Alison Brown Perform 'Let's Get Out of Here' on 'Fallon'
Music

Steve Martin, Alison Brown Perform ‘Let’s Get Out of Here’ on ‘Fallon’

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

The duo recently released a collaborative bluegrass album, Safe, Sensible and Sane

Steve Martin and Alison Brown appeared on The Tonight Show to showcase their instrumental bluegrass track “Let’s Get Out of Here.” Martin and Brown performed the rousing song on banjo with the help of several other live musicians, including two strings players.

“Let’s Get Out of Here” is the closing track on Martin and Brown’s recent LP, Safe, Sensible and Sane, which dropped earlier this month. The album marks the musicians’ first collaborative release, and includes appearances from Jackson Browne, Vince Gill, the Indigo Girls, Tim O’Brien, Jason Mraz, and Della Mae. It was tracked live at Compass Sound Studio in Nashville.

“With the banjo, there are so many styles you can work with, but Alison and I both have an ear for its more melodic, melancholy aspect,” Martin explained in a statement about the album. “We got together and played music for days, and ended up making a record where our entire banjo histories coalesce.”

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“We didn’t start off by saying, ‘Let’s make an album,’” Brown added. “We were just having a good time writing songs, and at some point we realized we’d written enough to gather them all together and put a bow on it. There was a joy and ease and sense of fun to the whole process, and now hopefully everyone who listens will share that joy.”

Martin recorded the album in the midst of filming his hit TV series, Only Murders in the Building. The fifth season of the show premiered on Sept. 9. Hulu recently announced that the series will head overseas to London to film its sixth season. Martin’s co-star Selena Gomez celebrated the news with a post on Instagram featuring a photo of her with Martin and Martin Short. “We are eternally grateful we can bring any of you any sort of joy,” she wrote. “My deepest gratitude from Steve, Marty and myself.”

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Best Pics From Night 1
Music

Reneé Rapp Joins Australian Open AO Live 2026 Line-Up

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Reneé Rapp is officially heading to Australia for the first time, joining the Australian Open 2026 AO Live lineup on Jan. 31 at Melbourne’s John Cain Arena.

The singer-songwriter and actress will perform on Saturday night of the five-day concert series, which runs Jan. 28 to Feb. 1 during the final stretch of the Australian Open. Her set is scheduled to run from 2–7 p.m. AEDT, just before the AO Women’s Final kicks off at 7:30 p.m. at the same venue.

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Rapp’s upcoming performance will mark her debut on Australian soil, following a massive year that saw her second studio album, Bite Me debut at No. 1 on the U.K. albums chart and No. 3 on the ARIA Albums Chart, while her 2023 debut Snow Angel earned the largest first-week sales for a female artist’s debut album in the U.S. that year.

Before heading Down Under, Rapp will hit the road in early 2026 for a European swing that is slated to kick off on March 11 at Lotto Arena in Antwerp, Belgium and keep her on the road through a March 22 show at the 3Arena in Dublin, Ireland.

In just over two years, Rapp has carved out a space as one of pop’s rising voices, earning both critical acclaim and a devoted fan base. She’s already taken her show to major U.S. festival stages, including Coachella, Lollapalooza, Governors Ball, and Boston Calling, and has made appearances on Saturday Night Live, The Today Show’s Summer Concert Series, and Late Night with Seth Meyers.

Before her music breakthrough, Rapp gained attention for her portrayal of Regina George in the Mean Girls Broadway musical in 2022 — a role she reprised in the 2024 film adaptation. The film’s soundtrack also featured Rapp and Olivia Rodrigo on the standout track “Not My Fault.”

Rapp joins this year’s AO Live lineup that also features an exclusive performance from The Kid LAROI and more. AO Pride Day on Jan. 30 will feature Australian favourites The Veronicas alongside Grammy-nominated duo SOFI TUKKER, while DJ and producer Peggy Gou will close out the event following the men’s final.

Each AO Live ticket includes full access to the arena concert as well as the Australian Open precinct. In addition to the headliner performances, the grounds will host acoustic sets in Garden Square and DJ-led parties on Grand Slam Oval. The event is presented by Tennis Australia and Untitled Group.

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Revolutionary Funk-Soul Luminary » PopMatters
Music

Revolutionary Funk-Soul Luminary » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

When a great artist passes, we often say that they were “larger than life”. While this was true of D’Angelo in many ways, it doesn’t exactly do his legacy justice. D’Angelo‘s presence certainly loomed large over the neo-soul scene throughout the 1990s and 2000s, but his music stood out not for its largeness, but its lightness—its subtlety, sparseness, and deftness of touch. It was as smooth as “chicken grease”, to borrow an oft-cited phrase from his musical icon, Prince, at once as sensual and soulful as Motown in its heyday and as effortlessly cool as the best of old-school hip-hop. 

Since his passing on 14th October, many tributes have been paid to D’Angelo, born Michael Eugene Archer, calling him a hitmaker. Yet calling him a hitmaker seems to miss the mark. Yes, he did score a top 10 hit in “Lady”, and a top 25 hit in “Untitled (How Does It Feel?)”, but D’Angelo’s true gift was not as a hitmaker. 

Instead, his music skirted around the rough edges of R&B, the seedy underbelly of 1970s funk. It took the drugged-out, dirt-encrusted sound of Sly Stone and P-funk and pared it down to its barest elements. D’Angelo knew how to both move the listener and restrain them at the same time—keeping them guessing and allowing them to fill in the gaps of his music, both literally and figuratively.

That is evident even in his most ‘billboard’ moments, like “Untitled”, where the oddly syncopated 6/8 beat almost seems to create a delay in the music, an extra space for the listener to fill. The additional space heightens the sexual tension within the track, dramatizing D’Angelo’s impassioned pleas for his lover to come closer, stop playing silly games, and “take the walls down” with him. 

Indeed, if there was one word that truly defined D’Angelo, it may have been just that: space. That was true of the way he made music, but it was also true of the way he treated the musicians who worked with him. As his tour manager, Alan Leeds said:

“D’Angelo always surrounds himself with great musicians, but most importantly, he gives them space. I don’t think I’ve ever worked with a frontman artist as unselfish musically and on stage as D’Angelo is. He’s like a jazz guy doing funk. I think he intrinsically gets the idea that’s foreign to so many musicians today that the beauty of the musical art form is the interplay.” 

Perhaps more than any other artist of his generation, D’Angelo knew how to let the music breathe. He knew that there is wisdom in letting your collaborators find their own rhythm, and that inspiration is something you have to sit with and wait on, not force. As a result, there isn’t a wasted note in his discography, nor is there a bad album. All three of his studio LPs—released in three separate decades—reflect a painstaking work ethic and a patience that verges on legendary. They are all certified stone classics, as virtually any R&B head worth their salt knows. 

D’Angelo has often been compared to Prince, and although the two share a clear sonic lineage—both steeped in the great American funk-soul continuum—in many respects, they are polar opposites. Prince’s music was huge and theatrical; D’Angelo’s was primarily marked by restraint and subtlety. It’s fitting, then, that D’Angelo’s favorite Prince song was “I Wonder U”, arguably the subtlest moment in Prince’s whole discography. 

The beat in “I Wonder U” is even sampled in “Africa”, the closing track on Voodoo. “Africa” was written as a tribute to D’Angelo’s newborn son, Michael, and it’s breathtakingly beautiful—a lullaby with a twinkle in its eye, sleepy, backward guitars merging with D’Angelo’s half-whispered vocals about spirituality and the blessings of “African descent”.

To sum up their differences: Prince made music for the party; D’Angelo made music for the after-party—steamy, slow-burning funk for bleary-eyed dancers taking one more hit of the joint, drinking “one mo’ gin”. It was the kind of music you put on in the wee AM hours when you were tired, high, and could no longer tell the difference between dreaming and waking. 

Yet this isn’t to say that all of D’Angelo’s music was marked by restraint and subtlety (just as not all Prince’s was power-ballad bombast). When the time was right, D’Angelo knew how to let fly and flat-out rock, like on his epoch-defining, 15-years-in-the-making comeback album Black Messiah. 

The album’s central highlight is probably “1000 deaths”, which opens with the sermonizing screed of black revolutionaries Khalid Abdul Muhammad and Fred Hampton and then comes totally unglued, the low-slung, bass-driven groove giving way to an epic wail of gun-slinging, turbine-roaring guitars. D’Angelo, deep in the mix, cries out in a plaintive and desperate battle cry: “You know a coward dies a thousand times, but a soldier only dies just once.”

You could say that D’Angelo’s music bore the best of both worlds—romantic and revolutionary, soft and hard, tender and machismo, masculine and feminine. Nowhere is this world of contrasts more beautifully exemplified than on Voodoo; he appears shirtless, chiseled, and dripping with sex appeal on the cover (just as in the famous music video), but the music itself feels almost supremely feminine and understated—the vocals airy and free-floating, the production minimal and crisp, the lyrics primarily tender and openhearted. Indeed, Voodoo is that rare thing: a 1990s hip-hop record that seems connected to the divine feminine. It doesn’t stand out in the records of the time; it exists in a category entirely separate from them. 

It’s ultimately impossible, in the space given here, to do adequate justice to D’Angelo’s legacy. Suffice it to quote the closing lyrics on “Africa”: “From which you came was love / And that’s how it all should be / You and my soul are one / Through all the time and history / And I thank you, thank you.”

Thank you, Michael Eugene Archer, for gracing this planet with your delicate and beautiful sound. 

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Special Olympics Asks Kid Rock to Stop Using the R-Word
Music

Special Olympics Asks Kid Rock to Stop Using the R-Word

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

As far as the Special Olympics is concerned, Kid Rock has a lot to learn.

During an appearance on Fox News show Jesse Watters Primetime last week, the rap-rocker-turned-conservative-troll joke that he was going to be a “r—–” for Halloween while brandishing a mask more recently associated with COVID-19 prevention (Rock’s history of disdain towards vaccine mandates is well-documented). His callous use of the slur caught the attention of Lorretta Clairborne, vice chair of the Special Olympics organization, who’s doing her best to make the unfortunate situation into a teachable moment.

In an open letter posted to the Special Olympics website, Clairborne urged the “Bawitdaba” singer to reconsider throwing around words that “have a long, painful history of being used to belittle and dehumanize.

“I’m writing to you personally with an urgent request: please acknowledge the hurt caused and use this moment to stand with us in rejecting that word and the prejudice it represents,” the letter reads. “People with intellectual disabilities, one of the largest groups of people with disabilities in the world, have suffered generations of discrimination and humiliation. In the 21st century, we’re still continuing to fight for the simplest form of justice: the recognition of our full humanity, a recognition you undermine when you use the word retard.”

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Clairborne goes on to invite Kid Rock to have a conversation with her, in hopes of sharing “more about the movement for inclusion and respect that has changed so many lives, including my own. Together, we can use this moment to build a world where every person is valued and respected.” See the full letter below.

While the conservative singer has yet to respond to the Special Olympics’ open letter, he’s been directing a lot of energy lately towards ticket brokers, even attempting to reach across the aisle by eliciting the help of Pearl Jam.

It’s a crusade he publicly took on last year during a meeting with Trump’s Attorney General Pam Bondi where he vowed to “open a can of whoop ass on the bots, scalpers, venues, ticketing companies, managers and artists alike who rip off and deceive the public with the horse shit that has gone on for decades and only gotten worse.” Earlier this year, he stood by Donald Trump as the American president signed an executive order aimed at reforming the concert ticket industry and protecting fans from what he called “exploitative ticket scalping.”

An Open Letter to Kid Rock: Words Matter

Dear Kid Rock,

I watched with deep concern your recent appearance on Fox News with Jesse Watters, where you mentioned you were going to be a “retard” for Halloween. The R-Word deeply demeans and harms people with intellectual disabilities. I’m writing to you personally with an urgent request: please acknowledge the hurt caused and use this moment to stand with us in rejecting that word and the prejudice it represents.

You have a powerful voice and a massive platform, and the world is watching. As an artist and cultural figure who influences millions, you can shape conversations and attitudes across this country. People with intellectual disabilities, one of the largest groups of people with disabilities in the world, have suffered generations of discrimination and humiliation. In the 21st century, we’re still continuing to fight for the simplest form of justice: the recognition of our full humanity, a recognition you undermine when you use the word retard.

Language plays a crucial role in that fight. Words like “retarded” and “retard” have a long, painful history of being used to belittle and dehumanize. When anyone, especially someone in the public eye uses them, it reopens wounds that so many of us have worked so hard to heal.

Through our “Spread the Word” campaign, Special Olympics and Best Buddies have joined hundreds of thousands of advocates around the world to end the casual use of the R-word and replace it with something far more powerful respect. We’ve made great progress, but every public use of that word sets us back and reinforces the stigma we’re trying to overcome.

I know this pain personally. Growing up, I heard that word used against me again and again. It hurt deeply then, and it still hurts today. But I’ve also learned that every moment of hurt can become a moment to teach, to grow, and to move forward together. I believe this can be one of those moments.

You have the chance to turn this incident into a statement of strength, to acknowledge the harm, to stand with people with intellectual disabilities, and to help lead the conversation toward greater understanding and respect.

I would be honored to speak with you and share more about the movement for inclusion and respect that has changed so many lives, including my own. Together, we can use this moment to build a world where every person is valued and respected.

With hope and sincerity,

Loretta Claiborne
Chief Inspiration Officer, Special Olympics

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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