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Rosalía: “Berghain” Track Review | Pitchfork
Music

Rosalía: “Berghain” Track Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Rosalía doesn’t do small gestures. The Spanish pop maverick’s follow-up to MOTOMAMI was always going to be an event, and then she posted a video with the London Symphony Orchestra. “Berghain,” the lead single from her forthcoming new album Lux, is all spectacle. Never before has Rosalía flexed her classical training this hard: composing in three languages, turning in a performance that’s almost all coloratura. “Berghain” feels as ambitious as Lux’s supposed four-movement structure, cantering from violin fireworks à la Vivaldi’s “Winter” to a pummeling “The Rite of Spring” grand finale. Yves Tumor is here—to usher us into the final act—as is Björk, whose own gale force presence threatens to knock the song on its side like a two-dimensional façade.

Then there’s the matter of the titular Berlin nightclub. Last year, French-Lebanese DJ Arabian Panther accused Berghain of cancelling a scheduled performance due to his pro-Palestine views. Controversy is built in with Rosalía—a Spaniard who sang in an Andalusian accent on 2018’s El Mal Querer and became a superstar making reggaeton—but “Berghain” never quite earns its provocation.

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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Ben Stiller says nepo-baby label is a “selling point”
Music

Ben Stiller says nepo-baby label is a “selling point”

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Ben Stiller has shared his views on the nepo-baby discourse, explaining that he sees why people who’ve grown up with parents in showbiz might follow in their footsteps.

  • READ MORE: Severance season two review: mind-bending workplace sci-fi is the smartest thing on TV

The former Severance director was discussing his own status after he paid tribute to his parents, the comedians and actors Jerry Stiller and Anne Meara, in the documentary Stiller & Meara: Nothing Is Lost, released on Apple TV on Friday (October 24).

It comes at the same time as fellow actor Stellan Skarsgård hit out at the nepo-baby label himself, explaining that his teenage son Kolbjörn is affected by the label.

On SiriusXM’s The Howard Stern Show, Stiller said that he understands the arguments “about access” but sees it as a “selling point” that nepo-babies have grown up familiar with the industry.

“I think it’s kinda like that Brat Pack thing, right? New York Magazine, they coined a phrase, and then it just became a thing,” he said of the nepo-baby label, which was popularised by the magazine in 2022.

“But it’s always been what it is, in humanity and life,” he said. “It’s like, you buy a violin, a Stradivarius or whatever, it’s been in the family for hundreds of years. That’s a selling point.”

He added: “But I also understand there are other arguments to be made about access and all those things. My feeling is … if it’s in your blood, if it’s your passion and you grew up around it — for me, I think growing up around it, talking about all these things that I saw with my parents, you, actually as a kid, see the dark underside of it, the stress, the effects it has on relationships. You see that up close as a kid, and then you still wanna go into it.”

He did admit that he got his first job, in the 1986 off-Broadway revival of House Of Blue Leaves after he got an audition “as a favour” for Meara, after he “couldn’t get in ‘cause the casting director didn’t wanna see me.

“But I felt like, doing that audition, I knew that I had done what I needed to get the part,” he added. “If you have the passion, you need to do it. You need to go for it.”

Stiller himself has two children with his wife, actress Christine Taylor. They have a daughter, Ella, and a son, Quinn. Both have followed their parents into the world of acting, with Ella starring in the off-Broadway play Dilaria earlier this year and them both having small roles in Happy Gilmore 2 alongside their father.

Also in the Stiller & Meara documentary, Quinn told his dad that he felt he sometimes put being a father last, explaining: “You have all these hats that you’re trying to balance, you know, being a director, an actor, you know, a producer, a writer, but also, just like a father, right? And sometimes I felt that that would come, you know, last to these other things.”

During a Q&A at the New York Film Festival premiere of the film earlier this month, Stiller said of the moment: “As a filmmaker, I’m like, ‘Oh this is a good moment for the movie,’ you know. As a person I’m like, ‘That sucks.’ ”

Also earlier this month, meanwhile, Stiller described making comedy as being “more challenging” in the current political climate. He told Radio Times, “We live in a world where taking chances with comedy is more challenging. You’re seeing that front and centre in our country … But I think it’s important that comedians keep doing what they’re doing, speaking truth to power and being free to say what they want. That’s the most important thing.”

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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Marleys' Jamrock Reggae Cruise Rerouted
Music

Marleys’ Jamrock Reggae Cruise Rerouted

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

As Hurricane Melissa barrels toward Jamaica, the Marleys’ Welcome to Jamrock Reggae Cruise has been rerouted, Rolling Stone has confirmed.

The five-night event, set to take place Oct. 27 to Nov. 1, was originally slated to set sail from Miami with stops in Montego Bay and Ocho Rios. The cruise has since been rerouted, and while it will still take off from Miami, it will no longer visit the Jamaican ports and will instead head to Cozumel, Mexico.

“The Fleet Captain has finished his review, and has determined Cozumel, Mexico as the safest course for the 2025 Welcome to Jamrock Reggae Cruise!” event organizers announced over the weekend on Instagram. In a separate post, organizers stated that many of the scheduled artists and DJs were “unable to get out of Jamaica due to the airports closing,” and that with “very little time, we made our best efforts to bring on new artists so that we can keep the music and vibes alive.” Reps for the event did not immediately respond to Rolling Stone‘s request for comment.

The 10th annual cruise, in partnership with Norwegian Cruise Line, currently features a lineup that includes Damian and Stephen Marley, as well as the third generation of Marleys including Yohan, Skip, YG, and Mystic. Shabba Ranks, Super Cat, Tarrus Riley, Spice Baby Cham, and more artists are also set to perform. The celebration will also mark the 20th anniversary of Damian’s Grammy-winning record Welcome to Jamrock, which shares the same name as the days-long concert cruise series.

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As of Monday, Hurricane Melissa reached a Category 5 with winds of 175 mph. According to The Associated Press, forecasters have warned it could lead to devastating flooding, landslides, and widespread damage to infrastructure in Jamaica. The hurricane is expected to make landfall Tuesday morning in Jamaica.

Three international airports in Jamaica — Kingston’s Norman Manley International Airport, Ian Fleming International Airport in Ocho Rios, and Montego Bay’s Sangster International Airport — have been closed as the country braces for Melissa’s impact, ABC reports. Per the outlet, several cruises in the Caribbean have changed their itineraries due to the approaching hurricane including several Carnival ships, Margaritaville at Sea’s Islander to avoid the storm, and the Disney Treasure and the Disney Wish.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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CashorTrade, Fan-to-Fan Ticket Exchange, Names Two Execs to Leadership
Music

CashorTrade, Fan-to-Fan Ticket Exchange, Names Two Execs to Leadership

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Face value ticket exchange CashorTrade has added two major names to its leadership ranks as the fan-first ticketing platform continues to gain traction across the live music industry. Industry veterans Andrew Dreskin — best known as co-founder and former CEO of Ticketfly and TicketWeb — and Craig Snyder, formerly of Intellitix and Lyte, have joined the company’s executive team in key leadership roles.

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Dreskin joins as strategic advisor while Snyder takes on the role of vp of business development & partnerships. In his role, Snyder will focus on expanding alliances with artists, promoters and festivals that share the company’s commitment to equitable access to live events.

“When veterans like Dreskin and Snyder join forces with a grassroots platform like CashorTrade, it’s a clear signal that the face value movement is no longer fringe — it’s the future,” said Brando Rich, co-founder of CashorTrade, in a statement. “Their expertise will help us scale our mission to make live events more accessible, equitable, and community-driven.”

Snyder added that CashorTrade’s fan-first foundation, founded in 2009, now has more than 1 million verified members. “Throughout my career, I’ve worked to tackle one of the industry’s biggest challenges — scalping and sky-high resale prices that hurt everyone: fans, artists, and venues,” he said. “CashorTrade is built differently. Whether a show is sold out or not, it gives fans a legitimate place to exchange tickets at fair prices while helping promoters fill seats. I’m looking forward to building partnerships that expand this community and make CashorTrade’s Gold Membership even more essential for live music fans.”

Billboard‘s Live Music Summit will be held in Los Angeles on Nov. 3. For tickets and more information, visit https://www.billboardlivemusicsummit.com/2025/home-launch.

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October 27, 2025 0 comments
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The Best Metal Albums of October 2025
Music

The Best Metal Albums of October 2025 » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

We are gearing up toward the end of the year, and October packs quite a punch. This month, many heavyweights make their return. Tristan Shone with Author & Punisher continues his industrial trajectory while not completely distancing himself from the humane. Primitive Man descend into the abyss, their sludge/death/noise combination going strong, while Evoken plunge into sorrowful and harsh gloom with Mendacium.

Hooded Menace carry their newfound heavy metal-inspired path, and the long-awaited return of Coroner lives up to expectations. Finally, a newer band with a lot of promise, One of Nine expand their majestic black metal, drawing inspiration from the ever-fertile subject matter of Middle-earth.

Deeper in the underground, Gates of Dawn make an astounding return with the psychedelic rock of III, Grole continue their relentless march through punk-infused black metal, Binah open up their death metal to cosmic extensions, and Sum of R produce a fantastical, dark trip through Spectral. This month really has everything, so dig in! – Spyros Stasis

Best Metal Albums of October 2025

Author & Punisher – Nocturnal Birding (Relapse)

Author & Punisher have always been pulled by different forces. Tristan Shone’s fascination with the artificial is well established. By building his own drone and dub machines to articulate his industrial vision, Shone proves his complete dedication to his craft. On the other hand, he has always balanced his mechanical harshness with an unmistakable human core. His music might collapse into brutal breakdowns and sonic debris, yet beneath it lies an unmistakable emotional resonance. Case in point, his latest work, Nocturnal Birding, where he draws inspiration from birdsong for his compositions, forcing his machines to abide by their sonic quality and rhythmic structure.

Following an excellent record in Krüller, Shone does not look to repeat the recipe. Krüller might have been the epitome of Shone’s organic/inorganic approach, but Nocturnal Birding takes a different route. The record is condensed, clocking at just over 30 minutes. The compositions themselves are much more immediate, heard in the devastating Godflesh-ian breakdowns of “Black Storm Petrel” and “Rook”.

Similarly, the hooks here feel less intricate, more immediate, than those on Krüller. “Meadowlark” pushes toward a Nine Inch Nails subtleness, the desolate vocal delivery creating an encompassing space. Even more impressive is the ending to “Mute Swan”, where the final ascent carries a hypnotic and otherworldly quality. It ties the urban to the transcendent in fascinating equilibrium, the sound design intricately mirroring the background bird chirps.

In many ways, Shone has not changed his ways. His vision remains unwavering, but still, he finds places to experiment. If Krüller was the culmination of his hybrid vision, Nocturnal Birding shows how potent his sound can be when stripped back to its most direct, primal form. – Spyros Stasis


Binah – Ónkos (Osmose)

Listening back to Binah’s debut, Hallucinating in Resurrecture, it is easy to see how the UK band could be lumped in the old-school death metal revival of the 2010s. Their heavy groove and obsession with Sunlight Studios’ guitar timbre alone sufficed. However, even then, something more complex was brewing beneath, highlighted by the atmospheric qualities, especially prominent in the title track. This atmospheric dimension further flourished in 2018’s Phobiate, which incorporated additional progressive elements and off-kilter ideas to set Binah apart from the herd. “Dream Paralysis” is a perfect example of this evolution, its discordant quality colliding with a contorted rhythmical structure.

Ónkos is another leap forward for Binah, who forge stronger connections to their experimental side. Ambiance sits at the core, shifting forms throughout. The electronic component might have existed before, but here it feels more immersive. The introductions and interludes it offers have a cosmic quality. 

This widening scope feeds directly into the psychedelic and progressive components of Ónkos. Amid a punishing death-metal form, their intricate guitar work opens another dimension amid the brutality. It channels the early spirit of Timeghoul, balancing beauty and horror.

While this might suggest that Binah might have made a more rigid turn outside of death metal, that is not true. Their old-school Swedish death metal adoration is still there, palpable in every heavy groove, identifiable through the guttural distortion. However, they move from the raw churn of classic Clandestine toward the expansive, narrative approach of Crimson.

The melodic guitar lines, the intricate solos, the immersive ambiance, and the bravery of experimentation all reveal this, but even more so is the fact that, much like Edge of Sanity, they do not forget their past. That refusal to abandon death metal’s core is precisely what makes Ónkos Binah’s most daring and accomplished work to date. – Spyros Stasis


I never thought I would see Coroner release a new record, and yet here we are. Twenty-two years after the monumental Grin, the Swiss act makes its long-awaited return with Dissonance Theory. Coroner pushed thrash to new dimensions, harnessing its raw aggression through a technical lens. Their first single from the new record, “Renewal”, reaffirmed this lineage, taking on a Kreator-esque hostility, but patching it through the trio’s relentless precision and heavy groove.

However, Coroner’s vision was more ambitious. I always viewed them as a reflection of Voivod, both bands tapping into the same discordant stream. However, where the Canadians reveled in chaotic exhilaration, the Swiss worshipped an unyielding force of precision. The breakdowns of “Transparent Eye” show this rhythmic dedication, a relentless order that slowly twists the mind. That same structural rigor injects the heavy groove that has always been Coroner’s hallmark. It is hard to believe that a band founded in 1983 could unleash the industrial coating of “Sacrificial Lamb”, the tremendous momentum of “Symmetry”, or the mid-tempo application of “Trinity”.

It is a truly forward-thinking mindset, separate from any pointless progressive term. How many thrash bands can you name with atmospheric passages? The aforementioned Voivod, maybe Depressive Age, aspects of Mekong Delta, and Sabbat. It is a slim list, right? Yet, Coroner did exactly that through the discordant lead of “Paralyzed, Mesmerized” in Grin, and they still unearth this otherworldly sense in “Sacrificial Lamb” and “The Law”. Still, through all this technical aptitude, the relentless rhythm, the discordance and atmosphere, Coroner remain extremely straightforward and catchy.

The opening track, “Consequence,” and its chorus alone will have you tapping frantically on the repeat button. It makes the ride through Dissonance Theory that much more rewarding, an ambitious work that retains a direct perspective. It proves that Coroner were not just ahead of their time back in the 1980s and 1990s, they still are to this day. – Spyros Stasis


Evoken – Mendacium (Profound Lore)

Part of the extreme doom/death pantheon, Evoken have amassed a near flawless discography. Embrace The Emptiness, Quietus, and Antithesis of Light established an unyielding sense of dread and sorrow. However, starting with A Caress of the Void, Evoken began to soften slightly (very, very slightly), enveloping their dread in a sense of melancholy. Hypnagogia and Altra Mors joined that tradition, but their new record, Mendacium, looks to unravel this.

Mendacium acts as a hybrid point. Opener “Matins” rekindles the old hopelessness, its riffs breaking in slow waves, vocals lamenting as though everything is destined to be swallowed by the abyss. It is a sad procession, a task that must be completed to achieve some form of catharsis. The continuation with “Lauds” follows this paradigm; here, the guitars and keyboards drip with venomous intent, their discordance enhancing the already uneasy sense of the ritual.

This is where the record twists, with Evoken tapping into their latter-day self. In this mode, they augment their majestic quality, confidently walking toward despair rather than being dragged into it. To that end, they evoke (see what I did there?) the melancholic spirit of the Peaceville Three, adorning their ceremony with a tangible, sorrowful essence. Then it all comes crashing down again. “None” channels Esoteric’s psychedelic endeavors, and the grand finale with “Compline” results in the final, unavoidable devastation.

Here doom contorts into something harsher, as death metal brutality tears through the funereal veil. It is an excellent structure, paying homage to the band’s evolution over the years and collecting all its individual components into a unified form. Thus, Mendacium does not just retrace Evoken’s past; it refracts it, proving that their command of extreme doom/death’s language remains as devastating and as essential as ever. – Spyros Stasis


Gates of Dawn – III (Death Hymns)

One of the most exciting acts in underground black metal, Gates of Dawn possess an uncanny ability to mix psychedelia into their black metal brew. True, others have pursued similar experiments, most notably Oranssi Pazuzu, but Gates of Dawn retained much of the black metal rawness in both their debut, I, and their more experimental sophomore, II, which at times embraced a kosmische outlook.

With III, the balance nearly collapses, with Gates of Dawn giving themselves over almost entirely to psychedelic rock. As “Screaming Skin” comes in, it is still the majestic black metal side that pierces through. The synthesizers create a vast space, while the guitar work stays in the metallic domain with galloping rhythms and even a quasi-romantic, medieval-esque passage. Yet, under the surface, the guitars lay catchy licks, more akin to psych rock. The second half of the track establishes the shift as the dreamy melodies take on a 1960s surf-rock perspective.

While black metal persists in parts, the foundation has shifted. Garage rock becomes a driving force in “Magewind”, with the guitars acquiring more grit as the drums perform their circular krautrock-inspired procession. Funk ideas bloom within this setting, the second half of “Faces In Flames” coming alive with a 1960s groove. And then the intricate guitar playing in “Trembling Gaze” has more in common with Eric Clapton than with Snorre Ruch.

With III, Gates of Dawn display a similar mindset to Ved Buens Ende in Written in Waters, a willingness to transcend the genre’s perimeter, while still haunted by its presence. Though sonically these two records are very different, they both mark a step away from the black metal space toward psychedelia, but there is always some pull that remains.

“Fell Specter” is the most obvious example —an excellent track that sees Gates of Dawn momentarily retreat into tremolo-picked black metal. What is even better is the moment when that riff collides with the intense audio effects, combining the cold grimness with a spaced-out feeling. It encapsulates Gates of Dawn’s creativity and opens a world of potential for what comes next. – Spyros Stasis


Grole – Come Here at Your Own Peril (Tour de Garde)

Jordan Kelly, aka Illusory, is best known in the Canadian black metal scene for his work with Spectral Wound and Profane Order. With Grole, Illusory descends to the primal depths of black metal, relishing its lo-fi qualities and harsh structures, and also finds a place to excavate his interests in Newfoundland history, tradition, and heritage. The first specimen in With a Pike Upon My Shoulder is a raw and uncompromising piece, defined by harsh production and lead lines that cut through the murk.

Where the debut carved out Grole’s raw foundations, Come Here at Your Peril refines them. Here, Illusory places the punk and proto-extreme metal heritage on equal ground with the raw black metal side. “Sheila’s Brush” feels like a blackened crossover track, while “Dubh Dóite” delivers a Celtic Frost-ian groove and deathgrunts. Further heavy metal tropes appear, with the sharp riffs of “I Went Home Today” echoing with a blackened edge.

Despite these excursions, the black metal presence is strong. “Talamh An Éisc” is the most prominent expression, with its traditional riffing radiating the icy feel of the genre, while the howling vocals echo through the abyss. Even the acoustic guitar inclusion in “I Went Home Today” reaffirms its lineage, a technique associated with the folky side of the Norwegian scene.

What this results in is a record that is more immediate and catchier than its predecessor. Tracks like “Moratorium” and its insane chorus, or “The Anti Confederation Song” with its powerful hooks, will be embedded in your mind for days to come. There is, however, a touch of the earlier romanticism that has subsided, mainly due to the less cavernous production, which moves away from the mystical and into the confrontational. If With A Pike Upon My Shoulder is the descent to the abyss, then Come Here At Your Peril is where Illusory sharpens the blade, combining immediacy with rawness to deliver a memorable result. – Spyros Stasis


Hooded Menace – Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration (Season of Mist)

Hooded Menace’s trajectory appeared set. The Finnish ghouls’ career was defined by the rotten ambition of Autopsy and the towering forms of Winter. Yet, in a surprising twist, 2021’s The Tritonus Bell saw them ingest classic heavy metal tropes. It was not so much the early Peaceville Three bleakness that guided them, but rather the fiery steel of Mercyful Fate and King Diamond. With Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration, this transformation is solidified, with the trio stepping back into 1980s glory. This is immediately apparent as the expressive lead work to “Pale Masquerade” settles in. NWOBHM collides with the fiendish essence of Melissa, and a touch of proto-thrash through bursts of undisciplined guitar solos.

However, if it were a complete shift from death/doom into heavy metal, the result would be ridiculous. This is where Hooded Menace show their quality. They do not forget their past; instead, they reconfigure it. “Portrait Without a Face” is telling, the track alternating between its Iron Maiden fascination and the My Dying Bride and Paradise Lost gloom (cello and all). Similarly, “Into Haunted Oblivion” awakens the Celtic Frost specter, its vile demeanor as unforgiving as ever.

Further classic doom tropes surface: the melodic essence of Candlemass shines through “Daughters of Lingering Pain”, and Cathedral’s playful, circa The Carnival Bizarre, invocations define “Lugubrious Dance”. In that way, Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration is a record that knows its past, thrives in its present, and even finds room for a sly wink with a Duran Duran cover to close the casket. – Spyros Stasis


One of Nine – Dawn of the Iron Shadow (Profound Lore)

One of Nine enter a rich tradition of black metal bands finding inspiration in the works of J.R.R. Tolkien. This is a subject that requires balance. On the one hand, they must lean into atmosphere and heroic poetry; on the other, they must retain the aggression and vigor of the genre. This tension pushes One of Nine to evolve from their debut style into something more ambitious.

Dawn of the Iron Shadow builds on Eternal Sorcery, but it is a deeper, more complete work. The ambient passages are more descriptive, serving as immersive introductions with monologues and narration. Much like Summoning, the band also weave these elements into the songs themselves. The result is a richer tapestry, with “Age of Chains” layering choirs and bells over a black metal backbone. Their fast-paced, expressive core has also stepped into majestic territory. Stormblåst-era Dimmu Borgir is the reference point, shining through the meticulous arrangements of “Behold the Shadow of My Thoughts” and “Of Desperate Void”.

Yet One of Nine balance this mainstream symphonic style with darker shades. Emperor’s influence fuels the fury of “Dreadful Leap”, while sharpened, melodic leads in the Sacramentum mold echo through “Death Wing Black Flame”. They also glance at their contemporaries, with Wormwitch’s recent pointed aggression informing “Quest of the Silmaril” and lending a modern edge to the Tolkienian tapestry.

Through these extensions, One of Nine live up to their ambition rather than becoming just another Middle-earth-inspired act. They project atmosphere and storytelling with both emotion and compositional strength. The only blemish is that Dawn of the Iron Shadow does not yet uncover wholly new ground. But if their evolution continues, that breakthrough might only be a matter of time. – Spyros Stasis


Primitive Man – Observance (Relapse)

In Primitive Man’s world, there is no room for hope. There is barely room for breathing. They view the world not as collapsing, but as already collapsed, and the rest of us are catching up to that fact. This running thread defines their discography and is the key component of their latest work, Observance. Many in extreme music have tried to capture this outlook, but Primitive Man stand apart in the way they join different lineages.

The slow, collapsing pace owes to the drone/doom pioneers, with the punishing minimalism of Khanate and the annihilating essence of early Unearthly Trance defining “Seer”. This is punishment delivered in sparsity. Riffs crash down, separated by gulfs of silence, while despairing vocals echo through cavernous depths. This feeling is enhanced via a funeral essence, a sense of melancholy that radiates with dread. The melodic touches of “Devotion” channel this energy, making for a heartbreaking turn. It is a foundation that is complete through the post-metallic influence of Neurosis, breathing a dissonant air into the grandeur of “Water”.

However, much like all their points of reference, Primitive Man understand that slow pace and towering form are not enough. To that end, they are on point with their sound design and noise textures, channeling the adventurous essence of Wolf Eyes to uncompromising effect, with even the interlude “Iron Sights” standing out with its chaotic form. Similarly, touches of punkish energy offer a pummelling alternative to the slow-moving dread of “Social Contract”.

The more subdued noise-rock applications are contorted, but they still arrive with the distinct Swans-ian touch in “Transactional”, and the blackened aesthetic is ever-present in “Natural Law”. And of course, none of these offer any respite, any deviation from the end goal of Observance. Seventy minutes of suffocation, ending not with relief but with obliteration. – Spyros Stasis


Sum of R – Spectral (WV Sorcerer / Dusktone)

Reto Mäder’s project, Sum of R, has always circled around one foundation: ritual. Through the years, Sum of R have changed their perspective multiple times. Their early experimental doom machinations reached a peak with 2013’s Lights on Water. This was followed up by a surprising retreat to a minimal, dark ambient form with the excellent Orga. 

In 2022, Sum of R released Lahbryce, which featured the addition of Jukka Rämänen and Marko Neuman of Dark Buddha Rising, injecting a new psychedelic dimension. In many ways,  Lahbryce was a return to the pre-Orga sound. Here, the drones were subjected to the doom riffs, but unlike Lights on Water, Sum of R injected a further psychedelic twist. A successful experiment, they now return to it with Spectral.

The droning progression and hypnotic movements mirror Lahbryce, where weaving melodies and free-flowing rhythmic patterns create a trance-like atmosphere that can lead to uneasy moments. “Null” exemplifies the latter, as the percussive structure becomes unwieldy and out of control. Like their Finnish kin, they embrace the doom dimension, unleashing excruciating processions of nihilistic torture in “Waltz of Death”.

At the same time, Sum of R return to their past. The post-metal and post-rock elements return in “Beer Cans in a Bottomless Pit”, where the electronic backbone slowly shifts toward krautrock-style repetition. Similarly, they again retreat to a minimal state, with echoes of Orga pulsing through the strange percussive structures of “Null” and the malicious abstractness of “Violate” and “Cold Signature”.

If Spectral falters, it’s in its closeness to Lahbryce. Though it refines the album’s approach—making it more focused, more controlled—it does not quite transcend it. The ritual remains, dark and glorious, but its circle feels familiar. However, as with rituals, repetition is not so much a sign of stagnation as of devotion, and this can lead to strange new places in the future. – Spyros Stasis


October 27, 2025 0 comments
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BTS to Return in 2026 with New Album and World Tour: Report
Music

BTS to Return in 2026 with New Album and World Tour: Report

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Big news for ARMY faithful: BTS are reportedly prepping for quite the return. As reported by Bloomberg, the K-pop superstars are gearing up to drop a brand new album and embark on a massive world tour in 2026.

BTS have been on hiatus as a group since mid-2022, when the members each began fulfilling their mandatory military service in South Korea. While solo projects have kept fans tied over, K-pop stans have eagerly awaited the return of BTS proper. Now, that return seems closer than ever.

While the act and their label Big Hit Music have yet to make any official announcement, sources have confirmed to Bloomberg that BTS have spent the past few months working on a new album and preparing for their comeback tour.

The album would mark the group’s first new record since 2020’s Be and is reportedly set for a March 2026 release date. As for the accompanying tour, the run would mark BTS’ first proper tour since 2019 and boast around 65 dates across the globe, including more than 30 shows in North America.

Notably, Big Hit Music lightly disputed some of the figures of the report. “Details regarding the dates and scale of BTS’ new world tour remain unconfirmed,” the label told Bloomberg in a statement. “The dates you mentioned are not the latest number we are discussing.”

For more discussion of BTS and its various members, check out Stanning BTS on the Consequence Podcast Network. You can also pick up the Stanning BTS T-shirt, now available in two colors at the Consequence Shop.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Rosalía Gets Surreal In 'Berghain' Video
Music

Rosalía Gets Surreal In ‘Berghain’ Video

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Rosalía delivers a stunning first sample from her upcoming Columbia album, LUX, in the form of the Nicolás Méndez-directed, Warsaw-set video for “Berghain,” which features vocals from Björk and Yves Tumor.

In the highly surreal clip, Rosalía is enveloped first by orchestra musicians and then a menagerie of animals as she moves from her apartment to a crowded bus, a jewelry store and a doctor’s office. The track is described by Columbia as “the grand orchestral centerpiece” of the upcoming project’s second movement — “an operatic journey across languages and emotion” that “expands from soft introspection to sweeping cinematic power.”

LUX will be released Nov. 7. It was recorded with the London Symphonic Orchestra conducted by Daníel Bjarnason and features such vocalists as Carminho, Estrella Morente, Silvia Pérez Cruz, the Escolania de Montserrat i Cor Cambra Palau de la Música Catalana and Yahritza. 

The album will feature three exclusive tracks on its CD and vinyl editions, which can be pre-ordered here. It’s the followup to 2022’s MOTOMAMI, which topped charts in Spain and Portugal and reached No. 1 on Billboard‘s Latin Pop Albums chart.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Sammie Breaks Silence Following Arrest On Assault, Child Abuse Charges
Music

Sammie Breaks Silence Following Arrest On Assault, Child Abuse Charges

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Sammie is speaking out publicly after being arrested on assault and child abuse charges in Georgia.

The R&B singer, who was arrested earlier this month after being accused of assaulting his girlfriend in front of their child, broke his silence in an Instagram post on Sunday (Oct. 26).

“Happy Sunday, first and foremost. I’m gonna let God have his say, and the courts have their say, and the truth shall set you free,” Sammie said in the post. “Love. I appreciate y’all. Thank y’all for the concerns. Love.”

Sammie attends Hulu’s “Freaknik: The Wildest Party Never Told” Atlanta Screening at The Bank Event Center on March 20, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Prince Williams/FilmMagic

The crooner’s message appeared to challenge the allegations against him while simultaneously expressing gratitude for the outpouring of support he’s received from his fans.

On Oct. 19, the 38-year-old, born Sammie Lee Bush Jr., was booked by the Henry County Sheriff’s Office in Georgia on suspicion of first-degree battery as family violence and third-degree cruelty to children, following a domestic incident involving his partner, Teanna Reid, and their child.

Authorities allege that Sammie physically assaulted Reid while their child was present. He was released shortly after posting a $1,050 bond.

Sammie’s public message came just a day after his performance at One Musicfest in Atlanta on October 25. The two-day festival, which took place at Piedmont Park in Atlanta, included appearances by Future, Clipse, The Roots, Ludacris, Wale, Chief Keef, Jazmine Sullivan, Doechii, and more.

A child-star turned adult R&B performer, Sammie first made waves with his 1999 hit “I Like It,” from his debut album From the Bottom to the Top (2000), which was certified gold. His discography includes albums such as Sammie (2006) and Everlasting (2019), along with multiple EPs and mixtapes.

See Sammie’s Instagram story here.

Sammie

Singer Sammie performs onstage during the Funk Fest on September 27, 2025 in South Fulton, Georgia.

Prince Williams/WireImage

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Jack DeJohnette, Towering Jazz Drummer and Bandleader, Dies at 83
Music

Jack DeJohnette, Towering Jazz Drummer and Bandleader, Dies at 83

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Jack DeJohnette, the jazz drummer, pianist, and bandleader who played on Miles Davis’ Bitches Brew and worked closely with Sonny Rollins, Keith Jarrett, and many other jazz luminaries, has died. His longtime label ECM Records confirmed the news, and his personal assistant told The Guardian the cause of death was congestive heart failure. DeJohnette was 83 years old.

Born in Chicago, in 1942, DeJohnette grew up in a mostly segregated neighborhood, raised primarily by his grandmother and poet mother. From the age of five or six, he studied traditional piano with a neighborhood teacher; back home, his uncle was filling the house with jazz records by the likes of Duke Ellington and Billie Holliday. When that uncle, Roy Wood, became the first Black news announcer on a white Chicago radio station, DeJohnette gained access to an endless supply of jazz records that fueled an early infatuation with the genre. In a newly integrated high school at the dawn of rock’n’roll, he sang doo-wop and played in dance bands—occasionally on acoustic bass—formed by students exposed to a network of legendary Chicago jazz and blues labels like Chess and Vee Jay.

When a drummer friend left his kit in DeJohnette’s basement, he took up playing along to his uncle’s Max Roach, Clifford Brown, and Charlie Parker records and discovered he was a natural. Kicked out of high school for skipping class, he took up serious music study and played with a local quintet specializing in Thelonious Monk and Art Blakey arrangements. When his grandmother died, he bought a car, a drum set, and a Wurlitzer electric piano and hustled solo keyboard gigs at Chicago bars, practicing in the daytime for three hours apiece on the drums and piano.

His growing curiosity and expertise brought him into the orbit of Chicago’s avant-garde scene. After watching Sun Ra and His Arkestra rehearse at a nearby tavern, DeJohnette was invited into the fold and played drums for the outfit in an ad-hoc arrangement that continued into the 1960s as his status grew. Sun Ra and a new generation of jazz masters—particularly Miles Davis and John Coltrane—were coming into their own as composers, and DeJohnette would catch their shows at local club McKee Fitcher’s. “I’d go almost every night to hear Coltrane,” he told the Smithsonian in 2011, “and it was… what can I say? It was the most amazing experience of hearing music.” One night, when Coltrane drummer Elvin Jones was late for a set, the club owner yelled at Coltrane to “Let Jack DeJohnette play.” He joined the band for three songs—“a great physical and spiritual experience,” DeJohnette said. “John was like a train. He was like a magnet and you felt this pull.”

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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"It's not really rock and roll friendly"
Music

It’s not really rock and roll friendly

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Slash has cast doubts on Guns N’ Roses ever playing the Las Vegas Sphere, saying: “It’s not really rock and roll friendly.”

  • READ MORE: Guns N’ Roses live at Glastonbury: a solid performance… to the wrong crowd

The futuristic state-of-the-art venue opened in 2023 and has since hosted residencies from the likes of U2, Phish, Eagles and the Backstreet Boys. It was also recently confirmed that a new Sphere venue will be constructed in Abu Dhabi.

Speaking on Eddie Trunk’s Trunk Nation SiriusXM show, Slash spoke about if Guns N’ Roses could ever take on a residency. Despite describing the venue in positive terms, he went on to say he wasn’t sure about it’s suitability for a rock show.

He explained: “Everything that I’ve seen, or most everything that I’ve seen of it, looks amazing. I’m real trepidatious about playing there, because…it’s a great visual show. I think that in almost every case for a band, it becomes a visual show as opposed to seeing a rock and roll show. So there’s that.”

He also went on to reveal that he’d spoken to Eagles guitarist Joe Walsh – who has played the venue – about his experiences. He added: “[My concern] is that it’s not really sort of rock and roll friendly, the way that it’s set up. So it’s just one of those things where it seems like a really cool thing and conceptually there’s probably a lot of cool things that you could do, but I don’t think it would be the right environment for a proper rock and roll show.”

He also added that he could see Metallica playing the venue. “I could see them doing it because I can imagine them…because you have to prepare your mind to put on not just a band performance, but 50 per cent of what you’re doing is going to be the projection, or whatever you call that — the outer wall…what you’re putting on as content.

“And so that is something that’s gonna be the main focus of your show and the main focus of what everybody’s gonna be looking at. And so you have to sort of getting to that mindset and I think that’s hard for us to go that far into it. But we’ll see. Maybe down the road.”

Another clip of Slash on #TrunkNation this week. SiriusXM

Posted by Eddie Trunk on Friday, October 24, 2025

No Doubt recently announced their 2026 Las Vegas Sphere residency – their first run of shows in 14 years. 

Gwen Stefani and co are slated to perform on six nights next year – on May 6, 8, 9, 13, 15 and 16. The announcement coincides with the 30th anniversary of their third album ‘Tragic Kingdom’, whose songs ‘Just A Girl’ and ‘Don’t Speak’ remain beloved hits.

Speaking about their upcoming residency, Stefani said: “The opportunity to create a show at Sphere excites me in a new way. The venue is unique and modern and it opens up a whole new visual palette for us to be creative. Doing it with No Doubt feels like going back in time to relive our history, while also creating something new in a way we never could have imagined.” You can sign up for tickets here.

Meanwhile, Slash recently hinted at new Guns N’ Roses music, saying that “everybody [in the band] is thinking about it”. The band’s last album was 2008’s much-delayed ‘Chinese Democracy’, while the last LP that either Slash or McKagan appeared on was the 1993 covers album ‘The Spaghetti Incident?’.

“There’s so much material at this point – it’s a matter of having the discipline to sit down and fucking get into it,” he said. “But the thing with Guns is, in my experience, you can never plan ahead. You can never sit down and go, ‘We’re going to take this time, and we’re going to do this.’ Every time we’ve done that, it falls apart.”

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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