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Alejandra Gala Bridges Wants To Hear The Music
Music

Alejandra Gala Bridges Wants To Hear The Music

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Once upon a time ago, Alejandra Gala had no idea that music would be her calling. Once an elite synchronized swimmer on Uruguay’s national team, she transitioned to the music scene after wading the waters as an acrobat in a circus. She gradually found her way to the music stand, first as a guitarist and later with the horn, finally understanding how her creativity and emotion can be expressed through sonic beauty. Her restless nature has her searching to the tune of her own soul, in constant search of her voice. Her musical sensibility is nourished by both movement and a return to her roots—drawing from jazz, electronic experimentation, the sounds of her homeland, and an ever-expanding harmonic universe.

Now based in Boston, she seeks to establish herself as a bridge between Uruguay and the global music scene as a trumpet player, guitarist and composer.

Growing up by the sea in Montevideo, Alejandra was shaped by an environment that blended creativity with discipline. Her artistic journey soon became a global one: she spent several months in Havana, where she began her formal music training and decided to make it her life path. She later lived in Buenos Aires and traveled frequently to Brazil and the U.S. to explore her musical curiosities and immerse herself into the musical sensibilities of the continent.

Some of her most formative experiences came at Berklee College of Music, where she became the first Uruguayan ever accepted into the Global Jazz Institute. There, she collaborated and studied with masters such as John Patitucci, Danilo Pérez, and Nicholas Payton. At Berklee, she also reunited with pianist Kris Davis—whom she first met at the Buenos Aires Jazz Festival in 2019—and soon joined the Institute of Jazz and Gender Justice, deepening her engagement with issues of tradition, identity, and gender in music. A defining chapter of her career has been her work with Mestizas, an international ensemble founded at Berklee in 2019 where Alejandra contributes as a composer, arranger, performer, and producer. Now evolved into a quartet joined by her twin sister Patricia Ligia on bass, Cuban pianist Estefanía Núñez Villamandos and Spanish flutist Paloma Cosano, the group explores the intersections of flamenco, Latin jazz, candombe and songwriting.

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Her solo project, GALA, has blossomed into two recent performance works: No-Plan, a concert that invites audiences into a space of introspection through presence and improvisation—the freer side of Alejandra’s musical identity—  and Candombe Meets Bostonia, a blend of candombe traditional songs with jazz, where she featured Noah Preminger on tenor sax and John Lockwood on bass.

Currently, she is preparing to release her debut album, Bajó del árbol un tambor, scheduled for summer 2026 with La Reserve Records. The project developed as part of her thesis at Berklee’s Global Jazz Institute, is titled “Tradition and Gender: A Story About Symbols, Women, and Rhythm.”

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Biggest No. 1 Country Albums Ever
Music

Biggest No. 1 Country Albums Ever

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Male solo artists dominate, though three female solo artists and two groups have also achieved the feat.


10/27/2025

Top Country Albums

Designed by Lyanne Natividad

Morgan Wallen’s I’m the Problem leads Billboard‘s Top Country Albums chart (dated Nov. 1) for the 23rd consecutive week. This ups Wallen’s career tally of weeks at No. 1 to 209, allowing him to extend his lead as the artist with the most weeks at No. 1 in the chart’s 61-year history.

Wallen’s achievement is especially impressive because he has amassed this hefty total of weeks at No. 1 in such a short amount of time. He first topped the chart on Aug. 15, 2020.

Top Country Albums originated as Hot Country Albums in the Jan. 11, 1964 issue of Billboard. Johnny Cash’s Ring of Fire (The Best of Johnny Cash) headed the inaugural chart. The compilation was well-timed: “Ring of Fire” had headed Hot Country Songs for seven weeks the previous summer and had crossed over to reach the top 20 on the Billboard Hot 100.

The chart was named Hot Country LP’s from 1968 to 1984, when vinyl LPs were king.

Twenty-one artists have logged 50 or more weeks at No. 1 on Top Country Albums. Male solo artists dominate, as you might expect, though three female solo artists have achieved the feat, as have two groups. (One of those groups is an all-female group.) Only one Black artist has amassed 50 or more weeks at No. 1, though that may change as country becomes more inclusive.

Here’s a look at all artists who have topped Top Country Albums for 50 or more weeks.

  • Kenny Chesney (50 weeks)

    Kenny ChesneyKenny Chesney
    Image Credit: J.Sciulli/WireImage for CMT: Country Music Television/Getty Images

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    First week at No. 1: Oct. 14, 2000

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 16, 2020

    Longest-running No. 1: When the Sun Goes Down (14 weeks in 2004)

    Notes: Chesney’s tally of No. 1 albums includes two live albums, LIVE: Live Those Songs Again (2006) and Live in No Shoes Nation (2017).

  • LeAnn Rimes (50 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: July 27, 1996

    Most recent week at No. 1: Feb. 17, 2001

    Longest-running No. 1: Blue (28 weeks in 1996-97)

    Notes: Rimes’ total includes a 1997 compilation of early recordings, Unchained Melody: The Early Years. Rimes was just 14 in February 1997 when she won a Grammy for best new artist. She remains the youngest winner ever in that category.

  • Eddy Arnold (51 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Aug. 14, 1965

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 4, 1968

    Longest-running No. 1: My World (17 weeks in 1965-66)

    Notes: My World was the first country album to receive a Grammy nod for album of the year. The album included the crossover hit “Make the World Go Away,” which all but defined the “countrypolitan” sound.

  • Glen Campbell (51 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Feb. 10, 1968

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 7, 1977

    Longest-running No. 1: Wichita Lineman (20 weeks in 1968-69)

    Notes: Wichita Lineman is tied with Johnny Cash at San Quentin for the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 1960s. Campbell’s tally of No. 1 albums also includes Bobbie Gentry & Glen Campbell, a collab with the singer of “Ode to Billie Joe.” The 1968 album was the first collaborative album to reach No. 1 on the chart.

  • Merle Haggard (51 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Dec. 10, 1966

    Most recent week at No. 1: June 20, 2015

    Longest-running No. 1: Pancho & Lefty (with Willie Nelson) (eight weeks in 1983)

    Notes: Haggard’s tally of No. 1s includes eight albums on which his backing group, The Strangers, was also credited. Hag’s tally includes three live albums, Okie From Muskogee (1970), The Fightin’ Side of Me (1970)and I Love Dixie Blues … So I Recorded ‘Live’ in New Orleans (1973). It also includes two collabs with Willie Nelson, Pancho & Lefty and Django and Jimmie (2015).

  • Johnny Cash (57 weeks)

    Johnny Cash poses for a portrait in circa 1969.Johnny Cash poses for a portrait in circa 1969.
    Image Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

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    First week at No. 1: Jan. 11, 1964

    Most recent week at No. 1: April 12, 2014

    Longest-running No. 1: Johnny Cash at San Quentin (20 weeks in 1969)

    Notes: Cash’s No. 1 albums spanned more than 50 years. Johnny Cash at San Quentin (which received a Grammy nod for album of the year) has had the longest run at No. 1 of any live album. It is also tied with Glen Campbell’s Wichita Lineman as the longest-running No. 1 album of the 1960s. Cash also reached No. 1 with two other live albums – Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison (1968) and The Johnny Cash Show (1970), which was recorded at the Grand Ole Opry. He also topped the chart with a 1985 collab LP with Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings and Kris Kristofferson and with two posthumous albums – American V: A Hundred Highways (2006) and Out Among the Stars (2014).

  • Buck Owens (60 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Jan. 25, 1964

    Most recent week at No. 1: April 20, 1968

    Longest-running No. 1: I’ve Got a Tiger by the Tail (15 weeks in 1965)

    Notes: Owens’ first No. 1 album, Buck Owens Sings Tommy Collins (1964), was a tribute album to the singer/songwriter whose biggest hits included “You Better Not Do That” and “If You Can’t Bite, Don’t Growl.” Owens’ tally of No. 1 albums includes two live albums, Carnegie Hall Concert (1966) and Buck Owens and His Buckaroos in Japan! (1967).

  • George Strait (61 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Feb. 18, 1984

    Most recent week at No. 1: April 13, 2019

    Longest-running No. 1s: Ocean Front Property (six weeks in 1987) and Carrying Your Love With Me (six weeks in 1997)

    Notes: Strait made this list the hard way – without a single album that logged more than six weeks at No. 1. Strait’s tally of No. 1 albums includes the 1992 soundtrack to Pure Country, in which he starred.

  • The Chicks (73 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Jan. 30, 1999

    Most recent week at No. 1: Aug. 8, 2020

    Longest-running No. 1: Fly (36 weeks in 1999-2000)

    Notes: The Chicks, formerly Dixie Chicks, are the second-highest ranking group on this list. Three of the group’s No. 1 albums – Fly, Home and Taking the Long Way – received Grammy nods for album of the year. The latter album won the award. The group’s most recent No. 1 album, Gaslighter, was bumped from the top spot by the debut album by a promising newcomer named Morgan Wallen.

  • Waylon Jennings (76 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Sept. 6, 1975

    Most recent week at No. 1: June 14, 1986

    Longest-running No. 1: Greatest Hits (16 weeks in 1979)

    Notes: Jennings’ tally of No. 1 albums includes three collabs with Nelson – one just with Nelson; one that also included Jessi Colter and Tompall Glaser; and one that included Johnny Cash and Kris Kristofferson as well. His tally also includes a 1976 live album, Waylon Live.

  • Tim McGraw (76 weeks)

    Tim McGrawTim McGraw
    Image Credit: Paul Natkin/Getty Images

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    First week at No. 1: April 9, 1994

    Most recent week at No. 1: Sept. 5, 2020

    Longest-running No. 1: Not a Moment Too Soon (29 weeks in 1994)

    Notes: McGraw’s tally includes a 2017 collab with his wife, Faith Hill, The Rest of Our Life. That title should probably be The Rest of Our Lives, but we’re not going to correct the grammar of someone who has logged 76 weeks at No. 1.

  • Randy Travis (80 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Aug. 9, 1986

    Most recent week at No. 1: Nov. 24, 1990

    Longest-running No. 1: Always & Forever (43 weeks in 1987-88)

    Notes: Always & Forever had the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 1980s.

  • Charley Pride (85 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: May 18, 1968

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 17, 1980

    Longest-running No. 1s: Charley Pride Sings Heart Songs (16 weeks in 1972) and The Best of Charley Pride, Volume 2 (16 weeks in 1972).

    Notes:  The albums referenced above were No. 1 back-to-back and spent a combined total of 32 consecutive weeks at No. 1. Now, that’s what you call dominating a chart. Both albums contained Pride’s signature song, “Kiss an Angel Good Mornin.’” Pride’s final No. 1 album, There’s a Little Bit of Hank in Me (1980), was a tribute to Hank Williams. Pride is the only Black artist on this list so far.

  • Luke Combs (89 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: June 24, 2017

    Most recent week at No. 1: July 9, 2022

    Longest-running No. 1: This One’s for You (50 weeks in 2017-18)

    Notes: This One’s for You had the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 2010s.

  • Shania Twain (97 weeks)     

    Shania TwainShania Twain
    Image Credit: Margaret Norton/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images

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    First week at No. 1: July 22, 1995

    Most recent week at No. 1: Oct. 21, 2017

    Longest-running No. 1: Come on Over (50 weeks in 1997-2000)

    Notes: Twain is the second-highest ranking female solo artist on this list. Come on Over had the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 1990s. The hit-studded blockbuster spent time at No. 1 in four consecutive years – 1997 through 2000. It received a Grammy nod for album of the year, and spawned two song of the year nominees, “You’re Still the One” and “You’ve Got a Way.”

  • Kenny Rogers (99 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: May 21, 1977

    Most recent week at No. 1: April 4, 2020

    Longest-running No. 1: Kenny (25 weeks in 1979-80)

    Notes: Kenny, which housed the hit “You Decorated My Life,” had the longest run at No. 1 of any album in the 1970s. Rogers’ tally includes a 1978 collab with Dottie West, Every Time Two Fools Collide, and a 2018 compilation, The Best of Kenny Rogers: Through the Years, which hit No. 1 following his death in March 2020.

  • Taylor Swift (101 weeks)

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    First week at No. 1: Aug. 4, 2007

    Most recent week at No. 1: July 29, 2023?

    Longest-running No. 1: Fearless (35 weeks in 2008-09)

    Notes:  Swift is the highest-charting female solo artist on this list, which is especially impressive given her mid-career pivot to pop. Her tally includes both the original and Taylor’s Version’s editions of Fearless, Speak Now and Red. With Fearless, Swift became the youngest Grammy winner for album of the year to that point, a title now held by Billie Eilish.

  • Willie Nelson (107 weeks)    

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    First week at No. 1: Oct. 4, 1975

    Most recent week at No. 1: May 20, 2017

    Longest-running No. 1: Always on My Mind (22 weeks in 1982)

    Notes: Nelson’s tally includes a collab with Waylon Jennings, Jessi Colter and Tompall Glaser; another with Jennings, Johnny Cash and Kris Kristofferson; another with just Jennings, and two with Haggard. It also includes two live albums, Willie and Family Live (1979) and the Honeysuckle Rose soundtrack (1980).

  • Alabama (125 weeks)           

    AlabamaAlabama
    Image Credit: CBS via Getty Images

    Trending on Billboard

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    First week at No. 1: May 23, 1981

    Most recent week at No. 1: Nov. 11, 2006

    Longest-running No. 1s: Feels So Right (28 weeks in 1981-82) and Mountain Music (28 weeks in 1982-83).

    Notes: Alabama is the highest-ranking group on this list. Feels So Right (in May 1981) was the first No. 1 by a group that wasn’t named after its leader. (So, we’re discounting Merle Haggard and the Strangers, Sonny James and the Southern Gentlemen and The Charlie Daniels Band.) Alabama’s tally of No. 1 albums includes a 1988 live album, Alabama Live.

  • Garth Brooks (173 weeks)

    Trending on Billboard

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    First week at No. 1: Oct. 13, 1990

    Most recent week at No. 1: Dec. 23, 2017

    Longest-running No. 1: No Fences (41 weeks in 1990-91)

    Notes: Brooks’ tally of No. 1 albums includes a double-disc live album, Double Live (1998); a pair of Christmas albums, Garth Brooks & the Magic of Christmas (1999) and Christmas Together (2016), the latter a collab with his wife, Trisha Yearwood; and a remarkable four box sets – The Limited Series (1998), Blame It All on My Roots: Five Decades of Influences (2013), The Ultimate Collection (2016) and The Anthology Part I: The First Five Years (2017).

  • Morgan Wallen (209 weeks)

    Trending on Billboard

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    First week at No. 1: Aug. 15, 2020

    Most recent week at No. 1: Nov. 1, 2025

    Longest-running No. 1: Dangerous: The Double Album (97 weeks in 2021-23)

    Notes: Dangerous: The Double Album had the longest run at No. 1 in the chart’s history. One Thing at a Time, which spent 87 weeks at No. 1, is in second place.

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October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Foo Fighters' 2026 Tour: How to Get Tickets
Music

Foo Fighters’ 2026 Tour: How to Get Tickets

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Rock favorites Foo Fighters have announced their 2026 “Take Cover” stadium tour, featuring massive shows across North America with special guests Queens of the Stone Age, Mannequin Pussy, and Gouge Away.

The tour launches August 4th in Toronto and includes stops at major venues like Ford Field, Soldier Field, Lincoln Financial Field, Nationals Park, BC Place, and Allegiant Stadium, marking the band’s first stadium run since their 2023-2024 “Everything or Nothing at All” tour.

Get Foo Fighters Tickets Here

Find more details on Foo Fighters’ “Take Cover Tour” and what to expect below.

How Can I Get Tickets for Foo Fighters’ 2026 “Take Cover” Tour?

Tickets for Foo Fighters’ 2026 “Take Cover” tour go on sale to the general public on Friday, October 31st at 10:00 a.m. local time via Ticketmaster.

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Multiple pre-sales begin earlier in the week for fans who want early access:

Newsletter Subscriber First Access Presale: Tuesday, October 28th at 10:00 a.m. local time (must be already subscribed to the Foo Fighters Newsletter)

Artist Presale: Wednesday, October 29th at 10:00 a.m. local time (register here)

Once tickets are on sale, fans can also look for deals or get tickets to sold-out shows via StubHub, where orders are 110% guaranteed through StubHub’s FanProtect program. StubHub is a secondary market ticketing platform, and prices may be higher or lower than face value, depending on demand.

What is Foo Fighters’ “Take Cover Tour”?

Foo Fighters’ “Take Cover” stadium tour represents the band’s triumphant return to North American stadiums following their recent run of surprise US club dates and overseas arena shows. The tour marks the first stadium run since the band returned to the stage in San Luis Obispo in September 2025 with new drummer Ilan Rubin.

Speaking about the tour, frontman Dave Grohl shared: “Since our return to the stage in San Luis Obispo five weeks ago, we have been reminded of why we love and are forever devoted to doing this Foo Fighters thing. From reuniting as a band and staring at a list of 30 years worth of songs to brush off, to reimagining versions with the incredible blessing of the one and only Ilan Rubin behind the drums, to reconnecting with our amazing fans and blasting them with everything we’ve got (no matter the size of the venue) because we would not be here without them, we have the most solid core. And the sun is finally rising over the horizon.”

The tour spans August through September 2026, featuring stops at major stadiums across the US and Canada including Rogers Stadium in Toronto, Ford Field in Detroit, Soldier Field in Chicago, Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia, and Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas.

Do Foo Fighters Have a New Album Coming Out?

Not yet! Though the band did release a new single “Asking for a Friend” alongside the tour announcement. Speaking about the new song, Grohl said: “‘Asking for a Friend’ is a song for those who have waited patiently in the cold, relying on hope and faith for their horizon to appear. Searching for ‘proof’ when hanging by a wish until the sun shines again.”

The band has described “Asking for a Friend” as one of many new songs, suggesting more material is on the way. Earlier this year, Foo Fighters shared the new track “Today’s Song,” and released a new live album, Foo Fighters – Are Playing Where ??? Vol. 1, exclusive to Bandcamp.

Who Is Opening for Foo Fighters on Their 2026 Tour?

The “Take Cover” tour features a rotating lineup of special guests varying by date:

Queens of the Stone Age will serve as direct support on all dates except for the September 12th show in Fargo, ND.

Mannequin Pussy will appear at most dates across the tour, including shows in Toronto, Detroit, Chicago, Cleveland, Philadelphia, Nashville, Washington DC, Fargo, Regina, and Edmonton.

Gouge Away will support at the Vancouver and Las Vegas shows on September 20th and 26th.

What Are Foo Fighters’ 2026 Tour Dates?

Check out Foo Fighters’ 2026 “Take Cover” tour dates below and look for tickets here.

Foo Fighters “Take Cover” Tour 2026 Dates:

08/04 – Toronto, ON @ Rogers Stadium ^+ [Buy Tickets]
08/06 – Detroit, MI @ Ford Field ^+ [Buy Tickets]
08/08 – Chicago, IL @ Soldier Field ^+ [Buy Tickets]
08/10 – Cleveland, OH @ Huntington Bank Field ^+ [Buy Tickets]
08/13 – Philadelphia, PA @ Lincoln Financial Field ^+
08/15 – Nashville, TN @ Nissan Stadium ^+ [Buy Tickets]
08/17 – Washington, DC @ Nationals Park ^+ [Buy Tickets]
09/12 – Fargo, ND @ Fargodome + [Buy Tickets]
09/15 – Regina, SK @ Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field ^+ [Buy Tickets]
09/17 – Edmonton, AB @ Commonwealth Stadium ^+ [Buy Tickets]
09/20 – Vancouver, BC @ BC Place ^* [Buy Tickets]
09/26 – Las Vegas, NV @ Allegiant Stadium ^* [Buy Tickets]

^ = w/ Queens of the Stone Age
+ = w/ Mannequin Pussy
* = w/ Gouge Away

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Eliza McLamb: Good Story Album Review
Music

Eliza McLamb: Good Story Album Review

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Have you ever found yourself in the middle of a conversation and realized you’re being fed a prewritten script? I recently caught up with a friend who had gone through several dramatic changes since we’d last spoken—a divorce, a new home, a new job—but no matter how much I politely pried, she kept giving me buzzwords: boundaries and self-care; yoga and gratitude and growth. Slowly, I realized that she’d known exactly what she’d tell me before I ever said hello: that clear, linear version of events she had learned to trot out, one that glossed over any disorderly details in service of premeditated lessons she now felt empowered to share.

On Eliza McLamb’s second album, Good Story, the singer-songwriter confronts this universal instinct to self-narrativize. “Catch it quick/Frame the image/Make your meaning before you’ve lived it,” she sings on “Mausoleum,” chiding herself for trying to nail down a story rather than inhabit her present experience. We’re all liable to these behaviors, but McLamb feels their pull acutely. On her debut album, 2024’s Going Through It, she excavated details of her childhood trauma and difficult relationships, topics she’s also tackled as a stirring essayist and podcaster, and learned how to package them as art. On Good Story, McLamb takes a step back, wondering what all these anecdotes add up to.

McLamb and her band—which includes Jacob Blizard (who’s played with Lucy Dacus); bassist Ryan Ficano; keyboardist Sarah Goldstone (who’s played with Chappell Roan and boygenius); and Death Cab For Cutie drummer Jason McGerr—construct this version of events on a solid indie-rock foundation. There are tinges of Lilith Fair pop-rock, especially in McLamb’s lilting delivery, and echoes of her contemporaries like Dacus and Soccer Mommy. But the tracklist takes gentle swerves that add depth and variety: “Better Song” ends with a minute-long, scorching guitar solo; at the close of the album’s A-side, the brief, subdued “Promise”—all gentle vocals and finger-picked guitar—is immediately followed by “Water Inside the Fence,” a continuous build of creeping anxiety that ends with screeching feedback and pounding drums.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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‘Halo’ is finally coming to PlayStation with original remake
Music

‘Halo’ is finally coming to PlayStation with original remake

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

For the first time in its 24-year history, Halo will soon be available on PlaySation consoles thanks to a remake of the original game.

Halo: Combat Evolved was released in 2001 as an Xbox exclusive. The first-person shooter inspired a number of sequels and spin-offs, but was never playable on a rival console.

However on Friday (October 24) it was confirmed that Halo Studios would be releasing a remake of Halo: Combat Evolved – and that it will be available on the PlayStation 5 at some point in 2026.

“The original Halo: Combat Evolved is a stalwart of gaming history, a cultural icon that helped define the first-person shooter experience. For Halo Studios, bottling the impact of that original campaign and all of its special moments is the ultimate goal – for new players and long-time fans alike,” said creators Halo Studios.

Halo: Campaign Evolved arrives in 2026.

Experience enhanced gameplay, additional missions, and new features on Xbox Series X|S, PlayStation 5, and PC.

Watch our #HaloCE Roundtable Reveal for more:

💫 https://t.co/99KGuxEjyg pic.twitter.com/dUd3I1AQd3

— Halo (@Halo) October 24, 2025

The “modern evolution” of Combat Evolved has been “thoughtfully brought to life” in Unreal Engine 5 with new 4K visuals, updated animations, remastered music and re-recorded voice lines. Halo Studios is also bringing in “a roster of beloved weapons and vehicles from later Halo titles, and adding three new bonus campaign missions, all designed to expand and celebrate  the adventure that started it all.”

The Halo: Campaign Evolved remake will also feature “expanded gameplay, two-player split-screen on consoles, online and networked co-op for up to four players on console and PC, and seamless cross-platform play with shared progression,” reads the official announcement. “It will be the definitive return trip through one of gaming’s greatest journeys.”

However the remake won’t feature the brilliant PvP multiplayer. “We’re not trying to replace what is a masterpiece in the original,” said executive producer Damon Conn in an interview with Windows Central. “We’re trying to basically make something that stands kind of shoulder to shoulder with it, using new tools, new energy, to get a little bit of a fresh take on some things, but honouring the legacy.”

Last October, Halo developers 343 Studios announced a rebrand as Halo Studios and confirmed “multiple” new titles were currently in development. And according to Halo Studios community director Brian Jarrard, all those titles will be available on Playstation. “It’s really a new era—Halo is on PlayStation going forward,”  he said during a livestream on Friday.

In other news, some of The Sims’ biggest streamers have quit the game in protest over the $55billion sale of publisher EA.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Bruce Springsteen, Steven Van Zandt Perform at the Stone Pony: Watch
Music

Bruce Springsteen, Steven Van Zandt Perform at the Stone Pony: Watch

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The musicians also performed “I Don’t Want to Go Home” at the benefit for Van Zandt’s non-profit TeachRock

On Sunday, Steven Van Zandt held his Party at the Pony, a benefit in support of his non-profit music education organization TeachRock. The star-studded event promised “special appearances from some of Stevie’s Disciples [of Soul] and E Street Band family,” and it delivered with an unannounced appearance from Bruce Springsteen.

Held at the Stone Pony in Asbury Park, New Jersey, the night included performances by Jesse Malin, Darlene Love, Gary U.S. Bonds, Marc Ribler, Anthony Almonte of the Funky Mofo’s, Curtis King Jr., Ozzie Melendez, Eddie Manion, and Barry Danielian. It was also billed as a birthday celebration for Van Zandt and his wife Maureen’s birthdays.

In a clip from the night, Van Zandt and Springsteen performed “I Don’t Want to Go Home,” the Van Zandt-penned title track to Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes’ first album, which was produced by Van Zandt and features two Springsteen compositions.

The night also featured them performing Born to Run’s “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out,” bolstered by a robust audience sing-along.

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Fans reported that they also performed Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band live staple, “Raise Your Hand.”

Fittingly, in the same weekend Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere opened, in which Jeremy Allen White’s Springsteen plays unannounced shows at the Stone Pony (just like Springsteen actually did back in 1982), Springsteen played an unannounced show at the same venue in real life once again.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Bruce Springsteen Performs For Steven Van Zandt’s Fundraiser
Music

Bruce Springsteen Performs For Steven Van Zandt’s Fundraiser

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The Boss is very much back.

Just days after walking the red carpet (and delivering a typical powerhouse performance) for Disney’s biopic Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere, Bruce Springsteen made another surprise appearance, this time for Steven Van Zandt’s Party at the Pony.

Per Rolling Stone, Springsteen joined his decades-long bandmate on stage Sunday, Oct. 26 at Asbury Park, New Jersey, for several performances, including “I Don’t Want to Go Home,” the opener and title track to Southside Johnny and the Asbury Jukes’ first album from 1976, which was produced and arranged by Van Zandt and includes contributions from Springsteen.

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Guests were also treated to a rendition of “Tenth Avenue Freeze-Out” from Springsteen’s third album, 1975’s Born to Run, and, reportedly, a performance of Eddie Floyd’s “Raise Your Hand,” a staple of Springsteen shows since the 1970s.

The evening’s program was billed as featuring members of the “E Street Band Family” with appearances by Jesse Malin, Darlene Love & Gary US Bonds, and musical guests Marc Ribler, Anthony Almonte, Curtis King Jr., Ozzie Melendez, Eddie Manion, and Barry Danielian.

The concert benefited TeachRock, a not-for-profit founded by Van Zandt which aims to improve “students’ lives by bringing the sound, stories, and science of music to all classrooms.”

Springsteen has been front and center in recent days, thanks to the theatrical release of the biographical drama, Deliver Me from Nowhere, and the well-timed arrival of Nebraska 82’: Extended Edition.

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Deliver Me had to settle for fourth place in its debut after coming in behind expectations with $9.1 million domestically and $7 million internationally from 28 markets for a global start of $16.1 million, though it has yet screen in a number of major markets. The film which had been on track for an open in the $10 million-$12 million range domestically and $20 million globally.

Springsteen doesn’t have any concerts on the slate. But he has hinted at another tour Down Under. Speaking with Rolling Stone earlier this year, the Rock Hall-inducted legend admitted he was long-overdue a long haul to Australia. “I’m doing my best as we speak to get down there, hopefully next year sometime. And I feel bad,” he remarked. “I apologize to my Australian fans for not getting down on this stretch, but I want them to know that we are planning to get down there as soon as feasible, probably in the next year sometime.”

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Radiohead Discuss Upcoming Tour, New Music, Israel in New Interview
Music

Radiohead Discuss Upcoming Tour, New Music, Israel in New Interview

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Next month, Radiohead will reconvene for their first tour dates in seven years. In anticipation, all five members spoke with The Sunday Times for what is being billed as their first full-band interview in years. They discussed their decision to take a break in 2018, their upcoming tour and the possibility of new music, as well as the recent controversy stemming from Thom Yorke’s comments regarding the situation in Gaza and Jonny Greenwood’s association with Israeli musicians.

On the decision to pause Radiohead following their tour in 2018…

Yorke admitted that he had never “really given myself time to grieve” following the death of his first wife, Rachel Owen, in December 2016. “[My grief] was coming out in ways that made me think, I need to take this away,” he explained. “There have been points in my life where I have looked for solace in music and played the piano, but it literally hurts. Physically. The music hurts, because you’re going through trauma.”

Meanwhile, Ed O’Brien said he was “effectively over Radiohead” by the time they decided to take a break. “It wasn’t great on the last round. I enjoyed the gigs but hated the rest. We felt disconnected, fucking spent. It happens. This has been our whole life — what else is there? Look, success has a funny effect on people — I just didn’t want to do it any more. And I told them that .”

“I went through a very long dark night of the soul,” O’Brien added. “I had a deep depression. I hit the bottom in 2021. And one of the things that was lovely coming out of it was realizing how much I love these guys. I met them when I was 17 and I have gone from thinking I can’t see myself doing it again to realizing that, you know, we do have some stellar songs.”

On the upcoming tour…

Yorke sent the band an initial list of 65 songs for them to draw from when crafting their nightly setlists. The band will also be playing in the round, something they haven’t done since opening for Ned’s Atomic Dustbin in 1993.

On plans for new music…

“I don’t know. We haven’t thought past the tour,” said Johnny Greenwood.

“I’m just stunned we got this far,” added Yorke.

On the ongoing controversy surrounding Yorke’s comments regarding Gaza and Greenwood’s association with Israeli musicians…

Radiohead has played concerts in Israel several times over the course of their career, including in 2017 when they ignored a request by Roger Waters to cancel a gig in Tel Aviv in support of the BDS movement. Yorke was also notably heckled by a pro-Palestine audience member during a solo concert in Melbourne, Australia in October 2024, prompting him to briefly walk off stage.

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Earlier this year, Yorke published an extensive statement responding to criticism over his reaction — or perceived lack thereof — to Israel’s war in Palestine, while also condemning what he described as “social media witch hunts.”

Further addressing the controversy with The Sunday Times, Yorke said, “This wakes me up at night. They’re telling me what it is that I’ve done with my life, and what I should do next, and that what I think is meaningless. People want to take what I’ve done that means so much to millions of people and wipe me out. But this is not theirs to take from me — and I don’t consider I’m a bad person.”

“A few times recently I’ve had ‘Free Palestine!’ shouted at me on the street,” Yorke continued. “I talked to a guy. His shtick was, ‘You have a platform, a duty and must distance yourself from Jonny.’ But I said, ‘You and me, standing on the street in London, shouting at each other? Well, the true criminals, who should be in front of the ICC [International Criminal Court], are laughing at us squabbling among ourselves in the public realm and on social media — while they just carry on with impunity, murdering people.’ It’s an expression of impotency. It’s a purity test, low-level Arthur Miller witch-hunt. I utterly respect the dismay but it’s very odd to be on the receiving end.”

Greenwood has faced his own criticisms for his association with Israeli musician Dudu Tassa and for performing in Tel Aviv last year. Earlier this year, Greenwood and Tassa canceled two UK shows after receiving alleged threats connected to protests against Israel.

“It’s the embodiment of the left,” Greenwood told The Sunday Times. “The left look for traitors, the right for converts and it’s depressing that we are the closest they can get.”

Greenwood revealed he is working on another record with Israeli and Middle Eastern musicians, adding, “And it’s nuts I feel frightened to admit that. Yet that feels progressive to me — booing at a concert does not strike me as brave or progressive.”

He continued, “Look, I have been to antigovernment protests in Israel and you cannot move for all the ‘Fuck Ben-Gvir’ stickers. I spend a lot of time there with family [he is married to an Israeli artist, Sharona Katan] and cannot just say, ‘I’m not making music with you fuckers because of the government.’ It makes no sense to me. I have no loyalty — or respect, obviously — to their government, but I have both for the artists born there.”

Yorke Says He Would Not Play Israel Now, Greenwood Can’t Say the Same…

“Absolutely not. I wouldn’t want to be 5,000 miles anywhere near the Netanyahu regime but Jonny has roots there. So I get it,” York said.

“I would also politely disagree with Thom,” Greenwood responded. “I would argue that the government is more likely to use a boycott and say, ‘Everyone hates us — we should do exactly what we want.’ Which is far more dangerous.”

“It’s nuts,” Greenwood added. “The only thing that I’m ashamed of is that I’ve dragged Thom and the others into this mess — but I’m not ashamed of working with Arab and Jewish musicians. I can’t apologize for that.”

Yorke also admitted to being concerned about Radiohead’s upcoming tour being disrupted by protestors. “But they don’t care about us. It’s about getting something on Instagram of something dramatic happening and, no, I don’t think Israel should do Eurovision. But I don’t think Eurovision should do Eurovision. So what do I know?”

On the recent viral success of “Let Down” on platforms like TikTok…

“I find that especially bizarre,” Yorke said. “Because I fought tooth and nail for it not to be on [OK Computer], but Ed was, like, ‘If it’s not, I’m leaving.’” It is, O’Brien added, the “emotional heart” of OK Computer. “Still, I was astonished,” he admitted. “So I told my kids, who are 18 and 21, and they said, ‘What do you expect? Teenagers are depressed. It’s depressing music!’”

You can read the full interview at The Sunday Times.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Carrier: Rhythm Immortal Album Review
Music

Carrier: Rhythm Immortal Album Review

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Even for an artist so adept at reinvention, Carrier’s run of EPs leading up to Rhythm Immortal was astounding. He developed an original techno language with an ancient junglist script. A mixtape called Pre-Milennium Witchcraft was the Rosetta Stone, a showcase of mid-late-’90s drum’n’bass that still sounds dumbfounding today. It’s precise and complex, with that in-the-room feeling that Carrier conures up, the sound of objects in three-dimensional space rather than an Ableton grid. Where EPs like In Spectra showcased that percussive wizardry, Rhythm Immortal slows things down to a faucet drip of drums and arcane noises, a chef plating with tweezers.

There is one other precedent for Rhythm Immortal: the final Shifted record, Constant Blue Light, which focused on the microscopic movement of percussion and synths as part of a monolithic wall of sound in place of techno’s usual forward motion. Carrier’s album has the same feel—the first drums on opener “A Point Most Crucial” land with a whipcrack, jostling up soil around them, and then work out a herky-jerky pattern that doesn’t feel rooted in any familiar dance music genre. Percussive sounds move backwards and then forwards, with delay envelopes that are reversed or suddenly gated, dissolving instantly. It sounds like a higher-tech version of Photek’s infamous drum martial arts, playing with the very fabric of the spacetime continuum, not just the rhythms of drum’n’bass—as though Brewer were playing god with the laws of physics, freezing events in real time and reversing them before letting them unspool forward once again.

This effect is strongest on “Outer Shell.” Here, Brewer turns elemental forces unfamiliar, with drums that seem to wade through a mucky pond before suddenly aquaplaning over the top. The effect is startling, especially given the periodic silences between sharp snare drums that could have been ripped from a Rudy Van Gelder session. “Wave After Wave” and “Lowland Tropic” both retool the thrust of drum’n’bass into an anxious pitter-patter undergirded by pretty synth melodies that are formed into icily perfect geometric shapes. This is music that makes you feel it more than hear it, channeling the ghosts of Brewer’s glory days into an eerie dance-music shadow realm.

This ouija board act peaks with “That Veil of Yours,” an ASMR-tingly collaboration with Voice Actor. Noa Kurzweil’s distinct, sibilant voice exhales over an artificial soundscape of howling wind and martial drums. It all sounds uncanny, moving in unnatural arcs with textures that are sanded down and trebly. But every sound in “That Veil of Yours” is concrete and present, taking up space in a way we don’t usually associate with electronic music. Rhythm Immortal asks: What if techno were made from blood, sweat, and stone, instead of inside a laptop? As “That Veil of Yours” bleeds into the earth-shaking rumble of “Carbon Works,” that hypothetical starts to feel a little scary, but also exhilarating. And, most shockingly of all, genuinely new.

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 27, 2025 0 comments
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Radiohead react to 'Let Down' going viral on TikTok
Music

Radiohead react to ‘Let Down’ going viral on TikTok

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Radiohead have reacted over ‘Let Down’ becoming the band’s fourth US hit, 28 years after its release.

The track, which came out as a promotional single in 1997, and appeared on Thom Yorke and co’s landmark studio album ‘OK Computer’ that same year, entered the Billboard Hot 100 in August following an increasing resurgence on TikTok.

Radiohead have previously featured in the Hot 100 with the ‘In Rainbows’ track ‘Nude’ in 2008 (Number 37), ‘High And Dry’ in 1995 (Number 78), and ‘Creep’ in 1993 (Number 34). The latter remains the band’s most successful single in the States.

‘Let Down’ also spent seven weeks on the UK singles chart upon its release, peaking at Number 85.

Speaking about the feat in a new interview with The Sunday Times, Yorke said: “I find that especially bizarre. Because I fought tooth and nail for it not to be on the record, but Ed O’Brien was, like, ‘If it’s not, I’m leaving.’”

The guitarist has now said the song is the “emotional heart” of ‘OK Computer’.

Despite that, he was surprised by the reaction on TikTok. “Still, I was astonished. So I told my kids, who are 18 and 21, and they said, ‘What do you expect? Teenagers are depressed. It’s depressing music!’” O’Brien added.

Drummer Philip Selway also opened up about his own experience of cross-generational appreciation for the band.

“I was at the station the other day,” he said. ‘And schoolboys were playing ‘Everything In Its Right Place’ [from Kid A] on a piano. Then they played Bohemian Rhapsody.”

Elsewhere in the interview, they also confirmed that their forthcoming shows will be played in the round, and they revealed that they have whittled down their back catalogue to a shortlist of approximately 65 tracks, which Jonny Greenwood said they are “all frantically learning”.

Radiohead are returning to the stage for the first time in over seven years in the coming weeks, with four-night residencies in each of Madrid, Bologna, London, Copenhagen and Berlin set to take place between November 4 and December 12. All of the tickets sold out very quickly.

The band also recently revealed whether fans can expect new material from the band after they play their UK and European dates.

Meanwhile, Radiohead spoke at length on their stance on Israel and Palestine. In 2017, they encountered a backlash when they played a show in Tel Aviv, Israel despite protests urging them to cancel the gig from the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement, as well as criticism from Roger Waters, Thurston Moore, Young Fathers and others.

Last year, Yorke clashed with a protester during a solo show in Melbourne, arguing with an individual from the crowd and storming off stage, before later issuing a lengthy statement explaining his decision.

Yorke said he will “absolutely not” return to Israel and he “wouldn’t want to be 5,000 miles anywhere near the Netanyahu regime”.

Greenwood, meanwhile, has come in for criticism for making records with Israeli musician Dudu Tassa, and saw two UK gigs with Tassa cancelled earlier this year after protesters called for a boycott. Greenwood, who is married to an Israeli artist, also played with Tassa in Tel Aviv last year.

On the subject of whether he would play in Israel again he said: “I would also politely disagree with Thom. I would argue that the government is more likely to use a boycott and say, ‘Everyone hates us – we should do exactly what we want.’ Which is far more dangerous.”

“It’s nuts,” he added. “The only thing that I’m ashamed of is that I’ve dragged Thom and the others into this mess – but I’m not ashamed of working with Arab and Jewish musicians. I can’t apologise for that.”

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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