celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Music » Page 55
Category:

Music

“There's a lot of things in there that are felt but not heard”
Music

“There’s a lot of things in there that are felt but not heard”

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Two years on from her debut album, 2023’s acclaimed ‘Aperture’, life is looking really different for Hannah Jadagu. In the time since the record’s release, the Texas-raised, New York-based alt-pop star has fallen in love, graduated from college and gone on her first headline tour across Europe. A lot of these experiences have shaped her introspective, synth-driven second album ‘Describe’, which arrives today.

The distance created by touring another continent made Jadagu “more cognizant of my own being and that relationship that I have with another person and how my work and my lifestyle can affect that in very real ways”, she tells NME over video call from her New York apartment. That helped inform the “authentic and vulnerable” songs on the album, such as ‘More’, where she sings: “I’ve been 5,000 miles away, why does 3,000 feel like more?”

At the same time, touring and “playing the guitar every day” also coloured the way Jadagu approached the creative process for ‘Describe’ when it started back in the summer of 2023. “I was trying to write new songs and trying to figure out the direction for my new record, I found that the guitar for me was not amplifying my voice in the way that I needed it to,” she says. “It wasn’t helping me discover new melodies that I could sing and stuff like that.

“So, I was like, ‘Let me just try to play stuff on a MIDI keyboard’. And then, a year later, I took it to my producers and we really amped it up,” she continues. Although that approach was “so freeing for what I was writing at the time”, the guitar is still never too far from her side: “On the record, there’s a lot of songs with guitar, but it functions more as accompaniment rather than the strong rhythm-heavy thing that moves it along.”

The title track ‘Describe’ is such an arresting opener. It really sets the stage for an album that is sonically wider and emotionally deeper. Why did you think that this song was the right one to not only open the album, but to name it after?

“When I first sat down to try making a new record, ‘Describe’ was the first thing that I made, and that was in the summer of 2023. So this is post-‘Aperture’ release, and ‘Describe’ came so naturally to me. I found myself playing around with new sounds, new themes lyrically, and I was just captivated by the sonic landscape of what I was doing, but there was no album that came of that.

“It took a full year, until the summer of 2024, where I felt like every song that I kept writing was leading me to an album, and it was making me realise that in all these songs, I’m literally trying to just describe the ways in which I was feeling and the experiences that I was having. ‘Describe’ is where it all started, and it kept being a through line to all of the lyrics and all of the sounds, and just trying to figure out what I wanted to say. I don’t know if I will ever fully describe or articulate things in the way that I hope to, but I’m always trying.”

I love how ‘Describe’ really primes the listener to expect the unexpected on this album, from the electronica of ‘More’ to the devastating piano moment on ‘Couldn’t Call’ or even a return to a more guitar-driven sound on ‘Doing Now’.

“That’s why I made ‘Describe’ the first track on the record. It prepares people to be like, ‘Wait, what?’ There’s so much that even happens in that song alone. There’s so much of a journey that it takes with the strings and with the senses and with the bare vocal. There’s a lot going on, and that was definitely the point, to say, ‘Hey, this record is not gonna be whatever the last record was, and that’s OK, but you’re in store for some really interesting sounds and somewhat of a progression [from the last album].’”

With this combination of synths and guitars on the record, it feels like there are a lot of hidden layers within layers across the album that make it come to life.

“I always say there’s a lot of things in there that are felt but not heard. Some people might call that a little maximalist. On ‘Normal Today’, there’s probably about 200 stems, and it’s a lot, and I kinda laugh at that because maybe I was doing too much. But sometimes you can create little harmonics out of the meshing of things, and sometimes that can create a really unique feeling.

“But we also strip it down a bit, like on ‘Doing Now’ or ‘Gimme Time’. There are moments where it is just back to the core timelessness of a Michael Jackson song – not to compare myself to Michael Jackson, but I like playing with that and going in and out of the analogue and the modern and just trying to find a balance between it. That’s why I’m very influenced by people like FKA twigs or Rosalía because they do that extremely well and at the highest level.”

Hannah Jadagu. Credit: Sam Wilbert

Was tracklisting something that was really important to you on this album?

“There was major intent behind the tracklisting. That’s what kept me from finishing the record or turning it in, because I kept being like, ‘Wait, no. Should I put this song right there? This song over there?’ [I wanted this album to] document what it’s like to be very human and to be in a relationship and to be navigating things when you’re 21. And I wanted to show chaos, but tell a loose story through that.

“Do I make the right choices [when tracklisting]? Who can say? That’s for the listener [to decide]. But I do think about these things, and I really care about stuff like tracklisting and how the listener can make sense of the record for themselves and how they can interpret it for themselves. And that’s always something I’m keeping in the back of my mind when I’m making an album. And that’s why I love to make an album, ’cause you get to tell a story.”

You recorded your first EP, 2021’s ‘What Is Going On?’, entirely on your iPhone 7. A lot has changed since, but how has your creative process evolved?

“The way that I think it’s similar is that a lot of the songs start in my room. It starts with just me, the MIDI keyboard and all the stuff I have at my disposal – which isn’t that much. I’ve got speakers, I’ve got a Scarlett, a keyboard, and I’ve got a guitar. I start with somewhat of a melody and gibberish, and then I start to notice certain words, and then I try to focus on a theme, focus on a message, and then I build the track around it.

“But then there’s songs like ‘Gimme Time’, where that was the first time I actually wrote a composition with somebody else [album co-producer Sora Lopez]. And then once we played that stuff together and just started adding layers, then I came up with the lyrics, freestyled a lot of that. Went back, hashed it out, and then we finished it. So it’s changed in some ways, where I’m open to collaborating from the beginning of a song – but it’s still very tight-knit, not too many cooks in the kitchen.

“A lot of times I’ll keep the first [or] second thing I do, which I’ve always done since I started making music when I was like 14. Once I try to workshop and go back and redo something, I’ve found that’s not really my vibe. So that’s something that I still do and I’ve always done, and I probably will always do.

“I’ve gotten a lot better about not rushing things, but maybe Sora would say differently. I don’t like spending a long time making stuff [laughs], because I feel like if you don’t got it, you don’t got it. Some people are different. Some people spend six years making an album and that’s cool. For me, the journey that I’m at in these two years is not the same that I’m gonna be at two years later.”

What’s on your mind these days and how do you think that might come through in your future music?

“These days, I’m trying to make the next record. I’m just very fortunate, because after I graduated school, I’ve been able to do music full-time. So, now I’m just trying to figure out the next step in what I wanna say next and what that looks like.”

“I’m living a very peaceful life now, trying to figure out my routine outside of being a student. And I’m very much in love now. Just enjoying life and trying to see what comes from it. I’m taking my time with it, and there’s not even a single song done, but that’s kind of what I’m doing. It’s just I’m always trying to navigate, always trying to see how I can be better and always trying to see, you know, what else it is that I have to say.”

Hannah Jadagu’s new album ‘Describe’ is out now via Sub Pop.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Megan Thee Stallion Drops New Single 'Lover Girl': Listen
Music

Megan Thee Stallion Drops New Single ‘Lover Girl’: Listen

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Megan Thee Stallion is living a love story with her new partner, Klay Thompson — and she’s embracing the cupid energy of it all on her new song. On Friday, the rap queen released the single “Lover Girl.”

“Let’s skip the small talk and make some big moves/I know you feeling me, you know I’m feeling you,” raps Megan on the track before not-so-subtly predicting: “A very freaky girl, you heard what Gucci said/First, I give you my number, then you give me some head.”

The cover art for the single sees Megan in a pink wig, violet bra, and wine-colored corset while holding up a bow and arrow like she’s cupid. Earlier on Thursday, she also shared photos with her basketball star boyfriend alongside the caption, “LOVER GIRL,” and has been capturing their sweet relationship on social media over the last few weeks. The Grammy winner also teased the music for several days, and wrote in one post: “All hotties better be in attendance.”

The new single arrives just a week before her annual HottieWeen event, which is set to be hosted in Humble, Texas, with proceeds supporting her Pete and Thomas Foundation. (The organization seeks to catalyze resources for women, children, senior citizens, and underserved communities.)

“Lover Girl” is Megan’s second release this year after dropping “Whenever” back in April. Last October, she surprised fans with a second act to her Megan album, which included collaborations with Fo Milli, Twice, and RM of BTS.

Trending Stories

Back in March, the Houston native teased plans for an Act III project. “I’m really just trying to figure out who do I want to do features with at this point in life,” she said at the time. “I only want to do features with people that … one, I haven’t done a feature with yet, and two, that I listen to on my own time — people that I actually, you know, fuck with.”

She also noted that Doechii is on her “album wish list,” adding: “I feel like Doechii would be the type of person that you would have to be in the studio to make a song with. I would like to hear a beat that she would like to rap over, and also I’m like challenging myself to rap over beats that I wouldn’t normally rap over without losing myself.”

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Bruce Springsteen Takes Us Back With ‘Nebraska 82: Expanded Edition'
Music

Bruce Springsteen Takes Us Back With ‘Nebraska 82: Expanded Edition’

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The Boss flicks the switch on the time machine, taking us back to a moment when E.T. was flying high at the box office, Michael Jackson’s Thriller was hot, and Ronald Reagan had the top job.

Explore

See latest videos, charts and news

At the stroke of midnight, Bruce Springsteen shared Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition (via Sony Music), a treasure chest stuffed with previously unseen and unheard cuts. It’s the stuff of fans’ dreams.

Released both digitally and as a five-disc box set, Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition gathers solo outtakes from back in the day, and the fabled “Electric Nebraska” sessions; a newly-shot performance film of Nebraska in its entirety; a recently-released version of “Born in the U.S.A.”, recorded back in April 1982 with Springsteen backed by Max Weinberg and Garry Tallent; plus a 2025 remaster of the original album.

“We threw out the keyboards and played basically as a three-piece,” Springsteen reflects of the unearthed “Born in the U.S.A.” cut, a song penned during the Nebraska era. “It was kinda like punk rockabilly. We were trying to bring ‘Nebraska’ into the electric world.”

In a separate promo video accompanying the release, Springsteen admits he’s often asked about “Electric Nebraska,” which features Tallent, Weinberg, Danny Federici, Roy Bittan and Stevie Van Zandt. “There is no ‘Electric Nebraska’. It doesn’t exist,” he says, thinking out loud.

Wrong.

He checked, revisited the vault. “There it was,” he remarks. “And radically different than anything I’d remembered.”

The album was pushed back a week to coincide with the cinematic rollout of Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere. Directed by Scott Cooper and released through 20th Century Studios, the biopic chronicles the making of Springsteen’s Nebraska, and served as the opening film at AFI Fest in Hollywood on Wednesday.

Springsteen was on hand for a brief performance inside the TCL Chinese Theater after the screening, according to The Hollywood Reporter, where he thanked guests for “supporting our movie” and quipped “this is my last night in the movie business, I’m sticking to music.”

The Rock And Roll Hall of Fame-inducted artist used the opportunity speak out once more against Donald Trump, offering up a “prayer” for “no kings” in his speech. “I’ve spent 50 years traveling as kind of a musical ambassador for America and I’ve seen firsthand all the love and admiration that folks around the world have had for the America of our highest ideals. Despite how terribly damaging America has been recently, that country and those ideals remain worth fighting for. I want to send this out as a prayer for America, for our unity. No kings,” he remarked, before hitting a rendition of “Land of Hope and Dreams.”

Jeremy Allen White stars as Springsteen in Deliver Me From Nowhere, which is in cinemas from today. Stream Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition below.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Remixes Extended Stimulation: 12" Pop Adventures on the Dancefloor 1983-1988
Music

‘Extended Stimulation’ Remixes Will Blow Out Speakers in Style » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Extended Stimulation: 12″ Pop Adventures on the Dancefloor 1983-1988

Various Artists

Cherry Red

24 October 2025

The 12″ single redefined music and the way we move to it, something that’s celebrated on the fantastic new four-CD collection from Cherry Red Records, Extended Stimulation: 12″ Pop Adventures on the Dancefloor 1983 – 1988. While 12″ vinyl is generally associated with disco, electronic, and hip-hop, this box set explores just how revolutionary it could be for traditional pop music, featuring tracks from the likes of New Order, Simply Red, the Human League, Duran Duran, Talk Talk, Pet Shop Boys, and many others.

However, these may not be the songs as most people remember them. That’s because everything here is either a remix (or extended mix) of some kind, originally released on 12″ vinyl. A little history lesson may be in order. Before the 12″ record, DJs would use 7″ singles, which of course were smaller and only held three or four minutes of music to them. The 12″ single allowed for more music at louder volumes, revolutionizing the night club. 

That was also the catalyst for remixes, with 12″ singles often containing remixed versions of the original song, using breaks (short, looped samples, often of only percussion) to extend and play with the original recording. Incredibly, Tom Moulton was the man behind all of these innovations (the 12″, breaks, remixes), during a flurry of creativity in the mid-1970s, making him one of the most intuitively brilliant sound artists since Berliner and Edison.

Pop bands caught onto the 12″ trend, getting their songs extended or remixed in more danceable ways. Thus, Extended Stimulation is less like a standard Now That’s What I Call Music than it is four DJ sets, with each disc lasting well over an hour. That is evident from the very start of the collection, with the great Francois Kevorkian’s remix of Thompson Twins‘ “You Take Me Up”. Deconstructed stereophonic percussion teases out the melody, sounding more experimentally funky than pat pop. It’s nearly nine minutes of cool club bliss.

Simply Red’s “Money’s Too Tight” follows, remixed by Steve Thompson and Mike Barbiero into “The Cutback Mix”, and it’s even better. Anyone turned off by the admittedly sad prospect of an 1980s best-of should already be relieved by this point in Extended Stimulation. That is radically reworked (and overlooked) pop for audiophiles—and, boy, does it sound phenomenal. 

Many of these tracks hadn’t been transferred before, as Jan Burnett of Cherry Red observes in the liner notes for the record. Burnett, who compiled and sequenced Extended Stimulation, writes that many of the songs were sourced directly from tape just for this compilation. Comparing their quality here to anything readily available on YouTube, at least for those remixes which are online, makes for whiplash, so astounding is the quality.

The quantity is remarkable as well, with roughly five hours of varied styles, from some of the best alternative songs of the 1980s to its cheesiest moments. It’s probably the only collection that has both Nitzer Ebb’s “Join in the Chant (Burn!)” and Culture Club‘s “I’ll Tumble 4 Ya”.

Extended Stimulation is a bit top-heavy, if that’s possible for a collection. The first two CDs are sublime, while the third feels a bit like bubblegum popping beneath roller skates at the rink; it’s nostalgia with beaucoup fromage, lacking the variety of the first two. Granted, the remixes are still good, especially the “U.S. Edit” of Laid Back’s “White Horse”, which sounds like the exact moment Kraftwerk gave birth to Hot Chip. Then there’s the dub version of Jermaine Stewart’s “We Don’t Have to Take Our Clothes Off”, which is spine-chillingly transcendent.

The fourth disc is similarly poppy but has some better original artists (ABC, Wet Wet Wet, the Human League, A-ha). It’s also the most sensual, slowing things down just a tad for a funkier, sexier party thanks to songs like the “French Extended Mix” of Vicious Pink’s “Ccccan’t You See” and the “That’s Entertainment” version of Act’s “Snobbery and Decay”.

Despite the lulls in the later half of the collection, Extended Stimulation is sure to be revelatory for anyone unfamiliar with these kinds of remixes. It’s a definite treat for any fan of 1980s music, especially from the United Kingdom, and a treasure trove for audiophiles. Just try to resist playing this as loud as possible.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Poppy Unveils New Original Solo Song "Unravel"
Music

Poppy Unveils New Original Solo Song “Unravel”

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Poppy has unveiled her first original solo song of 2025, “Unravel,” following a couple of notable collaborations earlier this year.

The song starts out as a radio-friendly rock ballad with Poppy delivering clean ethereal vocals until the 2:18 mark, when she goes into full scream mode. The track was produced and co-written by former Bring Me the Horizon member Jordan Fish, while an accompanying music video/visualizer was directed by Sam Cannon (watch below).

Poppy’s previous releases this year include a cover of the Wham! classic “Last Christmas,” the collaborative single “End of You” with Amy Lee and Courtney LaPlante, and a guest vocal on BABYMETAL’s “from me to u.” She recently wrapped up a headlining tour, and will support Linkin Park on a South American jaunt kicking off this Friday, October 25th.

 

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Foo Fighters Drop Live EP For Bandcamp Friday
Music

Foo Fighters Book 2026 Stadium Tour, Drop New Song

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

As expected following a series of recent surprise club shows that introduced new drummer Ilan Rubin, Foo Fighters will embark on a North American stadium tour next summer. The Dave Grohl-led group has also released its second fresh tune of the year, the ferocious “Asking for a Friend,” ahead of an anticipated new album at some point in 2026.

The tour will begin Aug. 4 in Toronto and conclude Sept. 26 in Las Vegas, although more dates will be announced. Queens of the Stone Age will support on all but the Sept. 12 gig in Fargo, N.D., while Mannequin Pussy and Gouge Away will open at various points. Tickets go on sale to the general public on Oct. 31.

In a long Substack post, Grohl described “Asking for a Friend” as “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. One of many songs to come…”

Without directly mentioning the circumstances that led to the Foos’ abrupt tour cancelation in 2023, Grohl acknowledged that “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.”

He also saluted Queens of the Stone Age, with whom he has frequently recorded and performed since the early 2000s (the two groups share a manager in John Silva). “What better way to share the view than with close friends? In 1992, I first saw the legendary Kyuss perform at the Off Ramp in Seattle and met Mr. Josh Homme. The band were friends of a friend, and before long their album Blues for the Red Sun became the soundtrack to that summer. 33 years later and with many miles behind us, I have shared some of my life’s most rewarding musical moments with my dear friend, Josh. A lifelong bond that goes far beyond the sound we’ve made together. So, it is with great happiness that we can share this next chapter together with his almighty Queens of the Stone Age. Take cover.”

Foo Fighters’ final shows of the year will take place Nov. 12 in Monterrey, Mexico, and two days later at the Corona Capital festival in Mexico City. The group will also perform Oct. 30 as part of Amazon Music Live’s new season.

Here are Foo Fighters’ 2026 tour dates:

Aug, 4: Toronto (Rogers Stadium)
Aug. 6: Detroit (Ford Field)
Aug. 8: Chicago (Soldier Field)
Aug. 10: Cleveland (Huntington Bank Field)
Aug. 13: Philadelphia (Lincoln Financial Field)
Aug. 15: Nashville (Nissan Stadium)
Aug. 17: Washington, D.C. (Nationals Park)
Sept. 12: Fargo, N.D. (Fargodome)
Sept. 15: Regina, Sk. (Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field)
Sept. 17: Edmonton, Ab. (Commonwealth Stadium)
Sept. 20: Vancouver (BC Place)
Sept. 26: Las Vegas (Allegiant Stadium)

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
9 Fun Facts About Black Thought, Redman From 'Musicians On Musicians'
Music

9 Fun Facts About Black Thought, Redman From ‘Musicians On Musicians’

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The two legendary lyricists spoke on the creative process, spirituality, and more.

Black Thought and Redman were the latest subjects to appear on Rolling Stone‘s Musicians on Musicians series, with the Hip-Hop legends being paired together for a discussion revolving around the creative process, their personal lives, and more.

Routinely listed among the greatest rappers’ list of favorite rappers, Black Thought and Redman’s conversation was filled with expressions of mutual respect and admiration.

From insights into pivotal moments in their respective careers, to the tease of a collaboration between the two on The Roots member’s forthcoming album Streams of Thought Vol. 4., the sit-down was filled with captivating soundbites and

VIBE shares 10 fun facts we learned about Black Thought and Redman from Rolling Stone‘s seventh annual Musicians on Musicians series.

  • Run-DMC Being Redman’s Gateway Into Hip-Hop

    Redman
    Image Credit: Scott Dudelson/Getty Images

    Many fans may be unaware of Redman‘s skills as a DJ and producer, but the New Jersey native credits DJ Grandmaster Flash as an early influence in those regards, as well as Run-DMC solidifying his passion for Hip-Hop.

    “When I first heard The Adventures of Grandmaster Flash, I was like, ‘Wow, what is this?,’” Redman told Black Thought.

    “And then it moved on to Run-DMC and when I first seen them. Not just heard them, but when I seen them with the black leather and the no strings in their Adidas and Godfather [hats], I literally thought they were the new God.

    “I was like, ‘What is this going on? I’ve got to be a part of this music, this fabric.’ It was something that changed my life. Meaning, I don’t care about the money, I don’t care about the fame, I just want to do this for this rest of my life. For the love of it.”

  • Redman’s Admiration Of Black Thought’s Skills As A Performer And Lyricist

    RedmanRedman
    Image Credit: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for SXSW)

    Despite making his debut prior to Black Thought and The Roots, Redman credits the group with inspiring him to level up as a lyricist, revealing that he used Black Thought’s skills as a measuring stick to his own.

    “Y’all was in my CD player, y’all was part of my growth of dopeness and caliber of how I should be spitting, especially you, bro,” Redman said of Black Thought.

    “Especially songs like ‘Desperado.’ Those songs resonated across my path and my journey of being an emcee and you held a high bar of what an emcee should be and how they should rap.

    “And one thing I admired about you and still admire is you [being] out on stage bodying sh*t without a hype-man or someone to back you up,” Redman marveled.

    “I be like, ‘Yo, how did he do it, where did he get the breath? But then again, from emcee to another emcee, it’s how you write your rhymes. You write your bars with your breaths [already inserted].

    “You’re not over-stacking it, you’re not overlaying vocals where you would have to have someone come in for this line. the emcee control of the whole rhymes being said without [needing] a hype-man.”

  • Redman’s Guest Appearance On Black Thought’s ‘Streams Of Thought Vol. 4’ Album

    RedmanRedman
    Image Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty Images

    Black Thought has spent the past several years stepping out as a soloist with his critically-acclaimed Streams of Thought series, with the latest volume in the collection currently in the works.

    During his time with Redman, Black Thought announced that the New Jersey bred spitter will make an appearance on the project, which he bills as the best work he’s ever done outside of The Roots.

    “In many way, I feel like it’s my opus,” Black Thought gushed. “It’s got the most features, the most elaborate beats, crazy samples, and part of that is the problem, trying to get all this stuff cleared.

    “But your verse on that song and on that record is definitely coming out and I think it’s super powerful. I think that verse represents part of your growth. It speaks to your mentorship, your activism, just where you are now based on where you were earlier in your career.”

  • The Impact College Radio Had On Redman’s Career

    RedmanRedman
    Image Credit: Kevin Winter/Getty Images

    Grassroots movements are nothing new in music, but have shifted in form, with streamers and podcasters now among the chief champions of new and independent artists today.

    During the ’80s and ’90s, college radio stations were a major conduit that helped aspiring artists gain traction and build a fanbase, helping expose them to a wider audience and the attention of the record industry.

    Redman praised the role in which these platforms helped impact his career. “My main outlet for people hearing my music was college radio stations,” the 55-year-old said.

    “College radio [stations] were just as important, if not bigger, than major radio in my era because the major radio stations listened to college radio to see what was hot and then they would play it.”

    Black Thought chimed in, comparing and contrasting their era to that of today, which he feels has given listeners “sensory overload” due to the sheer amount of options they have to access music.

    “I mean, New York City, Stretch & Bobbito, that dictated what you would later hear on the Hot 97s and the [W]BLS’.” Black Thought said, with Redman seconding that theory.

    “They can get their album right there and don’t have to listen to everything,” Redman added. “They can go right to their favorite song [and] keep it repeat on their phone so that limits the thoroughness of you wanting to hear your favorite artists.

  • Black Thought On The Evolution Of Music Distribution

    Black ThoughtBlack Thought
    Image Credit: Leigh Vogel/Getty Images for Congressional Black Caucus Foundation

    Black Thought and Redman touched on the evolution of Hip-Hop over the decades, particularly the spirit of independence and artists distributing their music directly to the consumer.

    “Lets consider the ways in which Hip-Hop has sort of changed since we got into the game, but then the ways that it hasn’t changed,” Black Thought said while addressing the topic.

    “One of the ways is how people receive music now. They done cut the middle-man out, it’s direct to sender. We come from the era of you’ve got to partner up with a distributor to get your joints into stores and to get your joints onto radio and all that. I think that’s definitely changed.”

  • Black Thought On The Roots’ Foundation As Road Warriors

    Black ThoughtBlack Thought
    Image Credit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for Tribeca Festival

    In terms of live performers, The Roots have been among the standard bearers since their emergence, rocking stages across the globe as one of Hip-Hop’s most active touring groups.

    Black Thought reveals that their lengthy runs on the road are equally driven by passion and design, as the profits from touring helped sustain the band despite middling commercial success for much of their career.

    “In The Roots’ capacity, we’ve always banked on awareness. We would record a record because that would support us being on tour and we would go out and we would tour,” Black Thought expalined.

    “So we would do the new songs, but we never put out an album with the intention of, ‘Oh, this is going to go double, triple platinum.’ We just weren’t that sort of act, we weren’t doing those numbers,” he addmitted.

    :So I think there’s something in just doing music to sustain your career as a road warrior. You talk about that balance, we definitely struck that balance.”

  • Jimmy Fallon Recruited The Roots To Be His House Band

    Black ThoughtBlack Thought
    Image Credit: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for A+E

    The Roots being tapped by late-night TV host Jimmy Fallon was a historic move for the band, giving them an unprecedented amount of exposure and broadening their base like never before.

    When asked by Redman how the partnership occurred, Black Thought points to Fallon’s love for music and his persistence as the traits that helped seal the deal.

    “Jimmy was always a huge music nerd, just into real music. Live music, touring bands who were popular, and he’s a huge, huge Beastie Boys fan. that’s like his top tier,” Black Thought said of Fallon. “And that’s the first band that took The Roots on tour so the Beastie Boys kind of showed us how to be on the road.”

    Black Thought recalled the award winning host making impromptu appearances at the band’s live shows in his attempts to recruit them as his show’s in-house band.

    “I need a band and would you be interested in doing it?’” Black Thought said of Fallon’s proposal. “We just thought he was bullsh*tting until he kept coming around. We would show up at a gig and he’d be in our dressing room and be like, ‘Hey, what’s up!’

    “You know I was serious about the thing we talked about.’ And we just started taking him seriously over time because he was dedicated.

    “He showed up a bunch of times, sort of pitching it. And this was around the time we had just got done working [on] Dave Chappelle’s show. Again, it was just timing. It was so much uncertainty at that time so it sounded good to have, sort of like, a day job. The consistency of a quote-unquote nine-to-five, it made sense.”

  • Black Thought On Ziplining With Jimmy Fallon

    Jimmy Fallon And Black ThoughtJimmy Fallon And Black Thought
    Image Credit: Todd Owyoung/NBC via Getty Images

    Black Thought appeared hesitant in accepting Redman‘s offer to take him skydiving, however, the Philadelphia native shared his experiencing of braving the air during an excursion with late-night TV host Jimmy Fallon.

    “Me and Jimmy Fallon went to Puerto Rico and we did the zipline,” Black Thought revealed. “At the time, it was the highest, longest zipline [in the world] called ‘The Beast’ or ‘The Monster’ or something. That’s the closest I’ve ever come to skydiving because though you’re connected to the cables, you’re connected laying flat and your arms are kind of behind your back and your legs are out sort of thing.”

    The GRAMMY Award winning artist went on to admit being surprised at the enjoyment he felt while participating in the activity “It was an adrenaline rush that I didn’t think I was going to love, but I loved it.”

  • The Roots’ Former Manager Also Served As Their Life Coach

    Black ThoughtBlack Thought
    Image Credit: Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images for GQ

    Black Thought‘s rhymes are often filled with poignant reflections and observations on life, evidence of his willingness to delve beneath the surface and within oneself. When speaking on his spirituality and self-development, the 52-year-old praised Rich Nichols, who served as The Roots‘ longtime manager prior to passing away in 2014, with guiding him and his bandmates along that path.

    “He came at a time when I really needed that guidance and discipline,” Black Thought said of Nichols. I met Rich maybe two or three years after I lost my mom. I lost my father at a super young age, like one or two [years old], and then my mom passed away when I was in high school. We were already The Roots, me and Quest were already partners when I lost my mom.”

    According to Black Thought, Nichols was more than a manager, playing an influential role in his life and maturation as a man. “I think Rich came along and sort of filled a void and I say father figure because he was a man but it was almost like he filled part of what I lost when I lost my mother,” he added.

    “What he brought into the picture was that level of awareness and discipline and he was just an OG who was already up on all those things so he really instilled it within us. Within me and Quest and Kamal [Gray]and all of us who were around for the earlier days of The Roots. He changed all of our lives in that way.”

Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox


Subscribe

The Vibe Newsletter

Get weekly rundowns straight to your inbox

By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy.
We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services. // This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Foo Fighters Announce 2026 Stadium Tour, Share New Song “Asking for a Friend”: Listen
Music

Foo Fighters Announce 2026 Stadium Tour, Share New Song “Asking for a Friend”: Listen

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Foo Fighters have announced a 2026 tour of North American stadiums. The shows take place across the United States and Canada in August and September of next year. It’s the band’s first major run since 2024’s Everything or Nothing at All Tour. See the new tour dates—featuring support from Queens of the Stone Age, Mannequin Pussy, and Gouge Away— below.

Foo Fighters have also shared a new song called “Asking for a Friend.” It follows “Today’s Song,” which came out in July. Hear the single below.

Foo Fighters have recently played a number of surprise club shows, and they captured the performance on a new EP titled Are Playing Where??? Vol. I. The Dave Grohl–led band has been breaking in a new drummer, Ilan Rubin, who joined after the departure of Josh Freese, the drummer who stepped in following the death of Taylor Hawkins.

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.

Foo Fighters: Take Cover Tour

Foo Fighters:

11-12 Monterrey, Mexico – Estadio Banorte ^$
11-14 Mexico City, Mexico – Corona Capital
08-04 Toronto Ontario – Rogers Stadium ^+
08-06 Detroit, MI – Ford Field ^+
08-08 Chicago, IL – Soldier Field ^+
08-10 Cleveland, OH – Huntington Bank Field ^+
08-13 Philadelphia, PA – Lincoln Financial Field ^+
08-15 Nashville, TN – Nissan Stadium ^+
08-17 Washington, D.C. – Nationals Park ^+
09-12 Fargo, ND – Fargodome +
09-15 Regina, Saskatchewan – Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field ^+
09-17 Edmonton, Alberta – Commonwealth Stadium ^+
09-20 Vancouver, British Columbia – BC Place ^@
09-26 Las Vegas, NV – Allegiant Stadium ^@

^ with Queens of the Stone Age
$ with Jehnny Beth
+ with Mannequin Pussy
@ with Gouge Away

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
a vicious, vulnerable and victorious comeback
Music

a vicious, vulnerable and victorious comeback

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Lily Allen’s been flirting with a comeback ever since she joined Olivia Rodrigo onstage at Glastonbury Festival 2022. The pair’s joyous, fiery rendition of Allen’s politically-charged 2008 hit ‘Fuck You’ was an overdue reminder of just how fearless a pop star she had been in her heyday. Her first two albums (2006’s ‘Alright, Still’ and the 2008 follow-up ‘It’s Not Me, It’s You’) inspired the next generation, with everyone from Joy Crookes and PinkPantheress to Billie Eilish taking influence from her cutting, conversational songwriting.

Third album ‘Sheezus’ sounded like an identity crisis, though, and since the release of 2018’s underrated electropop ‘No Shame’, Allen’s pivoted to become a celebrated star of stage and screen instead. She’s also been topping charts and snatching headlines while co-hosting the Miss Me? podcast (though she stepped down last month). Despite these successful ventures, Lily Allen never stopped writing music – she was just never able to create anything that felt interesting enough to release. “[It was] observational stuff about the internet and the world. It just all seemed really obvious and crap,” she said in a recent interview.

Surprise album ‘West End Girl’ is certainly neither of those. Written and recorded in just 10 days following the breakdown of her marriage to Stranger Things’ David Harbour, it’s a sleek, smart collection that sees Allen back at her very best. The 14 tracks are a familiar blend of experimental electronics, chirpy dance, infectious pop hooks and brutal honesty. For the most part, ‘West End Girl’ is an updated take on the sound that made her a crossover ’00s icon that never settles for comfortable throwback nostalgia.

Starting with the title track, a dreamy, musical theatre-inspired number, ‘West End Girl’ is a slow-burn break-up album with Allen taking heavy inspiration from her own life. She’s been quick to describe it as a “story”, though, which allows her to sing openly about finding a secret bag with “sex toys, butt plugs, lube [and] hundreds of Trojans” in her partner’s “pussy palace”.

As you’d expect from her most “vulnerable” album, there’s a lot of grief and misery across ‘West End Girl’, but it never sounds depressing. Since ‘Smile’, Allen’s always had a knack for making devastation sound exciting. There’s rage behind the pulsating ‘Ruminating’ as she struggles with the realities of an open marriage, playful other woman anthem ‘Madeline’ is a dizzying cocktail of uncertainty, fury and empathy, while the gorgeous ‘Just Enough’ is as crushing as it gets, heartbreak amplified by lush strings. It feels like a much-needed purge.

Diving into the complexities of love and loss, the rumbling ‘Relapse’ is about living up to the expectations of others, joyfully funky ‘Nonmonogamummy’ tackles dating in your late thirties and the art of people pleasing, before ‘Beg For Me’ has Allen listing exactly what she needs from a relationship. It leads into the determined, no-nonsense ‘Let You W/in’ and the smirking clarity of ‘Fruityloop’, which has her quoting her second album ‘It’s Not Me, It’s You’. By the end of ‘West End Girl’, it’s clear the relationship in this tale might be over, but Lily Allen’s comeback is just getting started.

Details: 

Credit: Nieves González

  • Record label: BMG
  • Release date: October 24, 2025

October 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Linda Perry Reacts to Viral Nicki Minaj ‘Beez in the Trap’ Mashup
Music

Linda Perry Reacts to Viral Nicki Minaj ‘Beez in the Trap’ Mashup

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Over the last few weeks, a peculiar remix of 4 Non Blondes’ “What’s Up?” and Nicki Minaj’s “Beez in the Trap” has taken TikTok by storm, with everyone from Sabrina Carpenter and Demi Lovato to Malala Yousafzai and Simone Biles joining in on the trend.

The videos start with Linda Perry’s signature vocals on the song — “I wake up in the morning and I step outside” — before the catchy beat of Minaj’s Pink Friday classic sneaks in for the background. As Perry lets out the song’s high notes, Minaj’s rap voice — “Bitches ain’t shit, and they ain’t say nothing” — takes over. It’s one of the most-posted tunes this month, with TikTokers using it as a soundtrack to show off Halloween costumes, hard-launch relationships, and showcase having friends with very different personalities.

DJ Aux Lord, an Ohio-based college senior who made the remix and asked not to be identified ny name or gender, is behind the viral sound, which they made and posted back in August. Their reaction to the big moment? “I’m so gagged,” they tell Rolling Stone. “It’s just been so crazy.”

The silly remix was posted to their TikTok page months ago, receiving 50,000 likes but not really spreading from there. Aux Lord, who has a background as a classically trained pianist and is currently studying psychology, says they started the page to share their adventurous mashups with close friends — and never expected a remix to have a moment like this. 

“I think it’s really fun to mix songs that don’t have to do with each other. There was no real reason why I chose to mix these,” they say. “I don’t know if they were in the same key or similar keys, but I thought it was so funny. The beat on ‘Beez’ is so catchy that it went so well with the vocals.”

Only Aux Lord’s close friends know who is behind the account, which has been viewed millions of times and used over 400,000 times on the platform, including by members of Katseye, Dancing with the Stars competitors, Marcello Hernández, and, most recently by Lovato, Troye Sivan, Rachel Sennott, and Adéla.

Editor’s picks

In a statement to Rolling Stone, Linda Perry calls the remix “ridiculous in all the best ways,” saying it made her get on TikTok for the very first time. Earlier this month, she joined artist Sophia Treadway in a lip-sync video using the song.

“She convinced me, and then after we released the version of me doing  ‘What’s Up’ and her doing ‘Beez,’ her followers were like ‘FLIP IT’ and honestly, I don’t know what that means,” Perry says with a laugh. “I mean, it’s pretty awesome, I must say. It’s out of control.”

The trend has sparked a massive spike in Spotify streams for Minaj’s track, which jumped 460 percent globally this month — with Gen Z listeners driving a 2,120 percent jump in discovery of Minaj’s music through the song, according to information from the streaming platform. Meanwhile, 4 Non-Blondes’ “What’s Up” saw a 75 percent boost. The boost might seem small, but it’s because it already saw a jump last month thanks to Cardi B and Lizzo’s “What’s Goin’ On,” which sampled the original.

Minaj, for her part, used the TikTok sound to share a carousel of photos and encouraged fans to support those doing the trend: “Barbz, show love to the ppl doing the trend. love you. You’re cute. Or whatever.”

DJ Aux Lord jokes that their close friends call them “Radio Rebel,” a nod to the secret DJ character played by Debby Ryan in the Disney Channel Original, since they’ve been spinning at parties at their college (including one this weekend) without anyone knowing they’re behind the viral trend. Beyond the Perry-Minaj mashup, they’ve also blended HorsegiirL with the Beatles, Taylor Swift with Charli XCX, and Chappell Roan’s “The Subway” with City Girls’ “Act Up” — all while using an app on their iPad called DJ Pro. (At parties, they clarify, they use their DDJ-FLX4.)

Trending Stories

Related Content

“A lot of people think music mixing and DJing are hard to get into as a hobby, but it goes to show you don’t need expensive equipment to reach a large audience. I think I’m going to keep doing it for fun for now. It’s a fun hobby, but I might branch out in the winter and see if I could DJ at gigs as a side hustle,” they say. “I didn’t think I was going to go this far.”

Linda Perry, for her part, is manifesting a real-life moment with the Queen of Rap: “I think everyone is trying to get Nicki and me to do one together,” she says. “It would be fun, and the best part is? ‘I love Nicki Minaj!’”

October 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming