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'Dream' On: Miley Records New Song For Third 'Avatar' Film
Music

‘Dream’ On: Miley Records New Song For Third ‘Avatar’ Film

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Miley Cyrus has been tapped to record a new song, “Dream As One,” for the upcoming third installment in director/writer James Cameron’s Avatar series, Fire and Ash, which will arrive in theaters on Dec. 19. The track will be released Nov. 14 through Columbia/Sony.

Cyrus contributed to the song’s music and lyrics in tandem with Andrew Wyatt, Mark Ronson and the Grammy-winning Simon Franglen, who also composed the film score. “Dream As One” will be heard during Fire and Ash‘s end credits and will be featured on its original soundtrack, due Dec. 12.

“Honored to support Avatar: Fire and Ash with an original song I’ve written with Mark Ronson and Andrew Wyatt,” Cyrus wrote in an Instagram post that teases a portion of the song. “Having been personally affected by fire and being rebuilt from the ashes, this project holds profound meaning for me. Thank you, Jim, for the opportunity to turn that experience into musical medicine. The film’s themes of unity, healing and love resonate deeply within my soul, and to be even a small star in the universe the Avatar family has created is truly a dream come true.”

Fire and Ash stars Sam Worthington, Zoe Saldana, Sigourney Weaver, Stephen Lang, Kate Winslet and Edie Falco. It’s the follow-up to 2022’s The Way of Water, which was itself the sequel to the 2009 original. Two additional films are expected in 2029 and 2031.

As for Cyrus, she has kept a low profile following the summer release of her ninth album, Something Beautiful, which was accompanied by a musical film of the same name that’s available on Disney+ and Hulu.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Bangladesh On Helping Ludacris Create 'Back For The First Time' Album
Music

Bangladesh On Helping Ludacris Create ‘Back For The First Time’ Album

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Years before gaining notoriety as a movie star through his role in one of the most successful film franchises in history, Ludacris was simply another artist on the grind trying to figure it out.

While his turn as DJ and radio personality “Chris Lova Lova” on Atlanta’s premier Hip-Hop radio station Hot 97.5 (now Hot 107.9) brought a level of success and regional fame, the former intern’s sights were set on more creatively fulfilling horizons, particularly building his career as a rap artist.

Facilitating a connection with producer Timbaland into a standout feature on “Fat Rabbit” from Tim’s Bio: From the Motion Picture – Life from da Bassment in 1998, Luda’s buzz in the southern region was reaching a climax.

However, the animated lyricist wouldn’t truly break through onto the national scene before cultivating a creative relationship with another, albeit unknown, boardsman, Bangladesh.

Courtesy of Bangladesh

Now known for creating anthemic hits for Beyoncé, Lil Wayne, Kelis, and more household names, Bangladesh, born Shondrae Crawford, was in a similar position to Luda during the late ’90s, splitting time between his job as a barber and crafting beats, which eventually landed on the radar of Ludacris.

Enlisted as a producer on Ludacris’ 1999 independent debut Incognegro, Bangladesh’s unique sound proved to be intoxicating when paired with Luda’s lyrics, evidenced by the ensuing bidding war that ended with Luda inking a record deal with Def Jam Records.

Releasing his major label debut Back for the First Time, including all of Bangladesh’s contributions to Incognegro, on October 17, 2000, Ludacris quickly became one of the hottest new stars in Hip-Hop.

Led by the hit single “What’s Your Fantasy” featuring Disturbing Tha Peace artist Shawnna, which peaked just outside of the Billboard Hot 100, Back for the First Time was a massive success, debuting at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 and being certified triple platinum.

Ludacris

Rapper Ludacris poses backstage at the Jordan Presents LOVE: In Concert in Atlanta at the AmericasMart February 7, 2003 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images

The album was the launchpad for what has been a legendary career, as Ludacris went on to release several more studio albums and is now widely regarded as one of the most popular and acclaimed artists the south has ever produced.

Yet, the magic all began with Back for the First Time, a bonafide classic that would be incomplete without Bangladesh helping to build its sonic foundation, most notable singles, and deep cuts.

In celebration of the 25th anniversary of Ludacris’ Back for the First Time album, VIBE spoke with Bangladesh about the backstory behind his introduction to Ludacris, the making the album, how its release impacted his own life, and its enduring legacy.

You had a big role in helping launch Ludacris’ career with your production on his first hit single “What’s Your Fantasy.” How did you begin working with Luda and how did that song come about?

How I began working with Luda was through a mutual friend. This is before anything. We met before we was doing music. Music was an idea of something that we wanted to be doing. I met him when I was probably a junior or senior in high school.

Once I bought my beat machine, I was making beats and “What’s Your Fantasy” was the last beat that I made for that project. I think it was the last song he recorded for that independent album that he put out, Incognegro. I made it in my auntie basement.

After I made it, I felt like I made something incredible, you know? Not just the way it sounds but the way I felt. It was the same feelings that I would feel before I started making beats. It’s more like two things meeting that you had dreamed about, like a dream come true type feeling.

It was like I used to have these feelings inside, like a butterfly type feeling. An epiphany. I felt this feeling I was dreaming about before I was actually producing.

So when I made this beat, that was the same feeling I had. It was kind of like a connector. I had already linked up with Chris. He would come get his hair done [at my barbershop]. He had an afro so he’d come to the shop to get [his hair] lined up. I just bought this car, so I took him to my car one day. This is before I made “What’s Your Fantasy.”

I had four beats on the [cassette] tape, back when tapes were still relevant. I played the beats and he was kind of looking through the front window. Looking straight ahead, but he was kind of stuck in thought.

He looked like he was thinking. Like he couldn’t believe what he was listening to. Like, ‘This is the perfect piece that I’m I’m missing,’ you know what I’m saying?

A producer that can create a sound or has a sound for what he does without it being a producer that he got to have a budget to spend with, stuff like that. It’s more like a, ‘Damn, we can come up together’ type of thing. So when we got out the car, we started walking back to the shop and he was just asking me what I was doing with those beats.

Bangladesh

Courtesy Of Bangladesh

I said, ‘It’s whatever, whatever you’re trying to do,’ you know what I’m saying? So he was like, ‘Man, let me get that tape, let me get that tape.’ So I gave him the tape and probably a few days later, I was making another beat in my aunt’s basement and I happened to call over to his house.

There were a few crew members at the house so I would call over there to play a certain person what I just made over the phone. So when I called over there, Chris picked up and it was like he knew me.

He was like, ‘Man, what you got?’ So it was like he already knew it was me and knew I had something [for him] to listen to. So when he picked up, I already had the beat ready to play ’cause I was calling over there to play somebody the beat.

I took Lil’ Kim’s voice and put it on there. She was saying, ‘Come see if you need a hit, come see me/ If you need a hit, ni**a come see me,’ or some sh*t. It was saying something like that. So, when I played it for him, he was like, ‘Man, come over now.’ He said, ‘bring all your stuff.’

Ludacris

Rapper Ludacris arrives at P. Diddy’s MTV Video Music Awards after-party at Show August 28, 2003 at Radio City Music Hall in New York City

Evan Agostini/Getty Images

That was like the first time he invited me over to a spot. That’s where some of the other crew members stayed, they lived with them, but he didn’t like nobody being in his sh*t when he ain’t there. So, that’s when it was okay to come through.

So that’s how “What’s Your Fantasy” came about. It being the last song that he recorded, the last beat that I think I gave him for that project.

You produced the first song on Back for the First Time, “U Got a Problem.” How did the whole concept of that song come about?

“U Got a Problem,” I was in my auntie’s basement at the time I made that. And once I made that, we had a relationship, but it wasn’t like it was once I started producing. Once I started producing, we got closer in the sense of working together ’cause I was the glue to get what he wanted. He would have had to spend major money to get those type of beats. I’m coming up and I’m influenced by the greats that were running the game at that time so my beats were kind of industry ready, early on. So, I feel like I was the glue to the puzzle.

You also helped create “1st & 10” with I-20 and Lil’ Fate. What’s the story behind that song?

I think I made that beat at my kids’ mother’s house at the time. And her dad is Jamaican, he had a little CD collection and I was going through it. I was going through some songs and I heard that sample. So, that’s how I made that beat.

Then I gave it to them. I think that might have been the first song they recorded on one of my beats ’cause that was the time when they were a group. Before Luther went solo, they were all recording together.

That was before Chris knew I was making beats, I was cutting hair at the time and everybody knew me as the barber. So me making beats kind of threw them off. Once people know you for something, they don’t really see nothing else.

It’s like, ‘The barber dude [is producing]?!’ So, yeah, I like that song a lot.

The track “Ho,” which you produced, is one of the most popular songs from Back for the First Time. Were you there during the recording?

Well, that was one of the songs that I played him while I was in my car. It was amongst the four beats that I gave him on the tape. And the next time I seen him, he had the hook and he told me the hook. He’s like, ‘I got something to that.’ And when I made the beat, I was more thinking like something hood. That’s the energy I was in. I wasn’t thinking like what he came up with.

When he was telling me the idea, I thought it was corny as hell. Like, ‘This sh*t sounds corny as hell to me.’ I wasn’t there when he recorded it, but he did tell me how it went. I don’t know exactly where he recorded it, it might have been at Patchwerk [Recording Studios] or something.

But I think besides “What’s Your Fantasy,” that was one of the songs that all the executives that was trying to sign him was really f**king with.

Definitely a classic classic moment and one of his signature records for the long-time fans. You also got to work with UGK on the Back for the First Time track “Stick ‘Em Up. What was that experience like having UGK on your beat?

Looking back at it, I wish I knew. It was early on, I ain’t really know what I was doing. I was just good at creating and putting sounds together, but looking back, I wish, having them, I would have knew what I was doing. That was just a group that he wanted on the album and I think the fact of “What’s Your Fantasy” already being in motion, it got everybody’s attention.

We might have recorded that at Patchwerk, I can’t remember. But Chaka Zulu was trying to get Pimp to be the producer on the song. I don’t think Chaka really believed [in me] for real, he was always trying to [replace me]. I don’t think he really believed in my abilities. But looking back at it, people weren’t collaborative producers [back then], you know what I’m saying?

So although UGK is Pimp C, when he was saying that, I felt like the beat was done. So I wouldn’t have been knocking it, but I wasn’t really clear what he was trying to accomplish.

He would come over to Pimp, he’s talking to Pimp, then he’d come back to me, and he was trying to orchestrate this thing right in the room. But when me and Pimp talked, Pimp was like, ‘Man, you made the beat. You produced the beat, man. The beat sounds fine to me, man.’

And that’s really what it was. That beat I made in my basement. That was early on when I was staying with my aunt. That’s really how that came about. But looking back, I wish I would have encouraged him to produce on it, too. ‘Cause in today’s time, that would have been dope. To look back on like, ‘Damn, that’s hard, I made a beat or I produced with Pimp C.’

R.I.P. to Pimp C. Ludacris’ “What’s Your Fantasy (Remix)” featured appearances by Shawnna, Trina, and Foxy Brown. What was that like having three of the dopest female emcees at the time rapping on your beat?

That was dope. I wasn’t really caught in the moment of it though like I wish I would would have been.

And you know, listening back to the sonic’ of the production, I wish we would have went through the right channels to mix the beat properly. It sounds different than original as far as like mixing and mastering. So those things right there, I didn’t really[like]. I wasn’t really into it.

Like if the composition don’t come out perfect to me, I’m a little irritated. I try to ignore it ’cause it’s already out. Then the people like it, so they don’t really hear what you hear. But I wish it was as perfect as the original, as far as the beat. Now, as far as the females that’s on the song, that was dope as hell. I was a big Foxy Brown fan. Of course, Shawnna’s dope, Trina’s dope, but out of the three, I feel like Foxy killed that. Like Foxy bodied that verse.

What’s a record on Back for the First Time that you didn’t produce, but you were really rocking with?

Man, I ain’t listen to that album in so long, I can’t even remember. It’s going to be cliche to say “Southern Hospitality” ’cause it was a single but I don’t really know. Something about that energy I like that beat a lot. The video was dope. I remember we was in the video. I remember shooting the video like yesterday. Then they threw “Ho” in in the middle of it, which I felt probably should have been a real single.

I think that sh*t would have been bigger. That’s an argument, like, it’s a classic but at that time, when you look at “Southern Hospitality” numbers, it really wasn’t a big song. Neptunes and Pharrell was hot so it was like the thing to do. And that was another thing.

A lot of politics back then. The new upcoming producers or artists were a little overlooked by the established ones. It was more political. Like “What’s Your Fantasy” wasn’t supposed to be his first single because I did it.

And he had Jermaine Dupri, Organized Noize on the album. So I was kind of being overlooked for those reasons. But it was a long time ago. It’s 25 years already. Yeah, that’s crazy.

How does it feel to even have people interested in Back for the First Time after all these years, not knowing back then what it would be remembered as today?

I mean, I think that’s the beauty of music. It’s always something you could reflect on, look back on. You kind of remember where you were when you heard it.

Especially, if you were into it. If that’s something you was into, that was an impactful time in Atlanta because we were like the second coming to Organized Noize and Outkast. Goodie Mob and them were the first to do it, as far as Southern Hip-Hop music.

Before, Atlanta was booty shake [music]. That was the sound in Atlanta. It wasn’t really real rap ni**as coming out [of Atlanta] before Outkast. There wasn’t really like sampled beats and baselines and hard drums before Outkast and Organized Noize. So we were next.

So that’s for me, coming from where I came from. I looked up to Organized Noize and Outkast. So like they inspired me to do what I was doing so to be amongst that time and around that, I felt like I made it.

Listen to Ludacris’ Back for the First Time below.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Sampha Shares New Song “Cumulus / Memory”: Listen
Music

Sampha Shares New Song “Cumulus / Memory”: Listen

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Sampha has shared an outtake from the sessions for his 2023 album Lahai. “Cumulus / Memory” was co-written with the xx’s Romy, who also sings on the track. Give the song a listen below.

“‘Cumulus’ was the first song I wrote for Lahai and the last one to be finished,” Sampha shared in a press statement. “Living with it for some time, I really feel like I wanted to share it with people.”

Last year, Sampha released a deluxe version of Lahai and collaborated with Romy on the single “I’m on Your Team.” He’s recently made guest appearances on new albums by Little Simz, John Glacier, and Richard Russell’s Everything Is Recorded.

Read about the Lahai single “Spirit 2.0” at No. 49 on “The 100 Best Songs of 2023.”

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Every The Walking Dead spin-off in the works
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Every The Walking Dead spin-off in the works

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

The Walking Dead may have come to an end in 2022 after eleven seasons, but the franchise continues to live on through various spin-offs.

Based on the comic series by Robert Kirkman, The Walking Dead TV universe spans seven live-action shows in total, between sequels, prequels and anthology shows.

  • READ MORE: ‘The Walking Dead: World Beyond’ review: ‘Stand By Me’ in the zombie apocalypse

Some of these spin-offs have already come to an end, including Fear The Walking Dead, which spanned seven seasons, the teen-orientated The Walking Dead: World Beyond, and the one-off miniseries The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live.

Several shows, however, are still ongoing, so here’s a rundown of all The Walking Dead spin-offs in development.

The Walking Dead: Dead City season 3

Lauren Cohan as Maggie in ‘The Walking Dead: Dead City’. CREDIT: Peter Kramer/AMC

Maggie and Negan’s spin-off was the first sequel series to The Walking Dead, which sees Lauren Cohan and Jeffrey Dean Morgan reprise their roles.

After the show’s second season concluded in June 2025, a third season was announced a month later. Production is set to begin in Boston, Massachusetts in autumn 2025, with Seth Hoffman joining as the new showrunner.

“I’m excited to have the chance to dive back into The Walking Dead universe and work to deliver another dynamic season’s worth of stories to this epic franchise,” Hoffman said.

“It’s a true honor to chart out the next chapter for Maggie and Negan’s iconic adventures in Dead City. Lauren, Jeffrey and Scott [Gimple] are incredible creative partners and I’m thrilled to collaborate with them to bring this story to life.”

The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon season 4

The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon
Norman Reedus in ‘The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon’. CREDIT: Emmanuel Guimier/AMC

Norman Reedus and Melissa McBride return as Daryl and Carol respectively in this sequel series, which takes the post-apocalyptic drama to Europe.

AMC announced the show would return for a fourth and final season earlier this year, which will span eight episodes. Production is set to begin in autumn 2025 in Spain.

Speaking about the final run of episodes, Reedus said: “Daryl Dixon has been an incredible journey. I thank each and every fan who has joined us on this ride. It’s been a privilege to build this story for these characters, and we have so much gratitude for how it’s been embraced.

“Your love and support have made every moment worth it. This finale isn’t just an ending; it’s a celebration of what we’ve all shared together. Keep carrying that love forward — Daryl’s journey is far from over.”

More Tales From The Walking Dead Universe

Back in 2023, AMC announced a new short-form spin-off with the working title, More Tales From The Walking Dead Universe. The show was pitched as a continuation of the anthology series, Tales Of The Walking Dead, which would be overseen by Scott Gimple.

There has been no word since about the spin-off, so it’s unclear if it is still in development.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Selena Gomez Reveals Video for New Single 'In the Dark'
Music

Selena Gomez Reveals Video for New Single ‘In the Dark’

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Selena Gomez has released the video for “In the Dark,” a song from the Season Two soundtrack of Netflix series Nobody Wants This.

The retro visual opens with the singer wearing a black leotard and sitting on a white chaise, before transitioning to moodier shots of Gomez fitted in a two-piece and glossy leather jacket surrounded by smoke. “I’ll be there when you lose yourself. To remind you of who you are,” sings Gomez in the Eighties-channeling track. “And I’ll be there like nobody else. You’re so beautiful in the dark.”

Gomez teased the video earlier on Wednesday, sharing scenes from the visual on Instagram stories, and sharing that it took under just eight hours to film. In one photo, she wrote: “Thought it be fun to add a little Revival to it.”

Last month, Gomez and Benny Blanco tied the knot in a private ceremony and exchanged vows in California in front of their friends and family. The couple had collaborated together on Gomez’s 2015 hit song “Same Old Love” and “I Can’t Get Enough” (which also featured Tainy and J Balvin) in 2019, before confirming their relationship in December 2023. In March 2025, the pop powerhouse and producer debuted their collaborative album, I Said I Love You First.

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Gomez recently featured on “Pick It Up,” as part of Cardi B’s sophomore album, Am I the Drama?, which dropped in September. The pair last linked up in 2018 for DJ Snake’s smash hit “Taki Taki,” with Ozuna as well. 

Meanwhile, Nobody Wants This returns for another season on Oct. 23. The rom-com Netflix series stars Kristen Bell and Adam Brody, and also features the likes of Timothy Simons, Jackie Tohn, Stephanie Faracy, Michael Hitchcock, Tovah Feldshuh, Paul Ben-Victor, Emily Arlook, and more. Season Two’s soundtrack spans 19 songs and taps some of the biggest names in music including Gomez, Kacey Musgraves, Chris Stapleton, Finneas, Role Model, and Teddy Swims.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Teddy Swims Recounts Collaborating With His ‘Heroes’ The Wiggles
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Teddy Swims Recounts Collaborating With His ‘Heroes’ The Wiggles

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Stadium shows, records set on the Billboard charts, awards. All of it, nice. But for Teddy Swims, the moment he knew he’d really “made it” was when he collaborated with The Wiggles.

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No lie. Swims is at the back-end of an action-packed tour of Australia and New Zealand, during which he performed at the NRL Grand Final, delivered a keynote at SXSW Sydney, and, yes, performed on stage with The Wiggles.

This morning, Swims stopped by Nova 100’s Jase & Lauren for a chat about the land Down Under, his tattoo obsession, and realizing his dream as an unofficial Wiggle.  

The Wiggles joined Teddy Swims onstage during his concert at Sydney’s Qudos Bank Arena on Oct. 15, for a medley of “Rock-A-Bye Your Bear,” “Hot Potato” and “Fruit Salad.”

“Yeah, that was the coolest thing ever,” he remarks. “So, I reached out to them years ago when I first started coming up on Instagram, because they’re really my heroes growing up, and always wanted to collab with them. And so I reached out to them, like, ‘you’re my heroes. I love you’.”

Fortune smiled on Swims as he greeted the children’s entertainers backstage on the Today Show, ahead of the Oct. 5 rugby league finale.

“I met them in the hallway, and they were like, ‘you want to play ‘Fruit Salad’ with us?’ And I was like, ‘oh my god!’… I was absolutely starstruck.”

Swims played his cards right and asked The Wiggles to join him at a show, which they did.

“Oh dude, it was so sick,” he recounts. “We did this whole three song medley, and the whole band was involved. It was the coolest thing ever. I think it was, like, I even said it afterwards, that was my ‘made it’ moment for me.”

Swims has some serious runs on the board. He made history in July when “Lose Control” became the first song in the history of the Billboard Hot 100 to spend triple-digit weeks on the chart, as it reached its milestone 100th frame. The next best is Glass Animals’ “Heat Waves,” which logged 91 weeks on the tally in 2021-22.

The Atlanta-born singer’s blend of R&B, country and soul has seen him fly high on Australia’s charts, too. In January, Swims’ I’ve Tried Everything But Therapy (Part 2) opened at No. 1 on the ARIA Albums Chart, while “Lose Control” went to No. 4 on the national singles survey.  

Speaking on Australian breakfast radio, Swims admitted he’s “running out of space” for new ink, but there are countless blank canvases among his pals.

“Right before my son was born,” he notes, “I was trying to take a couple months off the booze and so we’d always have kind of party after the show in the green room and stuff, there’s so many people. So I was like, instead of fighting the urge to drink, I could just pull the tattoo machine out and all the drunks would just let me tattoo them.”

Swims’ I’ve Tried Everything But Therapy Tour of Australasia continues tonight, Oct. 23 with the second of three dates at Melbourne’s Rod Laver Arena. Matt Corby is the support act and Frontier Touring is producing the trek, which ends Oct. 29 with a sold out concert at Perth’s RAC Arena.

Stream his Nova interview below.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Ace Frehley Kiss LP
Music

Ace Frehley Is Why I Love Music » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Like many others have eloquently shared in recent days, Ace Frehley was my reason. He’s the reason I became obsessed with the guitar in 1977. He’s the reason I begged my dad to take me to my first rock concert in 1983. He’s also the reason I was confused when the new guy played guitar onstage during the Creatures of the Night concert. 

He’s the reason I approached a publishing industry icon in 1997, with the intention of writing a book about KISS. “I don’t believe KISS fans actually read,” the guy sneered, long before metal memoirs from everyone with a Marshall amp stack clogged bestseller lists.

He’s the reason I launched an outrageous quest to meet my hard rock guitar heroes. He’s the reason I’ve bid on rare but expensive Washburn guitars that bore his name, but he refused to play. He’s the reason I Milli Vanilli-ed a guitar to stand next to him performing the song “Rip It Out” from his 1978 solo album. He’s the reason I planned a trip to Connecticut for early 2026 to visit a former residence.

Ace Frehley is also the reason why I decided, in July 2025, to stop seeing my heroes perform live.

“I don’t want to do this anymore,” I texted a music-loving friend from a hotel room in Louisville, Kentucky. I logged into my various ticket accounts and put everything up for resale.

The music will never die, but the show must come to an end at some point. 

***

I had driven several hours to see a triple bill of Quiet Riot, Slaughter, and Ace Frehley. It was 90 degrees at showtime in Louisville at the Iroquois Amphitheater. The venue features wood and stone structures that evoke a sense of a lovely state park. There was shade under the roof and on the stage, but the air was still and heavy. 

Over the course of my hair metal journalism career, I had the opportunity to interview and get to know many legends of the genre. I was always glad they still rocked every night. Whatever kept them on the road, whether it was money, ego, or desperation, I saw their determination as an admirable quality. There are far easier ways to earn a living than doing fly-in dates to a few hundred people. The published capacity at Iroquois was around 2,400 people, but there was nowhere near that amount in attendance. 

Frehley walked cautiously on stage. He seemed tentative, but he was 74 years old. I didn’t expect acrobatics, and he was legendary for clumsiness, even when sober. I don’t know that I ever did an interview with him where falling, tripping, or stumbling wasn’t mentioned, usually accompanied by his famous cackle. So, I didn’t judge his hesitant movements. 

In fact, I never judge harshly. As sports fans say, “Father Time is undefeated.” Voices weaken—hands atrophy. No one performs at 70 with the vigor they did at 30. As an observer and a fan, I am okay with that. 

When I watch a concert today, my experience is a pastiche of past and present. I think about the images and memories associated with the music. A tree on our farm that looked like Paul Stanley’s poofy mane, or my prom date saying she liked the drums on Appetite for Destruction, or how my best friend got a speeding ticket to the opening chug of Dr. Feelgood. I think about how the music has stuck with me over the decades. I reflect on my interviews with the musicians, how they’ve changed, and how I’ve changed. I evaluate the performance of the evening, sure. However, it’s mixed up in this cocktail of emotions, which tends to mean that I am a very understanding critic.

Three or four songs in, Frehley stood in front of drummer Scot Coogan and made a horizontal cutting motion in the air in front of his throat, the universal “it’s over” gesture. Coogan is a professional and experienced vocalist, and he usually sang some of KISS’s songs on the setlist. Some vocal duties are also regularly handled by bass player Ryan Spencer Cook. Some of that sharing is normal in an Ace show. But that night seemed different, like they were adjusting on the fly.

I caught Cook exchanging eye contact with his longtime friend and bandmate, Jeremy Ashbrook. Those dudes have known each other for decades. They’re hard-working, skilled, and dedicated admirers who share the stage with their childhood idol. I cannot definitely prove what was going on in their heads. 

However, I recognized that look. It was the one family recently shared as my parents’ health declined. It was the “Did you hear what Dad just said?” glance, the “Did you see Mom not be able to change the channel?” eyebrow raise. 

There’s an orchestra pit at Iroquois that keeps the audience at a distance. Cook and Ashbrook zinged guitar picks into the second level, like ninjas in a Bruce Lee movie. Ace’s guitar picks fluttered, hesitated, and fell into the pit before reaching any fans. 

Photo: Casablanca Records, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

His guitar performance meandered. There were moments of flash and excitement, but most of it was sloppy. Ace Frehley was never about precision. He had no pretensions about being a schooled and studied virtuoso. He joked in interviews that if he had known he would influence so many musicians, he would have practiced harder. He was Keith Richards or Joe Walsh, more about swagger and simply cool than sweeping picking arpeggios. However, that performance struck me as sloppy sloppy, not cool sloppy.

When he launched the opening crunch of “God of Thunder” before surprisingly transitioning to his solo hit “Back in the New York Groove”, I had moved from the front row to the back of the amphitheater. I was leaving early, but so was Frehley. Before I completely exited the venue, he told the crowd that the set was being cut short, but I couldn’t hear his explanation. Online, some fans said it was because Slaughter’s set ran long. Others claimed it was because he was sick. 

Others, of course, went straight to the “He’s drunk again” and “That’s embarrassing.” It is the internet, of course. 

As I lay in my hotel bed and read the comments and reviews, I didn’t feel anger. Frehley claimed to be sober, and I had no reason to doubt him. I think hard work and dedication to performance are positive, so I’m not going to tell anyone they need to quit. YouTube and social media make it easy to gauge how well an older artist is performing, so I don’t feel sorry for anyone who complains about being financially exploited. You know what you’re getting if you buy a ticket to Motley Crue or Stephen Pearcy of Ratt in 2025. 

Weirdly, I was grateful. I felt like that Ace Frehley show demonstrated that it was time for me to stop chasing these musicians around the country. God bless them all who continue to perform. The fans who choose to see them should cherish every note they play. I just decided not to do it anymore. I didn’t want to see any more decline, any more descent, but that was my decision and mine alone. 

***

Frehley wasn’t the only childhood idol that affected me in this way. I had felt it at a recent Yngwie Malmsteen gig. I was worried about Rudy Sarzo, at 74, performing in Birmingham, England, for Ozzy Osbourne‘s final gig and then getting back into economy class and passenger vans five days later for Quiet Riot shows. We age, and naturally, our heroes do too. It had been coming for me for some time.

On 10 July 2025, in Louisville, Kentucky, Ace Frehley was the reason I said goodbye to a generation of heroes. I’m grateful for the experience. I am thankful for him starting my musical journey in the first place. 

Rumor brewed in the afternoon of 16 October 2025. Confirmation of his death came at dinner time, as I cooked our family meal. The kids asked if I was crying, and I was able to blame it on the onions I chopped as Hair Nation played a tribute. Later that night, I went through my interview transcripts with Ace. He once told me about the wonder of upgrading his Apple II computer to 128k of memory in the late 1970s. “That was a big day for me,” he said. Luckily, the kids were in bed when I read that original KISS drummer and fellow rogue Peter Criss was at the bedside when Ace passed. I didn’t feel embarrassed by my tears. 

The Spaceman returned to his home planet of Jendell. He is the reason I love music. He is also the reason I was able to say goodbye, not just to him, but to a generation of heroes. I cherish it all.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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MC50 (Soundgarden, Faith No More, Fugazi Members) Announce New Live Album
Music

MC50 (Soundgarden, Faith No More, Fugazi Members) Announce New Live Album

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

MC50 — the touring band featuring late MC5 member Wayne Kramer alongside members of Soundgarden, Faith No More, Fugazi, and others — have announced a new live album titled 10 More, set for release December 5th.

The recordings were captured during a 2018 tour celebrating the 50th anniversary of the legendary proto-punk band MC5, on which Kramer was joined by Kim Thayil (Soundgarden), Brendan Canty (Fugazi), Billy Gould (Faith No More), Matt Cameron (Soundgarden, ex-Pearl Jam), and Marcus Durant (Zen Guerrilla).

The reason the collection is titled 10 More is because an earlier album of different live cuts from the same tour was included as a bonus disc in deluxe editions of the MC5’s 2024 album, Heavy Lifting.

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Among the songs on 10 More are “The American Ruse,” “Call Me Animal,” “Rocket Reducer No. 62 (Rama Lama Fa-Fa-Fa),” “Looking at You,” and “Starship,” as well as a cover of Ray Charles’ “I Believe To My Soul.” The tunes were recorded during shows in Seattle, Cincinnati, and Hamburg, Germany.

Sadly, Kramer died in February 2024, and only a few months later, drummer Dennis Thompson passed away, leaving no surviving members of the classic MC5 lineup.

See below for the the album art and tracklist for 10 More, which is available to pre-order on vinyl or CD via Amazon.

10 More Artwork:

10 More Tracklist:
01. Call Me Animal
02. I Believe to My Soul
03. Rocket Reducer No. 62 (Rama Lama Fa-Fa-Fa)
04. The American Ruse
05. Skunk
06. Teenage Lust
07. Looking at You
08. High School
09. Baby Won’t Ya
10. Starship

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Bono, The Edge Revisit U2 Classics At Guthrie Prize Ceremony
Music

Bono, The Edge Revisit U2 Classics At Guthrie Prize Ceremony

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

U2’s Bono and the Edge dipped into their back catalog during a six-song set last night (Oct. 21) as part of their Woody Guthrie Prize ceremony at Cain’s Ballroom in Tulsa, Ok., and even unveiled some lyrics for an in-progress song that may appear on their next album.

The duo rattled off “Running To Stand Still,” “Mothers of the Disappeared,” “Sunday Bloody Sunday,” “One,” “Pride (In the Name of Love)” and “Yahweh” in addition to a cover of Guthrie’s “Jesus Christ,” and later sang some a capella lines from the Beatles’ “A Hard Day’s Night” when accepting the award.

The Woody Guthrie Prize is given annually to artists who “best exemplify Guthrie’s spirit and work by speaking for the less fortunate through music, film, literature, dance or other art forms and serving as a positive force for social change.”

“Bob Dylan really did bring us to the place where the song was an instrument to open up worlds,” Bono said. “And the world of Woody Guthrie, I wouldn’t have entered if not for Bob.” He added, “America is the greatest song still yet to be written. The poetry is there but it’s still being written … don’t imagine it will continue to be extraordinary on its own, that if you fell asleep and woke up in 20 years, the world would be fairer or freer. It won’t. That’s not the way it works.”

“Our favorite protest songs always had a sense of vision, something to aim for,” said the Edge. “You don’t talk about the darkness — you make the light brighter.”

During a protest song-oriented discussion with producer T Bone Burnett, Bono admitted, “you can’t write a song to order,” but then proceeded to recite lyrics from an unfinished song about the late Palestinian activist Awdah Hathaleen: “one father shot / three children crying / if there is no law / is there no crime / if there is no hope / what’s there to rhyme / history is written / one life at a time.”

It was the first concrete evidence of material intended for the follow-up to 2017’s Songs of Experience, a release date for which has not been announced.

U2 hadn’t set foot in Cain’s Ballroom since performing there on April 4, 1981. The band returned to Tulsa again in 1983 and 2018 and had previously joked that its members were looking “forward to legally buying their own pints this time around.”

Bono, Edge, Adam Clayton and Larry Mullen Jr. join past Guthrie Prize recipients including Pete Seeger, Mavis Staples, Joan Baez, Bruce Springsteen and 2024 honoree Tom Morello.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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How Marques Houston Went From Sitcoms To Thriving On Tubi
Music

How Marques Houston Went From Sitcoms To Thriving On Tubi

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

“I mean, if you ain’t doing it for Lil’ Saint, are you really doing it? You know what I’m saying?,” Marques Houston quips when reflecting on his stacked TV/film résumé. For VIBE’s Then And Now, the singer-actor looks back on the highlights from his storied past and details how he went from a quirky, next-door neighbor on a hit sitcom to dominating a streaming platform with his own production company.

The child star made his formal on-screen debut in 1993 as Eli Black on A Different World. The following year, he became a household name as Roger Evans on the hit sitcom, Sister Sister, starring alongside Tia Mowry, Tamera Mowry-Housley, Jackée Harry, and Tim Reid, for the show’s first five seasons.

“Go home, Roger,” he joked, mimicking his infamous catchphrase. Houston knows that the tagline “still travels with me for the rest of my life,” but he embraces that level of immortality. “It’s always going to be wherever I go, someone’s going to yell out, ‘Go home, Roger.’ And I don’t mind because it was such a big part of culture and a big part of history. That show was so huge and I don’t take away from doing it. I would do it all over again if I could. Loved being on the show. Loved the girls, Tim, and Jackée. It was the dopest experience for me, but I think I left at the right time,” he explained.

SISTER, SISTER, Tia Mowry, Tim Reid, Marques Houston, Jackee Harry, Tamera Mowry, 1994. ©Paramount Television/Courtesy Everett Collection.

Houston confessed, “Being Roger was so exciting in the beginning.” He was just 12 years old when he got the role on the heels of his group, Immature, gaining success with ‘Never Lie’— the lead single from their sophomore album, Playtyme is Over. The record went on to become their biggest hit on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 5 in 1994.

“I was really excited about [the success]. It was real dope. It was like everything I’d always wanted,” Houston explaining, admitting that he wanted his own version of Steve Urkel. He described the Family Matters persona as “the scene stealer character that comes in and is the main character that everybody loves.”

However, as he got older, Houston felt he’d become typecasted if he continued. “I felt like I could only do that and I didn’t want that. So, I ended up leaving the show because career-wise I felt like it was the smartest thing for me […] I think it was the best career choice for me definitely. I think it allowed me to move on to other things. I think if I would’ve stayed being Roger, I would’ve probably just been that.”

Following his tenure, Houston starred in House Party 4: Down To The Last Minute, Fat Albert, and of course, You Got Served.

Ironically, Houston wasn’t even supposed to star in the dance film alongside B2K. The film was originally titled Dance and was supposed to star Ginuwine, Aaliyah, Wade Robson, and Dave Scott. “That’s why my name was Elgin because Ginuwine’s real name is Elgin,” Houston explained. When it was time for the film to be made, Sony Pictures got involved and then it came down the line from B2K to Chris Stokes to Houston.

YOU GOT SERVED, Omari Grandberry, Marques Houston, 2004, (c) Screen Gems/courtesy Everett Collection

The Naked crooner applauded the film’s legacy and impact on the cultural zeitgeist. “I think it’s beautiful, the fact that it’s been 20 plus years or however long, but just to be able to still be relevant and people still love ‘You Got Served ‘ and know to what [it] did for the culture, what it did for dance, the dance community, all the TV shows [and] movies that have come out after that, just everything. To be a part of something that’s so big like that that’s changed history, it’s always a blessing to be able to be a part of something like that,” he gushed.

Following that moment, Houston landed his own sitcom with Cuts— the spinoff to One On One, starring Kyla Pratt and Flex Alexander. Funny enough, the singer didn’t think he’d return to TV. “Growing up watching Will Smith, Jamie Foxx be able to do music and television and movies at the same time, once you get that hit movie, you kind of just stick with [movies]. So I remember telling my whole team, ‘I just want to stick to movies,’” he explained. After You Got Served, Houston said he was flooded with other movie offers and wanted to focus on those, but due to his relationship with Alexander, he took a meeting with the show’s executives and even though Ray J was also up for the role, Houston ended up as the lead.

Cuts lasted for two seasons.

CUTS, Omarion Grandberry, Rashaan Nall, Marques Houston, Grapevine (aka Edward Fordham Jr.), ‘Reverse The Curse’, (Season 2, aired November 3, 2005), 2005-, photo: Monty Brinton / © UPN / Courtesy: Everett Collection

For Houston, “‘Cuts’ was dope [and] hilarious. I loved ‘Cuts’ because it gave me an opportunity to be a comedian and be funny as an adult. A lot of people were used to me being funny and stuff on ‘Sister, Sister,’ but I was a kid. With ‘Cuts,’ it gave me the opportunity for people to see me as an adult being able to handle comedy and be funny. That was a great experience for me too.”

It got to a point, though, where Houston was experiencing two things: he felt seasoned enough to not have to audition for certain roles, but he, in turn, wasn’t fitting the roles being presented to him. This led to the creation of Footage Films with Chris Stokes.

“We were just like, ‘Let’s just do it ourselves.’ I’m like, ‘I have enough experience with writing. I have enough experience with acting; you have enough experience with directing and writing. Let’s just start our own production company and just kind of go from there,’” Houston recalled of the distribution/production company’s inception.

He credited Cathy Hughes (founder of Radio One, which owns Urban One and TV One) as the catalyst behind the first Footage Films production titled Will To Love. Stokes and Houston “called in [several] favors” and the film wound up a success. Timing was on their side with BET launching their film division, so Houston and Stokes began working on projects with the network and continued to evolve.

Since then, he and Stokes have continued to call in favors from Karrueche, Erica Mena, and more to star in their films. From Only For One Night, which became one of their top rated movies, to debuting their first TV series, Sacrifice, on BET+, the men quickly realized they were “onto something with thrillers.”

That success led to them helping to “break Tubi.” Despite not finding initial success in their debut, Howard High, the Stepmother franchise became their launchpad and as Houston puts it, “Just put Tubi on the map.”

Overall, Houston is “grateful” to be able to “be successful for something that you love and that you’re passionate about.” The latest Footage Film successes are Adopted 2 and Run. He stars in the latter. Both of which are Tubi Originals.

Check out the crooner’s full Then And Now breakdown above.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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