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Laufey 2025
Music

Laufey’s ‘Dream Concert’ Comes True at Red Rocks » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

The dude at the front desk of the Hampton Inn in Golden, Colorado, was a pleasant enough fellow, even if his popular musical knowledge was lacking. “So what brings you here?” he routinely asked, perhaps thinking Coors Brewery or Dirty Dogs Roadhouse in the middle of an early fall afternoon were the likely options for a middle-aged couple looking for a place to collapse after a brew or two. 

“We’re going to Red Rocks,” was the reply, just wishing the quick delivery of room key cards wouldn’t further prolong the proceedings. 

“Oh, yeah! Who’s playing?” was his Captain Obvious follow-up, when just a few feet to his left was a sign listing all the October acts heading to the majestic outdoors amphitheater in Morrison, just a couple of miles from his workplace. 

The name “Laufey” brought a deer-in-the-headlights look, even after he was told the alternative artist was an Icelandic-Chinese singer-songwriter-producer who plays multiple instruments and has recently been performing in front of packed houses across North America. 

Either clueless or unimpressed or both, he added, “The only singer I know from Iceland is Björk.”  

Man, he never knew what he missed. For anyone else out of the loop: The pop queen, a fantastic young entertainer who seamlessly shifts genres from jazz to classical to her own show tunes that would rightly belong in a Tony Award-winning musical, wooed the masses numbering 9,000-plus on 8 October. 

Touring Canadian and US cities the rest of the year before heading across the pond in 2026 behind her latest full-length album, A Matter of Time, released on 22 August, Laufey (pronounced LAY-vay) reigned over an adoring audience. While the male species was represented, the majority were young girls in frilly white dresses and stylish women in fringe, beads, and bows who sang along to each song while standing on their dancing feet for most of the show that lasted nearly two hours. 

Following English singer-songwriter-actress Suki Waterhouse’s superb, wind-aided 40-minute set, some pre-show recordings ranging from Frank Sinatra (“Witchcraft”) to Chet Baker (“Look for the Silver Lining”) set the mood. Laufey recognizes the greats, no matter their age, race, or gender. 

Performing with a crackerjack four-piece band on her left and a stunning string quartet on her right, Laufey also brought along her robust alto, several instruments and four athletically inclined dancers, who added ballet and stretchy steps while keeping the leading lady on her toes. There was no doubt. A star was born on this starry, starry night. 

Classic Entrance 

For starters, old-fashioned black-and-white opening credits straight out of a silent movie appeared on the giant video screens on each side of the stage along with an “Act I” designation, assuring the Red Rockers this extravaganza wasn’t going to be a typical concert. 

Almost like “Clockwork”, her flashy first number of the album and set, the 2024 Grammy winner appeared shortly after the listed starting time of 8.10pm. She wasted no time in heaping praise on the scenic setting, saying enthusiastically, “I’m so, so excited to be here. This is probably the most beautiful venue I’ve ever played. It’s such a dream concert for me.” 

The equally upbeat “Lover Girl” followed, with rhythmic handclaps setting the pace along with squeals of delight from the crowd. Yet the essence of her existence even revealed itself in one line on this celebratory evening: “Oh, what a curse it is to be a lover girl.”

Even if there was a hint of sarcasm, nobody dared to argue the point of a hitmaker whose most recent record debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 chart in early September. Humble, playful, warm, witty, charming and, yes, lovable, Laufey is living the dream, cursed or blessed. 

She also continued to reinforce a message of empowerment while touching on her own insecurities. “Dreamer”, from 2023’s Bewitched, utilized a cool piano intro and some pretty backing track harmonies while delivering the spirited lyrical statement: “No boy’s gonna kill the dreamer in me.”

To some bossa nova beats, doubts of realizing those dreams linger in “Falling Behind”, from 2022’s Everything I Know About Love, ending with, “Everybody’s falling in love but me.”

The ballad “Silver Lining”, enhanced with a swooning croon and her red Gibson ES-335 electric guitar, brought out the lights from a throng of cellphone holders who also sang along to these harsh words: “When you go to hell, I’ll go there with you too.” 

From devilish to angelic beliefs in a matter of seconds, Laufey gushed after the song, reiterating, “Thank you for lighting up the world up for me. It’s a very crazy feeling to feel like all my dreams are coming true. … I know you guys are busy and your time is valuable and the fact that you spent your time and money to come here, I don’t take it for granted, not for one second.”

Though many of her own songs (including 13 of the 15 from the latest LP that offers a cover of “Seems Like Old Times” as a bonus cut) are filled with romantic notions that either hit or miss, she doesn’t hesitate to put members of the opposite sex in their place. 

“Bored”, from 2024’s Bewitched: The Goddess Edition, is a clearcut example of that impulse, with just the title eliciting loud cheers, laughs and screams by her supporters. In introducing the song, Laufey admitted it’s “kinda mean,” yet honestly conveyed that “it’s about that feeling when you’re with someone and you just kind of develop, how you say, ‘Ick!’ And why? Just like all of a sudden, everything about this person is starting to annoy you.”

It’s another ballad with her lovely voice providing a hostile thought, reminiscent of Carly Simon’s “You’re So Vain”: 

Maybe you’re just way too vain to be interesting /
Baby keep talking but nobody’s listening
Lyrics from Laufey’s “Bored” 

Photo: Emma Summerton / AWAL

‘Welcome to My Jazz Club’ 

Laufey cooled down for “Act II” as the set transformed into a jazz setting that included the appropriate music, starting with “Seems Like Old Times”, initially recorded by Guy Lombardo’s orchestra in 1945. The gorgeous tune, covered by the likes of Kate Smith, Ella Fitzgerald, and Rosemary Clooney, first did a number on me when I heard Diane Keaton bashfully sing it as the title character in Annie Hall. 

Keaton’s death three days after this show will make the song linger even more in my mind, along with its performance by Laufey, who takes those soothing, nostalgic notes to another level with a jolt of jazzed-up swing. 

After her stunning rendition, Laufey explained, “I really want to find a way to make kind of like a unique, intimate moment in the middle of the set, where these guys really get to shine and I kind of get to dance a little, you know.” 

Annie Hall couldn’t have said it better. The musicians for this accomplished mission were: Heather Rivas, keys; Dario Bizio, bass; and Maverick MacMillan, drums. (Guitarist Ryland Holland wasn’t part of the jazz ensemble.)

Along with her own originals like “Valentine”, “Fragile”, and “While You Were Sleeping”, “Act II” included a cover of “It Could Happen to You” from the Great American Songbook.  

A piano-driven standard recorded by Bing Crosby in 1943 with music written by Jimmy Van Heusen, Laufey added a lemon-fresh zest while performing it on this A Matter of Time tour for the first time at Red Rocks, scatting included. This chanteuse brings to mind the glory days of yesteryear, with sultry torch singers like Billie Holiday and Julie London. Laufey on the Rocks? Yes, please!

Fashion Forward 

Known for her Oddli-created felt crowns that were spotted throughout the crowd, Laufey took about a five-minute intermission while nearing the show’s halfway point to announce her “best-dressed guest” on a night when passion was displayed by a fashion-conscious audience. 

A girl named Lucy, whose hand-sewn hoop skirt woven to include the clock theme that’s a central part of the third full-length studio album and stage design, appeared starstruck when walking up to meet Laufey. The excited winner received a special crown adorned with painted red rocks from “Mei Mei”. The artist’s popular life-sized bunny mascot will be the subject of the first-time author’s debut picture book that will be published next April. 

Made for little kids (and fans of all ages), Laufey has developed a special connection with youngsters through her music and outside projects, recently launching the Laufey Foundation, a nonprofit organization created to benefit aspiring musicians. 

Laufey 2025
Lucy the best-dressed guest with Laufey. Photo: Nicole Mago

Her affection for fellow artists is also apparent as this tour includes dates with various orchestras, along with a special opening act at Red Rocks and other cities. Laufey gave a shout-out to Waterhouse, cheerfully saying, “I feel so lucky when I get to have someone so cool and talented open for me. Really, I feel like I get a free concert every night. It’s honestly how I choose who will support me on tour. I am like, ‘Who do I want to hear every single night?’”

Multicultural (also half-Chinese; her mother is from Guangzhou) and multi-instrumental, Laufey mentioned she grew up fascinated with the cello as an orchestra member and “I always dreamt of getting cheers for playing” the instrument. “It’s been the greatest joy of my life to get to continue on this journey of recording songs with orchestras and playing with orchestras,” she said, turning to a grand piano to perform “Let You Break My Heart Again”. The weeper (“one of the very first songs I ever put out,” she offered) appears on the soundtrack album/concert film A Night at the Symphony: Hollywood Bowl. It includes the wistful-thinking line “Someday, someone will like me like I like you”. 

Don’t be misled, though. Laufey isn’t a woebegone, down-on-her-luck outcast. Combating anger/disappointment with a deft sense of humor, this is a performer who can add comedic touches to tragic episodes. During a mid-set video, she even poked fun at herself for making a few outfit changes. (“It’s my show,” she acts with a sneer. “I can wear what I want.”)

Laufey 2025
Photo: Emma Summerton / AWAL

Beauty and the Beat 

The ever-changing stage displayed a spinning carousel in the background as the enchanting song of the same name opened “Act III” with Laufey accompanied by her acoustic guitar. “Forget-Me-Not” featured the beautiful sounds of string quartet players Michelle Shin, Lucinda Chiu, Chrysanthe Tan, and Juan-Salvador Carrasco. Dancers Olivia Zeimi, Julia Alaimo, Bostyn Brown and Dabria Aguilar returned for “Cuckoo Ballet”, a tick-tock clock starting an orchestral-like instrumental interlude on which Laufey played the cello. 

Then the knives came out again like deep cuts from a sharp sword. In the sprightly “Mr. Eclectic”, leading off “Act IV,” she sings: “Talking ’bout some dead composer / You’re just a stoner patronizing me.” 

In “Clean Air”, Laufey drops an F-bomb while sweetly telling off her target, “My soul has suffered, get the fuck out of my atmosphere.” 

On the swirling “Tough Luck,” one of the finest cuts off A Matter of Time (that she coproduced with customary collaborator Spencer Stewart and new addition Aaron Dessner of the National), an ultimate loser hears: 

Tough luck, my boy, your time is up / I’ll break it first, I’ve had enough /
Of waiting ’til you lie and cheat / Just like you did to the actress before me
Lyrics from Laufey’s “Tough Luck”

Overcoming obstacles while admitting her insecurities are “still kind of there,” Laufey addressed the latter ahead of “Snow White”.  Calling it “probably the most vulnerable song on my new album,” the words ring true: “The world is a sick place, at least for a girl.” This one was born in Reykjavik, while raised there and in Washington, DC, before graduating from the famed Berklee College of Music in Boston.

Laufey remembers herself growing up in Iceland (with Junia, her identical twin sister) as “an orchestra nerd” with different hobbies, “and it was glaringly obvious to me that I was different, and I didn’t feel … like it was a good thing. I see it now as a good thing. … 

“I really empower all of you to always share your feelings and even though it’s really scary, they can be a very powerful tool.” There’s obviously stainless-steel strength in the woman whose full name is Laufey Lin Bing Jonsdottir.

“Act V” started and ended with the magnificent fury of “Sabotage”.  Reaching her peak by ascending the stage’s high staircase, this for-real idealist who can follow up that explosive set closer with the tender encore “Letter to My 13-Year-Old Self” doesn’t mess around. It’s only A Matter of Time for infatuation to strike anyone willing to join Laufey’s winning troupe of loyal lovelies. 

That includes the Golden guy who’s too busy checking in guests before checking out this team dream weaver.

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Echo & the Bunnymen Announce 2026 North American Tour
Music

Echo & the Bunnymen Announce 2026 North American Tour

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Echo & the Bunnymen have announced a 2026 North American tour on which they’ll be playing the greatest hits from their near 50-year career.

The 24-date spring outing, dubbed “The Very Best of Echo & the Bunnymen: More Songs to Learn and Sing” after the band’s 2006 compilation album of the same name, will kick off May 10th in Vancouver, Canada, and wrap up June 19th in Minneapolis. Along the way, the legendary UK act will hit such cities as Seattle, Los Angeles, Dallas, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Brooklyn, Boston, and Detroit, among others.

Get Echo & the Bunnymen Tickets Here

An artist ticket pre-sale starts Tuesday, October 21st, at 10 a.m. local time using the code VERYBEST via Ticketmaster, while a general on-sale begins Friday, October 24th, at 10 a.m. local time.

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Fans can expect to hear such classics as “The Cutter,” “The Killing Moon,” and “Lips Like Sugar,” among other favorites at each show. The band still features core founding members Ian McCulloch (vocals, guitar) and Will Sergeant (lead guitar), who formed Echo & the Bunnymen in Liverpool back in 1978.

Prior to the stateside run, Echo & the Bunnymen will embark on a previously announced UK tour, with tickets to those shows available here. See the band’s complete list of tour dates below.

Echo & the Bunnymen 2026 North American Tour Dates:
05/10 – Vancouver, BC @ Commodore Ballroom
05/12 – Seattle, WA @ Showbox SaDo
05/13 – Portland, OR @ Revolution Hall
05/15 – San Francisco, CA @ The Masonic
05/17 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Greek Theatre
05/18 – San Diego, CA @ SOMA @ Mainstage
05/21 – Salt Lake City, UT @ The Union Event Centre
05/22 – Denver, CO @ Mission Ballroom
05/24 – Dallas, TX @ House Of Blues
05/25 – Austin, TX @ ACL @ Live at the Moody Theatre
05/27 – Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall
05/29 – Nashville, TN @ Brooklyn Bowl
05/30 – Atlanta, GA @ Tabernacle
06/01 – Wilmington, NC @ Greenfield Lake Amphitheater
06/02 – Charlotte, NC @ The Fillmore
06/04 – Norfolk, VA @ The Norva
06/05 – Washington, D.C. @ The Warner Theater
06/07 – Philadelphia, PA @ The Fillmore
06/08 – Brooklyn, NY @ Brooklyn Paramount
06/11 – Boston, MA @ Road Runner
06/13 – Toronto, ON @ History
06/15 – Cleveland, OH @ House Of Blues
06/16 – Detroit, MI @ The Fillmore
06/19 – Minneapolis, MN The Fillmore

Echo & the Bunnymen 2026 UK Tour Dates:
03/04 – Norwich, UK @ The Nick Rayns LCR, UEA
03/06 – Warrington, UK @ Parr Hall
03/07 – Leeds, UK @ O2 Academy
03/11 – Manchester, UK @ Albert Hall
03/13 – Bristol, UK @ Beacon
03/14 – Brighton, UK @ Brighton Centre
03/18 – London, UK @ Roundhouse
03/21 – Liverpool, UK @ Empire Theatre
03/25 – Cambridge, UK @ Corn Exchange
03/27 – Bournemouth, UK @ O2 Academy
03/28 – Birmingham, UK @ O2 Academy
04/01 – Nottingham, UK @ Rock City
04/03 – Edinburgh, UK @ Usher Hall
04/04 – Newcastle, UK @ O2 City Hall

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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C.J. Smith and Tay Richardson of Besphrenz. (Credit: Dana Kalachnik)
Music

Besphrenz Only Need Each Other

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Sometimes you have to blow things up and start over again to some degree, even if things were working in the first place. A fresh start, a blank canvas, can inspire the creative process like the first time.

But does it count as starting over if you’re doing it with your day-ones?

Besphrenz, the genre-defying hip-hop/R&B/indie rock band mostly based in Philadelphia, is true to its name. Made up of childhood friends C.J. Smith, Taylor Richardson, and Rob Deckhart, Besphrenz found itself suddenly a part of the music industry machine when the original plan was just to make some stuff for themselves and their friends back in 2018.

“We threw a song out just for our friends under this silly name thinking no one would ever hear it, and Spotify put it on all these playlists, and next thing we know we’re off to the races,” Smith says. He’s nestled in a corner booth of the Blind Barber in Philadelphia, a bar-slash-barber shop that he is a part owner of, alongside the likes of Phillies star Bryce Harper. “I think up until that point, if we had 500 plays it was an amazing thing,” Smith says.

Tay Richardson. (Credit: Dana Kalachnik)

Thanks to appearing on a Spotify playlist called “Bedroom Pop” with poppy lo-ish fi songs like “Tired Eyes” and the “Fresh Finds: Class of 2019” playlist with “dreamgurl,” more eyes were suddenly on the trio.

By 2020, things slowed down for Besphrenz like it had for everyone. Smith and Richardson relocated to Nashville while Deckhart stayed on East Coast time, and the guys “put a pause” on things to regroup and recalibrate.

“We were in L.A. and Nashville all the time, and all of a sudden there was all of this pressure to have to put something out every six or eight weeks,” Smith says. “And that’s OK, too, but I think we realized for ourselves what we were really trying to do. So we kind of just hit pause and went back to the drawing board.”

Fast-forward to 2025, and the trio is readying its first official full length release, Bert. The idea of it being a full-length came from happenstance, too. The three of them had just gotten together as friends to make some music and ended up with what Smith describes in industry speak as “a shit ton of songs.”

“It seemed like the pressure was gone,” he says. “We had signed with a big manager in L.A., and that contract, we kind of just let it dissolve. We cut ties with all of those things, and we were like, ‘Now we can just do whatever we want.’”

Rob Deckhart. (Credit: Adam Barabas)
Rob Deckhart. (Credit: Adam Barabas)

“Whatever we want” for Besphrenz means taking melodies that sound like Soundcloud rap bars, letting those breathe for a few minutes before kicking in with more analog instrumentation and flipping things on their head with noodly guitars reminiscent of the likes of Rx Bandits.

Perhaps the most impressive part of all of it is that they’ve made sense of the moving parts and different sonic pieces and not only turned it into an album, but constructed it in a way that it sounds cohesive from top-to-bottom as a singular entity.

“Every transition is planned,” Smith says. “From a theory perspective, everything is melded in so the listener could just throw it on and it could be one long song essentially—with a lot of transition—or they could skip through. For us, just as creatives, that was super exciting and a lot of fun. Because up until that point it had been about creating just one song and throwing it out there. I think we’re just stoked to have a body of work and make a tangible thing. We got our test pressings back the other day. To hold it and just have it for yourself…sweet, we did it.”

This “from many, one” approach of the songs, with a host of influences and ideas and creative pathways ending in one singular piece is representative of the band. Smith, who has been in both music and hospitality circles for his adult life, has plenty of plates spinning. He’s a multi-hyphenate. And for the band, like plenty of others that started in high school, there was no definitive “We are a [genre] band.” You just made sounds based on what you liked, and hopefully it turns out good. They’re just three guys who love each other, and the output is the output that comes from that.

C.J. Smith. (Credit: Dana Kalachnik)
C.J. Smith. (Credit: Dana Kalachnik)

By now, having spent enough time in the Philly scene, the guys in Besphrenz have made more friends to add even more magic and confusion to their operation, like Good Old War’s Keith Goodwin and Anthony Green from Saosin, Circa Survive, and L.S. Dunes, in addition to his own prolific solo output.

Green’s trademark high-pitched vocals are featured on “yeah,” the lead single from Bert, which also includes Goodwin’s help with instrumentation and production.

Smith knew Goodwin as a high school kid in the Philly suburbs, when he was a fan of the Good Old War guys’ pop punk band Days Away. Eventually, Goodwin became aware of what the Besphrenz guys were up to, and enlisted Deckhart for his own projects. That turned into a close friendship between the band and Goodwin, who in turn introduced them to Green and he found his way into the fold, expanding the group of best friends in Besphrenz from three to five.

“It feels cool because we idolized them growing up, and now Keith and Anthony feel like Rob and Taylor—a couple of other dudes who grew up in our hometown,” Smith says. “I don’t think we lost hope, but we took a step back, and Keith has been such a cheerleader. Anthony, too. And it’s cool when people help when you’re not asking for it. They’re always there and asking, ‘Hey, what do we need to do?’ At the end of the day it’s cool to work with people you grew up with, whether they’re household names to everyone else. I think that collaboration is more meaningful to me than others.”

Besphrenz spent time in the machine, and while it didn’t break the friendship or the creative force behind the group, the three childhood friends at least saw what was really important in all of this: Each other. It sounds corny to distill the group down to a name that sort of started as a joke, playing on the trend of the time for Soundcloud artists to spell things phonetically and in silly ways. But Smith continues to hammer the point home: The goal is just to keep making music together as the three of them. If that leads to an even more comfortable “career,” that’d be just great. But they’re very much in agreement that it’s not the prime directive.

If it were, they probably wouldn’t try so many different things in the writing process. But, that could turn out to be a blessing in an era where the robots are starting to try their hand at art.

“We’re making AI-proof music,” Smith says. “Maybe that’s the move.”

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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adidas And Austin's Kicking It Launch New Gazelle Sneaker Collab
Music

adidas And Austin’s Kicking It Launch New Gazelle Sneaker Collab

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

adidas Originals teamed up with an Austin, Texas sneaker hive powered by Black creatives for a fresh take on their classic Gazelle, inspired by the southern city. Naja Dorsey, creative director of Kicking It, joined forces with the sneaker brand for a first-of-its-kind collaboration and launched the Live Music Gazelle in homage to Austin’s reputation as the “Live Music Capital of the World” and the city’s rich history and culture.

The shoe’s silhouette and design reference Austin’s rich blues culture, with a suede upper dipped in five shades of blue. A red tongue and yellow Three Stripes add more color to the statement sneaker. Together, they mirror the legendary entrance of Antone’s Nightclub, where Stevie Ray Vaughan, Ray Charles, and other musical icons once performed. Finishing touches include a 512 lace charm, and Austin proudly displayed it on the back.

“I just wanted something to be funky, because Austin has that slogan, ‘Keep Austin weird.’  So, we kind of pride ourselves on that, too,” explained Dorsey to VIBE. “Being weird, being yourself, being different, standing out. Not necessarily following the trends, but setting it. I wanted to touch on that with the colors, want to touch on the story as far as the music scene, and how it is a segregated city, and how that music brought people together.”

He continued to detail, “My favorite design element would be the guitar strings on the side, being able to hold the shoe and actually feel like I’m playing a guitar with my size and ukulele. I was adamant about it, because at first, adidas maybe wanted to print it on, but I was like, ‘No, I want it embroidered so I could be able to feel it.’ The guitar pick that was stitched in was going to be printed on. I said, ‘No, let’s do some leather. Let’s stitch that on so we can have that quality.’

Another element of the collab extends Kicking It’s dedication to giving back to the community. Throughout the year, the team is responsible for food drives, giveaways, toy drives, and other community initiatives. A portion of proceeds from the Live Music Gazelle is set to fund scholarships for students at the local HBCU, Huston–Tillotson University, benefitting its jazz band and future music programming.

The Live Music Gazelle was revealed to the public with two celebratory events: an in-store gathering with hat customizations, grill and tooth gem molding, where customers were able to shop the sneakers. Following the family-friendly event, the party moved to Antone’s at night for a free community concert headlined by rising hip-hop artist J. Soulja and blues band The Keezy Experience.

The adidas x Kicking It “Live Music” Gazelle will retail for $120 and be available in limited quantities exclusively at Kicking It’s Austin store and online at kickingit.com.

“I appreciate the community that we built out here. We have been stamped like a staple here in Austin, Texas. And we have earned the trust of the community here to be like, ‘Hey, this is cool, this is hot, and they listen to us,’ reflected Dorsey. “And then when we do stuff, they do show out for us and support us. So I would say I feel loved, I feel special, and I just appreciate Austin for showing out for us.”

Take a look at the Live Music Gazelle and both events below.

 

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Rosalía Announces New Album Lux
Music

Rosalía Announces New Album Lux

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Following a smattering of billboard and poster teasers around the world, Rosalía has announced her new album—and it arrives in less than a month. Lux, the Spanish pop star’s fourth studio album, will be released November 7 via Columbia. Details on the follow-up to 2022’s Motomami are otherwise scarce, but you can check out the album cover below.

Following the release of Motomami, Rosalía embarked on a world tour behind the Grammy-winning album and released a deluxe edition. In the years since, she has also appeared as a guest artist on several collaborations: She joined forces with Björk, for “Oral”; Blackpink’s Lisa, for “New Woman”; and Ralphie Choo, for “Omega.” She also released an EP with her then-fiance Rauw Alejandro in 2023. More recently, Rosalía was announced as a cast member in the upcoming third season of HBO’s Euphoria, set to premiere in 2026.

Revisit the interview “Work Hard, Play Hard: How Rosalía Makes Her Music.”

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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‘The Office’ Australia reboot has been cancelled after one season
Music

‘The Office’ Australia reboot has been cancelled after one season

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

The Australian version of The Office has been cancelled after one season after being hit by negative audience reactions.

The eight-episode run premiered on Amazon Prime Video in October last year, with Felicity Ward playing Hannah Howard, the managing director of the Flinley Craddick packaging company. She was the first ever female lead of an Office spin-off.

It was met with mixed reviews and became the subject of some social media backlash, with one X user writing that it made them “want to drink a pint of bleach” and another describing it as “possibly the worst version” of the show. It did, however, perform well in Australia, earning the top-rated opening weekend for a local original show on its release.

Now, it has been reported by The Nightly that Prime Video have cancelled the show, although they have not given a reason for their decision.

It was the 14th adaptation of the BBC series, originally created by Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant and airing for two seasons in 2001 and 2002 and a Christmas special in 2003.

NME gave the “workaday Australian remake” a two-star review, describing it as being “dogged by déjà vu” but adding: “It took the US Office two seasons to stop being a bad cover version and hit its stride. In this cutthroat climate of streaming where series are prematurely culled, will this be allowed time to settle into its own unique rhythm? A fatalistic question that would probably be followed in The Office by a reaction cutaway shot to somebody’s eyes awkwardly darting from side to side.”

When the Australian adaptation was announced in May 2023, Gervais said in a statement: “I’m very excited about Australia remaking my little show from the turn of the century. Office politics have changed a bit in 20 years, so can’t wait to see how they navigate a modern-day David Brent.”

Elsewhere, the new spin-off show The Paper debuted last month on Peacock in the US and Sky and NOW TV in the UK. It takes place in the same universe as the US version and stars Domhnall Gleeson as an idealistic new employee looking to revive a local newspaper.

In a four-star review, NME wrote: “Tim Key may be a scene-stealer but he’s matched by Impacciatore, who imbues narcissistic Esmeralda with deranged dignity. Quite often, she’s the agent of chaos who busts this show out of its comfort zone. In one episode, she becomes convinced that office duffer Barry (Duane R. Shepard Sr.) is an incubus pursuing her in her dreams. Does it all add up to watercooler TV? Probably not, but The Paper is definitely worth a binge on your next annual leave day.”

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Gracie Abrams' Red Rocks Shows Will Be Livestreamed by Apple Music
Music

Gracie Abrams’ Red Rocks Shows Will Be Livestreamed by Apple Music

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

The Secret of Us (Deluxe) tour might be over, but you can relive it on screen this fall

Gracie Abrams‘ The Secret of Us (Deluxe) tour might be over, but you can relive it this fall. Apple Music will stream the singer-songwriter’s Red Rocks show on Oct. 29.

Abrams played the iconic Morrison, Colorado venue on Aug. 11 and 12, where she performed her hit “That’s So True,” the fan favorite “Death Wish,” gems from the deluxe, and surprise songs (“Block Me Out” on Night One, “I Know It Won’t Work” on Night Two).

It’s unclear which show (or both) will stream, but Apple Music’s livestream is slated for Oct. 29 at 10 p.m. ET, and will be available afterwards on Spatial Audio. Zane Lowe will interview Abrams prior to the event.

Abrams released The Secret of Us, her second album, in June 2024, and dropped the deluxe version that October. The 2024 and 2025 tour legs allotted to 83 shows (including her Madison Square Garden debut). The two Red Rocks performances took place in the final month of tour, which concluded with two nights in Mexico City on Aug. 26 and 27.

Earlier this week, Abrams appeared in conversation with Cyndi Lauper for Rolling Stone‘s Musicians on Musicians package, and discussed her lengthy tour. “The whole thing is constantly shocking,” she told Lauper. “I also find the dopamine-hit piece of it all interesting to contend with, when you stop for even two days.”

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She added: “My greatest takeaway from touring, especially over the past year, because I was feeling kind of existential about it right after the election and everything was on fire … it turns out the best and highest use of my being here on this planet is for the two hours a night that people feel they can come and have some place to, at the very least, be around strangers who are expressing anything loudly. We don’t even really get that these days.”

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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2025 Academy Museum Gala Red Carpet: Best Photos
Music

2025 Academy Museum Gala Red Carpet: Best Photos

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

The 2026 MET Gala may still be several months away, but Hollywood’s biggest stars have another fashion playground.

On Saturday (Oct. 18), some of the biggest names across film and television descended upon Los Angeles for the fifth annual Academy Museum Gala, which has been nicknamed the Met Gala of the West. Held every year since 2021 to raise funds for the academy initiatives and display objects tied to key cinematic history, the 2025 Academy Museum Gala honored I’m Still Here director Walter Salles, Vantage Award recipient Bownen Yang, and Oscar winners Penélope Cruz and Bruce Springsteen. Notably, the Boss is the subject of one of this year’s best picture contenders, Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere, which stars Emmy winner Jeremy Allen White as the titular music icon. This year’s co-chairs included Jon M. Chu, Common, Viola Davis and Julius Tennon, Robert Downey Jr. and Susan Downey, Jennifer Hudson and Alejandro Ramírez Magaña.

Naturally, the Academy Museum Gala red carpet featured some of music’s buzziest stars, including Charli xcx, Addison Rae, Haim, Olivia Rodrigo, Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco, and Riley Keough. Charli xcx, who’s currently working alongside Jack Antonoff on the soundtrack for Emerald Fennell’s forthcoming Wuthering Heights adaptation while readying her own Kylie Jenner-starring Moment film, wore a dramatic all-black leather and lace gown that drove home her now-trademark Brat fashion aesthetic. Newlyweds Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco opted for matching blazers, Grammy-nominated sister trio Haim reached for classy, floral-accented neutrals and Hilary Duff, who recently signed a new deal with Atlantic Records, delivered a pop of color with a ravishing bright purple gown.

Check out the full gallery for photos of all the musicians at the 2025 Academy Museum Gala.

  • Olivia Rodrigo

    Olivia Rodrigo at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Image Credit: Gilbert Flores

    Olivia Rodrigo at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

  • Addison Rae

    Addison Rae at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.Addison Rae at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Image Credit: Gilbert Flores

    Addison Rae at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

  • Este Haim, Alana Haim and Danielle Haim

    Este Haim, Alana Haim and Danielle Haim at Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.Este Haim, Alana Haim and Danielle Haim at Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Image Credit: Michael Buckner

    Este Haim, Alana Haim and Danielle Haim at Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

  • Charli xcx

    Charli xcx at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.Charli xcx at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Image Credit: Gilbert Flores

    Charli xcx at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

  • Hilary Duff

    Hilary Duff at Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.Hilary Duff at Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Image Credit: Michael Buckner

    Hilary Duff at Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

  • Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco

    Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Image Credit: Gilbert Flores

    Selena Gomez and Benny Blanco at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

  • Jennifer Hudson

    Jennifer Hudson at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.Jennifer Hudson at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Image Credit: Gilbert Flores

    Jennifer Hudson at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala held at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

  • Riley Keough

    Riley Keough at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.Riley Keough at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
    Image Credit: Michael Buckner

    Riley Keough at the Fifth Annual Academy Museum Gala at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on October 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

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October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Trump country music dancing
Music

Trump Country Music’s March of the Cowboy Boots » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Donald Trump’s political base has been regularly fortified by a demographic raised on this century’s country music. Moreover, country music has grown so big that pop stars are now gravitating to it in the same way country stars once gravitated to pop in the 2010s. Just listen to recent material by Beyoncé, Post Malone, Ed Sheeran, Lana Del Rey, and Sabrina Carpenter. Inadvertently, their cachet has helped normalize and mainstream the ethos of both country music and Trump.

Bro-country still lingers, too, its testosterone-fueled songs now sounding like manifestos for the stereotypical Trumpian male. Despite “backlash” subgenres like neo-traditional and boyfriend country emerging, the industry sees little reason to deviate too far from bro’s macho imagery, now marketed and manifested throughout the nation. The more politicized male acts have been given particular attention, coalescing into a sub-subgenre one might call “Trump country”.

Like Merle Haggard for Richard Nixon and Toby Keith for George Bush Jr., Trump has his own country music star representative in Jason Aldean. Now an old-school bro with a John Wayne image and demeanor, Aldean measured and manipulated the rising tide and temperature of Trumpism with “Try That In a Small Town” (2023).

Trump Country Music’s March

Calculated to create controversy and clicks by its co-writers, Kelley Lovelace, Neil Thrasher, Tully Kennedy, and Kurt Allison, the song’s anti-liberal message was framed as a vigilante fantasy of small-town (code: white conservative) America responding to urban protesters (code: Black Lives Matter). Its effect was far-reaching, helping stir and rally the Republican base just in time for the 2024 presidential election.

The contentious aspects of the song, though, had less to do with the lyrics—which differed little from any number of songs by Charlie Daniels, Hank Williams Jr., and Kid Rock—than the video, which propelled the song from a minor to a major hit. Against a backdrop of rioters that suggests lawless American cities, Aldean threatens the similarly inclined with “try that in a small town”, inferring that calling the police would not be his first line of response.

Other scenes show the singer and band performing in front of the Maury County Courthouse in Columbia, Tennessee, the infamous site of 18-year-old Henry Choate’s lynching in 1927, and the Columbia Uprising in 1947.

Reactions to the video from within country music culture were immediate, with Jason Isbell, Sheryl Crow, and Margo Price condemning its endorsement of vigilante justice, and Travis Tritt, Cody Johnson, and Brantley Gilbert defending the clip for its law and order message. Released at the same time various Republican presidential candidates were vying for their party’s nomination, co-option fever broke out. Vivek Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley both used the song at campaign rallies.

A product built to exploit emotions of fear and anger, Aldean’s song was ideal for politicians seeking to outflank Trump on the right. When Country Music Television and other outlets pulled the video from rotation, this enabled the far right’s cherished victim role to be played. Then South Dakota governor Kristi Noem feigned shock that anyone would want to “cancel” the song, while her Arkansas comrade-in-performative outrage, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, argued that the urban left should spend less time trying to ban songs and more time trying to stop criminals and looters.

Trump soon added to the chorus, posting on his Truth Social account, “Jason Aldean is a fantastic guy who just came out with a great new song. Support Jason all the way. MAGA!!!”

Trump, of course, went on to win the nomination and the 2024 election, supported by appearances along the campaign trail by Aldean. The atmosphere of anger and outrage the singer had helped create across red America perhaps helped the president-elect even more. Aldean got what he asked for, too, as Trump’s regime now applies the kind of unconstitutional treatment of civil protesters the singer would no doubt welcome.

Another song co-opted relentlessly by the far right in the same year, 2023, was “Rich Men North of Richmond”, by Oliver Anthony. Sounding more like Appalachian folk than bro-country, Anthony’s song came out of left field but soon landed on the political right’s plate. Bypassing the Nashville superstructure, “Rich Men North of Richmond” signaled a return to roots music after decades of country rock and pop dominance. It also evoked the same feelings of anger, grievance, and nostalgia Aldean had in “Try That in a Small Town”.

Like that song, Anthony’s struck a chord with heartland America, and it, too, shot to the top of the national Trump country music charts. Both songs tapped into populist appeals, and both spoke to and stoked working-class resentments by targeting perceived elites.

Early in the song, the populism appears to come from the left as the singer rages against low pay and greedy politicians in Washington. Then, though, the lyrics take a rightward turn as Anthony shifts the blame to a section of the poor by calling out “the obese milking welfare”, an update of Reagan’s “welfare queen” scapegoat. 

By the time of the Republican primaries in 2023, Anthony’s song had gone viral, becoming a topic of national discussion. It was brought up in the first question of the primary debate on August 23rd when moderator Martha MacCallum of Fox News said, “As we sit here tonight, the number one song on the Billboard chart is called ‘Rich Men North of Richmond.’ It is by a singer from Farmville, Virginia, named Oliver Anthony. His lyrics speak of alienation, of deep frustration with the state of government and of this country.”

MacCallum then asked why the song was resonating so strongly, noting that Washington, D.C. is approximately 100 miles north of Richmond. This set up the participants to co-opt the song by aligning it with their own proposals for less government and less welfare spending.

Georgia U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene later jumped on the bandwagon, giving the song a nationalistic spin by calling it “the anthem of the forgotten Americans who truly support this nation.” In the ensuing weeks, it seemed that “Rich Men North of Richmond” was embraced by as many far-right influencers as MAGA voters.

Dismayed by the political exploitation of his song, Anthony’s protestations of misinterpretation and misappropriation were ultimately drowned out by the tsunami of far-right voices—as right-wing political strategist Steve Bannon would say, flooding the zone. Progressive country songwriter Nick Shoulders summarized, “It’s a song about the people who were trying to present [Anthony] as one of them, and it shows how insidious and intense the far right is when it attempts to co-opt country music and rural grievances.”

When co-opting country artists as their own, the far right gives them protected status. Thus, just as Trump is always pardoned for his “sins” and his indiscretions rationalized, so country singer Morgan Wallen was treated similarly when TMZ posted footage of him shouting out racial slurs. Although initially condemned within the industry, the singer was soon cast as a victim of the “gotcha” left.

Furthermore, Trump’s America rallied around the country star such that sales of his music shot up 339% the day after the incident. As with Aldean’s song, purchasing became part of the protest against cancel culture, a way of showing which side you are on. Trump country music, like Trump himself, essentially means that as long as your hurtful words or actions provoke or “own” the liberals, you will not face negative consequences for them. In fact, those moral failings can boost your career and make you a hero of the MAGA masses.

Hick-Hop’s Bro Country Beat

One subgenre of Trump country music that has made divisive resentment politics its primary appeal is country rap, or “hick-hop”. As both rap and country music have gradually drifted to the right in recent years, each increasingly driven by a monetary incentive, it was inevitable that they would cross paths despite their historic antipathy to one another. Bro-country integrated elements of rap and introduced some unlikely collaborations, Ludacris teaming up with Aldean for the remix of “Dirt Road Anthem” (2011) and Florida Georgia Line featuring Nelly on the “Cruise” (2012) remix. All concerned benefited commercially from the mergers.

Country rap departs from these past ventures by going all-in on both genres, giving full recognition to the reality that most young people raised on country music this century were also raised on rap. Colt Ford is a key figure in this subgenre, producing his own country rap in the late 2000s while introducing others via his Average Joes Entertainment label. His tentacles of influence reached into bro-country, too; it was he who first penned and performed “Dirt Road Anthem” in 2008. Bubba Sparxxx was also an early innovator, his Deliverance (2003) album drawing attention to Georgia as the hub of country rap activity.

Common to this subculture is a hard-right bent that takes the topics of bro-country—trucks, mudding, drinking, and pretty girls in boots ‘n’ jorts—then adds images with a more political identity: guns, “rednecks”, and Confederate flags. Without support from Nashville’s Music Row or country radio, country rap operates much like Ku Klux Klan-funded country did during the 1960s; in the shadows and on the periphery of society.

There, greater space and autonomy enable an extreme and full-throated version of conservative country, one more appealing to militia types than mainstream Republicans. Among the ranks of these rap warriors are the Lacs, who host their own annual festival in Blackshear, Georgia, where bro-country fantasies are lived out and Trump is branded on shirts and hats. Their song, “Let Your Country Hang Out” (2012), advocates flying the Confederate flag in your front yard, a gesture that posse member “Uncle Snap” Sharpe justifies as satiating fans that identify with this symbol of southern pride and liberal trolling.

Other acts include Big Smo, who channels his inner Hank Jr. with “Rednecks Got It Right” (2015), and Upchurch, a comedian turned social media star who has maximized his profits by playing to hard-right white supporters who care little for rap but a lot for the messaging. In “Bloodshed” (2018), Upchurch offers a Trumpian take on the 2017 Charlottesville “Unite the Right” rally with the lines, “Hate groups throwin’ piss ‘cause they’re mad at a monument / …You fuckin’ degenerate, get your lazy ass off the grass / This ain’t a statue of slavery.”

MAGA rapper Forgiato Blow survives through the online sale of Trump-loving and liberal-hating music and merchandise. As a committed activist rapper, he serves an important role for his political hero, keeping his followers in a perpetually elevated state of anger and aggression, in the process herding them into a de facto private army ready and prepared to intimidate or attack any dissenters or detractors.

Trump Country Music’s Tuning Fork

All authoritarians seek to legitimize their regimes by establishing a subservient cultural wing. With its vast majority of fans voting Republican, Trump country music is a genre suited for the current administration to court, cultivate, and co-opt. As sociologist Tressie McMillan Cottom recently noted, “Our nation’s politics…have gone white nationalist. That makes country music, and Nashville, a good fit for the moment.” ( She continues, “Trumpist power brokers want to turn Nashville into the right wing’s Hollywood. They want Nashville for the same reason they want universities and the Kennedy Center.”

To achieve this goal requires willing participants and alliances, artists and industries prepared to accept, express, and promote the requisite politics. In Trump country music, the far right has found that those involved are either drawn in by ideology or incentivized by the financial rewards available. Today’s country music culture has become a quid pro quo zone in which all involved parties are rewarded for their graft and exploitation.

For this to flourish, a network of communications is needed, an echo chamber where the voices of far-right country bounce into far-right media, which bounce into far-right politics, all ultimately bouncing back to the country fans that finance them all. Those consumers are (unwitting) contributors, prompted with values-based propaganda by their cultural representatives to buy the ideologically right music (e.g., Aldean) and to boycott dissenters (e.g., the Chicks).

For this circular flow of Trump country music to run smoothly, all artists are obliged to tow the party line. Thus, when country superstar Zach Bryan recently had the audacity to include lyrics in a song that critique the activities of ICE, he immediately incurred the wrath of both Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary of public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security, and its secretary, Kristi Noem.  Surveying what is currently happening elsewhere across America’s cultural landscape, one might ask: Will country music be next to experience the threats, bribes, and shakedowns necessary to create a Trump-friendly world of entertainment?


Works Cited [underway]

Barnette, Emma and Egwuonwu, Nnamdi. “Haley and Ramaswamy play Jason Aldean song ‘Try That In A Small Town’ at campaign events”. NBC News. 20 July 2023.

Cox, Bradley. “Shooter Jennings Says ‘Try That In A Small Town” Shouldn’t Be Considered For A Grammy Because It’s A Crappy Song’”. WhiskeyRiff. 3 November 2023.

Sforza, Lauren. “Noem ‘shocked’ over attempts to ‘cancel’ Jason Aldean, his song and beliefs”. The Hill. 19 July 2023.

Zemler, Emily. “Sheryl Crow Slams Jason Aldean’s ‘Try That in a Small Town’: ‘It’s Just Lame’”. Rolling Stone. 19 July 2023.

(https://thehill.com/blogs/in-the-know/4110225-republicans-rush-to-defend-jason-aldean-and-try-that-in-a-small-town/)

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFIBpVMoxWs)

(https://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/newly-released-country-song-rich-men-north-of-richmond-from-unknown-artist-instantly-becomes-right-wing-anthem/)

(https://jacobin.com/2023/09/country-music-white-rural-working-class-south-civil-rights-challenge-injustice) 

(https://www.businessinsider.com/morgan-wallens-music-sales-skyrocketed-racial-slur-controversy-2021-2)

(https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/rhymes-from-the-backwoods-the-rise-of-country-rap-205828/)  

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/18/opinion/country-music-beyonce-lana.html)

(https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/08/arts/music/zach-bryan-song-kristi-noem.htm

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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"Walk and Deal with Consequences Later"
Music

Walk and Deal with Consequences Later

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard frontman Stu Mackenzie has opened up about the band’s decision to leave Spotify over CEO Daniel Ek’s investment in AI military tech. In a recent interview with The Guardian, he said that the Aussie rockers weren’t intent on “start[ing] a movement,” but just doing what fit with their principles.

“We have done a lot of different things over the years, but sometimes you just forget that you have free will — you can do whatever you want in these spaces,” Mackenzie said. “I don’t particularly want to try to start a movement or something like that — I’m happy if other people join. But for us, it was a decision about our music and a decision about what we think is right and what we think is not right.”

Get King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard Tickets Here

He continued, “[We decided] we’re just gonna walk and deal with consequences later. Of which there have not been many… nobody seems to really care too much.”

Mackenzie explained their decision was inspired by Leah Senior, a fellow Melbourne musician who is a close collaborator with King Gizzard. “When Leah left, she and I had this one conversation about it — I told her I was really proud of her and I thought it was an awesome thing,” he recalled. “It’s kind of a beautiful thing — you look at people leaving and think ‘That’s really admirable.’ I admire the courage to do the thing that is different and also right.”

Related Video

After leaving Spotify, King Gizzard made their entire catalog available on Bandcamp under a “name your price” model. The initiative was a massive success, leading to their discography taking up the entire Top 25 of the platform’s best-selling albums section.

According to Mackenzie, this “didn’t really feel like a big move” because Bandcamp was already one of their larger platforms. “Bandcamp is actually quite a cool place, and it would be nice if we can lure some people over there [so they can] discover some other amazing music,” he said. “It’s been a really big part of King Gizzard’s story from the very beginning, and I’m happy for people who listen to our music to spend some more time there.”

Several other artists have pulled their catalogs from Spotify after Ek was revealed to be an investor in Helsing, a German company specializing in AI military tech, including Massive Attack, Deerhoof, and Xiu Xiu.

Helsing has since clarified that its technology is being used for defense purposes. “Currently we see misinformation spreading that Helsing’s technology is deployed in war zones other than Ukraine,” a statement reads. “This is not correct. Our technology is deployed to European countries for deterrence and for defence against the Russian aggression in Ukraine only.”

King Gizzard are currently gearing up to close out 2025 with a combination of orchestral shows and “rave sets” in the UK, Europe, and Australia, with their tour resuming on Halloween. Tickets can be purchased here.

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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