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Fred Durst Honors Late Limp Bizkit Bandmate Sam Rivers
Music

Fred Durst Honors Late Limp Bizkit Bandmate Sam Rivers

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Following the sad news that Limp Bizkit bassist Sam Rivers has passed away at age 48, frontman Fred Durst has posted a video message on his Instagram account honoring his late bandmate.

Durst began the video by talking about the vital role Rivers played in the formation of Limp Bizkit, discussing how he saw a then teenage Rivers playing with another band, and told him about his vision for Limp Bizkit.

“Sam Rivers, the legend,” began Durst. “Such a gifted and wonderful person. … There Sam was on the stage with his band, killing it on the bass. and I went, ‘Oh my gosh, this guy’s amazing.’ In my mind, you had to start with the rhythm section, the bass and the drums. … I saw Sam play, and I was blown away.”

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He continued, “I went up to Sam after the show, and I sad, ‘Hey man, you’re unbelievable, and I got this idea for a band I wanna do, and I kinda threw it out there, and I told him what I wanted it to be, and he looked at me, and says, ‘Killer, I’m in. Let’s do it!’… That’s kinda how things started to come together.”

Turning to the present day, Durst talked about Limp Bizkit’s recent resurgence over the past few years, saying, “It’s so tragic that he’s not here right now, and I’ve gone through gallons and gallons of tears since yesterday, and I’m thinking, ‘Sam’s a legend.’”

He added, “Here we are just having an incredible moment, and it’s going so beautifully smooth, and Sam was just really, really happy about it. … What he’s left us behind is priceless.”

Watch Fred Durst’s full tribute to Sam Rivers in the video via Instagram.

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter Performs “Manchild” and “Nobody’s Son” on Saturday Night Live: Watch
Music

Sabrina Carpenter Performs “Manchild” and “Nobody’s Son” on Saturday Night Live: Watch

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Sabrina Carpenter was the host and musical guest on last night’s (October 18) episode of Saturday Night Live, where she performed songs from her new album Man’s Best Friend. Dressed in SNL-themed underwear, Carpenter sang the single “Manchild” into a hairbrush; later, she donned a gi and did some karate for the album track “Nobody’s Son.” Carpenter also starred in sketches throughout the evening as a 12-year-old boy podcast host, a girlboss motivational speaker who suffers a head injury, and a singing washing machine.

In her opening monologue, Carpenter addressed the controversy around the Man’s Best Friend album cover. “What people don’t realize is that’s just how they cropped it,” she joked. “If you zoom out it’s clearly a picture from the [Saturday Night Live] 50th anniversary special of Bowen [Yang] helping me up by the hair after Martin Short shoved me out of the buffet line, saying something like ‘Daddy need his mini quiche.’” Carpenter also touched on her brand as a “horndog popstar”—“I’m not just horny, I’m also turned on, and sexually charged”—did some sexually charged crowd work, and was nearly arrested by Keenan Thompson. Watch Carpenter’s full speech and performances, plus her SNL promo video with cast member Marcello Hernandez, below.

Last night marked Carpenter’s third appearance on Saturday Night Live—fourth if you count her cameo in this year’s Quinta Brunson-hosted episode. She first stopped by Studio 8H as musical guest on the heels of her 2024 album Short n’ Sweet, and was a part of SNL50: The Anniversary Special, where she performed a duet of the Simon & Garfunkel song “Homeward Bound” alongside Paul Simon. On Thursday, Carpenter will kick off a run of North American arena shows, with stops in Pittsburgh, New York, Nashville, Toronto, and Los Angeles.

Season 51 of Saturday Night Live premiered on October 4. The season debut was hosted by Bad Bunny, with Doja Cat serving as musical guest. After taking this week off, SNL’s next three episodes are set to feature Miles Teller and Brandi Carlile, Nikki Glaser and Sombr, and Glen Powell and Olivia Dean, respectively.

Read about “Manchild” in “20 Contenders for the 2025 Song of the Summer.”

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Watch Waxahatchee join Rilo Kiley for 'With Arms Outstretched' at final reunion tour show
Music

Watch Waxahatchee join Rilo Kiley for ‘With Arms Outstretched’ at final reunion tour show

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Rilo Kiley brought out Waxahatchee to round out their reunion tour with a version of ‘With Arms Outstretched’ – check it out below.

Jenny Lewis and co. have been playing the ‘Sometimes When You’re On, You’re Really Fucking On Tour’ in the US this year, their first extended run of shows since 2008, although they did play a one-off gig for a livestream benefit in 2021.

The final date in the run came on Saturday night (October 18) at Los Angeles’ Greek Theatre, and Waxahatchee – aka Katie Crutchfield – served as the opening act, having been a self-confessed superfan of the group.

Together, they sang ‘With Arms Outstretched’, a fan favourite track from Rilo Kiley’s second album ‘The Execution Of All Things’, released in 2002. Watch footage of the collaboration here:

Rilo Kiley played:

‘The Execution Of All Things’
‘Spectacular Views’
‘Paint’s Peeling’
‘The Moneymaker’
‘Dreamworld’
‘I Never’
‘Glendora’
‘Close Call’
‘It’s A Hit’
‘Does He Love You?’
‘Ripchord’
‘The Good That Won’t Come Out’
‘Silver Lining’
‘With Arms Outstretched’ (with Waxahatchee)
‘A Better Son/Daughter’
‘Portions For Foxes’
‘Let Me Back In’
‘Breakin’ Up’
‘Pictures Of Success’

Jenny Lewis told NME in 2019 that she was open to getting the band back together, and then in 2023, the singer spoke to NME again about the prospect of a Rilo Kiley reunion, dismissing immediate hopes by saying: “I’ve got a lot on my plate […] We’re not talking about it, but it’s not off the table.”

Although live shows have been few and far between since 2011, Rilo Kiley did reissue their 1999 self-titled debut album in 2020 and made it available on streaming services for the first time.

As for Waxahatchee, her sixth studio album ‘Tigers Blood’ was released last year, which NME awarded the full five stars. “These songs offer a more adult and grounded perspective than ones like ‘Lone Star Lake’ and ‘Evil Spawn’; they’re about the person who feels like home rather than the one who gets your blood pumping,” the review read. “It’s a nice counterweight that feels emblematic of ‘Tigers Blood’ — it’s a burning fire, and it’s a warm summer evening at once.”

It was later named as one of NME’s 50 best albums of 2024.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Bad Bunny's Super Bowl Controversy: History Behind MAGA's Reaction
Music

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Controversy: History Behind MAGA’s Reaction

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

When the NFL, Roc Nation, and Apple Music announced that Bad Bunny would be the 2026 Super Bowl halftime performer, the noise started almost immediately. On one side, there were cheers and excitement: His fans recognized the historic nature of the performance, which will go down in the books as the first Super Bowl halftime entirely in Spanish. Plus, the announcement came toward the tail end of yet another massive year for Bad Bunny — after a triumphant 31-date residency in Puerto Rico, an Amazon stream of the concert that broke records, and the blockbuster success of his chart-busting album Debí Tirar Más Fotos.

On the other side, there was just as much commotion, but these conversations were almost hysterical — and far uglier. Conservatives blasted the NFL’s choice, taking issue with pretty much every facet of Latin music’s most visible star. His music? Unlistenable. His politics? Unacceptable. His lyrics in Spanish? Un-American.

Bad Bunny has been such a beloved figure across the global music landscape precisely because he’s been authentically himself, embracing fashion and aesthetic choices that subvert gender norms and refusing to make palatable, commercial pop in English. He’s been unafraid to speak his mind in his songs, often speaking out about difficulties in Puerto Rico, like gentrification, economic difficulties, and the long-term impacts of colonization. And while he isn’t a polemical artist who staged long tirades against the administration, he has stood up about issues he cares about, such as the rights of immigrants amid the government’s cruel deportation policies. In an interview with i-D magazine, he shared part of the reason he opted against touring in the U.S. was because he didn’t want ICE to terrorize his largely Latino fanbase outside his concerts.

This makes him a target for conservatives. Newsmax host Greg Kelly called for a boycott of the NFL, insisting that Bad Bunny “hates America, hates President Trump, hates ICE, hates the English language! He’s just a terrible person.” Even the highest levels of government have gotten involved. Kristi Noem, the Homeland Security secretary, threatened that immigration agents would be “all over” the event. Trump later went on Newsmax to bash the artist, saying, “I never heard of him. I don’t know who he is,” Trump said. “I don’t know why they’re doing it, it’s crazy, and then they blame it on some promoter that they hired to pick up entertainment. I think it’s absolutely ridiculous.”

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Turning Point USA, the conservative youth-focused group founded by the late Charlie Kirk, decided it would organize a “counterprogram” during Bad Bunny’s performance, calling it “The All-American Halftime Show” to celebrate “faith, family, and freedom.” A website contact form gives followers a chance to request music and artists, including worship music, country, and “anything in English.” MAGA supporters drafted inane petitions to replace his performance and even called for his deportation — despite the fact that Puerto Rico is a territory of the U.S. and he’s an American citizen.

As maddening and outsized as the reaction feels, it’s part of an unfortunate, small-minded tradition of sidelining and othering Latin artists in the United States, even though these musicians are often American and represent huge swaths of the population. These moments are callous and drenched in xenophobia, yet they go back decades. In 1968, for example, the Puerto Rican artist José Feliciano performed “The Star-Spangled Banner” at the 1968 World Series — only he did it in a stripped-back, Latin-influenced style on his acoustic guitar. The performance became a lightning rod; many people took it as if it was some kind of counterculture protest and were confused by Feliciano’s long hair and sunglasses (which he wore because he was born blind.) They raged to radio stations and sent him hate mail, with some even calling for his deportation — even though Feliciano, like Bad Bunny, was born in Puerto Rico and is a U.S. citizen. History, and ignorance, repeats itself, and in this case, it had dire consequences on Feliciano’s career for a few years.

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“I was a little depressed, to tell you the truth,” Feliciano said later. “And then they stopped playing me. Like I had the plague, or something.” Years later, in 2018, he reflected on the incident and shared that his rendition was actually his way of honoring his country from a deeply felt place. “When I did the anthem, I did it with the understanding in my heart and mind that I did it because I’m a patriot,” Feliciano said. “I was trying to be a grateful patriot. I was expressing my feelings for America when I did the anthem my way instead of just singing it with an orchestra.” (Perhaps not coincidentally, Bad Bunny paid homage to Feliciano as a pioneer and trailblazer, bringing him onstage during his 2023 headlining set.)

Other examples of bringing Latin artists onto mainstream stages have come with an unnecessary amount of controversy, even decades later. Take the 1999 Grammys: Back then, Ricky Martin was a star on the rise, having successfully plotted a career from child boy band Menudo to breakout solo act. He had already become a household name in Latin music, and his album Vuelve was nominated for a Grammy for Best Latin Pop. His label head Tommy Mottola began pushing to have Martin perform one of the tracks — the famed “Cup of Life” FIFA anthem that Martin had written for the 1998 World Cup — as an opening number for the Grammys telecast. Despite Martin’s stage presence and star power, producers for the awards show disapproved of the idea, convinced a Latin act singing primarily in Spanish wouldn’t work for the show.

Mottola later recalled how intense the pushback was. “There was tremendous resistance from the Grammys,” Mottola told Billboard. “They did not want an ‘unknown’ to perform, yet we had already sold 10 million copies of Vuelve worldwide. To me, that was absolutely UNACCEPTABLE.  We had enormous leverage at that time with almost every major superstar on our label. We heavily voiced our ‘opinion and influence’ and said: ‘Ricky must have a performance on the Grammys!’ No was not an option.”

It took Mottola fighting for that moment to make it happen — and a standing ovation and thousands of records sold later eventually proved that the Grammys short-sighted biases didn’t hold any water. It seems even more ridiculous today, now that Latin music continues to generate more than $1 billion in revenue. Bad Bunny later played that same slot at the Grammy awards — and while he didn’t appear to face opposition from the show’s higher-ups, he did go viral when captions popped up on the CBS telecast, describing his lyrics as “singing in non-English.”

The all-too-frequent xenophobic knee-jerk reaction to Latin acts is often triggered by language alone. Just this June, the singer Nezza, who is of Colombian and Dominican descent, was asked to do the national anthem at a Dodgers game. She had prepared to do “El Pendón Estrellado,” a Spanish version written in 1945 by Clotilde Arias after the Division of Cultural Cooperation of the Department of State asked for translated versions of the “Star Spangled Banner.” (These were solicited as part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “Good Neighbor Policy” toward Latin America.) According to some reports, Dodgers officials told her at the last minute she couldn’t perform in Spanish — but she did so anyway, angering conservatives and sparking outrage and insults online.

Nezza explained her decision at the time in a statement to Rolling Stone, saying “representation matters.” She added, “For anyone clutching their pearls, it’s important to know: in 1945, President Franklin D. Roosevelt himself commissioned an official Spanish version of ‘The Star-Spangled Banner’ to honor and include Latin Americans. That version — ‘El Pendón Estrellado’ — tells the exact same story, word for word in meaning, and is set to the exact same melody. The heart of the anthem does not change with the language. So why was I told I couldn’t sing it? Make it make sense.”

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Longtime prejudices have meant that Latin artists have been regarded with suspicion, doubt, and even outrage throughout music history, but these attitudes have twisted into something far more intense and sinister as a result of the current administration. Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl performance comes at a time when the government has antagonized Latino communities, spread anti-Latino rhetoric, and treated immigrants with abject cruelty, callously celebrating images of forceful, often violent arrests and brutal detainments. Even speaking Spanish is othered by conservatives and painted as anti-American. As soon as Trump came into office, he passed an executive order to make English the official language of the U.S. while the White House removed Spanish translations from its official websites. On social media, viral videos have shown right-wingers confronting people speaking Spanish and associating the language with those who don’t “belong” here, ignoring the fact that 18 percent of the population is bilingual.

But despite the rhetoric rooted in such an ugly history, Bad Bunny will still take the stage in February, and he’ll perform his songs in the language he wrote them in. That moment will represent millions of people in this country, including many of the Latinos who make up 20 percent of the population. What he chooses to say or do will ultimately be up to him, just the inherent act of him stepping under that spotlight will be a political statement — one that will speak to his roots, his lineage, and the history of Latin artists who have helped bring him here. No matter what, it will be a moment of self-expression — and one that’s deeply American, too.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Brandy Explains Abrupt Exit From Stage at Chicago Concert With Monica
Music

Brandy Explains Abrupt Exit From Stage at Chicago Concert With Monica

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Brandy made an unexpected exit from the stage Saturday night (Oct. 18) at Chicago’s United Center, where she was performing with Monica on the singers’ co-headlining The Boy Is Mine Tour. While she made it through most of the show, her abrupt departure meant fans didn’t get to hear the pair’s signature duet “The Boy Is Mine,” a hit that topped the Billboard Hot 100 songs chart for 13 weeks in 1998.

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On Sunday, Brandy explained that her early exit was due to a medical concern. She posted a full statement on Instagram.

“To my dear fans in Chicago,” Brandy wrote, “Thank you all for the overwhelming love, support, and—most importantly—your prayers. I sincerely apologize for the abrupt end to last night’s performance in Chicago. After weeks of nonstop rehearsals, last night I experienced dehydration and feelings of wanting to faint. Everyone involved agreed that prioritizing my well-being was of the utmost importance.”

“I still made the decision to try and return and give it my all despite not feeling ok,” said Brandy. “With having to make some adjustments and the show being very technical, unfortunately, it was impossible to fully connect sonically with the production. I really appreciate everyone’s best efforts.”

She added, “I’m deeply grateful to my sister, Monica, for stepping up with such grace and professionalism and the entire crew for their continued care and support.”

Brandy said she sought medical care locally Saturday night and will return to the stage Sunday.

“I went from the arena to see a doctor nearby and have taken the proper precautions to help moving forward,” she wrote. “Your understanding, patience, and unwavering belief mean the world to me. I look forward to returning to the stage—stronger and more grateful than ever—alongside my girl, Monica, tonight in Indianapolis.”

Brandy and Monica have a three-day break following their Oct. 19 show in Indianapolis, before taking the stage together in Nashville on Oct. 24. Their joint tour runs through Dec. 14 in Jacksonville, Fla.

See Brandy’s statement below.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Andrea Bocelli Serenades Trump, Will Return to White House in December
Music

Andrea Bocelli Serenades Trump, Will Return to White House in December

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Back in 2016, Donald Trump tapped Andrea Bocelli to perform at his first inauguration before abruptly rescinding the invitation, reportedly to shield the famed tenor from backlash. On Friday, Bocelli stopped by the Oval Office and serenaded the US president, who announced the singer will return to the White House in December.

Trump advisor Margo Martin shared footage of the visit on social media. In typically gaudy fashion, Bocelli’s own music was blasted throughout the White House and even the Oval Office. The president then coaxed him into singing along, presumably without giving the opera star a chance to warm up.

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Trump is a longtime fan of Bocelli’s work, having previously booked him to play a private party at Mar-a-Lago in 2010.

Bocelli’s White House performance is set for December 5th, two days ahead of the revamped 2025 Kennedy Center Honors. Trump will host that event, recognizing honorees including George Strait, KISS, Sylvester Stallone, and Gloria Gaynor.

President Donald J. Trump meets with Andrea Bocelli in the Oval Office. 🇺🇸 pic.twitter.com/8OqQ7FZej1

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— The White House (@WhiteHouse) October 17, 2025

World-famous Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli surprises President Trump with an Oval Office opera performance pic.twitter.com/MUPIOJdg8W

— FOX & Friends (@foxandfriends) October 18, 2025

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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FAKE NEWS! - SPIN
Music

FAKE NEWS! – SPIN

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

The city of Golden Sands may not actually exist, but it still has a weird and wonderful TV station. Programme 4 broadcasts commercials for local restaurants like Ramon’s Venetian Room (with new pleather-bound menus) and local businesses like Browner Carpeting (check out their floor-to-ceiling garage shag). There are ads for the annual Starving Artist Mathis Sale (“Every possible depiction of Johnny Mathis!”) as well as credits for made-up sitcoms like The William Joel Show, starring Billy Joel as a Long Island weatherman. Collected together at the web site programme4.tv, the series is strange, hilarious, maybe a little creepy, but infinitely rewatchable.

The William Joel Show, starring Billy Joel as a Long Island weatherman.

“In my mind it’s a local market station that’s maybe a little interdimensional,” says creator Rachel Lichtman. “It’s timeless and locationless. It’s this void where we’re not sure what year it is. There’s no hard date on anything. It’s more of a feeling.”

The unofficial mayor of Golden Sands, Lichtman co-wrote and directed the Programme 4 segments with contributions from the Sklar Brothers, Ted Leo, Julianna Hatfield, Patton Oswalt, and Tammy Faye Starlite. Constantly expanding — first through radio broadcasts from the local Easy 66 AM and eventually through small US tours — this world is built on small, well-observed details, which means the collection took a long time to create. “I’m taking notes all the time, and I’m always thinking of how I can weave something into this larger story,” says Lichtman, who describes the broadcasts as something like a comedy album. “But I don’t want to shape the story too much. I want your own personal emotional memories to be a character in the experience.”

Golden Sands’ interdimensional woman about town, Rachel Lichtman. (Photo courtesy of Programme 4)

Programme 4 is a love letter to a forgotten moment in television history, when national programming would air alongside local commercials on small-market stations. “This is obviously made by human people. It’s based on human memory. It’s not AI. Every bit of it has been touched by human hands, which is absolutely crucial right now. We wanted to acknowledge the humanity of the creators as well as the humanity of the audience.”

Call now for a quality shagging. (Photo courtesy of Programme 4)

Lichtman grew up outside of Chicago and was weaned on those regional advertisements, which offered her young self a glimpse of an adult world. “I thought those restaurants and nightclubs were the most important places in the world. This is what adults did. This is where adults went.” While Gen X and older viewers may recall similar experiences from their own childhoods, Lichtman has been surprised by the cross-generational appeal of Programme 4. “There are all these people of a certain age who are old enough to remember the pre-Internet days, but there’s also a whole crew of younger people who simply love the analog approach.”

In color! (Photo courtesy of Programme 4)

She hopes Golden Sands might be a pop-cultural utopia to her viewers, virtually if not physically. “I wanted to create a place where people could feel comfortable and seen in terms of the weird kinds of entertainment they like. So it’s not snobby. We tried to make it a very open and welcoming place. We’re all having drinks down at Ramon’s Venetian Room. Come join us!”

Join us! (Photo courtesy of Programme 4)

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Live From the Gas Station With TisaKorean
Music

Live From the Gas Station With TisaKorean

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Initially, Tisa made music to fill that same niche, eventually borrowing little production touches from outside influences of his own, like the Neptunes and Tyler, the Creator. He didn’t think his music was anything out of the ordinary until it started gaining traction online. “I thought my shit would be lame to somebody not from Houston,” he recalls while clicking through his beats on the computer. “But people from other places would be like, ‘Yo’ shit crazy!’ And I’d be like, ‘Really? We all sound like this in Houston.’”

Now long removed from the gym, Tisa changes out of workout clothes and into baggy shorts and a T-shirt that reads A1 Junky, a reference to his recently formed crew, A1, whose job I think is mostly to mob out in dance videos and wear matching outfits—stuff of that ilk. Joining us is co-face of the clique Mighty Bay, who has been partying, dancing, and occasionally rapping with Tisa since they met through a cousin nearly a decade ago. Together, they joke and sometimes finish each other’s sentences and share stories of tearing up dancefloors like they’re in Saturday Night Fever. “Partying cost too much now to not turn up; if I pay 500 to get in, you gon’ have to choke me out to make me not have a good time!” exclaims Tisa. Mighty Bay smiling along goes, “Yeah, we partying fanatics.”

The three of us spend the afternoon rolling around the south side of Houston in Tisa’s snow white Benz. They point out the club where they dance, the liquor store where they dance, and, of course, a few of the gas stations where they dance. We stop at Tisa’s favorite snow cone spot where he gets his drowned in cream the color of melted American cheese. Mighty Bay gets a kick out of my disgust. On line, a few people from the neighborhood come by and dap them up. Next, we head over to a Chinese chicken wing counter where we chow down as they get on my ass about the choices on Pitchfork’s “Best Rap Albums of All Time” list. “You guys are just rage baiting,” goes Mighty Bay; Tisa nods.

In the car, we’re listening to and cracking jokes about music. Mighty Bay has tears in his eyes from laughing so hard at the funky drum machine beats of Keith LeBlanc’s Major Malfunction, coming around to it by the final track. They go nuts for some old Afrika Bambaataa instrumentals, especially Tisa who tells us he was heavily influenced by a chopped-and-screwed version of “Planet Rock.” Tisa then plays a few beats that have lately been inspiring him as a producer: the G-funk bounce of Westside Connection’s “Bow Down,” the soul of UGK’s “Choppin’ Blades,” and more Boosie. “We really influenced the most by what we grew up around,” goes Tisa, barely talking when the beats play to catch every detail.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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David Gilmour says there is "no possible way" he would work with Roger Waters again
Music

David Gilmour says there is “no possible way” he would work with Roger Waters again

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

David Gilmour has said there is “no possible way” that he would ever work with his former Pink Floyd bandmate Roger Waters again.

The two creative forces behind the legendary rock band have been publicly feuding for much of the time since Waters’ departure in 1985, with the dispute becoming political in recent years. Last year, Gilmour stated that he would rather “steer clear of people who actively support genocidal and autocratic dictators like Putin and Maduro” than reunite with Waters.

It appears that he has not softened his stance over the past 12 months. In a new interview with The Telegraph, he was asked what it would take for him to join forces with Waters again. “Nothing,” he replied. “There is no possible way that I would do that.”

Going into further detail in the 2024 interview, Gilmour explained: “Nothing would make me share a stage with someone who thinks such treatment of women and the LGBT community is OK. On the other hand, I’d love to be back on stage with [Pink Floyd keyboardist] Rick Wright, who was one of the gentlest and most musically gifted people I’ve ever known.”

Gilmour’s wife Olly Samson has also been vocally outspoken against Waters’ politics, accusing him in 2023 of being “anti-Semitic to [his] rotten core” and “a Putin apologist and a lying, thieving, hypocritical, tax-avoiding, lip-synching, misogynistic, sick-with-envy, megalomaniac”. Gilmour re-shared Samson’s post, adding that “every word [is] demonstrably true”.

Waters himself issued a statement in response, in which he described Samson’s comments as “incendiary and wildly inaccurate”, adding that he “refutes [them] entirely”. He also said that he was “taking advice as to his position” regarding the claims.

Gilmour has also said he finds it “wearisome” to have to talk about Waters. “Do you know what decade of my life I was in when Roger left our pop group? My thirties. I am now 78. Where’s the relevance?” he told Mojo in 2024. In a Rolling Stone interview, however, he also stated that “one day there are things I will talk about”.

Elsewhere, Pink Floyd sold their back catalogue for $400million in a deal with Sony last year. Gilmour said it was a move driven primarily by his desire to “get out of the mud bath that it has been for quite a while”, rather than a financially-motivated decision.

Gilmour released the live concert film of his ‘David Gilmour Live At The Circus Maximus, Rome’ on Blu-ray on Friday (October 17), while a 50th anniversary edition of Pink Floyd’s ‘Wish You Were Here’ is coming on December 12 as a deluxe box set.

Earlier this year, Pink Floyd achieved their seventh UK Number One album with their live record ‘Pink Floyd At Pompeii – MCMLXXII’.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Bruce Springsteen ‘Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition' Review
Music

Bruce Springsteen ‘Nebraska ’82: Expanded Edition’ Review

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

There are good albums and great albums, and then there are holy records — worlds you enter as if into a dream and emerge with spirit and neurochemistry changed. Bruce Springsteen‘s 1982 classic Nebraska is one of those. Conceived at the crest of the Reagan years when the singer was in a dark place and rethinking his purpose, it was a pause and a hard reboot, a lo-fi set of home recordings that sounded like nothing in his catalog, and a calm before the storm of Born in the U.S.A. “I was after a feeling,” he wrote of Nebraska in his memoir, “a tone that felt like the world I’d known and still carried inside me.” The result was a hauntingly unsettled piece of art that many people hold very dear. 

But people always crave more, and given that A) Nebraska is mostly an album of spruced-up demos, B) it came from same writing sessions that later produced Born in the U.S.A., and C) superfans and E Streeters alike have been fueling rumors for years about a shelved Electric Nebraska LP, it’s amazing that it’s taken this long for said mythic lost album to surface. Clearly, we have Jeremy Allen White and Deliver Me From Nowhere to thank.

Anyway, here it is. Does it support the myth? Yes and no. Yes, in that there were indeed recordings made in 1982 of some Nebraska songs in fuller arrangements with Bruce’s E Street bandmembers. And no — because strictly speaking there is no Electric Nebraska per se, notwithstanding Springsteen’s equivocations on the point (as reported in this magazine) and the fact that one disc in this five-disc set is titled Electric Nebraska.

Nevertheless: as art history, theological inquiry, and a secular deep dive into the Brucebase rabbit-hole, Nebraska ‘82 is rich material, and for serious Springsteen fans, an essential listen. The first two discs are flecked with revelations. One disc contains outtakes from the original 4-track demos, made by Springsteen in his house in Colts Head, NJ, with extras from a follow-up acoustic studio session at The Power Station that tried, and failed, to better those recordings.

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The keystone is the demo of “Born in the U.S.A., which appeared on 1998’s epic loosie compilation Tracks. It opens this set and resonates differently here, showing how much of a piece it was with Nebraska’s vision and where Springsteen’s narrative songwriting was at. It also shows how wrong it would’ve been for Nebraska’s final tracklist — its anthemic chorus, yearning to be free, would’ve felt misplaced. The song’s next iteration, a raw guitar rocker on the Electric Nebraska disc, shows its evolution. Both versions showcase the song’s sharp social critique and conflicted pride more effectively than the final megahit version. But musically, neither is quite as compelling.

Similarly, at least in hindsight, you can hear the party jam in a softly insinuating draft of “Pink Cadillac,” the future Natalie Cole hit and Born in the U.S.A. b-side. It’s sexy and vaguely creepy, a weirdly intimate voice message. Elsewhere, the addition of corner-church piano and bass cloak the exquisite chill of Nebraska’s title track, while a stiff groove and overheated vocals diminish the articulate desperation “Atlantic City” (Levon Helm and The Band would pull off a more convincing band arrangement years later, as would Springsteen & Co.) Two feral punk-rockabilly versions of Born in the U.S.A.’s seething “Downbound Train” speak to Springsteen’s admiration of The Clash. 

But a pair of never-issued songs on the outtakes set are the set’s standouts. “Child Bride” is a disturbing draft of what would transform into Born in the U.S.A.’s “Working on the Highway,” which turned the narrative’s moral thicket, presumably involving an underage girl, into a sort of landlocked sea shanty that, like the album’s title track, drowns out its own narrative. (An early version of “Highway” here obfuscates the narrator’s transgression.) As America attempts to reclaim its pride by whitewashing its unflattering histories, Springsteen’s struggle to balance light and dark on these pointedly American recordings is tremendously poignant. “Gun in Every Home” is another balancing act, a striking outtake that ended up shelved. “I moved to the suburbs yeah, just me and my family/ On the block I live, you got everything that a man would need to want/ Two cars in each garage and a gun in every home,” Springsteen sings flatly. (“When I wrote it, I thought it was a little hysterical,” he admits in the liner notes. “Now of course it seems totally natural.”)

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The third and fourth discs — audio and video, respectively — document a (mostly) solo acoustic full-album performance of Nebraska, recorded this past summer sans audience at the Count Basie Theatre, Red Bank, NJ. The film, by Thom Zimny, is about what you’d expect: b&w, moody lighting, the artist striding in slo-mo onto the stage of the empty theater (trigger warning: may spur Covid lockdown flashbacks), then sitting down to play the songs straight through. There’s no attempt to hide the staging, although the accompanying musicians are mostly unseen. You can catch a fleeting glimpse of Larry Campbell in the wings offstage during “Atlantic City,” playing mandolin in the shadows; on “Used Cars,” Charlie Giordano adds glockenspiel fireflies in silhouette.

In the liner notes, Springsteen says he came to this latter-day performance fairly cold, and was struck anew by the songs, by how “their weight impressed upon me.” It’s a powerful performance, though 40-plus years on, as a dude in his 70s, he delivers them as a storyteller outside the story — a bit like Springsteen performing Springsteen on Broadway. On the original Nebraska LP, remastered for the set’s final disc, the performances felt more like method acting by a man possessed, physically inhabited by the stories he told.

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Springsteen has said Nebraska is his greatest work, and it’s interesting that, in surveying the original LP and the other vault recordings included here, he seems amazed at what his young self was channeling back then. He uses the word “shocked” more than once in the liner notes. He says “I don’t know where I was coming from for those arrangements,” and “I don’t know what was influencing me at the time.” He concludes: “Most of this stuff is pretty mysterious to me.”

Indeed, mystery is at the core of Nebraska’s magic — the mystery of what drives human beings toward darkness and self-destruction, the mystery of a rich country disrespecting its people, the mystery of an artist reinventing himself with a coal-hot songwriting hand, whispering in his own ear to make the mystery manifest. It did, and when you hear the final Nebraska, the set’s early takes and re-recordings, even the good ones here, are blown away like leaves in a punishing autumn wind. The falsetto howls at the end of “Atlantic City” become ghostly again, not vocal effects deployed variously across the sessions. Many of Nebraska’s songs would become American classics, and it says a lot that Levon Helm’s “Atlantic City” is one of his greatest performances, ditto Emmylou Harris’ version of “My Father’s House.” It says a lot, too, that their versions hewed close to those on the finished Nebraska album. Because Bruce got them dead right.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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