celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Music » Page 69
Category:

Music

Future Enters Spirits Industry With Roué Wine And Cocktails
Music

Future Enters Spirits Industry With Roué Wine And Cocktails

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

While Future is known for his melodic raps about the enticing allure of “Dirty Sprite,” the Atlanta rapper is actually a lover of wine. With each unscrewed cork, he’s noticed something amiss. His life path aligned with beverage industry expert Ryan Ayotte, and together the two formulated Roué: a new line of fine wines and Ready-to-Drink (RTD) cocktails.

“I enjoy wine, but couldn’t find a brand that truly reflected me, something current, innovative, and connected to the culture,” expressed the Grammy-winner in a press statement. “So, I created it. Roué is about bringing diversity into the wine world and showing what’s possible when creativity and culture collide. Roué is for everyone who’s ever felt unseen in spaces like this. Roué is culture, creativity, and authenticity in a bottle”.

Roué

The initial Roué launch includes a 2023 Cabernet Sauvignon and a 2024 Sauvignon Blanc, which feature grapes from Pasa Robles and Lake County, California, respectively. Roué also entered the market with two RTDs, Ruby Passion and Lemon Lust.

“If we just wanted to launch a generic wine bottle with a new label on it, it could take two months to build. But for us, we really start from scratch,” Ayotte explained to VIBE on a Zoom call ahead of the launch.

The two men embarked on a long journey from concept to product to create a wine that speaks to the preferences of today’s consumers, who want quality and style without the intimidating jargon of traditional wine culture.

“We had a whole bunch of ideas and we really landed on how to create a multifaceted, really unique bottle that kind of, when you’re bringing back to what the brand’s vision is and its background, it kind of parallels Future, but multi-dimensional,” adds Ayotte. “He’s so unique in the sense that he’s iconic in his music, but also at home on the streets of Atlanta versus the red carpet at the Met Gala. You can’t pigeonhole him into one thing.”

Roué wine

Roué

The wine bottle is custom-designed with this in mind. In the process, the team reviewed multiple samples, fine-tuning the bottle, the box, and overall packaging of Roué until all parties were satisfied.

“We had a ton of different ideas for what that bottle shape looks like, and Future had his hand in every part of the design process, reviewing samples, reviewing mood boards, reviewing the names,” said Ayotte.

The same intention went into the cocktails, which prioritize quality and taste to offer a premium experience, from the flavors served in glass bottles over cans to the unique flavor profiles. At 8% ABV, the Ruby Passion is described as having a red wine base, enhanced with strawberry, pomegranate, apple, raspberry, and a hint of lemon. Lemon Lust introduces a mix of lemon and orange with a white wine base, creating a bold flavor that is not a “sugar bomb.

Roue cocktail

Roué

Recommended pairings for the Cabernet Sauvignon include a filet mignon, a wagyu burger, or a charcuterie board. The championed Sauvignon Blanc is best served with seafood or creamy, buttery dishes. As for the cocktails, they make great options for a variety of meals and settings, as designed.

“I think, separately, both of us before even getting to know each other felt like there’s an opportunity to build a brand for sort of a new generation that kind of sets a new standard,” shared Ayotte. “At the end of the day, whether it’s with Future or just doing it on your own, to bring something to the market in such a competitive industry, you really got to have something that’s unique.”

Roué is available in 44 states, including Georgia, Florida, and California, and can be purchased through leading retailers like BevMo, Gopuff, Total Wine, and, of course, drinkroue.com.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
What Happened at Pitchfork’s Zine Launch With Oklou
Music

What Happened at Pitchfork’s Zine Launch With Oklou

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Rough Trade Below, the record store and venue tucked inside Rockefeller Center, was the spot for the launch of Pitchfork’s new zine on French pop singer Oklou. The zine is available to purchase at Rough Trade, and it complements the new cover story “Oklou’s Endless Summer.”

After everyone took their seats (or crowded in the back), complementary zines in hand, Head of Editorial Content Mano Sundaresan interviewed Oklou on stage to the crowd of 150 people. Oklou spoke about balancing life on tour with being a new mother, the power of minimalism on her breakout record, choke enough, and her online music influences. She also previewed and discussed music from the imminent deluxe edition, including her acoustic cover of “The fish song,” by hyperpop favorite underscores. The interview was recorded and will be up on Pitchfork’s YouTube channel soon.

After the interview, a long line of fans asked Oklou more questions, and then Oklou held a meet-and-greet, signing zines and records. Check out photos from the event below.

All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

What Happened at Pitchforks Zine Launch With Oklou
October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
“We want what we’re writing next to be better”
Music

“We want what we’re writing next to be better”

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

English Teacher have told NME about the “concrete validation” they received with their Mercury Prize win and have teased their new music will be “better”.

The Leeds band won last year’s prize with their debut album ‘This Could Be Texas’ and were on hand at this year’s ceremony last night (October 16) at Newcastle’s Utilita Arena, where Sam Fender beat out competition from the likes of Pulp, CMAT, Wolf Alice, Fontaines D.C. and Pa Salieu.

English Teacher’s victory last year saw them beat albums such as Charli XCX’s ‘Brat’ and The Last Dinner Party’s ‘Prelude To Ecstasy’ to take home the prestigious award, and on the red carpet this year, the band brought us up to date on how the win has impacted them in the past 12 months and the current status of their much-anticipated follow-up.

Guitarist Lewis Whiting explained that it was “quite nice knowing there’s no chance we have to go up and say an unprepared speech” this time around.

Reflecting on the win, he said: “I think it restarted the album cycle that we’re on. I felt like we were really busy, but post that, it kind of really continued until about now. Give or take, we’ve been on tour since then, it’s been a mental year. It’s making me reflect a lot on the past 12 months really, it’s been mad.”

Drummer Douglas Frost added: “And having a concrete validation like that does give you a sense of confidence, which does go a long way.”

Asked if it all adds more pressure on their second album, frontwoman Lily Fontaine said: “I think that will always be there, regardless. We want what we’re writing to come out next to be better. But there’s a history, isn’t there, of the Mercury curse.”

“I think it’s got to come from internally, hasn’t it, because you worry too much about all this and that and you’ll dig yourself into a hole,” Whiting added.

On the current status of the record, bassist Nicholas Eden said: “We’ve thrown our ideas at each other a bit and we’re getting there slowly.”

Last week, the band released the remix album, ‘This Could Be A Remix Album’, featuring contributions from Fontaines D.C., Working Men’s Club, Sherelle, Daniel Avery, Water From Your Eyes and Baxter Dury.

“It’s just surreal for me, personally,” Fontaine said about the record. “I really enjoy a lot of the songs, I thought what came back was really eclectic. It’s nice to hear the songs that we wrote as danceable tracks as well.”

“It’s kind of crazy hearing something that you created being put through someone else’s head,” added Whiting. “A lot of them I didn’t expect to sound like that.”

English Teacher were the first Mercury winners from outside London since 2014, and this year’s ceremony was the first ever to be held outside the capital, a shift that the band fully support.

“We’ve talked about this quite a bit before,” said Fontaine. “Obviously, the music industry is important for many different reasons, but the thing is, if you don’t have lots of different kinds of people making art, it’s all going to become monotonous, I think. And then, if it’s monotonous, it’s shit. It’s important that there are so many different perspectives outside of London.”

NME awarded ‘This Could Be Texas’ the full five stars on its release in 2024, noting: “What you have in ‘This Could Be Texas’ is everything you want from a debut; a truly original effort from start to finish, an adventure in sound and words, and a landmark statement. Poised for big things? Who knows if this industry even allows that anymore. Here are a band already dealing in brilliance, though – who dare to dream and have it pay off. Not everyone gets to go to space, but at least English Teacher make it a damn site more interesting being stuck down here.”

NME also spoke to Fontaines D.C. at the ceremony about the “witch hunt” against Kneecap and the police’s handling of Palestine protests, as well as Wolf Alice, who were nominated for a record-equalling fourth time., and Pulp, who revealed they are “not itching” to make a follow-up to this year’s ‘More’.

Sam Fender was crowned the winner of the 2025 Mercury Prize for his third album, ‘People Watching’. He thanked “very good friends” Fontaines D.C. and CMAT during his acceptance speech, saying that he was in “great company” on the shortlist.

In the winner’s room afterwards, Fender added: “We didn’t think we were going to win anything so I’m still in shock. It’s an absolute honour and it’s amazing it’s happened up here, for the first time outside of London. I think it’s a really important thing that’s happened right now in the music industry – I think it’s great.”

October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Taylor Swift Fans Donate Over $2 Million to Aquarium Over Otter Shirt
Music

Taylor Swift Fans Donate Over $2 Million to Aquarium Over Otter Shirt

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

A vintage t-shirt Taylor Swift wore in her Life of a Showgirl film has snowballed into Swifties raising over $2 million for the Monterey Bay Aquarium, its Sea Otter Program, and other conservation efforts. 

To go back to the beginning: At one point in The Official Release Party of a Showgirl, Swift is seen wearing a elegantly faded Monterey Bay Aquarium shirt with a charming encyclopedia-style illustrated graphic for sea otters. It’s got the animal’s latin name “Enhydra lutris,” some anatomical stats, and even an illustrated list of favorite foods. 

It is, on its own, a very cool shirt, but for Swift’s fans it also resonated with the revelation that she and fiancé Travis Kelce share a deep love of otters. During Swift’s appearance on Kelce’s New Heights podcast with his brother, Jason, Swift said: “All I really use the internet for is sourdough and when Travis shows me videos of otters on his Instagram algorithm.” (Kelce then revealed his wish to have, as a pet, a wild otter that he’s rescued.)

After the Release Party of a Showgirl film premiered, the Monterey Bay Aquarium was flooded with questions about the t-shirt. So, they tracked down the original artwork from 1993 to print a new batch, then made them available as part of a limited-time fundraising campaign for a minimum donation of $65.13 (the extra 13 cents of course being a nod to Swift’s favorite number).

Unsurprisingly, the campaign surpassed its $1.3 million goal in just seven hours, with the Monterey Bay Aquarium eventually putting the shirts on backorder due to the incredible demand. As of publication today (Oct. 17), the aquarium is still raking in money with over $2 million and counting. 

Trending Stories

“Your response was beyond our Wildest Dreams,” the aquarium wrote in a statement stuffed with Swift puns. “We hear you loud and clear, and we’re so grateful for the All Too Well kind of love this fundraising campaign as received.” 

As the Monterey Bay Aquarium also noted on its website, there are several other unique connections between the the aquarium, its otters, and Swift, though whether it’s just a coincidence or an Easter egg is up for fans to decide. For instance, just last month, the aquarium commissioned a local musician Taylor Safina to write up an otter rescue-themed song, which wound up being an homage of sorts to Swift’s “The Alchemy.” Even more striking, though, are the sea otters at the Monterey Bay Aquarium that happen to have Swift-adjacent names:  Ivy (like on Evermore) and Opal (as in “Opalinte”).

October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Cyndi Lauper Says This Gracie Abrams Song Made Her Cry
Music

Cyndi Lauper Says This Gracie Abrams Song Made Her Cry

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Girls just wanna have fun, but sometimes they just wanna cry, too. Luckily, Gracie Abrams has the perfect song for Cyndi Lauper to do just that. 

The two women were paired up for Rolling Stone’s musicians on musicians series, and their conversation was published Friday (Oct. 17). Right off the bat, both ladies praised each other’s work, with Lauper revealing which track in Abrams’ discography made her emotional upon first listen. 

“When I was listening to ‘I Know It Won’t Work,’ I started crying,” the 1980s icon revealed. 

“What?” an astonished Abrams replied. “Don’t say that to me. I can’t believe you listened to any of the music.”

“I listened to all of it,” Lauper corrected. 

The fandom certainly goes both ways, with the Gen Z pop star gushing that she listened to Lauper constantly growing up. Abrams also noted how much she was inspired by Lauper taking such creative control over her career early on.

“I feel so grateful, as a young person,” Abrams told her. “It’s so radically different now, but as I am growing up, I look at everything you’ve ever touched … I’ve adored it before I understood what you meant. Do you know what I mean? The more you grow into being a woman, the more you understand the significance of it.”

“I Know It Won’t Work” appears on Abrams’ debut album, Good Riddance. It’s one of several songs Lauper says she admires, showcasing Abrams’ “rhythm of what you’re doing in your songs, like the rapid speech.”

The two women’s conversation comes just after Abrams wrapped up years of touring in support of breakthrough sophomore album, The Secret of Us, which reached No. 2 on the Billboard 200. She’s now back in the studio working on her next record, though she told Lauper she isn’t sure where her next era is taking her. 

“Now that the album cycle is over, the next album isn’t made,” Abrams said. “I don’t know what I want to say yet.”

But, as Lauper pointed out from experience, inspiration will come. “You got your whole life now,” she told Abrams. “It’s going to be really great. You’re going to make it. You are going to write the book.”



October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Saint Etienne 2025
Music

Indie Pop Legends Saint Etienne Discuss Their Retirement Party » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Saint Etienne have always seemed to exist outside of time, so hearing news of their retirement felt like waking rudely from a dream, losing something you never really had. The group, comprising Bob Stanley, Pete Wiggs, and Sarah Cracknell, emerged as an immediate anomaly, releasing their debut album, Foxbase Alpha, to great acclaim in 1991. Now, in 2025, they’ve released their final one, International, an appropriate title for a band that’s always been so hard to pin down.

International was made with finality in mind, but instead of anything dour, it sounds like a right rave-up, a retirement party thrown by the forever young. They’ve invited guests, too: Tom Rowlands (The Chemical Brothers), Nick Heyward (Haircut 100), Confidence Man, Vince Clarke (Erasure), Tim Powell (Xenomania), Jez Williams (Doves), Erol Alkan (Flash Cassette), and Augustin Bousfield all appear. Listening to it is like being invited to some secret celebration held by the coolest cats in town.

The period between Foxbase Alpha and International found Saint Etienne bouncing along a balancing beam of paradoxes. They maintained a Zen-like consistency while also being restlessly chameleonic, attempting different styles and concepts with the same quality. They were decidedly European, and yet chronicled London like few other bands. They always seemed like the smartest band at the festival, but they moved your body as much as your mind. Forget retirement; the real question is, how did this chimera survive so long? Pete Wiggs and Sarah Cracknell sat down with PopMatters to provide an answer of sorts.

Endtroducing Pete Wiggs and Sarah Cracknell

Ever prolific, Saint Etienne were already teasing International when doing press for their previous album, The Night, earlier in the year. That rainy, gorgeous ambient album, full of spoken word and slow melancholy, is as different from International as Sid Vicious is from Blackalicious. It was almost like the band needed to rid themselves of The Night before they could party and part ways with International.

“There’s definite overlap between the two,” says Wiggs of Saint Etienne’s last two albums, “but none of the songs we started for The Night ended up on this. Because often we do that. I think we tried to get one on there, but it didn’t really fit the rest of it.” So how did it start? Wiggs and Cracknell have a think. It’s clear that they haven’t meticulously chronicled all the dates and figures of their retirement for historical record, despite its significance. 

“It had an earlier sort of genesis, I guess, demo-wise. ‘Two Lovers’, the one we did with Vince Clarke, that was probably a couple of years before,” explains Wiggs. “It went through a few phases.”

“Confidence Man, I think, was sort of last year,” adds Cracknell of their collaboration with the electropop duo, “Brand New Me”, which is a delightful, downright anthemic single from International. “Then, just as Pete was saying, things just evolved over time. You know, we’ll go in with an almost finished track and finish it off in the studio, or we’ll actually write whole verses and things in the studio in situ. It’s all different, actually; every bit’s different in that respect.”

Of course, things were especially different this time around – the last time around. “Yeah, once we started the actual making, knowing that we’re making an album and it being the last time booking studio time and stuff, we actually set ourselves a really, or our manager set us a really tight deadline to record this,” says Wiggs, smiling through his gray beard. “So we did the bulk of it in like a month, I think. It’s just crazy, really.”

Cracknell credits co-producer Tim Powell for speeding up the process. “Lovely man,” gushes Cracknell. Wiggs and Cracknell seem so strangely normal, awkward on the Zoom screen like the rest of us, far from Pop Stars™ or musical myths. They’re real, and their retirement suddenly made sense. That’s what people do, after all, if they can. 

Throwing a Retirement Party

The idea of retirement was written into International. “We’d made that decision before we were recording the bulk of the album, so we knew it was the last,” explains Cracknell. “The way you described it earlier, about being like a final party, that was very much the feeling that we wanted, a real celebration, and to include sort of the styles and moods from our career, from 30-odd years. We wanted it to be a bit of everything that we’ve done. I feel like the first album’s a bit of a mixing pot of ideas, so it’s the same sort of vibe.”

Why retire? That’s the question most people will ask, but perhaps the more interesting question is, why announce your retirement? Why not simply and silently stop making music? Then, if the creative urge so compels them, they could release another album in three, five, or nine years. Or not. They could instead just quietly and mysteriously fade away, like the sad half of that Neil Young song. What is the point of the announcement itself? 

“I think we just wanted a nice retirement gift, just like a clock to go on the mantelpiece or something like that,” says Cracknell, cracking up Wiggs.

“It’s more of an event, and hopefully, when we do gigs over the next couple of years, it’ll be like that. So it’s not like we’re not gonna do any gigs,” states Wiggs reassuringly. Still, the whole experience has been somewhat odd for him. “I think I’ve said this before, but it is a bit weird. It’s been like being at your own wake to see what people thought about you, and luckily, it’s been quite nice. 

“It wasn’t my decision, but once I got used to the idea, I found it quite exciting,” continues Wiigs. “It’s made the whole process of doing something and promoting and everything much more kind of exciting in a way. The good thing is it’s doing quite well, as well. So that feels like we made a good idea. It was a good plan.”

“Bob and I are not quite sure whether it was my idea or Bob’s idea,” adds Cracknell, making it even clearer how little melodrama, aggrandizement, or mythologizing has gone on vis-à-vis retirement. “It was a joint decision, though, between the three of us. We wouldn’t have just closed the band.”

“I don’t even remember the actual conversation,” admits Wiggs. “I think generally, whenever we make an album, we think it is potentially the last one, because you don’t know if you’re going to get a deal (well, then we’d probably still carry them, put it out ourselves somehow). But yeah, it did just feel organic. The last couple of albums have been really well received as well, so it feels nice, rather than going until people think you’ve done a couple of shit ones or something.”

Saint Etienne’s Final Tour

While Saint Etienne are done with the studio, they’re not finished with the stage. The band will have a farewell tour, and they’re already planning it out. “First of all, we’re going to do festivals. Next summer and stuff will be festivals, and then we’ll do the tour,” explains Cracknell. “We’ll be playing songs from across our career, which should be really good fun. Rather than touring an album, we’re just playing all the fun stuff. Then, I don’t know; we quite like the idea of ending up with the Royal Festival Hall, but we’re not sure yet. That won’t be until the following year, 2027.”

Wiggs and Cracknell have been touring for as long as Saint Etienne has existed, but the band has always been wise about pacing themselves. This (last) time, they plan to fulfill the title of their final album. “I’d like to come to America again, obviously,” shares Wiggs wistfully. “And someone said that we should do our last gig in Saint-Étienne. That would be quite funny, but I don’t know if anyone would even come. I’ve never been there, strangely.” 

Wiggs’ admission makes a certain amount of sense. Saint Etienne have always been unplaceable, cinematic, oneiric, so of course they’d be named after a place they’ve never visited. The places they have toured, however, have been memorable. Stanley has previously raved about Saint Etienne’s euphoric 1994 concert in Greece, one of those shows when the music transcends the moment and eternity is glimpsed.

“That was a good one, yeah,” muses Wiggs. “There’s been quite a few. We did play at the Limelight in New York, which was quite extreme. That was quite a memory, because America’s just so mad a place. It was like Studio 54, so that was pretty amazing. I just never thought we’d be doing a gig in a place like that.”

“I think my favorite one was just the first Glastonbury that we played in 1994,” adds Cracknell. “So memorable, so incredible, just walking out on the stage and seeing about 30,000 people.”

“We played in Basel, probably about ten years ago, maybe more,” recalls Wiggs of one strange Swiss concert. “It was on a floating stage in the river, which was quite mental, and these people dressed like gondoliers took you to the stage, and the audience was all on the bank. But when we did the sound check, there’s this thing that people do because the current’s really fast. They jump in the river with all their clothes and stuff in a plastic bag, inflated kind of, they jump in, hold it, and they go zooming by. So while we were playing, these people were just going by, like zooming past the stage. It’s really strange.”

International Music in the Time of Britpop

Of course, Saint Etienne will play multiple shows in their home country of England. Ironically, as they say goodbye, many of their 1990s contemporaries are reuniting or resurfacing for live shows. Oasis, Pulp, Suede, Manic Street Preachers, the Beta Band, Supergrass, and other leaders of the 1990s Britpop scene have either been touring or releasing long-awaited new albums in 2025. Hell, British icon Robbie Williams just released an album titled Britpop. Always the iconoclasts, Saint Etienne will be waving goodbye as the Britpop bands say, “Hello, hello (it’s good to be back).”

For such an international band so unstuck in time, Saint Etienne never quite fit into the hyper-nationalist, borderline xenophobic craze over Britpop. In fact, they traveled to countries like Germany and Switzerland to record different albums in the 1990s while their peers were waving the Union Jack. As Bob Stanley said in a 2016 interview with Drowned in Sound, “Britpop came along and ruined everything.”

Photo: Paul Kelly / [PIAS]

“That is quite strong,” laughs Wiggs upon hearing Stanley’s grumblings. “I think it just became a bit of a self-parody in a way. I still like Blur. I wouldn’t really listen to Oasis anymore, I don’t think, but I saw Pulp at Glastonbury and they were brilliant. I think it just became a bit of a joke, and so everyone got a bit sick of it. So it’s more that you didn’t necessarily want to be tagged as a Britpop band.”

“Also,” adds Cracknell, “people get sucked into this whole scene, and then can’t get out sometimes. I think also, because our music changes a lot in style, because we don’t play guitars and drums and stuff, it means that we can sort of segue between various styles. They can’t really pigeonhole us, which is good. Journalists generally can’t pigeonhole us. It’s difficult to, when people ask me, ‘What’s your band like?’ – I found it really hard to explain.”

So how reactionary were Saint Etienne? Were they willfully distancing themselves from the Britpop label? “In some respects,” admits Wiggs. “I think it’s because on our first two albums, a lot of the press would say that we were super English, and we were like, ‘We don’t think we are!’ [They said] everything’s about London, and the first album was, to be fair, but then we thought we’d moved away from that. And then it was always people just saying it was London-centric. So we were trying to be more international, as it were.”

“For me personally, it wasn’t a really deliberate distancing away from Britpop and British things,” adds Cracknell. “It’s just the way we are. We loved being in the European Union – sadly – and loved being international, love traveling, you know, getting to go away for our jobs a lot of the time. So we feel so privileged.”

“It was a way of making each album, to make it feel different from the next one,” says Wiggs. “We’d have a concept, and sometimes that concept was, like with the Swedish album, Good Humor, it was to record in a particular studio in Malmö, and to make it more of a sort of live-sounding album than perhaps previous ones. And then, with the Berlin one, we were really into the sort of Berlin electro scene at the time, so it was a way of getting into that, really, and having some of that flavor on the record.”

“We really loved the provincial side of going to Malmö and Berlin. So we just liked sharing a flat, getting an apartment or whatever,” remembers Cracknell with nostalgic warmth. “That’s really good for ideas, you know, getting immersed in each other.”

“A lot of the lyrics on Sound of Water, which is the one recorded in Berlin, we hadn’t written them before, and so they were kind of influenced from hanging out together and writing lyrics and newspaper reports from back home and things like that,” adds Wiggs. He pauses with a half-smile hidden in his beard, his headspace lingering on the scene. “It was, yeah, it was really good.

Saint Etienne 2025
Photo: Rob Baker Ashton / [PIAS]

The Philosophy of Saint Etienne

Pete Wiggs is hardly the only one looking back fondly on the songs of Saint Etienne. The band had one of the most devoted fan clubs out there, known as Lovers Unite, and for just five pounds a year, you could receive all sorts of special odds and sods from the band. Case in point, they had more private fan club releases than actual studio albums, and they shared all sorts of art and literature in addition to the music.

Saint Etienne made films with Paul Kelly, released Christmas music, and assembled compilations of obscure pop music. Bob Stanley wrote books, Cracknell released solo albums, and Wiggs curated wonderful playlists at his site, The Séance. Suffice to say, getting into Saint Etienne was like falling in love at the library, ensconced in references and catching the passion of artists like a contagion. You wanted to join their club. That was a song of theirs, “Join Our Club“, and it became Saint Etienne’s motto of sorts. “I know you want to hold my hand, I know you’re gonna love my band,” Cracknell sings in the song. 

Wiggs explains that “Join Our Club” is essentially the band’s philosophy. “It’s not supposed to be an exclusive thing. It’s supposed to be – if you’re interested in something, sort of mention it somehow. It’s how you make friends and how you meet people that are on the same kind of wavelength as you, really, so I suppose that’s it. 

“It’s sharing the things that interest you, and meeting like-minded people. Which is amazing, because we have done that over the years,” adds Wiggs. “You meet people and you go, ‘Oh man, until I’d listened to some of your stuff, or seen the sleeves or whatever, I didn’t know there were people like that, like me, out there. It’s good.’ We did a lot of signings last week in England and Scotland, and because it’s our last album, it was quite an emotional experience, lots of people coming up and saying stories about what we’ve meant to them over the years. 

“It felt like that sharing of ideas has really affected people,” continues Wiggs. “And they’ve gone on tangents exploring different avenues, things they picked up from the film clips that we put on the second album, So Tough. I sometimes forget that many of those were lines that Bob and I thought were funny or that we used to quote to each other. And so I thought, let’s stick them on the album. But then you hear that other people quote those lines, and it’s sort of like you spread a sort of daft virus. I mean, they’re samples, but people call them drops now, and they become memeable, like an inside joke for a family.”

Cracknell excitedly agrees with the philosophy of Saint Etienne. “[It’s] that whole sharing of, you know, you find out something great, when you see a great film or a wonderful building or whatever, and you just want to share it,” explained Cracknell. “I think some people misunderstood ‘Join Our Club’ as, you know, we’re elitist, we’ve got our own club, but it’s kind of the polar opposite, you know? It’s about – ‘listen to this, it’s great, or look at this, isn’t it amazing?’ That’s what we’re about, really.”

That’s what they’re about. Saint Etienne is a feeling – that feeling when you discover something that sings echoes in your soul, something so wondrous that you’re overcome with the compulsion to share it with someone else, as if it’s only that thing that can finally bridge the existential gap between you and another person. As if you’re a happy vessel, overflowing with this new thing (a song, a book, a picture), and you absolutely have to pour it out for somebody else, and when you do, it’s like you two are sharing the same serene dream outside of time. Saint Etienne are the sharing.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Tame Impala Makes Tiny Desk Concert Return: Watch
Music

Tame Impala Makes Tiny Desk Concert Return: Watch

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Tame Impala made his return to NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series on Friday to celebrate the release of his new album, Deadbeat.

Performing alongside his touring band, which includes longtime members Cameron Avery on bass, Jay Watson and Dominic Simper on guitar, and Julian Barbagallo on drums and percussion, Kevin Parker opted for an entirely-acoustic presentation for his Tiny Desk return. Parker had previously made his Tiny Desk debut in 2020, though due to the pandemic, it was presented “at home” instead of the NPR office.

Get Tame Impala Tickets Here

For his new set, Parker first led his band through a pared-down rendition “Borderline,” a single from his 2020 album The Slow Rush. He continued with a pair of Deadbeat’s singles: “Loser,” which we named Song of the Week upon release, followed by the effortlessly-groovy “Dracula.” Parker and co. concluded the set with a rendition of the Currents favorite “New Person, Same Old Mistakes.” Each song includes layered and well-executed harmonies from his backing band. Watch Tame Impala’s Tiny Desk Concert below.

Related Video

Tame Impala is back today with Deadbeat, Parker’s first new album in five years. He’ll be supporting the new record with a brief fall arena tour in the US, which will make stops in Brooklyn, Chicago, Austin, San Diego, Los Angeles, and Oakland. See his tour dates below and get tickets here.

Tame Impala 2025 US Tour Dates:
10/27 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
10/28 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
10/31 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
11/01 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
11/03 — Chicago, IL @ United Center
11/06 — Austin, TX @ Moody Center
11/09 — San Diego, CA @ Pechanga Arena San Diego
11/11 — Los Angeles, CA @ Kia Forum
11/12 — Los Angeles, CA @ Kia Forum
11/14 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
11/15 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
11/17 — Los Angeles, CA @ Kia Forum

October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Split Enz at Memphis in May in 1981. (Credit: Paul Natkin/Getty Images)
Music

Deep Cut Friday: ‘Sweet Dreams’ by Split Enz

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Each week, SPIN digs into the catalogs of great artists and highlights songs you might not know for our Deep Cut Friday series.

MTV premiered on August 1, 1981, and four different videos by Split Enz aired on the channel in its first 24 hours. The New Zealand band had only made its Hot 100 debut less than a year earlier with 1980’s “I Got You,” but at the dawn of music television, they were briefly as ubiquitous as rock titans like the Who and David Bowie. That’s because Split Enz were one of the most visually oriented bands in the world before the advent of MTV, with outrageously imaginative makeup and costumes. And by 1981, they’d already produced music videos for more than a dozen of their songs that had aired on television in New Zealand and Australia.

One of the earliest and most striking Split Enz videos was for “Sweet Dreams,” a track from 1976’s Second Thoughts that was never released as a single. Musically, the song showcases the distinctive voice and emotive, erudite lyrics of guitarist Phil Judd, who co-founded Split Enz and split frontman duties with Tim Finn on the band’s early albums. Visually, the clip showcases the work of Split Enz percussionist Noel Crombie, who directed most of the Split Enz videos and designed the surreal hairstyles and outfits sported by the band in “Sweet Dreams.”

On November 14, Chrysalis Records is releasing ENZyclopedia Volumes One & Two, a 5 CD set of early Split Enz work including two versions of Second Thoughts, one of them a new 2025 remix of the album by keyboardist Eddie Rayner. Rayner’s remix of “Sweet Dreams,” premiered here exclusively by SPIN, brings out more vivid sonic detail in the instrumental bridge of the original 1976 track, which was produced by Roxy Music’s Phil Manzanera.

Phil Judd left Split Enz in 1977 and briefly rejoined the band in 1978 before leaving a final time. Split Enz disbanded in 1984 and have reunited many times since then, including a planned appearance at the Electric Avenue Festival in New Zealand in February 2026. Judd hasn’t participated in any of the various Split Enz reunions over the years, but ENZyclopedia Volumes One & Two presents a loving portrait of the great songs he wrote for the band in the mid-’70s.

Three more essential Split deep cuts:

“Under the Wheel”

At nearly eight minutes long, “Under the Wheel” from 1975’s Mental Notes is an example of the kind of proggy, expansive songs Phil Judd and Tim Finn were writing together before Split Enz’s best known work in the new wave era.

“Missing Person”

Tim Finn’s little brother Neil joined Split Enz in 1977. And by 1980’s True Colours, the younger Finn was writing some of the band’s most memorable tracks, including “I Got You” and the Beatlesque “Missing Person.” After the breakup of Split Enz, Neil Finn would go on to greater international fame with his next band, Crowded House.

“Small World”

Tim Finn’s piano-driven Split Enz songs became a little more direct and concise after his brother’s success with the band, and 1982’s Time and Tide featured some of the elder Finn’s finest work before he began to turn his focus towards a solo career. 

October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Nas Reveals Where He Stands On Super Bowl Halftime Show Performances
Music

Nas Reveals Where He Stands On Super Bowl Halftime Show Performances

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

While many artists dream of headlining the Super Bowl Halftime Show, Hip-Hop icon Nas recently revealed that he has no interest in joining that elite list—despite being more than qualified.

In a conversation with Complex, the Queensbridge native was asked about potentially performing at the NFL’s biggest stage, and his response was refreshingly candid.

“Nah, I don’t want to do … I can’t say I don’t want to do the Super Bowl, but I don’t,” Nas admitted. “Why would I do that? Leave it to the professionals. Leave it to the pros. I’m a pro at what I do.”

Nas attends the “X: The Life and Times Of Malcolm X” opening night at The Metropolitan Opera on November 03, 2023 in New York City.

John Nacion/Getty Images

Known for his lyrical depth and cultural impact, Nas explained that he’s more comfortable in the role of an observer when it comes to the Super Bowl spectacle.

He offered praise for recent performers, acknowledging the quality of the show in recent years. “I want to watch dope halftime shows and that’s what has been happening lately so salute to all of them,” he said, referencing standout Super Bowl sets from Usher, Dr. Dre, Rihanna, and Kendrick Lamar.

Although Nas may not see himself on that stage, many would argue that few are more deserving. With a career spanning three decades, 20 studio albums, and a legacy that includes classics like Illmatic, the 52-year-old has remained a force in Hip-Hop and beyond.

Nas

Rapper Nas attends Pandora Sounds Like You NYC featuring Nas, Young M.A, Dave East and Biz Markie DJ Set at Brooklyn Steel on July 19, 2017 in New York City.

Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for Pandora

His humility aside, the conversation comes at a time when the NFL continues to embrace more diverse talent.

Bad Bunny is set to headline the Super Bowl LX Halftime Show on Feb. 8, 2026, at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California—marking a historic moment as the first solo act primarily performing in Spanish to take center stage.

Nas may be sitting this one out, but his presence in Hip-Hop culture remains as powerful as ever.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Sudan Archives: The BPM Album Review
Music

Sudan Archives: The BPM Album Review

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

The technology Sudan uses is scrappy, not cutting-edge—she employs a vintage toolkit of a Roland SP-404 and DAWs emulating the drum machines that defined 1980s Chicago house and ’90s Detroit techno. Collaborators include her twin sister, her cousins, and several friends from the Midwest. For all of its post-human imagination—Sudan’s alter-ago this time is “Gadget Girl,” a tech-augmented avatar—The BPM reaches deep into personal and cultural histories. Every few seconds, Sudan and her intimate cadre of producers jolt us from a 3 a.m. hypnosis with some acoustic or makeshift percussion over pounding kicks, a verse sliced with a breakbeat, or wordless, chopped-up backing vocals. The result is far more in touch with its feelings than its debaucherous veneer might suggest.

In the three years since her last album, Sudan broke up with a long-time partner. Having left behind both their shared house and the incense-scented bedroom atmospheres of her earlier oeuvre, Sudan reclaims herself and dance music’s confessional potential, merging Great Lakes hominess and booming arrangements that push toward the red. With the opening “Dead” and aching closer “Heaven Knows,” this is a breakup record that bleeds into the rebound period, smuggling liminality and angst inside a collection of bangers.

If The BPM sounds like the sort of album that might actually win over the mainstream, it’s also Sudan’s grittiest release, less pristine than the widescreen Natural Brown Prom Queen. And if that opus was sun-drenched, this is a wintry mix—all the more for its lyrical fantasies of fleeing to Costa Rica and Dubai. The bass is tectonic, the juxtapositions between short-lived melodies stark. Sudan’s violin parts are as rousing as ever, given breadth and texture by members of the Chicago string quartet D-Composed.

Yet she often tucks these accompaniments into the bridges, intros, and outros of songs, meaning they don’t provide the reckless release that they did in the past. Even an unexpected Irish jig in the center of “She’s Got Pain” only fuels The BPM’s pummelling energy, and later, “Ms. Pac Man” and the showstopping “Noire,” pull us into danker terrain. This dense, claustrophobic album is discomfitingly of the moment: Sudan’s characters sprint through these songs as though movement is a survival tactic, a way to push forward as the world presses down harder than ever.

All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

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

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

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

Categories

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

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

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

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

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

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

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


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