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Diane Keaton's Cause of Death Revealed
Music

Diane Keaton’s Cause of Death Revealed

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Diane Keaton died from pneumonia, according to a new statement from her family.

“The Keaton family are very grateful for the extraordinary messages of love and support they have received these past few days on behalf of their beloved Diane, who passed away from pneumonia on October 11th,” reads a statement shared to PEOPLE.

The Oscar-winning actress passed away on Saturday, October 11th, at the age of 79.

A source told PEOPLE that Keaton’s health declined “very suddenly,” and she spent her final months “surrounded only by her closest family, who chose to keep things very private. Even longtime friends weren’t fully aware of what was happening.”

Her family asks that any donations made in her memory be given to a local animal shelter or food bank, explaining that she “loved her animals and she was steadfast in her support of the unhoused community.”

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October 16, 2025 0 comments
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The Time I Set My Amp on Fire Through the Power of Rock
Music

The Time I Set My Amp on Fire Through the Power of Rock

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

On one of the U.S. tours to support the album Alien Lanes, Guided By Voices, for whom I played bass guitar at that time, did a show at a club in Los Angeles called Spaceland. It was so new it didn’t even have a stage. The P.A. system was not top flight, either, which is where the trouble started.  

On the guest list that night was the main guy from the band Soul Asylum, who was dating the girl from Edward Scissorhands at the time, so we were a little bit excited that a real Hollywood celebrity might show up to our show. Whether the Soul Asylum person or his date showed up, I could not say. This was a time, please understand, before GBV were regularly visited backstage in Los Angeles by, for instance, the guy from Zoolander, the little girl from E.T., that one thin blonde girl from that one movie, and possibly Che Guevara (actually, Benicio Del Toro, who played him in the movie). Because nobody had heard of the band yet, except people who liked rock music, and the guy from Soul Asylum.

Despite our lack of celebrity clout, the place was packed. The tiny sound system couldn’t cope. Especially the monitors. Things got so bad that our singer, Bob, actually stopped the show at one point and sat down on the floor, and said into the mic that he wasn’t going to play another song until someone fixed the fucking monitors. His voice was almost hoarse because we had been on tour for some time, and had only a couple of shows left on this particular leg. 

The soundman at the club did something to the monitors where it was possible for Bob and Kevin to at least hear the vocals, so that Bob didn’t blow out his voice, but I’m pretty sure he was in a bad mood and in a hurry to get off the stage. He signaled that we would play “Exit Flagger,” and that that would be our last song.

“Exit Flagger” was, when I first heard it, and remains to this day, one of my very favorite Guided By Voices songs. It has a very simple structure, and adeptly performs that neat magic trick where a song can be both anthemic and melancholic at the same time. Towards the end of the song, where Bob and Toby keep singing “Exit Flagger” over and over, I used to go kind of crazy with my bass runs. 

It was always a blast to play that closing bit, especially when drunk, because everyone knows that when you are drunk your fingers move faster. But what happened next was really a little extraordinary.

To this day, I will never know whether my (quoting Toby Sprout) “smoking” bass runs or some technical glitch in the bass cabinet caused my amp to cut out at the exact moment the song ended. I turned around to look for the reason, only to find that the cabinet was on fire. I mean, literally on fire. Flames were coming out of it. Toby turned around at the same time, noticed the flames, and casually picked up a cup of beer and poured it over them. The flames went out. Toby muttered something about “wasting good beer,” and that was that.

I can’t explain the cause, I can only speculate. And because I can only speculate, I prefer the satisfying explanation that “Exit Flagger” set my bass amp on fire through the power of rock. Having no use for it, and not wishing to load its heavy carcass into the van, I left the scorched wreck on the floor of Spaceland. It stood where it had died, I like to think proudly, or nobly, but dead all the same.
Our next show was a festival somewhere in San Diego. Luckily, our management had already got in touch with one of the other bands, who agreed to lend us their bass rig for our set. The kid who showed me how to use the rig was very nice; I can’t remember his name. He played with a band none of us had ever heard of before, and some of us have not listened to ever again, except accidentally, but I would like to stress: very nice people. The band was called No Doubt, which is fitting, because that is how I feel about the supernatural provenance of my amp’s fiery death.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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D'Angelo's Daughter, Imani, Shares Tribute Amid Singer's Death
Music

D’Angelo’s Daughter, Imani, Shares Tribute Amid Singer’s Death

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

D’Angelo’s death has rocked fans and fellow artists, but nobody is feeling the weight of this grief more than his children.

His 26-year-old daughter, Imani Archer, penned a tribute to her father on Instagram, whom she desribed as her “biggest hype man, protector, biggest musical inspiration, the kindest and most selfless man,” and of course, “the best father anyone could’ve ever had.”

The blossoming singer wrote, “Dear daddy, there are no words to describe this immeasurable loss. I’m in absolute disbelief and shock […] No one will EVER measure up to how brave and strong you are. Till the very end, you made sure to protect me from anything that would scare or hurt me.”

Archer continued, “I love you so much Daddy. I wish I had more time to spend with you. For you to show me new music, play piano with me to our favorite songs, or to go back and forward about our favorite go to meals. You’re a one of a kind soul, and I’m so grateful you chose me to be your daughter.”

Archer promised to “never forget all of your advice and things you’ve told me on how to get through this life,” adding, “Dad…I miss you more than life and this is breaking my heart into a million pieces. I wish I could hold your hand just one more time. I will forever honor you and carry on your legacy Dad. Everything I do will always be for you. I’m gonna miss you and hearing your voice every single day. I’ll always be your BabyGirl.”

The post concluded with the hashtag, “F**kCancer.”

It was announced on Tuesday (Oct. 14) that D’Angelo died at age 51 after a private battle with pancreatic cancer.

His eldest son with the late Angie Stone also made a brief statement following his death. “I just sat here watchin my daddy die after feeling like it was the first time he and I were truly building. He was there when I needed him the most after the passing of momma. Unfortunately, time ran out,” said Michael Archer II.

D’Angelo does have a third child, a boy assumed to be named Morocco, that he’s kept out of the public eye.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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feeo: Goodness Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

feeo: Goodness Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Even on her debut EP, at just 22 years old, feeo sounded like the weariest of old souls. She sang of a choking fear, of bombs falling like tears, of staying up to hear her lover leave because she couldn’t bear the thought of waking up to “haunted sheets.” Over toe-scuffing downtempo beats and wistfully unfurled synths, she asked questions—“Are we in love or is it just the drugs, babe?”; “Being lost is a bit like being free, isn’t it?”—in a tone that suggested she harbored few illusions about the answers.

It wasn’t just the wise-beyond-her-years lyrics that were so striking. It was feeo’s effortless balance of plaintiveness and composure, vulnerability and control. Her guarded, whisper-soft musings had a way of unexpectedly blossoming into R&B-schooled runs that proved that, for all her seeming reticence, this woman could really sing. Her tempos may have followed the halting pulse of a doubtful heart, but her voice telegraphed a quiet, determined confidence.

In the four years since, the artist born Theodora Laird has released a handful of EPs and singles, as well as collaborations with Caius Williams and Loraine James, fleshing out the bruised contours of her emotional world while burrowing deeper into the strangeness of her production. Composed of muted synths, thin tendrils of guitar, and atmospheric electronic processing, her sound atomized, turning granular and shimmery. A thin layer of dust seemed to cover everything, like a house that’s been locked up for years. Sometimes, her backing tracks were made of little more than tiny samples of her wordless voice, like a chorus of forlorn bumblebees.

On her debut album, Goodness, feeo returns with an even more experimental approach, befitting her new home on London’s adventurous AD 93 label. Her songs have gotten still quieter and more minimalist, even as her lyrical and conceptual horizons have ballooned outward. And while her voice remains as stunning as ever, some of the surface-level prettiness of her previous work has burned off, leaving a whiff of charred metal and plastic.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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"Brandon Flowers was the perfect fit"
Music

Brandon Flowers was the perfect fit

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Chrissie Hynde has shared a track-by-track guide to her star-studded new covers album, ‘Duets Special’, where she talks about how Brandon Flowers was the “perfect fit” for the project and more. Check it out exclusively on NME below.

The new record from the Pretenders frontwoman is set to arrive tomorrow (Friday October 17) via Parlophone (pre-order/pre-save here). Comprising 13 tracks, the project boasts team-ups with the likes of The Killers‘ frontman, Blondie‘s Debbie Harry, Depeche Mode‘s Dave Gahan and Garbage‘s Shirley Manson.

‘Duets Special’ also features the late Mark Lanegan on a rendition of Elvis Presley‘s ‘Can’t Help Falling In Love’, as well as collaborations with The Black Keys‘ Dan Auerbach, Cat Power, Alan Sparhawk and more.

She explained in the Q&A that she didn’t get the chance to meet Lanegan before his death in 2022, and talked about why she decided to cover a Morrissey classic with Power, as well as revealing her “highlight” of the LP and which collaborator she has an “odd thing in common” with. Read in full below.

Let’s talk about the collaborations on ‘Duets Special’. The album opens with ‘Me And Mrs Jones’ with k.d. lang. You first crossed paths with k.d. on the ‘Tame Yourself’ album for PETA, is that right?

“I met k.d. on a tour we did. Very early days. It was up in Canada and we bonded right from the start because of our mutual interest in animal welfare. PETA stuff followed.”

Your performance at the ‘Mark Lanegan 60’ concert last year was symbolic of how special a person and artist Mark was. What was it like singing Elvis‘ ‘Can’t Help Falling In Love’ with him?

“I never got to meet him. I read his book Sing Backwards And Weep, and only then got familiar with his music. Then I realised what I had been missing. A great, great singer and songwriter. We emailed, and I was so looking forward to meeting him. But fate had other ideas.”

Of all the Rolling Stones‘ songs you could have chosen, what led you and Lucinda Williams to sing ‘Sway’?

“I always dug the song, and so did Lu.”

Next up is ‘Dolphins’. You interviewed Tim Buckley when you were working for the NME. Was it important to include one of his songs on ‘Duets Special’?

“Well it’s a Fred Neil song, but Tim did the definitive version. He was one of my favourite all-time singers.”

Tell us about your friendship with Chan Marshall, aka Cat Power. You have toured together and spoken to Chan for Interview Magazine. What does ‘First Of The Gang To Die’ mean to you both?

“She’s a mate. We did a tour together, and I’m a huge fan. She has such a distinctive voice and style. We both loved the song. Morrissey being one of our best ever songwriters.”

Chrissie Hynde ‘Duets Special’ album artwork. CREDIT: PRESS

‘Always On My Mind’ is another song most people associate with Elvis. What does Elvis’ music mean to you and Rufus?

“I’m pretty sure Elvis’ music means a lot to any artist. He was the King.”

How did you first come to connect with Carleen Anderson? There’s a great photograph of you, Carleen and Lalah Hathaway together at a Billie Holiday tribute in 2004. Together, you’ve chosen Brenda Holloway’s ‘Every Little Bit Hurts’…

“That’s when I met Carleen.  We discovered that day that we had a mutual friend, the guitar player Donnie Baker. A Cleveland guy. Then I became pals with Carleen who is the best soul singer alive.”

What drew you to 10cc‘s ‘I’m Not In Love’? Why was that song right for Brandon Flowers?

“I’m mates with Kevin Godley, a good friend. I think I must have seen Kevin recently around the time, and was thinking about him. Great song. Brandon was the perfect fit with his beautiful voice.”

You chose a John Lennon song from The Beatles‘ catalogue, ‘It’s Only Love’. What was it like to sing John’s lines with his son Julian?

“I’ve met Julian and seen him perform. He is so talented.  I didn’t know if he’d be up for singing one of his father’s songs. But he obviously was, and it was a highlight to sing along with him.”

Why did you choose a Low song, ‘Try To Sleep’, to sing with Debbie Harry? This is an exciting and unexpected surprise.

“I loved Low – one of my all-time favourite bands. I toured with Debbie in Australia and thought her voice would suit it. I love her low-key, dignified approach. A great surprise that I got to sing with her!”

Your performance with Alan Sparhawk on ‘County Line’ is beautiful…

“I love it too. It was Benji’s idea. I originally had in mind for Mimi Parker to sing it but then Mimi died. So I sheepishly approached Alan, and he agreed to do it. I love his voice.”

How did you and Alan meet?

“I saw Low play and hung around after, as I was dying to meet them. I struck up a conversation with Mimi and told her Deb and I were doing her song for a duets album, and she stopped me in my tracks when she said point-blank, ‘Why didn’t you ask me to sing one with you?’ My excuse was that I didn’t know her – which was the truth – but I did after that night and sent her the song.

Tell us about working with Shirley Manson on ‘Love Letters’. You’ve known each other for a long time…

“Shirley and I have an odd thing in common. She’s from South Queensferry, Scotland, where I’ve spent time. Not many people can say that who aren’t from there. I’ve been a fan since the first Garbage album.”

The Pretenders covered ‘Little Latin Lupe Lu’, and here you return to The Righteous Brothers with The Black Keys’ Dan Auerbach. What does their music mean to you?

“I didn’t even know they did ‘Little Latin Lupe Lu’. I only knew the Mitch Ryder version. But I sure remembered The Righteous Brothers singing ‘You’re My Soul’. I’ve worked with Dan, and he’s one of my guitar heroes. He’s such a great producer and songwriter, and I wondered if those talents overshadow what a great singer he is. So I wanted to get his voice to highlight the fact.”

The tracklist for Chrissie Hynde’s ‘Duets Special’ is:

‘Me & Mrs Jones’ (feat. k.d. lang)
‘Can’t Help Falling In Love’ (feat. Mark Lanegan)
‘Sway’ (feat. Lucinda Williams)
‘Dolphins’ (feat. Dave Gahan)
‘First Of The Gang To Die’ (feat. Cat Power)
‘Always On My Mind’ (feat. Rufus Wainwright)
‘Every Little Bit Hurts’ (feat. Carleen Anderson)
‘I’m Not In Love’ (feat. Brandon Flowers)
‘It’s Only Love’ (feat. Julian Lennon)
‘Try To Sleep’ (feat. Debbie Harry)
‘County Line’ (feat. Alan Sparhawk)
‘Love Letters’ (feat. Shirley Manson)
‘(You’re My) Soul And Inspiration’ (feat. Dan Auerbach)

Chrissie Hynde
Chrissie Hynde. CREDIT: Ki Price/Press

Speaking previously about the origins of ‘Duets Special’, Chrissie Hynde explained that she’d “never thought” about doing something like it before. “I think the idea came about in 2023,” she said.

“I was talking to Jörn, Rufus Wainwright’s husband, on the phone. I think we were recommending novels to each other, and for some reason, I said, ‘Hey, maybe Rufus and I should do something,’ and quickly scribbled out 10 songs off the top of my head.

“So Jörn asked Rufus, who was up for it, and that’s how it started. A spontaneous and what I thought would be a fun thing.”

‘Duets Special’ follows on from Hynde’s second full-length solo album ‘Valve Bone Woe’ (2019) – a jazz-inspired covers collection – and 2021’s ‘Standing In The Doorway: Chrissie Hynde Sings Bob Dylan’.

In 2015, Brandon Flowers was joined by Hynde at a London gig for a performance of ‘Don’t Get Me Wrong’. The following year, The Black Keys’ Auerbach appeared on stage with The Pretenders on The Late Show.

This summer, Hynde attended one of Oasis’ Live ’25 reunion shows at Wembley Stadium in London earlier this month, alongside the former Smiths guitarist and his daughter Sonny, as well as Pretenders guitarist James Walbourne.

Chrissie Hynde & Pals’ ‘Duets Special’ is out tomorrow (Friday October 17) via Parlophone (pre-order/pre-save here). She is performing in the BBC Radio 2 Piano Room tonight (October 16). 

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Britney Spears Fires Back at Kevin Federline After Accusations
Music

Britney Spears Fires Back at Kevin Federline After Accusations

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

In an except of Kevin Federline‘s upcoming tell-all memoir, You Thought You Know, the dancer and ex-husband of Britney Spears issued a warning regarding the pop star and their sons, Sean Preston, 20, and Jayden James, 19. Along with an alarming claim that Spears would watch their children sleep with a knife in her hand and other ominous statements, Federline wrote: “Something bad is going to happen if things don’t change.”

Now, Spears is speaking out against his allegations, accusing Federline of “constant gaslighting” that has become “extremely hurtful and exhausting.”

“I have always pleaded and screamed to have a life with my boys. Relationships with teenage boys is complex. I have felt demoralized by this situation and have always asked and almost begged for them to be a part of my life. Sadly, they have always witnessed the lack of respect shown by own father for me,” wrote Spears in a statement posted to X on Wednesday. “They need to take responsibility for themselves. With one son only seeing me for 45 min in the past 5 years and the other with only 4 visits in the past 5 years. I have pride too. From now on I will let them know when I am available.”

The singer also addressed Federline’s allegations in his memoir, writing, “Trust me, those white lies in that book, they are going straight to the bank and I am the only one who genuinely gets hurt here.” Spears said that she “will always love” her sons, and those that truly know her, “won’t pay attention to the tabloids of my mental health and drinking.”

“I am actually a pretty intelligent woman who has been trying to live a sacred and private life the past 5 years,” said Spears before ending her post. “I speak on this because I have had enough and any real woman would do the same.”

The constant gaslighting from ex-husband is extremely hurtful and exhausting. I have always pleaded and screamed to have a life with my boys.
Relationships with teenage boys is complex. I have felt demoralized by this situation and have always asked and almost begged for them to…

— Britney Spears 🌹🚀 (@britneyspears) October 16, 2025

According to an excerpt obtained by The New York Times, while Federline doesn’t specify in the excerpt any one particular concern, he suggests that his ex-wife is in need of professional help that he believes won’t be provided in the aftermath of the “Free Britney” movement. “All those people who put so much effort into that should now put the same energy into the ‘Save Britney’ movement,” he wrote per the Times. “Because this is no longer about freedom. It’s about survival.”

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So far, excerpts have only prompted more questions (with details presumably in the book), such as a passage in which Federline wrote, “The truth is, this situation with Britney feels like it’s racing toward something irreversible. It’s become impossible to pretend everything’s OK.”

Spears was under conservatorship from 2008 until 2021, during which Federline had sole custody of Sean and Jayden and long periods of time passed between her visits with their children. Since being released from the conservatorship, the artist has spent more time with Sean and Jayden. In her 2023 memoir, The Woman in Me, Spears described her complicated relationship with her sons, the court-ordered conservatorship, and the custody battle with Federline. “My freedom in exchange for naps with my children,” she wrote. “It was a trade I was willing to make.”

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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British Composers Unite to End Ghostwriting in Film, TV and Game Music
Music

British Composers Unite to End Ghostwriting in Film, TV and Game Music

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

A number of leading British composers have joined The Ivors Academy’s call to “End Ghostwriting” in a campaign to ensure media composers are credited and compensated fairly for their work.

Calling for an end to the practice of ghostwriting in music for film, TV and video games – the activity of contributing creatively to a soundtrack, without a writing credit being disclosed – the academy is encouraging composers to commit to changing industry practice by signing a pledge.

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Ghostwriters in these sectors often receive no screen or IMDb credit, and therefore are excluded from cue sheets, meaning they lose the royalties they are legally entitled to.

According to the academy, the three pillars of the End Ghostwriting pledge are: To be fully transparent with productions about who will compose the music; To ensure that all contributing composers are credited on cue sheets, on screen where possible, and on IMDb; To accurately submit work for awards consideration that fairly credits everyone involved in the composition.

The campaign has been backed by a series of renowned media composers and members of The Ivors Academy, including Sheridan Tongue (Silent Witness, Wonders of the Universe), David Arnold (Casino Royale, Sherlock), Aisling Brouwer (The Buccaneers, White Riot) and more.

Other names involved include Ben Foster (Happy Valley, Torchwood), Daisy Coole and Tom Nettleship (The Pay Day, The Wives), Jessica Jones (The Tinder Swindler, Our Universe), and Sofia degli Alessandri-Hultquist (Dickinson, Red, White and Royal Blue), along with Jenna Fentimen, head of agency at Manners Faber, among others.

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Charlie Puth at the GRAMMY Hall of Fame Gala held at the Beverly Hilton on May 16, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California.

In a press release, Roberto Neri, CEO of The Ivors Academy, said: “We’re calling time on ghostwriting, where talented media composers can work on high-profile productions without ever being acknowledged. Thanks to our Media Council of composers, we’re bringing transparency, integrity and fairness back to the heart of audio-visual music. We must give composers credit where credit is due.”

David Arnold, fellow and board member of The Ivors Academy, added: “Our Industry is changing rapidly. Budgets and schedules are becoming more compressed and workloads are becoming more complicated to manage. So sometimes we need help. This campaign is here to ensure that help doesn’t go unrecognised and unrewarded. It’s only decent and it’s only fair.”

The Ivors Academy also runs the Ivor Novello Awards, which recognize excellence in songwriting and composing. The End Ghostwriting campaign will impact the 2026 edition of the event, as entrants will now also be asked to confirm that cue sheets list all composers who wrote a cue from scratch or made a significant new creative contribution. Entries that do not include all qualifying writers will be ineligible for consideration.

Elsewhere, earlier this month (Oct. 2), RAYE received an Ivors Academy Honour in recognition of her songwriting advocacy, led by a campaign that resulted in U.K. major labels committing to cover expenses for songwriters attending their studio sessions.

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Don Cook, Steve Bogard, Tony Martin

Upon accepting the award at an event in London, she said: “Being a songwriter is also one of the greatest privileges, and I think it’s something that should be about grafting and talent, not about how rich you are, or to be in a good situation financially to be a songwriter. It shouldn’t be about that.”


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October 16, 2025 0 comments
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On South Park, Donald Trump Is Desperate to Exorcise the Antichrist
Music

On South Park, Donald Trump Is Desperate to Exorcise the Antichrist

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

*Warning: This article contains spoilers*

Donald Trump is a father-to-be, and no one is happy about it. Not the president himself, not his vice president, JD Vance, and certainly not billionaire tech mogul and conservative activist, Peter Thiel. On the week’s episode of South Park, three of the most powerful men in America are dead set on finding a way to get rid of the Antichrist growing inside of Satan.

After PC Principal mistakes the children’s obsession with the “6 7” meme for satanic numerology, he invites Thiel to speak at the school. Thiel, who touts himself as the ultimate authority on biblical prophecy and the coming of the Antichrist, makes a few of his own innocuous references to “6 7,” only to be met with laughter from the students. Convinced that South Park Elementary has embraced the forces of darkness, he seizes all of the school’s private data to monitor the children’s behavior. (Thiel co-founded the government intelligence and software company Palantir.)

Of all the students, Cartman is most tickled by the meme, quite literally vomiting every time someone mentions it. Thiel, however, believes Cartman is possessed and stages an exorcism. When that fails, Thiel decides to take Cartman with him back to Washington, DC, telling Ms. Cartman, “Your son is the key to saving our country. Everything we hold dear could end. We have to unlock the secrets he holds, no matter what it takes.”

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Along the way, Thiel stays in contact with Vance, who has a vested interest in the situation since Satan’s baby threatens his own path to the White House. (In turn, Vance promises Thiel “full access to everyone’s data” if he can put a stop to the demonic child.) Meanwhile, knowing that Trump himself no longer wants the baby — albeit for reasons mostly related to his tee times — Vance convinces him to visit an abortion clinic, where Trump promptly drops his trousers, only to be informed that’s not how the procedure works.

There is also a B-storyline involving Jesus going on a blind date at the Cheesecake Factory and eventually coming to blows with PC Principal after simmering tension over their clashing religious styles. But for the most part, this week’s South Park seemed to be setting the stage for episodes to coming later on in Season 27.

Following its premiere on Comedy Central, Season 27, Episode 6 of South Park — “”Twisted Christian” — will be available to stream on Hulu beginning Thursday, October 16th.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Imani. (All photos by Fresh Sam)
Music

How the Pharcyde Led West Coast Hip-Hop Into a New Era

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

It was 1991. The Pharcyde—Bootie Brown, Imani, Fatlip, and Slimkid3—were spending most of their time in Inglewood, California, at South Central Unit (SCU) studios recording demos, writing lyrics, and smoking copious amounts of weed. Around 5:00 p.m., when traffic was peaking in Los Angeles, the four of them would step outside and watch the girls drive by, which would soon become the inspiration for “Passin’ Me By.” 

The track, which lives on the Pharcyde’s debut album, Bizarre Ride II the Pharcyde (1992), borrowed elements from songs like Eddie Russ’ “Hill Where the Lord Hides,” Quincy Jones’ version of “Summer in the City,” and Weather Report’s “125th Street Congress.” The combination, unlocked by producer J-Swift, proved to be a key to their longevity. 

Barely out of their teens at the time, the Pharcyde helped lead West Coast hip-hop into a new era with their jazz-infused beats and a lyrical style that sharply contrasted the gangsta rap that dominated the 1990s. They were essentially doing for the West Coast what De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, and the Jungle Brothers were doing for the East. 

“Passin’ Me By” was one of three songs from the demo tape they were shopping around to labels. It caught the attention of several majors, but they ultimately decided to sign the dotted line with Delicious Vinyl, home to rappers like Young MC, Tone Löc, and Masta Ace. 

More than 30 years later, “Passin’ Me By” still resonates with generations of hip-hop fans. It was finally certified platinum in April 2025, adding another accolade to the group’s storied career. While Bootie Brown is no longer part of the original lineup, the Pharcyde has moved on as a trio, bringing their legacy to countless people around the world. 

Speaking to SPIN, Fatlip, Slimkid3, and Imani dive into the creation of “Passin’ Me By,” the accompanying music video and how they feel when they perform it. 

Remember the time

Fatlip: Life was a bowl of cherries in 1991. Actually, it was a bowl of buds. We was getting high, smoking and making beats. We was going to a lot of meetings about videos and a lot of record industry things that we were dealing with, doing a lot of shows. We were just fully in the business at that point and becoming somewhat rap stars on that escalation to rap stardom.

Slimkid3: We were in our early 20s. We were basically living at a studio in Inglewood. That’s where we spent the most time at—SCU.

Imani: We all had different houses and locations that we came from, but we spent the most time in Inglewood at a studio or at girlfriends’ houses, surrounding areas. In ’91, I was finishing my dance and videos career and shit. I had been dancing and teaching rap dance classes and doing anything that had to do with dance. Just anything. Literally, I was just going around people’s dance studios, trading off moves with people, getting in videos and all kinds of shit. 

And the last video I did was the “Remember the Time” video with Michael Jackson. That was the last video that I did. And that was ’91. At the time, we were doing demos and recording with J-Swift and doing stuff like that. We hadn’t put the record out yet. We was just getting our demos together.

Imani.

Delicious demo

Slimkid3: We recorded the first verse at SCU. We kept the verse that we recorded at SCU and transferred it to Hollywood Sound.

Fatlip: We did the chorus and had the beat, and that was what got us a record deal. “Passin Me By” was one of the three songs on our demo tape that got us attention with all the record labels.

Slimkid3: It had “Ya Mama,” “Passin’ Me By,” and “Officer.” 

Fatlip: We talkin’ about Def Jam. We talkin’ about a lot of labels that aren’t even around today. But we talking about Motown. We was just young guys out here in L.A. trying to get a record deal, and we were actually on the verge of getting a record deal because we had been at this studio for a couple years.

Imani: A lot of labels wanted to sign us, so they took us out to dinners and shit, tried to swoon us, wine us and dine us and shit, and somehow Delicious Vinyl made their way to the front of the line because this dude named Lamar, he came to our studio and he was really geeked. He was like, “I’m going to take it to my dude,” and he took it to [Delicious Vinyl co-founder/owner] Mike Ross. The rest is history.

Fatlip: I think another factor with Delicious Vinyl was they didn’t want to keep our publishing. That’s what I remember. 

Slimkid3: They gave us creative control and that was the most important thing to us because everybody was bidding pretty damn high, but it wasn’t really about the money as it was the creative control. 

Imani: They also had this record that they was putting together called “Heavy Rhyme Experience” with the Brand New Heavies. They threw us a bone because they was like, “You guys could be on this record with all these big wigs.” It was like Gang Starr, Grand Puba, Black Sheep, Masta Ace, and we were the only group that wasn’t signed. When the record came out, you know, everybody was like, “Who is this Pharcyde?” The song was called “Soul Flower.”  

SlimKid3. (Credit: Fresh Sam)
SlimKid3.

Passin’ them by

Slimkid3: There was something we did every day at about 5 o’clock, during traffic time. We would all stand out on this little patch of grass in front of SCU, just watching the cars go by, watching the girls go by in these cars. It gave that “she keeps passing me by” feel. But it was something that we could all relate to, like going after the girl that is not giving you play or playing a role. Musically, there was this loop that J-Swift and probably Romye [Robinson] had found, and it was just looming throughout the studio. 

It kind of put you in a trance a little bit, in deep thought, and you’re sitting there working on your lyrics and writing your lyrics. So once we got the GPS, it was like, “She keeps passing me by.” So I was like, “OK I got that story all day because it’s something that we do all the time.” 

Imani and SlimKid3. (Credit:Fresh Sam)
Imani and SlimKid3.

Boom Boom Pow!

Fatlip: There’s around 10 samples, if I’m not mistaken. J-Swift was our main producer, but we were all contributing input. But J-Swift was the the piano prodigy that knew the MPC drum machine like the back of his hand. So we was just giving him loops and records, and he was chopping them up. With “Passin Me By,” we had a bunch of records and he was going to make a bunch of beats with them. Then Bootie Brown was like, “Nah, you got to put those two records together.” 

That main horn sample was Eddie Russ and the song is called “Hill Where the Lord Hides.” The other one is Quincy Jones’ “Summer in the City.” He put those two together and then “boom, boom, pow!”

Slimkid3: We had a living room area where we did choreography and stuff like that. The music looming through the different rooms, the record itself already gave you chills. It already gave you goosebumps. 

I feel like this song kind of wrote itself, and you were just lucky enough to be a part of it. It’s almost like on a spiritual level, you were coloring by numbers to be a part of a hit. And then just the topic, “she keeps passing me by,” was extremely relatable. When Fatlip went in to sing the hook, that just took it to another level of goosebumps. I went in right after he finished and put the harmony on there, too. It just took off. 

Fatlip: We had the beat playing over and over and over and over. I got to keep giving Bootie Brown his props. We was all in the room, he heard the melody and he was like, “Yo, this sounds like time keeps passing me by.” And then I was like, “What about she?”Then it was like, “Damn.” Everybody had a story about she. So we had the concept, right? That was really how we came up with all of our songs—with the chorus first. 

Slimkid3: That’s that GPS. 

Clockwise from top: Tajai, Fatlip, Phesto, Domino, Pharcyde’s Manager, Chuck D, Imani, and Slimkid3.
Clockwise from top: Tajai, Fatlip, Phesto, Domino, Pharcyde’s Manager, Chuck D, Imani, and Slimkid3.

Power Punch

Fatlip: We took a break, everybody went and did their own thing and I came back with that idea in my mind. Then I grabbed the mic and did it. And I listened to the first chorus, and I was like, “Damn that shit sound otherworldly.” Then I called Bootie Brown in the room. 

I was like, “Yo, listen to this!” He didn’t even come all the way into the room. He just peeked his head in the room, and with no kind of excitement was like, “OK, finish the other two choruses” and walked out. So that’s what I did. Had he come in and been like, “Wow, this is crazy!” and tripped out with me, I probably would not have finished the other two choruses. I’m gonna be honest with you. I have never sang that shit like that again ever in my life. 

Slimkid3: Fatlip was being honest. Everybody’s just being honest. Bootie Brown set it off, and then me and Imani was pretty much the cream filling in the middle. Then Fatlip brought it home. 

Fatlip: You mean eight months later? [laughs]

Slimkid3: You always take a long time, but when it’s done, it’s done, and it’s dope. It just takes one person to be vulnerable, not care and just get on there and sing like that, or let everybody else know it’s OK to do that, too. Then we’ll start getting that soul music again that we’ve craved for so long. 

Fatlip: We put out “Ya Mama” first. I don’t know how many months we promoted it. We did the video. 

Slimkid3:We did it for quite a while. 

Fatlip: It was a totally different situation from then and when we released “Passin’ Me By.” 

Slimkid3: Don’t forget. “Ya Mama” was definitely chosen by that radio station in Washington, D.C. They jumped on “Ya Mama” quick and it was running with that. It was cool. We always put out music like we play pool. The shot that you’re shooting ain’t the shot that you worried about. You’re thinking about your third shot and what’s gonna back it up, so “Passin’ Me By” was a definite next shot to smash with it. 

Fatlip: You’re right, because it’s kind of like, had we released “Passin’ Me By” first, who knows what would have happened? The fact that we came out so lighthearted and jokey-jokey, and then the next song was like, “Wait a minute.” It’s a power punch. It’s a groove behind it. Some funk. 

Slimkid3: It always made you feel like,”What’s next?” So don’t put out your power punch first. Let the power punch come out second or third. But all your other songs should be good songs, too. You shouldn’t have album fillers.

Slimkid3
Slimkid3.

Budget Schmudget

Slimkid3: The budget was alright.

Imani: “Ya Mama” was like $40,000 and we hated the video when it came out. It didn’t feel like it represented us. It was a part of us, but we felt like we wanted to be represented differently. We was all hands on deck for “Passin’ Me By.” Every single person had to add something. We had to take it back to where we started from. We went back to SCU. We incorporated a lot of the visions from everybody. Fatlip had the homie Sanji [Sanjeeva Senaka], who I think he used to go to school with. He directed the video. We was all coming from the same headspace and it was perfect from our perspective. 

Fatlip: When the song had come out, people had heard it, so there were a lot of directors hitting us up. We were taking a lot of meetings and hearing a lot of concepts for what this video was going to be. And then there’s even some directors that went on to get Oscars, who at the time were like, “Yo, let me do this video.”

But then when the homie Sanji came with it, he came with these books that showed us like, “Oh, this is the black and white aesthetic that we’re going to use. We’re going to have you guys hanging upside down,” so we went with Sanji. There was this one director in particular. He was a little disappointed that he didn’t get to do the video, but I seen him after the video came out and he just was like, “Yo, you did that.” Coming from this director who, again, went on to get Oscars, it was a real compliment. 

Imani: In comparison, nah, we didn’t have a big budget. People were still doing million-dollar videos or even $100,000 videos at the time. We weren’t doing nothing like that. 

Slimkid3: I’ll say this. I don’t think we were really thinking about it. Creativity is expensive. We knew that. And back in the day, the technology wasn’t even there to give us what we were looking for as far as, let’s say, “Otha Fish.” The water was murky. It wasn’t as clear as we wanted it to be or whatever, but if we had the technology we have now, it would have been something different, and that was an expensive video. But I don’t think we were thinking about it monetarily at the time because we were just trying to make sure that the concept came across like it needed to be. In my perspective, I was not thinking about what something cost as opposed to, “Is this correct? Is this right? Is this set right? Is it edited on beat and tempo?” 

Imani: Whatever the money or budget was, that’s what it was. It wasn’t like, “Yo, we need more money to do something” or “that’s not enough.” We didn’t have enough leverage to be like, “Yo, we want a lot of money.” They OK’ed the budget because we were their group. They’re spending the money. Second time we proved ourselves and let the leash go a little bit more, and then by the time “Otha Fish” came, it was like, “Hey man, OK. Boom.” We were able to do exactly what we wanted.

Lupe Fiasco and Fatlip.
Lupe Fiasco and Fatlip.

The Junkyard

Imani: Everything is funny and a memorable moment with that video.

Slimkid3: I feel like the funny moment was we were all in the backyard and there’s a car door. We were like, “What if we had Fatlip looking like he’s sitting in the car talking to a girl and then you pull back and it’s just the car door, and then all the homies stand in the back? We laughing about it.

Imani: We in a junkyard! 

HINDSIGHT IS 20/20 

Fatlip: To the label’s credit, it didn’t take much for them to side with us after—no pun intended—because we were very much going to push our ideas. 

Imani: We couldn’t have done it without Delicious Vinyl. 

Fatlip: We weren’t going to just stay quiet. They definitely heard us out. And even to this day, all we do is argue about what’s the right idea, what’s the right thing. 

Imani: It was a certain vibe at Delicious Vinyl. None of this could have happened without Delicious Vinyl. We had such a vibe with them. In hindsight, it’s a lot easier to see, because when you’re creating greatness, it’s kind of hard to witness it being made. But it’s easier to look back in hindsight and you can appreciate shit. I see Mike Ross now, and the way I think about him now is not how I thought about him in 1995. Literally. I appreciate this man. He gave me opportunity. He had a thing going on, we had a thing going on and together, we culture clashed and made some shit for the ages. We couldn’t have did it without him. It was one of the coolest labels. 

Slimkid3: The Pharcyde, as people see it and hear it, was more than just four people. It was definitely Delicious Vinyl, the staff, everybody. It was definitely all the people that made this thing happen. We were the eggs, milk, oil, and sugar that made this cake pop. It was definitely lit by the time people sunk their teeth into it.

2025 & BEYOND

Slimkid3: I feel good about the song. It’s like color by numbers once again. It’s not about us, it’s about the fans. When we’re giving this to the fans, we’re giving a thousand percent, like it’s our first and our last time to ever do this shit. 

Imani: It’s not our music no more. It goes through us, but it’s not our music no more. We’ve grown, kids have grown up, it’s a part of their DNA now. I feel happy and honored to be on stage with these dudes. 

Slimkid3: Yeah, same. 

Imani: And to be able to do it, and then to see the people out there, you don’t even understand. 

Fatlip: I love you, man! 

Imani: I feel like I’m blessed. 

Slimkid3: No, we are blessed. I feel like the thing that was a gift to us, we’re giving it to our fans as a gift to them when we’re performing it.

LOOK, MA! 

Slimkid3: For me, it was like, “It’s about time.” I feel like the universe does shit to you. It’s like a hurry up and wait thing. Our focus was not for us to be platinum or not be platinum. It’s just to do what it is that we do. It’s timeless, and I have to say that. It’s so timeless that it took its time to get where it needed to go. And it shined on us today to extend the life of what it is that we do and what it is that we’re doing right now, which is a super blessing. 

Imani: It’s dope that it went platinum, but if I have the opportunity to talk to the people that are actually in love with the music and they trust us enough to put their kids’ brains and souls into our hands, that means a lot to me. 

Slimkid3: We made it! 

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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D'Angelo's 2019 Documentary, 'Devil's Pie': Review And Recap
Music

D’Angelo’s 2019 Documentary, ‘Devil’s Pie’: Review And Recap

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

In 2019, D’Angelo allowed fans an intimate look into his life — the indelible highs and complicated lows — through the lens of his documentary, Devil’s Pie.

Named after a record from his second album, Voodoo, the Carine Bijlsma-directed film is full of archival anecdotes and behind-the-scenes moments as he prepared for his return in tandem with the release of his 2014 album, Black Messiah — which was described on Letterboxd as the “soundtrack of the lost years.”

Throughout the 90-minute film, we unpack his choice to step out of the spotlight at the height of his career, his spiritual foundation, the distinction between Michael Archer and D’Angelo, and the layers of what entails being a “Black genius.”

The documentary isn’t currently available to stream, but there are links floating around social media. If you get the chance to view it, we implore that you do. However, VIBE breaks down the top three takeaways from Devil’s Pie below.

  • The Complexities Of A Black Genius

    D'Angelo documentary recap
    Image Credit: Shahar Azran/Getty Images

    Within the first few minutes of the film, Questlove described D’Angelo as the “last pure singer on Earth,” but somberly added that the crooner “tends to hide.”

    The doc labeled him “elusive,” saying in 2000, he was “poised for superstardom” — thanks to Voodoo. Then, he disappeared for over a decade. His then-tour manager, Alan “Pops” Leeds, faulted “the media” for “playing up” the crooner’s arrests and unfortunate 2005 car accident, which left him critically injured.

    “Nothing beats D’Angelo. That gift only comes once in a blue moon,” said Questlove. He felt that D’Angelo battled with fears associated with being “the chosen one,” explaining that “To thine own self be true” was his mantra.

    D’Angelo even discussed the internal struggle, noting that following one arrest, he was upset with himself because he could’ve been in the studio instead. “I was bulls**tting [but] I’m sitting here,” he stated.

    In the third act of the documentary, he discussed the “power” of his music and referenced the quote: “With great power comes great responsibility.” He explained, “If Yahweh grants you that gift and you’re not being responsible about it, then it gets perverted and that can be very scary. That’s some place I don’t ever want to be.”

  • The “Untitled” Downfall

    D'Angelo documentary recapD'Angelo documentary recap
    Image Credit: Vinnie Zuffante/Getty Images

    After the video for “Untitled (How Does It Feel)” was released, D’Angelo became an instant sex symbol. However, the burden of that ideal plagued him. He hated the sexualization of his image and was part of the reason why he proverbially shut down.

    Questlove recalled during the Voodoo tour, they’d planned a “very meticulous two-and-a-half hour show,” but “18 minutes into it, women were screaming, ‘Take it off.’”

    Leeds felt that the fantasy of D’Angelo grew bigger than the music, which frustrated the crooner. D’Angelo played Quest a “crude demo” of what became “1000 Deaths” off Black Messiah. Leeds feared that the downward spiral following the “Untitled” visual would have caused catastrophic results.

    Questlove called D’Angelo “Superman, but he’s a kryptonite-filled Clark Kent trapped in his soul.”

    During that time, however, the singer also was navigating grief. His uncle and grandmother passed and a close friend died by suicide. This was the catalyst to his substance abuse. He attempted rehab twice before it worked, detailing that working on music led to him getting clean.

    He explained, “I was getting f**ked up and I never did that. I never got so f**ked up that I couldn’t make music, or that I was dysfunctional while I was in the studio […] The third rehab was when it really sunk into me that I had a problem and had to deal with it.”

  • D’Angelo Vs. Michael

    D'Angelo documentary recapD'Angelo documentary recap
    Image Credit: Vinnie Zuffante/Getty Images

    There was a fine line toed between Michael Archer, the man, and D’Angelo, the musician. He reportedly “wrestled” with pursuing a career in “secular music” due to his religious upbringing. However, his grandmother was the person who inspired him to pursue what he loved— which was always music in whatever capacity.

    During the documentary, his faith remained a constant fixture. “I trust in God. I trust in the spirit and the love that brought us together and in the gifts that God gave us. When we pray at night, it’s not a game and it’s very real. We walk out on faith. We got this far by faith and that’s how we walk out there and the way I feel, when I come out there and have that love, that spirit and that authority with me, it’s nothing that can stop us,” he said.

    He reflected on the “high” he felt while being onstage, but once the show is over, “you go back and it’s just you again.” He even confessed that there isn’t much separating Michael from D’Angelo. “To actually leave [D’Angelo] there on the stage is kind of hard,” he expressed. “I think a lot of times, I’m too real for that s**t. So, I have to leave him there.” He felt bringing his persona into his personal life caused it to become “murky and cloudy.”

    The crooner described the music industry as a “contact sport” and blamed the “business” for why many “didn’t make it.” There were even things about the business that he wouldn’t discuss because it was “deep s**t.”

    For D’Angelo, it seemed his mission was having God live within him and freeing himself of the “distractions” that would take him away from that. Music was his gateway and purpose. The documentary ended with the singer listening to the gospel song, “Lord, Plant My Feet On Higher Ground” and confirmed that he was working on his fourth album.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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