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Taylor Swift The Life of a Showgirl
Music

Taylor Swift Brilliantly Captures the Zeitgeist on New LP » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

In a 2014 Rolling Stone cover story, Taylor Swift described passing a man on the street who, inexplicably, walked around with a cat on his head. She wanted to take a picture, but hesitated: “What if he just wants to walk around with a cat on his head, and not have his picture taken all day?” The singer-songwriter offered sympathy because she is a massive celebrity, photographed every time she leaves home. 

Aside from romantic love, Swift‘s own fame has been the main subject of her work. In a 2015 interview with Glamour, the singer assessed her trajectory: “I was not shot out of a cannon. It was about five years before I became recognizable to everyone.” The irony of Swift’s life is that when she says “everyone”, it could literally mean every human. 

This universal existence is the premise for Swift’s 12th studio album, the Max Martin-produced The Life of a Showgirl. Swift first worked with Martin on 2012’s Red, venturing into pop, and the journey to the stratosphere took off from there. Swift collaborated with Martin on 1989 and Reputation, and Jack Antonoff added indie flair to Lover and Midnights. For a change, Aaron Dressner of the National created the acoustic soundscape of folklore and evermore. 

In terms of theme, The Life of a Showgirl is a sister to 2024’s The Tortured Poets Department. Both albums portray the distorted human experience of famous people, their emotions turned into products of public consumption. However, when fame itself becomes a product, can any part of a celebrity’s life appear human? 

In the Tortured Poets track “Who’s Afraid of Little Old Me?” Swift compares herself to a circus animal: “I am what I am ’cause you trained me.” The symbolism of The Life of a Showgirl is thinly veiled by comparison, but that is not to the album’s discredit. Swift is a confessional writer. In “Elizabeth Taylor”, Swift likens the reaction she would have to her current love affair ending to the infamous meltdown of a 1950s icon. “I’d cry my eyes violet,” she says, launching into a haunting hook. 

Elsewhere on Showgirl, Taylor Swift settles scores. “CANCELLED!” is an eerie and arresting takedown of the celebrity industrial complex. “Good thing I like my friends canceled,” Swift says over a bassline that sounds like a musical death march in the best way possible. “Welcome to my underworld,” she adds, implying that, in an alternate universe, her network of famous friends could have been a convincing band of villains. 

The revenge-seeking continues. In “Actually Romantic”, Swift takes aim at Charli XCX in the same way “Bad Blood” addressed a feud with Katy Perry. “Like a chihuahua barking at me from a tiny purse / That’s how much it hurts,” Swift says. Allegedly, Charli XCX wrote “Don’t wanna see her backstage at my boyfriend’s show,” on “Sympathy Is a Knife”, about Swift. Charli XCX is married to the drummer of The 1975, and Swift dated the band’s frontman, Matty Healy. 

The Life of a Showgirl reveals that Swift is now in a healthy relationship. In “Honey”, the singer mentions a lover who called her in the middle of the night to ask what she was wearing, but did not remember the conversation the next day. (This sounds like Healy.) On the other hand, Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce offers a benign new chapter. “Got me dreaming ’bout a driveway with a basketball hoop,” Swift says on “Wi$h Li$t”. You can’t help but be happy for her. 

In “Father Figure”, which interpolates George Michael‘s song of the same name, Swift recalls a protege who betrayed her. The song is the album’s best example of Swift’s strengths. A key change in the final chorus provides a melodic lift that matches the increased stakes of a back-stabbing. “Who’s portrait’s on the mantel? Who covered up your scandals?” she asks.

Soothing harmonies and dreamy synths throughout the song contrast its narrative, mixed emotions, in a concise vessel. Swift’s revenge is necessary, but she is sad to let go of an apprentice. “Father Figure” sounds like what Miranda Priestly, the fashion editor of The Devil Wears Prada, would have written about the assistant who resigned after a great accomplishment. 

Like Priestly, Swift understands that moral ambiguity is necessary to uphold a well-meaning empire. “I’m married to the hustle,” she says on the title track, which closes the album and features Sabrina Carpenter. The presence of Swift’s pop star protege embodies the song’s narrative, where an aspiring starlet achieves her destiny and passes the torch. 

The song’s outro is a recorded clip of Swift closing an Eras Tour show. While some of Showgirl’s tracks may lack the eccentricity of Midnights, this recording reminds listeners they played a part in the album’s origin. “I never really let myself say, ‘I’ve made it,” but the Eras Tour…this is different,” Swift said on Kelce’s New Heights podcast.  

Elsewhere, “Eldest Daughter” is a searing look back at Swift’s coming-of-age. “Every eldest daughter was the first lamb to the slaughter,” she says. This assessment describes Swift’s place in the music industry as a confessional songwriter who emerged in the 2000s diva era, yet received the same, if not more, tabloid scrutiny. 

The Life of a Showgirl enshrines Swift’s proof of concept as a celebrity: modern fame is an act of honesty and excess, a contemporary witch trial, and a glamorous night out. Charli XCX, Swift’s newest rival, brought depth to the dancefloor ruminations of brat: “I’m famous but not quite / One foot in a normal life,” she said on “I might say something stupid.” 

On Showgirl’s cover, Swift is submerged, her face poking above the surface of the water. The image references “The Fate of Ophelia”, where Swift thanks a lover for saving her from Shakespearean tragedy. Martin’s production bobs and weaves around Swift’s subtle hesitations and soulful spillovers: “If you’d never come for me / I might’ve lingered in purgatory.” 

When Swift is concise, it makes a bold statement. Although now heralded as an opus, upon its release, critics found Red scattershot. A succinct collection of uniform pop bangers, 1989, followed. Similarly, Showgirl is 12 tracks compared to Tortured Poets’ 31. However, in this case, brevity does not equal wit. “Did you, girlboss too close to the sun?” Swift asks on “CANCELLED!” A grab bag of internet slang is an unfortunate presence on the album. 

Overall, Swift’s writing holds up. The bridge of “Eldest Daughter” is a cinematic reverie of youthful indiscretions and natural imagery. “We lie back, a beautiful time lapse / Fairytale kisses and lilacs,” Swift says, as lush harmonies and acoustic guitars create a wistful medley. 

“I’m an archer. We stand back, assess, process how we feel, raise a bow, pull back, and fire,” she said in a 2019 Rolling Stone interview, referring to her astrological sign, Sagittarius. The Life of a Showgirl is not a misfire, but 1989 was a bullseye. Both albums share a similar mission: named for the singer’s birth year, 1989 marked a renewal and the start of an imperial phase. “I’m immortal, baby dolls, I couldn’t [die] if I tried,” Swift says on Showgirl’s title track. 

Swift wrote The Tortured Poets Department in a highly pressurized environment: the beginning of the biggest concert tour of all time, the breakdown of her six-year relationship with Joe Alwyn, and her chaotic rebound with Matty Healy. This public echo chamber resembles a scene in the music video for “Fortnight”, where Swift plays a captive in a laboratory, forced to take experimental drugs. “Forget him,” one pill bottle reads. 

Singer-songwriters want to tell their stories, but Swift is also a celebrity. Consequently, the public has an interest in providing “advice” based on what her life appears to be. Additionally, after a prolific run of albums, listeners chime in on what type of music Swift should release. The eagerness to form opinions on the singer’s creative decisions proves she has done her job. The ability to discuss the work is part of the product being sold. 

Taylor Swift can capture the zeitgeist because she understands the concept of one: a battle between tension and freedom, and the knowledge that conflict is necessary to sustain the things we want. The Tortured Poets Department proves Swift will navigate pain when it is part of a story. The Life of a Showgirl releases that angst. “They stood by me before my exoneration,” Swift said on “CANCELLED!” Even non-existence as a public figure is a discourse Swift engaged with and survived. Now that’s showmanship. 

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Aftershock 2025 Fest Shakes Sacramento with blink-182, Deftones, Korn, BMTH
Music

Aftershock 2025 Fest Shakes Sacramento with blink-182, Deftones, Korn, BMTH

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

The 2025 Aftershock festival took place in Sacramento from Thursday, October 2nd, through Sunday, October 5th. Stretching four days and spread out on four stages, this year’s festival once again had something for everyone, as Danny Wimmer Presents continues to expand and diversify the lineup. Although the weather went from pouring rain to unseasonably warm in the blink of an eye, that didn’t stop festival-goers from enjoying every minute of the festival.

Day 1 was headlined by pop-punk stalwarts blink-182, who last topped the bill at Aftershock in 2019. They were the band that most people came to see, and they did not disappoint, playing a 90-minute, 22-song set, highlighted by a cover of Descendents’ “Hope.” Good Charlotte closed out the Shockwave stage right before blink-182, while other highlights from the day included High on Fire, Testament, and the recently reunited Acid Bath, who drew a huge audience over on the Coors Light stage.

Deftones headlined Day 2, playing a near two-hour set to their hometown, and had the grounds around the Aftershock stage jam-packed. Highlights included “Digital Bath,” “Hole in the Earth” and “Around the Fur,” but it was “Cherry Waves” that had the fans most pumped up. A Perfect Circle had the audience singing along to every word, while Lamb of God also drew a massive crowd, delivering the live debut of their new single “Sepsis.” Turnstile and Knocked Loose brought the hardcore to Aftershock, while Iron Maiden frontman Bruce Dickinson’s set was among the other highlights of the day.

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Day 3 was headlined by Korn, who were, as always, one of the most anticipated bands of the entire festival. They played an electrifying set for their fans, some of whom were waiting up against the barricade all day in the sweltering sun. Gojira were another highlight on the Aftershock stage, while other standouts included Scowl, Spy, Slaughter to Prevail, and Trash Talk.

The fourth and final day of Aftershock saw Machine Head, In This Moment, and Mudvayne play before big crowds in the beating sun, but it was festival closers Bring Me the Horizon who were the main attraction. The UK band played a near 90-minute set which saw them run through 15 songs, including anthems like “Shadow Moses” and “Throne.”

By the time it was all said and done, Aftershock once again showed why it’s become the West Coast’s biggest hard rock and metal festival. Every year. the organizers seem to pull off something even bigger and better than the previous year, and with the rumors already starting to circulate about next year, it looks like the 2026 edition is not to be missed.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Justin Vernon Auditions His Replacement In 'Day One' Video
Music

Justin Vernon Auditions His Replacement In ‘Day One’ Video

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Justin Vernon gets conceptual in the new video for the Bon Iver song “Day One,” which finds him announcing his “retirement” and then holding an open casting audition for his replacement in school gymnasium.

Directed by Jos Diaz Contreras, the clip features cameo appearances from actors Cristin Milioti and Jacob Elordi, plus St. Vincent, Vernon himself, a child in a beard and the song’s guest vocalists, Dijon and Flock of Dimes/Bon Iver touring member Jenn Wasner.

“Day One” can be found on Bon Iver’s latest Jagjaguwar album SABLE, fABLE, which debuted at No. 1 on both Billboard‘s Rock/Alternative and Americana/Folk charts.

Vernon is committed to not touring in the near term in support of SABLE, fABLE, but told an invite-only crowd at an April promo event with Todd Snyder that he will return to the stage at some point.

“I’m not saying I’m not ever going to tour. I’m definitely going to play shows of some kind again. I want to be out there and I want to do that whole thing,” he said. “But I think taking the license to decide that something’s not for you is another one of those things. It may be painful and strange to not do the thing that’s expected of you or that other people who are successful do, but I do think that’s a little bit of that Midwest ethic. I grew up never expecting to have the kind of career I have now. I was hoping that I could hawk CDs out of the back of my Honda CR-V and go home to my little house with a wife and kids. It hasn’t turned out that way, but when you make those hard decisions, they bring rewards.”

For now, he can be heard guesting on Brandi Carlile’s upcoming album, Returning to Myself, which is due Oct. 24.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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HollyRod Foundation's 2025 DesignCare Gala: Recap And Photos
Music

HollyRod Foundation’s 2025 DesignCare Gala: Recap And Photos

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

The night featured a lavish red carpet, followed by a reception complete with a buffet and silent auction. An awards ceremony also celebrated those championing HollyRod’s mission, including Don Cheadle and Bridgid Coulter, who received the Clarence & Jacqueline Avant Humanitarian Award; Faith Evans as the HollyRod Champion, Vernon Jackson for the Karen E. Smith Angel on the Path Award, and Sumit & Viraj Dhanda as HollyRod Heroes.

Frederick Anderson presented each honor, highlighting the dedication of these individuals to making a difference.

Guests at the event had a range of ticket options, from general admission at $250 to VIP at $500, offering special seating and amenities. The foundation also welcomed Bronze and Silver sponsors, which included group tickets and high-profile acknowledgment across social media, print, and pre-event advertising, for up to $200,000.

Attendees included Holly Robinson Peete and former NFL star Rodney Peete, Faith Evans, Magic and Cookie Johnson, Don Cheadle, Skai Jackson, Tina Knowles, Glynn Turman, Michael James Shaw, Loni Love, Debra Lee, Vanessa Bell Calloway, Essence Atkins, Tabatha Brown, Malinda Williams, Tariq Walker, Vanessa A. Williams, Melvin Robert, and more.

Check out all the star-studded looks and notable attendees who turned out for this unforgettable night in support of the HollyRod Foundation below.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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PinkPantheress Announces Fancy That Remix Project With Oklou, Bladee, and More
Music

PinkPantheress Announces Fancy That Remix Project With Oklou, Bladee, and More

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Yesterday (October 6), PinkPantheress posted a teaser video to X. In the clip, the British musician’s animated alter-ego asks if she’d “fancy some more,” then scrawls the names of a whopping 23 artists on a whiteboard, among them Oklou, Bladee, Kylie Minogue, Kaytranada, and Jade. Now, those acts have been revealed as the featured guests on Fancy Some More?, a 22-track add-on to her recent Fancy That mixtape that’s out this Friday, October 10. Check out the tracklist and cover art below.

Fancy Some More? consists of two full-album remixes, one of which appears to lean more towards pop—with appearances from Anitta, Seventeen, Oklou, Jade, Yves, JT, Sugababes, Kylie Minogue, Bladee, Zara Larsson, Ravyn Lenae, and Rachel Chinouriri—while the other boasts a slew of dance and electronic acts—Nia Archives, Kaytranada, Basement Jaxx, Hot Chip’s Joe Goddard, DJ Caio Prince, Mochakk, Loukeman, Leod, Sega Bodega, Groove Armada, and Kilimanjaro.

PinkPantheress shared Fancy That in May. She’s since teamed up with Danny L Harle on his new song “Starlight,” and, later this month, will kick off her An Evening With PinkPantheress tour of North America.

Read about Fancy That on “The Best Music of 2025 So Far.”

01 Illegal + Anitta
02 Illegal + Seventeen
03 Girl Like Me + Oklou
04 Tonight + Jade
05 Stars + Yves
06 Noises + JT
07 Nice to Know You + Sugababes
08 Stateside + Kylie Minogue
09 Stateside + Bladee
10 Stateside + Zara Larsson
11 Romeo + Ravyn Lenae
12 Romeo + Rachel Chinouriri

01 Illegal + Nia Archives
02 Girl Like Me + Kaytranada
03 Tonight + Basement Jaxx
04 Tonight + Joe Goddard (Hot Chip)
05 Stars + DJ Caio Prince
06 Noises + Mochakk
07 Nice to Know You + Loukeman + Leod
08 Nice to Know You + Sega Bodega
09 Stateside + Groove Armada
10 Romeo + Kilimanjaro

01 Illegal
02 Girl Like Me
03 Tonight
04 Stars
05 Intermission
06 Noises
07 Nice to Know You
08 Stateside
09 Romeo

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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“It’s not what he’d want”
Music

“It’s not what he’d want”

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Robin Williams‘ daughter has hit out at “gross” AI deepfakes, saying “it’s not what he’d want”.

  • READ MORE: ‘Robin’s Wish’: what the new documentary tells us about Robin Williams’ final days

Zelda Williams has taken to social media to slam users who were sending her AI videos of the late comedian – who died aged 63 in 2014.

“Please, just stop sending me AI videos of Dad,” she began on her Instagram stories. “Stop believing I wanna see it or that I’ll understand, I don’t and I won’t. If you’re just trying to troll me, I’ve seen way worse, I’ll restrict and move on. But please, if you’ve got any decency, just stop doing this to him and to me, to everyone even, full stop. It’s dumb, it’s a waste of time and energy, and believe me, it’s NOT what he’d want.

“To watch the legacies of real people be condensed down to ‘this vaguely looks and sounds like them so that’s enough’, just so other people can churn out horrible TikTok slop puppeteering them is maddening,” she added.

She went on to call the AI videos “disgusting, over-processed hotdogs” made “out of the lives of human beings, out of the history of art and music, and then shoving them down someone else’s throat hoping they’ll give you a little thumbs up and like it. Gross.”

Zelda concluded her statement by pleading with users to stop calling AI “the future”. “AI is just badly recycling and regurgitating the past to be re-consumed,” she said. “You are taking in the Human Centipede of content, and from the very very end of the line, all while the folks at the front laugh and laugh, consume and consume.”

This is from Zelda Williams, Robin Williams daughter, begging people to stop sending her creepy AI videos of her dad.

Absolutely insane that it needs to be said. What the fuck is wrong with people pic.twitter.com/lXfeWAOcHd

— Scribe Phoenix🏳️‍🌈 (@Crackerphoenix) October 6, 2025

Robin Williams has remained a much-beloved comic, with many fellow entertainers sharing their stories on how he touched their lives.

Late night host Conan O’Brien revealed he was consoled by Williams after he was fired from The Tonight Show, organising a day of biking for him at the bike shop.

“I went down and it was a Colnago, which is a very nice bike,” O’Brien recalled. “And he said, ‘I told him to paint it in all these crazy Irish colours.’ I get down there and it’s the ugliest – I mean, it was just greens and shamrocks and everything. And he was like, ‘You’re going to like that bike, chief. Don’t worry about it.

“I thanked [Robin] many, many times,” O’Brien added. “I just couldn’t believe that he was thinking about me.”

Meanwhile, Kathy Griffin has shared her memories of “magical” Williams’ help after she once “bombed” on stage.

“Robin came over and he’s like ‘I’m so sorry, I think I touched on one of your topics before your set, I didn’t know you were gonna talk..’ and I was like ‘You don’t have to apologise, at least you’re talking to me’.

“So I’d say he was the first person that knocked my socks off because he was so magical, whether he was on camera or not.”

Elsewhere, Sally Field has hailed Williams after recently revealing that he changed the filming order of Mrs Doubtfire so she could leave filming after her father died.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Cody Johnson Cancels Remaining 2025 Shows
Music

Cody Johnson Cancels Remaining 2025 Shows

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Cody Johnson is canceling his remaining 2025 shows due to a burst eardrum, which the country singer said will require surgery and “many weeks” of recovery. He was expected to perform six upcoming dates through December, with his next performance originally scheduled for Oct. 18 at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, and the final 2025 date in Las Vegas at T-Mobile Arena on Dec. 5.

“It is with a very heavy heart I have to share the remainder of this year’s concert performances will not be able to happen. While battling a severe upper respiratory and sinus infection, I burst my ear drum. The severity of the rupture means I must undergo immediate surgery,” he wrote in an Instagram post.

He said that it will take “many weeks” for him to heal following the medical procedure. “It is not possible for me to sing during this time,” he added.

“Without the surgery my downtime could be months. I pray for full healing so I can get well and return to doing what I love,” he concluded, giving a shout-out to his fans. “Thank you COJO Nation for the love and support, now, and always.”

Johnson advised ticket holders to “Please stay tuned for an email from your ticket providers for further details.”

The news follows a recent Instagram post the singer shared from inside a recording studio. “Been working on something for y’all…” he captioned the black-and-white photo, hinting that new music was being tracked.

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Last fall, he told Rolling Stone about his approach to touring. “I take a very athletic standpoint toward my tours. You always want to outdo the last one, and outdo the last one after that,” he said. “But there have been so many big, significant things that have happened for us this year that it is clear the wave is starting to roll,” he says. “Now, we’ve gotta stay ahead of the wave.”

For now, he’ll be off the road through the end of the year. Currently, he has concerts planned through July 2026 according to his website, including a Stagecoach headlining appearance in April.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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John Legend's Daughter Luna Interviews 'Gabby's Dollhouse' Stars
Music

John Legend’s Daughter Luna Interviews ‘Gabby’s Dollhouse’ Stars

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Luna Stephens is shaping up to be quite the interviewer. Months after helming a Billboard Family Q&A with her famous dad John Legend, the 9-year-old has scored an exciting new gig: talking to Gloria Estefan and Laila Lockhart Kraner about the new Gabby’s Dollhouse movie.

In an adorable video that Billboard Family is exclusively premiering below, the EGOT winner’s eldest daughter with Chrissy Teigen sits between both the stars at the movie premiere. “Hi, my name is Luna, and today I’m interviewing Gigi and Gabby,” Luna tells the camera with a smile, referring to Estefan and Kraner’s characters in the film.

Luna goes on to ask a number of colorful questions about the characters in the movie, which builds on the interactive Gabby’s Dollhouse children’s series that first premiered on Netflix in 2021. The film is accompanied by the Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie soundtrack, which dropped alongside the film on Sept. 26.

“Do you have a favorite song from the movie that you love to sing?” the young Legend asks her interview subjects.

“I like ‘Gabby’s Dollhouse World,’ I think that’s a catchy one,” replies Kraner, while Estefan says, “For me, I think it’s the ‘pinch me’ song [‘Pinching In’].”

Elsewhere in the interview, Luna adorably challenges the two ladies to make the “silliest meow sound” they can. Both Kraner and Estefan immediately oblige with hilarious yowls, with the iconic Cuban-American entertainer joking, “That’s when they step on the cat’s tail.”

On screen, it’s easy to tell where Luna may have inherited her skills from: Her superstar mom has hosted a number of programs, from Lip Sync Battle to NBC’s New Year’s Eve program in 2018/19.

Late last year, Luna interviewed her dad on camera for Billboard Family. At the time, the two Legends spoke about John’s first kids’ album My Favorite Dream, on which Luna makes a cameo alongside younger brother Miles and Teigen.

Watch Luna’s full interview with the stars of Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie.



October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Greil Marcus Mystery train graffiti
Music

Greil Marcus’ Mystery Train Keeps on Rollin’ » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Cultural critic Greil Marcus’ classic text, Mystery Train, has been republished to mark its 50th anniversary; its title taken from Elvis Presley’s last single for Sun Records. The train—mysterious and elusive, a metaphor for fate and desire, though equally literal as symbolic—has been rolling along since the Carter Family in the 1930s to Bob Dylan in 2020 with “Murder Most Foul”; it snakes through the subconscious of the United States, where the nation’s imagination lies frighteningly and frightfully naked—alive. From John Winthrop to Little Richard, returning to Herman Melville, Mystery Train is a ride—that is for sure.

Little introduction is needed for Greil Marcus, who was the first reviews editor for Rolling Stone and, subsequently, wrote for Detroit magazine Creem, when rock criticism was in ascendancy. Apart from Mystery Train: Images of America in Rock ‘n’ Roll Music, Marcus has written other seminal books, including Lipstick Traces: A Secret History of the 20th Century (1989); Invisible Republic: Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes (1997); and, more recently, Folk Music: A Bob Dylan Biography in Seven Songs (2022).

Once on the mystery train, it is difficult to get offl Along the way, it picks up speed, ploughing harder and faster, deeper and broader than most non-fiction and fiction books. Indeed, it could be classified as fiction (isn’t the best non-fiction writing fiction, anyway?). Mystery Train crackles like an ole’ Vocalion 78 with secrets floating in the ether, waiting to be caught. Certain books make you dream; Mystery Train wakes you up to the blunt fact that you are alive.

Greil Marcus Keeps Rollin’ Table of Contents

The prologue of Mystery Train recounts The Dick Cavett Show, in which the New York critic John Simon and Erich Segal, author of Love Story [1970], and Yale Professor of Classics. They are having a heated debate about Euripides—as if the Greek tragedian will come back to life and let them know which one is correct before telling them both to put a cork in it. Little Richard, having had enough of this pretentious conversation, brings it to a crashing and dramatic halt.

The point: Greil Marcus uses this scene as a metaphor for how little importance critics have when compared to an artist. Especially an artist such as Little Richard, who inspired a 15-year-old Robert Zimmerman to pound his keys like a pugilist when performing Richard’s “Jenny, Jenny” in the auditorium of Hibbing High School, backed by his group the Shadow Blasters, in April 1957.

Greil Marcus was in his late 20s when he wrote Mystery Train, and, in one sense, it is a young man’s book: filled with incandescent rage and reckless ambition. *Speaking about the records of Robert Johnson, Chicago blues guitarist Mike Bloomfield (whose meaty guitar playing on Highway 61 Revisited hits better than most that it could make even the heavyweight champion of the world sweat), says, “ … I do know that in them you can hear a young man, a young man with an amazing amount of young man’s energy, the kind of thing that you would find in the early Pete Townshend, or early Elvis.”

Bloomfield forgot to mention Marcus. Passion for music is a young “man’s” game, and this is what you take away from Mystery Train: a writer who has everything to say and nothing to lose, a beauty with terrifying depth.

The classic book, Mystery Train, is so much more than a text on rock ‘n’ roll; it lays the foundation of the themes Greil Marcus will explore throughout his oeuvre, including his much-beloved and elusive United States. Specifically, how the United States being an “invented nation” impacts what it means to be an American today.

Thus, Mystery Train is a sweeping reaction to the imagination of the United States. Its purpose is to shed light on the collective unconscious of America, where Marcus likes to hang out, much like a Jungian analyst (I hope his rates are reasonable). However, instead of understanding the archetypal, shapeshifting hero Coyote (where is Bob Dylan when you need him? He told you: “I’m Not There”), Marcus delves into the symbolism of the devil in blues music, and Stagger Lee with his brand new Stetson hat. (What would have Lloyd Price made of Mystery Train? Or was he too busy watching the leaves tumbling down?)

As Greil Marcus explained in 1974, these American archetypes in the nation’s imagination—unconscious, psyche, call them what you want—are united yet elusive. Yes, Mystery Train is subterranean; you will not see daylight again.

For those who are not conversant with the history of the United States, there is one name you will learn to know by heart when reading Greil Marcus: John Winthrop. While aboard the ship Arbella during the trans-Atlantic journey from Britain to New England in 1630, Winthrop delivered a sermon to his fellow Puritans to prepare them for a new life in the Americas under the banner of Christ, their Redeemer. This sermon included the phrase “city on a hill,” which meant that if the Puritans failed to uphold their covenant with God, their sins would be for the world to see; simultaneously, they would also be a shining example. Arguably, the origin of American exceptionalism.

For Greil Marcus (granted, he has a wild imagination), this intense drama is played out to this day, both in real life and art. Therefore, questions arise: how has the United States betrayed the idealism of its Puritan foundation? Conversely, what is the reaction of the present-day United States to the Puritans’ failings? These are some of the questions posed in Mystery Train and again in Invisible Republic: Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes, reaching an apex in The Shape of Things to Come: Prophecy in the American Voice (2006).

In the prologue to Mystery Train, Marcus quotes from Leslie Fiedler’s 1968 essay “Cross the Border—Close the Gap“: “To be an American (unlike being English or French or whatever) is precisely to imagine a destiny rather than to inherit one; since we have always been, insofar as we are Americans at all, inhabitants of myth rather than history.” He deploys this as a springboard for Mystery Train: how American artists straddle between what is inherited and what is imagined, between history and myths, between fact and fiction.

Harmonica Frank: Dramatis Personae

Photo: Memphis International Records

Like the Puritans establishing settlements in New England, Mystery Train‘s two chapters—which are about hillbilly Harmonica Frank and the blues musician Robert Johnson—are entitled “Ancestors”; the other four—The Band, Sly Stone, Randy Newman, and Elvis Presley—are entitled “Inheritors”.All the artists in Mystery Train embody the paradoxical nature of the United States: between rebellion and conformity, freedom and obligation, ambition and restraint, real and unreal, offensiveness and inoffensiveness. Put differently, each artist is an insignia, a symbol, a countenance of the Janus-faced nature of American society.

Yes, Greil Marcus’ work is deep, like a black hole. He makes a profound point every other line, which takes minutes to assimilate; by then, you’re out of breath, wondering if he doesn’t know that there are readers—like myself—out there, trying damn hard to keep up with him. Oh, and who the hell is—and what is so great about—Harmonica Frank? I have heard of Guitar Slim—but Harmonica Frank? Is he kidding?

I swear he exists purely as a function for Mystery Train—or is part of Marcus’ fantasy for old-timey characters who are not so much real as fabulous. Have you heard of Harmonica Frank before or since?

Harmonica Frank was real! (music producer Steve Lavere rediscovered him.) The blues scholar Don Kent wrote the following about the otherworldly blues musician Geeshie Wiley: “If she did not exist, it would not be possible to invent her.” With a wry insouciance, Greil Marcus responds, “So did she invent herself?” However, Harmonica Frank takes it one step further: he could not have existed and still have influenced rock ‘n’ roll.

Enough of these ridiculous metaphysical asides, take a listen to Harmonica Frank’s talking blues number, “The Great Medical Menagerist”, his only single for Sun Records, in which he is more feline than human with those fiendish falsettos and caterwauls, blithely and gleefully making a fool of himself at his own expense. He was a larger-than-life vagrant who personified rock ‘n’ roll before rock ‘n’ roll; dirty, wild, and absurd. Unlike Bob Dylan, Harmonica Frank blew his lungs not even for a dollar a day. In fact, he smiled at obscurity. Born for the lonesome road.

In the Harmonica Frank chapter, Greil Marcus demands that you understand that this artist cannot be cast aside to the ash heap of history or, to purloin from the author, the “dustbin of history”. There is no question that this wailing clown is part of rock ‘n’ roll’s story, or, more accurately, essential to the rock ‘n’ roll topography that Marcus carves out in Mystery Train.

Travelling around the country, playing medicine shows, weirdo Harmonica Frank captured the strangeness rooted in the American experience, which Greil Marcus would later coin as “The Old, Weird America” (the inescapable epitaph for Marcus!). For Sam Phillips, founder of Sun Records, Harmonica Frank was his first shot at success, before Elvis Presley. Always before Presley.

The Elvis Presley chapter in Mystery Train is, by far, the strongest: Elvis Presley comes alive and, before long, not only are you walking alongside him but seeing through is eyes. You see this especially when Marcus delves into the ‘68 Comeback Special; a performance in which Presley reclaims his throne of “King of Rock and Roll” and searches for a future while confronting his past, atoning for his sins, seeking redemption, all in the name of the Lord.

America’s Mythical Transfiguration

Greil Marcus Graffiti train Arpad Czapp unsplash 1
Photo: Ezekial Powell | Unsplash

At the beginning of the Robert Johnson chapter, Greil Marcus writes, “It may be that the most interesting American struggle is the struggle to set oneself free from the limits one is born to, and then to learn something of the value of those limits.” Each artist in Mystery Train, some more than others, has grappled with limitations that they were born to.

In Invisible Republic: Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes (1997), Marcus writes at length about the reinvention that occurs in “Lo & Behold!”; effectively, the narrator pulls out of a town on a train to start anew but, when a conductor asks for his name, his mask falls off; the nation’s past and his own has caught up with him. William Faulkner wrote about the past not being past, while F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote that you cannot repeat the past; the past haunts the United States.

What these American writers understood, or tried to grapple with, is, as Greil Marcus hammers down at with a John Henry sledgehammer, that the nation’s history, due to being a nation built upon an idea, the past is always present. No more so than in the music of these six artists.

The six artists in Mystery Train follow a story bigger than themselves: that old United States’ narrative of self-invention. “In the work of each performer there is an attempt to create oneself, to make a new man out of what is inherited and what is imagined.” Robert Leroy Dodds to sold-his-soul-to-the-devil Robert Johnson, whose spindly fingers knocked out unorthodox chords like a barroom brawler.

All six acts have held contradictory feelings about the past, selves, place, success, and meaning. This is perhaps best summed up by Walt Whitman’s quip, “I Contain Multitudes”, which is an American characteristic and makes up for the American experience (despite the members of the Band being Canadian, minus Levon Helm).

Fitzgerald’s Every-Luring Green Light

American artists, sometimes unwittingly, expose the illusion of the American dream, the emptiness that lurks beneath the surface. They eviscerate the dream and themselves in the process. Nobody did so more than the parvenu Presley, who personified the rags-to-riches story that never leads to happiness; in his case, it ended in early death.

If not death, then, “Lonely at the Top”, as the quasi-vaudevillian Randy Newman sang, as if he was too wise to play the game. Greil Marcus highlights his ironic aside of wanting to perform at Shea Stadium to theater concertgoers, while his 1974 album, Good Old Boys, was rising in the charts. This is nothing but the goddam truth. Thus, the United States is partly founded upon a lie: success as succor.

When an American fails, Greil Marcus suggests, it is more than a personal failure: it is a failure by the person on the community and the community’s failure on that person. However, the failure of the American Dream does not fit into the country’s narrative and, thus, is usually scorned, ignored, or pushed aside as if it were contaminated; anything but accepted as a rigged game.

Yet, suppressing failure creates a further isolation already embedded in the American character, which is why, in rock ‘n’ roll, you get the archetypal image of the drifter driving along a lonely highway, wondering why his dream has turned into a nightmare. He’s wishing for more gas in the tank to drive himself over the bridge, where, perhaps, the real promised land awaits.

As Marcus alludes to in Mystery Train, the destructive side of the American dream is played out in the vernacular of rock ‘n’ roll. This would continue post-publication of Mystery Train in a figure, such as Bruce Springsteen, who—post-The River, an album containing “Hungry Heart”, his first top-10 hit on the Billboard Hot 100—delivers his midnight prayer.

“It’s a hey ho rock and roll, deliver me from nowhere,” to an empty highway, as if echoing Robert Johnson, along with all his whirling Puritan devils (we will get to that later). Springsteen sings the line jocularly, as if to pick up the narrator’s forlorn spirits or, let’s be honest, himself from the waist-deep abyss of the American dream gone wrong, even when it supposedly went right.

America’s Collective Unconscious

vintage guitar, folk guitar
Photo: bizoo_n | AdobeStock

As seen by its subtitle, “Images of America in Rock ‘n’ Roll Music”, Mystery Train asks, What are the myths, stories, and images that Americans inherit? Furthermore, what does Stagger Lee’s archetypal story portray about the United States’ fantasy of violence? Where does the image of the devil in blues music derive from?

Greil Marcus posits that the struggle between God and the devil is the legacy of the Puritan weirdness; they brought along a promise they could not keep, and their failures set the devil loose. In the 1920s and 1930s, blues singers, not gospel, were the real Puritans, Marcus explains in Mystery Train. They knew the devil better than most and, at the worst of times, they were the devil. For Marcus, Johnson was a failed Puritan.

Of course, Marcus is postulating a symbolic argument, as is the entirety of Mystery Train. This is why some readers fail to understand Marcus: they take him literally. Marcus has tapped into a way of understanding the United States on a symbolic level: to match myth with myth, song with song, art with art. Also, to understand the psychological effects of the country is to go beyond facts; it is to see it from the bottom up.

That being said, Greil Marcus is also literal. He has no qualms in taking the Faustian bargain Robert Johnson made at face value: “you could even take it literally,” Marcus writes, as if a matter-of-fact, an indifferent shrug of the shoulders, no bigger, right? Perhaps Marcus is correct: the selling of the soul in exchange for musical prowess returns to the Egyptians, as highlighted in a footnote in the “Notes and Discographies” section of Mystery Train, which is now, in the 50th anniversary edition, 269 pages long. (In the first edition, it was 25 pages.) Unsurprisingly, there is nothing new under the sun: what seems numinous today will be prosaic tomorrow, and vice versa.

“The image of the devil is a way of comprehending the distance between Fitzgerald’s shining image of American possibilities and his verdict on its result,” he pens. This is what makes Mystery Train engrossing: Greil Marcus neither goes down roads that you expect nor takes things as metaphors. For him, myths are real.

All these ideas will stay with him throughout his writing life, as he pens in his author’s note in 1974, “the resonance of the best American images is profoundly deep and impossibly broad. I wrote this book in an attempt to find some of those images, but I know now that to put oneself in touch with them is a life’s work.”

Imagined Democratic Vistas

Greil Marcus is obsessed with the reverberations of art: how one art form—such as song, film, or novel—connects with another. At his best, he binds seemingly disparate artifacts, rendering the idea of “being a stretch” obsolete, as that is its point: fiction emerges from fact. The creation of art is never coldly calculated—a thousand thoughts flow from and into artists in the process—so why not apply this to criticism?

The way in which Marcus oscillates between decades, centuries even, is closer to the workings of an artist—perhaps as he is a writer first, critic second—than the cold analytical eye of a professor. Like the Chantels, Marcus has rhythm, which is why he can get to the heart and soul of America quicker and better than most. An artist understands another artist.

Yes, of course, Marcus makes Whitmanesque transcendental leaps, but so did the artist that he is writing about. Whether consciously or not, there is an indebtedness to Marcus’ thinking to the German cultural critic and philosopher, Walter Benjamin; they both express an understanding that any historical investigation is exclusively embedded in the present moment—in other words, we can only understand the past in the present and understand the present from the past.

In the epilogue, Greil Marcus explicates that these six artists—lost and found, unknown and known, revered and discarded, in the United States—were working within Walt Whitman’s framework. “Whitman thought limits were undemocratic,” Marcus writes. “As good democrats, we fight it out within the borders of his ambition.” With all their might, these artists pushed against their limits; in Mystery Train, Marcus does too.

*This is reported in the “Notes and Discographies” section of Mystery Train. The 50th anniversary edition of the book includes Greil Marcus referencing the birth and death dates of every figure referenced who has passed away, turning this edition into a eulogy. It leaves you with a somber question: What will go out of the world with Greil Marcus?

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Zelda Williams Tells Fans to "Stop Sending AI Videos" of Her Father, Robin
Music

Zelda Williams Tells Fans to “Stop Sending AI Videos” of Her Father, Robin

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

In the past, Zelda Williams has had no problem defending her father, the late, great Robin Williams. But after putting Eric Trump in his place back in 2020, the actress and director has a new target: AI.

In a series of Instagram Stories on Monday, Williams urged the internet to “stop sending me AI videos of dad.” She continued, saying she’s “seen way worse” from trolls and described the process as a “waste of time and energy,” adding, “Believe me, it’s not what he’d want.”

She went on to say that these same people are condensing people’s very lives and legacies simply so they can “churn out horrible TikTok slop puppetering.” Those videos, Williams added, can’t be considered art whatsoever but are rather “disgusting, over-processed hotdogs [sic]” made from people’s unrelated imagery/likenesses. In turn, online users are only inundated with this “slop” because some folks are “hoping they’ll give you a little thumbs up.”

She went on to say that these same people are reducing entire lives and legacies just to “churn out horrible TikTok slop puppeteering.” Those videos, Williams added, can’t be considered art whatsoever but are rather “disgusting, over-processed hotdogs [sic]” made from people’s unrelated imagery/likenesses. In turn, online users are only flooded with this “slop” because some folks are “hoping they’ll give you a little thumbs up.”

Related Video

As if that wasn’t enough, Zelda Williams delivered this undeniable truth bomb: AI isn’t “the future,” it’s simply “recycling and regurgitating the past.” And for the grand finale, she threw in a conversation-ending haymaker:

“You are taking in The Human Centipede of content, and from the very end of the line, all while the folks at the front laugh and laugh, consume and consume.”

If we could for a moment, GOTDAMN.

But more seriously, even a tertiary glance at TikTok and similar platforms will reveal dozens and dozens of AI-generated Robin Williams videos/clips. None of them are worth linking to or referencing directly, but all of them are guilty of either infringing on various IP and trademarks as well as being generally obtuse regarding the ideas and opinions of a man they’d never known let alone ever met. It’s painful as fans of Williams to see his image be needlessly manipulated, especially when the work he left beyond already checked so many boxes in terms of emotional content and genre offerings.

Zelda Williams previously struck back at AI during 2023’s SAG-AFTRA strike. In response to people at the time having already used Robin Williams’ voice for various AI-generated media, Zelda said that while she found that “personally disturbing…the ramifications go far beyond my own feelings.” She went on to declare that “living actors deserve a chance to create characters with their choices.”

Check out screen grabs of her IG stories below.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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