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Refused members announce debut album as Backengrillen with menacing single 'A Hate Inferior'
Music

Refused members announce debut album as Backengrillen with menacing single ‘A Hate Inferior’

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Members of Refused have launched a new project, Backengrillen, and announced their self-titled debut album. Listen to the single ‘A Hate Inferior’ below.

  • READ MORE: Refused tell us about their final tour, winning over fans from ‘The Bear’ and the future of hardcore

The Swedish hardcore punk outfit are due to play their final-ever live shows next month, following a recent run of last dates in the UK and Europe.

When announcing their farewell gigs, Refused revealed that a new group had “been born within the band”. Now, it’s been confirmed that Backengrillen will release their debut album on January 23, 2026 via Svart Records (pre-order here).

The experimental project features three out of four Refused members (singer Dennis Lyxzén, bassist Magnus Flagge and drummer David Sandström), as well as the non-Refused saxophonist Mats Gustafsson.

“Backengrillen’s music is a paean to chaos and destruction,” the band explained in a statement. “The basic idea is to take a death/doom metal, or noiserock riff and play it until it loses meaning and then break it apart like a ravenous cat would a tiny forest mouse.”

They went on to describe the LP as being “filled to the brim with the self-hatred endemic to the province of Västerbotten from whence the members hail”.

“The record was written on a Thursday during their first ever rehearsal, performed live on a Friday and recorded on a Saturday, so what you’re hearing is raw, stupid, gut instinct music played by seasoned purveyors of hardcore punk, metal, free jazz, noise et cetera,” the outfit continued.

Backengrillen confirmed that their second album was already “in the making”, describing it as “less stupid, more ugly”. They added: “Stay tuned and fuck the pigs.”

The band have previewed their five-track debut with a menacing 10-minute single, ‘A Hate Inferior’. Tune in above.

The tracklist for Backengrillen’s self-titled debut album is: 

1. ‘A Hate Inferior’
2. ‘Dör För långsamt’
3. ‘Repeater II’
4. ‘Backengrillen’
5. ‘Socialism Or Barbarism’

Sandström had previously explained that the members wanted to be in “a band with no baggage, no fans to please, limited only by our wildest musical hopes and dreams”, adding: “We’re very excited about getting around to taming this new wild beast.”

Backengrillen previously played live together in early 2023.

Refused’s final-ever dates will take place in Sweden, with performances scheduled for Gothenburg, Norrköping, Stockholm and Umeå next month. These are set to follow a run of gigs in Australia.

Speaking to NME at Mad Cool 2025 this summer, Sandström explained: “We have other plans for our future, and Refused doesn’t fit in there.”

Lyxzén elaborated: “What we’re doing with Refused is very physical and quite demanding. I already feel like it’s pushing it. In 10 years, I’ll be 62, and that’s not a good look to try and prance around in tight pants.”

The band also discussed the future of the hardcore scene, and how featuring on The Bear’s soundtrack had won them some new fans. Watch the video interview in full below.

Refused’s winter 2026 Sweden dates are:

DECEMBER
11 – Gothenburg, Sweden – Pustervik (with Division Of Laura Lee and Spøgelse)
12 – Gothenburg, Sweden – Pustervik (with Rome Is Not A Town and Darla_
13 – Norrköping, Sweden – Arbis (with Fireside and Lost Faith)
17 – Stockholm, Sweden – Fallan (with Abhinanda and Twin Pigs)
18 – Stockholm, Sweden – Fallan (with Youth Code and Harrowed)
19 – Umeå, Sweden – Vaven (with Youth Code, Left Hand Of Darkness and Millencolin)
20 – Umeå, Sweden – Vaven (with Fireside, Mattias Alkberg, Top 10 Babies and Deppa)
21 – Umeå, Sweden – Vaven (with Abhinanda, Final Exit, Nix and Dream Warriors)

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Questlove Teases Posthumous D'Angelo Album: “You’ll See Soon"
Music

Questlove Teases Posthumous D’Angelo Album: “You’ll See Soon”

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Questlove has revealed that a new album by the recently-departed D’Angelo is currently in the works.

The musician and filmmaker spoke about the prospect of new music from the late R&B star with entertainment reporter Courtney Tezeno this past weekend,

“You’ll see soon,” Questlove teased prior to a tribute performance honoring Sly Stone at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame in Los Angeles, offering a brief but strong hint regarding new music from D’Angelo being unvaulted.

Questlove attends the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame Induction Ceremony at Peacock Theater on November 08, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic

He then added, “It’s always the sound of yesterday, but for the future. This record is no different.”

Although the posthumous project has no title or release date yet, its very existence represents a new chapter to come in the crooner’s legacy.

It remains to be revealed whether the forthcoming album will consist of songs fully completed by D’Angelo himself, or whether Questlove (as curator, producer or archivist) will sculpt unfinished material into a finished work, but the promise alone has sparked excitement among fans.

D'Angelo

D’Angelo performs on stage at O2 Academy Birmingham on February 17, 2015 in Birmingham, United Kingdom.

Ollie Millington/Redferns via Getty Images

For now, only the cryptic assurance remains. In the meantime, beloved tracks like “Lady,” “Cruisin’,” and “Really Love” serve as reminders of D’Angelo’s singular talent, his influence on generations of artists, and the potential of what might yet emerge from this new chapter.

Questlove’s connection to D’Angelo runs deep. The drummer/producer of The Roots first met D’Angelo in the mid-1990s and the two forged a musical bond that helped shape the sound of that era. D’Angelo earned four Grammy Awards and fourteen nominations over his career.

D'Angelo

Soul singer-songwriter D’Angelo performs during Day 1 of the 2012 Essence Music Festival at Louisiana Superdome on July 6, 2012 in New Orleans, Louisiana.

Skip Bolen/WireImage

His earlier albums — Brown Sugar (1995) and Voodoo (2000) — were touchstones of the neo-soul movement, with Voodoo winning the Grammy for Best R&B Album and its single “Untitled (How Does It Feel)” taking Best Male R&B Vocal Performance.

The Virginia native’s last studio album, Black Messiah, dropped in 2014 and received widespread acclaim.

D'Angelo

D’Angelo performs live on the main stage during Day Two of the Lovebox festival at Victoria Park on July 20, 2013 in London, England.

Simone Joyner/Getty Images

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Stereogum home
Music

Refused Members Announce Debut Backengrillen Album: Hear “A Hate Inferior”

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Refused are still playing their last shows as Refused, but they’re also launching their new project already. Backengrillen has three out of four Refused members: vocalist Dennis Lyxzén, bassist Magnus Flagge, and drummer David Sandström, in addition to the non-Refused saxophonist Mats Gustafsson. They’re announcing their eponymous debut album today.

“Backengrillen’s music is a paean to chaos and destruction,” the band says in a statement. “The basic idea is to take a death/doom metal, or noiserock riff and play it until it loses meaning and then break it apart like a ravenous cat would a tiny forest mouse.”

“It’s filled to the brim with the self-hatred endemic to the province of Västerbotten from whence the member’s hail,” they continue. “The record was written on a Thursday during their first ever rehearsal, performed live on a Friday and recorded on a Saturday, so what you’re hearing is raw, stupid, gut instinct music played by seasoned purveyors of hardcore punk, metal, free jazz, noise et cetera. Record no 2 is in the making, less stupid, more ugly. Stay tuned and fuck the pigs.”

Check out the 10-minute, off-kilter rocker “A Hate Inferior” below.

TRACKLIST:

01 “A Hate Inferior”
02 “Dör För långsamt”
03 “Repeater II”
04 “Backengrillen”
05 “Socialism Or Barbarism”

Backengrillens is out 1/23/26 via Svart Records. Pre-order it here.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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keiyaA: hooke’s law Album Review
Music

keiyaA: hooke’s law Album Review

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Can a dark night of the soul be fun? keiyaA thinks so. The producer and singer’s second album is a freewheeling journey through clubs, bedrooms, and panic that’s as cheeky and propulsive as it is heavy. Where her debut Forever, Ya Girl was affirmational and atmospheric, healing incense for working folks trying to get by, Hooke’s Law is an accelerant. Over staggering tracks overrun with rhythms, melodies, and voices, keiyaA hurtles through the abyss and dares you to keep up. She wants to take up space, to eat her landlord, to be chewed like pastrami on rye by a lover who follows her hips and the latest headlines. These are rider anthems for after the crashout.

The album title references a law of classical physics that describes how certain objects survive the imposition of force. When a coil is stretched, for instance, it can shift back without losing shape. keiyaA sees that elasticity in her battles with depression and loss, and dedicates the album to describing the feeling of being constantly squeezed and prodded by the world. As she put it in an interview, Hooke’s law helped her realize “a downward spiral is a loaded spring.”

Embracing that ethos, she prioritizes tension, narrating struggles with love and mental health in the nervous heat of real time. The unruly arrangements flow freely from drunken R&B to racing breakbeats to mellow IDM. Sound effects and warped samples abound: explosions, shattering glass, the iconic Lex Luger riser, clips of poems by Jayne Cortez and Pat Parker, and a flip of Jadakiss’ “U Make U Wanna.” The flux highlights her playfulness as a songwriter; you can feel her chuckling to herself when she begins a confessional about being frustratingly horny with a clip of Gucci Mane’s slut-shaming “Thirsty.” Through it all, keiyaA shows off a widened repertoire of scats and harmonies, often using Auto-Tune to stretch her cool melodies into tumbling streams of consciousness. It’s as if she’s cranked up the volume of the monologues from her past music.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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WNC WhopBezzy / 70th Street Carlos: Out the Blue Album Review
Music

WNC WhopBezzy / 70th Street Carlos: Out the Blue Album Review

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

In Ghetto Stories, a 2010 Baton Rouge hood flick that I like to think of as Trill Entertainment’s The Fast and the Furious, Boosie and Webbie are rivals from opposite sides of town. “You finna witness some other shit, nigga!” threatens Boosie at one point during a gas station confrontation, one of at least a dozen of his hilarious line readings. Unknowingly, the two have a mutual OG, Slimm, a big-time drug dealer with morals, although he’s cheating on his girlfriend, played by Hoopz, the winner of Flavor of Love season one. Eventually, Slimm is mysteriously killed, forcing Boosie and Webbie to come together to carry out his mission of getting rich or something and to find out who did the deed. Most of the second act is about the formation of their friendship, which is strengthened through strip club nights, getting money, cooking crack, and, of course, a makeover montage. Watch the movie once and you’ll understand the central idea of Baton Rouge rap: Nothing means more than brotherhood.

That might be why, even beyond Boosie and Webbie, Baton Rouge has been a city with strong rap duos for a minute: Scotty Cain and Mista Cain, TEC and Maine Musik, and at the moment, 70th Street Carlos and WNC Whopbezzy. Supposedly, Carlos and Whopbezzy met in the first grade when Bezzy walked into class with two golds in his mouth, a chain on his neck, and girls throwing themselves at him. In that instant, Carlos thought, “That lil bitch thuggin’,” and they’ve been boys ever since. (You should know by now to take rappers’ stories with a grain of salt, but I choose to believe this one.)

Years later, in the mid-2010s, back when Bezzy used to do Carlos’ tats, they started rapping on a whim. With a run of singles and a 2017 joint mixtape, the pair made a lot of noise in a competitive era of Louisiana rap—the rise of NBA YoungBoy and JayDaYoungan; Kevin Gates’ star turn—until they eventually took an unexplained break from dropping music together. On their return, with Out The Blue, they pick up right where they left off.

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Summer Walker Launched "Finally Over It" Dump Truck Service Ahead of New Album - Invites Fans to Literally Toss Their Ex's Stuff
Celebrity News

Summer Walker Launched “Finally Over It” Dump Truck Service Ahead of New Album – Invites Fans to Literally Toss Their Ex’s Stuff

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Summer Walker Launched “Finally Over It” Dump Truck Service Ahead of New Album – Invites Fans to Literally Toss Their Ex’s Stuff

Summer Walker is taking the phrase “out with the old” to a whole new level.

The R&B star unveiled her “Finally Over It Dump Truck Service,” a playful and symbolic pop-up activation inspired by her upcoming album Finally Over It, set for release on November 14, 2025.

In collaboration with YouTube, Walker invited fans to gather at Morehouse College in Atlanta over the weekend to “finally get rid of your ex’s stuff.” The mint-green dump truck — branded with the album’s title — was open to Spelman and Clark Atlanta University students from noon to 2 p.m., with all gently used items donated afterward.

The stunt ties directly to Walker’s Finally Over It rollout — her third project in the “Over It” series, following 2019’s Over It and 2021’s Still Over It . The campaign doubles as a cathartic nod to the emotional cleansing themes behind her new music.

“Taking out the trash since 2017,” one of the event’s posters read — a cheeky reference that fans connected to Walker’s famously candid breakup anthems.


November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Cindi Lauper in 1984. (Credit: Koh Hasebe/Shinko Music/Getty Images)
Music

Every Cyndi Lauper Album, Ranked

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

In an ’80s pop landscape full of enormous talents and outrageous fashions, Cyndi Lauper still managed to stand out with one of the loudest voices and biggest personalities on MTV. The Queens native looked like a thrift store come to life and incorporated professional wrestlers like Captain Lou Albano into her music videos and performances. She ruled the pop charts with a string of massive hits like “Girls Just Want to Have Fun” and “True Colors,” won the Grammy for Best New Artist in 1985, had one of the most spotlight-grabbing turns on “We Are the World,” and displayed her razor-sharp wit in late-night interviews with Johnny Carson and David Letterman. 

Cyndi Lauper performs at Northwell Health in 2025 in Wantagh. (Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Cyndi Lauper)

After the ‘80s, Lauper just kept pivoting and revealing new talents and dimensions with more autobiographical songwriting and ventures into film, television, and musical theater. She’s only an Oscar away from an EGOT, and her later albums have proven that she can sing just about anything she wants to, including blues, country, and house music. And with decades of activism, she’s been a prominent and articulate voice for causes like gay marriage rights, AIDS research, and youth homelessness.

Lauper turned 72 this year, but she’s winding down her performing career in typically splashy fashion. The acclaimed 2024 documentary Let the Canary Sing gave Lauper a chance to tell her story as “music’s most authentic superstar.” This year she concluded a farewell tour with two shows at the Hollywood Bowl that were filmed for a special that recently aired on CBS, though she’ll return to the stage next April for a Las Vegas residency. And on November 8, Lauper will be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame alongside artists like OutKast and Soundgarden. Here’s a look back at Lauper’s very unusual career.

14. The Body Acoustic (2005)

There are two lovely new songs on The Body Acoustic: Lauper co-wrote “Above the Clouds” with legendary guitarist Jeff Beck and “I’ll Be Your River” with R&B star Vivian Green. The rest of the collection, however, is a mixed bag of re-recordings of some of Lauper’s most beloved songs. The diverse guest list is a testament to Lauper’s versatility and wide reaching influence, but an album that zig zags from Taking Back Sunday’s Adam Lazzara on one track to dancehall hitmaker Shaggy on the next might be too eclectic for its own good. And nobody really needed a tasteful unplugged version of “She Bop.”

13. At Last (2003)

At the beginning of Lauper’s solo career, she resisted the overtures of managers and labels who thought she could be the next Barbra Streisand. Two decades later, Lauper finally relented and recorded a crowd-pleasing collection of standards and torch songs. She can play the role of a brassy jazz singer to perfection, singing “Makin’ Whoopee” as a duet with Tony Bennett. But the most impressive moments on At Last are when Lauper finds a quiet intensity and brings out the loneliness and desolation in songs like “Don’t Let Me Be Misunderstood” and “If You Go Away.” “On Smokey Robinson’s ‘You’ve Really Got a Hold on Me,’ she’s a pitch-perfect combination of anguish and poise, and on Aretha Franklin’s ‘Until You Come Back to Me,’ she delivers a smoky rendition that isn’t too shy to flirt with the original,” Jon Caramanica wrote in the Rolling Stone review of At Last.

12. Blue Angel with Blue Angel (1980)

Lauper spent years honing her voice and stage presence with New York bands like Doc West and Blue Angel, the latter signing to Polydor Records and releasing one album. “I’m Gonna Be Strong,” popularized by Gene Pitney in 1964, was Lauper’s big, dazzling vocal showcase with Blue Angel, which she’d later re-record for a greatest hits compilation in 1994. The band’s original material also had a throwback vibe, and their rockabilly and doo wop pastiches lacked personality; it’s hard to picture Blue Angel ever becoming much more than an opening act for other retro-minded new wave bands like the Stray Cats or the B-52’s. The quintet were skilled musicians, though, and the unusual meter on “Anna Blue” feels like a waltz rhythm with a trap door. Lauper would sprinkle a few of the songs she wrote with Blue Angel keyboardist and saxophonist John Turi into her solo catalog, most notably She’s So Unusual’s “Witness.”

11. Detour (2016)

It’s easy to be cynical about artists from other genres making country albums now, but just about any talented singer has a good country album in them, and Lauper found hers on Detour. Seeing Patsy Cline sing on television was a formative moment for Lauper, and her renditions of “Walkin’ After Midnight” and “I Fall to Pieces” are sublime. If Detour could use more of anything, it’s the sillier side of country and western glimpsed in her cover of Conway Twitty and Loretta Lynn’s “You’re the Reason Our Kids are Ugly” with Vince Gill.

10. Sisters of Avalon (1997)

Cyndi Lauper married actor David Thornton in 1991, and their son Declyn was born in 1997, a few months after the U.S. release of her fifth album. Sisters of Avalon was the first in a string of projects where Lauper’s chief collaborator was Jan Pulsford, a British multi-instrumentalist who’d played with the Thompson Twins in the ’80s. She brought along Jan’s brother Nigel Pulsford, then riding high as a member of the band Bush, to contribute some of the album’s heavier guitar. In addition to the grunge riffs, Sisters of Avalon leans heavily on the trendy trip hop sound courtesy of co-producer Mark Saunders, who’d worked on Tricky’s trip hop landmark Maxinquaye. The album feels like the dated product of a very specific mid-’90s moment, but the sound suits the songs. “Judging from the soaring self-assurance of ‘Sisters of Avalon’ to the love-wounded quiver on ‘Unhook the Stars’ (the title track of the recent Nick Cassavetes film), Lauper remains an intoxicating pop siren,” David Grad wrote in the Entertainment Weekly review of Sisters of Avalon.

9. Merry Christmas… Have a Nice Life (1998)

After 15 years with Epic Records, Lauper asked to be released from her contract, and her longtime label complied on the condition that she make a Christmas album on her way out. The title of Merry Christmas… Have a Nice Life may be a humorous kiss off to the label, but Lauper treated the album more like a creative opportunity than a contractual obligation. She re-recorded the Hat Full of Stars highlight “Feels Like Christmas” and penned six more originals to go with it, some heartfelt and some light and campy. Even perennial favorites like “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” are given quirky new arrangements.

8. A Night to Remember (1989)

After two enormous multiplatinum albums that both spun off chart-topping singles, A Night to Remember didn’t even go gold, and Lauper’s first film vehicle Vibes was a box office bomb. Kids today would say that Lauper “entered her flop era” in the late ’80s, and Lauper herself has jokingly referred to her third album as A Night to Forget. With some time and distance though, it’s easier to appreciate as her funkiest and most lyrically conventional album, a playful collection of songs about love and sex with a supporting cast that includes Bootsy Collins and Cameo frontman Larry Blackmon.

7. Bring Ya to the Brink (2008)

Throughout the ’80s and ’90s, Lauper rarely made straight-up dance music, but 12-inch remixes of her singles by producers like Junior Vasquez and Shep Pettibone made her a mainstay of clubs and Billboard’s dance charts. Working with an array of big names like Basement Jaxx, Max Martin, and Axwell, Lauper finally embraced her inner disco diva on what remains to date her last collection of original songs. “Bring Ya to the Brink escapes just being a club-tailored album, for underneath the glossy production is some of Lauper’s strongest writing in her 25-year solo career,” Christian John Wikane wrote in the Pop Matters review of the album.

6. Memphis Blues (2010)

For a streetwise New Yorker, Lauper sounded surprisingly at home in a Memphis studio with B.B. King, Allen Toussaint, and Charlie Musselwhite. And the Little Walter and Muddy Waters covers on Memphis Blues feel like the ultimate test of her adaptability as a vocalist. It actually became her highest charting album since True Colors, and Lauper supported it with the longest tour of her career and released the live album To Memphis, with Love in 2011.

5. Kinky Boots (Original Broadway Cast Recording) (2013)

These days, Broadway is overrun with moonlighting pop stars, but Cyndi Lauper was an unlikely outsider when Harvey Fierstein asked her to write the songs for his stage adaptation of the 2005 British film Kinky Boots. The musical version of Kinky Boots was the big story at the 2013 Tony Awards with six wins, with Lauper making history as the first woman to win alone in the Best Score category. The cast recording album, released days before the award show sweep, makes it easy to hear how Lauper’s childhood of listening to her mother’s favorite show tunes paid off in Billy Porter showstoppers like “Hold Me In Your Heart” and “Land of Lola.” In 2024, Lauper revealed that there are plans to develop the musical into a feature film.

4. Shine (2004)

After Lauper was released from her Epic contract, she recorded Shine for a smaller label, Edel Records, which ended up going out of business before the album could be released. Shine was whittled down to a 5-track EP for an American release in 2002, and the full album only received a 2004 release in Japan, where Lauper has enjoyed chart success more consistently than anywhere else since the ’80s. It’s truly unfortunate that Shine slipped through the cracks, because it balances Lauper’s pop instincts and more adventurous impulses beautifully, particularly on “Eventually,” co-written with Ryuichi Sakamoto.

3. True Colors (1986)

Decades before it was the norm for straight pop stars, Cyndi Lauper was an outspoken queer ally, casting several gay and trans friends including Gregory Natal in the “She Bop” video. The title track from True Colors has become an anthem for the LGBTQ+ community over the years, but it was the album’s less successful fourth single “Boy Blue,” written for Natal while he was dying of AIDS, that’s the album’s most personal statement of compassion. True Colors is often a bombastically overproduced record, and the cover of Marvin Gaye’s “What’s Going On” is more a potent gesture than a great interpretation of the song, but the album’s big-hearted humanity has an irrepressible charm.

2. Hat Full of Stars (1993)

Allee Willis, who died in 2019, was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2018 and posthumously inducted into the Women Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2024 for penning timeless hits with Earth, Wind & Fire and the Pet Shop Boys. Willis was also a great foil for Lauper, co-writing several of the best songs on her fourth album. Hat Full of Stars touches on topics like abortion, child abuse, and racism, but Lauper imbues “Sally’s Pigeons” and “Lies” with deeply personal lyrics that feel more like short stories than protest songs. “It is her most consistently tuneful and ambitious album,” Jean Rosenbluth wrote in the Los Angeles Times review of Hat Full of Stars.

1. She’s So Unusual (1983)

Everything about Lauper’s first solo album was unusual. She was a seasoned 30-year-old performer who could channel ’20s flapper starlet Helen Kane, but she made an audacious and youthful synth pop album for the MTV generation. She was given a somewhat sexist lyric written by a man, Robert Hazard’s “Girls Just Want to Have Fun,” and turned it into the most deceptively sunny feminist anthem of the ’80s. She covered one of the more subtly dirty songs from Prince’s Dirty Mind, “When You Were Mine,” but she also wrote an ode to the female orgasm, “She Bop,” that wound up on the Parents Music Resource Center’s “Filthy Fifteen” most objectionable pop songs. And just as the sessions for She’s So Unusual were winding down, Lauper came up with the heartbreaking ballad that became her first No. 1 single, “Time After Time,” cementing the album as an era-defining smash with emotional depth beneath its stylish hooks and infectious vocal performances. 

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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The D.O.C. Says His Split with Erykah Badu Happened After Dr. Dre Asked Him to Write for an Album
Celebrity News

The D.O.C. Says His Split with Erykah Badu Happened After Dr. Dre Asked Him to Write for an Album

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

The D.O.C. Says His Split with Erykah Badu Happened After Dr. Dre Asked Him to Write for an Album

The D.O.C. is opening up about the moment his relationship with Erykah Badu came to an end — and how a call from Dr. Dre played a key role in their split.

During an appearance on the Willie D Live podcast, the Dallas-born rapper and songwriter reflected on his breakup with Badu, explaining that it happened after Dre reached out and asked him to help write for an upcoming project. The former couple, who share a daughter, Puma Curry, now 21, had been together for about four years in the early 2000s.

The D.O.C., known for his classic track “It’s Funky Enough,” said he had returned to Dallas following a “huge blowout” with Dre and was still working through how to “write a happy ending” to his story after his career-altering car accident in 1989. Around the time their daughter was four, Dre called him to collaborate. “Erykah and I had been together for three, four years. She cleaned me up. No more drugs and alcohol. You know, I’m a father now,” he said. “I still had a desire to be somebody. And I hadn’t figured out how to create art again yet. So, when Dre called, that feeling came back — and I wanted to go. She didn’t want me to go. She thought it was a bad decision.” Badu warned him that returning to Los Angeles would land him “in the same hole” as before. “But she said, you know, if you going to go, then just go,” he recalled, admitting that despite his belief that things would be different, “she was right.”

The D.O.C. added that he doesn’t believe Badu felt “betrayed” when he left because he had “given so much” to their family during their time together. He acknowledged, however, that both knew his departure would mark the end of their romantic relationship. “We both knew when I left that we weren’t going to be able to come back to what it was. And we acknowledged that and just moved forward.” Badu — who also shares son Seven Sirius Benjamin, 27, with André 3000, and daughter Mars, 16, with Jay Electronica — continues to maintain a close friendship with The D.O.C., much like she does with her other children’s fathers.


November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Patti Smith: Horses Album Review
Music

Patti Smith: Horses Album Review

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

The austere reggae of “Redondo Beach” is like a three-minute film treatment, a story of overcast beachgoers grieving a girl, the narrator’s lover, lost to “sweet suicide”: “You’ll never return into my arms cause you were gone, gone,” she despairs, though the tune’s overall effect is bewilderingly playful. In live shows, Smith would reportedly introduce the song saying it was about “a beach where women love other women.” She rejected Horses’ queerness as autobiography, but the songs still created new paradigms, inventing roles in the schema of rock for women seducing women, women mourning women, women protecting women, women intoning “Ohh, she looks so good, oooh she looks so fine” and “20,000 girls/Called their names out to me,” aware that in its way it was radical.

“Free Money” was the first song Smith and Kaye penned together, and Smith wrote the lyric “Scoop the pearls from the sea, cash them in and buy you all the things you need” with another woman in mind: her mother. Smith had watched her parents struggle all her life. The song’s blazing dream of winning some fantastical lotto and making something from nothing feels rooted intuitively in a working-class consciousness. The steadiness and structure of “Free Money” mirror the relief she longs to deliver; its ecstatic build becomes the voyage she’s desperate to share. As a kid, Smith’s own aesthetic inspiration was free, from trashed issues of Vogue, stolen poetry volumes, and public art museums. That Blondie eventually echoed “Free Money”’s message—dreaming is free—underscores its perfect distillation of an essential punk virtue.

The apotheosis of Smith’s ambition, “Land,” is an epic nine-minute triptych and semi-apocalyptic hero’s journey, a cut-up of angels and ancient wisdom and a band called Twistelletes. The first act weaves three Smith vocal takes into an unnerving inner monologue about “Johnny,” a boy who is viciously assaulted, depicting the stampede of brutal reality as “horses, horses, horses.” Next a hairpin turn takes us suddenly to a dance hall. Smith quotes from the live-wire abandon of Chris Kenner’s 1962 classic “Land of a Thousand Dances,” a parade of teen dance crazes: “Do you know how to Pony like Bony Moronie?” she hollers. “Then you mashed potato!” “Do the alligator!” “Do the Watusi!” “Land” is ultimately an action painting of jaunty keys and single hammered chords and pure corporality, circling the fact that “life is filled with holes,” “full of pain,” Smith sings, but it’s worth living. (A Creem reporter, Tony Glover, was present for the Horses sessions, and after watching Smith spend seven possessed hours mixing “Land,” her fingers at the controls, he wrote, “I had trouble sleeping for several days.”)

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Bob Dylan: Through the Open Window: The Bootleg Series Vol. 18 Album Review
Music

Bob Dylan: Through the Open Window: The Bootleg Series Vol. 18 Album Review

by jummy84 November 8, 2025
written by jummy84

In one of the finest moments of sequencing on this set, the next song up is “Boots of Spanish Leather,” an outtake from the Freewheelin’ sessions with Tom Wilson (Dylan would eventually re-record it for The Times They Are A-Changin’ in 1964). The contrast between the rousing chorus of “Blowin’ in the Wind” and the stillness of “Boots” is jarring enough to bring out new aspects of each song, with “Boots” sounding even lonelier, even more despairing. Written during a trip to Italy as his relationship with Suze Rotolo appeared to be crumbling, it sounds intimate and unguarded, intensely private rather than public; he needs a quiet moment to himself in order to rouse an audience with his friends.

Though known in folk circles, Dylan was still struggling to find a larger audience and break through to the pop market. He signed with Columbia in late 1961, which is roughly where Act II begins. He recorded his self-titled debut with John Hammond producing, but it was not the breakout anyone expected. Here’s where you might want to place your bookmark and give that album another listen, just to get a feel for how this young man presented himself to the world; unexpectedly, Bob Dylan might work better as an addendum to this bulky novel than as a standalone release. Even Dylan considered it a failure, both commercially and creatively, and he was moving so fast that these traditional tunes and talking blues were old news by the time it was released.

His follow-up, The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan, did not come easy. He worked through a series of aimless sessions over several months, finally piecemealing an album that wasn’t too dissimilar from his debut. At the last minute Columbia decided that “Talkin’ John Birch Society Paranoid Blues” was potentially libelous and removed it from the album. Dylan was irate, but it worked out in his favor, as it gave him a chance to quickly record several new songs and redo about half the album, including “Girl from the North Country” and “Masters of War”—two of his best compositions from the era. The new tracklist sharpened his Cold War fears while also introducing more intimate struggles, in particular his insecurities about Rotolo. The album toggles gracefully between the public and the private, each lending weight to the other, which contributes to its status as Dylan’s breakthrough as well as just one of the best folk albums ever made.

November 8, 2025 0 comments
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