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BTS spends day off at LA beach amid recording new album; J-Hope shares photos
Bollywood

BTS spends day off at LA beach amid recording new album; J-Hope shares photos

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

BTS J-Hope dropped pictures of the group’s recent get-together at a beach in Los Angeles on his Instagram. Following the K-pop group’s reunion in June at J-Hope’s solo concert in Gyeonggi Province, South Korea, the popular boy band is now in LA, working on their upcoming album.

J-Hope shared the photo of BTS’ day out at the beach.(Instagram/@uarmyhope)

Also read: BTS’ newest Happy Meal collaboration with McDonald’s faces ARMY backlash: ‘Can’t expect anything from these idols…’

BTS day off at LA beach

At the LA beach, BTS held a live session for the ARMYs on HYBE’s fandom platform Weverse. Group leader RM shared that it was a day off for the group. Taking to Instagram, J-Hope shared several images from their time on the LA beach. “BTS!!” he simply captioned the post.

Kim Namjoon, Jin, Suga, J-Hope, Jimin, Taehyung, and Jungkook all posed for the camera in casual attire. J-Hope, who sported a light-wash denim jacket, had a serene glow all over his face, while Jimin had a towel wrapped around his shoulder. Jin – Mr. World Wide Handsome – looked glamorous in a Gucci T-shirt, and Suga aced the casual look.

On the other hand, Jungkook and V sported cool hoodies, while RM stood tall in a blue jacket. “Everyone is working really, really hard”, RM said on the Weverse live session.

Going by J-Hope’s photos, it looks like the K-pop band also went shopping after their time on the beach. In one of the photos, Jungkook is seen trying on new clothes.

Also read: Kim Taehyung of BTS announces baseball debut with the LA Dodgers; breaks MLB site as ARMY clamours for tickets

BTS is recording a new album

Even though they took the day off, it seems like BTS eventually returned to the studio. While on mute, Kim Taehyung was seen singing in a video that J-Hope uploaded along with the pictures. In another clip, J-Hope is recording a track while Jungkook struggles to hold his laughter.

Their next album is expected to come out in the spring of 2026, Billboard reported.

FAQs

What is BTS doing in Los Angeles right now?

The group is currently working on their upcoming album in Los Angeles.

What session did BTS hold recently?

BTS recently held a brief live session on HYBE’s fandom platform Weverse.

When will the next BTS album come out?

The next BTS album is expected to come out in the spring of 2026.

What tour did J-Hope recently complete?

J-Hope recently completed his first solo world tour – Hope on the Stage.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Deftones' New Album 'Private Music' Has Arrived: Listen
Music

Deftones’ New Album ‘Private Music’ Has Arrived: Listen

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Deftones‘ Private Music is private music no longer, with the rock band dropping its 10th studio album on Friday (Aug. 21) for all the world to hear after more than a month of buildup.

Led by singles “My Mind Is a Mountain” and “Milk of the Madonna,” Private Music features 11 tracks total. The rest of the tracklist features “Locked Club,” “Ecdysis,” “Infinite Source,” “Souvenir” “Cxz,” “I Think About You All the Time,” “Cut Hands,” “~Metal Dream” and “Departing the Body.”

Recorded and produced in part in Malibu and Joshua Tree in California, the project marks the bandmates’ first full-length since 2020’s Ohms. Peaking at No. 5, the latter became Deftones’ sixth top 10 hit on the Billboard 200.

The release of Private Music comes about six weeks after the rockers first announced the album, sharing its simplistic cover art — an albino snake curled up on a bright green surface — on social media and writing simply, “private music | out august 22.” That same day, Deftones dropped “My Mind Is a Mountain,” with “Milk of Madonna” arriving about one month later.

The band has since been getting fans ready for the long-awaited new record by hosting a string of private listening parties leading up to Private Music‘s release. The sessions took place Aug. 19-21 in Amsterdam, Mexico City, Los Angeles, London, Melbourne, New York City, Sydney, Toronto, Vancouver,
Berlin, Paris and, of course, Deftones’ home city of Sacramento.

Before that, the band kicked off a North American headline tour that has already included shows at NYC’s famed Madison Square Garden and the Kia Forum in L.A. Next up, Deftones will play a string of dates in Canada — starting with a performance in Vancouver on Friday — followed by more shows in the U.S.

Listen to Deftones’ new album Private Music below.

August 22, 2025 0 comments
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Music Review: Jon Batiste opts for chill vibe on stripped-down album, 'Big Money'
Bollywood

Music Review: Jon Batiste opts for chill vibe on stripped-down album, ‘Big Money’

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

On “Big Money,” Super Bowl-sized singer Jon Batiste opts for a surprisingly intimate sound.

Music Review: Jon Batiste opts for chill vibe on stripped-down album, ‘Big Money’

The just over 32-minute, nine-song set will be released Friday, and it’s not nearly as loud as the New Orleans’ jazzman’s eye-popping wardrobe. The stripped-down, mostly acoustic arrangements create a chill vibe. Simplicity somehow only intensifies the songs’ swing and sway.

Batiste pairs lyrics about devotion, values, angels and ecology with music that mixes folk and funk, gospel and the blues. The range is such that Batiste even plays a little fiddle and mandolin, but he shines brightest on two songs featuring his solo piano.

The first is a wonderful duet with Randy Newman, another piano man with New Orleans roots, who in recent years has been slowed by health issues and kept a low profile. They cover Doc Pomus’ “Lonely Avenue,” and Newman’s legendarily froggy tenor provides a comical contrast to Batiste’s vocal sheen. “I could die, I could die, I could die,” Newman sings. “It sounds like I’m dying.”

Also stellar is “Maybe,” a ballad filled with thick chords and questions about the big picture. “Or maybe we should all just take a collective pause,” Batiste sings, before launching into a keyboard exploration worthy of Jelly Roll Morton.

The bouncy “Lean on My Love” draws from Prince, Sly Stone and the Spinners as Batiste sings in unison with Andra Day. The equally buoyant title cut rhymes “money” and “dummy” in a strummy sing-along that includes backing vocals by the Womack Sisters, granddaughters of soul singer Sam Cooke.

“Pinnacle” chooses a similar tempo to kick up Delta dust around a delightful word salad. “Hop scotch/Double Dutchie jumping rope/Twistin’ it and ya wobble it/And let it go,” he sings on one verse.

Batiste’s gospel influences are most evident on the closing reggae tune “Angels” and the ballad “Do It All Again,” a love song that could be interpreted as secular or spiritual.

“When I’m happy, it’s your shine,” Batiste sings. As always, he makes joy sound genuine.

More reviews: /hub/music-reviews

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

August 20, 2025 0 comments
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Maroon 5: Love Is Like Album Review
Music

Maroon 5: Love Is Like Album Review

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Since their ascent in the early aughts, Maroon 5 have been inescapably viral: Songs like “This Love” and “Moves Like Jagger” have ridden to the top of the pop charts (even if frontman Adam Levine has insisted he’s inspired, above all else, by hip-hop); they’ve soundtracked everything from Kia commercials to Disney movie trailers; they headlined the 12th annual Honda Civic Tour. Can you even call it selling out when the whole point has always been commercial success? Love Is Like, the group’s eighth album since Songs About Jane rocked the adult contemporary scene in 2002, continues Maroon 5’s legacy of neutered, frictionless songs to activate brands to. Here, behind a roster of plug-and-play beats and glittery guest stars like LISA and Lil Wayne, you can meditate on the way algorithms breed cultural hegemony and imagine you’re trapped in a Sandals resort lobby.

Adam Levine’s white boy swagger has never been less convincing, particularly as he raps non sequiturs on tracks like “Yes I Did.” It’s a chilling Notes-app non-apology for spousal infidelity: “Yeah, if you ask me if I ever really loved you/Yes, I did,” he says between a falsettoed bridge. “Need to know that I still wanted to be in this/Yes, I did/If you’re questioning my motivation, you know where I live.” Later, in the refrain, he cops to “making every mistake there was to make” and “turning a negative into a positive” between a noxious peppering of “yeah yeah yeah”s. Everything is a pose, it seems, from remorse to sincerity (“We was only having fun,” he insists on “California,” adopting a grammar whose authenticity is questionable).

Meanwhile, “All Night” is an exploration of a toxic relationship written from the perspective of, one can only assume, an A.I. chatbot.  The music video stars his wife, Behati Prinsloo, in a Robert Palmer homage—but while Palmer’s addiction to love had teeth and a latexed vision of ’80s hedonism, “All Night” just mouthbreathes platitudes and cliches that feel just a little too stupid for an Instagram caption. “We do it all night, until the sunlight,” sings Levine on the hook, a line so bad it barely hides his contempt for his audience and the American tradition of songwriting of which he claims to be a part.

But if your shoulders begin to shimmy despite your misgivings at the end of “I Like It” featuring Sexyy Red, you’re not afflicted and you’re not alone. Maroon 5 is the Monsanto of music, genetically and corporately engineered for maximum palatability. They’ve proven in the past that they can, on occasion, tilt that earworm quality towards a pleasant kind of maximalism, embracing his inner cheeseball that lets you forget you’re being pandered to and fall effortlessly into the groove. “Burn Burn Burn,” is as close as this record gets, a head-nodding chronicle of heartbreak that feels like too much time in the sun on Venice Beach.

Too anemic for the Trolls movie franchise yet too emotionally complex for toddlers, Love Is Like is the latest repackaging of benign background noise for people who register music as something that happens without registering its particulars. It goes through your system like a juice cleanse—quick and optimized, but ultimately meant for the toilet.

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August 20, 2025 0 comments
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Fat Joe Lied About Collaborative Album With Biggie, Says Lance Rivera
Music

Fat Joe Lied About Collaborative Album With Biggie, Says Lance Rivera

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Lance “Un” Rivera, a close confidant and former business partner of The Notorious B.I.G., is calling “cap” on Fat Joe’s recent claims that he and Biggie were working on a full collaborative album before the rap legend’s tragic death in 1997.

In a new interview with The Art of Dialogue, Rivera addressed Joe’s assertion head-on, expressing skepticism and a touch of humor while firmly questioning the validity of the Bronx rapper’s story.

Fat Joe visits SiriusXM Studios on March 28, 2024 in New York City.

Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

“I love Fat Joe, Fat Joe is my guy. I love the Jada & Joe show, and now I know why they’re running with the ‘Joe is the King of Cap,’” Rivera joked.

“Imma call cap, without even knowing, ’cause I don’t know for sure, but I’m calling cap […] If there was a real, legitimate album, I would’ve heard about that. I wouldn’t have heard about them doing songs.”

Rivera, who founded Untertainment Records and worked closely with Biggie on multiple projects, noted that even hearing about a few casual tracks between the two would have raised eyebrows.

Lance

Ray Tamarra/Getty Images

“And I wouldn’t have heard about them doing songs together, right? Because in Daddy’s House, Big go in the studio, you could get a verse or you might not get a verse, depending on his mood and how much money you had in your pocket. He was a ‘How much weed you got on you’ type sh*t, you know what I’m saying? But I call cap off that, Joe. Show me the receipts, Fat Joe.”

Fat Joe, for his part, previously shared in a 2023 interview that he and Biggie recorded several songs that were ultimately shelved—possibly destroyed—because the lyrics included disses toward 2Pac. With both icons later dying in the midst of their feud, Joe claims he chose to scrap the recordings out of respect.

The Notorious B.I.G.

Raymond Boyd/Getty Images

“We made a bunch of songs, y’know what I’m sayin’?” Joe said. “But it was like really disrespectful and hateful and so [Biggie] died and 2Pac died. They might have burnt them sh*ts, to be honest with you, ’cause you know, it was distasteful after the fact.”

While fans would undoubtedly love to hear unreleased music from the legendary Brooklyn emcee, Rivera’s remarks have now added fuel to the fire of uncertainty—and cast a long shadow over the legitimacy of Joe’s bold claims.

Watch Lance “Un” Rivera speak on Fat Joe’s alleged album with Biggie below.

August 20, 2025 0 comments
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Chance the Rapper: Star Line Album Review
Music

Chance the Rapper: Star Line Album Review

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Chance doesn’t seem at ease putting it all out there, which, in a twisted way, only makes me want it more. With his usual mix of sun-kissed melodies and squawking ad-libs, inoffensively sweeping soul beats with gospel touches by his usual production braintrust, he opens up just enough to get the internet off his back. “Some days I just ghost her, some days I’m supposed to/The crib feel like a gunfight, but them strollers, that’s the holster,” he raps on “The Highs & Lows,” the easygoing piano-led beat allows his words to breathe. He sounds a little lonely and sad, like he’s skipping rocks at the lake on “Back to the Go,” as he thinks about the effect his relationship falling apart will have on his kids and having to spend his days in a bachelor pad. It’s his most direct writing and, unfortunately, it’s done over a rock-rap instrumental that sounds like it was ripped from a 2DopeBoyz blog post.

There’s a suggestion that his self-esteem has taken a hit on “Pretty,” where, over a vocal sample pitched-up to Heatmakerz levels, he works through his insecurities in real time: “My mom told me I’m a nice person/I got left but maybe I ain’t find the right person/I got clean, maybe I ain’t get the right version.” There are a few striking moments like these where Chance allows himself to feel unconsciously exposed. But most of the time, it feels like you’re hearing Chance’s emotions once they’ve already been self-consciously processed, which is less personal and interesting. For example, “Space & Time,” a bland and distant ballad where he builds up the maturity to face the crib where he thought he’d raise a family, sounds straight off the Lion King soundtrack.

It’s human to be tentative when writing about intimate experiences, but Chance rarely lets those bits of pure feeling slip through the cracks. His writing feels heavily combed over, and though he calls himself an “emotional rollercoaster,” I only get that because he said so. Otherwise he doesn’t allow himself to be potentially picked apart or embarrassed, like on Acid Rap when he downplays his Blackness to girls in an attempt to get laid. Chance would rather cloak his feelings in his reliable wordplay (“You know it’s dirty when the sink dirty,” he raps on “Negro Problem”) or shift the focus away from his relationship entirely. “No More Old Men,” with longtime collaborator Jamila Woods, is his sweet spot, vividly describing childhood memories (the familial vibe of the barbershop; his uncles on the block drinking beers and betting on boxing matches) as a way of messaging the lack of male mentors in his hometown nowadays. As well as “Letters,” where he calls out the unholy actions of both his local parish and Joel Osteen-style megachurches. Both are solid and impassioned Chance the Rapper songs—he’s bending his voice, toggling between moods—that show the totality of what’s on his mind, but I feel his message more than I actually want to listen to him on the same frictionless, loungey beats that haven’t sounded fresh in a decade.

It’s frustrating that the main goal of Star Line seems to be for Chance to reset the board without getting shit on. That’s an uninspired mission that mostly relies on Chance reverting back to his corny writing exercises (the greek mythology bit on “Space & Time”), trusted lighthearted stoner anthems (“Tree”), and knack for bringing a cross-generational cast of likable characters into his world like he did on Coloring Book: Some work (DJ Pharris’ drop on the intro; BabyChiefDoit’s foul-mouthed drill punchlines; Do or Die’s welcomed nostalgia tour) and some don’t (Lil Wayne in 2025; stale BJ the Chicago Kid parts; a Jay Electronica verse that sounds like it was recorded in a Rothschild family dungeon). It’s rarely bad, just safe, doing more to remind us of the old days than to embrace the musical crossroads he’s at. That feels like a missed opportunity to fill in the blanks that are still there.

August 20, 2025 0 comments
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