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Trina Braxton Faces Backlash for Supporting K. Michelle's Country Album Amid Tamar Braxton Feud
Celebrity News

Trina Braxton Faces Backlash for Supporting K. Michelle’s Country Album Amid Tamar Braxton Feud

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Trina Braxton Faces Backlash for Supporting K. Michelle’s Country Album Amid Tamar Braxton Feud

Trina Braxton found herself at the center of online debate this week after publicly supporting singer K. Michelle’s upcoming country album — with some fans calling her move “messy” given K. Michelle’s long history of conflict with Trina’s sister, Tamar Braxton.

The exchange began when Trina commented under K. Michelle’s post promoting her “Bringing Nashville to Atlanta” private listening event, writing, “You know I love country music!” K. Michelle warmly replied, “Come see me Trina ?? DM me, I’ll set it up. The album is great.”

While the interaction seemed harmless, social media users quickly reacted — many suggesting Trina’s comment was ill-timed considering Tamar and K. Michelle’s past public feud. The pair’s disputes have spanned years, including multiple heated exchanges on social media and television, most notably when K. Michelle called Tamar a “muppet” during a viral 2014 interview (Billboard).

On X (formerly Twitter), fans speculated about Trina’s motives. One user wrote, “If you’re my sister’s opp, you’re now my opp… this is shady!” Another added, “You don’t have to be their opp, just don’t fraternize with people who clearly dislike your sister. Toni would never do that.”

Others defended Trina, noting her interest in country music and her history of supporting other artists. Still, many commenters interpreted her gesture as subtle shade following recent family tension involving Tamar and the Braxton sisters — including Tamar’s own claim that her siblings have been distant.

Under K. Michelle’s post, several Instagram users directly called Trina out, with comments like “You are messy,” “trifling,” and “please don’t do it… she is your sister.”

Despite the criticism, neither Trina nor Tamar has addressed the backlash publicly. K. Michelle’s country project, part of her musical pivot announced earlier this year, is scheduled for release on November 8.


November 7, 2025 0 comments
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Rosalía: “Berghain” Track Review | Pitchfork
Music

Rosalía: LUX Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Rosalía is redrawing pop’s map at a stunning pace. Her first two records, Los Ángeles and El Mal Querer, brought flamenco into the mainstream; the second fractured the genre from its tradition, unearthing a pop architect intent on stitching sacred text with street expression. Then came MOTOMAMI, a world born of Caribbean heat and unbridled nerve, cementing her as an experimental auteur burning through sounds like a master technician. But when the earthly map felt complete, she spoke directly from the heavens: LUX.

The Spanish superstar’s fourth album is a heartfelt offering of avant-garde classical pop that roars through genre, romance, and religion. Arranged in four movements and sung in 13 languages, its orchestral pop storms down from the skies and leaves, in its thundering aftermath, a field guide for pop’s seekers, those who believe the answers to love, desire, and creative purpose might yet be contained in three or four minutes at a time. It’s not a dopamine machine like MOTOMAMI, but it rewards listeners who ache for more from pop artists: more feeling, more risk.

For all its scholarship and borderless histories, LUX isn’t a massive homework assignment; it’s an operatic lament for a new generation, an exquisite oratorio for the messy heart. Yes, the credits read like a conservatory (the London Symphony Orchestra; Catalan choirs; MOTOMAMI collaborators Noah Goldstein and Dylan Wiggins; Pharrell; and arrangements from Caroline Shaw and Angélica Negrón, to name a few), but Rosalía’s voice remains at its center. With her as its lodestar, LUX advances like a crusade to conquer the mysteries of human existence. On opener “Sexo, Violencia, y Llantas,” she announces her plan: “How nice it’d be, to come from this Earth, go to Heaven, and come back to the Earth.” She spends the next hour detailing this process from start to finish through flamenco pop revelations (“La Rumba Del Perdon”), waltzing insults (“La Perla”), existential operatic swells (“Memoria”), and songs that feel entirely new and genreless (like “Focu’Ranni or “Novia Robot”).

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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Summer Walker Pays Tribute To Anna Nicole Smith On New Album Cover
Music

Summer Walker Pays Tribute To Anna Nicole Smith On New Album Cover

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Summer Walker has taken inspiration from late cultural icon Anna Nicole Smith for the cover art for her forthcoming studio album Finally Over It, recreating the infamous photograph of Smith at her wedding ceremony with J. Howard Marshall.

Walker unveiled the album’s cover art via social media on Wednesday (Nov. 6) evening, announcing that the project will be released on Friday, Nov. 14.

The cover is a coy reference to the R&B star’s disenchantment with traditional romantic relationships and prioritization of financial and material gain in her dealings with men, an accusation levied upon Anna Nicole Smith regarding her own love life.

Summer Walker (L) attends the 2025 MTV Video Music Awards at UBS Arena on September 07, 2025 in Elmont, New York.

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

In June 1994, Smith, who was 26-years-old at the time, married Marshall, an 89 year-old millionaire and former government official, in a wedding held at the White Dove Chapel in Houston, TX.

Marshall, a stakeholder in notably Koch Industries with an estimated net worth of $550 million, would pass away of pneumonia in August 1995, with Smith eventually losing a lengthy legal battle with Marshall’s family and estate regarding his fortune.

Anna Nicole Smith

American model, actress and television personality Anna Nicole Smith (1967-2007), poses for a portrait during the Video Software Dealers Association Convention on July 11, 1993 at the Las Vegas Convention Center in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Ron Davis/Getty Images

Walker, whose tumultuous relationships have been addressed in her music and bled over into tabloid fodder, has been vocal about her newfound attitude towards men, an admission the 29-year-old recently made in a clip that went viral on social media.

“Men are providers, and that’s it,” the hitmaker told journalist Speedy Morman during an interview. “I’m not attracted to them.” When asked whether that meant “bleeding them dry,” she chuckled while confirming, “Yes. As soon as I get everything, you’re off.”

Prior to those comments, life seemingly imitated her art, as Walker showed up to the 2025 MTV VMAs with an older Caucasian man as her “mystery guest.”

Summer Walker

Summer Walker performs onstage during Hot 107.9 Birthday Bash 2024 at State Farm Arena on June 22, 2024 in Atlanta, Georgia.

Prince Williams/WireImage

Following her 2019 effort Over It and its 2021 sequel Still Over It, Finally Over It arrives a full four years after the previous offering in the series and marks the songstresses most anticipated release to date.

With high-profile features alongside Usher (“Good Good”), Odeal (“You’re Stuck), and Cardi B (“Dead,” “Shower Tears”), her own 2024 hit single “Heart of a Woman,” and her most release solo release “Spend It,” the GRAMMY-nominated artist has managed to keep her voice on the airwaves and increase her popularity despite sporadic releases, an admirable task in today’s content-hungry landscape.

See Summer Walker’s Finally Over It album cover below.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Lenny Kravitz in 2024. (Credit: Suhaimi Abdullah/Getty Images)
Music

Every Lenny Kravitz Album, Ranked

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Leonard Albert Kravitz was born in 1964, the only child of Black actress Roxie Roker and Jewish NBC news producer Sy Kravitz. Over the next few decades, he grew up to be one of his generation’s most iconic rock stars, befriending idols like Prince and Michael Jackson and dating an array of glamorous actresses and models. Transitioning into acting, he played key supporting roles in hits like Precious and the Hunger Games franchise.

(Credit: gie Knaeps)

Beneath all the glitz and glamor of Lenny Kravitz’s jet setting lifestyle, his talent is sometimes overlooked. Kravitz has self-produced all 12 of his albums, playing every instrument on many tracks, and often puts his spirituality and social conscience front and center in his lyrics. Kravitz famously wears his influences on his sleeve, but he’s demonstrated remarkable versatility in his ability to channel just about every style of rock and soul of the ’60s and ’70s, winning four Grammys and selling 40 million records along the way.

In September, Virgin Records released an expanded 30th anniversary reissue of 1995’s Circus. Kravitz’s fourth album was considered a disappointment at the time of its release, but is it actually one of his best?

12. Strut (2014)

For most of the last two decades, Kravitz has been vocal about being celibate, occasionally telling interviewers he’s abstaining from sex until he remarries for religious reasons. The one period in which he wavered from that position was around the time he released Strut, which opens with a song called “Sex” (“I’m just a slave for your pleasure and I’m waiting to pop”). Strut may be more lyrically occupied with carnal desire than any other Kravitz album, but its formulaic arena rock doesn’t sound particularly seductive. The most memorable moment from Strut’s promotional cycle was X-rated but purely accidental: Kravitz went viral when his leather pants split open at the crotch during a 2015 concert in Sweden.

11. Baptism (2004)

Kravitz spent some time in the studio with Michael Jackson in 1999, although the song they made together, “(I Can’t Make It) Another Day,” wouldn’t see release until 2010, after Jackson’s death. In the meantime, Kravitz retooled the song as the Baptism single “Storm” featuring Jay-Z. Kravitz was briefly engaged to actress Nicole Kidman in 2004, although the lyrics about her on “Lady,” his last Top 40 hit, are pure drivel (“I know she’s a super lady / I’m weak and I’ve gone hazy”). Instead, Baptism is at its most compelling when Kravitz sounds disillusioned with fame and show business on “I Don’t Want to be a Star,” “Flash,”  and “The Other Side.” “If an element of humor or self-deprecation were evident, the results would be funny—a guilty-pleasure romp. But here’s the problem: Kravitz is completely and utterly straight-faced about every single aspect of what he does,” David Browne wrote in the Entertainment Weekly review of Baptism.

10. Raise Vibration (2018)

Michael Jackson makes a posthumous cameo on “Low,” the Raise Vibration single that features a sumptuous Off the Wall-style disco groove and some immediately identifiable “Hoo!” ad libs from the King of Pop. And “Gold Dust” is one of those most creative and rhythmically intricate tracks in Kravitz’s catalog. Unfortunately, the album otherwise rarely sounds that good, with irritations like a chorus of children’s voices on the vapid “5 More Days ’Til Summer” and the facile political commentary of “It’s Enough!” (“What’s that going down in the Middle East? Do you really think it’s to keep the peace?”).

9. It Is Time For a Love Revolution (2008)

Kravitz plays most of the drums on his albums, and It Is Time For a Love Revolution is his pinnacle as a percussionist as he nails a taut James Brown groove on “Will You Marry Me” and plays behind the beat with the grace of Charlie Watts on “Dancin’ Til Dawn.” Unfortunately, the album is also a low point for Kravitz as a lyricist. “Love Love Love” is the closest he’s ever come to rapping, and it’s not pretty (“I want you to know I’m emphatic/ About your love that’s enigmatic”). And on “Good Morning,” Kravitz even seems to bore himself imagining the workaday lives of people with 9-to-5 jobs.

8. Black and White America (2011)

Kravitz confronted racism on one of his earliest songs, 1989’s “Mr. Cab Driver,” but he didn’t decide to explore the topic of race for an entire album until after the 2008 election of President Barack Obama. Kravitz initially recorded his ninth album under the working title Negrophilia before settling on Black and White America. On the title track, he sings about his parents’ interracial marriage in 1963, and how it wasn’t safe for them to walk down the street together at the time. “Sunflower” is one of the album’s more straightforward love songs, but it features a verse from Drake, another superstar with one Black parent and one Jewish parent. “Each of these 16 songs succeeds on its own terms, which is a vision for America beyond the black and white divide,” Anthony DeCurtis wrote in the Rolling Stone review of Black and White America.

7. Lenny (2001)

A successful best-of compilation can be a blessing or a curse, boosting an artist’s profile for future projects or putting a cap on their hitmaking days. Unfortunately for Kravitz, his triple platinum 2000 Greatest Hits package was the latter, with its new track “Again” becoming his last inescapable single. Lenny’s lead single “Dig In” earned Kravitz his fourth and final Grammy win, all in the category of Best Male Rock Vocal Performance, but its monotonous chug didn’t make much of an impact on the charts. Kravitz, who often shares lead guitar duties with longtime sideman Craig Ross, plays some of his finest guitar solos on several tracks on Lenny, including a lively talkbox section on “God Save Us All.” And “Believe in Me,” with its fidgety drum machine groove and Minimoog synth lines, actually sounds like Kravitz was taking some cues from hip-hop producers like Timbaland.

6. Blue Electric Light (2024)

In 2024, Lenny Kravitz turned 60, began his first Las Vegas residency, and was nominated for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. He also, surprisingly, released one of the most creatively vital and contemporary-sounding albums of his career. Kravitz’s last few albums have been recorded at Gregory Town Sound, the studio he built on the beach in the Bahamas. And with songs like the electro funk banger “TK421” and the sinuous slow jam “Stuck in the Middle,” Blue Electric Light is the album that most sounds like Kravitz is just enjoying himself with jam sessions in a tropical paradise.

5. 5 (1998)

5 underperformed at first, with the initial rollout focusing on the sleek R&B of “If You Can’t Say No” and “I Belong To You.” It was only after one of the album’s only guitar-heavy rockers, “Fly Away,” was promoted as a single six months after 5’s release that the album really started to sell. A cover of the Guess Who’s “American Woman,” recorded for the Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me soundtrack, was added to later editions of 5, helping Kravitz reach a new level of ubiquity. Kravitz’s longtime drummer Cindy Blackman Santana is frequently seen in his music videos and concerts, but “Straight Cold Player” is the only time she’s actually gotten to lay down a deep groove on one of his studio tracks. “Here we are on the brink of the millennium, but nobody’s told Lenny Kravitz, who’s still cranking out pedestrian Prince-style glam funk like it’s 1978,” Paul Lukas wrote in the SPIN review of 5.

4. Are You Gonna Go My Way (1993)

Craig Ross joined Kravitz’s band for the tour in support of Mama Said, and has become Kravitz’s most consistent collaborator on every subsequent album. Ross co-wrote Are You Gonna Go My Way’s smash hit title track and played all of the song’s dazzling interlocked guitar lines. “Is There Any Love In Your Heart” is the only other song on the album with the same kind of irresistible hard rock hooks as Kravitz chases one of his most persistent muses, the dry drums and reverbed vocals of John Lennon’s early solo albums. “Sugar,” however, is a soulful delight that probably could’ve been a crossover hit like “It Ain’t Over ’til It’s Over.”

3. Let Love Rule (1989)

Lenny Kravitz was going by the stage name Romeo Blue in 1987 when he eloped in Las Vegas with The Cosby Show star Lisa Bonet on her 20th birthday. He became a tabloid fixture before the world had heard a note of his music, and a label bidding war ensued with Virgin Records eventually signing Kravitz, who decided to make music under his real name. Bonet wrote lyrics for two songs on Let Love Rule and appeared in the video for the title track, helping make it a modest hit. Despite all the media hoopla, Let Love Rule is an uncompromising self-produced debut that stands apart from even the other strains of neo-psychedelic ’60s nostalgia that were on the charts in the late ’80s.

2. Circus (1995)

Circus is the dark horse of Kravitz’s catalog. His mother was dying of cancer during the difficult recording sessions, and it’s the only album from the first decade of his career that performed below expectations and didn’t win him a significant number of new fans. But it rocks more consistently than any other Kravitz release and has a thunderous drum sound, perhaps the best faux-Led Zeppelin album since Billy Squier’s Don’t Say No. Kravitz headlined the 1996 H.O.R.D.E. tour in support of Circus, and songs like “Tunnel Vision” and “Can’t Get You Off My Mind” sounded great the only time I’ve seen him live. “Yeah, on Circus, Lenny Kravitz proves himself to be just as much a purveyor of record collection rock as he’s ever been. But what most people fail to notice is that Len has got stone-cold impeccable taste,” Paul Moody wrote in the NME review of the album.

1. Mama Said (1991)

Kravitz co-wrote and co-produced Madonna’s provocative chart-topper “Justify My Love” in 1990, and followed it a few months later with his biggest solo hit. “It Ain’t Over ’til It’s Over” borrowed a quirky neologism from the baseball legend Yogi Berra, turning it into a plea to Kravitz’s estranged wife. The song didn’t save their marriage—he and Bonet divorced in 1993—but it remains his finest soul song, with a silky, expressive vocal and a lush arrangement that includes the Phenix Horns from Earth, Wind & Fire. “Flowers for Zoë” is another beautiful song on Mama Said that he wrote for their daughter, actress Zoë Kravitz. The era’s other most prominent biracial rock star was Slash of Guns N’ Roses, who went to high school with Kravitz and played on the first two tracks on Mama Said. And it’s hard not to wish that the two friends made a lot more funk rock masterpieces together after “Always on the Run.”  

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Armand Hammer / The Alchemist: Mercy Album Review
Music

Armand Hammer / The Alchemist: Mercy Album Review

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

If Haram was the Alchemist’s entry to Armand Hammer’s world, Mercy is a shared vision. There’s a greater understanding of what they can create together, and a willingness to add other sounds into their combined vocabulary. “Calypso Gene” could’ve been unearthed from some lost trove of Dungeon Family recordings, dipping into that collective’s gospel and funk-tinged waters; “Crisis Phone” taps into the white-knuckle pressure Alc and Boldy James explored on “Scrape the Bowl” and “Brickmile to Montana”; “California Games” unfolds like a ’70s psychedelic soul epic, flutes and wordless vocals intertwining over a splashy groove, wailing up at the heavens. And there are thrilling accents that reveal themselves after a few listens, like the synths on “Dogeared” that overlap to create dissonant siren calls, or the car peeling out during the heist-movie soundtrack of “Glue Traps.” These details become little vortexes, pulling you further into the trio’s universe.

There’s a pronounced urgency on Mercy, a grounding in the here and now that’s not always prevalent on woods or Elucid projects. The two have distinct ways of experiencing time—woods flattens it by meticulously threading historical events together, showing how they rhyme, while Elucid operates in a more metaphysical lane, weaving facts, feelings, and memories into spiraling, nonlinear episodes. Those methodologies appear here, but they’re increasingly used to react to the wretchedness of our current age.

On “Peshawar,” woods bemoans the sudden prevalence of AI: “Thou shalt not make a machine in the likeness of a human/Mind, that’s the rubric/Deep Blue versus Vladimir Putin.” The song itself is named after a city in Pakistan that suffered a brutal terrorist attack on a school in 2014, a scenario that now unfolds across the globe. Elucid dreams of “exploding beepers” on “Nil by Mouth” after images of the one-drop rule, the Iran-Contra affair, and “self-made martyrs” stream through his head like a sour meditation. On “Glue Traps,” he paints a picture of the intersecting lives in his neighborhood, reflecting on its beauty while ruing the constant hustle required of its residents. The brief but brutal “u know my body” sounds like woods describing the scenes of destruction livestreaming from Gaza, but could represent any genocide, past or present. After spending seven records anticipating and examining the effects of our ever-curdling history, Mercy presents the results: The war has arrived at everyone’s doorstep.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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The 1975 Remove Song From Streaming Because Matthew Healy Prefers the Album Without It
Music

The 1975 Remove Song From Streaming Because Matthew Healy Prefers the Album Without It

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Fans of the 1975 were left puzzled this week by the disappearance from streaming services of “Human Too,” an album track from 2022’s Being Funny in a Foreign Language. Now, Matthew Healy has taken to Reddit to explain its absence: “‘Human Too’ was removed from the album so the album is more how I want it to be,” he wrote. That clears that up, then. The remaining records are safe, Healy added, because he is “pretty happy with them”—with one exception: “What Should I Say” from Notes on a Conditional Form. “So that may also be removed who knows,” he concluded. Catch the latter while you can below.

While it is now commonplace for artists to tweak albums post-release—typically for reasons to do with sample clearance or perfectionism—retroactively wiping a song, three years after the fact, is more of a novelty. Healy notes in his comment, presumably for those unfamiliar with the mechanics of physical media, that “Human Too” still appears on prior physical releases of the album.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Dave: The Boy Who Played Harp Album Review
Music

Dave: The Boy Who Played Harp Album Review

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Perhaps Dave is caught in a loop of his own making. He’s built a career speaking for the most suppressed from the perspective of a person who comes from similar struggles, but now that he’s materially removed from that reality, he’s unsure of where he stands—in the minds of others but, more immediately, in his own. He denounces atrocities in the Congo, but wears jewelry that may have come from its diamond mines. He hardly ever prays, but seeks guidance from the God he was raised to worship. He boasts about money but won’t speak up for Palestine. These are criticisms he turns onto himself throughout the album without ever reaching a resolution. Will he stop participating in these things or does he just want to clear his conscious to the public?

In 2017, on his breakout “Question Time,” a 19-year-old Dave called then-Prime Minister Theresa May to task over UK airstrikes that killed children in Syria and for defunding the NHS rather than paying liveable wages to nurses like his mom. Two years later, “Black,” from his debut, Psychodrama, got at the maddening reality of being part of a subjugated people, working your whole life to dispel myths about yourself, only to still be treated like a second-class citizen. “Three Rivers,” from 2021’s We’re All Alone in This Together, paid tribute to Britain’s immigrant communities as hostilities toward them began to rise. That sort of state-of-society demonstration, which has always distinguished Dave from his peers in UK rap, is hardly present on his newest album. And it doesn’t help that The Boy Who Plays the Harp is considerably less dynamic when it comes to production.

What made Psychodrama and We’re All Alone in This Together especially stimulating was that between Dave’s social commentary and lyrical flexing lay sullen portraits of his of neighborhood (“Environment”), brooding D’n’B (“Voices”), glitzy trap-like bounce (“Clash” with Stormzy), and more. On The Boy Who Played the Harp, that diversity appears sparingly. “Raindance” with Tems, a sweet, stripped-down take on an Afroswing love song, will likely be the album’s mainstream win. Young British sensation Jim Legxacy contributes to “No Weapons” as a producer and vocalist, making it the album’s most fun track. “Marvellous” is largely about a young boy from Dave’s South London neighborhood who’s getting a taste of street life, but the Spanish guitar and thumping drums give it a useful jolt.

Even with the presence of these songs, the heart of this album lies in the more downtempo, man-in-the-mirror moments. The Kano-featuring “Chapter 16” is such an effective song in this context because, while Dave spends much of the album berating himself about whether he’s a fraud, or has strayed too far from God, or deserves to find true love, the make-believe steak dinner provides him with someone to bounce those insecurities off of. And, even though it takes the long road to get there, maybe this is the point that The Boy Who Played the Harp seeks to make: When you isolate yourself from the world, the voices within may eventually turn on you.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Gretchen Wilson Is Re-Recording 'Here for the Party' as Duets Album
Music

Gretchen Wilson Is Re-Recording ‘Here for the Party’ as Duets Album

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

More than 20 years after Gretchen Wilson released her empowering breakthrough single, “Redneck Woman,” the song continues to speak to listeners. Arguably, that’s even more true today, when identifying as blue collar, country, or, yes, redneck is worn as a badge of honor by many. But when Wilson released the song in 2004, that wasn’t necessarily the case in country music.

“‘Redneck Woman’ was just different enough at that time and authentic enough in that moment to become an anthem for women who weren’t being talked to, or talked about either,” Wilson says on Rolling Stone’s Nashville Now podcast. “I’m a very proud woman. I actually like myself. I like the things I’ve been able to accomplish.”

Wilson, who won a Grammy for “Redneck Woman” in the Best Female Country Vocal Performance category in 2005, is teeing up a new accomplishment: The Illinois native says she’s re-recording her debut album, Here for the Party, as an all-star duets project for her own indie label, Redneck Records.

“I’m going to have a guest vocalist on each song. I’ve gotten some promises from some pretty big names. You know how music works, though. They don’t actually have to be there the day I’m tracking it,” Wilson says. “But I’ve gotten far enough to know what key everybody’s song needs to be in.”

Wilson is bullish on naming names. She says Tanya Tucker will sing on “Redneck Woman” and Cody Johnson will duet on the LP’s unconventional love ballad. “I played a show a few weeks ago with [him] and he told me he and his wife have a favorite song on that record: ‘When I Think About Cheating,’” Wilson says.

Wilson also says Miranda Lambert and Travis Tritt are on board, and that she’s “almost 100 percent” on securing Ella Langley.

Along with the Here for the Party re-record, Wilson has been busy advising contestants on CBS’s new musical competition series, The Road. Produced by Yellowstone’s Taylor Sheridan, the show is hosted by Keith Urban and Blake Shelton and casts Wilson in the role of “tour manager.”

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“This show follows these individuals much more closely than any show you’ve seen like it. And it’s a lot more real life. We’re putting them on tour buses, taking them across the country, putting them in bars. It’s not a built-in audience,” she says. “It’s a lot more realistic to what it really is to be on tour and to be on the road.”

Download and subscribe to Rolling Stone’s weekly country-music podcast, Nashville Now, hosted by senior music editor Joseph Hudak, on Apple Podcasts or Spotify (or wherever you get your podcasts). New episodes drop every Wednesday and feature interviews with artists and personalities like Lainey Wilson, Hardy, Charley Crockett, Gavin Adcock, Amanda Shires, Shooter Jennings, Margo Price, Halestorm, Dusty Slay, Lukas Nelson, Ashley Monroe, Old Crow Medicine Show’s Ketch Secor, and Clever.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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5 Best Songs From Offset's 'Haunted By Fame' Album
Music

5 Best Songs From Offset’s ‘Haunted By Fame’ Album

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Offset’s surprise new album, Haunted By Fame, dropped on Halloween, just two months after his third solo studio album Kiari—and it’s anything but a throwaway follow-up.

The 11-track project finds the Atlanta rapper in a self-assured zone, channeling personal turbulence into confident, energized performances. With standout features from YoungBoy Never Broke Again and NoCap, Offset leans into both menace and melody, flexing his versatility with ease.

The album’s best moments capture him at his most focused and fiery. Despite the chaos surrounding his personal life, Offset sounds reinvigorated and carefree, making Haunted By Fame one of his strongest, most cohesive listens to date.

VIBE compiled and ranked the 5 best songs from Offset’s Haunted By Fame album that has our playlists in a chokehold.

  • “YA DIGG”

    Offset
    Image Credit: Richard Bord/Getty Images

    Gauntlets are thrown down on “YA DIGG,” one of the fiercest standouts from Offset’s Haunted By Fame.

    Backed by slick, high-energy production from London Jae, Pharoah, IRoccOnTheBeat, and Chanel, Offset snaps with the confidence of a man who knows he’s in his prime.

    Lines like “Bitch, I’m Tony the Tiger, great/ I don’t want nothin’ but mouth and face/ Thinkin’ ’bout shittin’ on my opps today/ Birthday girl, got lots of cake” capture his mix of bravado and humor.

    The beat knocks, the flow is razor-sharp, making for a standout that’s bold, quotable, and undeniably replayable.

  • “FASHION ICON”

    OffsetOffset
    Image Credit: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for GQ

    Lyrical poses are struck on “FASHION ICON,” a booming standout from Haunted By Fame that captures Offset casting aspersions on swagger jackers and opponents.

    “Told my brothers I struggle, look after me/ At the top of the bottom, it’s full of leech/ I look in the eyes of my enemies/ I got my first rack, I was seventeen,” the hitmaker scoffs while maneuvering atop production by DJ Durel and Rott, making it clear he’s not new to the hustle, but fully invested and true to it.

  • “NO SWEAT”

    OffsetOffset
    Image Credit: Amy Sussman/Getty Images

    Offset’s “NO SWEAT” might clock in on the shorter side, but its impact lands squarely. Produced by COUPE, London Jae, and DBTZ, the track is sleek and simmering, driven by a pulsing beat and Offset’s sharp, dismissive delivery.

    Lines like “How the f**k you leave Jordan for Rodman?/ You a fool if you think that I’m hurt” cut deep, with the lyrics clearly aimed at his ex Cardi B amid their ongoing divorce drama. Yet, rather than wallow, Offset flips the narrative—he’s unbothered, laser-focused on success, and basking in luxury.

    It’s a brief but potent statement piece: a reminder that even in the storm of celebrity chaos, Offset still moves with icy composure and undeniable style.

  • “HEADHUNTER”

    OffsetOffset
    Image Credit: Francois Durand/Getty Images

    Offset goes for the jugular on “HEADHUNTER,” Haunted By Fame‘s closing effort, which finds the lyricist expressing his fixation on bankrolls accumulated and disregard for love lost.

    “Industry funny, they try to hang me like an ornament, but I got hedge money,” he boasts while prancing atop production by Kaigoinkrazy and ​Kyuro, who craft a frantic, 808-driven soundscape that matches Offset’s urgency.

    Sold out international shows and luxury vehicles purchases are simply spoils to the victor in the former Migos‘ orbit.

  • “I HEARD” Featuring YoungBoy Never Broke Again

    OffsetOffset
    Image Credit: Marcus Ingram/Getty Images for REVOLT

    Offset and YoungBoy Never Broke Again reunite on “I HEARD,” a hard-hitting new release that proves their chemistry is as sharp as ever. Produced by Mally Mall, 1parkerhill, Brigtaudio, and babymaneomg, the track blends menacing 808s with razor-edged verses as the two rappers trade flexes and warnings.

    Their energy peaks on the final verse, where they rhythmically rhyme in tandem. The song follows their previous collaborations—“Pills,” “R.I.P.,” and “Need It”—and arrives as Offset joins YoungBoy’s Make America Slime Again tour as a supporting act.

    With its slick production and magnetic back-and-forth, “I HEARD” cements itself as another standout moment in their ongoing creative partnership.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Chat Pile / Hayden Pedigo: In the Earth Again Album Review
Music

Chat Pile / Hayden Pedigo: In the Earth Again Album Review

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

In the Earth Again is set at a glacial pace, allowing each element to coalesce in its own time. The first two tracks descend into murky purgatory: Instrumental opener “Outside” is led by Pedigo, his plaintive guitar backed by additional axe work from Chat Pile guitarist Luther Manhole, Busch, and Cap’n Ron, who traditionally handles percussion but plays a powerslide lap steel on some of these songs. That track flows seamlessly into “Demon Time,” a hypnotic number in which Busch prophesies the burning of all the castles in the world and the return of every demon. “And they will find you/And they will fuck you up,” he sings, his voice low and even. Despite their tranquil sound, “Outside” and “Demon Time” are all tension, no release. So when “Never Say Die!” begins with a bulldozing power chord and a nuclear kick—the first percussion on the record—it’s pure catharsis. It’s the most characteristic Chat Pile cut on the album: sludgy, detuned, and merciless.

The rest of In the Earth Again alternates between vocal-centric songs and instrumental tracks. “Behold a Pale Horse” is a Pedigo/Manhole duet full of lovely counterpoint curdled by reverb. “Fission/Fusion” begins as a noisy, jolting scrum before settling into something more Metallica adjacent. And “I Got My Own Blunt to Smoke” finds Busch alone with his guitar, seemingly interpolating Timbaland. It’s only a five-note descending scale, but Busch draws out its melodrama to an almost cartoonish degree. It’s hard to imagine that, in light of the goofy cultural references he’s sprinkled across Chat Pile’s past work, he doesn’t know exactly what he’s doing.

Where field recordings and tape loops make indelible contributions to the record’s atmosphere, they fall flat on its eight-minute centerpiece, “The Matador.” “Things fall apart!” Busch yowls several times, and it’s here Chat Pile and Pedigo’s shared sensibilities hold together least. They open the song with nearly two minutes of tape loops before the drums, bass, and guitar build gradually into a monster lick. The music chugs ceaselessly but loses its punch on the home stretch. There’s a great four-minute song here, but the long closing guitar solo is gratuitous, as is the sluggish intro.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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