celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Album » Page 5
Tag:

Album

BTS to Return in 2026 with New Album and World Tour: Report
Music

BTS to Return in 2026 with New Album and World Tour: Report

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Big news for ARMY faithful: BTS are reportedly prepping for quite the return. As reported by Bloomberg, the K-pop superstars are gearing up to drop a brand new album and embark on a massive world tour in 2026.

BTS have been on hiatus as a group since mid-2022, when the members each began fulfilling their mandatory military service in South Korea. While solo projects have kept fans tied over, K-pop stans have eagerly awaited the return of BTS proper. Now, that return seems closer than ever.

While the act and their label Big Hit Music have yet to make any official announcement, sources have confirmed to Bloomberg that BTS have spent the past few months working on a new album and preparing for their comeback tour.

The album would mark the group’s first new record since 2020’s Be and is reportedly set for a March 2026 release date. As for the accompanying tour, the run would mark BTS’ first proper tour since 2019 and boast around 65 dates across the globe, including more than 30 shows in North America.

Notably, Big Hit Music lightly disputed some of the figures of the report. “Details regarding the dates and scale of BTS’ new world tour remain unconfirmed,” the label told Bloomberg in a statement. “The dates you mentioned are not the latest number we are discussing.”

For more discussion of BTS and its various members, check out Stanning BTS on the Consequence Podcast Network. You can also pick up the Stanning BTS T-shirt, now available in two colors at the Consequence Shop.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Eliza McLamb: Good Story Album Review
Music

Eliza McLamb: Good Story Album Review

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Have you ever found yourself in the middle of a conversation and realized you’re being fed a prewritten script? I recently caught up with a friend who had gone through several dramatic changes since we’d last spoken—a divorce, a new home, a new job—but no matter how much I politely pried, she kept giving me buzzwords: boundaries and self-care; yoga and gratitude and growth. Slowly, I realized that she’d known exactly what she’d tell me before I ever said hello: that clear, linear version of events she had learned to trot out, one that glossed over any disorderly details in service of premeditated lessons she now felt empowered to share.

On Eliza McLamb’s second album, Good Story, the singer-songwriter confronts this universal instinct to self-narrativize. “Catch it quick/Frame the image/Make your meaning before you’ve lived it,” she sings on “Mausoleum,” chiding herself for trying to nail down a story rather than inhabit her present experience. We’re all liable to these behaviors, but McLamb feels their pull acutely. On her debut album, 2024’s Going Through It, she excavated details of her childhood trauma and difficult relationships, topics she’s also tackled as a stirring essayist and podcaster, and learned how to package them as art. On Good Story, McLamb takes a step back, wondering what all these anecdotes add up to.

McLamb and her band—which includes Jacob Blizard (who’s played with Lucy Dacus); bassist Ryan Ficano; keyboardist Sarah Goldstone (who’s played with Chappell Roan and boygenius); and Death Cab For Cutie drummer Jason McGerr—construct this version of events on a solid indie-rock foundation. There are tinges of Lilith Fair pop-rock, especially in McLamb’s lilting delivery, and echoes of her contemporaries like Dacus and Soccer Mommy. But the tracklist takes gentle swerves that add depth and variety: “Better Song” ends with a minute-long, scorching guitar solo; at the close of the album’s A-side, the brief, subdued “Promise”—all gentle vocals and finger-picked guitar—is immediately followed by “Water Inside the Fence,” a continuous build of creeping anxiety that ends with screeching feedback and pounding drums.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Carrier: Rhythm Immortal Album Review
Music

Carrier: Rhythm Immortal Album Review

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Even for an artist so adept at reinvention, Carrier’s run of EPs leading up to Rhythm Immortal was astounding. He developed an original techno language with an ancient junglist script. A mixtape called Pre-Milennium Witchcraft was the Rosetta Stone, a showcase of mid-late-’90s drum’n’bass that still sounds dumbfounding today. It’s precise and complex, with that in-the-room feeling that Carrier conures up, the sound of objects in three-dimensional space rather than an Ableton grid. Where EPs like In Spectra showcased that percussive wizardry, Rhythm Immortal slows things down to a faucet drip of drums and arcane noises, a chef plating with tweezers.

There is one other precedent for Rhythm Immortal: the final Shifted record, Constant Blue Light, which focused on the microscopic movement of percussion and synths as part of a monolithic wall of sound in place of techno’s usual forward motion. Carrier’s album has the same feel—the first drums on opener “A Point Most Crucial” land with a whipcrack, jostling up soil around them, and then work out a herky-jerky pattern that doesn’t feel rooted in any familiar dance music genre. Percussive sounds move backwards and then forwards, with delay envelopes that are reversed or suddenly gated, dissolving instantly. It sounds like a higher-tech version of Photek’s infamous drum martial arts, playing with the very fabric of the spacetime continuum, not just the rhythms of drum’n’bass—as though Brewer were playing god with the laws of physics, freezing events in real time and reversing them before letting them unspool forward once again.

This effect is strongest on “Outer Shell.” Here, Brewer turns elemental forces unfamiliar, with drums that seem to wade through a mucky pond before suddenly aquaplaning over the top. The effect is startling, especially given the periodic silences between sharp snare drums that could have been ripped from a Rudy Van Gelder session. “Wave After Wave” and “Lowland Tropic” both retool the thrust of drum’n’bass into an anxious pitter-patter undergirded by pretty synth melodies that are formed into icily perfect geometric shapes. This is music that makes you feel it more than hear it, channeling the ghosts of Brewer’s glory days into an eerie dance-music shadow realm.

This ouija board act peaks with “That Veil of Yours,” an ASMR-tingly collaboration with Voice Actor. Noa Kurzweil’s distinct, sibilant voice exhales over an artificial soundscape of howling wind and martial drums. It all sounds uncanny, moving in unnatural arcs with textures that are sanded down and trebly. But every sound in “That Veil of Yours” is concrete and present, taking up space in a way we don’t usually associate with electronic music. Rhythm Immortal asks: What if techno were made from blood, sweat, and stone, instead of inside a laptop? As “That Veil of Yours” bleeds into the earth-shaking rumble of “Carbon Works,” that hypothetical starts to feel a little scary, but also exhilarating. And, most shockingly of all, genuinely new.

All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Lily Allen's 'West End Girl' Is a Stunning Divorce Album: Review
TV & Streaming

Lily Allen’s ‘West End Girl’ Is a Stunning Divorce Album: Review

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Out of the many thousands — surely tens of thousands — of albums I’ve listened to in my time, I can’t recall one that had me on the edge of my seat from the first moments to the last on first listen the way Lily Allen’s new “West End Girl” did, almost as if it were a suspense movie. The tension doesn’t come in wondering about where the record’s narrative is ultimately headed; as you may have heard, this is a divorce record with a capital D. My inability to sit back in my chair came from just savoring every confessional line and wondering what the hell she was going to tell us in the next one to top it. It’s the pleasure of listening to a master storyteller who makes your jaw drop by seeming to have spilled all the tea almost at the outset, and then the tea just keeps on coming. Not since Boston in 1773, maybe, has anyone dumped it this massively, or this fulfillingly.

If that sounds a little hyperbolic, well, sure. But “West End Girl” is the kind of record that can inspire crazy superlatives. It’s not solely about the candor — although if all Allen did was read like-minded passages of her diary aloud, you’d still have to give the album some points. It’s not just what she says from moment to moment but how she says it that keeps you riveted. And that applies on fifth, sixth and seventh listen, too, however well you’ve absorbed the story beats. The level of pop craftsmanship remains superb throughout, too, in 14 songs that somehow manage to keep the emotions feeling utterly raw at every turn, even as the music itself is anything but.

So: Come for the shock value, and stay for the high level of craftsmanship. Then stay even longer for how cannily the album sustains its mix of droll delivery and pure heartbreak. It’s a place you’ll probably want to linger.

There have been a lot of powerful divorce albums in recent years: Already in 2025, we had Jason Isbell’s and Amanda Shires’ both-sides-now releases, plus Maren Morris’ roman-a-clef set. Going back further, we’ve had Adele’s “30,” Kacey Musgraves’ “Star Crossed” and the Chicks’ “Gaslighter,” and the divorce-court near-miss that was Beyonce’s “Lemonade,” not to mention non-marital laments like Taylor Swift’s “The Tortured Poets Department.” What all those albums had in common was how those artists offered at least occasional time-outs from the trauma. Usually the artist will feel obligated to give the audience a breather with at least a couple songs that deal with something other than the central rupture, or which flash forward to assure everyone that the singer is doing all right and healing up, thank you, post-split.

But there will be no such commercial breaks or reassurances about time’s healing power for Allen. These 14 songs never offer the slightest relief from the intense emotionality of the breakdown of her relationship. But they’re so uniformly good, the fact that she doesn’t stray for a second from the subject of straying and its effects, but holds onto it like a dog with a bone, is… well, it’s a relief, actually. Allen has been working as a stage actress lately, on London’s West End (hence the title), and listening to the album one fell swoop at a time is like immersing yourself in a terrific one-woman show, where she’s running through the demise of a dream marriage in something that feels like real time. If you’re not riveted by all of this, you may not even be rivet-able.

Released with only a few days’ warning, “West End Girl” has already prompted scores of headlines in the U.K., where Allen remains a paparazzi-attracting A-lister, and just a few less in the U.S., where she is revered by most of the pop intellgentsia but has been known to walk down the street unaccosted. It doesn’t hurt, as far as intense public curiosity goes, that she was just divorced from “Stranger Things” actor David Harbour, after five years of marriage that apparently started as a fairy-tale romance for her and ended in the devastation strewn throughout every track on the album. We say “apparently” because Allen did suggest in a British Vogue interview that there’s at least a little fiction mixed in with the blatant autobiography. But every lyrical detail is so vividly delineated — in a “she probably wouldn’t make this up” way — that, rightly or wrongly, you’re likely to walk away thinking that possibly the only thing fabricated from whole cloth is the pseudonym she came up with for the story’s principal mistress (“Madeline”).

The album gets off to a blithe enough start… for a couple of verses. The title track is styled initially as a kind of samba, with Allen breathlessly reeling off how she and her husband moved to a brownstone in New York: “Found ourselves a good mortgage / Billy Cotton got sorted.” (Cotton is the designer who made the couple’s new digs worthy of a much-talked-about home-tour profile in Architectural Digest in 2023.) All is bliss until Allen tells her husband in the tune that she had just landed a leading role in a London play, presumably referencing her award-nominated breakout role in “2:22 – A Ghost Story.” (She subsequently starred on the West End again this year, in “Hedda.”) “That’s when your demeanour started to change,” she sings. “You said I’d have to audition / I said, ‘You’re deranged’ / And I thought that that was quite strange.” And there, two minutes in, with 42 left to go, end the sum total of the album’s sunny moments. Halfway through this title track, the music suddenly changes, turning to a creepily underwater-sounding version of that electro-samba, as the backdrop to a phone call we hear only Allen’s side of, in which her partner delivers some unknown bad news from the other side of the pond. It’s up to the listener to imagine what’s being said on the other end of the line: Is he telling her he’s moving out for good? Or just moving to another state, or getting his own flat in town (all of which will factor in in songs that come later)? All she can think of to say back is a dumbstuck “It makes me really sad but… I’m fine, I just want you to be happy… I love you.” And with that, the dream is over. Even though the album is just getting started.

She saves the discovery of infidelity for track 2, “Ruminating” (and practically every track thereafter). This one is a delectable slice of hyperpop, paced to keep up with the racing thoughts that keep our heroine awake at 4 a.m.: “I’m not hateful but you make me hate her / She gets to sleep next to my medicator… / And I can’t shake the image of her naked / On top of you, and I’m disassociated.” She repeats a statement of her partner’s — “If it (casual sex) has to happen, baby, do you want to know?” —answering back, ad nauseum, “What a fucking line, line, line,” repeated endlessly in a lovely, profane, Autotune-enhanced vocal cascade.

“Sleepwalking” brings some sweetness back to the album, but only in the ironic music, which uses the cadences of a sweet girl-group ballad from the ‘50s or early ‘60s top underscore a bitter lyric that says: “Who said romance isn’t dead? / Been no romance since we wed / ‘Why aren’t we fucking baby?’ / Yeah, that’s what you said / But you let me think it was me in my head / And nothing to do with them girls in your bed.” Allen says she’s become the madonna in her marriage when she’d eagerly play whore, if only. (Freud’s interpolation there goes uncredited.)

In “Tennis,” deceptively cheerful couplets that are divided up by light banging on a single piano key, she sings about how his abrupt grabbing back of his phone caused her to take a look at his texts, revealing that he’s been exchanging volleys on the court with a mystery woman, which in her mind may count as the more unforgivable infidelity: “If it was just sex, I wouldn’t be jealous / (But) you won’t play with me,” she sings — and then the music drops out for a blunt spoken-word inquiry: “And who’s Madeline?” (Soon to be drolly repeated and amended as: “Who the fuck is Madeline?”) In one of the great segues of our time, the next number is actually titled “Madeline,” and it’s there that Allen gathers the moxy to text the pseudonymous woman — and, for our listening pleasure, recites the answers that get texted back to her in an amusinglyu authentic American accent. (Whether she’s quoting real-life texts verbatim or paraphrasing for comedic effect is hard to know, but the end result is a dialogue that feels satirical and real at the same time.)

It’s so easy to become wrapped up in what’s actually being sung and said in “Madeline” that you might miss what’s happening musically, on first listen. The instrumental bed for this track focuses on a kind of acoustic guitar strumming that feels faintly redolent of a Marty Robbins ballad about Western gunslingers in a showdown — and yeah, that does become a bit more obvious when a couple of actual gunshot sound effects are eventually thrown into the mix.

It’s not the only time stylistic pastiche is employed for humor. It happens again, for instance, in “Dallas Major,” a song about Allen reentering the dating scene against her better judgment. That one brings in a light R&B groove that is meant to confer a surface sexiness, even as Allen warns a possible suitor, “I’m almost nearly 40 / I’m just shy of five-foot-two / I’m a mum to teenage children / Does that sound like fun to you?” Well, it does, kind of, but only because primary producer Blue May and his cohorts are adding bits of funk guitar, ‘70s-style keyboards and even some ‘80s-style scratching, while Allen conversely laments, over and over: “I hate it here.” If you don’t notice all these fairly subtle arrangement touchs on the first couple of listens, it’s understandable — you are busy being hit by a 2-by-4, which is to say, the accumulative effect of Allen’s jaw-dropper divulgements.

In “Madeline,” the “it’s complicated” part of the story really starts to take effect. There we learn the rules of the game of the marriage: It’s an open one, but Allen posits that she’s only agreeing to that to keep the embers of her former fairy-tale union alive. It’s here that she may lose some listeners who would otherwise be down to empathize with a straightforward divorce album: If you agreed to an open marriage, why are you so outraged he had sex with other women? The singer establishes there were boundaries set: “We had an arrangement / Be discreet, and don’t be blatant / There had to be payment / It had to be with strangers… [Dramatic pause.] But you’re not a stranger, Madeline.”

The magnitude of the extramarital exploits is stressed in an unforgettable sing-along that soon follows, “Pussy Palace.” In this one, the narrator goes to drop off medication at the West Village apartment her husband is keeping on his own, to discover a shoebox of love letters from serial lovers and a “Duane Reade bag with the handles tied / Sex toys, butt plugs, lube inside / Hundreds of Trojans, you’re so fucking broken / How’d I get caught up in your double life?” If that sounds stressful, know that the chorus is actually the kind of earworm you may spend the fall singing out loud — “I didn’t know it was your pussy palace (x4) / I always thought it was a dojo (x3) / So am I looking at a sex addict (x4)?” (It’s pretty much guaranteed, by the way, that with this album Merriam-Webster look-ups on dojo just went up 10,000%.)

The musical dynamics of the record are fairly spectacular. At its tenderest, there is “Just Enough,” a ballad with finger-picking guitar and orchestra that has Allen caught up in seeing herself as a hag: “Look at my reflection / I feel so drawn, so old / I booked myself a facelift / Wondering how long it might hold / I gave you all my power / How I’m seen through your eyes…” It’s one of the few songs on the album that is universal enough that many women will presumably relate — although, again, she can’t resist bringing it home to some triggering specifics when she asks aloud: “Why are we here talking about vasectomies?”

Contrast that with the wildly up-tempo tune that immediately precedes it, “Nonmonogamummy.” (Best tongue-twister of a title for a great pop song since “Femininomenon.”) In this one, Allen has reluctantly given in to keeping her side of the marriage open and is working the apps herself, in frustration. Her date for the evening is a British DJ named Specialist Moss, who raps, “I look at your eyes, you say your heart is broken,” while Allen can’t stop thinking about her husband: “I don’t want to fuck with anyone else / I know that’s all you want to do / I’m so committed that I’d lose myself / Because I don’t want to lose you.” The date goes badly, but the song goes spectacularly. An irresistible electric guitar line and an unbeatably furious beat help Allen and Blue May make “Nonmonogamummy” into what may be the most brilliant banger of the year.

Much respect, also, for “Relapse,” in which Allen, who is apparently about five years sober, writes about how the breakdown of her personal life and dreams is driving her to want to drink, or drug — but expresses this hunger not as some kind of slog but as a delicious piece of dubstep.

For an album that proceeds quite deliberately as a narrative, “West End Girl” doesn’t have a terribly definitive wrap-up. In the finale, “Fruityloop” (seemingly named for her ex’s choice of cereal, as well as the snare-drum loop that underlies the track), Allen brings the fatal attraction down to unresolved parental-neglect issues: “You’re just a little boy, looking for his mummy… / Playing with his toys, he just wants attention / He can’t really do attachment, scared he’s gonna be abandoned.” For herself, “I’m just a little girl, looking for a daddy / Thought that we could break the cycle.” If that sounds like pretty reasonable, even high-minded after all that has preceded it, rest assured that Allen is not quite done with the tough talk yet. “You’re a mess, I’m a bitch,” she proclaims. Magnanimous, sort of, but then she can’t help finally quoting the sage that was Lily Allen, circa 2008: “It’s not me, it’s you.”

If her deep woundedness comes as a bit of a surprise on this album, it may be because cockier older songs like “F— You” gave her the image of a tough broad, or because she already had one divorce album, 2017’s “No Shame,” in which she seemed to take a lot of responsibility for her first marriage’s failure. So among the many things that feel shocking here is just how submissive she seems to her mate’s will and wishes, up to a breaking point. The picture painted is of a wife who’s a true lovestruck romantic, and maybe even,  aspirationally, a tradwife. There’s an interesting contrast here, between the Allen who might be seen by some as a ball-buster for how candidly she’s laying out her anger for the world to see here, and the Lily who is — like a globetrotting woman before her — just a girl, standing in front of a boy, asking him to love her. (Even for a while after she’s learned what minefields his phone and his Duane Reade bag are.) For all of the avenging spirit that animates a good part of this album, it’s tremendously touching, when she’s not turning up the pyro. Or even when she is.

For now, it’s enough that we have her back with an album-of-the-year contender. (Extra kudos to Blue May, who is not really a famous name among producers yet, but is probably about to become one, based on this.) But is this the beginning of a renaissance — a Lily-sance? — after she spent eight years off the recording scene? It’s not as if whole generations of women haven’t followed in the footsteps she set down more than 20 years ago, yet it still feels like we need her now more than ever.

Allen has said she was indeed recording prolifically in the lead-up to the domestic drama detailed here, but not releasing those tracks because she felt she was writing too impersonally, putting down her thoughts about the internet and stuff like that. You’d hate to think it would take this much trauma for her to follow up with another great album. (Here’s betting those unreleased songs about the worldwide web are not as bad as she thinks they are, right?) Anyway, we are just a world, standing in front of a girl, asking her to make more records.

October 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Mass MoCA Releases Malawian Roots Album to Launch Its New Label: Listen
Music

Mass MoCA Releases Malawian Roots Album to Launch Its New Label: Listen

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

A new album of Malawian roots music is the inaugural release of a new record label from the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (Mass MoCA). A collaboration with California label Hen House Studios, Mass MoCA Records released the Kasambwe Brothers’ self-titled album today, and you can hear it below.

The Kasambwe Brothers are a band of four decades, based in the Ndirande township near Malawian capital Blantyre. They found their way to a Mass MoCA residency with help from Hen House and Luc Deschamps, the director of the Jacaranda Foundation and France’s honorary consul to Malawi. Watch a documentary on the making of the album, which involves collaborators from the Massachusetts music scene, below. Clement Kammwamba is the artist behind the cover painting.

Mass MoCA Records will operate in tandem with the museum’s curatorial ethos, a press release notes, and is running as a three-year pilot. Museum director Kristy Edmunds said, “By joining forces with Hen House Studios and being able to tap into the remarkable number of music studios and intimate venues in the local area—the ingredients for a hand-made record label were all around us. I see this label as an extension of how we innovate to support the mobility of artists’ ideas and connect audiences the world over.”

Harlan Steinberger, the producer and engineer behind Hen House, added, “Though technology today can work wonders, the digital world has de-humanized us. I believe in an older-world method that emphasizes the magic of a band making music together in one room, playing off the creativity of the moment. The humanistic approach creates a deeper emotional listener experience that can not only be heard, but also felt.”

An album from Compton jazz artists Black Nile will follow in 2026, the press release notes.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Mass MoCA Releases Malawian Roots Album to Launch Its New Label: Listen
Music

Mass MoCA Releases Malawian Roots Album to Launch Its New Label: Listen

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

A new album of Malawian roots music is the inaugural release of a new record label from the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (Mass MoCA). A collaboration with California label Hen House Studios, Mass MoCA Records released the Kasambwe Brothers’ self-titled album today, and you can hear it below.

The Kasambwe Brothers are a band of four decades, based in the Ndirande township near Malawian capital Blantyre. They found their way to a Mass MoCA residency with help from Hen House and Luc Deschamps, the director of the Jacaranda Foundation and France’s honorary consul to Malawi. Watch a documentary on the making of the album, which involves collaborators from the Massachusetts music scene, below. Clement Kammwamba is the artist behind the cover painting.

Mass MoCA Records will operate in tandem with the museum’s curatorial ethos, a press release notes, and is running as a three-year pilot. Museum director Kristy Edmunds said, “By joining forces with Hen House Studios and being able to tap into the remarkable number of music studios and intimate venues in the local area—the ingredients for a hand-made record label were all around us. I see this label as an extension of how we innovate to support the mobility of artists’ ideas and connect audiences the world over.”

Harlan Steinberger, the producer and engineer behind Hen House, added, “Though technology today can work wonders, the digital world has de-humanized us. I believe in an older-world method that emphasizes the magic of a band making music together in one room, playing off the creativity of the moment. The humanistic approach creates a deeper emotional listener experience that can not only be heard, but also felt.”

An album from Compton jazz artists Black Nile will follow in 2026, the press release notes.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
John Magaro as Keith Jarrett in a scene from Köln 75. (Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)
Music

A Broken Piano, An Exhausted Pianist, and the Album That Changed Jazz

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

For a lot of years, Vera Brandes couldn’t listen. Not once had she heard the bestselling solo jazz album of all time—Keith Jarrett’s passionate and sublime The Köln Concert—though she’d been essential to making it happen in 1975 as an 18-year-old music promoter in Cologne, West Germany.

It wasn’t the first show organized by the teenage music fanatic, but it was her most challenging, and almost didn’t happen at all. “It was such a traumatizing situation for me that night that I never listened to the record,” says Brandes, whose real-life struggle to make the concert happen is the subject of an engaging new film, Köln 75.

When Jarrett, then 29, arrived at the Cologne Opera House to perform on January 24, 1975, he hadn’t slept in 24 hours and was dealing with serious back pain. Even worse, the magnificent Bösendorfer Concert Grand 290 Imperial piano he’d requested was not waiting for him. Instead, he was provided an out-of-tune baby grand with a broken pedal.

By then Jarrett was already an acclaimed jazz player who had recorded with Miles Davis, Art Blakey, and many others. But his European solo tour was a low-budget operation, and he was traveling by car from city to city, aggravating his back issues. When he saw the piano in Cologne (Köln in German), he initially refused to play the concert.

The scramble of Vera (played by Mala Emde) and her young team to salvage the night—and convince Jarrett to perform—is the story told by the alternately playful and dramatic Köln 75, written and directed by Ido Fluk. The bilingual English and German language movie follows the desperate search for a suitable instrument, with the help of two heroic piano tuners, and the overflowing passions of a young woman putting on a show. 

(Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)

Köln 75 debuted October 17 in New York, and opens October 24 in Los Angeles and Houston, and several other cities through December. (See zeitgeistfilms.com/film/koeln-75.)

The real-word result of that crisis was a hugely successful live album, recorded by the Munich-based label ECM Records, released as the 4 million-selling The Köln Concert. The hour-long record was pure improvisation and deeply rhythmic, with elements of classical and American gospel. Because of his substandard rehearsal piano, Jarrett focused on the instrument’s middle-register, and created spontaneous melody in a flow of inspiration.

The resulting music touched a popular nerve, and its immediate pleasures provided a doorway to jazz for new listeners, much like other top-selling recordings, like Kind of Blue by Miles Davis and A Love Supreme by John Coltrane.

Brandes didn’t hear the record until many years later, when it came on at a lemonade stand while on vacation with some friends on the Spanish island of Formentera. “All of a sudden I hear this music, and I said, ‘Shit, I know this from somewhere,’” she recalls with a smile, on a video call. “Then I realized this was the album. And from that moment on, it started to haunt me.”

It has also haunted the pianist who made it. Jarrett, now 80, has grown increasingly frustrated by the outsized notoriety the album has had in his career. Jarrett and ECM weren’t involved in the movie, and did not allow the Köln recording to be used.

John Magaro as Keith Jarrett in a scene from Köln 75. (Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)
(Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)

Fluk was previously aware of the Köln album, but knew nothing of the drama behind the scenes until he read a short magazine article about the substandard piano used and Brandes’s role. “I thought, what an incredible story about every piece of art ever made—like how important it is to face obstacles and how that makes art better,” says Fluk, calling from his home in Brooklyn.

Once he began talking to Brandes, the filmmaker was pulled deeper into her backstory, from conflicts with her parents to the obstacles for a young woman in 1975 putting on such a large concert. Fluk spent eight hours interviewing Brandes about her story.

In preparation for Köln 75, Fluk immersed himself in German culture, learning the language, watching German films, and studying the music of the period. In the film, he also puts the concert in a larger musical context, not just within jazz, but the vibrant musical landscape of West Germany at the time.

“So much happened back then musically, like Kraftwerk coming from Düsseldorf, inventing electronic music,” says Fluk, who was born in Tel Aviv and grew up mostly in Paris and New York City. “Then you have all this psychedelic rock and Kraut rock, with Can and Neu! and protopunk happening there. You also, by the way, have David Bowie and Iggy Pop moving to Berlin.”

As a young music fan and concert promoter, Brandes was engaged in many sounds and genres. “The story we’re dealing with is a jazz concert, but it’s a punk rock story, and I think the character is a punk rock character,” Fluk says of Vera. “She just did not listen to anyone who told her what to do, and she just did whatever she wanted.”

Mala Emde as
Vera Brandes in a scene from Köln 75. (Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)
Mala Emde as Vera Brandes in a scene from Köln 75. (Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)

At the invitation of British jazz musician Ronnie Scott, Brandes booked her first tour at age 16 and began her career in music. Soon she was putting on her own shows in Cologne. She wasn’t a neophyte when she brought Jarrett to town, but the 1,400-capacity Opera House was her largest venue yet.

It also represented a big financial risk. Among the many miracles along the way was that her mother unexpectedly provided the 10,000 Deutsche Marks needed to rent the hall. Vera had to agree to leave the music business if she couldn’t pay back the loan. 

Though she had once dreamt of being a jazz singer herself, Brandes embraced the role of concert promoter. The mid-’70s was an exciting time to be engaging with art, music, and politics, she says.

“It was such a cultural explosion that was going on, and there was no separation of the arts and no separation of age groups,” she remembers. “We were all in this together as so many things went on politically—the peace movement, the anti-atomic power movement, and women’s liberation. You know, ’75 was the international year of the woman. Everything was going on at the same time.” 

At the beginning of the movie’s production, Brandes was welcome on the set, and she was curious to watch it come together. The day before shooting began, she made an encouraging speech to the cast and crew that Fluk says “gave everyone a sense of mission.” Then, the first day with cameras rolling focused on the family conflicts between Brandes and her parents, in particular, her disapproving father.

Michael Chernus as Michael Watts in a scene from Köln 75. (Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)
Michael Chernus as Michael Watts in a scene from Köln 75. (Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)

In the scene, young Vera is quietly returning home late at night, slowly coming up the stairs with her boots off, when the light goes on, and her father confronts her in German: “I can smell cigarettes. I’m talking to you, young lady! Like a whore, coming home in the middle of the night … You went to that jazz club, didn’t you?”

Watching the actors bring her memories to life was too much. “I saw them redo the scene a few times, and I realized I had to leave because my mirror neurons were dancing the polka,” she says. “All the fear that my whole early part of life was associated with came up crawling through the soles of my feet. And I just couldn’t stand watching it.”

The struggle of Brandes to make the concert happen is the heart of the film, but it also spends significant time with Jarrett on the road, leading to his troubled physical state on the night of the concert. Köln 75 offers a deeply empathetic portrayal of the pianist, as played by John Magaro.

“He was clearly under an enormous amount of stress. He was rather shy. He was not a friendly creature,” Brandes recalls.

Jarrett adapted to the circumstances, and improvised his way to the creation of the most popular album of his career. As time went on, Jarrett grew less interested in talking about the concert. While the album has never been taken off the market, and has been reissued in different editions and formats multiple times (including a new 50th anniversary edition), Jarrett has often dismissed it entirely. 

(Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)
(Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)

Jarrett, who can no longer perform after suffering two strokes in 2018, was not interested in participating in the film.

Fluk says he understands Jarrett’s feelings, and he compares the Köln record to Radiohead’s early hit “Creep.” For a time, the British rock band expressed a similar resentment toward the early hit song as they pursued more challenging work, but have become a lot more relaxed about it in recent years. Jarrett seems only less inclined to celebrate it.

“Musically speaking, I think he has better concerts, better live recordings, but everyone wants to just speak about this concert, and the record sold so much more than anything else,” says the director. “I understand that for him, this has become kind of like an albatross. I respect that.”

That said, Fluk wasn’t going to allow Jarrett’s disinterest get in the way of telling Brandes’s story. 

“She was never really given the credit that she deserves,” Fluk says. “We live in a time where there’s a lot of music movies being made, and they all focus on the artist, and they all almost tell the same story, just with a different soundtrack. That’s fine, and I enjoy those. But I thought, here’s an opportunity to focus the spotlight on someone we usually don’t see. There’s so many invisible people in making movies, in making music, and in the entire artistic endeavor. 

(Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)
(Courtesy of Zeitgeist Films / Kino Lorber)

“The Cologne concert is the spark that happens when two great improvisers meet. One’s great at improvising on the keys, the other’s great at improvising at life. And I was not going to let anyone tell me I’m not able to make a film about this woman.”

After the Cologne concert, Brandes continued promoting concerts in Germany, and founded her first record label, CMP, in 1977. There were more labels in Europe and the U.S., including Intuition Records, which became Blue Note’s world music sister label. Since 2000, she has been focused on the use of music in alternative medicine. 

Brandes has had very little contact with Jarrett in the years after their famous concert, and her few experiences mirrored the pianist’s increasingly negative attitude about the Köln album. A few years after the Cologne concert, Jarrett was playing in a nearby town with his quartet. Brandes met him there. 

“I took him after the concert from the venue to his hotel, and we had a very friendly conversation,” she recalls. “We even had dinner together, but that was it.”

About 10 years ago, she saw him again at a show in Toronto, and Jarrett didn’t even shake her hand. And then, shortly before his strokes in 2018, Brandes was invited backstage at a show in Vienna, where she again extended her hand to say hello. “He didn’t take it,” she says. “He was a little obnoxious. He said, ‘Oh, they’re telling me you are the woman with the piano in Cologne.’ It was crystal clear he had absolutely no interest in talking to me, so I said goodbye.”

Regardless, their names will now be linked forever with the release of Köln 75. Brandes has seen the film several times at premieres and festivals, but plans to soon put it aside.

“I’m trying to keep the original memory as much as I can, which is why I probably don’t want to see it a lot more,” Brandes says, though she hopes a new generation watches. “It’s such a positive movie, telling people there is just absolutely nothing that cannot be done. That’s a spirit that is so important.” 

October 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Korn: Korn Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Korn: Korn Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

The rest of Korn had his back. That quiet moment during “Fake” is a rare bit of respite amid these 12 tracks. They are, for the most part, like the militia at his side and rear, ready to defend Davis as he lambastes the people who have hurt and harassed him. That ability owes, at least in part, to the band’s idiosyncratic setup.

In the early ’90s, Munky had fallen for the strange sounds of Steve Vai’s athletic guitar, always moving like an elite gymnast who had unlocked an extra limb. When he learned that Vai was playing a seven-string Ibanez, he not only got one for himself but also convinced his bandmate Head to try one, too. The tandem tweaked the instruments, adjusting the strings and springs so that the sound was deeper and thicker, covering bits of the spectrum a bass would ordinarily manage. That allowed the band’s actual bassist, Fieldy, to approach his instrument differently, channeling an early love of funk-rock into distinct lead lines. With five strings instead of four, Fieldy could slide upward into some space normally reserved for guitars, adding licks and even taking stunted solos in the room abdicated by Head and Munky. All these tonal shifts meant the bass wasn’t always tied to the drums, too, so that Silveria could move more freely. He responded to the rest of the band in real time, his hits sometimes landing, crucially, like Davis’ fists.

To wit, on “Ball Tongue,” a break-up song with an old friend, Davis recounts all the ways he’s been disappointed until he just runs out of words. He repeatedly hurls himself into inscrutable scat outbursts, his annoyance beyond ordinary expression. (He was, mind you, also freaking out on meth in his dad’s studio during this take.) Especially at the start, Silveria’s drums are enormous, each hit lasting longer than it needs. Head and Munky’s guitars sound like sirens or a mind spinning out, while Fieldy seems to be slapping at Silveria’s every beat, a mountain lion pawing at a house cat’s toy. It is intentionally mean, the four old friends telling their new pal’s old friend to fuck off forever. And during “Helmet in the Bush,” a song about trying to overcome an addiction that is breaking Davis’ body, they become his backbone, forever trying to pull him back toward the center as he spirals.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Marcus King Talks New Album On 'Lipps Service'
Music

Marcus King Talks New Album On ‘Lipps Service’

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Marcus King is the guest on the newest installment of the Lipps Service podcast, speaking with host Scott Lipps about his new Republic album, Darling Blue, and the challenges of mental health and sobriety amid life in the music industry.

King also gets into his upbringing in South Carolina and playing music with his family members from a young age, his decision to leave school to pursue his career full-time, the merits of micrososing and working with producers such as Rick Rubin and Dave Cobb. The episode concludes with King’s lists of his top five guitarists and roots, Americana and country artists.

On the previous episode of Lipps Service, YUNGBLUD discussed his new EP in collaboration with Aerosmith and paying homage to Ozzy Osbourne at the Back to the Beginning concert in July just days before the Black Sabbath frontman’s death.

Since it began in 2018, the acclaimed podcast has featured many of the biggest voices and personalities in music, including exclusive interviews with Anthony Kiedis, David Lee Roth, Hozier, Maynard James Keenan, the Police’s Stewart Copeland, Mick Fleetwood, Nikki Sixx, Dove Cameron, Perry Farrell, the Kills and many more. Every few weeks, a new episode of SPIN Presents Lipps Service is available wherever you listen to podcasts.

Stay tuned into all things Lipps Service by following the podcast on Instagram (@lippsservicepod), TikTok (@lippsservice) and YouTube (@LippsService).

October 25, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Joe Westerlund: Curiosities From the Shift Album Review
Music

Joe Westerlund: Curiosities From the Shift Album Review

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

After recording alone at Sylvan Esso’s studio, Westerlund had friends like Califone’s Tim Rutili, saxophonist Sam Gendel, and violinist Libby Rodenbough make their marks, drawing out the songfulness of his pitched percussion and electronic washes—his kaleidoscopic mills of hand drums, shakers, metallophones, thumb pianos, flutes, field recordings, and so on. To call it a percussion album probably gives the wrong idea of austerity and intensity, when the music is really driven by its transparent density and uncanny efflorescence of textures and colors. It’s vivid and exciting in the manner of techno, though dancing to it would be a path to insanity, and it’s beautiful and subtle in the manner of concert music without taking itself quite so seriously.

For all of his evident technical ability, Westerlund’s music seems most concerned with vibe and feel, and each track on Curiosities gives us a different way to perceive meaning in motion. “Nu Male Uno” is moist-eyed like Animal Collective, draping a swaying theme over a sashaying ant-line of little pulses. “Peebles ’n’ Stones” is an array of seemingly disparate parts—unwinding clockwork, essayistic constructions of mixed percussion, glassily shattering piano phrases—inextricably linked like falling dominos. “Can Tangle” distills a knack for coating sweet, tiny songs in glittering scales of rhythmic and timbral elaboration.

There are still many surprises to come—the dubby noir of “Persurverance,” the computerized scramble and galumph of “Furahai,” the perfumed Italo splashes of “Midpoint,” and the mighty churn of “Elegy (for OLAibi),” which begins in sinuous reverie and ends in rapture. Throughout his work, Westerlund makes beats feel less like unilateral lines and more like vast webs vibrating with sympathetic reactions—percussion as ecosystem, not the bulldozer plowing through it. This approach, rigorous yet flexible and fluid, has a natural synergy with the clave on Curiosities From the Shift. Though clearly born out of strenuous study and effort, it’s an easy and captivating listen, which is the essence of his generous, endlessly generative approach to music.

All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Joe Westerlund: Curiosities From the Shift

October 25, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming