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Corey Taylor, Billy Idol, Josh Freese to Perform The Cars and New York Dolls Albums at Benefit Show
Music

Corey Taylor, Billy Idol, Josh Freese to Perform The Cars and New York Dolls Albums at Benefit Show

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

An initial lineup has been announced for the Above Ground 4 benefit show, featuring an all-star cast of musicians performing the classic self-titled debut albums of New York Dolls and The Cars in full.

The concert, set for October 26th at the Honda Theatre in Hollywood, California, was originally scheduled for January 2025 but was postponed due to the LA wildfires. With the new date, the artist roster has changed from the original announcement.

Corey Taylor (Slipknot), Billy Idol, Josh Freese (Nine Inch Nails), Moby, Nuno Bettencourt (Extreme), Steve Stevens (Billy Idol), and Cars guitarist Elliot Easton are among the musicians set to perform, along with special guests Cypress Hill.

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Above Ground, which was founded by Dave Navarro and Billy Morrison, helps raise awareness and funds for mental health initiatives and suicide prevention. The two guitarists usually perform at the benefit shows, but are not listed as of yet, although a full lineup is expected to be announced in the coming weeks.

Past Above Ground benefit concerts have seen notable musicians performing full albums by the likes of The Velvet Underground, Sex Pistols, David Bowie, The Stooges, and more. Thus far, Above Ground has helped raise $750,000 for the aforementioned causes, according to its official website.

Tickets to the Above Ground 4 benefit show are available here. Stay tuned as more artists are announced.

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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5 Albums I Can’t Live Without: X Ambassadors
Music

5 Albums I Can’t Live Without: X Ambassadors

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Name  X Ambassadors (Intro completed by Sam Nelson Harris)

Best known for  My moustache.

Current city  Los Angeles.

Really want to be in  A cabin in the woods learning how to be a cobbler or some shit because the entertainment industry is sooo wacky and I often wanna run away from it all. (But who am I kidding? I’d last three days out there and then come running back).

Lol Tolhurst and Robert Smith of the Cure in 1983. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns)

Excited about  VHS(X) 10-year anniversary tour, and then getting back to finishing up our new (5th!) album.

My current music collection has a lot of  I’ve been listening to a lot of rap (Benny the Butcher, Westside Gunn, JID), and classical (Gustav Holst’s The Planets). Just about anything that takes me as far away from the genre I tend to write in.

And a little bit of  Pop Country—A LOT of, actually. I love Ella Langley and Lainey Wilson the most right now.

Preferred format  I love the ritual of putting on a Vinyl and because most everything sounds good on Vinyl, BUT… I think right now I’m a bigger CD guy. It’s nostalgic for me as a mid-millenial and I also just love how good and consistent the quality is.

From Sam Nelson Harris (vocalist)

1

Nebraska, Bruce Springsteen

This is by far my favorite album of all time. I wasn’t really a fan of Bruce’s until I heard Atlantic City—in that instant, the second that chorus hit, everything made sense to me about him. I was immediately as hardcore, die-hard of a Springsteen fan as you could find. There’s both an uncanny poetry and a grounded realism to his writing that is so egalitarian and human. I can genuinely feel that not only is he diving deep into himself but also reaching out to all of us, trying to build some sort of bridge between us. It’s what makes him one of the greatest to ever do it, and is the blueprint for me of what a really good song / album has the power to do.

2

In Rainbows, Radiohead

There are some albums you’ll never forget where you were and how you felt listening to it. I was in my apartment in Bushwick on my computer, and somewhere, somehow, read an article about a “pay-what-you-want Radiohead album.” Like a rabid animal I raced to the website, paid $0 for it (sorry Radiohead), and started listening. “15 Step” had me on the edge of my seat the whole time, and when the riff from “Bodysnatchers” started, I remember I literally jumped up out of my seat and started yelling, “HOLY SHIT HOLY SHIT HOLY SHIT!!!!” I sat and listened all the way through, then put it on my iPod, went for a long walk and listening to the whole thing again. Every year I go back and find a new song from that album to obsess over, but my favorite will always be “All I Need.” It’s Thom at his most genuine, pure, and un-obscured vocally and lyrically. I always think about the painting “Christina’s World” by Andrew Wyeth when I hear that song: “I’m in the middle of your picture / lying in the reeds.” It’s a tortured love song about an imbalanced relationship, he’s always pining for them, but they couldn’t give a shit about him. Which… I mean, I think we’ve all been there.

From Casey Harris (keyboardist)

3

Blow by Blow, Jeff Beck

I have always loved instrumental music, but this was the first album I’d ever listened to, that wasn’t a soundtrack of some kind, and was captivating from start to finish. It’s been one of my favorites ever since I discovered it at age 16. I can honestly say that it was this record which inspired me to learn to improvise and actually practice piano until I felt I could play like these guys. I’m still trying!

4

Manic Meat, Tobacco

I learned to play piano as a kid, and I was mainly a piano/organ guy for years, even into adulthood. It wasn’t until I discovered this album that I realized how much I’d been missing on the synth side of town. There are so many sonic colors on these tracks, and the whole thing in general is so unique and unlike any other music I’ve heard really. Also very cool to hear vocorder used like this, as a serious lead vocal, rather than a gimmick or effect.  

From Adam Levin (drummer)

5

The Shape of Punk to Come, Refused

I discovered this record when I was 15 and deep in the throws of my emo/screamo era. I love everything about the record. Everything about it felt next level. It was heavy, weird, experimental, and somehow still catchy. It sounded unlike anything I’d ever heard, like hardcore smashed together with noise, electronics, and these wild left turns that made no sense but worked perfectly. What really sticks with me is how far ahead of its time it was. When it dropped, it basically flopped, but now you can hear its fingerprints all over the next generation of bands. It still inspires me today because it reminds me that art can be challenging, and ahead of its time and even if the world doesn’t get it right away, it can still leave a lasting impact.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Ken Vasoli of the Starting Line. (Credit:Lupe Bustos)
Music

5 Albums I Can’t Live Without: Ken Vasoli of the Starting Line

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Name  Ken Vasoli of the Starting Line

Best known for  Lifer song and dance man. Simultaneous professional bass player/semi-professional singer. Bleached hair 1999-2003.

Current city  Philadelphia, PA.

Really want to be in  I wouldn’t mind retiring in El Pescadero, Mexico. I would enjoy beach life with the family. Great eating and surfing, perhaps improving my skills at the latter.  

Excited about  First baby due in November! First TSL album in 18 years coming out in September, Eternal Youth on our own label Lineage Recordings. Our first headline tour in 17 years is pounding the pavement in a few weeks as I write this. Big year!

Bob Dylan in 1965. (Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

My current music collection has a lot of  My record shelves hold quite a large selection of instrumental albums. Anywhere from instrumental hip-hop, electronic, jazz to experimental, Italian soundtracks, library records, and everywhere in between. I’m not sure exactly why I gravitate to these kinds of albums, but I do enjoy the aspect of no meanings being assigned to the songs through traditional lyric delivery. It allows the music to tell its own story and control the momentum solely with mood and texture. Plenty of unexpected gems to be found in this territory of record digging.

And a little bit of  I keep a healthy supply of soul records in house. I adore Curtis Mayfield and Barry White, both amazing songwriters and impressive producers. I collected quite a few of their records over the years, especially ‘70s Barry. They are easy LPs to find and consistently hit VERY hard. 

Preferred format  Vinyl is my preferred method of listening. I love the ritual of putting on a record and cooking or simply relaxing in the living room as it spins, it’s hard to beat that experience. If I’m driving, running, or walking, streaming has forced my hand, but I’m not proud of it. 

5 Albums I Can’t Live Without:

1

Clinging to a Scheme, The Radio Dept.

The Radio Dept. and this record in particular delivers a flawless and delightful example of understated melodic brilliance. There is nothing to skip here, it’s a shimmering gem front to back. The elevator pitch would be to call this a lo-fi pop record, but that description really undersells the delicate perfection in TRD’s songwriting. The music on Clinging to a Scheme is minimal but measured so perfectly. The drums are all programmed or looped on relatively rudimentary sounding equipment, while the clean guitars, warm keys, and calming vocals float and fold into the sequences with tact and humble nuance. The lyrics are flawlessly penned with lines that read both sensitive and profoundly bold.  As a bass player, I LOVE how much the lines play into the upper register of the neck and also get doused in a slick spring reverb from time to time. I play this album and am able to instantly conjure a memory of riding my bike on a hot day in 2010, bombing down an empty hill feeling the wind cool my skin and pure bliss while these songs filled my ears. A perfect moment.

Funny story! A few years after I fell in love with this album I played some festival shows in Australia alongside another favorite band of mine, Millencolin. One night at a fest after-party, I saw the singer of Millencolin standing next right outside the bar. I felt bold and introduced myself as a fellow musician and longtime fan. We engaged in small chit chat. I knew that Millencolin were from Sweden, so I had excitedly asked him if he listened to the Radio Dept. (also from Sweden and have been at it for quite some time). Do you know what he said??? “…No.” That conversation pretty much wrapped up then and there. 

2

Some Kind of Cadwallader, Algernon Cadwallader

I’m realizing through this exercise that I achieve different benefits from specific records that I favor in the collection, this one in particular delivers a sure shot, supercharged dose of happiness to my dopamine receptors. Algernon has always impressed me since the get-go. Full disclosure, they happen to be friends and from the neighborhood, but that plays zero part in securing this coveted No. 2 spot. Just a solid bonus! I’ve had the pleasure of seeing Algernon Cadwallader perform everywhere from Gazebos and VFWs to the finest Philadelphia stages over the years. They have always struck me as one of the most uniquely original modern punk bands of my generation, not just locally but globally! These guys are undisputed trendsetters. I hear their influence in countless bands who came to follow. They nail this signature combination of glass sharp dueling guitar tones and heady rhythms juxtaposing one of the most on-point raw, guttural vocalists in the game who also manages to display impressive pitch control. Perhaps the most naturally “cool” bands I’ve come to know and love. They’ve never taken themselves too seriously or compromised their style to serve mainstream audiences. Always retaining their magic and integrity every step the way. 

This debut album, Some Kind Of Cadwallader, felt like a classic punk piece to my ears upon first listen. Equal parts airtight performances with just enough scrappy rambunctious energy equating to a brilliant sonic roistering. The moment I heard the gang hook erupt “Oh man, it’s taken me over!” on Track 2, I knew this LP would be a mainstay of the music collection. Big fun-in-the-sun, skateboards-by-the-beach kind of music. I only recently started looking up the words I was previously unable to decipher by ear and I can now confirm the lyrical wit is by all accounts unmatched! 

A beautiful coincidence. Early into dating my now wife a decade ago I visited her apartment in her home state of Texas. I was thumbing through her record collection and was joyously surprised to discover that she also owns and loves this Algernon record. Now we have two copies in our home! Kismet!

3

You Fail Me, Converge 

This is the unequivocally heaviest record I’ve ever heard by my absolute favorite heavy band. Listening to Converge music is not typically a shared experience for me. This is the only album of my five picks that I’m ashamed to say I don’t own on vinyl, for the sole reason I fear I would likely disrupt my loved ones in the household if I amplified this pummeling masterpiece through the living room speakers. (My wife has affectionately referred to this as “dude music.”) Therefore this is a bigtime headphones and solo car ride album for this dude. I am a runner. Not a fast one, but I do run often. I’ve timed myself repeatedly and I can scientifically say with confidence NO ONE MAKES ME RUN FASTER than Converge (by a huge margin!). This album is the perfect example of brutal sonic violence with unmatched rhythmic intelligence and relentless intensity within the punk universe. 

The sonics on You Fail Me are downright blistering! I purposely chose the “Redux” version for the newer and improved Kurt Ballou mix. The sound has a deep low-end gut punch, the finest bass guitar growling tone I could ever dream up,  and drums that BITE like a goddamn grizzly bear. Some other great albums have a one-two punch with exciting first tracks, right? Well, this baby has six devastating haymakers lined up immediately after the “First Light” bending guitar intro. No other music energizes me quite like Converge does, especially on this album. For that alone, they deserve a clinched spot in this hypothetical eternal rotation.

4

Shades of Blue: Madlib Invades Blue Note, Madlib

This monumental album is a perfectly executed culmination of several personal favorite aspects of the music world, namely the union of top shelf instrumental hip-hop production and the legendary Blue Note Records jazz archives. It is of my own passionate opinion that Otis Jackson Jr., a.k.a. Madlib, is the greatest living producer this world has to offer. There is something in the way his pocket always sits so flawlessly in a collage of supremely chosen instruments and textures weaving together with such charismatic style. I think this album best showcases the man’s extraordinary talents as an audio visionary with a knack for sample-based production far ahead of his time. I marvel at the achievement of how he blurs the line between sampled and recorded material so seamlessly. I house plenty of jazz as well as instrumental hip-hop records in the collection, since neither of these genres are represented on the rest of this list, Shades of Blue is an absolute no-brainer to keep on deck forevermore. 

5

Selected Ambient Works Volume II, Aphex Twin

I recently had dinner catching up with a longtime friend and electronic music collaborator, and he joked that the older and deeper one gets in this genre of music [it] always leads to collecting ambient albums and cassette tapes, and I am admittedly guilty of both right on schedule. Coincidentally he was also revisiting SAW VII regularly in his recent listening rotation. This brought up an intriguing question: asking each other what it is that makes this record so special?  My friend’s response was something astute along the lines of “it’s just so innocent.” That really stuck with me and I couldn’t agree more. 

To know Richard D. James and his body of work, is to understand that his style of sound is fearlessly ever-changing while existing in his own vast (yet cohesive) universe. He is perhaps best known for his work on more drum-and-bass-leaning records. This album is essentially and famously drum-less, practically wordless while revealing from its core a sprawling sonic bed of transcendently stretched and drenched loops blossoming with marvelous grace. The music itself feels like an effortless and purely guilt-free expression of art. There was speculation between my friend and I if some of these pieces were initially unfinished starts intended for more elaborate final compositions. Regardless of whether or not that theory holds water, Richard made a masterfully prophetic decision to exercise such an elevated level of restraint by keeping the field of sound so confidently minimal. The experience of listening to this record is unlike any others in my collection, it emits a potently hypnotic transmission. I find it can transform the room in a drastic way. As boneless and wordless as this album is, it somehow feels CATCHY in a way that my brain gravitates towards before any pop song melody I’ve heard in my life. I feel as though could listen to that same “#21” arrangement on loop for an eternity, and have caught myself humming that tune in my head with no accompaniment.

I nabbed the 4-LP Expanded Edition of this album earlier this year and the records have rarely left the turntable. That’s the other nice thing about this album, the music is sprawling, plentiful and never rushed. It’s an unforgettable floating trip across a divinely serene atmosphere. One of my favorite parts of the 2024 physical record is a message included in the “Rhubarb Notes” written by Richard. It reads: “My mum gave me so much love, dedicated her life to me, filled me to the brim with confidence, and somehow managed to be a nurse at the same time. That love she gave can now be felt by millions all over the world and beyond through this music. Thanks for everything Lorna James!” As a guy who lost his mom four years ago, these words hit me with a weighty significance and drew my relationship to this music even closer. What a magnificent triumph to honor the irreplaceable love of a mother. Bravo, Richard.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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10 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Wednesday, Cardi B, Nine Inch Nails, and More
Music

10 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Wednesday, Cardi B, Nine Inch Nails, and More

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

For Icelandophiles who semi-learned the words to Sigur Rós and Sin Fang records back in the day, the wait for Múm’s return has been long enough. History of Silence, Múm’s first album in 12 years, nestles into the fibers of their longtime sound: whispered lyrics, gauzy strings, melodica, and percussive ambiance. Although their seventh studio album and follow-up to 2013’s Smilewound’s gets its name from dead air, Múm are lively and present throughout, be it the shimmering sounds of “Kill the Light” or the vividness of “Mild at Heart.” Recorded, deconstructed, reassembled, and refined over two years, History of Silence is a humble comeback that savors every second.

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Listen/Buy at Bandcamp


Kitba: Hold the Edges [Ruination]

Kitba makes bedroom-pop music that harks back to a time before “bedroom-pop” was really a thing. On Hold the Edges, the Brooklyn-based harpist and singer-songwriter, otherwise known as Rebecca El-Saleh, composes hall-of-mirrors synth ballads with the sumptuous textures and sing-songy quality of Frou Frou, their vocals, often Auto-Tuned, a nervy mix of the shellshocked and declarative. The mazy single “Soften,” one of many breakup songs on the LP, is about “being angry long after you feel you should be, wondering when your hardened heart will soften,” they said in press materials. “It’s twisting inside and chaos, vibratingly bright and tense.”

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Ed Sheeran Reveals His Favorite Rappers And Rap Albums Of All Time
Music

Ed Sheeran Reveals His Favorite Rappers And Rap Albums Of All Time

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Ed Sheeran has never been shy about his love for Hip-Hop, and now he’s letting fans in on which albums and rappers top his list. During a recent sit-down on GOAT Talk with actor Barry Keoghan, the British singer-songwriter revealed that his go-to records come from some of the game’s most championed lyricists.

“It’s that whole world. You have Get Rich or Die Tryin’, The Documentary – Game, or The Marshall Mathers LP,” she revealed. “Those three, I could put them on in any scenario. 2001 – Dr. Dre is another one.”

Keoghan named Get Rich or Die Tryin’ as his favorite, which prompted Sheeran to share a moment that proves his love for 50 runs deep. “I was listening to that weirdly with my dad the other day. We were in Italy. I was topless with a beer in my hand, explaining to him how great ‘If I Can’t’ was because it’s not a full eight bar chorus,” he laughed.

Sheeran has always shared his high regards for Eminem throughout his career as well. He’s often shared how rapping along to The Marshall Mathers LP as a kid helped him overcome stuttering.

“By learning that record, and rapping it back to back to back to back, it cured my stutter,” he previously told Howard Stern. Sheeran has also collabed with Em on three songs and has shared the stage with him.

50 Cent, who’s close friends with the Detroit icon, also gave Sheeran a major co-sign once after seeing his acoustic cover of “In Da Club.” At the time, Fif reposted it on Instagram with the caption: “Ed Sheeran right now in LA at the John Mayer concert Killing sh*t! BOOM.”

Busta Rhymes chimed in, dropping a slew of fire emojis in the comments.

Aside from U.S. rappers, Sheeran also gave flowers to U.K. spitters Skepta, Dave, Wretch 32, and Stormzy.

Watch above.

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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King Gizzard and The Lizard Wizard Albums 'Name Your Price' on Bandcamp
Music

King Gizzard and The Lizard Wizard Albums ‘Name Your Price’ on Bandcamp

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The band left Spotify in June after its CEO Daniel Ek invested in AI military drone technology

After pulling their music from Spotify following CEO Daniel Ek’s investment in AI military drone technology, King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard have successfully taken over the entire Top 25 of Bandcamp’s best-selling albums and are letting fans “name your price.”

While Bandcamp’s default pricing for albums is set at $9 (with tracks at $1.50), the company says artist are still able to set “pricing in a way that reflects your goals, your audience, and the value of your work.” The novel pricing move by King Gizzard opens up their digital catalog with a no minimum payment, making their music more accessible than ever.

Earlier this summer, the Aussie band began to remove dozens of albums from Spotify following the announcement that Ek’s investment firm, Prima Materia, helmed a 600 million euro fundraising round for Helsing, a defense technology startup developing AI drones. Simply writing “fuck Spotify” while promoting a new demo collection at the time, King Gizzard later explained their decision in an Instagram Story.

“Hello friends… A PSA to those unaware: Spotify CEO Daniel Ek invests millions in AI military drone technology… We just removed our music from the platform… Can we put pressure on these Dr. Evil tech bros to do better?… Join us on another platform,” the band’s statement read.

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Along with King Gizzard, other prominent artists including Deerhoof, Xiu Xiu, Hotline TNT, the Mynabirds, Kadhja Bonet, and WU LYF have since left the platform.

“We’ve been saying ‘f— Spotify’ for years. In our circle of musicians, that’s what people say all the time for well-documented reasons,” King Gizzard’s Stu Mackenzie previously told the Los Angeles Times. “I don’t consider myself an activist, but this feels like a decision staying true to ourselves. We saw other bands we admire leaving, and we realized we don’t want our music to be there right now.”

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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King Gizzard and The Lizard Wizard Make Albums "Name Your Price" on Bandcamp
Music

King Gizzard and The Lizard Wizard Make Albums “Name Your Price” on Bandcamp

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard have raised the bar. After leaving Spotify earlier this summer over the streaming platform CEO Daniel Ek’s investment in AI drone technology, the Australian psych rockers have made their music more accessible on Bandcamp by switching to a name-your-price model for fans looking to access their digital catalog.

“Can we put pressure on these Dr. Evil tech bros to do better? Join us on another platform,” the band posted to Instagram back in July. Now, after more than a month of their music being unavailable on streaming platforms, the world can purchase their jams at a lower price than the previous minimum of $10 for each album.

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Paying supporters get unlimited streaming of King Gizzard’s music on the free app. Proving this strategy’s success, the prolific band’s deep discography currently populates the entire Top 25 of Bandcamp’s best-selling albums section.

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King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard are just one of a growing group of artists fleeing Spotify in response to Ek serving as chairman of Helsing, a German company that specializes in AI military software. Xiu Xiu, Deerhoof, and Godspeed You! Black Emperor are just some of the acts that have pulled their music from Spotify for that reason.

The band is set to go back on the road next month, for a combination of orchestral shows in support of their most recent album, Phantom Island, mixed in with a series of “rave sets.” The gigs rev back up on Halloween night (October 31st) in Manchester, UK, followed by stops in London, Paris, Berlin, Vienna, and more before wrapping up in December in Melbourne. See the full run of dates below, and get tickets here.

King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard 2025 Tour Dates:
10/31 – Manchester, United Kingdom @ Aviva Studios ^
11/01 – London, United Kingdom @ Electric Brixton ^
11/02 – London, United Kingdom @ Electric Brixton ^
11/04 – London, United Kingdom @ Royal Albert Hall *
11/05 – Paris, France @ La Seine Musicale *
11/06 – Tilburg, Netherlands @ 013 Poppodium ^
11/07 – Den Bosch, Netherlands @ MAINSTAGE *
11/09 – Gdańsk, Poland @ Inside Seaside Festival *
11/10 – Berlin, Germany @ Columbiahalle ^
11/11 – Prague, Czech Republic @ SaSaZu ^
11/12 – Vienna, Austria @ Gasometer ^
11/14 – Copenhagen, Denmark @ Poolen ^
11/15 – Gothenburg, Sweden @ Gothenburg Film Studios ^
12/02 – Sydney, AU @ Sydney Opera House *
12/03 – Sydney, AU @ Sydney Opera House *
12/05 – Sydney, AU @ Enmore Theatre #
12/07 – Brisbane, AU @ Fortitude Music Hall #
12/09 – Brisbane, AU @ The Princess Theatre *
12/12 – Melbourne, AU @ Sidney Myer Music Bowl %
12/13 – Melbourne, AU @ Sidney Myer Music Bowl &

* = Orchestral show
^ = Rave set
# = Rock show w/ Party Dozen
% = Orchestral show w/ Folk Bitch Trio
& = Rock show w/ Barkaa

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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11 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Big Thief, Titanic, David Byrne, and More
Music

11 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Big Thief, Titanic, David Byrne, and More

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

While Oasis, Blur, and, to some degree, Pulp rake it in with reunions bankrolled by nostalgia, Suede are still plugging away as a working band of Britpop survivors. Antidepressants, their 10th studio album, channels their usual mix of light social commentary and first-person misadventure in songs as full-throatedly anthemic as anything in their catalog.

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Buy at Rough Trade


La Dispute: No One Was Driving the Car [Epitaph]

There’s regular dissociation, and then there’s the three-tiered saga presented in No One Was Driving the Car, La Dispute’s first new album in six years. The Michigan screamo and post-hardcore musicians immerse themselves in the narrative of a man disconnecting from himself as he shaves his head, follows a sex worker outdoors, and ends an aimless walk at night at the hospital before things spiral further. Taking inspiration from the 2017 Paul Schrader film First Reformed, La Dispute’s follow-up to Panorama is intense and brooding as it grapples with self-control, technological consumption, and the feeling of dread that populates the future.

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Listen/Buy at Bandcamp
Buy at Rough Trade


Flur: Plunge [Latency]

Flur Plunge

While studying different courses from one another at the London university Goldsmiths, all three members of Flur—Austrian Ethiopian harpist Miriam Adefris, British saxophonist Isaac Robertson, and percussionist Dillon Harrison—submerged themselves in the school’s explorative music scene where they started gravitating towards one another as musicians. After various stints collaborating with artists like Floating Points and Shabaka Hutchings, the three musicians finally formed a proper trio. On Plunge, their debut album as Flur, they merge written compositions and offhand improvisation to showcase their take on classical, ambient, and free jazz.

Listen on Apple Music
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Listen on Tidal
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Listen/Buy at Bandcamp
Buy at Rough Trade


September 7, 2025 0 comments
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K-Pop Albums to Hit Number One on Billboard 200: Full List
Music

K-Pop Albums to Hit Number One on Billboard 200: Full List

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Stray Kids’ new album KARMA puts K-pop back in a familiar spot – No. 1 on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart. By debuting at No. 1 on the chart dated Sept. 6, KARMA becomes the 20th album or EP by a K-pop act to reach No. 1 on the Billboard 200. The first was BTS’ Love Yourself: Tear in June 2018.

Stray Kids has amassed seven No. 1 titles on the Billboard 200, which puts them out front among K-pop acts. BTS is in second place, with six No. 1 titles. ATEEZ is next in line with two No. 1s on the Billboard 200. SuperM, BLACKPINK, TOMORROW X TOGETHER, NewJeans and TWICE have all notched one No. 1 to date.

BLACKPINK was the first female K-pop act to land a No. 1 album on the Billboard 200. They scored with Born Pink in 2022. NewJeans and TWICE were the second and third.

K-pop groups tend to be large ensembles. TWICE has nine members, one more than Stray Kids and ATEEZ. BTS and SuperM each have seven members. TOMORROW X TOGETHER and NewJeans each have five members. BLACKPINK has four members. To date, no K-pop solo artists, duos or trios have topped the Billboard 200.

There have been multiple No. 1 albums on the Billboard 200 by K-pop acts in every year since 2018 except for 2021, when there were none, and 2025, when there has been just one so far. The peak year (to date) for most No. 1 K-pop albums on the Billboard 200 was 2023, when there were five. There were four in 2022 and four again in 2024.

Here’s a list of all K-pop albums to top the Billboard 200. They are listed in chronological order.

  • BTS, Love Yourself: Tear

    BTS
    Image Credit: JTBC PLUS/Imazins via Getty Images

    Date Hit No. 1: June 2, 2018

    Single: “Fake Love”

  • BTS, Love Yourself: Answer

    Date Hit No. 1: September 8, 2018

    Single: “Idol”

  • BTS, Map of the Soul: PERSONA

    Date Hit No. 1:  April 27, 2019

    Singles: “Boy with Luv,” “Make It Right”

  • SuperM, SuperM: The First Mini Album EP

    Date Hit No. 1: October 19, 2019

    Single: “Jopping”

  • BTS, MAP OF THE SOUL: 7

    Date Hit No. 1: March 7, 2020

    Singles: “Black Swan,” “On”

  • BTS, BE

    Date Hit No. 1: Dec. 5, 2020

    Single: “Life Goes On”

  • Stray Kids, Stray Kids Mini Album: Oddinary (EP)

    Stray KidsStray Kids
    Image Credit: The Chosunilbo JNS/Imazins via Getty Images

    Date Hit No. 1: April 2, 2022

    Single: “Maniac”

  • BTS, Proof

    Date Hit No. 1: June 25, 2022

    Single: “Yet to Come (The Most Beautiful Moment)”

  • BLACKPINK, Born Pink

    BLACKPINKBLACKPINK
    Image Credit: Jeff Kravitz/Getty Images for MTV/Paramount Global

    Date Hit No. 1: Oct. 1, 2022

    Singles: “Pink Venom,” “Shut Down”

  • Stray Kids, Maxident

    Date Hit No. 1: Oct. 22, 2022

    Single: “Case 143”

  • TOMORROW X TOGETHER, The Name Chapter: Temptation (EP)

    Date Hit No. 1: Feb. 11, 2023

    Single: “Sugar Rush Ride”

  • Stray Kids, 5-Star

    Date Hit No. 1: June 17, 2023

    Single: “S-Class”

  • NewJeans, 2nd EP ‘Get Up’

    NewJeansNewJeans
    Image Credit: The Chosunilbo JNS/Imazins via Getty Images

    Date Hit No. 1: Aug. 5, 2023

    Singles: “Super Shy,” “Cool With You,” “ETA”

  • Stray Kids, ROCK-STAR

    Date Hit No. 1: Nov. 25, 2023

    Single: “Lalalala”

  • ATEEZ, THE WORLD EP. FIN:WILL

    ATEEZATEEZ
    Image Credit: Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images

    Date Hit No. 1: Dec. 16, 2023

    Single: “Crazy Form”

  • TWICE, With YOU-th (EP)

    Date Hit No. 1: March 9, 2024

    Singles: “I Got You,” “One Spark”

  • Stray Kids, ATE (EP)

    Date Hit No. 1: Aug. 3, 2024

    Single: “Chk Chk Boom”

  • ATEEZ, Golden Hour: Part.2 (EP)

    Date Hit No. 1: Nov. 30, 2024

    Single: “Ice on My Teeth”

  • Stray Kids, Hop

    Date Hit No. 1: Dec. 28, 2024

    Single: “Walkin on Water”

  • Stray Kids, KARMA

    Date Hit No. 1: Sept. 6, 2025

    Single: “Ceremony”

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Your fall preview of new albums: What’s coming before the end of 2025? - National
Celebrity News

Your fall preview of new albums: What’s coming before the end of 2025? – National

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Yes, I know Taylor Swift has a new album coming. Yes, I know she and Travis Kelsey are engaged.

Yes, there are all kinds of speculation about the wedding date, the maid of honour and the best man. And yes, she’s currently the odds-on favourite to perform the Super Bowl halftime show. But believe it not, there are plenty of other albums coming out this fall. Here’s a round-up of what to expect beyond Sept. 1.

September 5

Big Thief, Double Infinity (4AD)

Big Thief is an interesting band whose style is tough to categorize. This sixth album was recorded over just three weeks at Power Station, NYC’s famous studio.

David Byrne, Who is the Sky? (Matador)

A few weeks ago, David Byrne dashed everyone’s hopes about a Talking Heads reunion. No one in the group seems all that interested in getting back together, Byrne especially. Why? He’s got so much going on. This record, recorded with The Ghost Train Orchestra, is his 11th solo record (Talking Heads released only eight studio albums). I’m impressed with what I’ve heard so far.

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Shame, Cutthroat (Dead Oceans)

Shame is a South London five-piece post-punk band with an impressive following and critical acclaim. It’s a noisy record for a noisy world. We need that.

Suede, Antidepressants (BMG Rights Management)

Suede appeared in that tiny gap between Madchester and Britpop and have been able to navigate things for more than 30 years. This will be their 10th album.


September 12

David Bowie: I Can’t Give Everything Away (2002-2016) Parlophone

Fans will recognize the title of this collection as the title of a song from his final studio album, Blackstar, released just hours before Bowie’s death in 2016. This is a massive box set (the sixth in a series) that will feature 13 CDs and 18 pieces of vinyl. Like the title says, it will cover material from his Heathen album (2002) right up to Blackstar and come with an 84-page hardback book. The best pre-order Canadian price I’ve seen is $265.

King Princess, Girl of Violence (Section 1)

If you haven’t discovered New York’s Mikaela Mullaney Straus yet, this might be the album that does it. She can already sell out medium-sized venues based solely on word of mouth. She is a hero of the lesbian and genderqueer community. This will be here third album.

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September 19

Buckingham Nicks, Buckingham Nicks (Rhino)

The long-lost album featuring Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks, released a few years before they joined Fleetwood Mac. I used to see this one in the delete bins back in the ’70s, but time can heal such wounds.

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Nine Inch Nails: Ares Soundtrack (Interscope Records)

Both NIN and Tron fans were sent into ecstasy when they heard that Trent Reznor and partner Atticus Ross had been commissioned to write the soundtrack for the latest in the franchise. Can they do better than Daft Punk with Tron: Legacy in 2010? Based on what I’ve heard so far, I think so.

Lola Young, I’m Only F—ing Myself (Island)

Lola is a fascinating English singer. She’s won or been nominated for numerous awards in the U.K., but also has a history of schizoaffective disorder that was diagnosed in 2017 when she was 17. Lola also has issues with vocal cord cysts, which have hampered her ability to tour.

September 26

Robert Plant, Saving Grace (Nonesuch)

Plant has long left Led Zeppelin behind. In fact, when he tours this record, he won’t be doing any Zep songs because he says that music isn’t related to what he’s doing today. This will be his first true solo album since 2017.

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XTC, Drums and Wires (Steve Wilson Dolby Mix) (Ape House)

XTC were meticulous perfectionists in the studio. What will this 1977 release sound like in a multi-channel ATMOS form?

October 3

AFI: Silver Bleeds the Back Sun… (Run for Cover)

Although most people know AFI as the Northern California band that had a hit with their cover of Don Henley’s Boys of Summer, fans will know that they’re up to their 12th album. Word is that it’ll feature some rockin’ stompers and a song or two with obvious Goth vibes.

Oasis, (What’s the Story) Morning Glory (Big Brother)

Oasis isn’t missing a trick when it comes to generating revenue from their reunion tour. From $155 T-shirts sold at gigs and pop-up stores to this 30th anniversary edition of their second album, they’ll find a way to service their rabid fanbase. I don’t think they’re bothered by releasing this on the same day as Tay-Tay’s The Life of a Showgirl.

October 10

The Antlers, Blight (Transgressive)

Antlers release some of the saddest, most heart-wrenching, and frankly depressing songs I’ve ever heard (if you want to see what I mean, check out their 2010 album Hospice). This album will probably continue in that vein. What else can we believe when the first single is entitled Carnage?

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John Lennon, Yoko Ono, The Plastic Ono Band & Elephant’s Memory, Power to the People (The Ultimate Collection) (Capitol)

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If you’ve ever thought, “There’s not enough Yoko in my life,” you’re in luck. All of John and Yoko’s unreleased collaborations have been collected in one box set. It will contain 12 CDs featuring 90 never-before-released tracks from demos, home recordings, live performances and more. Expect to spend north of $300 for this one.

October 17

All Time Low, Everybody’s Talking (Basement Noise Records)

It’s the 10th album from the Baltimore band. A dose of pop-punk for when the weather begins to turn colder.

October 24

Just Mustard, We Were Just Here (Partisan)

My interest in this experimental Irish band has only grown with each single they’ve released. This third album could be the one that results in a breakthrough.

The Lemonheads, Love Chant (Fire)

Against all odds, Evan Dando is still chugging along. After once again disappearing from sight, this record (the first since 2019) is the 11th album from the band, a legacy that stretches all the way back to 1986. This will go nicely with a new memoir titled Rumor of My Demise, which will also be released in October.

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November 7

Finger Eleven, Last Night on Earth (Better Noise Music)

Has it really been 10 years since the last Finger Eleven album? Yes, but the hiatus is coming to an end. We’re promised “a big rock record,” according to the band.

Sorry, Cosplay (Domino)

More interesting British indie music. Sorry comes from North London and was scooped up by Domino, home to groups like Arctic Monkeys, Franz Ferdinand, My Bloody Valentine, Wet Leg and dozens of other cool indie groups from around the world. The moment I see that a band has a deal with Domino, I’m interested.

White Lies, Night Light (Fiction)

I discovered White Lies, a modern-sounding Joy Division London band, about 15 years ago. They’ve sort of fallen off my radar, but I’ve made a note to check out their seventh album.

November 21

The Beatles, Anthology Collection (Capitol/Apple/UMe)

There seems to be an endless supply of material for the countless number of Beatles fans. This is a remastered collection of the original three Anthology collections of rarities and outtakes released in 1995 and 1996. This time, Giles Martin, son of George, has brought the audio up to date for 2025. Alas, this collection will not contain Story of Carnival of Light, a mythical, unreleased, never bootlegged track from the Sgt. Pepper era, which has legendary status amongst Beatlemaniacs. It remains locked away in the Abbey Road archives.

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Danko Jones, Leo Rising (Sonic Unyon)

If there’s a Canadian band that rocks as honestly, authentically, and as hard as Danko Jones, I haven’t heard them. The 11-track 12th album promises to be as loud, rowdy, and beer-soaked as the other 11.

Release Dates TBA

  • Asia: Still untitled. Only Geoff Downes remains from the early ’80s lineup
  • Blondie: Still untitled. First album since 2017.
  • Lana Del Rey: Delayed; title was The Right Person Will Stay, but that’s been changed.
  • Gorillaz: Still untitled; ninth album.
  • Incubus: Something in the Water; their ninth album
  • JET: Still untitled. First album in 15 years.
  • Megadeth: Still untitled, but Dave Mustaine says that this will be the last album.
  • John Mellencamp: Orphan Train, his 26th album.
  • Social Distortion: Still untitled. First album in 11 years.
  • Sublime: Still untitled. Jakob Noel, the son of original singer Bradley Nowell, who died of an OD in 1996, is the new frontman.

 

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