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Every Red Carpet Look From the 2025 LACMA Art + Film Gala
Fashion

Every Red Carpet Look From the 2025 LACMA Art + Film Gala

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Red carpet fashion enthusiasts, rejoice! Tonight in Los Angeles, the LACMA Art + Film Gala returned for another evening of style, star power, and awards, all in the name of philanthropy.

Inaugurated in 2011 as a way to raise money for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s film program—as well as educational initiatives, acquisitions, and exhibitions—the annual event is the brainchild of LACMA trustee Eva Chow, who has co-chaired each year alongside Leonardo DiCaprio. This Saturday’s gala honors artist Mary Corse and filmmaker Ryan Coogler.

Every Hollywood red carpet is bound to be fashionable, but when an event’s presenting sponsor is Gucci, as is the case with this affair, the black tie ante is ineviatbley upped. The 2022 gala saw Billie Eilish arrive in a Gucci-monogrammed robe and pajamas (eye mask included), while Jared Leto sauntered in wearing a bedazzled pink velvet suit (sans shirt) and pink hair to match. Greta Lee’s black and mint green slip dress for 2023 was an early hint that her fashion star was on the rise; and last year, Sofia Richie Grainge stuck to the quiet luxury brief in a sleek, chocolate brown Saint Laurent look.

Ahead, see every red carpet look from the 2025 LACMA Art + Film Gala.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Daniel Ash performs with Love and Rockets at The Fillmore Silver Spring on June 11, 2023, Silver Spring, Maryland. (Credit: Paul Morigi/Getty Images)
Music

Bauhaus Alum Daniel Ash’s New Project Is Modern Art

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

“‘Danny, we need a gimmick. Wear a gas mask.’”

Daniel Ash is recalling his first paid gig as a young musician with a band called MI5. It was at Glasgow Rangers Supporters Club in Corby, an industrial town in Northamptonshire, where Ash is from, nearly two hours from London. Aside from its (obvious) Scottish pride, Corby was, according to Ash, also known for its violence, most apparent when they take the small stage—and the audience starts throwing bottles at them. They ran off after only a few minutes, confronted by their promoter, who’d been “piss drunk” since about 3:00 that afternoon.

“He said, ‘What are you doing? Get back out there.’ We said, ‘They hate us, they’re throwing glasses!’ ‘No. When they throw glasses and bottles, that means they love you. When they don’t like you, they jump the stage and beat you up.’ Good thing he wasn’t wearing the gas mask, and instead opted for a “really white” boiler suit. The other guys, in case you were wondering, were “dressed in totally normal clothing, doing their soul thing.” They played together for about a year, Ash, by his own classification, the “weirdo” in the group. 

“I even had a funny haircut back then,” he adds. 

Bauhaus perform at the Roundhouse in Camden, London during the filming of their video of “Ziggy Stardust” in August 1982. Left to Right: David J, Peter Murphy, Daniel Ash, Kevin Haskins. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns)

I don’t ask and I hadn’t planned to, but he immediately declares he doesn’t want to talk about Bauhaus origins and his well-documented child/teen-hood friends and band members Peter Murphy, David J, and Kevin Haskins. “I’m not going to tell that story again,” he says, launching, unprovoked, into the story. “I knew Peter from 10 years old and hadn’t seen him for five years,” he recalls, of the day he decided to reconnect with Murphy and, shortly thereafter, form a band, Ash as the guitarist. “Then just on the spur of the moment, I just thought, I’m going to drive to Wellingborough, which was 10 miles away. I’m going to drive there and just knock on his door. Neither of us had phones back then, I don’t think. Knocked on his door, and then—boom, boom, boom—and everything started off.” 

Bauhaus debut, 1980’s In the Flat Field, shot the band immediately into legend status, widely regarded as trailblazing the goth genre. This launched Ash into a nonstop creative cycle, with and without bassist David J and drummer Kevin Haskins: Tones on Tail, Love and Rockets, Poptone, a series of solo albums. Most recently, he’s formed Ashes and Diamonds with drummer Bruce Smith (Public Image Ltd.) and bassist Paul Spencer Denman (Sade, Sweetback). Their debut album Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever (releasing October 31) continues Ash’s ongoing legacy of creating sexy art-school soundtracks; its 12 songs—undeniably cinematic, provocative, and powerful—sculpt an unexpected story and create one of the best albums of the year. 

“On a Rocka,” the album’s lead single, features a video directed by Jake Scott (Ridley Scott’s son), compiled footage from a full day-to-evening shoot of Ash riding a motorcycle in and around Joshua Tree. “It was a really fun day because I’m on a bike. What’s better than that, in my element? If you told me when I was 16 years old that I’d be living in Southern California with a load of bikes and being able to ride every day, I would never have believed you. It’s a dream come true times 10. Yes, it’s great. Having a variety of bikes is fantastic.” He says he has 25 bikes on the road, one to commemorate every tour. “I take a different one out every day,” he says. “There was actually a quote from Steve McQueen. He said, ‘I’d rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than any city on earth.’ I’m pretty much the same.” 

(Bruce Smith, Daniel Ash, and Paul Spencer. Photo courtesy of Ashes and Diamonds.)

His love of riding started at 12, stealing his father’s Lambretta scooter. After getting his license at 16, he got his own bike, a 42 pound (as in English dollars) Triumph with no wheels. “I got it from a farmer,” he says. “Then I took it home and got some wheels and built it. The first bike I ever got was a little 250 BSA. Then I went from that real quick to a 500 Triumph Twin, and then never looked back. My brother, he was a mod in the ’60s, and he was like Sting in Quadrophenia. He was the king mod. I’ve said this story before, but it is true. Girls used to pay him to be on the back of his bike going through town center on a Friday and Saturday night. Just to be seen with him on the back of the bike. That’s how popular he was. He had the bike, just like in Quadrophenia. He had one of those bikes with all the mirrors on it, and the fur things on the back, and this and that, full on like a Christmas tree going down the street. His best friend was a rocker who had a BSA 650. He took me on the back of that. As soon as I got on the bike, no way was I going to be fucking around with scooters. It was all about motorcycles because the power of motorcycles is through the roof in comparison with any scooter. I leaned towards the motorcycle thing, not the scooter thing.”

(Credit: Regan Catam)

“Actually, this is going to sound really goth…” he says. “I love visiting graveyards. Doesn’t get much more goth than that, does it, thinking about it? In the graveyard, I’d look at all the ages of what people died. I was fascinated by how long people lived. Back then, there was a lot of infant deaths, but there was also a lot of people that lived to ripe old ages. Going back to the 18th, 17th, and 16th centuries.

“There are some of these tombstones that go back to the 13th century in England. They’re all crooked. A lot of them, you can’t see any writing on them. They’re covered in moss. I still do that all the time because on a bike, you always find stuff that you would never usually find when you go for a wander. Yes, that was one of my favorite things to do… I must be a goth after all,” he says, with a laugh. 

“I’m joking. Of course I’m not a goth. I love sunshine and riding on bikes in the daylight. Goths don’t do that.” The airborne vibrations of this statement no doubt shattering thorny goth hearts throughout the globe.

Love and Rockets in 1987: David J, Kevin Haskins, and Ash. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns/Getty Images)

If we look at Bauhaus as the start of Ash’s career (let’s leave MI5 out of this for now), we can easily trace Ash’s evolution from dark-aesthetic subculture pioneer, to new wave pop chart-topper (Love and Rockets), traveling through other uncompromising peaks and valleys to arrive here, at Ashes and Diamonds, a genre-defying blend of Ash’s entire career, mixed with modern, high-tech, heavy beats, fit for a club or an action thriller. (Don’t worry, he’s still taking us to dimly-lit places.) 

The Ashes and Diamonds trio officially came together seven years ago when East Coast-based Smith and Denman, who’s often in the U.K., were finally all in the studio together. Their careful collaboration slowed, like so many, when the pandemic hit in 2020. Even after the album was recorded, Ash says at the 11th hour they went into a Hollywood studio to rerecord everything in just 10 days. “It was a very expensive mistake to think we had the album finished, but it just wasn’t good enough,” Ash says. “Tweak it and tweak it and tweak it—because now it’s fully realized. There’s no filler tracks, there’s no cover versions of anything. The production is like we’re all 100% on it now. We had that breathing space to really get it right.”

Ash says he used “the cut-up idea,” popularized by William S. Burroughs, to write nearly all of the lyrics on Ashes and Diamonds Are Forever. “I remember when I was a kid, I saw it on the TV,” he recalls. “I use trashy magazines because they have the most juicy headlines, like the National Enquirer and stuff like that, and People magazine and all the gossip mags because you get terrific headlines.

“Then I just cut them all. I cut all these headlines up. Put them on the kitchen table. Listen to the backing track, bass drums, and then I start joining the sentences together. Then hopefully, if I’m lucky, by the end of the afternoon or evening, I’ve got a song out of it. All of these songs and all the titles came from cut-ups from trashy magazines.” 

Ash performs with Love and Rockets at the YouTube Theater on August 13, 2024 in Inglewood, California. (Credit: Corine Solberg/Getty Images)

This conversation started when I’d noted my affinity for the album’s ninth track, “Setting Yourself Up for Love,” a song I’d referred to as a vampire love song. “‘Setting Yourself Up for Love’ must have been something that I’d seen as a title, or it could have been two sentences, ‘setting yourself,’ and then the word ‘love,’ and I join them together. That’s the whole cut-up thing.

“What’s great about it is it sets you free because you don’t have to work and sit there and think, how do I feel about whatever? This thing takes over. Your subconscious takes over, and you’re just having fun putting words together. It’s such a great way to create lyrics. 98% of this album, most of the other stuff I’ve done as well in the past is like that. Again, I don’t know what I’m going to write about when I very first sit down and have the track in my head. I don’t know. I just look at words. Oh, I like that headline. I like this. I like that. Put them on the kitchen table, and then I start mixing them up. Then suddenly, it’ll start working. Then I’ll have a whole song.

“It wouldn’t have been about something that I would have even wanted to sing about initially, but it creates itself because of the cut-up idea. That would have been the case with that track.” The ambiguity, the individual interpretations, he loves it. “Go wherever you want to with it,” he says. 

Ash in 1982. (Credit: Fin Costello/Redferns)

It’s no surprise that Ash started out as a visual artist, doing an extra year at art school because he loved it so much. “They couldn’t get me out of there,” he says. “I loved the solitude of being on my own. When everybody had left at 5:00 or 6:00, I’d be there until 10:00 p.m. with my little record player, playing records and doing my own work there. They used to have to kick me out every night. I was totally at home at art school.” 

He majored in industrial design. “What that actually meant was you could do whatever the fuck you wanted all day long,” he says. “It was perfect. It was very loose back then. This is back in the ’70s. Industrial design basically meant you can work in plaster, oil colors, gouache, water colors, anything you wanted to. It was very, very free and easy. Yes, I absolutely loved it.” 

That’s where he met Kevin Haskins and David J; Tones on Tail bassist Glenn Campling also went to art school. 

“I went for a job at the Weetabix factory,” he says, recalling making the top 10 of applicants for a job to design Weetabix cereal cartons “for the rest of [his] life.” At the second interview, he was terrified he might actually be offered the position. Luckily, his fashion sense blew the opportunity for him. “The guys that were interviewing me knew my older brother because he went to art school as well. They said, ‘Your brother’s eccentric.’ He says, ‘Why?’ He said, ‘He came to the interview in a black velvet suit, and he had earrings on.’ That was outrageous to them. I wasn’t going to be fitting in doing the yogurt cartons. I remember after I went away, they said to me, ‘We’re so sorry, but you haven’t got the job.’ I said, ‘Oh, thank you so much.’ I drove out of there in my $50 car, my old Ford Cortina. I could see the Weetabix sign. I’ll always remember it getting smaller and smaller in the rearview mirror, and me going, ‘Oh, that’s it. That’s it. I can tell Dad now, ‘well, I tried, didn’t get the job.’ That’s it.’ It’s funny because the next couple of years, I think I ended up pumping gas at a gas station until what happened, happened.”

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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Shiner 2025
Music

Shiner’s Allen Epley Discusses Balancing Life and Art » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

There is the cliche of the starving artist, and then there is the cliche of the rock star life after making it big, selling out arenas, and living the cliche of the rock star life. However, without the space between, music would be a whole lot less exciting, and that is the space Shiner occupy: four friends who make music together because they want to, not because they have to. Lead singer Allen Epley sees some advantages to the life of a working artist.

“For a lot of people, it’s a combination of a day job and making money with art. It’s a great feeling not to be burdened by having to make music to survive. I can make some money from music, but not fully make a living,” he shares. Some people try to make a living by music alone, trying to write scores, teaching, or other ways, but that can make it so much less enjoyable.”

Shiner are a group of working musicians who all have music careers in addition to playing in the band. Paul Malinowski is a sought-after mixer and recording engineer. Josh Newton is a guitar technician with Kings of Leon and Fall Out Boy, who has also worked with the Breeders and Band of Horses. Additionally, drummer Jason Gerkin also plays in Hum.

Epley just completed a 14-year run with the Blue Man Group live show in Chicago. “As soon as we announced the closing, the remaining shows sold out. We should have dragged it out longer like KISS does,” he jokes. “It was a unicorn gig for a musician. It’s not like we were doing Hamilton. It was a constantly evolving piece, so every show was different. It was a special thing to be a part of, and it was very good for me.”

However, it wasn’t always like that for Epley. “At one point, I told my therapist that I felt like a failure, working on Blue Man. I felt like I should be something else,” he says.

Epley turned this anxiety into something positive, creating the podcast Third Gear Scratch, where he interviews other artists who make a living at their day job so they can pursue their art. Through interviews with guests, he addresses the question many working artists have had to answer: How can I support myself while pursuing my passion? It’s a must-listen for anyone balancing the need to pay the bills with creating art, whether as a musician or not.

“I came up with the idea for the podcast through those conversations with my therapist. So many artists feel like, ‘What the fuck am I doing with my life?’ Everyone feels it sometimes, but talking to all these artists and finding out how they make it work was such a burden lifter. I credit a lot of my rehabilitation to working on the podcast,” Epley beams.

Right now, though, everyone in Shiner is focused on their recently released BELIEVEYOUME, which is another stellar release, sure to please longtime fans and likely to convert some new ones. It is their most direct and accessible collection yet, instantly gratifying, yet also filled with depth. “There are a lot of brilliant bands who stay in a lane, but that’s never been us. If we had written a big hit, I bet we would have hewn a little closer to a playbook, but that’s not me,” he explains.

The title may be an old-fashioned colloquialism, but Epley sees it in a slightly different light. “We stylized the name as we did to give it a fresh spin. It signifies believing in ourselves and believing in each other, whether that is the band or other relationships,” he explains.

The group’s mix of melodic, heavy rock with a touch of shoegaze has won them a devoted following that is a diverse lot. In an environment where algorithms guide listeners to new music, a band like Shiner, which draws from a diverse range of influences, can appeal to a wide variety of music fans. Spartan Records’ reissue of their catalog has helped them reach a whole new audience, too.

“Our crowd is all over the map, and we love that. We went a long way to keep ourselves out of a specific movement, possibly to our detriment, but the people who are into our band are into a wide range of other bands. We like to joke about lining up a group of fans based on their band tees to show the range of taste in the crowd,” Epley jokes.

Living through the major label gold rush of the 1990s without signing turned out to be great for Shiner, despite the expectations that hung heavy for indie bands during that decade. The group have been playing music together on and off for 25 years, and things are better than ever between them.

“Back in the day, we used to fight a lot,” Epley recalls. “There was that sense of the clock ticking, since lots of our friends had signed to major labels. We were surrounded by the idea that it was only a matter of time before we got signed. We were always waiting for that big payday back then. We thought we’d have a big tour, but we never got there.

“But it was a blessing in disguise, though,” they continue. “I am so glad we didn’t go through that experience. If we do have a point of contention now, we handle it more healthily. We are older and wiser, and we are doing this for the purest reasons. Really, it’s just amazing to have a group of men to have close friendships with. Plenty of guys don’t get that opportunity.”

Shiner records are always a team effort, and BELIEVEYOUME was even more collaborative than their other releases. “Even the idea of putting the opening track where it is. I would have put that as track one, side two, but Jason wanted to be more involved in the decision-making, and he insisted that ‘Asleep in the Trunk’ is the opening track,” Epley shares.

Epley credits their methods with the resulting songs. As you might expect, with a band of working musicians, there is a balance of making space for creativity and a regimented commitment to the process that goes into making a Shiner record.

“Everything we do is organic. We go with what we are feeling. I am the seed writer. I plan some writing sessions so we can have things to work on when we are together. I brought my usual Chavez-inspired music. Someone has to do it,” he laughs.

For Shiner, the time spent together in the room working on songs is critical to the process. “Lots of bands are skipping the step of being in the space together. They work remotely, and they all start to sound the same. Most of us live far apart, so it could have made sense to do the record remotely, but we committed to working together. I wrote on my guitar and kept it raw, then digitized and sent it to the band,” he shares.

BELIEVEYOUME was recorded at Malinowski’s studio, and while not every group has that type of luxury, it streamlined the process, allowing them to complete the record even more efficiently than usual. The band held a series of four-day sessions for writing and recording, which were critical to shaping the record.

“Paul and Jason had everything set up and ready to go, so we were able to think about this like we were just making the record, not just making demos. What you hear on the record all happened right there in those sessions,” he says.

His work on a solo album also shifted his approach to lyrics. “On previous Shiner records, I was writing these murky metaphors that didn’t always translate. When I did my solo record, it was a breakthrough for me for writing in a direct style. It really allowed me to focus on how to write lyrics. Usually, those come last. We get the music, and then I try to come up with something that works syllabically. But this one is primed to connect with people, musically and lyrically,” he says.

“Some people have lyric books, but I listen to the song on the drive and I let the song speak to me,” he continues. “The melody line hits, and then the lyric will fall out and present itself. One of the first things I heard was “I keep thinking that we’re still in love”. A lot of my work is historical fiction, using people and places but creating an extension of those. I try not to fight it when the line presents itself.”

Epley typically finds the common threads after writing. “I’m able to psychoanalyze myself after the record,” he jokes. “Some of the themes here are damage and escaping damage, long-term relationships. I’ve been married for 25 years. You’re never coasting, even though I know we aren’t planning on going anywhere. I still take care of myself because I want to do that for her.”

Epley loves that Shiner is now at a point where they have a multigenerational fan base, too. Epley smiles when he finds YouTube videos of younger musicians covering Shiner songs. “It’s important to me to reach younger people with our band. I am also a substitute guitarist for Sunny Day Real Estate, and those rooms are filled with younger people and older people, and kids with their parents. It’s great to see bands having that kind of reach.”

Next up is a tour to support BELIEVEYOUME, and the band is ready to play these exciting, dynamic new songs for their longtime and new fans.

“We have won the battle, making a record we love. We love playing packed-out rooms with people singing the words back to us. We aren’t putting undue expectations on what we do. It would be cool if we got picked to open a big tour, but we are in this to make ourselves happy, and if we are doing it for any other reason, it’s the wrong reason. I am too old to be fucking around with trying to figure out what an audience wants and not thinking about what would make me happy. Now we just want people to get to hear the record and to play it live for them,” he says.

“Anyone who wants to come along for the ride, please do. It’ll be a great time.”

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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Sabrina Carpenter Nailed the Art of Showgirl Style on SNL
Fashion

Sabrina Carpenter Nailed the Art of Showgirl Style on SNL

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

As the show progressed, Carpenter’s promo photos—because every host gets a full-on SNL photo shoot—continued her high-fashion takeover. She sported pieces such as a vintage Dolce & Gabbana rose coat, a vintage Emanuel Ungaro black and white polka dot frock from spring 2003, and even a shimmering blue Dior lace dress from the recent spring 2026 collection. In a promo clip with SNL co-star Marcello Hernandez, the singer also donned a vintage canine-themed Vivienne Westwood dress from fall 1992—a tie-in to her album name, Man’s Best Friend, obviously.

Photo: Getty Images

Across several sketches, she also wore a pink check Love Shack Fancy twin set, a turtleneck mini-dress from Theory, and a sparkling Princess Polly halter mini-dress.

The epic leading lady wardrobe concluded with her two musical performances of the night. For her live rendition of “Nobody’s Son,” Carpenter sported a crystal-covered black and white karate robe, while her backup dancers performed choreographed fights. She was not barefoot, though: For a glamorous pop star touch, she accessorized with a staggering pair of Christian Louboutin platforms. To perform “Manchild,” Carpenter then rocked a “Live From New York” baby tee, while the back of her pink briefs read, “It’s Saturday Night!”—a cheeky homage to the famous SNL tagline. Her SNL looks had all the makings of greatness: Campy, fun, yet chic!

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Art House New York Launched to Strengthen Indie Film Exhibition
TV & Streaming

Art House New York Launched to Strengthen Indie Film Exhibition

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84


Art House New York Launched to Strengthen Indie Film Exhibition




























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The regional alliance is founded by former Film at Lincoln Center president Lesli Klainberg, who tapped Third Industry Strategies’ Allason Leitz to serve as the initiative’s director.

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October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Study Fashion at a Premier Art & Design Institution
Fashion

Study Fashion at a Premier Art & Design Institution

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84


When you study in the Fashion Design Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, you work parallel to painters, sculptors, designers, architects, and performance artists, among others, for a unique, interdisciplinary educational experience that challenges you to take an artistic …

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October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Snapped: The Long Feng Art Car - A Cultural Phenomenon (A Photo Essay)
Music

Snapped: The Long Feng Art Car – A Cultural Phenomenon (A Photo Essay)

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

With the likes of Vintage Culture, Damian Lazarus, Gordo, Colyn, Lee Foss, Arodes b2b AMÉMÉ, Kaz James and more gracing its decks at Burning Man last month, the AAPI-inspired art car did more than turn heads. It served as a cultural bridge between East and West. Concepted from the forms of the dragon, the phoenix, the pearl and the five elements, the extraordinary moving art piece brought thousands together through its groundbreaking visuals and sound.

“We built Long Feng with the precision of a tailor — every cut intentional, and every detail curated.” Mark Alan Diaz, Long Feng Creative Director

In addition to its moving, contorting robotics and full complement of mind blowing visuals, Long Feng leaves nothing on the table when it comes to sound design, including components from Funktion-One, NST Audio and Full Fat Audio. Adding to the immersive sensory experience are “performers, circus artists, and immersive storytelling that literally unfold with the music.”

Next time you’re on The Playa – or wherever else Long Feng is making an appearance, make sure you carve out some time to take it all in. It was definitely a highlight of my burn.

Special thanks to Benji Kaiyo for the images.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Olivia Dean: The Art of Loving Album Review
Music

Olivia Dean: The Art of Loving Album Review

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

“I’ve done all the classic stuff,” Olivia Dean sings on “Nice to Each Other,” the lead single from her second album, The Art of Loving. And it certainly does seem that way—the rising British neo-soul star studied songwriting at London’s prestigious BRIT School, got her first gig as a backing vocalist for the chart-topping dance-pop group Rudimental, and, throughout the 2020s, has worked her way up the United Kingdom’s traditional ladder to stardom: BBC Introducing Artist of the Year, Glastonbury, Jools Holland. She cites Amy Winehouse and Carole King in interviews and has covered the Supremes and Nat King Cole. So I’ll respectfully disagree with Dean’s follow-up claim, that “all the classic stuff… it never works.” Arriving at the peak of her fame to date, The Art of Loving is a genuinely lovely collection of would-be classic pop songs, all variations on the titular theme. It moves with the timeless grace of some bygone, indeterminate era in music and celebrity, one that maybe never existed to begin with.

Prior to recording The Art of Loving, Dean had immersed herself—as many of her generation have and many more surely will—in bell hooks’ All About Love. “‘Gotta throw some paint,’ that’s what bell would say,” she sings on the album’s brief prelude. More precisely, Dean drew inspiration from an exhibition of the same name by the artist Mickalene Thomas, itself a response to hooks’ influential work of theory. Whereas Thomas’ paintings are elaborate and rhinestone-encrusted, The Art of Loving is filled with little marvels of economy. Dean and executive producer Zach Nahome borrow a spare set of bongos from a Laurel Canyon open mic, a buttery Brill Building Rhodes organ, and some well-placed bah-bah-bahs courtesy of Motown girl-groups. In their fastidious arrangements, little details that might otherwise go unnoticed—a five-note, hyaline piano motif on “Nice to Each Other” or the passage of double-time horns that follow the first chorus of “Let Alone the One You Love”—instead become focal points.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Future’s 'DS2' Brooklyn Ballet Celebration Was Hip-Hop In High Art
Music

Future’s ‘DS2’ Brooklyn Ballet Celebration Was Hip-Hop In High Art

by jummy84 September 23, 2025
written by jummy84

I watched history unfold at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM) on Friday (Sept. 19), and let’s just say trap music never looked more regal. Grand Marnier and multi-platinum rapper, Future, transformed BAM’s historic Howard Gilman Opera House into a stage where Hip-Hop, ballet, and high fashion collided in celebration of his 2015 album Dirty Sprite 2.

DS2 Remixed: The Ballet was curated to perfection as a one-night-only spectacle reimagining Future’s triple-platinum album, through the lens of Emmy Award-winner Ebony Williams’ choreography and LaQuan Smith’s couture designs. As a Black woman who’s never stepped foot in a ballet recital — or could hardly name more than one Black ballerina beyond Misty Copeland — I felt emotional watching a stage filled with world-class Black and brown ballerinas breaking the invisible traditional barriers of classical dance.

The production saw album classics like “Real Sisters,” “Trap Ni**as,” and “I Serve the Bass” paired with pliés, pirouettes, and a few sophisticated twerks, as the ballerinas moved with much grit and grace. Backed by a live orchestra and Future’s right-hand man, DJ Esco, the night struck the perfect balance of elegance and bass.

When Future took the stage for hits like “Commas” and “Rich $ex,” the BAM transformed into a trap cathedral. His performance in the airy theater created an atmosphere that underscored the fact that Hip-Hop can be high art and worthy of existing beyond the clubs and charts — and in more opera houses.

“I was excited to be a part of this project because it represented everything I love about choreography—honoring tradition while breaking boundaries,” Williams told VIBE. “When Grand Marnier approached me, their vision immediately resonated with my own: blending a strong classical foundation with bold, unexpected layers.” Having worked with Beyoncé, Doja Cat, Rihanna, and countless others, Williams made it clear that her goal was “to honor the structure and discipline of ballet while infusing it with the energy and rhythm of Future’s music, the balance of respecting tradition without being confined by it.”

That truth was made clear by Misty Copeland, who sat front row, embodying the moment’s weight. The legendary and exceptional Black ballerina radiated pure joy and admiration as she witnessed more minority dancers furthering the evolution of classical dance.

Grand Marnier

Although The Ballet was a one-of-a-kind event, Hip-Hop’s flirtation with “classy” spaces didn’t start with ballet. Rappers have been claiming sophisticated stages for years, like when A Boogie wit da Hoodie flipped the script with Audiomack’s Trap Symphony series and Big Sean linked up with the Detroit Symphony Orchestra.

Even Chief Keef made headlines in 2018 with a viral performance accompanied by live strings. Common graced stages alongside orchestras from Chicago to Houston. Gucci Mane once transformed his Road to 1017 concert into a symphonic journey, while JAY-Z performed with full orchestras at Carnegie Hall and London’s Royal Albert Hall. Kendrick Lamar’s 2015 Kennedy Center performance remains a blueprint, with Jeezy, Killer Mike, and Rick Ross all venturing into orchestral territory since.

Most recently, Clipse took the stage at the Vatican. Yes, thee Vatican.

And the list doesn’t stop there. Nas, Cypress Hill, Pharrell, will.i.am, Nelly, Wyclef, Migos, Metro Boomin, Ye, and countless others have rightfully claimed space in classical realms, while collectives like The Illharmonic Orchestra and The Hip-Hop Orchestra Experience have been pushing this fusion forward for years.

Then there’s Trinity Joy, the Detroit native famously known as the “Trapperina,” who has taken TikTok by storm with her inventive “Trapllet,” a collision of ballet and trap music that has captivated millions. Her viral videos, including one where she pirouettes and krumps to GloRilla and Cardi B’s “Tomorrow 2,” prove that the next generation is already living at this intersection of Hip-Hop and classical dance.

A girl who once called herself a “ballerina from the ghetto who dances to Durk’s music” is now leading a movement that refuses to be boxed in by tradition.

The recent shift of rappers seeking visibility beyond Madison Square Garden and stadiums raises a deeper question: Why? Now, we’re not here to critique the answer, but it does spark a conversation about the desire to belong or the need to prove the genre’s worthiness in these traditionally “highbrow” spaces. One thing is clear, though: Hip-Hop is every bit as much high art as anything else gracing those stages.

What I witnessed at BAM wasn’t just entertainment or another marketing ploy (because there’s a lot of that happening), it was reclamation. The evening showed just how much Hip-Hop belongs in every corner of culture, from the block to the ballet. Seeing Future’s DS2 reimagined with pointe shoes and couture was proof that our music and our stories will always elevate and demand a place in spaces that once said “no.”

On this night in particular night, that “no” turned into a standing ovation.

Grand Marnier

September 23, 2025 0 comments
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Taylor Swift Talks 'The Life of a Showgirl' Vinyl & CD Packaging, Art
Music

Taylor Swift Talks ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ Vinyl & CD Packaging, Art

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Seated in front of a backdrop reminiscent of a floral watercolor painting — perhaps a reference to artist John Everett Millais’ Hamlet-inspired work “Ophelia,” which fans theorize influenced “The Fate of Ophelia” singer’s pose on her new album cover — Taylor Swift talks about the visual art of upcoming album The Life of a Showgirl in a promo clip released by her Taylor Nation team on Saturday (Sept. 20).

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“The photo shoot that we did with Mert and Marcus [Mert Alaş and Marcus Piggott] was so extraordinary and I was so happy with it that I just wanted the fans to have as many images from this sort of world, this album era, as possible,” Swift says in the brief video. “And so I really spent a lot of time figuring out how I could make the best vinyl product and the best packaging and the best CD experience that they could have.”

As Swift explains in the clip: “The CDs all have photo cards in them. The vinyls, they each have a poem inside of them, a unique poem. They’ve got more images than we ever planned to put in there.”

The Life of a Showgirl has so far been made available for pre-order in its standard format on CD and vinyl, and in various special editions — with different covers and extras, like the aforementioned photo cards — in limited (now sold-out) quantities on Swift’s official webstore. Target also released an exclusive edition CD pre-order.

Swift adds of the album art, “We chose this really high-gloss finish which I’ve never done before, and I think it looks so cool. We wanted this album to feel really luxurious and kind of as a nod to the luxury that a showgirl puts on when she’s on stage. Meanwhile, in the quick-change room she’s like [out of breath, breathing heavily] … Maybe that’s just me, I don’t know.”

“It’s all just something I’m really proud of,” says Swift, who on Friday announced her new project is also headed to select movie theaters with The Official Release Party of a Showgirl, a premiere experience that will debut her music video for album opener “The Fate of Ophelia,” behind-the-scenes footage of the shoot, lyric videos and personal reflections on the collection’s 12 tracks. “It took a lot of time to put together, a lot of concentration, a lot of organization, but hopefully it pays off. I hope the fans are happy.”

Also on the Showgirl promotional calendar: an appearance on The Graham Norton Show, set for broadcast on the BBC on her 12th studio album’s release date, Oct. 3.

Watch the latest clip shared by Taylor Nation below.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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