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Journey's Jonathan Cain denies bandmate Neal Schon's claim that he is quitting the band
Music

Journey’s Jonathan Cain denies bandmate Neal Schon’s claim that he is quitting the band

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Journey keyboardist Jonathan Cain has denied he is planning to leave the band, despite recent comments from the band’s guitarist Neal Schon.

Schon posted on social media on Thursday (October 9) that Cain had informed the rest of the band that he planned to call it a day after the completion of one final tour.

“Jonathan Cain announced his farewell to Journey tonight,” Schon’s X post read. “I’m nowhere near done! Journey has so much more life ahead! I’m sure we will have a great tour!”

Jonathan Cain announced his farewell to Journey tonight. I’m nowhere near done ! Journey has so much more life ahead ! 🤟🏽I’m sure we will have a great tour ! pic.twitter.com/njwEsfBc6D

— NEAL SCHON MUSIC (@NealSchonMusic) October 10, 2025

Schon later clarified that Cain would still tour with the band for all dates in 2026 and 2027, although no tour dates have yet been announced.

In response to Schon’s comments, Cain’s representatives released a statement, denying that he had given any confirmation that he is quitting the band.

We will be touring with Jon all through 26-27 celebrating the music we’ve created. pic.twitter.com/b4IdArd1Og

— NEAL SCHON MUSIC (@NealSchonMusic) October 10, 2025

“Jonathan Cain remains an active member of Journey,” the statement read (via Consequence). “And any reports suggesting otherwise are inaccurate. He is fully dedicated to touring with the band over the next couple of years and has only expressed plans to retire at a later time”.

Cain did, however, suggest in a recent appearance on the Strang Report podcast that he has plans to leave Journey, describing a 2026 tour with the band as “our farewell Journey tour”, adding: “So I’ll be saying goodbye to that”.

Cain and Schon have been locked in a bitter public dispute for some time – in 2024, Cain filed a lawsuit against Schon during the band’s co-headline tour with Def Leppard, on grounds of frustrations over his “expenses related to the tour”, including “budgeting and spending” of the band’s credit card over personal expenses.

Schon later said the band had opted to bring in “someone impartial” to help smooth over their differences. “Anyone who follows Journey will know that Jon Cain and I don’t always see eye-to-eye on everything Or, sometimes, on pretty much anything,” he wrote.

“Recently, Jon Cain made a number of claims and slanderous accusations about me and my wife – and I can’t stress enough how much it upset me and how wrong they are. I am determined to take the high road and push all this aside for the moment to focus on our fans, the tour and all who give so much to make things happen.”

“That’s why I’m so glad that Jon now agrees with me that the current dynamic can’t continue and it’s also why I’m pleased that we’re going to bring in someone impartial to help us resolve our disputes, bring clarity to what we’re doing and allow us, as a band, to get back to what we should all focus on – making music and performing for our fans.”

Schon, who is the band’s lead guitarist and sole original member, owns 50 per cent of the band via entity Freedom 2020, with Cain owning the other half, making it a deadlock when it comes to company decisions, per Bloomberg Law. Cain is the second longest serving member of the band, having joined it in 1980.

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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John Lennon / Yoko Ono / Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band / Elephant’s Memory: Power to the People (The Ultimate Collection) Album Review
Music

John Lennon / Yoko Ono / Yoko Ono Plastic Ono Band / Elephant’s Memory: Power to the People (The Ultimate Collection) Album Review

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

At the One To One concerts, Lennon displayed a certain nervous energy, which pairs well with the sleazeball boogie of Elephant’s Memory, a local NYC band best known for its contributions to the soundtrack of Midnight Cowboy. Elephant’s Memory served as the backing band for Some Time, but were too slack and lackadaisical to get through the One To One concerts without the reinforcement of drummer Jim Keltner, who helps give the performance a serious, heavy swing.

Frontloading Power to the People with the One To One performances—the two sets are here, along with a hybrid highlights disc—illustrates how Lennon spent the early ’70s wallowing in the pleasures of old-time rock’n’roll. Even when he and Ono are having an improvisatory freak-out with Frank Zappa & the Mothers of Invention, it’s rooted in basic three-chord changes. Almost all of the songs John and Yoko wrote during this period are deliberately simple: “Sisters, O Sisters” is a revved-up girl group number, “Attica State” and “John Sinclair” are straightforward blues, “The Luck of the Irish” is a folk ballad, ”New York City” is high-octane Chuck Berry boogie.

The exception to the rule is the one song of the period that isn’t here: “Woman is the N***** of the World,” an overblown wall-of-sound homage intended as an anthem of feminist solidarity, inspired by a slogan Yoko Ono likely adapted from a line in Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God. The box set ignores that track (despite the fact that Lennon chose it as Some Time’s single), cutting it out of the new mixes of the album and the accompanying concerts. Its absence helps shift the story towards Lennon’s continued return to the big bang of 1950s rock’n’roll during this volatile period. Left to his own devices, he sings oldies: the last song disc here is a “Home Jam,” where he’s sitting around the house strumming Everly Brothers and Buddy Holly tunes. On its cousin “Studio Jam” disc, Lennon leads his band through Jerry Lee Lewis and Elvis Presley rockers. These passages are loose, maybe even to a fault, but they’re charming, capturing one of the greatest rock vocalists singing unencumbered by an audience.

These two discs of informal jams are the ideal coda to Power to the People, which chronicles the era when Lennon was keenly aware that he was performing at all times. It wasn’t just that he was playing his first live shows since the breakup of the Beatles. Lennon and Ono were omnipresent in 1971 and 1972, heading off to Ann Arbor to play a rally to free John Sinclair, strumming songs with Phil Ochs in a hotel room, accepting seemingly any offer to appear on TV, as evidenced by their appearance on the Jerry Lewis Muscular Dystrophy telethon. A rousing reggae-fied version of “Give Peace a Chance,” plucked from the telethon, features Lewis himself as part of the onstage chorus; his appearance crystallizes the essential oddness of this period. Even as he got his hands grimy in the leftist underground, Lennon remained one of the most famous men in the world, using mainstream platforms to preach politics to the masses. The dissonance of this intersection remains intriguing, long after the headlines have faded away.

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

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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New York Alt-Rock Band SAMSARA is on the Verge
Music

New York Alt-Rock Band SAMSARA is on the Verge

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

The meaning of the word Samsara (the cycle of death) may imply the opposite of Nirvana (the circle of life), yet the New York band of the same name is not unlike the iconic grunge band that still defines an era of misfit musicians from the 90’s. Yet the alt rock band, SAMSARA’s musical oscillation and talent stands on its own merit. 

SPIN discovered SAMSARA on ReverbNation via the music creation and discovery platform BandLab where their tracks jumped out as fully formed calling cards among other developing acts on the popular music mastering app. Not unlike emerging bands before them, SAMSARA has played NYC dive bars, had the chord pulled on them for being too loud and misunderstood by audiences and venue owners, and played New York’s Mercury Lounge at key turning points in developing their live performance prowess, songwriting, and edgy yet beautiful sound.  

The five-member act started out playing covers – from Billie Eilish (“Bad Guy”) to “Little Sister” by Elvis – at Food Truck Festivals around their native New York. Today, their smart, hard-driving sound belies each member’s 20-something age. Guitarist and vocalist Charlie LoMonaco was ten years old when he first met bassist John Devito and drummer Ben Bustamante at School of Rock, the performance-based music education program for young New York musicians. “It really taught us how to perform in front of an audience,” explains Ben, “and it’s where every single one of us met at different times.”

“I remember when I met them I was 14,” says lead vocalist Dylan Trif. “They were the most tight knit musicians I’d seen for our age because they had known each other for so long already, and I was like, Oh, f***, how do I get in on this? And I slowly finagled my way in… secretly.”

Photo Courtesy of SAMSARA

Today, SAMSARA’s technical ability melds with vocal and lyrical chops to create an evocative, determined sound that sets them apart from other rising musicians. LoMonaco is now a graduate of Berklee College of Music where lead vocalist Dylan is currently enrolled. John acquired a prestigious history degree from upstate New York, while Ben attended community college in Long Island for studio recording but learned more from studying the drumming of John Bonham and Dave Grohl. Rhythm guitarist Brendan Sandhovel remains a mysterious secret weapon that the other members swear they can’t live without. He’s the computer scientist in the group. You can hear the band’s diverse sonic influences in Queens of the Stone Age, U2, Arctic Monkeys, early Coldplay, Black Sabbath, and even My Bloody Valentine. 

SAMSARA’s blown out songs are powerful and infectious. Edgy lovelorn storytelling and vocals match assaulting guitars, ominous chord structures and amped up rhythm. Their sound is melancholic and downcast yet cacophonous not unlike British rockers The Editors. 

The track “Shadow” unravels a tale of loss traversing through the light and dark of a traumatic night that is dream-like and real all-at-once. On the uncompromising drive of “Nirvana,” Dylan’s vocals and lyrics land somewhere between Julian Casablancas in The Strokes, Arctic Monkey’s Alex Turner, and Billy Idol. The more metal sounding, “Tell Us Your Name,” is marked by heartbreak and possessed guitars. It was the band’s first track where they felt their true sound started to emerge. “Filthy Habit” reveals an addictive love and an unsuccessful attempt to break it. Yet it is the mournful track, “411,” that haunts the listener with its jangly Britpop guitars and tight rhythms washing over chord structures and vocals that pine for an ill-fated love (“But you had to say that we are gonna fade away…”). “Awake” is the most British rock sounding track, yet it is also distinctly American.

SPIN caught up with the guys on a Saturday night in September where they were eager to talk about their music, desires, and future aspirations of playing Madison Square Garden and a British festival like Leeds and Reading or Glastonbury, plus finish a full-length album by year’s end. 

When people ask you about the band’s sound, how do you describe it to them?  

(Dylan) Hard alt rock is a good way of describing it. It’s really interesting because all of us listen to such different music. None of us in the band have the same music taste, and I think that’s why we have such a unique sound. It’s because we take everything from different genres. What I like to say is that SAMSARA is alt rock with a mix of grunge and shoegaze. Shoegaze is a very generous one. But there are so many different components of what everyone listens to. 

For instance, John just loves metal! This guy can go on and on about metal. I like the 2000s, a lot of pop alternative rock. Ben is just a crazy John Bonham type of drummer… that’s just how he started off. When you have that power from the drums, then some grit from the bass, and then Charlie in his own little world – he’s like a machine on guitar – then Brendan comes in with this chugging that brings it down. Somehow it all goes together. One of my favorite bands is Coldplay. I love early Coldplay… the album Parachutes with the song “Yellow.” I put Coldplay-esque melodies over all the music underneath our sound. I don’t know how to explain it but when you add all of these different genres in, it gets into all of our minds on one track. 

Tell us about the first song that you ever wrote as SAMSARA, “Tell Us Your Name” (2019). 

(Dylan) John wrote the baseline. It was when we first started the band and we used to spend every day of the summer together. Like, three months. We probably spent 90 days of the summer together and we wrote one song. It was good.

(Ben) I feel so bad for my parents. Everybody was playing close to my house, right next to the living room… rehearsing so loud, going over the song over and over. 

(Charlie) But it made us so tight as a band where you can just glance at somebody and know exactly what they’re thinking… onstage and in the studio. It made us super locked in together. It was like an incubator. 

SAMSARA has so many songs already. Can you explain how they all come together in your song writing process:

(John) Sometimes we get to send demos and sometimes we’ll have the opportunity to write together in the same room.

(Ben) Dylan writes all the lyrics but songs can come in from anywhere. We all dabble in different instruments which helps in our songwriting, and performing too. It’s really interesting and helps with our process. It makes us different from other bands. 

A lot of the time, Dylan and I work on Logic (the app), and we’ll send little ideas to each other here and there. And I’m like, ” Oh, I think this might be cool.” And then Dylan will be like, “Nah, I don’t like it. I like this.” It’s super important to be honest with each other, or else it won’t happen. Then we’ll show it to the band. Then if everybody’s cool with it,  it starts to become bigger. Then people who actually know how to play their instrument will start playing the parts how they are intended to sound. They bring in the skills! We always thought it was a good idea to have songs that were powerful, that hit you. Like how Dylan writes his lyrics over the songs, it’s very melodic. Then when we pull back on a song, it gives the audience a second to breathe and take in what just happened. 

(Dylan) It’s funny, though, because whenever I’m writing, I’ll be like, okay, I can’t play that well, but Charlie can… John can do that… then Ben can do that. But we’re all very locked in rhythmically because we can all play drums so it comes together rhythmically. We all definitely play more than one instrument, some more than others, which really helps in our songwriting, although writing songs is more difficult now with me being a little far away in Boston. Since I’ve been at school, we’ll write individually then send it to each other, just to get the ideas out and be like, Hey, just thinking about this, what do you guys think we can do with it? If we agree over text, we’ll listen to it and try it out.

Photo Courtesy of SAMSARA

Tell us about how you all play more than one instrument and use that to describe the other guys:

Vocalist Dylan on Bass Player John: John is a crazy drummer and a crazy guitarist. He won’t admit it, but he’s insane at playing every instrument. He’s probably better than all of us! He’s better at  playing secondary instruments than we are at playing our primary ones.

Drummer Ben on Vocalist Dylan: He’s the best singer ever. I remember when I first met him. He was 14 and came in to School of Rock. He auditioned and I heard him sing for the first time. It felt like the room was shaking. I felt it in my chest and I got chills. I was like, dude, this is crazy. How does this guy have such a powerful voice? His voice is so good and I actually love Dylan’s lyrics a lot.

Guitarist Charlie on Drummer Ben: Ben’s guitar playing is super inspiring to me because he comes at it from a different perspective. Let’s say he writes a riff or a chord progression, and then I transcribe that where I riff from what he’s doing but play it my way. Then somebody who doesn’t have, for example, a formal guitar education, like Dylan or Ben, will come in. I got into Berklee for guitar, so when somebody like that will come in and show me weird chord shapes that they’re playing, it becomes a challenge for me. It’s fun to explore different melodic pathways. 

Vocalist Dylan on Guitarist Charlie: It’s funny, though, because whenever I’m writing, I’ll be like, okay, I can’t play that well, but Charlie can. John can do that, and then Ben can do that. But we’re all very rhythmic so it comes together. We are all very locked in rhythmically because we can all slightly play drums.

Guitarist Charlie on Rhythm Guitarist Brendan: He’s our second guitarist. He joined the band when John went to college in 2019 and we didn’t have a bass player. We had met him at School of Rock. He came through when I was about 15 – a little bit later than the rest of us. But Brendan clicked right away. He had the same humor and same ability. He was keeping up with us. He just got added in and nothing changed. He gelled and kept on rolling with it. So when John got back, we were like, we should keep this guy around!

Conclusion

How does a really good band even come together? Is it through innate talent, technical skills, a soul connection, a great name, drive, comradery, or even fate?  Most successful bands can’t even tell you. They can only guess at how they achieved an elevated status in a competitive music landscape. In general, it’s a little bit of everything. If that’s true, then SAMSARA is sitting pretty.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Watch ex-Turnstile guitarist Brady Ebert return with new band The S.E.T.
Music

Watch ex-Turnstile guitarist Brady Ebert return with new band The S.E.T.

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Ex-Turnstile guitarist Brady Ebert has returned with a new band, The S.E.T. – check out footage of the moment below.

  • READ MORE: Turnstile live at Glastonbury 2025: The hardcore giants bring the moshpit to Worthy Farm

The group played their first show together on Saturday (September 27) at Zen West in Baltimore.

The S.E.T., which stands for ‘The Self Evident Truth’, opened for hardcore veterans Death Threat. Footage of the gig appeared soon after on Instagram as well as Reddit, with Ebert seen shredding for the new hardcore band.

The S.E.T. will next play the Baltimore Soundstage on January 31 as part of the 2026 edition of Disturbin’ the Peace festival, which will be headlined by Hatebreed.

Check out footage of the band performing here:

BRADY EBERT (ex-Turnstile) is back with a new band (The S.E.T)
byu/Testie_Tickler inHardcore

ex-Turnstile guitarist Brady Ebert’s new band The S.E.T.’s first show

🎥: @FeetFirst11 pic.twitter.com/1pcD9JAtNr

— BrooklynVegan (@brooklynvegan) September 29, 2025

Back in 2022, Turnstile announced they were parting ways with guitarist Brady Ebert after 12 years together.

The outfit shared the news in an Instagram story, writing: “We are deeply grateful for our time together. Our love for him continues and we wish him nothing but the best moving forward.”

Ebert was one of the group’s founding members, alongside vocalist Brendan Yates. They started the band in 2010, joined by bassist and vocalist Franz Lyons, drummer Daniel Fang and guitarist Sean Cullen (who left in 2015 and was replaced by Pat McCrory). He played on three of the band’s studio albums — 2016’s ‘Nonstop Feeling’, 2018’s ‘Time & Space’ and 2021’s ‘Glow On’.

Turnstile’s US tour kicked off on September 15 in Nashville, where they brought out Paramore’s Hayley Williams for a duet of ‘Seein’ Stars’. They will play around the country for the rest of the autumn, with support to come from SPEED, Jane Remover, Mannequin Pussy, Blood Orange, and Amyl & The Sniffers. See more information about the tour here and find any remaining tickets here.

The band’s latest album is ‘Never Enough’, which received a glowing five-star review from NME, and was also named as one of our best albums of 2025 so far.

Turnstile perform live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Andy Ford for NME

Speaking to NME in June, drummer Daniel Fang says the success of 2021’s ‘Glow On’ didn’t create any pressure when making its follow-up. “I don’t know how anyone would have time or the bandwidth to manage outside expectations,” he said. “I don’t think any of us can even fathom that, because there’s an infinite well within everyone [in the band]… I don’t understand how anyone could be guided by that when there’s so much else to work off of.”

They played an acclaimed, moshpit-heavy Glastonbury 2025 set, and will embark on a UK and European tour, which kicks off in Dublin on October 31. See the full list of dates here and find tickets here.

In a five-star review of the Glastonbury set, NME wrote: “This set is what Turnstile are all about – there’s no needless chatter and no projections behind them illustrating what their songs are meant to symbolise. Instead, it simply boils down to the sheer intensity and precision with which they deliver each of their 15 tracks, and the unwavering loyalty they get in return. Get ready for Turnstile to dominate this summer – and beyond.”

Meanwhile, last week, an investigation was launched after a sheriff’s deputy appeared to pepper spray a Turnstile fan in Richmond.

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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10 days after Liberal says Kneecap barred from Canada, band has ‘no notice’
Celebrity News

10 days after Liberal says Kneecap barred from Canada, band has ‘no notice’

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Controversial Irish hip-hop group Kneecap has still not received official notice from the Canadian government about whether they are barred from entering Canada, the band’s manager said Monday, 10 days after their apparent entry ban was announced.

“No notice on anything,” band manager Daniel Lambert told Global News in an email, “just Vince’s social media video.”

Lambert was referring to Liberal MP Vince Gasparro, the parliamentary secretary for combating crime, who posted a video to his social media on Sept. 19 saying the government has deemed Kneecap’s members ineligible to enter Canada.

“On behalf of the Government of Canada I am announcing that on the advice of our officials, we have deemed the group Kneecap ineligible to enter our country,” Gasparro said in the post.

Kneecap, which has been outspoken in its support of the Palestinian people and opposition to Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, was scheduled to perform next month in Toronto and Vancouver.

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Gasparro said in the video the group has endorsed political violence and terrorism, and noted one member was facing “terrorism-related charges” in the United Kingdom.

A British judge on Friday dismissed the case against Liam Óg Ó hAnnaidh —also known by his stage name Mo Chara, which means “my friend” in Irish — who had been charged after waving a flag of the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah during a London concert last year.

Hezbollah is a listed terrorist organization in both the U.K. and Canada.


Click to play video: '‘It was always about Gaza,’ Irish band Kneecap says after court drops terrorism charges'

2:51
‘It was always about Gaza,’ Irish band Kneecap says after court drops terrorism charges


Gasparro declined to answer questions from reporters Friday on whether Kneecap would be allowed into Canada now that the British case has been dropped.

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“Look, any statement I’ve made, there’s nothing more for me to add in terms of my video,” he said. “Any further comments I’m going to leave to the officials at immigration, and they’ll manage that accordingly.”

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“It’s better for me to leave it to our professional public service to manage any rollout from there, but I appreciate the questions,” Gasparro added after he was pressed.

He said his video was made and released “based on the information that was available.”

In a statement Monday, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) said it cannot comment on Kneecap’s specific case due to privacy reasons and did not confirm whether a formal entry ban was put in place, or if one remains.


Irish citizens do not require a visa to visit Canada but do require an electronic travel authorization (eTA), which is applied for online and is needed when arriving by air.

In a social media message responding to Gasparro’s video, Kneecap said its members had already been issued valid electronic travel authorizations.

“Each case is assessed individually,” the IRCC spokesperson said. “Entry to Canada may be refused for a number of reasons, including concerns related to security, human or international rights violations, or criminal activity.”

Global News was included on an email chain between bureaucrats and a spokesperson for Immigration Minister Lena Diab, who instructed the department’s media relations team to add a line to its “messaging for Kneecap moving forward,” noting that “applicants are informed of their visa status through the email provided on their applications.”

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The statement said anyone whose entry visa applications have been denied “can reapply for an eTA once they have addressed the reason(s) leading to the refusal of their application.”

The minister’s office declined to comment separately from the department’s statement.


Click to play video: 'Canada bars hip-hop group ‘Kneecap’ over allegations of supporting terror groups'

2:13
Canada bars hip-hop group ‘Kneecap’ over allegations of supporting terror groups


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A spokesperson for Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree’s office declined to comment Monday when asked by Global News if Gasparro consulted with the minister before his announcement.

The spokesperson said the office would “defer to IRCC” on questions regarding Kneecap’s case

Global News has also reached out to the Prime Minister’s Office for comment.

The group said Gasparro’s “baseless” allegations were “wholly untrue and deeply malicious,” adding that no member of the group had ever been convicted of a crime in any country.

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The group also threatened to take legal action against him.

“When we beat you in court, which we will, we will donate every cent to assist some of the thousands of child amputees in Gaza,” its statement said.

Gasparro on Friday said he’s not concerned about a possible lawsuit.

“I’ve done a lot of things in my private sector career. I have never been sued,” he said. “If they want to sue me, I look forward to it.”


Click to play video: 'Irish hip hop group ‘Kneecap’ banned from Canada for supporting Hamas, Hezbollah'

0:49
Irish hip hop group ‘Kneecap’ banned from Canada for supporting Hamas, Hezbollah


In his video, Gasparro accused Kneecap of publicly supporting Hezbollah as well as Hamas, which is also a listed terrorist entity in Canada, and that “open endorsements of terrorist groups are not free speech.”

Justice Minister Sean Fraser tabled legislation the same day Gasparro released his video that would make hateful displays of certain symbols — including listed terrorist group emblems as well as the Nazi swastika — a criminal offence punishable with up to two years in prison.

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Kneecap has accused critics of trying to silence the band because of its support for the Palestinian cause throughout the Israeli military’s destruction of Gaza. The band says it doesn’t support Hezbollah and Hamas, nor condone violence.

The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs and Jewish advocacy organization B’nai Brith Canada, which had advocated for the ban, have praised the government for Gasparro’s announcement.

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&copy 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Freaky Red Band Trailer for 'In Our Blood' Mystery Horror Film Trailer
Hollywood

Freaky Red Band Trailer for ‘In Our Blood’ Mystery Horror Film Trailer

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Freaky Red Band Trailer for ‘In Our Blood’ Mystery Horror Film Trailer

by Alex Billington
September 29, 2025
Source: YouTube

“I can’t be part of this system anymore…” Utopia has revealed their official trailer for the indie horror film titled In Our Blood, the first narrative feature from editor / doc filmmaker Pedro Kos. This first premiered last year at the 2024 Fantasia Film Festival, with stops at Screamfast, Mórbido, and other fests. Now set to open in US theaters in October. In Our Blood masterfully blends psychological mystery with chilling horror. The film weaves a twisted tale of reconciling with the ghosts of our past and confronting the complicity we share in creating a world that preys on the most vulnerable. That sounds scary! Nothing is as it seems when filmmaker Emily Wyland teams up with cinematographer Danny to shoot an intimate documentary about reuniting with Emily’s estranged mother after a decade apart. When her mom suddenly is missing, possibly because of the addictions that first tore her family apart, Emily and Danny must piece together increasingly sinister clues to find her before it’s too late. Starring Brittany O’Grady, E.J. Bonilla, Alanna Ubach, Krisha Fairchild, Leo Marks, Bianca Comparato, and Steven Klein. Check out some footage below.

Here’s the official red band trailer (+ poster) for Pedro Kos’ In Our Blood, from YouTube:

In Our Blood Poster

In Our Blood Poster

Nothing is as it seems when filmmaker Emily Wyland (Brittany O’Grady) teams up with cinematographer Danny (E. J. Bonilla) to shoot an intimate documentary about reuniting with Emily’s estranged mother after a decade apart. When her mother suddenly goes missing, possibly succumbing to the addictions that first tore her family apart, Emily and Danny must piece together increasingly sinister clues to find her before it’s too late. In Our Blood is directed by editor / writer / filmmaker Pedro Kos, director of the doc films Bending the Arc and Rebel Hearts previously, plus other shorts, now making his narrative debut with this feature. The screenplay is written by Mallory Westfall. Produced by Aaron Kogan, Stuart Fenegan, Gary Lucchesi, Michael McKay, Steven Klein. This premiered at the 2024 Fantasia Film Festival last year. Utopia releases Pedro Kos’ In Our Blood in select US theaters starting October 24th, 2025 this fall. Look scary?

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September 30, 2025 0 comments
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The Jim Carroll Band: Catholic Boy Album Review
Music

The Jim Carroll Band: Catholic Boy Album Review

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Clear-eyed for the first time in a decade, he fell in love and got married. His new wife, a law school student at Stanford, took him to New Wave shows in San Francisco, and divine inspiration struck again.

“People had encouraged me to do rock ‘n’ roll for a long time,” he said upon the release of Catholic Boy in 1981, a vast understatement. New York City seemed insistent that Jim Carroll have a career in music, even if he was not. He “had never listened to much rock after the Velvet Underground split,” he said in an NME article from the time, but he was impelled into collaboration by pals like Patti Smith and Blue Öyster Cult’s Allan Lanier. Lanier needed lyrics. Smith convinced him to open for her with her backing band, even though he missed a show after a drug bust landed him in jail overnight. When she worked at Scribner’s books on 5th Avenue, she saved him from an overdose, walking him around until he came to.

Compared to the readings he’d done all over the city, performing onstage felt vital and raw, a way to connect with people outside the incestuous, erudite New York poets’ circle. “I didn’t like the negativity of punk,” he said, “but at least I saw how I could get past my technical limitations, because you didn’t have to sing well. And after publishing poems all those years and having a very esoteric audience, the prospect of this other audience seemed nice.”

It was in Bolinas, on the beach with the dogs, that he’d become the frontman of his own band. There, he met some members of a local group called Amsterdam, and convinced them to soundtrack one of his readings. Soon after, the new Jim Carroll Band were polishing material at Bay Area clubs until they finally won over the scene’s youths. This was by design: “I wanted kids to like it,” Carroll said, “kids into heavy rock and hot guitars.” Doors opened quickly for Carroll, as they tended to do. On a trip to New York in 1979, he inked a deal with famed music mogul Earl McGrath at a party.

If Catholic Boy is for the kids, it’s a specific subset of them: precocious, kinetic, and traumatized. The breakneck pace of punk rock is perfect for outrunning what haunts you. A louche hybrid of New York Dolls-style glam rock and ’80s gloss, the album is an emblem of the national transition from downtown punk squats to cocaine penthouses and Reagonomics. It’s a bridge between the Ramones and the Cars, a yarn that ties together two decades and two cities.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Kneecap launch legal attack on Canadian MP Vince Gasparro for "wholly untrue and deeply malicious" comments as band barred from entering Canada
Music

Kneecap launch legal attack on Canadian MP Vince Gasparro for “wholly untrue and deeply malicious” comments as band barred from entering Canada

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Kneecap have launched a legal attack on Canadian MP Vince Gasparro after being barred from entering Canada.

The Irish rap trio were banned from entering Canada earlier this week, with Canadian officials saying they had “made statements that are contrary to Canadian values” that “have caused deep alarm”.

Announcing the ban on Monday (September 15), Canadian Liberal MP and Parliamentary Secretary for Combating Crime Vince Gasparro said in a video on X/Twitter that the group has “amplified political violence and publicly displayed support for terrorist organisations such as Hezbollah and Hamas.”

“These are not expressions of art or legitimate political critique,” Gasparro said. “They are dangerous endorsements of violence and hate.”

Mo Chara is currently facing terrorism charges levelled against him in May for allegedly displaying a Hezbollah flag on stage at a London show last November. Chara appeared in court last month, where the case was adjourned until September 26.

Kneecap have consistently denied supporting either Hamas or Hezbollah, and said that they do not incite or condone violence. They have also argued that the footage at the UK shows had been taken out of context, and described the legal action as a “carnival of distraction”.

They were due to perform in Toronto and Vancouver in October. A Jewish organisation in the country has been pushing for the government to deny them entry since June.

On behalf of the Government of Canada I am announcing that on the advice of our officials, we have deemed the group Kneecap ineligible to enter our country.

Our government will not tolerate the advocating of political violence, terrorism or Anti-Semitism and hate more broadly. pic.twitter.com/3KOf84G3bZ

— Vince Gasparro (@vgasparro) September 19, 2025

Kneecap have now responded to Gasparro’s comments in a post on Instagram today (September 19), saying his statements are “wholly untrue and deeply malicious” and threatening legal action.

“We have today instructed our lawyers to initiate legal action against you,” the group said. “We will be relentless in defending ourselves against baseless accusations to silence our opposition to a genocide being committed by Israel.

“When we beat you in court, which we will, we will donate every cent to assist some of the thousands of child amputees in Gaza,” they added.

They also issued a message to their fans in Canada, saying, “We have played in Canada many times with zero issues and a message of solidarity and love.

“We are sorry we cannot be with you next month but we will not be silenced and will always oppose genocide. Use your voices in Canada – stand up and speak out.”

Last night (September 18), Kneecap played their biggest England gig to date at the 12,500-capacity OVO Wembley Arena.

Massive Attack and Ben Jamal introduced them to the stage, describing them as “a band who refused to be silenced for their solidarity with the Palestinian people”.

NME caught the gig and gave it a glowing five-star review, which read: “You don’t pull off a gig like that on controversy alone. You need bangers and you need a culture to fill this room. Kneecap have all that, and they’re a fucking good laugh. There’s no call for violence, there’s nothing that should land someone in front of a judge, just solidarity and a rave against the dying of the light. Just 24 hours earlier in this same room, Together For Palestine put on all-star fundraiser for the cause, the biggest of its kind.

“It’s significant like gigs like this should happen at a time like now. The state may try to crush them, but Kneecap have a power of their own. As they spit on ‘It’s Been Ages’: “Controversy won’t phase us, we hold all the cards and they’re aces, try to protect your kids but they’ll hear us.”

Kneecap have announced a live-streamed performance for fans after being forced to cancel their US tour due to the “close proximity of [their] next court hearing”. They will then head out on a 2025 UK headline tour in November. Find any remaining tickets here.

In other news, Kneecap are among Fontaines DC, Amyl & The Sniffers, and over 400 other artists to have joined the No Music For Genocide campaign, while Massive Attack, who are involved in the campaign, have committed to fully boycott Spotify.

Other artists, who are largely on independent labels, participating in the campaign include Rina Sawayama, MIKE, Primal Scream, Faye Webster, Kneecap and Japanese Breakfast. They are joined by the likes of Yaeji, King Krule, MJ Lenderman, Mannequin Pussy, Wednesday, Soccer Mommy and MØ.

To join the coalition, the artists involved have edited their own release territories or sent geo-block requests to their distributor or label. They are encouraging major label groups Sony, UMG, and Warner to follow suit, particularly as they blocked their entire catalogues from and closed operations in Russia a month into their invasion of Ukraine.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Refused Forming New Band With Same Members After Last Shows
Music

Refused Forming New Band With Same Members After Last Shows

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

After their final shows as a unit in December. the four members of Refused will all remain together in a brand new band. Drummer David Sandström broke the news on Instagram while announcing details of their last gigs in their native Sweden before the end of the year.

“We ([guitarist] Mattias [Bärjed], [bassist] Magnus [Flagge], [vocalist] Dennis [Lyxzen] and me) want to explore that — a band with no baggage, no fans to please, limited only by our wildest musical hopes and dreams,” he said without elaborating on the project’s name or specific timeline. “We’re very excited about getting around to taming this new wild beast.”

Addressing why they couldn’t just carry on as Refused, Sandström admitted, “Refused was never good for mine and Dennis’ relationship. We both have our own idea of what the band should be and how we should behave and never the twain shall meet. And we’d rather be friends than play in a popular band.”

As they near the conclusion of their farewell tour, which resumes Oct. 1 in Glasgow, Refused have also set the lineups for the last eight gigs in Sweden, which will boast some of their oldest friends from the global hardcore scene as openers. Among them are Harrowed, Division of Laura Lee, Millencolin, Abhinanda, Final Exit, Nix and Dream Warriors.

“We’re bringing Youth Code over from L.A. to join us, a band we love both artistically and socially,” Sandström said. “Whenever i want listen to some really intense, violent new hardcore I always end up listening to Youth Code instead, and I can’t think of a band that better embodies the maelstrom of hatred and insanity that is presently consuming the U.S.”

He continued, “you have a pretty glorious marriage of old and new, of underground and established, of traditionalists and risk-takers, and nothing could sum up our band more than this amazing catalog of bands. This is going to be an absolute blast of a finale.”

Refused formed in 1991 and split following their landmark 1998 album The Shape of Punk to Come, but they reunited in 2012 and have been active in the studio and on the road ever since. Lyxzen suffered a heart attack in June 2024 but recovered sufficiently for Refused to begin touring again earlier this year.

“A few people have insinuated that like some other bands who, in the fashion of the great Larry David, quit with bells, whistles (and blood raining from a lacerating sky) only to return within a few years as if nothing had happened, Refused would do the same. Well, we won’t, and I feel the need to elucidate,” Sandström said. “We only broke up once and it was involuntary. Most of you might not remember but at the end of our reunion year [in] 2012, we kept things ambiguous in our final statement (‘The hatchet is buried … we’re going home’) for plausible deniability, because we weren’t sure our attempt at a permanent reunion would fly. It did, but only so far.”

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Refused Announce Last-Ever Shows, Unveil Plans to Form New Band with Same Members
Music

Refused Announce Last-Ever Shows, Unveil Plans to Form New Band with Same Members

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Legendary hardcore band Refused have announced the final shows of their ongoing farewell tour, set to take place in their home country of Sweden. Additionally, drummer David Sandström has revealed plans for the members of Refused to form a new band.

After embarking on a a fall tour of UK and Europe in October, as well as playing three shows in South America, Refused will end their career with eight shows in Sweden, culminating with a final concert in their hometown of Umea on December 21st. Each of the gigs in Sweden will feature a different combination of opening acts, with Youth Code among them.

In a lengthy post on Instagram, Sandström explained why Refused are breaking up, citing the band’s negative effect on his friendship with singer Dennis Lyxzén, while announcing plans for the new band:

“Hello, this is David speaking. A few people have insinuated that like some other bands who, in the fashion of the great Larry David, quit with bells, whistles (and blood raining from a lacerating sky) only to return within a few years as if nothing had happened, Refused would do the same. Well, we won’t, and i feel the need to elucidate.

We only broke up once and it was involuntary. Most of you might not remember but at the end of our reunion year 2012 we kept things ambigious in our final statement: “The hatchet is buried … we’re going home”, for plausible deniability, because we weren’t sure our attempt at a permanent reunion would fly. It did, but only so far. The reasons for ending the band are legion, but the two most important ones are:

1. Refused was never good for mine and Dennis’ relationship, we both have our own idea of what the band should be and how we should behave and never the twain shall meet. And we’d rather be friends than play in a popular band.

2. A new band has been born within the band and we (Mattias, Magnus, Dennis and me) want to explore that, a band with no baggage, no fans to please, limited only by our wildest musical hopes and dreams. We’re very excited about getting around to taming this new wild beast.

But before all that, we have some business to attend to. The last of the last shows are soon upon us and it’s come together better than we could have hoped for. The lineups are stacked with old friends, comrades and collaborators as well as some of the best newer bands in the heavy, punk and/or violent music spectrum.”

Related Video

The post continues with details about the various opening acts, before signing off with, “This is going to be an absolute blast of a finale… Go tell it on the mountain.”

See Refused’s last-ever tour dates below, and pick up tickets to their upcoming concerts at this location.

Refused’s Remaining 2025 Tour Dates:
10/01 – Glasgow, GB @ SWG3 *
10/02 – Manchester, GB @ O2 Victoria Warehouse *
10/03 – London, GB @ O2 Academy Brixton *
10/05 – Dublin, IE @ 3Olympia *
10/07 – Tilburg, NL @ Poppodium 013
10/08 – Paris, FR @ Elysee Montmartre *
10/09 – Lille, FR @ L’Aéronef
10/10 – Cologne, DE @ Burgerhaus Stollwerck
10/11 – Leipzig, DE @ Felsenkeller
10/12 – Munich, DE @ Muffathalle
10/28 – Barcelona, ES @ Razzmatazz 1
10/29 – Madrid, ES @ Sala Riviera
10/31 – Sao Paulo, BR @ Terra SP
11/01 – Palermo, AR @ Palermo Groove
11/03 – Santiago, CL @ Teatro Coliseo
12/11 – Goteborg, SE @ Pustervik (feat. Division of Laura Lee & Spøgelse)
12/12 – Goteborg, SE @ Pustervik (feat. Rome Is Not a Town & Darla)
12/13 – Norrkoping, SE @ Arbis (feat. Fireside & Lost Faith)
12/17 – Stockholm, SE @ Fallan (feat. Abhinanda & Twin Pigs)
12/18 – Stockholm, SE @ Fallan (feat. Youth Code & Harrowed)
12/19 – Umea, SE @ Vaven (feat. Youth Code, Left Hand of Darkness & Millencolin)
12/20 – Umea, SE @ Vaven (feat. Fireside, Mattias Alkberg, Top 10 Babies & Deppa)
12/21 – Umea, SE @ Vaven (feat. Abhinanda, Final Exit, Nix & Dream Warriors)

* = w/ Quicksand

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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