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Slim JIm Phantom. (Credit: Russ Harrington)
Music

5 Albums I Can’t Live Without: Slim Jim Phantom of the Stray Cats

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Name  Slim Jim Phantom

Best known for  Drummer for the Stray Cats, DJ “Little Steven’s Underground Garage,” Owner of the Cat Club at 8911 Sunset Blvd., and providing a place to play for 5,000 bands you’ve never heard of.

Current City  Los Angeles, CA.

Really want to be in  Jamaica At Goldeneye with my beautiful and rocking wife Jennie Vee.

Excited about  The Stray Cats upcoming tour of the U.S.A. with some new music on the way, Las Vegas show with the Midnight Cowgirls on the bill, we’ll be playing on Long Island for the first time in a long time!

My current music collection has a lot of  Rockabilly, Elvis Presley.

And a little bit of  Jump blues.

Preferred format  Vinyl has always been the coolest, CDs were convenient, Sirius XM is the greatest thing ever!

5 Albums I Can’t Live Without:

1

The Sun Sessions, Elvis Presley

This is the record that changed my life. The first time I heard it and saw that famous hillbilly cat photo of Elvis, the world stopped spinning for a minute and I knew what the rest of my life was going to look and sound like. He is definitely the King of Rock ‘n Roll.

2

Gene Vincent & His Blue Caps, Gene Vincent

All these years later, I was trying to look up the exact title of this album and the best I could come up with is just the band name. Everyone just calls this the second Gene Vincent album. This one was probably the most influential record for me musically. It swings and it rocks which is the trickiest of all things to do as a drummer and a band. It’s got the perfect blend of chops and feel. It still sends me every time I hear any of the cuts. The drummer Dickie “Be-Bop” Harrell is a hero to me. When we first starting meeting all of our classic rock heroes like Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page, the Stones, and George Harrison, they all told me how this album was their one, too!

3

Singin’ to My Baby, Eddie Cochran

Eddie Cochran was the best rock star ever. He played great, he sang great, he looked great, was way ahead of the curve technologically and left behind a timeless image and beyond-impressive catalog. This may have been his only official complete LP. We benefitted from compilations that included all the singles. Not many of the rockabilly stars had complete albums, just singles. We had to get the compilations on import as many of our original American rock ‘n roll stars’ records had gone out of print and many were re-issued by British and French labels. The records were expensive for young rockabilly boys, so we leaned towards the compilations with 20 tracks on each one.

4

Miss Etta James: The Complete Modern and Kent Recordings, Etta James

If anyone listens to my radio show “Rockabilly Rave Up” on “Little Steven’s Underground Garage,” then they know that I love Etta James. The early R&B numbers had a big impact on me. When we first got turned on to them in London in 1981, I didn’t know this style of music and it connected immediately with me in a big way. Jump blues and R&B from the mid-‘50s is the “rock” part of rockabilly, original Grand Ole Opry “hillbilly music” being the big part of the beautiful equation. “Good Rockin’ Daddy” is a stand out and Etta is the rockin-est gal in any galaxy.

5

Infinity, Journey

Does this tick the “hmmm…I had no idea they would listen to that” box?! My buddy Steve Perry is one the best singers ever. He hits all those notes full voice and makes it look easy. It’s not! He’s working really hard but makes it look and sound effortless.  That’s a whole other gift. The whole band shreds on this album. I didn’t know until we became friendly that Steve is a Ricky Nelson fan. I shouldn’t have been surprised. When we first met Robert Plant, I was surprised when he told us he was such a big Gene Vincent fan. Of course, now, it all makes sense. The influence of the original American rock stars and R&B artists is everywhere and always will be.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Doja Cat 2025
Music

Doja Cat’s 1980s Extravagance Is Remarkable on ‘Vie’ » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Doja Cat is an all-or-nothing pop star. In 2023, the rapper tweeted to fans, “I don’t love y’all cos I don’t know y’all.” Extremes are her medium. When Doja Cat, whose real name is Amala Dlamini, attended Schiaparelli’s Spring/Summer 2023 fashion show, she wore a red body paint look covered in head-to-toe crystals. With her song “Paint the Town Red”, the absurd look captured Doja’s refined brand of camp. At that show, when the singer crossed paths with beauty mogul Kylie Jenner, who wore a lion’s head on her chest, the pair exchanged a cursory ‘Good to see you’ with each other. Their outlandish costumes were not acknowledged. 

Doja’s fifth album, Vie, French for “live”, is an about-face from its predecessor, 2023’s Scarlet. On that record, Doja sought to prove herself as a rapper, perhaps in response to a 2022 comment from Remy Ma on the podcast Drink Champs: “I don’t think [Doja Cat] is a rapper,” Remy said. While Doja did not respond directly, she tweeted, “The truth is I do tell stories, use punchlines regularly, and prioritize world play frequently. This is what rapping is by definition.”

In response, Scarlet crusaded for rap dominance, but critics said it lost the charm of Doja’s pop-infused early hits. This criticism became the jumping-off point for Vie, which rejects the notion that a need for rap credentials is the singer’s primary motive and establishes Doja as the type of star whose credibility as an artist does not rely on album-by-album critiques. Mixing 1980s pop and R&B on Vie, Doja remains an elusive, genre-bending savant. 

The record’s standout tracks fully embrace 1980s synthpop. The lead single “Jealous Type” bears no trace of another genre, giving Doja room to experiment on the other tracks, while proving the album’s thesis about versatility. The familiarity of 1980s pop brings Doja dangerously close to validating the criticism that she’s not a real rapper. However, by repackaging a maximalist genre in her seductive image, Doja turns herself into an enigma, immune to accusations of pastiche. 

A modern pop star paying homage to the 1980s is not a new idea. Taylor Swift received a synthpop makeover with 1989, and Dua Lipa tried disco on Future Nostalgia. Why does pop keep going back to that decade? During that time, the genre became glamorous. The rock stars of the 1960s were larger than life, and the singer-songwriters of the 1970s were open-hearted and intriguing, but the 1980s made music opulent. As a result, modern celebrities are cartoonish fashion muses. At the 2023 Met Gala, in honor of Karl Lagerfeld, Doja dressed as a cat and “Meow” -ed during interviews. 

While Vie’s main throughline is the 1980s, other elements surface. In “Acts of Service”, Doja Cat’s sultry vocals glide over a laconic R&B soundscape, while dreamy synths allude to the album’s central motif. A psychedelic guitar riff opens “Make It Up”, a trap-inspired plea for forgiveness where indifference becomes a means of seduction. In the irreverent “AAAH MEN!”, Doja recounts a litany of lovers’ shortcomings, but does not wallow. The ease of her delivery over a rapid bassline suggests that any former pain is no longer worth considering. 

The rap verses and catchy chorus of “Gorgeous” tie the album together, reconciling Doja’s nature as a hip-hop provocateur and pop hitmaker. The song’s music video is a parody of a cosmetics commercial, starring Doja alongside models Alex Consani and Anok Yai. The video is sumptuous and luxurious, featuring panoramic shots of glistening bottles of product and close-ups of the stars’ faces.  

The video accomplishes several purposes. Firstly, it continues the album’s 1980s references by depicting the over-the-top beauty trends of that decade. Secondly, it examines Doja’s place in pop. A frequent front-row presence at fashion shows, Doja Cat embodies the marriage of fashion and pop culture. Similarly, her celebrity stemmed from the union of music and the internet. By satirizing commercialized beauty, Doja Cat portrays herself as glamorous while upholding the cultural change that produced her: beauty must be contextualized to have meaning. 

Unlike other celebrities, Doja does not set boundaries with the public to create a mystique. Instead, she critiques the absurdity of her platform. “I got surgery ’cause of the scrutiny,” she admits in “Gorgeous”. “Vegas”, a song Doja recorded for the 2022 biopic Elvis, embodies the main accomplishment of Vie by interpolating the melody of Elvis’ “Hound Dog” over a trap beat. By referencing pop so overtly, Doja finds her own place within the genre. 

At the 2024 Met Gala, Doja Cat and Kylie Jenner crossed paths again, this time in a not-so-polite manner. Instead of a courtesy greeting, red-carpet footage showed Jenner cast a judgmental up-and-down glance in Doja’s direction. Pop culture is like an arena where celebrities utilize various creative media to further their self-expression. As a title, Vie does not have a clear thematic connection to the album’s contents. Is it meant to imply that Doja Cat is living her best life? Given the star’s inscrutable persona, pulling off an extravagant album is a remarkable accomplishment. No matter what criticism she is responding to, Doja Cat lands on all fours. 

October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Doja Cat Tries to Reframe Her Purpose in Pop on Vie: Review
Music

Doja Cat’s Vie Tries to Reframe Her Purpose in Pop: Review

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

If everything means nothing to Doja Cat, what actually matters? Fans, stans, and casual listeners are now just as familiar with the pop/rap star’s chaotic provocations as they are with her music. In May 2023, she dismissed her breakthrough albums, unprovoked: “Planet Her and Hot Pink were cash-grabs and y’all fell for it,” she wrote. “Now I can go disappear somewhere and touch grass with my loved ones on an island while y’all weep for mediocre pop.” Months later, she brushed off her hard-edged 2023 hip-hop album Scarlet with equal irreverence: “Not to diminish it, but it was a bit of like, I just need to get this out — it was a massive fart for me,” Doja told the New York Times earlier this month.

Doja Cat’s talent has never been a question, but rather how she chooses to engage with it. She has historically been deeply unserious in her assessments of her own work — but with Vie, it’s clear that she’s seeking to understand herself a bit more broadly this time around. “Jealous Type,” the album’s New Jack Swing-inflected lead single, indirectly illustrates the conflict of Doja as an eager artist who feels both overexposed and misunderstood: “Boy, let me know if this is careless, I/ Could be torn between two roads that I just can’t decide/ Which one is leading me to hell or paradise?”

Duality has always made Doja Cat a more compelling artist, and Vie proves she thrives when she’s embodying every version of herself. Instead of committing to one lane, she treats the album as an experiment in blending eras and styles. She stands under the neon haze of the ’80s, fusing sleazy synths with the glossy pulse of R&B of the era and the grandiosity of glam rock. Vie also doesn’t forget that rapping is still in her arsenal — even if used sparingly.

Related Video

After spending the last album cycle hyper-focused on hip-hop, Doja returns here to the comparably softer space of pop — but she doesn’t abandon the grit she picked up along the way. She finally seems less concerned with choosing between her creative instincts and more comfortable letting them co-exist, treating her full range of talents as equally valid tools rather regarding one or another like an affliction she needs to shake off.

On the opening track, “Cards,” saxophone bleeds through the left speaker before evening out and expanding to a soundscape that would be fit for electro-funk band Zapp & Roger. Doja Cat slinks and prowls as she vacillates between singing and rapping, setting the thematic tone of the album: “Maybe in time, we’ll know/ Maybe I’ll fall in love, baby/ Maybe we’ll win some hearts/ Gotta just play your cards.”

It’s a generic mission on its surface — deconstructing and rebuilding love in all its iterations — but it’s direct in its simplicity, which has often powered the best pop of the past and present. Which makes sense, as Jack Antonoff, the purveyor of dominant, era-crossing pop, has his fingerprints all over a Doja Cat album for the first time, producing on nine of the 15 total tracks.

In addition to “Jealous Type,” Antonoff’s contributions sparkle most on “AAAHH MEN!” Sampling the theme from the 1980s program Knight Rider, the song inserts itself into the lineage of hip-hop songs that have lifted the memorable synth, joining the ranks of Timbaland & Magoo’s “Clock Strikes” and Busta Rhymes’ “Turn It Up (Remix) / Fire It Up.” As averse as she seems to the pure “rapper” label, Doja can spit her ass off, and she demonstrates that most clearly here: “Men need to cry more, boys need to work/ But not when he beg his employee to flirt/ Ain’t nobody finna force me to twerk/ When you’re finished with your goon sesh, join me in church.”

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Official US Trailer for Anime 'Cat's Eye' About Three Art Thief Sisters
Hollywood

Official US Trailer for Anime ‘Cat’s Eye’ About Three Art Thief Sisters

by jummy84 September 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Official US Trailer for Anime ‘Cat’s Eye’ About Three Art Thief Sisters

by Alex Billington
September 11, 2025
Source: YouTube

“All according to plan.” Hulu has revealed an official trailer for the anime series Cat’s Eye, an adaptation of the 1980s manga of the same name (CAT’S♥EYE). The same manga has turned into other series before, including a live-action TV series in France. Now it’s being made into proper modern anime and will debut on Hulu in the US later this month. By day, Hitomi, Rui, and Ai run a cafe called “Cat’s Eye”, but by night these three sisters work as a trio of thieves working to recover their father’s stolen art collection. Balancing their double lives becomes even more difficult as they are relentlessly investigated by Detective Toshio — who doesn’t know his girlfriend is one of the thieves he’s pursuing. Yoshifumi Sueda directs the series, with Yosuke Yabumoto as character designer & animation director, Hayashi Mori as series writer, and Yuki Hayashi on the music. The voice cast includes Mikako Komatsu as Hitomi, Ami Koshimizu as Rui, Yumiri Hanamori as Ai, Takuya Sato as Toshio, Yoko Higasa, & Katsuyuki Knoishi. Looks like amusing fun, following these 3 as they outsmart the authorities stealing back their father’s art around world.

Here’s the official trailer (+ posters) for Yoshifumi Sueda’s anime series Cat’s Eye, direct from YouTube:

Cat's Eye Poster

Cat's Eye Poster

Hitomi, Rui and Ai are three sisters with a secret. By day, they run the popular Cat’s Eye Café; by night, they slip into the shadows, executing high-stakes art heists with precision and style. Since its manga debut in 1981, Cat’s Eye has developed a global fandom, with the upcoming series sure to deliver on everything fans have come to love from this fun story: thrilling action, high stakes heists, along with the impossibly complex relationship between Hitomi and her partner Detective Toshio — the man sworn to catch these infamous thieves. Cat’s Eye, originally known as キャッツ・アイ in Japanese, is an anime series directed by Japanese animation filmmaker Yoshifumi Sueda, director on the series “Rail Wars!”, “High School DxD”, “Z/X: Code Reunion”, and Sailor Moon Cosmos previously. With writing by Hayashi Mori; adapted from Tsukasa Hôjô’s manga series of the same name. Featuring music by Yûki Hayashi. Produced by Liden Films (Rurouni Kenshin 2023, Berserk). Visit the anime series’ official Japanese site. Disney will release Sueda’s Cat’s Eye series streaming on Hulu starting September 26th, 2025 coming soon. Who’s into this anime?

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September 12, 2025 0 comments
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