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Charlie Bruber Goes on an Experimental Folk Adventure » PopMatters
Music

Charlie Bruber Goes on an Experimental Folk Adventure » PopMatters

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Begin to experience the music of Charlie Bruber by dropping the needle on the first track of his new record. You’ll likely be pleasantly surprised by the sheer variety of everything that follows. Prized Burden, Burber’s second album, begins with the song “Charlie?”, a spacey, widescreen instrumental soundscape featuring Burber on an Oberheim OB8 synthesizer, accompanied by co-producer Murphy Janssen on thunderous, larger-than-life drums. The track sounds like a progressive rock band from circa 1973 during an entertaining, if woozy, sound check.

“Charlie?” is one of several somewhat experimental instrumental tracks (calling them “interludes” undercuts their impact) that dot this powerful new record from the multi-talented Minneapolis resident, which follows his debut solo LP, Finding the Muse (2023). Much of Prized Burden is actually rooted in singer-songwriter folk rock. Bruber and a small cadre of deeply talented fellow musicians weave their way through his songs, which seem to harken back to an era of deeply felt, folk-leaning compositions that would sound right at home in an excellent record collection from a bygone yet well-aged era.

The downbeat, minor-key “Complexion” exudes a pastoral warmth that evokes John Martyn, with Charlie Bruber’s acoustic guitar and Jack Barrett’s piano meshing with gleaming vocal harmonies featuring Stephanie Ehrlich. The expert acoustic fingerpicking on “Mother Morning” fits in beautifully with the bass, piano, and Mellotron all played by Bruber (joined again by Ehrlich and the low-key syncopated drumming of JT Bates).

More instrumental wonders follow, such as on the puzzling, ethereal “That Way”, which seems to take cues from the mysterious nature of film scores. Later, tracks like the odd, experimental “Caricature” and the distorted electric stoner fuzz of “I Wanna Play Gtr” serve as unexpected palate cleansers in between the more emotional tales of love and everyday life. The sonic linchpin of the single “Sweet Friend” is Kevin Gastonguay’s Fender Rhodes and Clavinet, bringing a retro edge to an irresistible, catchy ode to a fading friendship: “How can I be who I am,” Bruber sings, “When you think you got me figured out / Why did you stick around my friend / You boxed me in / A means to an end”).

Other highlights include the shimmering soft-rock chug of the title track, the jazzy folk of “Day to Day”, and the curious tropical vibe of “Vai e Volta,” which starts in a simple enough groove before Carla Hassett sings the Portuguese lyrics and stretches the melodies into phrasing that’s both comforting and a bit disarming. Dropping a song with this unusual of a makeup, both lyrically and musically, is an interesting but ultimately perfect choice in a record filled with interesting options.    

“Vai e Volta” leads into the closing track, “Up and Around”. This slight but delicious nugget has Charlie Bruber on vocals and acoustic guitar for 48 charming seconds. “He’s gone away / What can I say / He’s here to stay / Up and around you / Don’t you know?” Prized Burden sees Charlie Bruber trying out several different things at which he and his band all collectively excel.

The music may not be uniformly experimental by nature, but the way this unique, utterly lovable record navigates different stylistic paths while maintaining its consistently high quality is a testament to both the artist and the album, which will only improve with every listen.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Noted Experimental Filmmaker Was 92
TV & Streaming

Noted Experimental Filmmaker Was 92

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Ken Jacobs, the pioneering experimental filmmaker noted for incorporating manipulated found footage into a series of films over more than seven decades, died Sunday in Manhattan. He was 92.

His son, filmmaker Azazel Jacobs, noted that Ken’s wife Flo Jacobs had died on June 4: “While the official cause of death was from kidney failure, life without his collaborator and partner since 1960 was unimaginable for so many, especially him.

“He worked on his art every day, completing some final ‘eternalisms’ on the day he went to the hospital,” Azazel Jacobs continued.

Film at Lincoln Center called him “the titan of American experimental cinema.”

Born in Brooklyn, Ken Jacobs got his start in New York’s downtown art scene during the 1960s during the era of Andy Warhol and Allen Ginsberg. After studying painting with Hans Hoffman, he moved into filmmaking. He collaborated with his friend Jack Smith on the notable underground films “Blonde Cobra” and “Little Stabs at Happiness.”

Flo and Ken Jacobs

Courtesy Azazel Jacobs

Jacobs and his late wife Flo founded Millennium Film Workshop in 1966. Ken Jacobs taught in the cinema department of Binghamton University in New York for over three decades.

In 1956, he made his first film “Orchard Street” about the Lower East Side, and many of his later films also “used Manhattan streets, rooftops and dumps as the backdrop for sardonic minidramas of social despair,” his former student, film critic J. Hoberman, wrote in 2013.

His 1969 film “Tom, Tom the Piper’s Son” uses a short film from 1905 as source material to manipulate speed, light and motion. It was admitted to the National Film Registry in 2007. Jacobs explained the film saying, “There’s already so much film. Let’s draw some of it out for a deeper look, toy with it, take it into a new light with inventive and expressive projection. Freud would suggest doing so as a way to look into our minds.”

His later films include 1986’s “Perfect Film” and 1990’s “Opening the Nineteenth Century: 1896.” In 2004, he released “Star Spangled to Death,” a nearly seven-hour compendium of found footage on 20th century American history that he began compiling in 1957.

Jacobs’ films, videos and performances have been exhibited at venues including the Berlin Film Festival, the London Film Festival, the New York Film Festival and the Museum of Modern Art.

His honors include the AFI’s Maya Deren Award, a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Rockefeller Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts.

In addition to his son, he is survived by a daughter, artist Nisi Ariana.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Butthole Surfers, August 1996: (L-R) Guitarist Paul Leary, drummer King Coffey, and lead vocalist/keyboards Gibby Haynes of the American rock band the Butthole Surfers in New York, New York. (Credit: Bob Berg/Getty Images)
Music

New Butthole Surfers Documentary Cements the Psych-Punk Heroes’ Experimental Legacy

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Butthole Surfers: The Hole Truth and Nothing Butt, Tom Stern’s bio-doc chronicling the chaotic yet culturally significant career of San Antonio, Texas’ Butthole Surfers, was much-lauded at South By Southwest earlier this year for its revelatory examination of the band—which lives up to its title with a humorous, heartfelt, and unflinchingly honest approach. It’s also a rollicking look at one of the most brilliant, experimental, and misunderstood collectives in music history. 

The documentary made its West Coast debut September 23, kicking off Beyond Fest—the popular alternative genre movie series hosted by Neon and the American Cinemateque inside Hollywood’s Egyptian Theatre. 

Friends, famous fans, and a multitude of bassists and drummers throughout Butthole Surfers’ trajectory are interviewed, but the spotlight is mostly on its founders, vocalist Gibby Haynes and guitarist Paul Leary. Their relationship started off as a creatively charged stoner bromance and ended up distanced, if not estranged, with both men recalling certain parts of their journey differently. 

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

Gibby Haynes poses at Sneekwave in Sneek, the Netherlands on August 9, 1987. (Credit: Frans Schellekens/Redferns)

Of course, that’s mostly due to drug use. The band members were known not just for drinking and toking themselves silly while touring across the country in their early years, but for dropping LSD and mushrooms right before live performances, which made their sets unpredictable and often volatile. 

These noisy freakouts became the stuff of underground legend, but their ground-breaking album releases on labels like Alternative Tentacles, Touch and Go, and Rough Trade in the ’80s, and later Capitol Records (where they scored a mainstream hit, “Pepper,” off of Electriclarryland in ’96) influenced the musical landscape for years to come.  

The band has been due a proper cinematic biography and this one delivers in a fittingly frenetic way, highlighting both the madness of the past and reflective regrets of today. 

After the Hollywood screening, Talking Heads’ Jerry Harrison conducted a Q&A, but it was clear that the band didn’t want to talk too much about the film, with Haynes going off on tangents about Tex Mex food and jokingly calling music docs in general “bullshit.” About three questions were asked and answered (sort of) when Haynes gestured toward a set-up behind them. Then Butthole Surfers played a surprise mini-set of three songs including “Cherub,” “1401,” and “The Shah Sleeps in Lee Harvey’s Grave.” 

(L-R) Gibby Haynes, Teresa Nervosa, and King Coffey perform at the 7th St. Entry in Minneapolis, Minnesota on November 24, 1985. (Credit: Jim Steinfeldt/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

SPIN messaged the filmmaker afterward to ask about the challenges of documenting such a tempestuous crew. “A big advantage I had is that I knew from the outset I would just keep shooting until I thought I had enough no matter how many years that took,” Stern says. “Production line-style documentaries like the ones you see on Netflix have a limited timeframe to shoot in, so they either get the goods or they don’t on the first couple tries, but I interviewed Gibby at least 20 times over five years and ultimately got the emotional vulnerability I was hoping for. He’s such a complicated guy and I felt the audience would want to understand him on a deeper level than what you see in the typical rock doc.” 

With hilarious puppet reenactments, wacky animation, awkward but illuminating edits, and outrageous archival footage, including the band’s infamous 1986 NYC Danceteria club show (which featured simulated sex on stage), The Hole Truth may not be a typical rock doc, but it is a highly entertaining one. 

Everyone from Dave Grohl to Keith Morris share fond memories, recalling the rhythmic rituals of dueling drummers King Coffey and Teresa Taylor, Leary’s astounding psychedelic riffage, and Haynes arresting presence as he trampled the stage in a bloody dress or completely naked, with fire, strobe lights, and graphic medical films adding to the spectacle.

The doc has a massive roster of famous commentators, too. And while some of them question the band’s choices—both live and on record—all of them tout B.S.’s transcendence and talent. Eric Andre, Flea, Ian MacKaye, Steve Albini, Donita Sparks, Henry Rollins, Thurston Moore, Wayne Coyne, Ice-T, Al Jourgensen, Richard Linklater, John Paul Jones, and many more share their thoughts and recollections, but two appearances in particular stand out. 

Gibby Haynes and Paul Leary, September 23, 2025. (Credit: Hadley Gustafson)

Johnny Depp (who befriended Haynes during the “Hollywood years” as it’s referred to in the doc) marks a low point, when the pair dabbled with heroin. He speaks somberly of the era, when he and Haynes formed a supergroup with the Red Hot Chili Pepper’s Flea and John Frusciante called P., which headlined Depp’s Sunset Strip club The Viper Room the night River Phoenix died there. 

He’s followed up with Thelonious Monster’s Bob Forrest, now an addiction recovery advocate, reflecting on Haynes’ guilt over Phoenix’s passing and bad advice he gave Kurt Cobain before his death. Forrest also helps the frontman revisit suppressed memories of childhood sexual abuse, which may have led to his self-destructive tendencies. 

Then we learn that Taylor, one of the most charismatic characters in the movie (she also starred in and became the poster girl for Linklater’s Gen-X classic Slackers after she left the band) was dying of lung disease and perished before it was completed, as did Coffey’s husband, who battled brain disease. Both figures are important reminders that the Surfers’ brought queer representation to the punk community (in Texas no less) before it was actually accepted. Their personal struggles are heart-wrenching and make for a pretty heavy last act. 

But ultimately, The Hole Truth takes fans on a wild ride filled with lots of laughs, vivid visuals, and thoughtful perspectives. It’s an amalgamation that captures the irreverent spirit and visionary madness of the group itself. 

“My goal was to cement a place in music history for this amazing band because they deserve it,” Stern shares. “They were singular artists, each one an amazing character, and they evoked such strong, emotional responses from audiences, including, obviously, me.”

September 26, 2025 0 comments
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diana penty fashion styles
Bollywood

Diana Penty’s Wardrobe Is A Mix Of Chic And Experimental

by jummy84 September 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Diana Penty has mastered that sweet spot between effortless chic and edgy experimentation. Always a fashion girl’s fashion girl, she brings her signature mix of grace, polish, and cool-girl edge to every outing. What makes her style click is how personal it feels—never overdone, never forced—yet always with a twist that keeps it fresh and unpredictable. For the promotions of her upcoming series, Diana has been serving look after look, proving why she’s one of the most consistent yet daring dressers in the game.

Diana Penty’s Wardrobe Is A Mix Of Chic And Experimental

Red Top And Pants

Diana kicked off the promo circuit in a bold red top and pants set from Anamika Ananth — polished, powerful and utterly clickable.

The White Set

In this white Tisharth By Shivani top-and-pants set, Diana takes risks — the silhouette doesn’t follow the norm, but her poise and attitude make the ensemble memorable.

The White Top-And-Pants Set

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The White Top-And-Pants SetThe White Top-And-Pants Set

The Black Look

In a striking black look, Diana channels her inner global icon — reminding us of the likes of Emily Ratajkowski and Kendall Jenner. The silhouette and detailing bring timeless elegance, while her minimal glam keeps things contemporary and cool.

Denim Look

Rocking a Moonray denim top-and-skirt combo with Alaïa flats and long earrings, Diana turns casual into couture — denim never looked this elevated.

Balletcore Dress

Diana Penty floated in a balletcore fantasy sculpted by Gauri & Nainika for the Do You Wanna Partner trailer launch, turning modern elegance into a poetic fashion moment.

The Sheer Layer Over Dress

Bringing Europe’s sheer-layer-over-dress trend to India, this Aroka look is sexy yet conservative, with burnt orange being a big colour for the fall.

The Sheer Layer Over Dress

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The Sheer Layer Over DressThe Sheer Layer Over Dress

For more news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Aashiqui 2’s Rahul Jaykar To Metro…In Dino’s Parth Sahadev, 5 Roles That Define Aditya Roy Kapur’s Charm

Akankshya MukherjeeAkankshya Mukherjee

Akankshya Mukherjee is a dynamic and ambitious individual poised to make waves in the realm of Media and Communication. With a passion for creativity and a drive to contribute to forward-thinking organizations, Akankshya embodies adaptability and a hunger for learning. Having already garnered experience through involvement in various organizations, she has honed the skill of quickly adapting to new environments and challenges. She sees each opportunity as a chance for personal and professional growth, eagerly embracing roles in communications and content writing.

September 14, 2025 0 comments
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