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LE SSERAFIM, J-Hope's 'Spaghetti' Voted This Week's Favorite New Music
Music

LE SSERAFIM, J-Hope’s ‘Spaghetti’ Voted This Week’s Favorite New Music

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

LE SSERAFIM’s new collaboration with BTS’ j-hope has topped this week’s new music poll.

In a poll published Friday (Oct. 24) by Billboard, music fans chose the powerhouse team-up’s “Spaghetti” as their favorite new release of the week.

“Spaghetti” earned 77% of the vote, beating out new projects from Demi Lovato (It’s Not That Deep), Megan Thee Stallion (“LOVER GIRL”), Bruce Springsteen (Nebraska ’82), Daniel Caesar (Son of Spergy), Leon Thomas (Pholks), and more.

The track serves as the lead single from LE SSERAFIM’s eight-track HYBE compilation of the same name and marks j-hope’s first-ever feature on a K-pop girl group song.

Earlier in the week, the song was teased through a YouTube video titled “The Kick,” featuring j-hope in a Matrix-inspired outfit and shades, surrounded by flashing strobe lights. The clip ends with a snippet of LE SSERAFIM members — KIM CHAEWON, SAKURA, HUH YUNJIN, KAZUHA, and HONG EUNCHAE — delivering the line “eat it up.”

Speaking with Billboard Philippines, LE SSERAFIM shared insights into the making of “Spaghetti.” The song “expresses LE SSERAFIM’s charm that you just can’t get away from, like spaghetti that’s stuck in your teeth,” SAKURA said. “The part where we sing ‘eat it up’ over and over is the highlight, and since each of us members delivers it in our own styles, it adds even more playfulness to the song.”

LE SSERAFIM have been on a hot streak this year. In March, the group’s album HOT debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Album Sales chart, marking their fifth top 10 entry and second chart-topper after 2024’s Crazy.

Placing second in this week’s poll was Lovato’s new album, It’s Not That Deep, which secured 7% of the vote.

Check out the full results of this week’s poll below, and visit Billboard’s Friday Music Guide for more must-hear new releases.



October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Medicine Music Is Having a Special Moment
Music

Medicine Music Is Having a Special Moment

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

“Music can heal, if life is put into it.”

Those are the words of a holy man named Inayat Khan, plucked from his treatise, The Mysticism of Sound and Music. A renowned musicologist, philosopher and singer, he is largely credited with bringing Sufism, a mystical branch of Islam, to the West during his travels through WWI. 

“Health is a perfect condition of rhythm and tone.” He wrote. “And what is music? Music is rhythm and tone. When the health is out of order it means that the music in ourselves is not right.” As a music student, I would carry his book with me from lesson to lesson, tucked into my gig bag to keep it dry from the Boston rain as I walked the same streets he did a century before on his pilgrimage to bring his message to America. 

Expressing his concern, he shared, “the great drawback today in the world of song is that people are going far away from what is called the natural voice, and this is brought about by commercialism. They have made a hall for one hundred persons, then for five hundred, and then for five thousand persons. A man must shout in order to make five thousand people hear him, in order to have a success.” 

Music is made by how we make each other feel. Greatness requires an attunement to your own and other people’s souls. Harmony or dissonance is in the way you breathe, how you act, and in the words you choose. The instrument is you, and how you live is what keeps it in tune. 

When I stepped into my career in 2010, the inflation rate on his principle shared in 1910 had increased a hundredfold. This was the rise of social media so the emphasis on music-making for attention-getting was being shaped by the emerging necessity of “going viral” to succeed. Going viral. Those words alone should have told us we were making ourselves sick, long before we saw how it made us act.

There’s a place for Inayat Khan’s principles in pop culture now. It’s called ‘Medicine Music’ and while it’s nothing new, the growing level of interest from today’s audiences is. 

It dawned on me that a shift was happening a couple of years ago while I was on a boat in Antarctica with Diplo and the musician Rhye, debating with the scientists on board whether the music from our dance parties was attracting the whales. Strikingly, that very same day on the other side of the planet, a team of scientists shared an announcement of their success in communicating with a whale off the coast of Alaska through the use of an underwater speaker. See, up north, they were using AI to optimize their whale songs. Down south, we were using vibes.

Singer Mike Milosh of Rhye getting his patterns on in Berlin, 2022. (Photo by Gina Wetzler/Redferns via Getty Images)

I loved ribbing our scientists on board with the silliness of this idea. We were, after all, aboard a circus at sea that was being widely memed online as “Diplo’s Wellness Cruise” for its featured sound baths, yoga, and meditations. 

It was during one of those sound baths, led by Rhye (aka Mike Milosh), that I experienced one of the most remarkable musical moments of my life. We were in a glass atrium on the upper deck of the ship as it navigated between icebergs through a tight channel in the Antarctic sea, with glacial mountains rising on either side. It was the December solstice near the South Pole, so we were passing quietly through an everlasting twilight. For the first half or so, Rhye was playing acoustic versions of his popular songs. For the second, he was doing something different. He was being someone different. He wasn’t performing as Rhye, he was making music as Mike Milosh. 

Those familiar with Rhye’s music will recognize his voice for its uniquely ethereal quality, often both melancholic and soulful to the point of feeling intimate. Much of this sound comes, I imagine, from Mike’s early classical training on the cello. Liberated from the recitation of his own songs, he began to improvise, simply making music to meet the moment. The prosody of the melodies matched our environment of ocean waves and frozen fog. 

A sound bath is meant to be an attunement. So, listening closely, I attuned to my instinctive feelings. Quietly, I stood up and walked to the windows at the ship’s bow. Two pods of orcas had approached on either side of the ship and were swimming alongside us, escorting us across the sea.

“Besides the natural charm that music has, it has a magical power, a power that can be experienced even now. It seems that the human race has lost a great deal of the ancient science of magic, but if there remains any magic it is music.” – Hazrat Inayat Khan

It’s silly to believe in magic. Yet it’s undeniable to encounter awe. Such is the magic of art. Let science claim the search for truth. Music is the search for beauty, and it’s through beauty the truth is often found. 

The label ‘Medicine Music’ applies first and foremost to an indigenous approach to music making, often as an accompaniment to ceremonial gatherings with or without plant medicine. The Yawanawá tribe of the Amazon have become powerful cultural ambassadors, traveling far and wide to host gatherings in the hundreds singing powerfully, accompanied by the steady strumming of acoustic guitars while serving hapé, a sacred shamanic tobacco snuff medicine. Ayahuasca ceremonies of the Andes, guided by icaros, the songs of the Quechua medicine people, have exploded in popularity around the world. 

Contemporary world music artists like Poranguí have blended together medicine music influences from across the Americas into something of a continental folk instrumental movement that has captured its own sub-sub-culture of spiritual seekers in the music festival world. The last decade or so has seen the emergence of festivals such as Medicine Festival in England, Envision Festival in Costa Rica, Aniwa Gathering in California, and others that harness the growing audience at the intersection of indigeneity, spirituality, sustainability, and music.

In the worlds of ambient and electronic music specifically, musicians like East Forest whose 2019 album Music for Mushrooms: A Soundtrack for the Psychedelic Practitioner and Jon Hopkins 2021 album Music for Psychedelic Therapy have focused squarely on the usage of music for guided ceremonies with plant medicine. In 2023, when André 3000 made a pivot into ambient flute music with his album New Blue Sun, it was heralded as a smart, provocative turn by a tastemaker toward a renewing trend in culture. Collaborating with new age instrumentalist Carlos Niño, the project infused playful references to medicine music themes with tracks such as the lead single, “I Swear, I Really Wanted to Make a ‘Rap’ Album but This Is Literally the Way the Wind Blew Me This Time”.

Carlos Niño on stage with André 3000 in Los Angeles, 2024. (Photo by Randy Shropshire/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

All of this describes a growing cultural movement but doesn’t decode what I believe to be the most important aspect of what’s going on: a renewed valuing of the experience of music made from the full depth of your human spirit in rising counterpart to the now deafening noise of the artificial. 

There is a paradox in this in that we are seeing a modern expansion of an ancient approach to music that is powered by the intimacy of presence, in a shared moment of human experience, happening at a time of technology’s seizing the means of creative production. Could this emphasis on human creativity — should it — overcome the forces of commercialization?

Vivien Vilela, co-founder of Aniwa, an international platform that shares Indigenous wisdom and amplifies the voices of Indigenous leaders through online education, an annual gathering, and in-person retreats, is a guide for many who seek an authoritative connection to the deeper truths held by human cultures. Born and raised in Brazil, Vivien has dedicated her life to her spiritual studies under the mentorship of some of the most respected Indigenous elders from South, Central, and North America. She has taken a sacred oath and commitment in the Wixarixa tradition to continue to serve her life as a Marakame — a shaman that can heal and teach. 

“Medicine music is more than sound,” she says. “Medicine music opens the heart, calms the mind, and harmonizes the spirit. It often calls upon the forces of nature and spirit to bring forth healing. These songs carry a frequency of beauty, reverence, and balance. Icaros, for example — sung by shamans working with healing plants — are not just songs; they are energetic tools and spiritual channels.

“Each icaro carries the consciousness of the plants and serves as a bridge between the seen and unseen realms. They can be sung to activate the energy of the medicine during ceremony, clear energetic blockages, remove negative influences, guide participants through their inner landscapes, and call in protective spirits, ancestors, or elemental forces to support the healing process.”

She continues: “The way music is performed carries just as much energy as the sound itself. The focus is not on performance, but on presence. Every sound, movement, breath, and silence is part of the medicine being offered.”

There is also a science to this approach to music-making, in the knowledge of specific tones or sonic frequencies held to be sacred. As Vivien articulates, “A hallmark of medicine music is its use of natural, harmonic frequencies. 432 Hz, for example, is often called the ‘frequency of harmony,’ believed to resonate with the body’s cells and the natural rhythm of the Earth. In contrast, much of today’s music is produced using 440 Hz tuning. Many believe it contributes to a more dissonant, mind-centered experience that can disconnect us from our bodies and inner stillness. Medicine music is about tuning in, pop music can be about tuning out.

“Medicine music has the potential to play a much larger role. As more people awaken to the importance of frequency, intention, and spiritual health, this music can become a bridge, reconnecting individuals to nature, ancestral wisdom, and their own inner truth.

“Be mindful of what you’re listening to,” she warns “because sound is not just entertainment — it’s energy. And energy has the power to heal or to harm, to center or to scatter.”

Jon Hopkins in Roskilde, Denmark, 2019. (Photo by Helle Arensbak / Ritzau Scanpix / AFP via Getty Images)

This brought me back to what had intrigued me so much about that musical moment with Mike Milosh and the whales: a musician more answering their inner call than responding to an outer tradition. In that performance, he was straddling between Rhye, who has over 130M streams on his songs, and a call to a more mystical identity that, at that moment, could not have an audience greater than whomever is present in any given room. It was an attunement in frequency from the modern world Inayat Khan warned about and toward the ancient world he remembered. 

I asked Mike how this shift from mainstream toward medicine has continued for him. He clarified that the Medicine Music I’m asking about is “music that has a doorway to the mystic, inherently a long form experience with many peaks and valleys. 

“A lot more patience and a lot more — and I stress that — subtlety is required for medicine-specific music. 

“American culture is a fairly new culture, one that needs to move past the stages of growth that it has been cycling in. The homogenization of wellness culture needs to move past just capitalistic endeavors and into mystical expansion, and a connection with both our planet and its wonderful animals, the universe and consciousness and our ability to commune with other beings. We need to grow and become more self aware. There is no rule, no one way, there are many roads to calm, self realization and actualization.

“I do feel this world isn’t a surface one, and should be approached with a lot of care, a lot of intention and with the right people around. Musically that is incredibly important.”

October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Why the term ‘mainstream music’ is outdated - National
Celebrity News

Why the term ‘mainstream music’ is outdated – National

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Before the internet really exploded around 2000, our access to music was limited.

It began at the record label level. Without a deal, getting distribution of your music was nearly impossible. Even if you did, your music was run through other filters: radio, music video channels, record stores and music magazines. The entire time, you competed with all the other new songs out there, along with older established favourites.

Getting the public’s attention was hard. Getting them to part with their limited disposable income to buy your music was even harder.

But because the initial supply was small and the winnowing process so stringent, rewards awaited the lucky few who came out the other side of the star-making machinery system. We lived in a monoculture, driven largely by radio airplay. In those days, we had a general idea of what everyone else was listening to. Music fans were connected by a common music vocabulary and a need to know that there were others with similar musical tastes. And because the biggest songs were so ubiquitous, we couldn’t help but learn the lyrics to even songs we hated.

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To be a mainstream artist was to be BIG: Michael Jackson-Madonna-AC/DC-Eagles big. You could stop any stranger on the street to name three songs by any of those artists and get three correct answers.

Today, though, we all live in our separate, individual and highly personal musical bubbles, and we like it a lot. It’s so empowering to have our own little special niche that’s tailored for us. Thanks to streaming, there’s no more “mainstream” music fan. We’re all unique, each with an opinion on what music is “good.”

Even with someone as big as Taylor Swift, her songs haven’t achieved the kind of ubiquity we used to see before 2000. If you want to test that, ask a random stranger to name three Tay-Tay songs. Unless you choose a Swiftie, that person will probably struggle. I work in the music industry with all sorts of music 24-7-365 and I have trouble.


Click to play video: 'Taylor Swift breaks own record as new album sells 2.7 million copies in 1 day'

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Taylor Swift breaks own record as new album sells 2.7 million copies in 1 day


Another example: What was the song of the summer of 2025? What song was in everyone’s heads over June, July and August? For the first time in years, there was no clear winner. This underscores the fact that we’ve moved beyond big artists having big hits for the masses. Today’s hits are far smaller than those of the past because the same number of people can no longer come to a consensus on what we should all be listening to. That shared experience over a song/artist is nowhere near what it used to be.

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Radio, as popular as it still is, is no longer as dominant as it once was when it comes to getting the word out on a song or artist. The music video channels have disappeared. When was the last time you bought a physical music magazine? And how many regular people make regular visits to record stores because there’s that hot new release everyone says they must have? Instead, we have streaming algorithms that automatically and constantly offer an endless parade of songs that they think we, as an individual music fan, might like. There’s no “everyone” anymore. It’s just “me.”


The music industry is struggling to redefine “mass appeal.” And it’s more than just radio airplay, streaming numbers and record sales. In today’s music business, you can have a hit outside the realm of what used to be defined as mainstream. In fact, you’ll be surprised to learn how big an act can be serving just their community.

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Take My Chemical Romance, for example. When they announced their reunion tour, I was surprised that they’d been booked to play stadiums. Stadiums? For an emo band that had broken up for years and whose reunion was sidelined by COVID-19? Yet in one 30-day period this past summer, they averaged 42,797 people per show, a sellout rate of 100 per cent Surprised? I was.

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Then there are the Lumineers, the Ho Hey band that became a Family Guy meme. During the same 3o-day period, they performed seven sold-out arena shows, averaging 18,430 tickets per gig, resulting in an average box office gross of nearly US$2 million per show.

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Here are some other recent numbers via Pollstar, the bible of the touring music industry. Are any of these “mainstream” artists in the old sense of the definition?

  • ENHYPHEN: eight shows at 98 per cent sold, average of 20,329 tickets per gig, average gross of US$2.9 million.
  • Rüfüs Du Sol: nine shows at 96 per cent sold, average of 18,197 tickets per gig, average gross of US$1.65 million.
  • Phil Wickman/Brandon Lake: six shows at 100 per cent sold, average of 15,733 tickets per gig, average gross of US$889,512.
  • Anuel AA: eight shows at 85 per cent sold, average of 13,794 tickets per gig, average gross of US$1.2 million.

Even Creed, one of the most ridiculed bands of the last quarter-century, is selling out shows with an average attendance of 11,000 people. That’s close to a million bucks a night.

To be clear, none of what I’m saying is the screed of an old man pining for the old days. I’m merely pointing out the difference between how the music world used to be and what it’s become.

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While the major labels still haven’t figured out how to deal with this new world, indie labels have more of a chance. Songs and artists bubble up online through streamers and social media and end up finding their audience, person by person. Eventually, there are enough of them to band together into a community for that artist, communities that, while large, are largely invisible to everyone else.

Another paradigm is to create a superfan constituency. If you can convince just 3,000 people to pay you $10 a month for all kinds of exclusive access and special privileges, that’s $360,000 a year. Not bad.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to listen to the new Jehnny Beth album, You Heartbreaker You. It’s excellent. Everyone’s listening to it–or at least should be.

 

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

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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The Real Reason Diljit Dosanjh Calls Punjabi Music 'Unmatched' Will Surprise You! | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

The Real Reason Diljit Dosanjh Calls Punjabi Music ‘Unmatched’ Will Surprise You! | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Punjabi superstar Diljit Dosanjh, whose natural charm and honesty have won him millions of fans, recently revealed the inspiration behind his new album and world tour, Aura, in a recent episode of Spotify’s Gal Baat. The actor-singer revealed how the title had been inspired by his fans, who used to tell him how the energy he exudes on stage is something special. “They would say, ‘Your aura hits different when you perform live,’” Diljit smiled. “So when naming time came for the tour and the album, I thought, that’s it. Aura isn’t a title — it’s the connection that flows between me and my fans.”

Described as a celebration of connection and positivity, Aura captures the infectious vibe that defines Diljit’s live performances. With sold-out concerts across continents, he continues to elevate Punjabi music on the global stage, blending cultural pride with universal appeal.

Even with his busy schedule, Diljit explained how he is inspired by little, mundane things. “Whenever I have a break, I go to a park where people sing voluntarily — sometimes I join them. That spontaneity helps me be grounded and creative,” he added, highlighting that pure joy and raw music power his creative spirit.

Looking back at his inspirations, Diljit honored late Punjabi legend Amar Singh Chamkila by referring to his music as timeless and fearless. “Chamkila’s rhythms remain unbeaten,” he added. “Indian music is wonderfully diverse, but Punjabi music just has that flow — it gets people moving.”

Also Read: The Bold and the Beautiful: Diljit Dosanjh and Manushi Chhillar’s Kufar Controversy!

From Coachella to his international Aura tour, Diljit’s path is the embodiment of the global ascension of Punjabi music. With humour, humility, and heart, he continues to bridge the cultures and remain rooted — showing that his “aura” isn’t one-dimensional in his shows, but in the pride he induces in Indian music worldwide.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Cricket in L1
Bollywood

‘Soulless BS’: Netizens slam AI music video of Jagjit Singh’s hit song Koi Fariyaad

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Jagjit Singh is celebrated as one of the most iconic voices in Indian music history. Among his many unforgettable songs, Koi Fariyaad from Tum Bin (2001) stands out, a track that captured the very soul of the film. The song’s emotional depth wasn’t easy to achieve, as director Anubhav Sinha once revealed, according to Filmfare: “Ghazal was to play a very integral part in telling the story. Faaiz Anwar was essentially a shayar and not a lyricist, but when I told him to write a ghazal for Tum Bin, the whole idea was I’d approve one sher (couplet) and then he would write the song around that.

AI music video for Koi Fariyaad

He would tell me a sher every now and then, and I kept refusing. Finally, I was at some shoot and he called me, and recited the lines ‘Ek lamhe mein simat aaya hai sadiyon ka safar. Zindagi tez bahut tez chali ho jaise.’ I jumped at it and said this is it! He started laughing and asked me if I was aware that it was the 82nd sher, which means I had already rejected 81 shers.”

AI-generated rendition of Koi Fariyaad

However, the latest rendition of the song, released by T-Series two days ago, has stirred some controversy. The music label launched an AI-generated rendition of Koi Fariyaad, keeping Jagjit Singh’s timeless voice and original lyrics intact, but presenting a stop-motion visual treatment where the people on screen appear eerily not-human. The new direction, by Shreya Mehrotra and Gourov Dasgupta, was produced by Cyberpunk Studio.

Netizens were quick to share their disappointment. On Reddit, one user said, “Man the song itself has so much emotion and then when u go watch the video u see this soulless bs 🥲🙏.” Others chimed in with comments like, “what a joke,” “T series Short Of Money. Old Songs And AI Videos,” and “sad song ko comedy song bana diya hai.” Several fans felt that AI could never capture the emotional nuance of the original actors, with one writing, “AI can’t ever replace Priyanshu and Sandali Sinha… AI can’t explain eye expressions ever.” Another tried to see the silver lining: “They are doing an experiment i guess.”

The AI-fication of music videos

This is not T-Series’ first foray into AI music videos. In August 2025, the label collaborated with Google’s Veo 3 model and Cyberpunk Studio to produce an AI-generated video bringing the late singer KK back to life.

But with Koi Fariyaad, it seems that the emotional essence of the song is difficult to translate through AI, sparking an ongoing debate amongst netizens. What do you think about this?

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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The Droptines on Hard Work, TikTok, and Texas Country Music
Music

The Droptines on Hard Work, TikTok, and Texas Country Music

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

The Droptines were used to playing simple dive bars and rock rooms. Their worldview changed this summer when they went on an amphitheater tour with Whiskey Myers.

By the time the Texas roots-rock band’s opening run for Whiskey Myers ended with a sold-out show in Nashville earlier this summer, the five-piece — named after a deer’s antler that, through genetics or injury, grows downward — nearly had whiplash over how far they had come.

“It feels like an acid trip,” Conner Arthur, the band’s singer, tells Rolling Stone. “There will be a lot to unpack after it’s all done. I need to start journaling, because I feel like I’ve forgotten a lot already.”

The Droptines are Arthur, bassist Dillon Sampson, drummer Johnny Sheets, pedal steel player Tony Rincon, and guitarist Donny Parkinson. Collectively, they are a group of veteran musicians from the Texas Hill Country, heavy on Texas and Red Dirt, with a wildly prolific catalog they are hell-bent on sharing at every concert.

“If you look at our setlist, there’s a shitload of songs on there,” Arthur says. “We’re not dragging out a song that should be three minutes and making it nine minutes, relying on every lick our guitar player has. We punch in, and we punch out. We’re trying to sell the songs.”

A native of Concan, Texas, Arthur grew up “at the foot of the state” at House Pasture Co., a major venue in the Texas music scene, run by Arthur’s parents. He started taking music seriously as a teenager, leaving home at 18 and busking around the country for the better part of a year. He formed the Droptines in 2019 and released an EP, but the pandemic shelved any real growth until 2021.

The first few years of the band were “filled with dumb shit” as Arthur recalls now. The band took nearly any gig it was offered, even when travel costs outweighed the pay. Their approach, he says, was grassroots, aiming to win over fans one-by-one. The first place he recalls it taking hold was in Lubbock, Texas. The band celebrated the release of a single, “Bill of Sale,” at the Blue Light — a music room on Buddy Holly Ave. — in 2023, and were greeted with a full house.

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“The biggest chapter turn was in Lubbock,” Arthur recalls. “We walked in the damn door and it was sold out. That’s when I went, ‘God almighty, this is working.’ People started paying attention after they saw that.”

“Bill of Sale” made it onto the band’s self-titled 2024 album, one which raised the group’s profile significantly. Once impressive shows — such as an afternoon set at the 2024 Jackalope Jamboree in Pendleton, Oregon, to an overflow crowd — became routine. This year, the group landed a slot at Bonnaroo as well as a pair of afterparties at Lollapalooza (one with Luke Combs and one with Wyatt Flores), plus runs with Dwight Yoakam and American Aquarium.

The Lollapalooza show, the group says, was apparently manifested by the guitarist Parkinson.

“We got the news we were gonna play Lollapalooza, and Donny was still asleep,” Sampson says. “I go upstairs, and I wake him up and say, ‘Donny! We’re gonna play Lollapalooza!’ and he opens his eyes and says, ‘I always knew I’d play Lollapalooza,’ and rolls back over and goes back to sleep.”

Such confidence did not extend across the group. Ahead of their show at Nashville’s Ascend Amphitheater, Arthur admitted he wasn’t “used to this type of shit.” Success, he said, felt “like I stole something.” In the wake of the Droptines’ self-titled record, the calls from record labels began. Major outfits like Warner Records felt too big, but when representatives from Big Loud Texas showed up to a bar show in College Station, the group found its match.

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Big Loud Texas was co-founded by Miranda Lambert and Jon Randall in 2023, and, a year later, the imprint named Brendon Anthony, then director of the Texas Music Office, as vice-president. Immediately, Anthony and Randall realized they both had the Droptines on their radars.

“Conner is a special songwriter and frontman,” Anthony tells Rolling Stone. “That comes across to me on the releases and onstage. His mind and interests and talents — beyond music as well — are so unique. The band behind him is tightly in tune and gets more locked in as they tour.”

The group announced their signing by the label at their Nashville show, which coincided with the release of the single “Take Too Much.” The song combines love at first sight, drugs, and death. Arthur’s initial delivery of, “I met a girl and it’s too soon to talk about her,” over heavy electric guitar, is a chilling tone-setter.

At the end of September, the Droptines released the follow-up “Calling All Cars,” a cover of a Mike McClure (The Great Divide) song about an alcohol-fueled fatal car crash and its impact on the first responders. The group will spend the rest of 2025 alternating between a headlining tour of theaters, along with more of those high-profile opening slots, including dates with the Turnpike Troubadours, plus another show with Whiskey Myers at the rockers’ annual Moon Crush festival in Miramar Beach, Florida, on Nov. 7.

For the Droptines, it’s all the result of their on-the-grind mentality.

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“Hard work is hard for a reason. I’m not mad at anybody who went from TikTok to a tour bus right away,” Arthur says, “but I feel like what we’re doing has a little bit more dignity.”

Josh Crutchmer is a journalist and author whose latest books, Never Say Never and Red Dirt Unplugged are available via Back Lounge Publishing.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Shudder To Think Embarking On Fall Reunion Tour
Music

Shudder To Think Ready First New Music Since 1998

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

With their first proper tour in 17 years now underway, the reunited Shudder to Think are also unveiling some new music for the first time since Bill Clinton’s second term as president.

Per an Instagram post, the group is selling a seven-inch vinyl single with the songs “Thirst Walk” and “Playback” at the shows, which conclude Nov. 11 in Los Angeles. They’re also making it available for pre-order through longtime record label partner Dischord for a Nov. 7 release. It’s Shudder to Think first new music since the soundtrack for the 1998 movie Velvet Goldmine.

Beloved for its influential, unique blend of post-hardcore, alternative rock and glam, Shudder to Think returned to the stage in March with two performances for friends and family at Los Angeles’ tiny Permanent Records and also played Riot Fest in Chicago in September. The group’s current lineup includes frontman Craig Wedren, guitarist Nathan Larson, drummer Adam Wade, guitarist Clint Walsh and bassist Jherek Bischoff.

After emerging on Dischord with classics such as Funeral at the Movies and Get Your Goat, Shudder to Think signed to Epic and in 1994 released one of the strangest major-label debut albums of all time, Pony Express Record. Following an uneven response to its 1997 follow-up, 50,000 B.C., the band split up. But as Wedren told SPIN earlier this year, there was always a plan to complement the live shows with new music.

“We’re trying to do this in a very organic way that works for everybody’s individual lives and collective health,” he said. “We’re going to keep working on new music together in a room and each in our separate corners. We have shared ProTools sessions where we record demos together, but then everybody can tweak ideas on their own. It’s a more multi-dimensional, accordion-esque creative process rather than just being in a room, working on the song, playing the songs live and recording the songs. The intention is to hopefully have a record done within a year from now — next summer or fall or something like that. If it winds up being a series of EPs or singles, it doesn’t really matter. We just want to make new Shudder to Think music together, and we’re documenting it all.”

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Muni Long Sued By Ex-Managers, Including Music Exec Chaka Zulu, For $600K In Unpaid Commissions
Celebrity News

Muni Long Sued By Ex-Managers, Including Music Exec Chaka Zulu, For $600K In Unpaid Commissions

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Muni Long Sued By Ex-Managers, Including Music Exec Chaka Zulu, For $600K In Unpaid Commissions

Muni Long is facing a lawsuit from her former managers, who claim she owes more than $600,000 in unpaid commissions.

Ebony Son Entertainment, run by industry veterans Chaka Zulu and Jeff Dixon, alleges the Grammy-winning singer stopped paying her agreed-upon 20% management fee in late 2024 despite earning millions through shows, deals, and collaborations. The pair, who helped manage Ludacris under their Disturbing Tha Peace label, say their work played a major role in Long’s Grammy success.

“Defendant Priscilla Renea Hamilton is publicly known as the musical artist ‘Muni Long’ but her less well-known performances are as a serial grifter,” the lawsuit states.

Long’s team fired back, calling the claims “unfounded” and insisting “no formal contract ever existed.” They allege Ebony Son’s team once “took possession of the artist’s phone and sought to have her involuntarily committed” during a lupus flare-up.

Zulu is an established businessman but he’s most widely known for a criminal case he was fighting. He previously faced a 2022 mrder charge stemming from an Atlanta sh*ting, but prosecutors later dropped the case, ruling he acted in self-defense.

What are your thoughts on this legal filing?


October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere Review: A Curveball Music Biopic
Music

Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere Review: A Curveball Music Biopic

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

After giving us the image of Bruce excitedly flipping through microfiche articles about Starkweather at the library, the film settles in as White patiently begins to put the song “Nebraska” together. Much is made throughout the movie about the pitch-black nature of the songs Springsteen was recording; at one point, Landau—who went from writing about Springsteen to managing him—tells his wife that the songs sound like they’ve been made by a guilty man. The scene from Badlands hangs over the songwriting like a dark cloud; Spacek’s bedroom in the scene looks quite a bit like the bedroom in which the young Springsteen hides from his own angry father.

His father, Dutch Springsteen, isn’t portrayed as the lightly comical foil of the dad in the “Growin’ Up” tape. In flashback scenes shot in black and white, Stephen Graham does a lot of sitting at the kitchen table smoking, a lot of sitting on a barstool smoking, and a lot of yelling at his family. At one point, he drunkenly forces Bruce into sparring practice in the middle of the night.

But the relationship between Bruce and his father is the film’s true dramatic crux, far more so than his romance with the invented Faye Romano, who exists primarily as a mirror for Springsteen’s many issues. Rather than reduce the father-son relationship to fodder for Nebraska’s songs or overall mood, Cooper positions it as the primary issue of Springsteen’s life at the time and the source of a depression that grows more and more crippling as the film unfolds. White is at his best when he gives himself over to psychic pain.

While some of Nebraska is drawn from Springsteen’s personal life, most of the album is populated by nervous criminals, broken-down factory workers, fatalists, and racket boys. “Mansion on the Hill” carries a whiff of the Hank Williams classic of the same name, but where the country standard uses the titular image as a symbol of a woman who was “alone with her pride” after rejecting the singer, Springsteen eyes the mansion like it’s Jay Gatsby’s house across the water, a promise of abundance that’s held out but never delivered. Despite his claim that he had “no conscious political agenda or social theme” while making the record, it’s impossible not to also hear it as a critique of the “city on a hill,” the avatar of American exceptionalism first coined by John Winthrop in 1630 and repeated ad nauseam by Ronald Reagan.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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Music Nation Launches in UAE to Collect Royalties with BMI Partnership
Music

Music Nation Launches in UAE to Collect Royalties with BMI Partnership

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

For years, the Middle East has been regarded as the next hot music market – for talent, streaming and even the live business. But few countries there have modern collective management organizations that can take in and pay out royalties for performing rights or mechanical rights on the publishing side, or neighboring rights when recordings are used on radio or television or in bars or restaurants. On Oct. 23, the start-up Music Nation, which has a partnership with BMI, will begin collecting for those rights in the United Arab Emirates, which includes Dubai and Abu Dhabi – and it will not be the only player in the market.  

Related

The UAE’s 2021 update of copyright law established public performance and neighboring rights in the country. Since then, the UAE has given permits to two collection organizations: Music Nation and the Emirates Music Rights Association (EMRA), which has the backing of some foreign societies, including SACEM, and plans to operate as a nonprofit. (A third company has been collecting royalties for several years.) Music Nation, which is technically a Rights Management Entity (RME), is a private company. It has a partnership with BMI, which gives it access to important U.S. repertoire, and it has a deal with SoundExchange to provide neighboring rights administration, so it can license both publishing and neighboring rights for the use of recordings.  

“With Music Nation’s technology and a leadership team that understands both the UAE’s cultural fabric and global music operations, we’re delivering a simple, transparent and modern licensing solution that easily licenses businesses and quickly pays creators,” said Music Nation founder and chairwoman Rasha Khalifa Al Mubarak.

The executive team includes CEO Amer M. Samhoun, COO James K. Petrie and chief creative officer Ali Dee.

Rasha Khalifa Al Mubarak

The launch of Music Nation is the first international partnership of its kind for BMI, after that organization shifted to operating as a for-profit company backed by private equity.

It also represents the opening of a potentially important new market, since the UAE has said it is making the music business and the creative industries an economic priority, and Saudi Arabia is moving in the same direction. The markets are different, however. Foreigners make up about 88% of the population in the UAE, with significant numbers coming from elsewhere in the Middle East, the U.S. and Europe, India and the Philippines. Anglo-American songs and recordings are said to be popular, which means that the country could generate significant royalties for ASCAP, BMI and the UK CMO PRS for Music.

There will be competition, however. As a nonprofit in the traditional European model, EMRA has been championed by SACEM. Since 2020, the UAE has also had another RME, ESMAA, a subsidiary of PopArabia, which is majority-owned by Reservoir Media and run by Hussain Yoosuf, who goes by the nickname “Spek.” Although ESMAA does not have a permit to operate as a collective management organization under the UAE copyright law, it has an Abu Dhabi business license for rights management that allows it to collect and distribute royalties. Right now, it also has more reciprocal agreements in place than its competitors, including with PRS, GEMA (the German CMO) and STIM (Sweden).

Both Music Nation and EMRA will presumably pursue deals with those entities, as well as others, and the market could get very competitive.


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October 24, 2025 0 comments
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