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(All photos by Anthony Batista. Styled by Louise Donegan. Custom stage clothes by Alexander Wang)
Music

Producer Mike Dean on Making Music That Stands the Test of Time

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

As I greet Mike Dean over a video call, it’s five days until the closing of the first round of voting for the 2026 Grammy Awards. His production work on the Weeknd’s Hurry Up Tomorrow is up for 10 categories. I ask him if there’s a particular category he’d like to win. “I’ve never won Song of the Year or Record of the Year…” he says, sitting in the kitchen of his California home, wearing a gray T-shirt, sipping a glass of ice water, and occasionally inhaling from his bong. “I’ve been nominated several times, and just never got the big category.” 

Dean’s not nervous, though. His life doesn’t depend on it, he says. After all, the producer, audio engineer, and multi-instrumentalist has been nominated for 19 Grammy Awards, winning seven of them, most recently in 2022 for Best Rap Song as one of the songwriters for Kanye West’s “Jail,” featuring Jay-Z. 

Over his more than 30-year career, Dean—who’s known for his synth-heavy production sound—has worked with 2Pac, Scarface, Madonna, Selena Gomez, Lana Del Rey, and countless others. He’s also released his own music, the six-album 4:20 series. 

Dean started out in music as a pianist and keyboard player, eventually getting into synthesizers in high school. 

Fresh after graduating in 1983, he started playing with Mexican-American singer Selena. “I’d be in the studio with her, and that’s whenever I started hitting record and overdubbing keyboards and producing,” he says. “That was the beginning of it, I guess, with Selena.”

Dean eventually got into hip-hop, working alongside artists such as Scarface, Geto Boys, and the Dogg Pound before forming a partnership with West as a producer, engineer, and multi-instrumentalist on almost all of his albums. Then there’s Travis Scott, with whom Dean has collaborated on all of his music since 2013.

But it’s Dean’s creative long-term team-up with the Weeknd, of course, that’s been keeping him busy lately, having just finished touring with him on his After Hours til Dawn stadium tour. Dean was not only the opener, but on some dates, he performed alongside Playboi Carti and Kaytranada.  

Now, as Grammy season rolls around, Dean has solidified his status as a legend in the field, with way too many accomplishments to mention here. In our brief chat, we only scrape the surface of all that he’s done throughout his career, how he approaches producing, and how he wants to be remembered.

How do you approach sound design? Do you approach it differently now than when you did back in the ’90s?

Not so much, really. Just still trying not to overproduce and make enough space for every instrument that’s there, instead of putting too many things and then having to fight it in the mix to make it all work. It’s much easier with computers instead of back then, [when] we were using drum machines and tape and SMPTE time code, locking things up. It was a lot harder to get into making beats. You couldn’t just go out and buy loops and figure out with YouTube how to make beats. Back in the day, you’d buy an MPC drum machine, you had this thing with 16 sounds in it that sucked, and you had to find sounds and put them in there and make songs, you know? It’s a different era.

You’ve said before that you “let the synths talk.” What does that mean to you creatively?

You’re always turning knobs trying to find something new or different. And then you’ll have those happy accidents. That’s where all the cool stuff happens. I might play a keyboard part on one keyboard and then assign it to another keyboard, and it does something crazy.

How much of your process is about technical perfection versus emotional instinct? 

It’s a natural balance, a yin-yang type of thing…half technical experience, from doing the same thing over and over and seeing when you’re going down bad paths and stuff, and half just emotional flow state, as people are starting to call it. 

Like getting in the zone?

Yeah, stream of consciousness.

You’ve worked in a lot of different genres. What do you think ties all of your work together sonically? 

My chord voicing and leading notes. I choose to put chords together, and what note goes on top, that turns into what inspires the singer or the rapper.

You’ve worked with Kanye, Travis Scott, The Weeknd, Beyoncé, so many major artists. What do you think makes a collaboration truly work?

Patience and trust. They have to trust you to let you do your thing, which everybody does now. Earlier on, I had to push more to get my ideas across. Now, I just put too many ideas and let the artists pick through it a lot of times, let them thin it out, sit with me, and arrange stuff.

Is it a back-and-forth type thing, where you’ll let them listen and then they come back with feedback? 

Beyoncé is a good example of that. It was her Renaissance album I worked on. I did all those songs. They sent me the songs to work on, and I just sent them the fuck out. I just played synths all over them, and then sent it back to her and she’d sit with her engineer and arrange what I played and where she wanted it. I never heard it again until it came out. That’s one work state that I don’t do very often, but I do enjoy it.

How do you balance contributing to an artist’s vision while keeping your own creative identity? Is that something that you even think about?

Not really. It just happens. I don’t really need a producer tag. I kind of have a sound people can feel, and it’s me. Or hopefully, they can. Sometimes you get into a flow state with the artist where that’s like the perfect situation. Working with Abel [The Weeknd] on this last album, towards the end of the album, me and him were just in the studio, just locked in, just finalizing stuff. And that’s when it gets exciting to me. It’s when you have 72 hours to turn in and you have 144 hours of work to do, and you just do it. 

You’re deadline driven. 

Yeah, I like a deadline. That’s the only way I got my 4:25 album done. I knew I wanted to drop it around 4/20 this year, and I just fucked around and fucked around and didn’t start it until 4/10, you know what I mean? I literally did it in 11 days. And then the album came out really, really good. It’s really cohesive because it’s made in such a short time period.

You’ve mentored a lot of younger producers. What’s the biggest mistake you see up-and-comers make?

Business. I think business mistakes…not standing up for themselves. It’s hard. I know some of the DSPs [digital service providers] are changing. It’s hard to get the credits all right, which is very important to up-and-coming producers. I know some of the DSPs, I won’t mention any names, but they’re working on updating their stuff. I’m kind of working with them. I hope to work with them more and get where everybody’s recognized that works on this music, behind the scenes. You used to get recognition during physical projects because it was all printed out. Now, they only put certain credits online. It’s not really fair. Anyway, that’s my preaching for that.

You’ve had a hand in some of the most influential albums in the past three decades. Do you think about your legacy at all? 

I think about it. Like I was thinking, what do I have left to prove? I can make a good record. Now I’m kind of doing what I want to do, not so driven by trying to get so many projects out. I used to try to do six albums a year or something. Now, I did two albums last year. Or one really. I did Abel’s album and then toured for four months, working on a few things I can’t talk about yet.

When you look back on your catalog, what moment feels like the biggest creative breakthrough for you?

Probably 2011, 2012, whenever I really made the move from being more of a mixer-engineer, to being a producer. I mean, I was a producer in the ’90s. All the beats we did by ourselves. We didn’t have producers. And then with Kanye, I was just mixing for the first two albums, and then the next two albums is where I kind of came into my own, adding synths and guitar solos. My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy uses that growth, you know? 

You’ve said before that you can see sound visually. Can you describe what that looks like when you’re in a session?

It’s kind of like a real-time analyzer (RTA), when you see the frequencies. Before there were RTAs, I would always just kind of see it like that. I’d stare between the speakers and see a mountain of low frequency over here and high, you know? George Augspurger, the guy who designed most of the studios in California and made the famous speakers, he taught me how to tune rooms and he always said that doing music in a room is like pouring water from a pitcher into a glass. If you pour it too fast or pour too much, it just splashes everywhere. You want to pour it in smoothly. And that’s the way I look at sound, too, like water flowing. Too much of one frequency and it shakes everything up. You’ve got to balance everything.

What’s the most misunderstood part of being a producer? 

That it’s really easy and you just hang out and smoke weed and listen to music real loud. Yeah, it’s a little more than that. 

How do you define success at this point in your career?

I don’t know…just helping more people come up in the business. To have more people that I work with be successful. That’s important to me. And just continuing to push the envelope with sounds and technology.

Do you feel like you still have anything to prove? 

I mean, nothing to prove, but I want to keep on the forefront of everything, just keep in tune with the youth and what they’re doing.

I want to be remembered like all the greats one day. In 200 years, hopefully people are still talking about Mike Dean’s music, you know? How did he make so much music in his lifetime?

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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JISOO & ZAYN's 'Eyes Closed' Voted Favorite New Music This Week
Music

JISOO & ZAYN’s ‘Eyes Closed’ Voted Favorite New Music This Week

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

“Eyes Closed,” the new single from JISOO and Zayn Malik, tops this week’s fan-voted music poll.

Music fans voted in a poll published Friday (Oct. 10) on Billboard, choosing the pair’s duet as their favorite new release.

“Eyes Closed” made its grand entrance during a week that also saw new releases from Khalid; Gorillaz feat. Trueno and Proof; Alemeda and Doechii; HAIM and Bon Iver and more.

Bringing together a pair of mega pop stars — a former member of One Direction plus one-fourth of BLACKPINK — “Eyes Closed” blends two recognizable voices in one emotional ballad. Fans of both both flooded in to vote in this week’s poll, and their support led the singers to a landslide victory.

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“Time is standing still and I don’t wanna leave your lips/ Tracing my body with your fingertips,” JISOO begins on the track, to which Malik sings back, “I know what you’re feeling and I know you wanna say it/ I do too but we gotta be patient.”

“‘Cause someone like me/ And someone like you/ Really shouldn’t work, yeah, the history is proof/ Damned if I don’t/ Damned if I do,” they sing through a chorus about opening their hearts to new love. “Oh, we should fall in love with our eyes closed/ Better if we keep it where we don’t know/ The beds we’ve been in/ The names and the faces of who we were with.”

Among the new releases trailing behind “Eyes Closed” on the poll: Khalid’s After the Sun Goes Down, Gorillaz featuring Trueno and Proof’s “The Manifesto,” Alemeda and Doechii’s “Beat a B!tch Up,” HAIM and Bon Iver’s “Tie You Down” and A Boogie Wit da Hoodie’s “Part of Me.”

See the final results of this week’s poll below.

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October 13, 2025 0 comments
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What’s the future of AI and music? Things may be starting to become clear - National
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What’s the future of AI and music? Things may be starting to become clear – National

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Every September, leading up to the Formula One race, Singapore hosts a conference called All That Matters. Thinkers, creators, and entrepreneurs from all over Asia gather to talk about the latest developments in sports, tech, marketing, gaming and music. I try to go every year, because in many aspects, Asia is already living in the future. (Actually, that’s incorrect. They’re living in the present; it’s parts of the West that are clinging to the past. But I digress.)

Artificial intelligence was front and centre for many of the sessions, especially those dealing with music. There was much discussion about how AI will factor into things like music creation, music distribution and copyright. I took notes.

The internet is changing again

The internet we’ve been used to is once again changing rapidly. The browser wars are back, too, thanks to searches turbocharged by AI. I’ve been trying out Comet, a brand-new browser from the people behind the AI program Perplexity. It still has some rough edges, but I can see myself liking it better and using it more than Google. Then again, Google has its own AI in the form of Gemini, which has been going up against Microsoft’s Co-Pilot.

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How AI assisted The Beatles and the impact it has on the music industry


Music-creating AI programs are about to have a moment

The last quarter century has been about changes in consumption: CDs to MP3s to piracy to streaming, with a detour back into vinyl. The next decade will see major shifts in creation. Ignore and disparage that all you want, but it’s going to happen.

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When it comes to artificial music creation, the big players are Suno and Anthropic, two generative AI programs that keep getting better when it comes to making music based on user prompts. Although both are deep in litigation with rightsholders and labels, expect licensing deals to be hammered out with the major labels sooner rather than later. This means more human-created music will be used to feed the models behind AI programs. By this time next year, these programs will be able to analyze trillions of data points when responding to prompts. More data points means (theoretically) more realistic and — this is key — emotional music. Predictions are that this will set off a new era for the recorded music industry.

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One way that will happen is a simplification of user interfaces. One of the biggest problems with any computer program is learning how to use it. Today, the thinking is the less user interface (UI), the better. We’re approaching a situation where the programs will say, “Just tell me what to do and I’ll do it by pulling all the tools that exist in the cloud.” Already, we have programs that will return produced music if you just hum an idea into it.

But what about artists?


The bulls outweighed the bears on this one. Here’s how AI might benefit musicians very soon.

  • With AI, fans will have a chance to collaborate more directly with artists, contributing directly to intellectual property. They’ll be involved in “world-building,” the creation and execution of an artist’s vision, which might lead to monetization for fans. In other words, fans will co-create new material with their favourite musicians. Up until now, fans have invested a lot of money in artists. New tech will allow artists to give something back to the fans.
  • Artists should — should! — benefit from the negotiations between labels and publishers and generative AI companies. This will be a new form of licensing that could — could! — be more lucrative and longer-lasting than the revenue derived from streaming.
  • On that note, indie and emerging artists may be the ones to benefit the most.
  • The music being fed into these models is from all over the world. Artists who learn to use AI as a music creation tool will have access to many, many more influences than they do today. They’ll all be stored in the AI models, waiting to be used.
  • AI will allow the number of people who create music to explode even further. In Mozart’s day, perhaps 50,000 people were actively and regularly making music. Estimates today say the number is over 100 million. With AI, even more people will be able to. Not all of it will be good or deserve to be heard, but new stars will be minted.
  • The cost of making music will drop further, even approaching zero.
  • And what about this: Could the rise of AI music accelerate and increase the value of music created by humans?

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Awfully rosy. What about the downsides?

Whenever any kind of promising technology comes along, there has always been a segment of humanity that will drag it down to its lowest common denominator. (Hello, social media!) There will also be knock-on effects. For example, if generative AI programs blow up the way they’re expected to, what happens to real-life musical instruments and the people who make them? What happens to traditional recording studios and the people who staff and equip them? Will people of the future bother to learn to play a traditional instrument by putting in 10,000 hours of practice?

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There’s more. How will copyright be divided up? What about unintentional duplication, imitation or derivations of existing works? Is AI training fair use under current law? What about data privacy?

When music starts flooding out — maybe billions of new works a year — how will anyone ever discover new music? How will any artist of the future have a hope of being found? If we have billions of new songs every year thanks to AI, is it possible that highly average music will dominate the future? What happens 20 to 50 years from now when AI is indistinguishable from human intelligence?

And what about the current record label system? Is it ethical to sign an AI artist to a recording contract? (SPOILER: It’s already happening. Heard of Xania Monet yet?)

Everyone at the conference agreed that there are still more questions than answers when it comes to AI and music. But they also agree that this space is moving fast. Ignore it at your peril.

 

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October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Timbaland Drops AI Artist TaTa Taktumi's Music Video "Glitch x Pulse"
Music

Timbaland Drops AI Artist TaTa Taktumi’s Music Video “Glitch x Pulse”

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Timbaland has risen to fame for his ability to be a forethinker and create music that’s consistently ahead of the times. He’s sticking to his ways by being one of the biggest advocates of using artificial intelligence in music, and now, he’s officially debuted the first release from his AI artist, TaTa Taktumi.

The new single “Glitch x Pulse” arrived on Friday (Oct. 10) paired with a futuristic music video filled with dancing robots, a spaceship, and a routine by popular dance crew Jabbawockeez. The beat was produced by Timbaland, who also executive produced the video via his AI entertainment company, Stage Zero.

“I pulled up in the spaceship, make a b**ch crease her facelift/ Talk my sh*t on vibrations, 808 conversations/ One on one’s on some greatness, public miseducation, all I read now is statements,” TaTa raps with intentional “glitches” in between bars. Watch below.

The release was met with mixed reactions from his fans. One person commented on Instagram about the perceived lack of certain critical factors, writing, “Where’s the voice inflection? The emotion? The delivery?” as someone else echoed, “This sounds so soulless.” Another top comment on IG read, “I hate that every time I see a Timbo video now my first thought is ‘Is this AI?’”

However, longtime friend and fellow producer Swizz Beatz was supportive by commenting a series of fire emojis. Co-founder of Jabbawockeez insisted everyone else was just “behind” in terms of embracing AI, writing, “Too new for people. Let them catch up. This is [fire].”

The “Apologize” creator’s enthusiasm for AI-generated music has been met with plenty of resistance. He previously explained the motive behind creating Stage Zero and signing TaTa, and he’s enthusiastic about her being the “first icon” of “A-Pop.”

“I’m not just producing tracks anymore,” Timbaland said in a statement to Billboard back in June. “I’m producing systems, stories, and stars from scratch. [TaTa] is not an avatar. She is not a character. TaTa is a living, learning, autonomous music artist built with AI. TaTa is the start of something bigger. She’s the first artist of a new generation. A-Pop is the next cultural evolution, and TaTa is its first icon.”⁠

He has also said he thinks AI-generated music and artists have “more soul” right now than new artists.

“You could feel the pressure of the dividedness, and I hate that. This whole election divided us,” the “Say Something” producer said on The Inner Court back in March. “What I mean by that is it divided the music. The music sounds bland, it sounds boring—it lacks excitement. While we frequently discuss AI, I believe it’s the only entity that embodies a genuine soul right now. It allows for the expression of true feelings, resulting in it coming out beautiful.”

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Judge Throws Out Drake’s “Not Like Us” Defamation Lawsuit Against Universal Music Group
Music

Judge Throws Out Drake’s “Not Like Us” Defamation Lawsuit Against Universal Music Group

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Drake’s federal lawsuit against his own record label, Universal Music Group (UMG), for their involvement promoting Kendrick Lamar’s diss track “Not Like Us” is officially over after a federal judge threw it out on Thursday (October 9), reports the Associated Press. In her ruling, Judge Jeannette A. Vargas stated that the song is a series of opinions, not defamatory allegations, and listeners were aware of such.

“Although the accusation that Plaintiff is a pedophile is certainly a serious one, the broader context of a heated rap battle, with incendiary language and offensive accusations hurled by both participants, would not incline the reasonable listener to believe that ‘Not Like Us’ imparts verifiable facts about Plaintiff,” wrote Judge Vargas.

In the lawsuit, Drake also claimed the popularity of “Not Like Us” was to blame for attempted break-ins to his Toronto residence and a security guard getting shot. The single artwork depicts an aerial view of his mansion from Google Maps and overlaid with “more than a dozen sex offender markers,” which Judge Vargas said were “obviously exaggerated and doctored.” She added, “No reasonable person would view the image and believe that in fact law enforcement had designated thirteen residents in Drake’s home as sex offenders.”

After the lawsuit was thrown out yesterday, Drake’s legal team released a statement, saying, “We intend to appeal today’s ruling, and we look forward to the Court of Appeals reviewing it.”

UMG shared their own update following the ruling, stating: “From the outset, this suit was an affront to all artists and their creative expression and never should have seen the light of day. We’re pleased with the court’s dismissal and look forward to continuing our work successfully promoting Drake’s music and investing in his career.”

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Clairo, Lucy Dacus, Nao, More Join No Music for Genocide Boycott
Music

Clairo, Lucy Dacus, Nao, More Join No Music for Genocide Boycott

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

On Oct. 10, the No Music for Genocide collective announced that Clairo, Lucy Dacus, Nao, and more have joined their ranks. Last month, the decentralized organization kicked off a boycott movement protesting what a United Nations commission and other organizations have deemed Israel’s genocide against Palestinians in Gaza in their war with Hamas following the attacks of Oct. 7, 2023. The No Music for Genocide boycott unites artists, labels, and music rights-holders in geo-blocking their music from Israel. Wolf Alice, Of Monsters and Men, Nilüfer Yanya, and Jorja Smith’s label Famm were also among new participants announced on Oct. 10 the same day a new ceasefire agreement took effect. 

A representative for No Music for Genocide told Rolling Stone, “We’re hopeful that this new ceasefire will put an end to the worst of the worst, if Israel doesn’t violate it, but our urgency remains unchanged. The ‘peace plan,’ imposed on Palestinians under the threat of continued genocide, offers no guarantees or credible paths for a full Israeli withdrawal from Gaza; the end of Israeli apartheid and occupation; Palestinian rights to self-determination, self-governance, and the return of refugees; nor holding Israeli war criminals accountable.” The groups says over a 1,000 artists and labels have joined their boycott. According to Reuters, this first phase of the Trump administration’s plan to end the war gives Israeli troops 24 hours to pull from urban areas of Gaza, although they will still hold more than half of the area.

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No Music for Genocide launched on Sep. 17 with artists such as Faye Webster, Arca, MIKE, Japanese Breakfast, and redveil, participating. On Oct. 3, it announced that acts like Hayley Williams, Marina, Idles, Muna, Obongjayar, and many more joined as well. According to the group, Williams and Paramore — who had joined the boycott but found that their labels Atlantic Records and Warner Music Group overrode their geo-block in what they called a glitch — have gotten most of their music removed from streaming services in Israel as well. 

“Many of our peers have felt, like ourselves, unsure how to use music in this moment,” organizers told Rolling Stone in September, citing their aims to “help reject political repression, shift public opinion toward justice, and refuse the art-washing and normalization of any company or nation that commits crimes against humanity.” They added that, “Our first goal with No Music For Genocide is to inspire others to reclaim their agency and direct their influence toward a tangible act.”

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Taylor Momsen of the Pretty Reckless performs during AC/DC's Power Up Tour at Nissan Stadium on May 21, 2025 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Credit: Tibrina Hobson/Getty Images)
Music

Magic, Music, and Movies: Taylor Momsen Is Seeing Things ‘in a New Light’

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Taylor Momsen sits at a desk in her New York City apartment, the place she’s called home since she was 12, a sign hangs just beyond her right shoulder: “love” written in cursive pink neon. “Welcome to my home,” she says, fresh faced and smiling, a natural beauty in black wide-rimmed glasses. In August, her band the Pretty Reckless released their newest single “For I Am Death,” and in the video Taylor personifies death itself, morphing into a slithering Middle-earth-esque manifestation, slick in all-over black body makeup.

When Taylor and I talked last year for the 10th anniversary of Going to Hell, we discussed the original art applied to her back for the iconic album cover. “There’s something very freeing and pure about being as vulnerable and as exposed as possible,” she says, because actual nudity is often a non-option. “I use paint in different forms to cover up. I think that’s why it’s a recurring theme as we keep making music.”

The paradox of power and vulnerability may just define Taylor in many ways. On October 10th, she’s re-releasing the sweet song she sang as Cindy Lou Who for 2000’s How the Grinch Stole Christmas, “Where Are You Christmas?.” The fact that it’s the film’s silver anniversary is a complete coincidence, but rather a result of—in addition to finally acquiescing to pleading fans—a storied journey that brought her to revisiting and embracing her past. 

Taylor with Jim Carrey in a scene from ‘How The Grinch Stole Christmas,’ 2000. (Credit: Universal/Getty Images)

While Jim Carrey played the title character, it was 6-year-old Taylor, with a wigged blonde basilica on her head, who is the beating heart of the film. The Grinch is highly stylized and vividly fantastic, but little Taylor, who’d started acting when she was 2, shines with genuine hope and fortitude, purity and joy. 

In a Grinch promo interview for WFAA, Taylor, who’d tuned 7 by the time the film was released, stated: “I love fantasy no matter what story it is.” 

“I stand by that,” Taylor says, not recalling the interview. “I stand by that statement today. It’s just proof that you never really change as a person. You’re born the way you are, and you grow and you evolve, but you’re that same person for the rest of your life. At least that’s true with me. I think you’re born with certain instincts and values. I guess values are taught, but inherently, you’re born with some kind of center. I think that’s the key to life. 

“If you can manage to not lose that as you get older, that’s everything. Especially as a musician, as an artist, I spend a lot of time trying to maintain my childlike mind to a degree, because it’s so important and so necessary for writing, and yet still be an adult with responsibilities and bills and all the things that come with being a grown-up. I think that’s the key. I think that’s the key that everyone forgets. You’ve got to remember who you were as a kid, and if you can hold on to that, you’ll always be good.”

Despite audience requests, she resisted the idea of reviving “Where Are You Christmas?” since starting the Pretty Reckless at 14; the initiative, for her, had to come with a purpose. It wasn’t until 2020, going through a time she describes as “a very difficult period…with a lot of loss. COVID had just hit. We were in lockdown, and it’s the holidays again.” And she was with her band, hanging out, and the requests for a rock version of the song she sang 20 years earlier kept coming in. So, they (probably, somewhat begrudgingly) played through the song. “By the end of [“Where Are You Christmas?], these four miserable, jaded, pissed-off, depressed people had giant grins on our faces. Just undeniable, couldn’t help it, huge smiles, laughing, having the best time. We all turned to each other and we went, ‘Was that just great? I think that was just magic. I think there was something really special about what just happened, and I think we have to do this now.’ That was the jumping-off point with COVID, of going back to my childhood and realizing, after having been through such a hard time, wanting things to be simple again and wanting things to be joyful. This song and this memory of filming this movie and being a part of this, I never had a tainted memory about it. The Grinch was something that I hold very dearly and have very fond memories of.” 

The experience inspired Taylor to write an entire Christmas record. “It’s this little coming-of-age story and this full circle moment of me accepting my past and embracing it and realizing that you never really do change, with the intent of just wanting to purely spread joy to everyone. It’s a very hard time for everyone right now if we’re being real about it, and I just wanted to bring happiness. I wanted to bring joy to the world, to quote another Christmas song.”

The new version of “Where Are You Christmas?” “morphs” childhood Taylor’s original vocals into her own now, a concept she says exemplifies the magic of one’s childhood self. “To be a part of something that is so universally loved feels surreal, now, 25 years later, and also has been very cool. I wanted to continue that joy and bring fresh life to it from my own perspective as a grown-up Cindy Lou Who.”

But music, she says, was always her everything—not acting—knowing from a very young age she wanted to write songs, something she did while filming The Grinch. (Young Taylor was clearly an avid animal lover, as one song was about her father’s dead dog, and another was called “Rescue a Pet.”) With all the fluctuation from her early childhood acting career, songwriting provided an all-important grounding. “Writing was this place where I could truly be me without any affect, without having to be this version of me, or this version of me. It was the purest form of myself because it wasn’t for anyone. It was just for myself, and it still remains that. My notebook was my best friend.”

(Credit: Steph Gomez)

The Grinch also provided Taylor with her first experience in a professional recording studio, with none other than legendary film composer James Horner (Titanic, Braveheart). The entire experience, she says, changed her life. “I left that experience going, ‘That’s what I want to do.’ That was magic. That was everything. There’s a really great photo of me, holding a stuffed animal, sitting at the console with my chin on my fist listening to the song with James Horner sitting next to me. Fast forward years later, there’s another photo of me and our producer, Kato, sitting at the console, and I’m doing the exact same thing. It’s a mirrored image, except I’m now 20-something. It just reassured me that all my crazy decisions in life of quitting a career [in acting] and pivoting and joining a rock band to go on the road and grind it out, and all those things, that was my path. That was the path that I always wanted. I fought for it and went for it, and now I’m doing that.” 

There’s a scene in The Grinch where little Cindy Lou Who is walking up a mountain to the Grinch’s nefarious lair. Director Ron Howard later told her the story. “It was a big mountain. I actually am walking up the mountain, so it was a very long shoot, but there was no dialogue or anything. I was miked. I shoot the scene. I come down, and everyone’s laughing, and I don’t understand why everyone’s laughing.

“I’m going, ‘Why is everyone laughing? What’s so funny?’ Turns out I was humming the entire time up the mountain, not knowing it because I was always singing. I was always humming. I was always writing songs. I always had music in me, which I feel very blessed about because it’s just something that came really naturally to me.” 

Taylor in a scene from ‘The Grinch.’ (Credit: Getty Images)

Today, she says she’s in a good place, well-earned after some dark and difficult years, the same that inspired the Pretty Reckless’s fourth studio album, 2021’s Death by Rock and Roll. “Living in that space, I had to make a very conscious decision at one point of I was on a very bad path, and I was going to die. I had to choose if I was going to live or die, and I made a very conscious decision to move forward.”

That was the beginning of Taylor looking back at her childhood in an attempt to rediscover her true self. “When I lost some of those people, I couldn’t listen to music anymore. It brought me so much pain I couldn’t deal. To lose an outlet like that, where this music has been such a solace for me, to not have that anymore was terrifying. I felt like I really lost myself.” She says she began almost in chronological succession identifying and reintroducing the things that brought her joy in her early years, starting with the first band she fell in love with: the Beatles. 

And part of this process included going back into her past film and TV work, “accepting them and seeing them in a new light.” 

She says she’s comfortable now, stronger. 

“I was always very me, but…you go through phases. I had my rebellious youth, where I was extra angsty. I wanted to be something and was fighting for that, and now I just kind of am, and that’s just a really nice place to be. I just feel very comfortable in my own skin and all aspects of myself, and I’m not living in a place where I’m shutting off any part of me. I’m firing on all cylinders, and it’s good.

“I’m still that little girl humming, walking up the mountain. I really am.”

October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Neil Young to Remove Music From Amazon as Singer Slams Jeff Bezos
Music

Neil Young to Remove Music From Amazon as Singer Slams Jeff Bezos

by jummy84 October 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Neil Young is pulling his music from Amazon, the legendary singer-songwriter revealed in a blog post published on his personal website on Wednesday (Oct. 8).

In an apparent protest against the Trump administration, Young wrote, “The time is here. FORGET AMAZON,” under a header that includes the words, “BEZOS SUPPORTS THIS GOVERNMENT,” a reference to Amazon founder Jeff Bezos.

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“Soon my music will not be there,” Young continued of Amazon. “It is easy to buy local. Support your community. Go to the local store. Don’t go back to the big corporations who have sold out America.”

The revelation came in a post that included a larger call by Young for people to discontinue shopping at Amazon and the upscale grocery chain Whole Foods, which the online retail giant acquired in 2017. He also seemed to call for a boycott of Facebook, writing “FORGET FACEBOOK” under a logo of the social media platform’s parent company, Meta. In August, Young left Facebook after a Reuters report claimed Meta had allowed AI chatbots to communicate with minors using “romantic or sensual” language.

“We all have to give up something to save America from the Corporate Control Age it is entering,” Young continued. “They need you to buy from them. Don’t.”

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Neil Young and the Chrome Hearts, "Big Crime"

The singer also referenced the current shutdown of the U.S. government, writing, “They shut down our government your income your safety your family’s health security. Take America Back together, stop buying from the big corporations support local business. Do the right thing. Show who you are.”

Young has been openly critical of President Trump over the years. Last month, he released the song “Big Crime” with his band Chrome Hearts that railed against recent actions by the president — who is never mentioned by name — with lyrics like, “No more money to the fascists/ The billionaire fascists/ Time to blackout the system/ No more great again.”

Young’s music remained available on Amazon Music at the time of publishing. Representatives for Amazon Music and Young’s label, Warner Music/Reprise, did not immediately return requests for comment.

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Neil Young performs onstage at Light Up the Blues 7 Concert Celebrating Autism Speaks' 20th Anniversary at The Greek Theatre on April 26, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

This isn’t the first time Young has boycotted a digital music provider. In January 2022, the star pulled his catalog from Spotify over its lucrative deal with Joe Rogan, through which it retained exclusive rights to, but not ownership of, the host’s wildly popular Joe Rogan Experience podcast. In a post on his website at the time, Young accused Rogan of spreading “misinformation” about the COVID vaccine on the podcast. “They can have Rogan or Young. Not both,” he wrote.

Young’s stance inspired several other artists to remove their catalogs from the service, including Joni Mitchell and Young’s Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young bandmates David Crosby, Graham Nash and Stephen Stills. Young restored his music to the streaming giant in March 2024 following the expiration of its exclusive deal with Rogan. The previous September, Billboard estimated that Young’s decision to remove his catalog from Spotify cost him roughly $300,000 in lost recorded music and publishing royalties up to that point.

More recently, artists including Massive Attack, King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard, Deerhoof and Sylvan Esso have pulled their catalogs from Spotify over founder Daniel Ek‘s reported $1 billion investment into defense company Helsing, which sells AI software to inform military decisions.

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October 11, 2025 0 comments
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Neil Young Pulling Music from Amazon, Calls for Boycott: "Support Your Community"
Music

Neil Young Pulling Music from Amazon, Calls for Boycott: “Support Your Community”

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Neil Young has had enough of Amazon.

The classic rocker has announced that he’ll be pulling his music from the massive online retailer, and is calling for a boycott of the Jeff Bezos-founded company.

“FORGET AMAZON AND WHOLE FOODS. FORGET FACEBOOK. “BUY LOCAL. BUY DIRECT,” reads his post on the Neil Young Archives website. “BEZOS SUPPORTS THIS GOVERNMENT. IT DOES NOT SUPPORT YOU OR ME.”

Young’s message continues:

“The time is here.
FORGET AMAZON.
Soon my music will not be there. It is easy to buy local. Support your community.
Go to the local store.
Don’t go back to the big corporations who have sold out America.
We all have to give up something to save America from the Corporate Control Age it is entering.
They need you to buy from them.
Don’t.
They shut down our government
your income
your safety
your family’s health security.
Take America Back
together, stop buying from the
big corporations
support local business.
Do the right thing. Show who you are.”

It has yet to be revealed if Young is just pulling his music from the Amazon Music streaming platform, or if he’ll be removing his physical products from the store as well.

Of course, this isn’t the first time Young has pulled his music from a platform. It was back in 2022 when he demanded that his music be removed from Spotify over misinformation about vaccines spread on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast. Just last year, he announced his unenthusiastic return to the streaming platform after Rogan’s podcast was no longer exclusive to Spotify.

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In regard to Facebook, it was in August of this year when Young ceased all activities on his official Facebook page in response to a Reuters report revealing that Meta’s AI chatbots have been permitted to have “romantic or sensual” conversations with minors.

His rage against the current administration was on full display last month with the official release of the new song, “Big Crime,” which calls out Donald Trump for (among other things) “fascist crimes,” adding the declaration, “Don’t want soldiers on our streets.”

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Neil Young pulling discography from Amazon Music
Music

Neil Young pulling discography from Amazon Music

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Neil Young has announced that he is removing his discography from Amazon Music – find out more below.

  • READ MORE: Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025: a no frills set that proves that sometimes, the old ways are the best

In January 2022, Neil Young announced that he would be removing his music from Spotify after episodes of Joe Rogan’s controversial podcast spread misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccines. At the time, Joe Rogan’s podcast was signed exclusively to Spotify.

He reluctantly returned to the streaming platform in 2024 after Apple Music and Amazon picked up the podcast. Young said at the time: “Spotify, the #1 streaming of low res music in the world – Spotify where you get less quality than we made, will now be home of my music again.”

“My decision comes as music services Apple and Amazon have started serving the same disinformation podcast features I opposed at Spotify. I cannot just leave Apple and Amazon, like I did with Spotify, because my music would have very little streaming outlet to music lovers at all.”

Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Derek Bremner for NME

Now, however, Young has announced that his music will be leaving Amazon “soon”. He wrote in a new entry on his Neil Young Archives blog: “The time is here. FORGET AMAZON. Soon my music will not be there. It is easy to buy local. Support your community. Go to the local store. Don’t go back to the big corporations who have sold out America.”

He then went on to urge his fans to boycott corporations like Amazon, Meta – who owns Facebook and Instagram – and Whole Foods. Young deactivated his Facebook and Instagram accounts over Meta’s reported “unconscionable use of chatbots with children” earlier this year.

Young wrote of his boycott plea: “We all have to give up something to save America from the Corporate Control Age it is entering. They need you to buy from them. Don’t. They shut down our government, your income, your safety, your family’s health security. Take America back together, stop buying from the big corporations. Support local business. Do the right thing. Show who you are.”

He also quit X/Twitter in late 2023 after Elon Musk appeared to endorse an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory. On his website, he wrote: “We are stopping all use of X we can control. For reasons that should be obvious to the richest man on Earth, we are taking this action against his company.”

Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025, photo by Derek Bremner
Neil Young live at Glastonbury 2025. Credit: Derek Bremner for NME

Earlier this summer, Neil Young and The Chrome Hearts headlined Glastonbury 2025 and topped the bill at BST Hyde Park in London. They also played a concert at Malahide Castle in Dublin, among numerous other European dates.

In a four-star review of Young’s return to the Pyramid Stage at Glasto, NME described the performance as “a headline set that proves that sometimes, there’s still power to be found in an old-school approach”.

“It is, in short, the definition of no frills,” it read. “It’s testament to the power of Young’s songwriting, then, just how brilliantly it all works, how little the momentum drops.”

Young released his first studio album with the Chrome Hearts, ‘Talkin To The Trees’, in June.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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