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South Park's Trey Parker Says "Politics Became Pop Culture"
Music

South Park’s Trey Parker Says “Politics Became Pop Culture”

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

This season, South Park has drawn attention for repeatedly targeting President Donald Trump and his administration. In an interview with The New York Times, however, co-creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker clarified that this wasn’t intentional, but rather a byproduct of the times.

“It’s not that we got all political,” Parker said. “It’s that politics became pop culture.” Stone added that they were also “attracted to” the idea that speaking out against the administration had become “taboo.”

According to the creative duo, they didn’t decide to take on the US president until after their deal with Paramount was delayed by a merger between Paramount and Skydance that required the Trump administration’s approval.

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“We just had to show our independence somehow,” Stone explained. Parker added that the Trump parody was meant to be a one-off: “We basically start with a song and we don’t know where the album’s going to take us.”

And while Stone and Parker have frequently discussed returning to their regular style of programming, they realized there is “no getting away” from MAGA.

“It’s like the government is just in your face everywhere you look,” Parker said. “Whether it’s the actual government or whether it is all the podcasters and the TikToks and the YouTubes and all of that, and it’s just all political and political because it’s more than political. It’s pop culture.”

The ratings success likely factored into their decision-making as well, with viewership over the past four months more than doubling South Park’s previous season in 2023.

According to Stone, they haven’t gotten any pushback from Skydance founder David Ellison, who took over as chairman and CEO of Paramount after the two companies merged in August. A recent Variety report noted that Ellison has helped push Paramount toward cultivating closer ties with the Trump administration.

Parker also emphasized that he and Stone are still “down-the-middle guys,” unafraid to satirize both sides of the political spectrum. “Any extremists of any kind we make fun of. We did it for years with the woke thing. That was hilarious to us. And this is hilarious to us.”

For more on South Park, read our own Jonah Krueger’s essay on how the show finally got Gen Z to take notice. Plus, read our review of the first two episodes of Season 28 (Season 27 ran just five episodes): “Twisted Christian” and Halloween special “The Woman in the Hat.”

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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White Stripes Celebrated by Olivia Rodrigo, Iggy Pop at Rock Hall
Music

White Stripes Celebrated by Olivia Rodrigo, Iggy Pop at Rock Hall

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s official: The White Stripes are in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. The induction took place on Saturday in Los Angeles, with Jack and Meg White honored for their indelible, decade-long mark on music.

As expected, Meg did not attend the ceremony — she has completely left the music industry and public life in general since the White Stripes broke up in 2011 — but thankfully a handful of artists were on hand to help fill the void left by the essential artist, one of Rolling Stone‘s 100 Greatest Drummers of All Time.

Olivia Rodrigo and Feist teamed up for a rendition of the White Blood Cells classic “We’re Going to Be Friends,” while Twenty One Pilots, themselves a guitar-drums duo like the White Stripes, delivered a rendition of the ultimate stadium rocker “Seven Nation Army.”

Feist and Olivia Rodrigo perform onstage during the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony

Amy Sussman/WireImage

The White Stripes were inducted into the Rock Hall by fellow Motor City rock icon Iggy Pop, who took the stage and led the crowd through a chant of “Seven Nation Army.” He held his speech in his hands and joked, “Let me see if I can read this shit.”

Pop described the duo as “a 21st century Adam and Eve, who had started a rock & roll band,” and praised Meg’s drumming ability, saying it was her support that launched “the rocket of racket that was Jack White.”

Next, Jack himself took the podium for his induction speech, thanking “Uncle Iggy.” Standing in a red suit and white tie, he revealed that he’d been talking to Meg about being honored, and that Meg made “punctuation and corrections” to his speech. “I spoke with Meg White the other day; she said she’s very sorry she couldn’t make it tonight, but she’s very grateful for the folks who have supported her throughout all the years, it really means a lot to her tonight,” he said.

Jack thanked the White Stripes’ musical heroes, and also named other iconic duos in pop culture: Leiber and Stoller, Siegel and Shuster, and Abbott and Costello. “I myself have been in a lot of bands that you’ve probably never heard of,” he said. “But for some reason, people especially connected with this one two-piece duo project that I was in called the White Stripes. We don’t know why these things happen, but when they do, it’s the most beautiful thing you can have as an artist or musician when people are responding and sharing with you.”

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“To young artists, I want to say, get your hands dirty and drop the screens and get out in your garage or your little room and get obsessed,” he added. “Get obsessed with something, get passionate. We all want to share in what you might create.”

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Iggy Pop and Jack White onstage during the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony

Amy Sussman/WireImage

Rodrigo, who was born just two months before the White Stripes released Elephant since April 2003, has long praised the group, saying she grew up listening to the album and especially “The Hardest Button to Button.”

“Meg’s drums really shine on that one, and from there I dove into all their other incredible albums and became a massive fan,” Rodrigo told Elle in 2023. “Meg’s drumming and the White Stripes in general [provided] a huge lesson to me on the value of simplicity in music. They taught me that a truly great song doesn’t need to have crazy production or layers of sound. It just needs to move you.”

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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From Mozart to Berghain, Rosalía’s LUX Bridges Centuries of Musical Temptation: Review
Music

Rosalía’s LUX Is Orchestral Pop Worthy of an Orchestra

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Before Beatlemania there was Lisztomania; before young people were grinding in clubs, they waltzed in beer halls and sang horny operas. The emotions may feel universal, but tastes evolve. Nothing’s sexier than a 3/4 waltz one day, and then everyone decides to get down in 4/4 for a few hundred years.

Like music, religion has a habit of changing with the times. Rosalía‘s LUX expresses a personal spirituality, inspired by her Catholic upbringing as well as classical philosophy, new age, Islam, and her unique relationship with God. Made in collaboration with the London Symphony Orchestra under the conduction of Daníel Bjarnason, LUX is in constant conversation with the popular music — and ideas — of the past.

Philosophically and structurally, LUX shares some beats with Mozart’s Don Giovanni, that rascally, randy nobleman we’ve come to call Don Juan. In Don Giovanni, the titular villain gets out of danger time and again, until finally, he meets a force he cannot defeat. After he is dragged to Hell, the chorus sings, “Questo è il fin di chi fa mal, e de’ perfidi la morte alla vita è sempre ugual,” (“This is the end of one who does evil, and for the wicked, death is like life”). LUX puts Rosalía and her characters in moral danger, and her story [spoiler alert for what it means to be human] terminates in death. The album asks, what is the end for one who tries to do good but sometimes fails? What about a few temptations not resisted, the occasional enthusiastic sin?

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The stakes are high; Rosalía’s God can be a terrifying God, and He doesn’t seem the type to “Kumbaya.” At the beginning of Movement II, she feels Him breathing down her neck in “Berghain.” Movement III opens with “Dios Es un Stalker” (“God Is a Stalker”), with lyrics both funny and frightening. God has seen Rosalía fall, followed her into dark corners, and watched her sin. While she can joke about it, she has God say, “No me gusta hacer intervención divina” (“I don’t like to do divine intervention”), and her deity will watch her stumble into Hell without troubling Himself to stop her.

Like Don Giovanni, Movement I of LUX opens with sex, violence, and the chance for a quick escape — or as she puts it, “Sexo, Violencia y Llantas [Tires].” “Quién pudiera/ vivir entre los dos/ Primero amaré el mundo/ y luego amaré a Dios,” she sings: “How nice it’d be/ to live between them both/ First I’ll love the world/ then I’ll love God.” Eternal paradise or fun right now? LUX is never far from that tension.

Movement I also introduces one of the central metaphors of LUX: Divine light, trying (and perhaps sometimes failing) to shine through her skin. “Through my body you can see the light” she coos in English in “Divinize.” The idea gets twisted in the seductive, irresistible “Porcelana.” Translated from Spanish, she sings, “My skin is thin/ fine porcelain/ and it emits/ radiant light/ or divine ruin.”

Ruin, because “Porcelana” introduces a darkness that LUX‘s protagonist will struggle to overcome. The London Symphony Orchestra conjures some incredible sounds on this one, including banging percussion and fat triads of brass and strings that will leave every rapper jealous. Forget small sounds and chamber pop, she’s got the LSO ready to blast the Symphony’s donors right out of the front row.

Movement I ends with “Mio Cristo,” a classical Italian aria about a Christ that weeps diamonds, more Verdi than Usher. But this old-fashioned track gives way to bonkers post-modern pop in “Berghain,” the album’s most daring song, and where Rosalía’s soul is most at hazard.

“Berghain” is named for a Berlin nightclub with a debauched reputation, and the song has classical references to Vivaldi’s “Winter” and Wagner’s Ring Cycle trading bars with pop melodies and Yoko Ono-style word loops. Before Rosalía’s protagonist gives in to temptation, her different impulses are expressed across different performers and languages.

A German choir thunders, (translated),

His fear is my fear
His rage is my rage
His love is my love
His blood is my blood

At first Rosalía joins them in German, expressing proper awe in the local language. But her first words in Spanish are a confession: “Yo sé muy bien lo que soy,” she sings (“I know full well what I am”). Translated to English, she goes on to say what purpose she can serve: “Sweetness for your coffee/ I’m just a sugar cube/ I know heat melts me/ I know how to disappear.”

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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Ruel Creates Sunny, Self-Assured Pop Creates Happiness » PopMatters
Music

Ruel Creates Sunny, Self-Assured Pop Creates Happiness » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

The Australian singer-songwriter Ruel is a savant of musical styles. 2019’s “Painkiller” was a compact mix of funk and pop, and 2023’s 4th Wall blended acoustic and electronic elements. Discovered by the Grammy-winning producer M-Phazes at age 12, Ruel van Dijk achieved stardom in his native Australia after signing with RCA Records at 15 and performing as an opening act on Shawn Mendes’ 2019 tour. His second studio album, 2025’s Kicking My Feet, proves he is ready to continue ascending the music industry ladder. “If everything comes, I’m gonna say yes to it,” he told Rolling Stone.   

In the music video for “Wild Guess”, Ruel plays himself, a musician acting in a movie. “Singers shouldn’t be actors,” says his co-star in the video. Through this self-reference, he calls attention to the fact that, since the dawn of social media, musicians have become multi-media celebrities. In 2023, he told The Guardian that the album title 4th Wall was inspired by The Truman Show, a film about a reality television series. As a rising star himself, he related to Truman’s constant surveillance. 

Kicking My Feet is a joyful record that portrays messy emotions as building blocks for newfound happiness. In “Not What’s Going On”, Ruel gives in to a new romance, as glossy harmonies enhance an ecstatic chorus. “I Can Die Now” conveys a similar sentiment: “But since I found you, I can die now.” “Only Ever” calls back to the funk influences of his previous records, but uses crisp guitar riffs to express devotion in a laid-back manner. Elsewhere, “The Suburbs” leans into rock, as a raucous sound contrasts peaceful lyrics: “Always drivin’ under 35,” Ruel says, imagining a settled-down life with a partner. 

At other points, Kicking My Feet takes a break from bliss. “Destroyer” brings the record’s rock homages to a crescendo, as Ruel contemplates his agency in the breakdown of a relationship. In “Even Angels Won’t”, the singer appreciates a friend who stuck by him during tough times, as haunting harmonies blend with a chilling acoustic piano riff. When he says to a friend, “You go where even angels won’t,” the tension of this moment might have, in the hands of another artist, warranted production theatrics. However, his husky vocals and songwriting mastery create a compelling composition that draws on pop’s core elements. 

Kicking My Feet is a shiny, highly-produced album, but it stands out in a crowded field of male pop stars. In 2024 and 2025, Shawn Mendes and Justin Bieber returned from extended breaks, and the odd former member of One Direction always threatens to release a solo album. Meanwhile, newcomers Sombr and Role Model blend rock and country to contrast the glitzy bubblegum pop that boy bands espoused in the 2000s and 2010s. 

After exploring acoustics on 4th Wall and incorporating R&B and funk on previous EPs and singles, Ruel made his foray into synths and electric guitars. Kicking My Feet is a sharp take on an existing formula. While most pop stars could spend an entire album cycle deciding how confessional they want to be, he has struck an innate balance between fame and privacy as he has gradually ascended to stardom. This personal assurance allows him to focus on the music. Like a painkiller, the songs are quick shots of dopamine, small experiments with sounds that use lyrics to ensure tidy moral resolutions. 

“Two tickets for a funeral / When you blow up the hand that feeds ya,” Ruel says on “Destroyer”. Although personally content, the singer understands that pop works best when grounded in reality, conveniently or not. In an interview, he told Rolling Stone, “The goal is not extreme happiness or extreme success. My goal is to be comfortable and sustainable.” As expressed in the song “The Suburbs”, Ruel will maintain stability when he finds it, even if its soundtrack continues to change. 

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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Olivia Dean Is Your Next Favorite Pop Star
Fashion

Olivia Dean Is Your Next Favorite Pop Star

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Though the 26-year-old’s songwriting feels very now, she’s not imitating pop-music trends like the heavy-handed satire of Sabrina Carpenter or the very-online language of Taylor Swift. She’s cheery but not trite, earnest but not saccharine. A situationship might be a modern conceit, but “Nice to Each Other” sounds as though it could have been published in any decade between 1950 and the 2020s. Dean captures the messiness of a dalliance with an expiration date for what it is—a push and pull between romance and convenience that is not really modern at all.

Dean’s rich sound and blend of genres—pop, neo-soul, R&B, with a kiss of Motown and the singer-songwriters (Joni Mitchell, Carol King) and vocalists (Aretha Franklin, Whitney Houston) that inspire her—also make her an outlier among her peers. Fans have likened her to Norah Jones and Amy Winehouse for the warm and soulful sound that she appears to deliver effortlessly; the most apt comparison, in my opinion, remains Adele, a fellow graduate of London’s Brit School, where Dean says she learned to let go of her fear of putting her art in front of a judgy audience.

“That’s where I met my band and my best friends and like-minded people,” she says of the renowned arts school. “I was able to just really commit to myself and not be ashamed about my love of music and feel like it was embarrassing or over-the-top.”

Dean is affable but a little reserved during our call, which took place the week between her performances on weekends one and two of the Austin City Limits Festival. She recalls that she was a shy kid, and I wonder if that foreshadowed her tendency toward privacy as she’s entered the spotlight. We chat casually about Cameron Winter, the artist she’s been listening to lately; her curly-hair routine (she’s on a less-is-more, embrace-the-volume kick right now); and her current TV diet, a combination of Sex and the City, Friends, and The Great British Bake Off. She’s quick to laugh, her British accent carrying the same satisfying huskiness she possesses in her singing voice.

October 18, 2025 0 comments
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Katy Perry announced as 'Pop Day' headliner
Music

Katy Perry announced as ‘Pop Day’ headliner

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Katy Perry has been announced as the headliner of ‘Pop Day’ at the 2026 edition of Rock In Rio Lisbon Festival.

The singer will top the bill on the Palco Mundo Stage in Parque Tejo in the Portuguese capital on June 20 next year, with the festival running over two consecutive weekends.

Linkin Park have already been announced as headlining the festival on June 21, and the event will also run on June 27 and 28. Tickets for Rock In Rio Lisbon 2026 can be purchased here.

In a video shared on the festival’s Instagram, Perry, who previously played at the festival in 2018, has said: “Ola Lisboa. It’s such an honour to announce that I’ll be performing at Rock In Rio Lisboa 2026. This festival is one of the most iconic in the world and I am so excited to join this very incredible line-up. Lisbon, I’ll see you in June for a very special show.”

Also on the bill so far for ‘Pop Day’ will be Brazilian singer and producer Pedro Sampaio and Sao Tome and Principe duo Calema, as well as NAPA, who will be playing in their home country.

Roberta Medina, executive vice president of Rock in Rio Lisbon, has said: “We are preparing the largest and best edition of Rock in Rio Lisbon with unique and memorable experiences. In this way, we position Lisbon and the festival as global references in entertainment tourism. We want Rock in Rio Lisbon to continue being much more than a festival, a stage for unique, live, and collective experiences showing that people united in peace and harmony are the greatest transformative force to build the world we want to see.”

They have also announced that the festival site will be expanded by 25 square kilometres for 2026, and they will also debut ‘The Flight’, a new aerial show created specifically for the 11th edition of the festival.

Perry released her seventh album ‘143’ in September, which NME awarded two stars and described as “a serviceable but slightly dull collection on which Perry struggles to relocate her old sense of fun”.

Last month, Perry reflected on her “rollercoaster year” and said she was done “forcing” her career. “Whatever comes next, I’m letting it unfold naturally,” she said. “No forcing, no controlling – just trusting the angels, the fans, and the music to guide me where I’m meant to go. Please know this: my love for you is unconditional, and I couldn’t do any of this without you.”

Controversies surrounding the album included her choice to work with Dr. Luke despite the abuse and assault allegations against him, and the supposed male gaze-centric nature of her single ‘Woman’s World’.

Elsewhere, she was recently spotted apparently kissing former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, although neither party have confirmed the relationship.

October 18, 2025 0 comments
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Yasmine Hamdan Uses Pop As a Counterbalance to Tragedies » PopMatters
Music

Yasmine Hamdan Uses Pop As a Counterbalance to Tragedies » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Since Yasmine Hamdan’s last record, 2017’s Al Jamilat, Lebanon has undergone significant changes. There was the 2020 Port of Beirut explosion, where some 2750 tonnes of ammonium nitrate caused a blast that could be felt as far away as Cyprus. This disaster happened in the middle of the COVID pandemic and contributed to an already devastating economic meltdown that has continued in the years since.

Despite this, or more likely because of it, the Lebanese-born, globe-traveling Hamdan decided to ground herself once again in her home country, both literally and metaphorically, on I Remember I Forget. Like her other two solo LPs, as well as her work with the late 1990s-early 2000s duo Soapkills, there’s a connection between Lebanese, Palestinian, and Egyptian musical traditions and electronics. However, the music she makes now feels worlds away from what she recorded 25 years ago.

While she continues to collaborate with Marc Collin, the music here feels less gauzy than her previous work. “Shmaali”, for example, takes its lyrics and melody from Palestinian tarweeda, songs sung by women that have long served as a form of resistance. In a recent interview for the Tarab podcast, she describes the song as a “hymn”. Beginning with a hazy synth pulse and drum machine, she sings, her voice certain and urgent, before the song becomes something of a dance track. She repeats, “I will send a message with the Northern wind,” before giving way to Cedric Le Roux’s buzuq-like electric guitar. It’s arguably a perfect example of how the region’s musical traditions lend themselves so naturally to sonic updates.

The temptation to examine Hamdan’s art as a sonic space where lyrical poetry meets the political feels clichéd. To be a groundbreaking artist, often regarded as the beginning of any sort of “indie scene” in Beirut, is to take on a certain weight. I Remember’s opening track, “Hon” (or “Here” in English) references a “collapse”, “a corpse in my bedroom”, and “a small country with a big wound”. It’s likely to be a direct reference to the 2020 blast, but also an indirect reference to the numerous other historic and current instances of instability.

On “Shadia”, she coos of surrendering to sleep as the cruelty of the world outside becomes too much to bear. This track also serves as the most straightforward pop moment on the album, floating on a billowy synth line, with a groove somewhere near reggae, and vocal flutters reminiscent of Angel Olsen. It’s as if the pop sensibilities are a necessary counterbalance to tragedies that are otherwise difficult to bear.

Without knowledge of either the video or an understanding of Arabic, you’d be forgiven for hearing the album’s title track as nothing more than a tune to light up a club. It begins with an insistent stutter, before keys, guitars, handclaps, strings, and Hamdan’s voice move it into heavier territory. However, with lyrics acknowledging the normalization of despair, murder, manipulation, and intimidation, and a music video depicting a Super Mario brothers-style game, including a goofy version of Hamdam navigating a juxtaposition of destroyed buildings, tanks, armed soldiers, beach parties, children on scooters, barbed wire, and sunsets, there ceases to be any secret to what she’s addressing.

I Remember I Forget can sometimes seem schizophrenic, as solemn dirge poetry erupts into dance (“Vows”); yet elsewhere, the blend of centuries-old Lebanese musical influences with synthpop trimmings feels as natural as a worn pair of boots (“Mor”). While understanding the complex, frustrating politics that form the album’s core is helpful, most of her global audience will likely be drawn to the music and the sound of her voice, which is substantial enough in and of itself to fill theaters, demand attention, and leave listeners entranced.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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Saint Etienne 2025
Music

Indie Pop Legends Saint Etienne Discuss Their Retirement Party » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Saint Etienne have always seemed to exist outside of time, so hearing news of their retirement felt like waking rudely from a dream, losing something you never really had. The group, comprising Bob Stanley, Pete Wiggs, and Sarah Cracknell, emerged as an immediate anomaly, releasing their debut album, Foxbase Alpha, to great acclaim in 1991. Now, in 2025, they’ve released their final one, International, an appropriate title for a band that’s always been so hard to pin down.

International was made with finality in mind, but instead of anything dour, it sounds like a right rave-up, a retirement party thrown by the forever young. They’ve invited guests, too: Tom Rowlands (The Chemical Brothers), Nick Heyward (Haircut 100), Confidence Man, Vince Clarke (Erasure), Tim Powell (Xenomania), Jez Williams (Doves), Erol Alkan (Flash Cassette), and Augustin Bousfield all appear. Listening to it is like being invited to some secret celebration held by the coolest cats in town.

The period between Foxbase Alpha and International found Saint Etienne bouncing along a balancing beam of paradoxes. They maintained a Zen-like consistency while also being restlessly chameleonic, attempting different styles and concepts with the same quality. They were decidedly European, and yet chronicled London like few other bands. They always seemed like the smartest band at the festival, but they moved your body as much as your mind. Forget retirement; the real question is, how did this chimera survive so long? Pete Wiggs and Sarah Cracknell sat down with PopMatters to provide an answer of sorts.

Endtroducing Pete Wiggs and Sarah Cracknell

Ever prolific, Saint Etienne were already teasing International when doing press for their previous album, The Night, earlier in the year. That rainy, gorgeous ambient album, full of spoken word and slow melancholy, is as different from International as Sid Vicious is from Blackalicious. It was almost like the band needed to rid themselves of The Night before they could party and part ways with International.

“There’s definite overlap between the two,” says Wiggs of Saint Etienne’s last two albums, “but none of the songs we started for The Night ended up on this. Because often we do that. I think we tried to get one on there, but it didn’t really fit the rest of it.” So how did it start? Wiggs and Cracknell have a think. It’s clear that they haven’t meticulously chronicled all the dates and figures of their retirement for historical record, despite its significance. 

“It had an earlier sort of genesis, I guess, demo-wise. ‘Two Lovers’, the one we did with Vince Clarke, that was probably a couple of years before,” explains Wiggs. “It went through a few phases.”

“Confidence Man, I think, was sort of last year,” adds Cracknell of their collaboration with the electropop duo, “Brand New Me”, which is a delightful, downright anthemic single from International. “Then, just as Pete was saying, things just evolved over time. You know, we’ll go in with an almost finished track and finish it off in the studio, or we’ll actually write whole verses and things in the studio in situ. It’s all different, actually; every bit’s different in that respect.”

Of course, things were especially different this time around – the last time around. “Yeah, once we started the actual making, knowing that we’re making an album and it being the last time booking studio time and stuff, we actually set ourselves a really, or our manager set us a really tight deadline to record this,” says Wiggs, smiling through his gray beard. “So we did the bulk of it in like a month, I think. It’s just crazy, really.”

Cracknell credits co-producer Tim Powell for speeding up the process. “Lovely man,” gushes Cracknell. Wiggs and Cracknell seem so strangely normal, awkward on the Zoom screen like the rest of us, far from Pop Stars™ or musical myths. They’re real, and their retirement suddenly made sense. That’s what people do, after all, if they can. 

Throwing a Retirement Party

The idea of retirement was written into International. “We’d made that decision before we were recording the bulk of the album, so we knew it was the last,” explains Cracknell. “The way you described it earlier, about being like a final party, that was very much the feeling that we wanted, a real celebration, and to include sort of the styles and moods from our career, from 30-odd years. We wanted it to be a bit of everything that we’ve done. I feel like the first album’s a bit of a mixing pot of ideas, so it’s the same sort of vibe.”

Why retire? That’s the question most people will ask, but perhaps the more interesting question is, why announce your retirement? Why not simply and silently stop making music? Then, if the creative urge so compels them, they could release another album in three, five, or nine years. Or not. They could instead just quietly and mysteriously fade away, like the sad half of that Neil Young song. What is the point of the announcement itself? 

“I think we just wanted a nice retirement gift, just like a clock to go on the mantelpiece or something like that,” says Cracknell, cracking up Wiggs.

“It’s more of an event, and hopefully, when we do gigs over the next couple of years, it’ll be like that. So it’s not like we’re not gonna do any gigs,” states Wiggs reassuringly. Still, the whole experience has been somewhat odd for him. “I think I’ve said this before, but it is a bit weird. It’s been like being at your own wake to see what people thought about you, and luckily, it’s been quite nice. 

“It wasn’t my decision, but once I got used to the idea, I found it quite exciting,” continues Wiigs. “It’s made the whole process of doing something and promoting and everything much more kind of exciting in a way. The good thing is it’s doing quite well, as well. So that feels like we made a good idea. It was a good plan.”

“Bob and I are not quite sure whether it was my idea or Bob’s idea,” adds Cracknell, making it even clearer how little melodrama, aggrandizement, or mythologizing has gone on vis-à-vis retirement. “It was a joint decision, though, between the three of us. We wouldn’t have just closed the band.”

“I don’t even remember the actual conversation,” admits Wiggs. “I think generally, whenever we make an album, we think it is potentially the last one, because you don’t know if you’re going to get a deal (well, then we’d probably still carry them, put it out ourselves somehow). But yeah, it did just feel organic. The last couple of albums have been really well received as well, so it feels nice, rather than going until people think you’ve done a couple of shit ones or something.”

Saint Etienne’s Final Tour

While Saint Etienne are done with the studio, they’re not finished with the stage. The band will have a farewell tour, and they’re already planning it out. “First of all, we’re going to do festivals. Next summer and stuff will be festivals, and then we’ll do the tour,” explains Cracknell. “We’ll be playing songs from across our career, which should be really good fun. Rather than touring an album, we’re just playing all the fun stuff. Then, I don’t know; we quite like the idea of ending up with the Royal Festival Hall, but we’re not sure yet. That won’t be until the following year, 2027.”

Wiggs and Cracknell have been touring for as long as Saint Etienne has existed, but the band has always been wise about pacing themselves. This (last) time, they plan to fulfill the title of their final album. “I’d like to come to America again, obviously,” shares Wiggs wistfully. “And someone said that we should do our last gig in Saint-Étienne. That would be quite funny, but I don’t know if anyone would even come. I’ve never been there, strangely.” 

Wiggs’ admission makes a certain amount of sense. Saint Etienne have always been unplaceable, cinematic, oneiric, so of course they’d be named after a place they’ve never visited. The places they have toured, however, have been memorable. Stanley has previously raved about Saint Etienne’s euphoric 1994 concert in Greece, one of those shows when the music transcends the moment and eternity is glimpsed.

“That was a good one, yeah,” muses Wiggs. “There’s been quite a few. We did play at the Limelight in New York, which was quite extreme. That was quite a memory, because America’s just so mad a place. It was like Studio 54, so that was pretty amazing. I just never thought we’d be doing a gig in a place like that.”

“I think my favorite one was just the first Glastonbury that we played in 1994,” adds Cracknell. “So memorable, so incredible, just walking out on the stage and seeing about 30,000 people.”

“We played in Basel, probably about ten years ago, maybe more,” recalls Wiggs of one strange Swiss concert. “It was on a floating stage in the river, which was quite mental, and these people dressed like gondoliers took you to the stage, and the audience was all on the bank. But when we did the sound check, there’s this thing that people do because the current’s really fast. They jump in the river with all their clothes and stuff in a plastic bag, inflated kind of, they jump in, hold it, and they go zooming by. So while we were playing, these people were just going by, like zooming past the stage. It’s really strange.”

International Music in the Time of Britpop

Of course, Saint Etienne will play multiple shows in their home country of England. Ironically, as they say goodbye, many of their 1990s contemporaries are reuniting or resurfacing for live shows. Oasis, Pulp, Suede, Manic Street Preachers, the Beta Band, Supergrass, and other leaders of the 1990s Britpop scene have either been touring or releasing long-awaited new albums in 2025. Hell, British icon Robbie Williams just released an album titled Britpop. Always the iconoclasts, Saint Etienne will be waving goodbye as the Britpop bands say, “Hello, hello (it’s good to be back).”

For such an international band so unstuck in time, Saint Etienne never quite fit into the hyper-nationalist, borderline xenophobic craze over Britpop. In fact, they traveled to countries like Germany and Switzerland to record different albums in the 1990s while their peers were waving the Union Jack. As Bob Stanley said in a 2016 interview with Drowned in Sound, “Britpop came along and ruined everything.”

Photo: Paul Kelly / [PIAS]

“That is quite strong,” laughs Wiggs upon hearing Stanley’s grumblings. “I think it just became a bit of a self-parody in a way. I still like Blur. I wouldn’t really listen to Oasis anymore, I don’t think, but I saw Pulp at Glastonbury and they were brilliant. I think it just became a bit of a joke, and so everyone got a bit sick of it. So it’s more that you didn’t necessarily want to be tagged as a Britpop band.”

“Also,” adds Cracknell, “people get sucked into this whole scene, and then can’t get out sometimes. I think also, because our music changes a lot in style, because we don’t play guitars and drums and stuff, it means that we can sort of segue between various styles. They can’t really pigeonhole us, which is good. Journalists generally can’t pigeonhole us. It’s difficult to, when people ask me, ‘What’s your band like?’ – I found it really hard to explain.”

So how reactionary were Saint Etienne? Were they willfully distancing themselves from the Britpop label? “In some respects,” admits Wiggs. “I think it’s because on our first two albums, a lot of the press would say that we were super English, and we were like, ‘We don’t think we are!’ [They said] everything’s about London, and the first album was, to be fair, but then we thought we’d moved away from that. And then it was always people just saying it was London-centric. So we were trying to be more international, as it were.”

“For me personally, it wasn’t a really deliberate distancing away from Britpop and British things,” adds Cracknell. “It’s just the way we are. We loved being in the European Union – sadly – and loved being international, love traveling, you know, getting to go away for our jobs a lot of the time. So we feel so privileged.”

“It was a way of making each album, to make it feel different from the next one,” says Wiggs. “We’d have a concept, and sometimes that concept was, like with the Swedish album, Good Humor, it was to record in a particular studio in Malmö, and to make it more of a sort of live-sounding album than perhaps previous ones. And then, with the Berlin one, we were really into the sort of Berlin electro scene at the time, so it was a way of getting into that, really, and having some of that flavor on the record.”

“We really loved the provincial side of going to Malmö and Berlin. So we just liked sharing a flat, getting an apartment or whatever,” remembers Cracknell with nostalgic warmth. “That’s really good for ideas, you know, getting immersed in each other.”

“A lot of the lyrics on Sound of Water, which is the one recorded in Berlin, we hadn’t written them before, and so they were kind of influenced from hanging out together and writing lyrics and newspaper reports from back home and things like that,” adds Wiggs. He pauses with a half-smile hidden in his beard, his headspace lingering on the scene. “It was, yeah, it was really good.

Saint Etienne 2025
Photo: Rob Baker Ashton / [PIAS]

The Philosophy of Saint Etienne

Pete Wiggs is hardly the only one looking back fondly on the songs of Saint Etienne. The band had one of the most devoted fan clubs out there, known as Lovers Unite, and for just five pounds a year, you could receive all sorts of special odds and sods from the band. Case in point, they had more private fan club releases than actual studio albums, and they shared all sorts of art and literature in addition to the music.

Saint Etienne made films with Paul Kelly, released Christmas music, and assembled compilations of obscure pop music. Bob Stanley wrote books, Cracknell released solo albums, and Wiggs curated wonderful playlists at his site, The Séance. Suffice to say, getting into Saint Etienne was like falling in love at the library, ensconced in references and catching the passion of artists like a contagion. You wanted to join their club. That was a song of theirs, “Join Our Club“, and it became Saint Etienne’s motto of sorts. “I know you want to hold my hand, I know you’re gonna love my band,” Cracknell sings in the song. 

Wiggs explains that “Join Our Club” is essentially the band’s philosophy. “It’s not supposed to be an exclusive thing. It’s supposed to be – if you’re interested in something, sort of mention it somehow. It’s how you make friends and how you meet people that are on the same kind of wavelength as you, really, so I suppose that’s it. 

“It’s sharing the things that interest you, and meeting like-minded people. Which is amazing, because we have done that over the years,” adds Wiggs. “You meet people and you go, ‘Oh man, until I’d listened to some of your stuff, or seen the sleeves or whatever, I didn’t know there were people like that, like me, out there. It’s good.’ We did a lot of signings last week in England and Scotland, and because it’s our last album, it was quite an emotional experience, lots of people coming up and saying stories about what we’ve meant to them over the years. 

“It felt like that sharing of ideas has really affected people,” continues Wiggs. “And they’ve gone on tangents exploring different avenues, things they picked up from the film clips that we put on the second album, So Tough. I sometimes forget that many of those were lines that Bob and I thought were funny or that we used to quote to each other. And so I thought, let’s stick them on the album. But then you hear that other people quote those lines, and it’s sort of like you spread a sort of daft virus. I mean, they’re samples, but people call them drops now, and they become memeable, like an inside joke for a family.”

Cracknell excitedly agrees with the philosophy of Saint Etienne. “[It’s] that whole sharing of, you know, you find out something great, when you see a great film or a wonderful building or whatever, and you just want to share it,” explained Cracknell. “I think some people misunderstood ‘Join Our Club’ as, you know, we’re elitist, we’ve got our own club, but it’s kind of the polar opposite, you know? It’s about – ‘listen to this, it’s great, or look at this, isn’t it amazing?’ That’s what we’re about, really.”

That’s what they’re about. Saint Etienne is a feeling – that feeling when you discover something that sings echoes in your soul, something so wondrous that you’re overcome with the compulsion to share it with someone else, as if it’s only that thing that can finally bridge the existential gap between you and another person. As if you’re a happy vessel, overflowing with this new thing (a song, a book, a picture), and you absolutely have to pour it out for somebody else, and when you do, it’s like you two are sharing the same serene dream outside of time. Saint Etienne are the sharing.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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Sunn O))) Sign to Sub Pop, Share New Songs: Listen
Music

Sunn O))) Sign to Sub Pop, Share New Songs: Listen

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Sun O))) have signed to Sub Pop and shared their first songs for the venerated Seattle-based label. “Eternity’s Pillars,” “Raise the Chalice,” and “Reverential” are out now on streaming services and as a limited-edition 12” vinyl single. Hear all three tracks below.

“‘Eternity’s Pillars’ is named for the mid-1980s television program created and hosted by jazz visionary and spiritual guru Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda, focusing on her incessant belief in music’s capacity to attain spiritual transcendence,” Sun O))) shared in a press statement. “‘Raise the Chalice’ is named for a rallying cry often uttered by Northwest legend Ron Guardipee throughout the mid-1990s. ‘Reverential’ equally pays respect and sends loud praise to those who came before us with the heaviest burdens, expressions with music and art being the materials of an antiphon.”

Now a duo of founding members Stephen O’Malley and Greg Anderson, Sunn O))) shared their last new studio LPs, Life Metal and Pyroclasts, in 2019. The band also documented their BBC Radio 6 session from that same year in the 2021 live album Metta, Benevolence.

Read about Life Metal in “The Best Metal Albums of 2019.”

All products featured on Pitchfork are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Sunn O))): “Eternity’s Pillars b/w Raise the Chalice & Reverential”

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Taylor Swift’s “The Fate Of Ophelia” Is Shattering Streaming Records And Owning Pop Radio | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Taylor Swift’s “The Fate Of Ophelia” Is Shattering Streaming Records And Owning Pop Radio | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

Taylor Swift’s new song The Fate of Ophelia isn’t just another chart entry, it’s a full-blown phenomenon. Within days of release, the track became the fastest song ever to cross 100 million streams on Spotify, setting a record that even Swift herself hadn’t touched before. The pace was unreal. Fans kept refreshing the counters, posting updates in real time, and by the end of the week, Ophelia had become Spotify’s new benchmark for what a hit looks like in 2025.

What’s even wilder is how the song has taken over pop radio. In the U.S., The Fate of Ophelia earned the most pop radio adds in a single week since Easy on Me by Adele back in 2021. For a song to dominate both streaming and traditional radio like that is rare now, but if there’s one artist who still pulls it off effortlessly, it’s Taylor. Program directors reportedly jumped on the track right away, a mix of that instant earworm production and Swift’s knack for lyrics that hit straight to the gut.

Musically, The Fate of Ophelia feels like the sweet spot between her cinematic songwriting and her pop roots. It’s grand, emotional, and kind of haunting. The production swells slowly, almost like you’re walking into something you shouldn’t, and then it crashes right when you expect it to stay quiet. It’s the kind of song that feels like it’s hiding something, which, let’s be real, is what Taylor does best.

Also Read: Taylor Swift’s Latest Look Will Leave You SPEECHLESS – See Her Showgirl-Inspired Outfit!

On social media, fans are losing it. Reddit threads and TikTok edits have already turned Ophelia into an obsession. People are analyzing every lyric, connecting it back to her earlier eras, and talking about how it feels like the perfect blend of Folklore’s emotion and 1989’s confidence.

It’s easy to say Taylor breaks records every time she breathes, but this one hits differently. The Fate of Ophelia isn’t loud about its power; it just moves like a storm that no one saw coming. And once again, everyone’s caught in the rain.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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