celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Pop » Page 2
Tag:

Pop

Molly Tuttle 2025
Music

Molly Tuttle Dives Headfirst Into Entertaining Country Pop » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

So Long Little Miss Sunshine

Molly Tuttle

Nonesuch

15 August 2025

On singer Molly Tuttle’s newest album, So Long Little Miss Sunshine, the country rising star is letting bluegrass take a bit of a backseat this time. A light, infectiously optimistic collection of songs, primarily fitting snugly within the cozy confines of country pop, Tuttle‘s latest album allows her to flex her musical muscles beyond bluegrass and the folksy Americana of her previous work.

Tuttle, who’s widely credited with bringing bluegrass closer to the mainstream following her Grammy nomination for Best New Artist in 2023 alongside musicians like Samara Joy and Anitta, grew up on bluegrass in the Palo Alto area. While the San Francisco Bay Area might not be the most obvious place of origin for bluegrass’s ingénue in residence, Tuttle’s Northern California roots creep through the Appalachian overgrowth of the genre, evident in influences like the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane.

Tuttle grew up on bluegrass, joining her family’s band, the Tuttles, with AJ Lee when she was just 15 years old. When we asked Tuttle what it felt like to have been recognized as one of the greats in a genre she grew up on, she told us, “It’s an amazing feeling. When I see my name placed with this new generation of bluegrass musicians, it’s such a cool feeling. Ever since I was eight years old and picked up a guitar, it’s been a dream of mine to make my life centered around music. It’s just so cool that this music has had this resurgence and reached this new fan group. There are so many more people here now, and it’s great to see the music is rising.”

Although flavors of Tuttle’s bluegrass roots are evident in So Long Little Miss Sunshine, the album represents a definite departure from Tuttle’s previous work. Being that bluegrass is a very “tradition-minded” genre, we asked Tuttle how she decides when to push the boundaries of the genre a bit and when to honor its more “traditional” aspects. Tuttle tells us it’s a fine line she has to walk. Elements of her trademark guitar picking and bluegrass flair shine through on some tracks.

Still, Tuttle wanted to create something that felt wholly “her” and not necessarily centered around the structures of a more traditional bluegrass album. Tracks like “Rosalee”, a spunky bluegrass ballad, would be right at home in Tuttle’s older work, like her Grammy-winning album Crooked Tree, while others, like the lead single ‘That’s Gonna Leave a Mark”, feel like they could be plucked right from the airwaves of country pop radio.

By giving herself a bit more freedom with production design, many of the confines Tuttle was accustomed to working within seemed to slip away, allowing for more rip-roaring live performances with heavy drumlines punctuated by more traditional bluegrass-sounding tracks. Moving away from the more storytelling, folksy aspects of bluegrass, Tuttle could break away and tell her own story in a way that felt authentic to both her and the music that influenced her.

In an Instagram post promoting the record’s release, Tuttle encouraged listeners to experience the tracks in the order in which they appear on the album (a foregone art lost to streaming and shuffle play supremacy). Of how she chose to order the LP, Tuttle said it was arranged both thematically and sonically. Tracks near the end of the album, like “No Regrets”, hark on notions of acceptance and moving on, while songs like “Story of My So Called Life” show Tuttle reflecting on the blank page, deciding where her music will take her next.

The Grammy-winning singer notes, “Kicking it off with a song like ‘Everything Burns’ that’s kind of dark and restless starts off the arc of the album with a bang. There were just certain interludes we came up with to weave the songs together. Certain things happen at the end of songs that weave into the next one. It was really fun to record the album this way. We were pretty diligent about going in with the track order and recording to work out those interludes.”

Smack in the middle of the album, a cover of Swedish pop duo Icona Pop‘s 2012 hit “I Love It” makes a surprise appearance. On her decision to include the cover, Tuttle said, “It came about in a very funny and random way. I had just heard that song, and it popped back into my head. Probably because of Charli XCX blowing up. We were in the studio doing pre-production and coincidentally Jake Joyce [her producer] said, ‘I really wanna do a cover of that song, but make it really spacey and kind of trippy.’”

Molly Tuttle went home and learned the song that night, recording it the next day in an hour. By the time the album was nearing completion and Joyce sent her a tracklist, she’d almost forgotten they’d recorded it. While a Swedish pop song more than a decade old might seem incongruous to an upbeat collection of country tracks, the song seamlessly slips into the rhythm of the album, almost entirely disguised by Tuttle’s stripped-down and more melodic iteration of the track.

With much of So Long Little Miss Sunshine harkening to the act of letting go, we asked Tuttle if there were any themes in music she felt she was ready to say “so long” to. “I feel like musically I don’t know what I’d like to let go of, except for feeling like kind of a fraud in a way. Since I’m not from the South, sometimes I feel like I have a little bit of imposter syndrome. But I feel like for me I want to move forward to a more expansive vision of who I am as an artist, which I think I did a little more on this record, and I’m excited for whatever I do next because I feel like I’ve gotten a clearer vision of who I am and where I’m going.”

With bluegrass having a definitive geographic association, we asked Molly Tuttle how location influenced this album. The country singer told us that while the Bay Area still very much feels like home to her, Nashville (where she’s lived for the last decade) left its mark on this album more than it has on any of her past work.

For all its love of freedom and family, bluegrass (and country more broadly) finds itself in a precarious position as unbridled patriotism moves from “love of country” to often bordering on fascistic nationalism. With much of country music being co-opted by conservatism, we asked Tuttle if the political climate has changed her relationship to the genre.

“I do feel like, for me as a woman in this male-dominated industry. It was hard for me to find my voice within that. There was a shift I noticed in my early 20s. When I moved to Nashville, people became more curious about ‘What is it like for a woman in the music industry?’ and people weren’t really asking those questions.”

October 8, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Shop These Deals On Funko Pop Advent Calendars During Amazon Prime Day
Music

Shop These Deals On Funko Pop Advent Calendars During Amazon Prime Day

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.

Amazon Prime Day is here, which means you’ll be snagging incredible deals on just about everything, and that includes holiday gear.

Our favorite find this Prime Day? Funko Pop Advent calendars. Why not get ahead of the curve and do some holiday shopping early while the deals are still hot? We’re talking up to 16% off on interactive calendars themed like Marvel characters, Disney princesses and Nightmare Before Christmas, among others.

Each themed calendar comes with labeled boxes for 24 days, all filled with surprise collectible vinyl figures, kind of like a blind box but bigger and more holiday-esque. These figures will coordinate with the calendar’s theme. No matter which themed calendar you pick, it’ll be a whole lot more exciting than just ticking off boxes on a calendar.

Explore

See latest videos, charts and news

Figures included in every Funko Pop Advent Calendar are made of sturdy vinyl and stand at 0.9 inches. These figures are not for those under the age of three and can be played with or displayed like any other collectible. The figures are extremely detailed, depicting some of your favorite characters, including Stitch, Ironman and Princess Tiana in Christmas attire including little fuzzy hats.

Shop These Deals On Funko Pop Advent Calendars During Amazon Prime Day

Funko Pop! Bitty Countdown Calendar: Stitch Holiday

A Lilo & Stitch themed Advent calendar.

Shop These Deals On Funko Pop Advent Calendars During Amazon Prime Day

Funko Pop! Bitty Countdown Calendar: Marvel Comics

A Marvel superhero-themed Advent calendar.

ShopBillboard especially loves the Nightmare Before Christmas offering, given it’s the most on-theme calendar of all four we’ve picked. You’ve got your familiar faces like Jack Skellington, along with timid little Sally and the loveable ghost dog Zero. The Marvel-themed calendar is also a hit, especially with comic book fans. Every hero from Captain America to Spiderman is decked out in proper Christmas attire, ready to fight crime and keep the city safe, snow or shine. If you’re not into opening up these calendars one by one, you can also use the little accompanying figures as stocking stuffers or situated atop a cake.

Funko has created a slew of themed Advent calendars, all available on Amazon. While some of them aren’t currently on sale, they’re still worth a splurge, especially if you have little ones you want to impress this holiday season. These calendars are both interactive and decorative, the best of both worlds.

These figures are classified as Bitty Pops, a subsection of Funko Pop figures that are miniature. Don’t let their size fool you; these figures are extremely expressive and colorful, making any space they’re placed in come alive. Funko sells these miniatures beyond their Advent calendars, sometimes solo, other times in packs with miniature display sets.

Shop These Deals On Funko Pop Advent Calendars During Amazon Prime Day

Funko Pop! Bitty Countdown Calendar: Disney Princess

A Disney princess themed Advent calendar.

Shop These Deals On Funko Pop Advent Calendars During Amazon Prime Day

Funko Pop! Countdown Calendar: The Nightmare Before Christmas

A Nightmare Before Christmas Advent calendar.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
CBGB Festival Grew Venue's Legacy with Iggy Pop, Jack White
Music

CBGB Festival Grew Venue’s Legacy with Iggy Pop, Jack White

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s easy to get a little cynical about the very concept of CBGB Fest. When one of the side stages — the Young Punks Stage — is presented by Ed Hardy, it’s even easier. Is corporate integration and brand licensing really “punk?” Surely someone else can write that dissertation. Besides, the idea of counter culture in 2025, where monoculture is so fragmented it barely even exists, is rarely decoupled from capitalism.

So, is gathering a bunch of punk fans something to really diminish because they’re taking pictures in front of a replica CBGB awning? Let them rock, we say. And hey, at least the original bar and wall segments on display were real.

For sure, the inaugural edition of the festival at Under the K Bridge in Brooklyn, New York, had its issues. Although beverage stands were abundant, the food options were insufficient; you cannot expect four food trucks and two little stands to comfortably feed a festival crowd, and just about everyone had to deal with brutal wait times. But if we’re judging on the music alone, CBGB Fest knocked it out of the park — and it was the Godfather of Punk himself who put an exclamation point on the daylong event with a phenomenal set.

Related Video

At 78 years old, Iggy Pop is still one of the greatest live acts on Earth, and he proved that tenfold with his headlining performance. Taking the main CBGB Stage at 9:30 p.m., Iggy and his band tore right into the Stooges classic “TV Eye” — just about 20 minutes North West from the Brooklyn venue named after the song. With his skin weathered and leathered, and a twisted spine from all the damage he’s done to himself onstage over the years, Iggy is punk personified.

More Stooges gems followed, like “Raw Power,” “Gimme Danger,” and “I Wanna Be Your Dog,” as well as solo favorites like “The Passenger,” eliciting a “la, la, la, la” sing-along from the packed crowd, and “Lust for Life,” with the audience soaking it all in under a light rain coming down in between the cover of the Kosciuszko Bridge above.

Backed by a very cool band, including the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ Nick Zinner on guitar, Iggy sounded as great as ever. And seeing the greatest living punk headlining a festival honoring the most iconic punk venue of all time gave off a very historic vibe, even in real time.

The brief drizzle during Iggy’s set was the only wet weather on a day that was comfortably overcast and mild. Which is good thing, considering the festival’s biggest sin: The “water station” — that place every festival has to offer free refills to keep attendees hydrated and safe, usually while reducing waste — was no more than a table handing out 8 oz. plastic bottles of water and someone yelling, “One per person!” A lack of NA beers felt lazy; the water situation felt like an afterthought.

Thankfully, those waiting in the ridiculous food lines at least were right next to the Young Punks Stage, which featured many of the day’s best sets. Former CoSigns Pinkshift, buzzy British band Lambrini Girls, rising Cali punks Scowl, and everyone’s favorite kids-turned-pros The Linda Lindas all brought truly deafening energy to the small stage. Having it tucked in the smaller courtyard Under the K Bridge gave it a fittingly intimate feeling — not as intimate as a tiny Bowery bar, sure, but close enough that Pinkshift and Lambrini Girls were able to control the crowd into joyful moshing.

Many of those Young Punks either took part in signings at the nearby Marshall tent or met with fans waiting by the side stage rails after sets. That amplified the community feeling of the event, and true monoculture or not, punk has always been a community. Above all else — even above the transcendent Iggy Pop performance, the exhilarating Jack White set, The Damned’s UK punk classics, and Johnny Marr’s Smiths-friendly setlist — that’s what felt most CBGB about CBGB Fest. People were there to have a good time and catch some great music; while more care could have been given to the comfort of attendees, the fans brought enough positivity that the gathering was largely successful.

Not even the delay on the mini-amphitheater Hilly’s Stage (YNWH Nailgun’s set was at least 20 minutes late, pushing back much of the afternoon — but worth the wait for vocalist Zack Borzone’s bizarro energy and drummer Sam Pickard’s percussive creativity) could dampen the mood. It was over on that stage that fans witnessed throwback performances from such acts as Cro-Mags, Marky Ramone, and Murphy’s Law — whose set included a surprise appearance by Jesse Malin, recovering from a spinal stroke he suffered two years ago that left him paralyzed from the waist down — offering the most old-school CBGB vibes of any of the stages throughout the day.

If organizers can figure out how to throw a truly sturdy festival Under the K Bridge, which would include fixing a few sound issues and overhauling their approach to concessions, CBGB Fest could easily turn into a landmark annual gathering. The location is great (they certainly have the physical space to make those adjustments), the bookings were unimpeachable, and the audience was open to it all. Who knows if it will fall to the slop and licensing complexities that CBGB is infamous for, but for one day, the grimy spirit of the Bowery felt alive under a Brooklyn bridge.

 

September 30, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Doja Cat Tries to Reframe Her Purpose in Pop on Vie: Review
Music

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

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

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

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

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

Related Video

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

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

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

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

September 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Conner Ives Spring 2026 Is an Ode to Pop Music, Addison Rae and, of Course, the Dolls
Fashion

Conner Ives Spring 2026 Is an Ode to Pop Music, Addison Rae and, of Course, the Dolls

by jummy84 September 23, 2025
written by jummy84


Just before the Conner Ives Spring 2026 runway show began on Monday afternoon, the venue’s overhead lights flashed in bright primary colors, creating a rainbow effect over the split crowd of showgoers. It set the tone for a joyous show featuring equally mesmerizing vivid neons, as well as an …

Continue reading

September 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
JADE Talks 'THAT'S SHOWBIZ BABY!' Album, Her Love of Pop & New Tour
Music

JADE Talks ‘THAT’S SHOWBIZ BABY!’ Album, Her Love of Pop & New Tour

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s no mistake that JADE’s debut solo album THAT’S SHOWBIZ BABY! is a thoroughly poptacular affair. “I live and breathe pop, I always have done,” she tells the Billboard Pop Shop Podcast (listen to her full interview, below). “I just am obsessed with it.”

Billboard has called the album “a distinct, dazzlingly ornate record” that takes sonic cues from divas like Diana Ross, Madonna and Janet Jackson, and demonstrates the breadth of her “taste as a pop student and skills as a wide-ranging vocal dynamo.”

JADE first made her mark on the pop landscape as Jade Thirlwall, a member of the British girl group Little Mix. The ensemble was formed in 2011 on the U.K. reality competition program The X Factor and notched numerous hit albums on both sides of the Atlantic, including a whopping 19 top 10-charted hits on the U.K. Official Singles Chart. In 2022, the act went on hiatus while the individual members explored solo endeavors.

Fast-forward to 2024, and JADE’s debut solo single “Angel of My Dreams” hit No. 7 on the U.K. Official Singles Chart. She followed it with another top 40 hit in “FUFN (F— You For Now)” this past March, and won her first solo BRIT Award for Best Pop Act that same month. Through the summertime, JADE played major festivals including Glastonbury, and opened for Chappell Roan in Edinburgh. Her THAT’S SHOWBIZ BABY! – THE TOUR kicks off Oct. 8 in Dublin and continues on into the U.K. through Oct. 22 in London, which she has “hope” will come to the U.S.

The Billboard Pop Shop Podcast caught up with JADE quite literally a few hours before THAT’S SHOWBIZ BABY! was released on Sept. 12. Here are some excerpts of her chat with the podcast, which you can listen to in full below.

On when the writing process for the album began.

The album writing process started, I think, like three years ago now, right off the back of the Little Mix hiatus. I went straight into the studio, writing nonstop, figuring out what my sound was on my own. And then I think just over, maybe, a year and a half ago was when “Angel of My Dreams” was written. And I think once that happened, that kind of became the catalyst for what the album would be, and everything just fell into place from that point onwards.

How she’s staying in the moment and celebrating the album’s arrival.

In the next few weeks, I just want to be super present with this record. It’s something I’m so proud of and waited a long time for. And I want it to feel like a celebration between me and my fans and see as many of them as possible. And I think in this job, in this music industry, you’re constantly on the move, and you can easily just sort of get swept up in all the politics and the promotion and marketing and all that stuff. And just forget that actually it’s really f—ing cool. And you are able to just make an album, and you should take time to be proud of that and be present for it.

On how SHOWBIZ has an “element of chaos.”

And then I think the album itself has an element of chaos to it, just sonically. And each song is different to the next. I consciously didn’t want it to be a super cohesive or conceptualized album, because the truth is that I was experimenting for this and trying different sounds, figuring out who I am. So I wanted the album to literally sound like that. And with songs like “Angel of My Dreams” or “It Girl,” and, you know, even to “Fantasy,” every song has its own identity. And I guess that’s where the kind of chaos of the record lies. I feel like you can hear it … so that day she was, she was trying this sound, and she was merging these genres. It’s a very sort of experimental pop record, I would say.

On JADE’s love of pop music.

I live and breathe pop. I always have done. I just am obsessed with it. And I’ve done a lot of research. Ever since I was a little girl, it’s always been something I’ve been obsessed with — not just the music, but, like, just every part of it. Like, I’d have the dolls of my favorite artists, and the CDs, and I’d open it up, and I’d look at all the credits and the lyrics and take it all in and study the artwork and the videos. So for me, the best pop artists are the ones that don’t just focus on the music and they see it as a whole brand, I suppose. And so I have a lot of fun with that. And, you know, making a pop record that feels very visual, too. So, yeah, I always knew, and I always will be like a pop girly. But, it was interesting, and it was essential to sort of find out what the JADE sound is. And, like, how do I stand out and make my mark in the pop world?

Did the genesis of SHOWBIZ begin before Little Mix went on hiatus?

I think, like musically, I kind of had an inkling of where I might go. There was a song I wrote for the girls on our fifth album called “Wasabi,” and it kind of became a fan favorite, and it became almost known as like, as my song within the group. And so, I kind of knew that that would be a good starting point. But I think lyrically, it wasn’t until after, I think because I was so used to writing lyrics that were very universal or very relatable for everyone, because in a group you can’t be too personal. It’s not just about you. So, it wasn’t until afterwards, when I was in rooms on my own, and getting more confident and sort of realizing, oh, I actually can just literally write about anything now, and I can be, almost uncomfortably honest at times with, like, my own experience.

On her love of Madonna.

She is one of the best pop stars we will ever get. She reinvents herself with every era, which I find hugely inspiring. As someone that wants a long career, for me, Madonna is the epitome of longevity as a pop artist, and I think that’s when you are so sure of who you are, and you speak up and speak out for things you feel passionate about. I watched her documentaries as a teenager, and I always respected that she wasn’t afraid to be controversial, or afraid to stand up for what she thought was right. So, I’ve took that with me as a solo artist.

On what to expect from her THAT’S SHOWBIZ BABY! tour.

I think my THAT’S SHOWBIZ BABY concert will play on that sort of theatrical theme. And I’m actually really excited to be in theaters, because it means I can really delve into taking advantage of those stages and making it almost feel like a musical theater production or a cabaret show. So I’m very excited for that. And, all the songs are all very different. So it’s going to make for a, well, a show that won’t be boring. (Laughs.) You know, obviously I love to go in with the costumes, and we’ll have the band and the choreography. So, yeah, I’m really working hard with my creative director on how we make this smaller stage feel like you’ve entered my world and you leave there being like, ‘Oh, fuck, you know, she really made that work.’

Could the tour visit America?

I think so. Yeah, I hope so. We hope so. We’re all putting our heads together of how to make this work. Because I really, really want to get over to the U.S. and do shows there and in Europe and just everywhere. You know, it’s always been a dream of mine to be able to say that I’m doing my own headline show, whatever that is.

The Billboard Pop Shop Podcast is your one-stop shop for all things pop on Billboard‘s weekly charts. You can always count on a lively discussion about the latest pop news, fun chart stats and stories, new music, and guest interviews with music stars and folks from the world of pop. Casual pop fans and chart junkies can hear Billboard‘s executive digital director, West Coast, Katie Atkinson and Billboard’s managing director, charts and data operations, Keith Caulfield every week on the podcast, which can be streamed on Billboard.com or downloaded in Apple Podcasts or your favorite podcast provider. (Click here to listen to the previous edition of the show on Billboard.com.)  

September 17, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Kat Velasco
Hollywood

Kat Velasco Is Turning Chaos into Country Pop Gold – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 September 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Kat Velasco

Kat Velasco has a talent for finding beauty in the unpredictable. The rising country-pop star doesn’t shy away from life’s chaos. She turns it into music that feels both deeply personal and instantly relatable.

Born and raised in Columbia, South Carolina, Velasco grew up in a home where music was always present. At just eight years old, she signed with a small agency and began performing in musical theatre and pageants. These early experiences taught her stage presence long before she ever stepped into a studio.

Whether it is small-town drama, heartbreak, or the thrill of chasing big dreams after moving to Nashville on her own, Velasco transforms it all into songs that stick. Her lyrics hit with the honesty of a late-night conversation, wrapped in melodies that belong on repeat.

“The best songs come from the real stuff,” she explains. “The good, the bad, the parts you think you will never get through — that is where the gold is.”

Kat Velasco
Image Credit: Kat Velasco

Her catalog shows a writer unafraid to take risks. The breakout single “Kitchen Sink,” inspired by growing up with three older brothers, taps into the unspoken rules of small-town life. “Burning Man” leans darker without losing its heart, “Paper Boy” turns personal moments into cautionary tales, “Leave Me Wild” reads like a mission statement, and “Let It Ride” confronts her own insecurities head-on.

Most recently, she released “Breaking My Own Heart,” a raw and emotionally charged anthem about self-sabotage and bracing for disappointment even when everything feels right, showcasing her powerhouse vocals and a bold step into darker territory.

Velasco’s life offstage carries the same spirit as her music. She embraces the unfiltered and the magical in equal measure, finding stories in late-night writing sessions at home, long beach days, and nights that turn into mornings. She says she writes best when she is surrounded by the little pieces of life that remind her of home.

That blend of authenticity and star power is why her fan base keeps growing. People see their own lives reflected in her music, and they connect with the way she tells her story.

Kat Velasco
Image Credit: Kat Velasco

Hollywood loves a personality who owns their narrative, and Kat Velasco is doing just that. With each song, she is proving that chaos is not something to hide. It is the secret ingredient that makes her shine.

September 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
I feel a great deal of responsibility
Celebrity News

Pop music is about the collective, says Lorde

by jummy84 September 9, 2025
written by jummy84

9 September 2025

Lorde thinks pop music is “about the collective”.

Lorde has opened up about her creative process

The 28-year-old singer has explained that she tries to provide some temporary relief to fans who are experiencing some “big, deep pains”.

Lorde told Dazed: “I reread [Lois Lowry’s] The Giver recently. I read it as a ten-year-old, and I reread it on the plane a couple of weeks ago and it really struck me. There’s this figure in the community who feels all the pain that other people couldn’t handle – absorbs it, holds it.

“Without being too f****** high-minded – I make pop music, I’m under no illusion – I think it’s my job to get as close to these big, deep pains that we all feel as I can bear, and try and alchemise them into something that is beautiful and gives catharsis. I think about that a lot with my work.”

Lorde’s music is personal to her own experiences. However, the singer believes she also has a responsibility to her fans.

She said: “I don’t really see it as being about me, although it is very personal. But that’s why I find pop music so incredible, because it’s about the collective.”

Meanwhile, Lorde previously confessed that she felt “disconnected from [her] creativity” at the start of 2023.

The chart-topping star considered quitting the music business altogether two years ago, admitting that she was “not in a great way” at the time.

Speaking to BBC Radio 1’s Jack Saunders, she explained: “At the beginning of 2023 I was not in a great way on a lot of levels.

“I’d never felt more disconnected from my creativity.”

Lorde admits that an eating disorder took over her life at the time, and that it stunted her musical creativity.

The Royals hitmaker shared: “All I was thinking about was trying to weigh as little as possible.

“Going to sleep thinking about food, waking up thinking about food and exercise – that was my creative pursuit.”

Lorde released her latest album, Virgin, earlier this year, and she was deliberately brave in her approach to the project.

She said: “It was hard, it was scary. Some songs aren’t easy.

“I made a lot of changes and really put my artistry front and centre and made that my full-time job and I got a lot of stuff out of the way.”




September 9, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Jonas Brothers Tour Making Every Concert an Event: Pop Shop Podcast
Music

Jonas Brothers Tour Making Every Concert an Event: Pop Shop Podcast

by jummy84 September 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Jonas Brothers are maximizing the news cycle around their 20th-anniversary Greetings From Your Hometown Tour, which launched less than a month ago but has generated dozens of headlines about surprise guests, unexpected reunions and two brother trios joining forces.

The latest big news from the tour came at Sunday’s stop in Dallas, where Fifth Harmony — Ally Brooke, Normani, Lauren Jauregui and Dinah Jane — performed together for the first time in seven years. The quartet performed “Worth It” and “Work From Home” for the lucky crowd, which was also treated to surprises from Kelsea Ballerini, The Plain White T’s and Ryan Cabrera that night. The tour kicked off in the JoBros’ native New Jersey, with Demi Lovato popping up Aug. 10 for a Camp Rock sing-along. Oh, and fellow brother trio Hanson showed up at the Virginia Beach show on Aug. 15 to perform “MMMBop” with the boys.

On the new Billboard Pop Shop Podcast, Katie & Keith are talking about all the ways artists are carving out special moments for fans at their shows — like Taylor Swift’s acoustic set on Eras Tour or Kelly Clarkson’s nightly Kellyoke cover in Las Vegas — and why it’s a win-win for everyone involved.

Also on the show, Stray Kids get their seventh No. 1 album on the Billboard 200 — the entirety of their charting efforts — as KARMA debuts atop the list. Meanwhile, Laufey, Deftones, Tyler, The Creator and BigXthaPlug all shake up the Billboard 200 top 10. Plus, on the Billboard Hot 100, as the KPop Demon Hunters hit “Golden” is No. 1 for a third week, Doja Cat’s new “Jealous Type” debuts in the top 40. And on the Pop Airplay chart, Sabrina Carpenter’s “Manchild” jumps to No. 1 — marking her sixth leader, and all have come in just one year and five months’ time. Has anyone else notched that many No. 1s that quickly?

The Billboard Pop Shop Podcast is your one-stop shop for all things pop on Billboard‘s weekly charts. You can always count on a lively discussion about the latest pop news, fun chart stats and stories, new music, and guest interviews with music stars and folks from the world of pop. Casual pop fans and chart junkies can hear Billboard‘s executive digital director, West Coast, Katie Atkinson and Billboard’s managing director, charts and data operations, Keith Caulfield every week on the podcast, which can be streamed on Billboard.com or downloaded in Apple Podcasts or your favorite podcast provider. (Click here to listen to the previous edition of the show on Billboard.com.)

September 3, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
why female pop stars and sexuality still spark outrage in 2025
Lifestyle

Why Female Pop Stars And Sexuality Still Spark Outrage In 2025? | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

The Blueprint: Madonna and Britney

Madonna set the standard in the early 1990s. With her album Erotica and the infamous Sex book, she pushed boundaries that had never been touched in mainstream pop. She was called vulgar, banned on TV, and branded a bad influence, yet she rewrote what pop stardom could look like.

Why Female Pop Stars And Sexuality Still Spark Outrage In 2025

A few years later, Britney Spears walked into the same trap. Her “…Baby One More Time” schoolgirl image turned her into America’s sweetheart and tabloid target all at once. As she grew bolder in her music and performances, the media turned on her, questioning whether she was “too provocative.” Britney’s career became a case study in how the industry builds women up only to tear them down when they dare to change.

The Rap Vanguard: Nicki and Cardi

By the 2010s, Nicki Minaj and Cardi B redefined how women could use sexuality in music. Nicki’s Anaconda video broke records and broke the internet, while Cardi B’s WAP became both a feminist anthem and a lightning rod for moral panic.

nicki and cardi
Why Female Pop Stars And Sexuality Still Spark Outrage In 2025? 4

What stood out was the hypocrisy. Male rappers had been bragging about sex for decades without scrutiny. When Nicki and Cardi flipped the script, critics accused them of “going too far.” Yet their success showed that audiences were ready for women to own the narrative, even if society wasn’t.

The New Era: Taylor and Sabrina

Fast forward to 2025. Taylor Swift, once the ultimate “girl next door,” is now experimenting with a showgirl persona. Album covers, bold photoshoots, and sultry lyrics have divided her fanbase. Some say it doesn’t match the Taylor they grew up with; others argue it’s simply an artist evolving on her own terms.

taylor and sabrina
Why Female Pop Stars And Sexuality Still Spark Outrage In 2025? 5

Sabrina Carpenter, meanwhile, has taken the spotlight as pop’s newest provocateur. Her album Man’s Best Friend sparked backlash before it even dropped. The cover image, showing her on her knees with a man pulling her hair, was called “degrading” by some and “satire” by others. The album itself turned out to be playful, cheeky, and far from shocking, but the controversy proved how easily female sexuality still rattles audiences.

The Real Issue:

The backlash these women face isn’t really about the music. It’s about control. When female pop stars decide how to present their sexuality, society struggles to accept it. Critics call it a bad influence, fans call it “out of character,” and commentators fall back on the same old labels.

Decades after Madonna was told she’d gone too far, nothing has really changed. Female sexuality in pop still feels “radical”, not because it is, but because society keeps refusing to move on.

Conclusion:

From Madonna to Sabrina Carpenter, the cycle repeats: outrage, debate, judgment. The music evolves, the aesthetics shift, but the conversation remains stuck. Until society stops policing how women choose to express themselves, every new era will look like the old one, just dressed in a different costume.

September 2, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming