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The Charlatans 2025
Music

The Charlatans Come Out on Fire with ‘We Are Love’ » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

The Charlatans are one of those bands with little following in the United States but a massive fanbase in the UK. The rare American who happens upon them is likely searching for artists associated with Oasis or Blur before digging into Inspiral Carpets, Manic Street Preachers, or Ocean Colour Scene. That’s how far we are removed from the Cheshire band, now boasting 14 albums, 22 top 40 singles, and three number one albums.  

Despite our collective ignorance, the Charlatans have returned after an eight-year hiatus with a certain amount of fanfare. The band, which features Tim Burgess (vocals), Martin Blunt (bass), Mark Collins (guitar), Tony Rogers (keyboards), and Pete Salisbury (drums), entered the studio with the crack production team of Dev Hynes (Blood Orange) and Fred Macpherson, including additional contributions from Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur). 

The Charlatans have always prided themselves on moving their music forward; this last break was due to the pandemic, and the members focused on other projects. On We Are Love, they were committed to entering this next phase of their career, incorporating innovative elements, while taking a last meaningful look back at the defining moment that made them who they are today. The record is as invigorated as we’ve heard them in quite some time, without a doubt their most cohesive effort this century. 

Despite the layoff, the Charlatans come out on fire. The tone on the first few tracks is brooding, celebratory, and yearning, sometimes within the span of a few notes. The first single, “We Are Love”, foregrounds intricate guitarwork and angular riffs, a combination that brings together the influences of Johnny Marr and Andy Gill. They can construct sonic landscapes, as on “Many a Day a Heartache”, or fall back into more familiar territory with “For the Girls”. They came of age when acid house, shoegaze, and Britpop all existed contemporaneously, and they show fidelity to each of those scenes. 

The album was recorded in two meaningful locations for the band. Not surprisingly, they made a portion of the album in their own Big Mushroom space in Middlewich, Cheshire; more significantly, they returned to Rockford in Wales, the famed farm studio where their original keyboardist, Rob Collins, was killed in a car crash while making their most well-known record, Tellin’ Stories (1997).  

While decades have passed, that event still colors much of what they do, and the impact is no less present today, as heard on the opener, “Kingdom of Ours”. It describes Collins’ spectral-like presence in the space, complemented by the lyrics: “This world couldn’t hold you / It just reached down, and it took you.” Like many long-standing bands, tragedy is not unfamiliar to them, as they also mourned the death of original drummer Jon Brookes. The bookend track, “Glad You Grabbed Me”, offers a more celebratory take on their history and how nothing less than fate brought them together and kept them afloat. 

Along with Burgess’ striking vocals, keyboards remain the defining aspect of their sound. Unlike some of the Charlatans’ more recent works, We Are Love digs into the grooves that made them such an innovative act in the 1990s. The powerhouse line on “Deeper and Deeper” and keyboard solo on “Many a Day a Heartache” hearken back to a simpler (maybe druggier) time when Madchester was all the rage. Even the lyrics echo from back then: “Deeper and deeper / I don’t feel like coming up from air, just now / Not while I got my head in the clouds.” 

The Charlatans prove they have another act that’s worthy of your attention (that means you, Yanks). Unlike bands that have reemerged after extended periods, like the Jesus and Mary Chain, My Bloody Valentine, and Slowdive, the Charlatans have evolved since we met them, with to-be-expected hits and misses. Maybe because the group have been active this whole time, the tendency is to take their presence for granted, like how we view Primal Scream these days. We Are Love celebrates their history but skips the victory lap, creating some of their most important music to date in the process. 

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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The Best Metal Albums of October 2025
Music

The Best Metal Albums of October 2025 » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

We are gearing up toward the end of the year, and October packs quite a punch. This month, many heavyweights make their return. Tristan Shone with Author & Punisher continues his industrial trajectory while not completely distancing himself from the humane. Primitive Man descend into the abyss, their sludge/death/noise combination going strong, while Evoken plunge into sorrowful and harsh gloom with Mendacium.

Hooded Menace carry their newfound heavy metal-inspired path, and the long-awaited return of Coroner lives up to expectations. Finally, a newer band with a lot of promise, One of Nine expand their majestic black metal, drawing inspiration from the ever-fertile subject matter of Middle-earth.

Deeper in the underground, Gates of Dawn make an astounding return with the psychedelic rock of III, Grole continue their relentless march through punk-infused black metal, Binah open up their death metal to cosmic extensions, and Sum of R produce a fantastical, dark trip through Spectral. This month really has everything, so dig in! – Spyros Stasis

Best Metal Albums of October 2025

Author & Punisher – Nocturnal Birding (Relapse)

Author & Punisher have always been pulled by different forces. Tristan Shone’s fascination with the artificial is well established. By building his own drone and dub machines to articulate his industrial vision, Shone proves his complete dedication to his craft. On the other hand, he has always balanced his mechanical harshness with an unmistakable human core. His music might collapse into brutal breakdowns and sonic debris, yet beneath it lies an unmistakable emotional resonance. Case in point, his latest work, Nocturnal Birding, where he draws inspiration from birdsong for his compositions, forcing his machines to abide by their sonic quality and rhythmic structure.

Following an excellent record in Krüller, Shone does not look to repeat the recipe. Krüller might have been the epitome of Shone’s organic/inorganic approach, but Nocturnal Birding takes a different route. The record is condensed, clocking at just over 30 minutes. The compositions themselves are much more immediate, heard in the devastating Godflesh-ian breakdowns of “Black Storm Petrel” and “Rook”.

Similarly, the hooks here feel less intricate, more immediate, than those on Krüller. “Meadowlark” pushes toward a Nine Inch Nails subtleness, the desolate vocal delivery creating an encompassing space. Even more impressive is the ending to “Mute Swan”, where the final ascent carries a hypnotic and otherworldly quality. It ties the urban to the transcendent in fascinating equilibrium, the sound design intricately mirroring the background bird chirps.

In many ways, Shone has not changed his ways. His vision remains unwavering, but still, he finds places to experiment. If Krüller was the culmination of his hybrid vision, Nocturnal Birding shows how potent his sound can be when stripped back to its most direct, primal form. – Spyros Stasis


Binah – Ónkos (Osmose)

Listening back to Binah’s debut, Hallucinating in Resurrecture, it is easy to see how the UK band could be lumped in the old-school death metal revival of the 2010s. Their heavy groove and obsession with Sunlight Studios’ guitar timbre alone sufficed. However, even then, something more complex was brewing beneath, highlighted by the atmospheric qualities, especially prominent in the title track. This atmospheric dimension further flourished in 2018’s Phobiate, which incorporated additional progressive elements and off-kilter ideas to set Binah apart from the herd. “Dream Paralysis” is a perfect example of this evolution, its discordant quality colliding with a contorted rhythmical structure.

Ónkos is another leap forward for Binah, who forge stronger connections to their experimental side. Ambiance sits at the core, shifting forms throughout. The electronic component might have existed before, but here it feels more immersive. The introductions and interludes it offers have a cosmic quality. 

This widening scope feeds directly into the psychedelic and progressive components of Ónkos. Amid a punishing death-metal form, their intricate guitar work opens another dimension amid the brutality. It channels the early spirit of Timeghoul, balancing beauty and horror.

While this might suggest that Binah might have made a more rigid turn outside of death metal, that is not true. Their old-school Swedish death metal adoration is still there, palpable in every heavy groove, identifiable through the guttural distortion. However, they move from the raw churn of classic Clandestine toward the expansive, narrative approach of Crimson.

The melodic guitar lines, the intricate solos, the immersive ambiance, and the bravery of experimentation all reveal this, but even more so is the fact that, much like Edge of Sanity, they do not forget their past. That refusal to abandon death metal’s core is precisely what makes Ónkos Binah’s most daring and accomplished work to date. – Spyros Stasis


I never thought I would see Coroner release a new record, and yet here we are. Twenty-two years after the monumental Grin, the Swiss act makes its long-awaited return with Dissonance Theory. Coroner pushed thrash to new dimensions, harnessing its raw aggression through a technical lens. Their first single from the new record, “Renewal”, reaffirmed this lineage, taking on a Kreator-esque hostility, but patching it through the trio’s relentless precision and heavy groove.

However, Coroner’s vision was more ambitious. I always viewed them as a reflection of Voivod, both bands tapping into the same discordant stream. However, where the Canadians reveled in chaotic exhilaration, the Swiss worshipped an unyielding force of precision. The breakdowns of “Transparent Eye” show this rhythmic dedication, a relentless order that slowly twists the mind. That same structural rigor injects the heavy groove that has always been Coroner’s hallmark. It is hard to believe that a band founded in 1983 could unleash the industrial coating of “Sacrificial Lamb”, the tremendous momentum of “Symmetry”, or the mid-tempo application of “Trinity”.

It is a truly forward-thinking mindset, separate from any pointless progressive term. How many thrash bands can you name with atmospheric passages? The aforementioned Voivod, maybe Depressive Age, aspects of Mekong Delta, and Sabbat. It is a slim list, right? Yet, Coroner did exactly that through the discordant lead of “Paralyzed, Mesmerized” in Grin, and they still unearth this otherworldly sense in “Sacrificial Lamb” and “The Law”. Still, through all this technical aptitude, the relentless rhythm, the discordance and atmosphere, Coroner remain extremely straightforward and catchy.

The opening track, “Consequence,” and its chorus alone will have you tapping frantically on the repeat button. It makes the ride through Dissonance Theory that much more rewarding, an ambitious work that retains a direct perspective. It proves that Coroner were not just ahead of their time back in the 1980s and 1990s, they still are to this day. – Spyros Stasis


Evoken – Mendacium (Profound Lore)

Part of the extreme doom/death pantheon, Evoken have amassed a near flawless discography. Embrace The Emptiness, Quietus, and Antithesis of Light established an unyielding sense of dread and sorrow. However, starting with A Caress of the Void, Evoken began to soften slightly (very, very slightly), enveloping their dread in a sense of melancholy. Hypnagogia and Altra Mors joined that tradition, but their new record, Mendacium, looks to unravel this.

Mendacium acts as a hybrid point. Opener “Matins” rekindles the old hopelessness, its riffs breaking in slow waves, vocals lamenting as though everything is destined to be swallowed by the abyss. It is a sad procession, a task that must be completed to achieve some form of catharsis. The continuation with “Lauds” follows this paradigm; here, the guitars and keyboards drip with venomous intent, their discordance enhancing the already uneasy sense of the ritual.

This is where the record twists, with Evoken tapping into their latter-day self. In this mode, they augment their majestic quality, confidently walking toward despair rather than being dragged into it. To that end, they evoke (see what I did there?) the melancholic spirit of the Peaceville Three, adorning their ceremony with a tangible, sorrowful essence. Then it all comes crashing down again. “None” channels Esoteric’s psychedelic endeavors, and the grand finale with “Compline” results in the final, unavoidable devastation.

Here doom contorts into something harsher, as death metal brutality tears through the funereal veil. It is an excellent structure, paying homage to the band’s evolution over the years and collecting all its individual components into a unified form. Thus, Mendacium does not just retrace Evoken’s past; it refracts it, proving that their command of extreme doom/death’s language remains as devastating and as essential as ever. – Spyros Stasis


Gates of Dawn – III (Death Hymns)

One of the most exciting acts in underground black metal, Gates of Dawn possess an uncanny ability to mix psychedelia into their black metal brew. True, others have pursued similar experiments, most notably Oranssi Pazuzu, but Gates of Dawn retained much of the black metal rawness in both their debut, I, and their more experimental sophomore, II, which at times embraced a kosmische outlook.

With III, the balance nearly collapses, with Gates of Dawn giving themselves over almost entirely to psychedelic rock. As “Screaming Skin” comes in, it is still the majestic black metal side that pierces through. The synthesizers create a vast space, while the guitar work stays in the metallic domain with galloping rhythms and even a quasi-romantic, medieval-esque passage. Yet, under the surface, the guitars lay catchy licks, more akin to psych rock. The second half of the track establishes the shift as the dreamy melodies take on a 1960s surf-rock perspective.

While black metal persists in parts, the foundation has shifted. Garage rock becomes a driving force in “Magewind”, with the guitars acquiring more grit as the drums perform their circular krautrock-inspired procession. Funk ideas bloom within this setting, the second half of “Faces In Flames” coming alive with a 1960s groove. And then the intricate guitar playing in “Trembling Gaze” has more in common with Eric Clapton than with Snorre Ruch.

With III, Gates of Dawn display a similar mindset to Ved Buens Ende in Written in Waters, a willingness to transcend the genre’s perimeter, while still haunted by its presence. Though sonically these two records are very different, they both mark a step away from the black metal space toward psychedelia, but there is always some pull that remains.

“Fell Specter” is the most obvious example —an excellent track that sees Gates of Dawn momentarily retreat into tremolo-picked black metal. What is even better is the moment when that riff collides with the intense audio effects, combining the cold grimness with a spaced-out feeling. It encapsulates Gates of Dawn’s creativity and opens a world of potential for what comes next. – Spyros Stasis


Grole – Come Here at Your Own Peril (Tour de Garde)

Jordan Kelly, aka Illusory, is best known in the Canadian black metal scene for his work with Spectral Wound and Profane Order. With Grole, Illusory descends to the primal depths of black metal, relishing its lo-fi qualities and harsh structures, and also finds a place to excavate his interests in Newfoundland history, tradition, and heritage. The first specimen in With a Pike Upon My Shoulder is a raw and uncompromising piece, defined by harsh production and lead lines that cut through the murk.

Where the debut carved out Grole’s raw foundations, Come Here at Your Peril refines them. Here, Illusory places the punk and proto-extreme metal heritage on equal ground with the raw black metal side. “Sheila’s Brush” feels like a blackened crossover track, while “Dubh Dóite” delivers a Celtic Frost-ian groove and deathgrunts. Further heavy metal tropes appear, with the sharp riffs of “I Went Home Today” echoing with a blackened edge.

Despite these excursions, the black metal presence is strong. “Talamh An Éisc” is the most prominent expression, with its traditional riffing radiating the icy feel of the genre, while the howling vocals echo through the abyss. Even the acoustic guitar inclusion in “I Went Home Today” reaffirms its lineage, a technique associated with the folky side of the Norwegian scene.

What this results in is a record that is more immediate and catchier than its predecessor. Tracks like “Moratorium” and its insane chorus, or “The Anti Confederation Song” with its powerful hooks, will be embedded in your mind for days to come. There is, however, a touch of the earlier romanticism that has subsided, mainly due to the less cavernous production, which moves away from the mystical and into the confrontational. If With A Pike Upon My Shoulder is the descent to the abyss, then Come Here At Your Peril is where Illusory sharpens the blade, combining immediacy with rawness to deliver a memorable result. – Spyros Stasis


Hooded Menace – Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration (Season of Mist)

Hooded Menace’s trajectory appeared set. The Finnish ghouls’ career was defined by the rotten ambition of Autopsy and the towering forms of Winter. Yet, in a surprising twist, 2021’s The Tritonus Bell saw them ingest classic heavy metal tropes. It was not so much the early Peaceville Three bleakness that guided them, but rather the fiery steel of Mercyful Fate and King Diamond. With Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration, this transformation is solidified, with the trio stepping back into 1980s glory. This is immediately apparent as the expressive lead work to “Pale Masquerade” settles in. NWOBHM collides with the fiendish essence of Melissa, and a touch of proto-thrash through bursts of undisciplined guitar solos.

However, if it were a complete shift from death/doom into heavy metal, the result would be ridiculous. This is where Hooded Menace show their quality. They do not forget their past; instead, they reconfigure it. “Portrait Without a Face” is telling, the track alternating between its Iron Maiden fascination and the My Dying Bride and Paradise Lost gloom (cello and all). Similarly, “Into Haunted Oblivion” awakens the Celtic Frost specter, its vile demeanor as unforgiving as ever.

Further classic doom tropes surface: the melodic essence of Candlemass shines through “Daughters of Lingering Pain”, and Cathedral’s playful, circa The Carnival Bizarre, invocations define “Lugubrious Dance”. In that way, Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration is a record that knows its past, thrives in its present, and even finds room for a sly wink with a Duran Duran cover to close the casket. – Spyros Stasis


One of Nine – Dawn of the Iron Shadow (Profound Lore)

One of Nine enter a rich tradition of black metal bands finding inspiration in the works of J.R.R. Tolkien. This is a subject that requires balance. On the one hand, they must lean into atmosphere and heroic poetry; on the other, they must retain the aggression and vigor of the genre. This tension pushes One of Nine to evolve from their debut style into something more ambitious.

Dawn of the Iron Shadow builds on Eternal Sorcery, but it is a deeper, more complete work. The ambient passages are more descriptive, serving as immersive introductions with monologues and narration. Much like Summoning, the band also weave these elements into the songs themselves. The result is a richer tapestry, with “Age of Chains” layering choirs and bells over a black metal backbone. Their fast-paced, expressive core has also stepped into majestic territory. Stormblåst-era Dimmu Borgir is the reference point, shining through the meticulous arrangements of “Behold the Shadow of My Thoughts” and “Of Desperate Void”.

Yet One of Nine balance this mainstream symphonic style with darker shades. Emperor’s influence fuels the fury of “Dreadful Leap”, while sharpened, melodic leads in the Sacramentum mold echo through “Death Wing Black Flame”. They also glance at their contemporaries, with Wormwitch’s recent pointed aggression informing “Quest of the Silmaril” and lending a modern edge to the Tolkienian tapestry.

Through these extensions, One of Nine live up to their ambition rather than becoming just another Middle-earth-inspired act. They project atmosphere and storytelling with both emotion and compositional strength. The only blemish is that Dawn of the Iron Shadow does not yet uncover wholly new ground. But if their evolution continues, that breakthrough might only be a matter of time. – Spyros Stasis


Primitive Man – Observance (Relapse)

In Primitive Man’s world, there is no room for hope. There is barely room for breathing. They view the world not as collapsing, but as already collapsed, and the rest of us are catching up to that fact. This running thread defines their discography and is the key component of their latest work, Observance. Many in extreme music have tried to capture this outlook, but Primitive Man stand apart in the way they join different lineages.

The slow, collapsing pace owes to the drone/doom pioneers, with the punishing minimalism of Khanate and the annihilating essence of early Unearthly Trance defining “Seer”. This is punishment delivered in sparsity. Riffs crash down, separated by gulfs of silence, while despairing vocals echo through cavernous depths. This feeling is enhanced via a funeral essence, a sense of melancholy that radiates with dread. The melodic touches of “Devotion” channel this energy, making for a heartbreaking turn. It is a foundation that is complete through the post-metallic influence of Neurosis, breathing a dissonant air into the grandeur of “Water”.

However, much like all their points of reference, Primitive Man understand that slow pace and towering form are not enough. To that end, they are on point with their sound design and noise textures, channeling the adventurous essence of Wolf Eyes to uncompromising effect, with even the interlude “Iron Sights” standing out with its chaotic form. Similarly, touches of punkish energy offer a pummelling alternative to the slow-moving dread of “Social Contract”.

The more subdued noise-rock applications are contorted, but they still arrive with the distinct Swans-ian touch in “Transactional”, and the blackened aesthetic is ever-present in “Natural Law”. And of course, none of these offer any respite, any deviation from the end goal of Observance. Seventy minutes of suffocation, ending not with relief but with obliteration. – Spyros Stasis


Sum of R – Spectral (WV Sorcerer / Dusktone)

Reto Mäder’s project, Sum of R, has always circled around one foundation: ritual. Through the years, Sum of R have changed their perspective multiple times. Their early experimental doom machinations reached a peak with 2013’s Lights on Water. This was followed up by a surprising retreat to a minimal, dark ambient form with the excellent Orga. 

In 2022, Sum of R released Lahbryce, which featured the addition of Jukka Rämänen and Marko Neuman of Dark Buddha Rising, injecting a new psychedelic dimension. In many ways,  Lahbryce was a return to the pre-Orga sound. Here, the drones were subjected to the doom riffs, but unlike Lights on Water, Sum of R injected a further psychedelic twist. A successful experiment, they now return to it with Spectral.

The droning progression and hypnotic movements mirror Lahbryce, where weaving melodies and free-flowing rhythmic patterns create a trance-like atmosphere that can lead to uneasy moments. “Null” exemplifies the latter, as the percussive structure becomes unwieldy and out of control. Like their Finnish kin, they embrace the doom dimension, unleashing excruciating processions of nihilistic torture in “Waltz of Death”.

At the same time, Sum of R return to their past. The post-metal and post-rock elements return in “Beer Cans in a Bottomless Pit”, where the electronic backbone slowly shifts toward krautrock-style repetition. Similarly, they again retreat to a minimal state, with echoes of Orga pulsing through the strange percussive structures of “Null” and the malicious abstractness of “Violate” and “Cold Signature”.

If Spectral falters, it’s in its closeness to Lahbryce. Though it refines the album’s approach—making it more focused, more controlled—it does not quite transcend it. The ritual remains, dark and glorious, but its circle feels familiar. However, as with rituals, repetition is not so much a sign of stagnation as of devotion, and this can lead to strange new places in the future. – Spyros Stasis


October 27, 2025 0 comments
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Pulse Emitter 2025
Music

Pulse Emitter Dive Deeply Into Synth Landscapes » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Under the moniker of Pulse Emitter, Daryl Groetsch’s work with the synthesizer has embraced melodic synth music, organic ambient, relaxation, microtonal, and noise/drone, and while the most recent Pulse Emitter album, Dusk (2022), encompassed most of these subgenres, his new one, Tide Pools, is more of the same. Which is good news, because Groetsch absolutely excels at creating synth soundscapes that sound mind-bendingly wild, are massively melodic, and demand repeated listens.

Leaping out of the gate with the frantic, jittery “Energy Flying”, Groetsch immediately creates an atmosphere of futuristic hope. Things slow down on the more ruminative “So Many Leaves”, but none of the sleek sophistication or generally upbeat vibes are compromised. Despite the songs all seeming to embrace the same positive headspace, there’s plenty of variety and individuality. “Chip Stacking” is positively playful: crystal clear melody lines that are rich and irresistible, often coming off as a soundtrack to the world’s most advanced video game.

There are moments on Tide Pools that sound gracefully unmoored, such as on the lush, ethereal “Jellyfish and Friends”, which includes fretless bass soundalike patches that nudge the song into new age jazz territory. Meanwhile, songs like “Critters” and “Fronds” take cues from more experimental electronic avenues, with gurgling sounds and slashes of distorted clips that would sound at home on Orange Milk Records.

However, much of Tide Pools consists of neat, orderly lines that pleasantly surprise with unusual sound combinations that ultimately sound warm and inviting: “Early Motion”, “In a Circuit”, and the twin title tracks (“Tide Pool 1” and “Tide Pool 2”) are playfully adventurous, like bright, buzzy ear candy that won’t rot out your teeth.

Tide Pools is the fourth Pulse Emitter release on Chicago’s Hausu Mountain label (in addition to Dusk, Swirlings, and his collaboration with Brett Naucke, Mugen: Volume 9), and while it largely falls along the lines of that imprint’s dedication to bold individuality, Daryl Groetsch goes a step further by creating musical worlds that are always filled with a sense of optimism alongside a bold artistic spirit.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Carmen Staaf Sounding Line
Music

Carmen Staaf’s New LP Takes on Williams and Monk » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Pianist Carmen Staaf came galloping onto the jazz scene through her work with drummer Allison Miller in their Science Fair (2018) and in a set of duets, Nearness (2022). If you are playing a percussion instrument (which the piano is, after all) and keeping up with Allison Miller, you are exceptional. Staaf‘s new album is both an interesting thinkpiece and a lovely jazz recording. It is subtitled “Conversations on the Music of Mary Lou Williams and Thelonious Monk” and was inspired by the friendship of these two composers and pianists.

Due to the longstanding sexism in jazz, we tend to think of Monk as more important and influential than Williams, but this is untrue. She was a well-formed jazz musician before Monk came up in the 1940s, and she was a mentor to him and to other young beboppers. It is well documented that the main melodic element of Monk’s “Hackensack” actually came from Williams, that he shared his early music with her at salons she hosted for him and other up-and-coming players like Bud Powell, and that she acted as an advocate for Monk’s art. Monk casts a long shadow in the art form, but a good part of that shadow belongs to Mary Lou Williams.

Particularly, Williams was one of the links connecting Monk back to the early stride and swing pianists. His innovations may have been a factor in her continued growth as a writer and player well into her 60s. It was a complex friendship.

Carmen Staaf’s Sounding Line makes some interesting sonic arguments about this relationship. She presents three Mary Lou Williams tunes and two Monk tunes in alternation, followed by two originals. Five performances are duets, and two feature a quartet consisting of a trumpet/clarinet front line backed by her piano and drummer Hamir Atwal. All the recordings, made without a bass player, are more transparent or even “naked” than typical mainstream jazz. The compositions are laid bare to a significant extent.

I love how Staaf has juxtaposed Williams’ “Libra” with Monk’s “Monk’s Mood”. “Libra” is a duet with clarinetist Ben Goldberg, a searching, slow-midtempo melody that is both melancholy and stately. The pair plays it with languor, showing off the unusual harmonic structure and letting the clarinet take only a brief solo before the theme returns, lazily, subtly. The Monk tune that follows—a duet with vibraphonist Dillon Vado—also sneaks up on us.

For a couple of minutes, the musicians play a moody introduction: Vado uses his instrument’s rarely explored ability to play for a long time. These sustained notes make it sound like a synthesizer, while Staaf abstracts Monk’s harmonies into blue patterns and arpeggios. When the familiar melody finally arrives, we realize they have been teasing it all along, but in shades and slivers. Together, the performances suggest that both composers were drawn to mysterious harmonic patterns that strayed from the Tin Pan Alley norm and unique melodies.

The Williams tune “Scorpio” runs into Monk’s “Bye-Ya” in a similar way. The former finds Staaf playing a craggy, interval-leaping left-hand bass figure as trumpeter Ambrose Akinmusire brings in melody. The two musicians percolate against each other, improvising, before a more particular melody joins them in careful counterpoint. In a third “movement” of the performance, Staaf’s left hand suggests an old cowboy song, a sad shade to underlie the trumpeter’s expressive playing. The Monk tune is a duet with percussionist John Santos on bongos, with another leaping bass part essential as the drums tap dance and play counterpoint to a melody that is a symphony for wild intervals.

It is no surprise, then, when Staaf’s first original, “Boiling Point”, uses a left-hand piano bass line that jumps around with lively energy. It seems to flow nicely from the prior track, Williams’ “KoolBonga”, a blues arranged with the bass line itself (played by bass clarinet and muted trumpet) being the melody. Goldberg’s clarinet and trumpeter Darren Johnston outline the “Boiling Point” melody, harmonizing it with sassy originality, and the improvisations spit, spin, and curl above the pattern without sounding like any other tune.

Staaf saves the best for last. “The Water Wheel”, the second duet with Akinmusire’s trumpet, closes the album with a summation of the other six tracks. The opening flows in a manner that suggests the title: a genuine conversation between the musicians—the conversation that took place in the 1940s-1960s between Monk and Williams, if you like. Staaf and Akinmusire improvise together, truly, interpolating her melody, mixing and matching the form, until, voila!, she begins a rolling bass line beneath the trumpet’s last set of variations. It isn’t exactly the line from the album’s first (Williams) composition, but the callback reminds us that Staaf’s artistry also flows from Williams as mentor and teacher.

Throughout Sounding Line, there is relatively little show-offery from Carmen Staaf. As a pianist, she exemplifies taste and balance—the kind of playing that makes her a superb bandmate and duet partner throughout. Her own improvisations are logical and artful, flowing out of and amplifying the beauty or daring of the composed pieces. In a sense, it is easy to “merely” enjoy an album like this because it doesn’t surge dramatically or overheat, but neither did Thelonious Monk nor Mary Lou Williams. For this recording, that is part of the point. They came together and raised jazz to a new level, and the music follows suit.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Joan Baez Farewell Angelina
Music

Reissue of Classic Folk LP Shows Joan Baez in Transition » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

American folk music legend Joan Baez’s interpretive skills are undervalued. Many know her through her one-time partner, Bob Dylan, and, to a lesser extent, from her remarkable, vibrato-heavy soprano and decades of political activism. However, some of her best-known covers, especially her 1971 hit version of the Band‘s “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down“, can feel woefully inappropriate, with or without botched lyrics.

Still, a new reissue of her 1965 album, Farewell, Angelina, shows Baez in generally stronger form singing work by Dylan, Donovan, Pete Seeger, and Woody Guthrie, bolstered by Kevin Gray’s new all-analog mastering, cut directly from the original tapes. Pressed on heavyweight (180 gram) vinyl in a faithfully replicated jacket, the LP sounds warmly inviting and enveloping, providing a welcome alternative to listening on CD or streaming.

Amid the booming folk revival of the 1950s and 1960s, 18-year-old Baez and her dulcet voice first came to public attention when she performed at the 1959 Newport Folk Festival. In the years that followed, she became known for championing young songwriters like Dylan and for marching alongside activists like Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Farewell, Angelina provides a transition between Baez’s early acoustic work and her more electric and orchestrated recordings of the near future. The album was recorded the year Dylan went electric at the same festival, and it is the first Baez record to feature an electric guitar. Whether Baez’s new direction was more commercially or artistically motivated (if such a separation is possible), the album shows Baez changing with the times, however tentatively such work might suggest today.

The title track, the first of four Dylan songs, is gorgeously understated, opening Farewell, Angelina with a gently apocalyptic omen. Baez sounds more in her element, regardless of instrumentation, than on some tracks. Another acoustic track, the traditional “The Wild Mountain Thyme“, sounds less muted but also has Joan Baez sounding like she’s at her most comfortable.

On the other hand, the electric guitar might have been a novelty in American folk music at the time. Still, despite the loveliness of the instrument’s accompaniment on “Daddy, You Been On My Mind,” it sounds more like an accessory than a necessity today.

In addition, with hindsight, some potentially exciting tracks sound out of place: a chipper, strident rendition of Dylan’s “It’s All Over Now, Baby Blue” is the most awkward track. Other versions of Baez singing the song, like on Live at Newport, sound steadier and more naturally performed. In contrast, the version with a louder electric band on Baez’s underrated 2005 live album, Bowery Songs, is interpretively superior to either version.

The most haunting moment on Farewell, Angelina is “Sagt Mir Wo Die Blumen Sind“, a German translation of Pete Seeger’s “Where Have All the Flowers Gone“, recorded two decades after the end of World War II. Though it lacks the cultural cachet of the Dylan covers, “Sagt Mir Wo Die Blumen Sind” is the album’s greatest track, in its subdued mourning.

In fact, to my ears, the record’s ending is stronger and more startling than its more celebrated beginning, as mentioned in the three consecutive Dylan covers. “Sagt Mir Wo Die Blumen Sind” and a sparely electrified, but declarative closer, Dylan’s “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall“, rivet the listener and bring Farewell, Angelina full circle with the apocalyptic specter of nuclear war on the opening title track.

The reissue’s sensitive mastering brings out the acoustic bass and the high tremors of Baez’s voice well, and the record sounds excellent in this incarnation. The album, especially in this reissue, is strong enough to warrant repeated listenings. However, at times, Joan Baez sounds as if she’s in a transitional state—not only with the electric guitar behind her, but also with her interpretive skills. However, the reissue is nuanced enough to appeal to many fans of (mostly) acoustic music, not only American folk music of the time.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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Los Cinco Cardones 2025
Music

Los Cinco Cardones’ Debut Shows Their Versatility » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The title track of Los Cinco Cardones’ debut, El Quinto Cardón, sits just about at the album’s center. It’s a spellbinding ten minutes of desert-tinged jazz, keys lifting like a midnight wind, guitar echoing over open sand, bass rolling along on a high-speed night drive, sax soaring into a cloudless midnight. That is both the record’s heart and its pinnacle: the quartet performing not just a piece but a cohesive landscape, breathtaking and dreamlike. Here is where the band move with the tightest fit, everything glowing, everyone creating. It is outstanding.

I start my review five tracks in, not because “El Quinto Cardón” is representative of the rest of the album–no two of its tracks are alike enough for such a claim–but because I can’t stop listening to it in all its lengthy, evocative glory. Part of me thinks I would like an entire album of this song.

A wiser part of me, though, knows that what makes this piece so mesmerizing is that it arrives amid a very eclectic mix. Each of the eight tracks of El Quinto Cardón has its own feel, profoundly so. El Quinto Cardón opens with the straight-ahead grooves of “El Baile De Los Cardones”, a warm introduction to the group on which each member gets at least a moment in the spotlight: bandleader Sebastian Maschat on drums, Sebastian Dimarco on bass, Diego Sole on guitars, and Howard Clifton on sax and keys. “Afresque” picks up the pace with broad Afrobeat references, giving Clifton a chance to loosely emulate Fela with swinging brass.

The band skip into unexpected meters on “Clowns are the Real Magicians”, in which Clifton’s lilting keys are crucial in delivering on the whimsy promised in the title, as are subtle horn squeaks at the end. There’s an esoteric flair to “Ode to Being Weightless”, in which Clifton sings over retro, agile riffs. After monumental “El Quinto Cardón” is a trio of more fast-paced numbers: melodica-infused “Peyotito”, guitar-driven and progressive-tinged “Sheep of My Parrish”, and quirky Afrobeat-meets-fast march “Afrencera En Onze Típico”.

It’s hard to imagine getting bored at a Los Cinco Cardones gig. El Quinto Cardón is an impressive show of the group’s range, and their musicianship throughout is unquestionable. It’s a promising sampler, well-balanced between freedom and structure. The diversity of the band’s repertoire is intriguing, if sometimes hard to parse as a single record. Simply put, a lot is going on. Even so, the band hit marvelous heights, and there are moments here that are truly exhilarating and well worth the time spent listening.

Los Cinco Cardones don’t necessarily need to pare down their stylistic field, to be sure. There is much to be said for how wide a net is cast on El Quinto Cardón. Each member does exceptional work with complex meters and thoughtful melodies. Would they be better off sticking to a single mood for a single album? Maybe the focus would make it easier for me to stop listening to one track over and over.

Then again, maybe the group know better than to try to reuse textures they’ve already put to good use. Whatever their strategy, I look forward to the quartet’s next directions, however many there are and however far they go before making yet more turns.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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Remixes Extended Stimulation: 12" Pop Adventures on the Dancefloor 1983-1988
Music

‘Extended Stimulation’ Remixes Will Blow Out Speakers in Style » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Extended Stimulation: 12″ Pop Adventures on the Dancefloor 1983-1988

Various Artists

Cherry Red

24 October 2025

The 12″ single redefined music and the way we move to it, something that’s celebrated on the fantastic new four-CD collection from Cherry Red Records, Extended Stimulation: 12″ Pop Adventures on the Dancefloor 1983 – 1988. While 12″ vinyl is generally associated with disco, electronic, and hip-hop, this box set explores just how revolutionary it could be for traditional pop music, featuring tracks from the likes of New Order, Simply Red, the Human League, Duran Duran, Talk Talk, Pet Shop Boys, and many others.

However, these may not be the songs as most people remember them. That’s because everything here is either a remix (or extended mix) of some kind, originally released on 12″ vinyl. A little history lesson may be in order. Before the 12″ record, DJs would use 7″ singles, which of course were smaller and only held three or four minutes of music to them. The 12″ single allowed for more music at louder volumes, revolutionizing the night club. 

That was also the catalyst for remixes, with 12″ singles often containing remixed versions of the original song, using breaks (short, looped samples, often of only percussion) to extend and play with the original recording. Incredibly, Tom Moulton was the man behind all of these innovations (the 12″, breaks, remixes), during a flurry of creativity in the mid-1970s, making him one of the most intuitively brilliant sound artists since Berliner and Edison.

Pop bands caught onto the 12″ trend, getting their songs extended or remixed in more danceable ways. Thus, Extended Stimulation is less like a standard Now That’s What I Call Music than it is four DJ sets, with each disc lasting well over an hour. That is evident from the very start of the collection, with the great Francois Kevorkian’s remix of Thompson Twins‘ “You Take Me Up”. Deconstructed stereophonic percussion teases out the melody, sounding more experimentally funky than pat pop. It’s nearly nine minutes of cool club bliss.

Simply Red’s “Money’s Too Tight” follows, remixed by Steve Thompson and Mike Barbiero into “The Cutback Mix”, and it’s even better. Anyone turned off by the admittedly sad prospect of an 1980s best-of should already be relieved by this point in Extended Stimulation. That is radically reworked (and overlooked) pop for audiophiles—and, boy, does it sound phenomenal. 

Many of these tracks hadn’t been transferred before, as Jan Burnett of Cherry Red observes in the liner notes for the record. Burnett, who compiled and sequenced Extended Stimulation, writes that many of the songs were sourced directly from tape just for this compilation. Comparing their quality here to anything readily available on YouTube, at least for those remixes which are online, makes for whiplash, so astounding is the quality.

The quantity is remarkable as well, with roughly five hours of varied styles, from some of the best alternative songs of the 1980s to its cheesiest moments. It’s probably the only collection that has both Nitzer Ebb’s “Join in the Chant (Burn!)” and Culture Club‘s “I’ll Tumble 4 Ya”.

Extended Stimulation is a bit top-heavy, if that’s possible for a collection. The first two CDs are sublime, while the third feels a bit like bubblegum popping beneath roller skates at the rink; it’s nostalgia with beaucoup fromage, lacking the variety of the first two. Granted, the remixes are still good, especially the “U.S. Edit” of Laid Back’s “White Horse”, which sounds like the exact moment Kraftwerk gave birth to Hot Chip. Then there’s the dub version of Jermaine Stewart’s “We Don’t Have to Take Our Clothes Off”, which is spine-chillingly transcendent.

The fourth disc is similarly poppy but has some better original artists (ABC, Wet Wet Wet, the Human League, A-ha). It’s also the most sensual, slowing things down just a tad for a funkier, sexier party thanks to songs like the “French Extended Mix” of Vicious Pink’s “Ccccan’t You See” and the “That’s Entertainment” version of Act’s “Snobbery and Decay”.

Despite the lulls in the later half of the collection, Extended Stimulation is sure to be revelatory for anyone unfamiliar with these kinds of remixes. It’s a definite treat for any fan of 1980s music, especially from the United Kingdom, and a treasure trove for audiophiles. Just try to resist playing this as loud as possible.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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Lindsay Ell 2025
Music

Lindsay Ell Ready for Reinvention in Nashville’s Risky Business » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

If Lindsay Ell was a little bit country when she crashed onto the Nashville scene, it ultimately proved to be a little too much to bear. Of course, the Canadian native was appreciative of the attention she drew from the Music City and beyond, earning raves from established artists as far back as 2014. 

That’s when Ell made her Grand Ole Opry debut, went on the Band Perry’s “We Are Pioneers World Tour”, began winning music awards, and solidified her spot in the second class of CMT’s Next Women of Country. Among the members who performed on stage for the induction event co-hosted by Leslie Fram and Lee Ann Womack at Nashville’s City Winery that year were Ell, Kelsea Ballerini, Mickey Guyton, Maddie & Tae, and Jana Kramer. 

Yet something was missing. Ell decided to tell her intriguing story during an hour-long Zoom interview with PopMatters on 2 October ahead of the 24 October release of her new EP, fence sitter (Universal Music Canada). The Calgary-born singer-songwriter-guitarist frankly fills in the gaps that began with a promising Nashville career, took a turn toward tasty pop, and were interrupted by revelations of personal struggles with sexual assault and an eating disorder. 

After happily living “in almost every neighborhood in Nashville” for 15 years but pondering an eventual move to either New York City or Los Angeles, Lindsay Ell is ebullient while addressing the past, present, and future. On the verge of having “new music coming out that needs to be talked about”, she adds (with a laugh) that sitting in a room and discussing her latest project is “my favorite place to be”. 

That might be especially true after a “real crazy” summer touring for the second straight year as co-Canadian Shania Twain’s lead guitarist and backing vocalist after opening for her in 2023. In between concerts, Ell would fly back and forth for her own shows. Yet nothing could beat a date with Twain, “one of my childhood heroes,” in Calgary’s Saddledome. 

The first concert Ell ever attended was there, watching Metallica. After previously performing at her hometown venue, playing it on 5 July with “Shania just seems like a really special bucket list thing to check off, you know, that I never even knew was going to be on my bucket list, in all honesty.” (laughs) 

Risk-Taker and Reinventor 

The five-song pop-oriented EP is only 17 minutes long, but listeners will want to keep fence sitter on repeat for the desired effect. Lindsay Ell hopes to get feedback from “all the amazing fans” who’ve stayed loyal throughout her career and have “them feel like a deeper sense of vulnerability in my songwriting and even the way I play live,” she shares. “Being able to explore new sonic spaces that I haven’t been able to explore previously. 

“When I look back on the last decade or so in the past, I feel like I’m just taking bigger risks than I ever have in the studio, and really being able to make the music that I’ve always heard in my brain, but just was too scared to do that. It makes my little 1975 heart happy,” referring to one of her favorite bands, not the year. 

Calling it a “reinvention”, she coproduced the EP with Doug Schadt in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, where he lives, and the process took about three or four months. Calling Schadt “one of the smartest people I’ve ever met”, Ell adds, “He’s never scared of an idea or a direction. He’s always down to chase whatever we think is cool.” 

Having previously said, “This EP is me sharing my story in real time, as I peel back the layers and try to see what my next chapter might be,” Lindsay Ell gets asked if she knows what that next chapter will be. 

“Sonically and musically, I feel I do,” she offers. “Personally, I have absolutely no idea. (laughs) And I think why I love writing and songwriting so much is that it’s a way to explore the personal questions that I have about life, and a way to sometimes figure them out. Or at least get to understand them deeper and get you closer to an answer.” 

From her EP, she cites enjoyable moments on songs like “good guy” (“makes you want to dance”) and “magic” (“that I can really stretch and lean into with my band”).  

Getting away from a structured show that includes full production where “everything is timed out live” is another goal, she says. “I just want to get back to the place of just being a band onstage where every show is different and I don’t use tracks anymore and I’m a lot more of, like, I can turn on a dime musically,” Ell maintains. “That’s when I’m the happiest onstage, and that’s when I think I put on the best show.” 

Photo: Alyssa Lancaster / Universal Music

Getting Personal 

While touring in 2026 is definitely on her agenda (eight North American dates are currently listed on her website), Lindsay Ell continues to contemplate one of life’s most important questions that is addressed in the EP’s pretty title track. “I don’t wanna end up looking back / And wish I had a life like that / If it’s one thing or the other? / Do I wanna be a mother?”

“It’s a question that’s been really loud recently,” Ell replies when asked if she wants to have kids one day. “I’ve always asked myself that question and just felt like I had a lot of time to figure it out. Now I’m in my mid-30s and know I don’t have much time to figure that out. As a woman, there’s a finite number of years I have to figure that out, and yet also as an artist, it’s complicated. It’s definitely not impossible. 

“I’m so grateful to be surrounded by a lot of really talented female artist friends who all have children, who have recently had children, and have had children for a long time. Hearing all parts of their story and getting to pick their brain and getting to hear them talk about it has been very inspiring and very mind-opening in all sorts of ways.”

Lindsay Ell is particularly impressed by three female artists in Nashville who have children and play occasional dates for a show called “Mother” — Jillian Jacqueline (whose new album MotherDaughterSisterWife was released last week), Caitlyn Smith, and Lucie Silvas. “They talk about how hard it is to be a mom and how amazing it is to be a mom, and sing songs that they have written about being a mom,” Ell reports. “It’s been so wonderful to hear them and watch them build this little show.”

Ell also consults with another Nashville musician friend, Maggie Rose, whose first baby, a son, was born on 13 April. “I love her so much. I actually heard all four of them do a live podcast (Rose’s Salute the Songbird) a few weeks ago,” Ell proclaims. “It was really inspiring to hear all of them talk about, ‘OK, obviously having a baby is incredible, the best thing I’ve ever done, I know a love now that I never would have been able to know before, but it’s also hard.’ …

“I don’t have kids obviously, but hearing all these stories, I’m just like, ‘Wow, I think being a touring artist is hard enough.’ Adding a human being on top of that, like, sometimes I think taking care of a dog and traveling as much as I do is hard. (laughs) But I can leave my dog with a friend and call it a day, and I know you can’t do that with a kid. (laughs) I’ve just been thinking a lot about all those things—about not knowing if I’m ready, about not knowing if I’ll say I’m not ready for the rest of my life, and about not knowing if I’ll regret not having a kid and asking those questions.

“The only thing I, like, know in my heart right now is now is not the time,” reveals Lindsay Ell, who pleasantly discloses being in a relationship. “But it’s felt really good to keep that part of my life private and give him some privacy, too. I’m not married yet, and I know if I do want kids, I would want to get married. So maybe that’s the first place I should start. I don’t know!” (laughs)

Lindsay Ell 2025
Photo: Alyssa Lancaster / Universal Music

For the Love of a Guitar 

The subject of starting a family is likely a topic of discussion during trips back to Calgary to see her parents, Bob and Suzanne Ell. “My older brother (Shawn) and I joke all the time because my brother doesn’t have kids as well,” Ell explains. “He and I are always like, ‘Our parents want grandkids so bad, so bad. Neither of us has provided them with grandkids yet, and I don’t know if that’s gonna happen for either one of us.” (laughs)

At the very least, memories will linger of their daughter and son growing up. Bob Ell brought Lindsay to country-bluegrass camps after she gave up the piano for a guitar at age eight upon finding his collection of string instruments at home. Then at age 13, Ell credits getting “discovered” by fellow Canadian Randy Bachman (the Guess Who, Bachman-Turner Overdrive), who later called her “the most talented and multifaceted artist I’ve come across in many years”. 

“I met Randy through a songwriting buddy of mine,” Lindsay Ell recalls. “Randy was the guy who taught me how to write a song and taught me how to record in a professional recording studio. Really got me into Stevie Ray Vaughan and (Jimi) Hendrix and (Eric) Clapton when I was in my teens. I just dove so deeply into the world of blues, jazz, and rock guitar, all thanks to Randy.

“He was the one who introduced me to the people who offered me my first record deal and got me started with Gibson Guitars way back in the day, and really connected me to some people in Nashville. Without Randy, I think my career could have had a much different start. He is still so inspiring. The guy just turned 82, I believe, and he’s still touring! He’s the epitome of if you love something, you will do it for the rest of your life.” 

Lindsay Ell also remembers one of her favorite pieces of advice from him, comparing the music business to an emotional roller coaster with a lot of ups and downs: “Your goal is just to figure out how you can, like, ride in the middle. As long as you can try to figure out a way to coast, and not take yourself too high or not take yourself too low, you’ll be fine.” 

Lindsay Ell 2025
Photo: Alyssa Lancaster / Universal Music

The Making of The Project 

Becoming a country star wasn’t Ell’s initial intention. “When I first came to Nashville, I had my heart set on making a female John Mayer record,” she points out. “Then I got offered a country record deal and was like, ‘All right! I can still do what I want to do and still make music that is exactly how I feel in my heart.’ After being wound so tightly in the way that, like, a lot of country radio ticks, I found myself more focused on what I thought was going to be successful in country radio than what I actually wanted to create. … 

“For my first radio tours, program directors were always so sweet to me. They’re like, ‘Lindsay, you’re so cool, but you’re not country.’ I’m like, ‘Yeah, I know, but the format’s growing and becoming wider.’ There was a part of me that always knew that I wanted to use other sonic sounds in the studio, but I think I was just too scared to go there.”

Making a permanent move to Nashville in 2010, the 21-year-old Lindsay Ell signed with Stoney Creek Records. While she learned her craft and toured with the likes of Buddy Guy, it wasn’t until 2017 that she released her first full-length studio album, but what a record The Project was. 

Wanting to lean more toward pop by then, while still signed to a country label that “needed a country single to send to country radio”, Ell relied on guidance from her producer, Kristian Bush, who had been one-half of the famed duo Sugarland with Jennifer Nettles. 

He gave Ell what she calls an important musical lesson. “Kristian’s just so cool. He was like, ‘What’s your favorite album? What’s your desert island record?’ And I’m like, ‘Obviously, Continuum by John Mayer.’ And he’s like, ‘Cool. I want you to re-record that entire album. I want you to take every instrument on that record and re-record it and hand it in. This is your homework assignment, and you have two weeks. Go.’” 

After tirelessly working from 8:00pm to 3:00am every day to successfully complete the assignment (her Continuum version was released in 2018), Lindsay Ell began recording The Project, cowriting nine of its 12 songs. “It ended up landing in, like, not just a country space but also a bluesier space because that’s really how I learned to play guitar, you know, mainly from a blues perspective,” she recollects. “When I, like, really clicked into the groove as a musician.” 

The Project reached the top spot on Nielsen Soundscan’s country albums chart in August 2017. Ell was recognized as only the second solo female artist to reach number one with a debut album that year. That same month, she performed on NBC’s Today show and was called “a true triple threat” by Nashville daily The Tennessean. In the story, country music historian Robert Oermann is quoted as saying, “There aren’t a whole lot of guitar-slinging women out there. She could be a country Bonnie Raitt if she wanted to be. She’s a real talent.” 

Ell later went on the Weekend Warrior World Tour to open for Brad Paisley, who delivered the highest of compliments in that same article: “When you think of the list of all the best attributes you could throw into a blender to create a musical artist, such as soulful vocals, writing chops, ability to play the fire out of a guitar, being gorgeous, and not to mention class and kindness, Lindsay is all of it. Here’s to her future.” 

Looking back at recording The Project, Lindsay Ell contends, “I’m coming back to the place of walking into a studio and just doing what I think sounds cool. Working with Kristian, he was so drawn to those things. Like, ‘What’s fun?’ Like, ‘Let’s play what’s fun!’ I was playing a lot more freely live. I didn’t have tracks at the beginning of that era of my career. I felt artistically a lot freer than, you know, that next seven-year period of my career where I think I was just so intently chasing a number one on country radio that I, like, lost sight of that.” 

Yet another ambitious project was on the way, but so was COVID-19. 

Heart of the Matter 

“Heart Theory is like such an important record to me in so many different ways. I got to work with one of my producer heroes, Dann Huff, a guitar player that I will always look up to for the rest of my life,” Ell declares. “Dann Huff is like one of the nicest guys and also one of the smartest producers. He can do anything and make it sound cool, and the process of recording that whole record, I will never forget it.

“Playing guitar in front of Dann was one of the most stressful things and one of my favorite things. (laughs) Just because he was so cool. He wouldn’t tell me what to play. He would be like, ‘Yeah, Linds, that sounds great! How about you try playing a B-flat at the start?’”

Like with so many artists in 2020, Lindsay Ell’s plans to release it early that year were interrupted by the dreaded coronavirus. She co-wrote 11 of the 12 songs on the full-length concept album, but “I don’t love you” wasn’t one of them. Released to country radio in the US on 9 December 2019, just before COVID-19 arrived, the album’s lead single received critical praise and peaked at number 48 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart. 

“When COVID hit, radio program directors just kind of got back to the label, and they’re like, ‘Hey, we can’t play a song that says ‘I don’t love you’ anymore. Like, it’s just not the vibe. It’s not the time.’ And so a song we put so much heart into, and I felt had such potential —it just wasn’t the right time. Therefore, it didn’t happen. When it could’ve happened had it been a different time.” 

According to Ell, she continued to get messages from fans who loved Heart Theory, saying, “That record saved my life”, or “The record got me through such a hard time.” 

She looks back proudly, asserting, “It’s amazing to know that music meant something to people. I had my heart so set on that record doing things that it just never was given the opportunity to do. It kind of started this other chapter of my life that I didn’t see coming, you know.”

Another song she co-wrote with Brandy Clark, “Make You”, sheds light on her being a survivor of sexual assault. “Everybody has a story, and unfortunately, I think that a lot of us go through childhood trauma. Yet I believe that it’s those experiences that make us who we are,” Lindsay Ell conveys. “That are so deeply transformative to how we show up in the world, and the things that we learn and the things that we believe. I feel it would almost be a disservice to myself and to any of my fans listening to my music if I didn’t write about those things.”

Ell decided to write “make you” after working with an organization called Youth for Tomorrow and traveling to West Virginia to help victims of sex trafficking and sexual assault from the ages of 12 to 18 launch their music program. 

She sat at a conference table next to a 12-year-old girl who opened up to her, saying, “My parents sold me to a sex trafficking company when I was little.” 

Moved by the youngster who “had like this light in her eyes and in her heart” while continuing her horrific story, Ell thought, “My God, if this little girl can say that story and make me feel so inspired and so not alone, then who am I to think my story can’t help somebody else? From that moment forward, I knew I needed to write a song about my journey with sexual assault.” 

The song “make you” was released on World Forgiveness Day and motivated Lindsay Ell to create the Make You Movement, a charitable fund to help survivors of sexual assault and domestic abuse, along with at-risk youth. Here are the song’s opening lyrics: Thirteen, staring in the mirror / You still look so innocent / 
But that was all gone yesterday / At 18, you’ll see it a little clearer / As something that was taken / Before you could give it away.”

In a 2020 interview with People magazine, Ell said, “I was raped when I was 13, and it happened again when I was 21. The song only talks about the first time.”

Stoney Creek Records pushed back the release date of Heart Theory, a full-length concept album that explores seven stages of grief, to 14 August. American Songwriter called it a “masterpiece”.

Meanwhile, the delays and the pandemic gave Lindsay Ell time to think. “I started asking myself a lot of questions. After Heart Theory, I had some real tough decisions to make,” she reflects.

One was deciding to replace her entire team. Another was insisting to herself, “I need to make the music that I feel I need to make, regardless of how it’s gonna do. So these past couple of years have just been my refiguring it out and getting back to, obviously, like the girl who walked into the studio to make The Project, and that’s felt really good.”

Those teenage years continued to haunt her in 2023, though. “I did not see that coming whatsoever,” Ell admits. “I ended up developing an eating disorder from what happened to me as a kid when I was 13 to now, 20 years later, when I was, ‘This is just the way I live and I’m a female artist, so I have to be skinny and that’s how I’m going to be successful.’ Going through ED treatment, and really rewiring my brain around all of that. It was a huge change, not only my relationship with food but the way I live my life.

“Maybe I could connect with somebody who feels the same. My story might encourage them to get help, or go get therapy, or even have awareness about what they may be feeling.” 

Wishing and Hoping

With fence sitter finally out in the world this week, Lindsay Ell is looking forward to what will happen in 2026 and beyond, saying, “When I think of where I’m bringing my music next year, it comes back to that question: What’s fun?” Figuring this could be another fun question, Ell was asked if she could single out one gratifying part of her career thus far. “Oh my gosh,” she exclaims. “One? That’s such a question. My goodness!” 

Pausing for a few moments, she narrows it down to getting to work with two of her favorite people, first referring to Twain as “a powerhouse” and the Energizer Bunny on the road. After covering his “Stop This Train” on a 2017 EP, another thrill was to meet Mayer, who asked her to be one of the six guitarists to appear with him in a Silver Sky SE commercial he shot in 2022. “To be able to, like, meet your musical heroes and to work with them … have just been like two career-defining moments,” she declares. “Like, oh, I guess if you do work really, really, really hard and you believe in yourself enough, then maybe life does bring you down some crazy paths. Paths you never saw coming.” 

She’s optimistically started a long wish list of potential collaborators, too.  They range from Ed Sheeran and Shawn Mendes (another “fellow Canadian”) to Sheryl Crow and Taylor Swift. Giving kudos to the former country artist whose The Life of a Showgirl was released the day after this interview, Ell states Swift is “the ultimate example of how to pour artistry into your music and make it universally relatable.” 

Lindsay Ell also isn’t sitting on the fence when announcing which venues top her bucket list of places still to play, either. “I feel like I’m still a toddler and I have a lot of things to accomplish in this life,” she notes. “I’ve actually never been to Red Rocks (the outdoors amphitheater west of Denver). I would love to headline Red Rocks one day. Headlining (New York’s Madison Square Garden) has been at the top of my bucket list ever since I was a tiny human.” Qualifying that by mentioning a previous hop onstage for a song there, she added, “But to me and my weird mind, that doesn’t count.” 

Ell, yeah! Even if a little bit of country still exists, it’s her rebellious rock ’n’ roll spirit that will live forever. 

Lindsay Ell 2025
Photo: Alyssa Lancaster / Universal Music

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Ruen Brothers 2025
Music

The Ruen Brothers Keep It Dark on ‘Awooo’ » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Going all the way back to their earliest EP (Point Dume) and single (“Aces”), both released in 2015, the Ruen Brothers have fused a variety of musical genres (a little rockabilly here, some country twang there, a touch of alt-rock) into a unique sound drenched with atmosphere. The brothers have gone even further into the mystic to create their moody and evocative new album, Awooo. 

Originally from Scunthorpe, England, Henry and Rupert Stansall now reside in Louisville, Kentucky, a city they relocated to to immerse themselves in the local musical heritage. While nothing on Awooo might sound explicitly like Kentucky bluegrass, it’s infused with a dark mood that could clearly have been influenced by the tradition that emerged from Appalachia decades ago.

The Ruen Brothers are a self-contained unit on Awooo, pretty much doing everything themselves. They’ve co-written all the songs, other than a cover of J.J. Cale’s frisky “Mama Don’t”. Henry is the lead vocalist, with a voice that might evoke comparisons to singers like Roy Orbison, Chris Isaak, and Orville Peck, although he doesn’t sound exactly like any of them. Henry also contributes acoustic guitar and percussion. 

Meanwhile, Rupert has produced the album, sings backing vocals, and plays all the other instruments, which include electric and acoustic guitars, keyboards, programming, synths, bass, percussion, and even a glockenspiel. The combination of influences and environments the Ruen Brothers have experienced leads to Awooo, an album that can be described as both “spooky Americana” and “sparse alt-pop”. It’s a combination that Henry and Rupert manage to keep intriguing throughout. 

The spare opening track, “Can You Face the Water?” gets Awooo started on a melancholy note, with Henry singing, “Darling, can you weather / A thousand leagues of pressure? / Can you face the water?” “Mama Don’t” livens up the proceedings a bit. It is then followed by the quietly intense “Sitting at the Station”,” which features some noirish electric guitar and lyrics that provide the album’s title. “Poison Down the Line” opens like a classic Orbison song, almost exclusively focused on Henry’s singing before it unfolds to become the most infectious pop tune on the record. 

Another highlight, “The Cabin on the Hill”, is possibly the most complex song on Awooo. Like many songs here, “The Cabin on the Hill” is a slow burn, but it gradually builds to a musical moment during which a chorus of dramatic backing vocals surrounds a guitar solo by Rupert. The opening lyrics – “In the night / In the cabin on the hill / A light will burn until / Sine until you come home” – are an apt description of the nighttime vibe Awooo evokes throughout. 

The after-dark feel continues with “Bonfire”, in which the narrator sits in the basement after midnight, contemplates all the paperwork surrounding him that he should burn. Given the general mood of the album, it’s no surprise that ghosts show up at the end. “Seeing Ghosts” finds Henry intoning, “You’re seeing ghosts if you’re seeing me.” It’s an appropriately ghostly ending to the thoroughly haunted Awooo.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Ace Frehley Kiss LP
Music

Ace Frehley Is Why I Love Music » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Like many others have eloquently shared in recent days, Ace Frehley was my reason. He’s the reason I became obsessed with the guitar in 1977. He’s the reason I begged my dad to take me to my first rock concert in 1983. He’s also the reason I was confused when the new guy played guitar onstage during the Creatures of the Night concert. 

He’s the reason I approached a publishing industry icon in 1997, with the intention of writing a book about KISS. “I don’t believe KISS fans actually read,” the guy sneered, long before metal memoirs from everyone with a Marshall amp stack clogged bestseller lists.

He’s the reason I launched an outrageous quest to meet my hard rock guitar heroes. He’s the reason I’ve bid on rare but expensive Washburn guitars that bore his name, but he refused to play. He’s the reason I Milli Vanilli-ed a guitar to stand next to him performing the song “Rip It Out” from his 1978 solo album. He’s the reason I planned a trip to Connecticut for early 2026 to visit a former residence.

Ace Frehley is also the reason why I decided, in July 2025, to stop seeing my heroes perform live.

“I don’t want to do this anymore,” I texted a music-loving friend from a hotel room in Louisville, Kentucky. I logged into my various ticket accounts and put everything up for resale.

The music will never die, but the show must come to an end at some point. 

***

I had driven several hours to see a triple bill of Quiet Riot, Slaughter, and Ace Frehley. It was 90 degrees at showtime in Louisville at the Iroquois Amphitheater. The venue features wood and stone structures that evoke a sense of a lovely state park. There was shade under the roof and on the stage, but the air was still and heavy. 

Over the course of my hair metal journalism career, I had the opportunity to interview and get to know many legends of the genre. I was always glad they still rocked every night. Whatever kept them on the road, whether it was money, ego, or desperation, I saw their determination as an admirable quality. There are far easier ways to earn a living than doing fly-in dates to a few hundred people. The published capacity at Iroquois was around 2,400 people, but there was nowhere near that amount in attendance. 

Frehley walked cautiously on stage. He seemed tentative, but he was 74 years old. I didn’t expect acrobatics, and he was legendary for clumsiness, even when sober. I don’t know that I ever did an interview with him where falling, tripping, or stumbling wasn’t mentioned, usually accompanied by his famous cackle. So, I didn’t judge his hesitant movements. 

In fact, I never judge harshly. As sports fans say, “Father Time is undefeated.” Voices weaken—hands atrophy. No one performs at 70 with the vigor they did at 30. As an observer and a fan, I am okay with that. 

When I watch a concert today, my experience is a pastiche of past and present. I think about the images and memories associated with the music. A tree on our farm that looked like Paul Stanley’s poofy mane, or my prom date saying she liked the drums on Appetite for Destruction, or how my best friend got a speeding ticket to the opening chug of Dr. Feelgood. I think about how the music has stuck with me over the decades. I reflect on my interviews with the musicians, how they’ve changed, and how I’ve changed. I evaluate the performance of the evening, sure. However, it’s mixed up in this cocktail of emotions, which tends to mean that I am a very understanding critic.

Three or four songs in, Frehley stood in front of drummer Scot Coogan and made a horizontal cutting motion in the air in front of his throat, the universal “it’s over” gesture. Coogan is a professional and experienced vocalist, and he usually sang some of KISS’s songs on the setlist. Some vocal duties are also regularly handled by bass player Ryan Spencer Cook. Some of that sharing is normal in an Ace show. But that night seemed different, like they were adjusting on the fly.

I caught Cook exchanging eye contact with his longtime friend and bandmate, Jeremy Ashbrook. Those dudes have known each other for decades. They’re hard-working, skilled, and dedicated admirers who share the stage with their childhood idol. I cannot definitely prove what was going on in their heads. 

However, I recognized that look. It was the one family recently shared as my parents’ health declined. It was the “Did you hear what Dad just said?” glance, the “Did you see Mom not be able to change the channel?” eyebrow raise. 

There’s an orchestra pit at Iroquois that keeps the audience at a distance. Cook and Ashbrook zinged guitar picks into the second level, like ninjas in a Bruce Lee movie. Ace’s guitar picks fluttered, hesitated, and fell into the pit before reaching any fans. 

Photo: Casablanca Records, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

His guitar performance meandered. There were moments of flash and excitement, but most of it was sloppy. Ace Frehley was never about precision. He had no pretensions about being a schooled and studied virtuoso. He joked in interviews that if he had known he would influence so many musicians, he would have practiced harder. He was Keith Richards or Joe Walsh, more about swagger and simply cool than sweeping picking arpeggios. However, that performance struck me as sloppy sloppy, not cool sloppy.

When he launched the opening crunch of “God of Thunder” before surprisingly transitioning to his solo hit “Back in the New York Groove”, I had moved from the front row to the back of the amphitheater. I was leaving early, but so was Frehley. Before I completely exited the venue, he told the crowd that the set was being cut short, but I couldn’t hear his explanation. Online, some fans said it was because Slaughter’s set ran long. Others claimed it was because he was sick. 

Others, of course, went straight to the “He’s drunk again” and “That’s embarrassing.” It is the internet, of course. 

As I lay in my hotel bed and read the comments and reviews, I didn’t feel anger. Frehley claimed to be sober, and I had no reason to doubt him. I think hard work and dedication to performance are positive, so I’m not going to tell anyone they need to quit. YouTube and social media make it easy to gauge how well an older artist is performing, so I don’t feel sorry for anyone who complains about being financially exploited. You know what you’re getting if you buy a ticket to Motley Crue or Stephen Pearcy of Ratt in 2025. 

Weirdly, I was grateful. I felt like that Ace Frehley show demonstrated that it was time for me to stop chasing these musicians around the country. God bless them all who continue to perform. The fans who choose to see them should cherish every note they play. I just decided not to do it anymore. I didn’t want to see any more decline, any more descent, but that was my decision and mine alone. 

***

Frehley wasn’t the only childhood idol that affected me in this way. I had felt it at a recent Yngwie Malmsteen gig. I was worried about Rudy Sarzo, at 74, performing in Birmingham, England, for Ozzy Osbourne‘s final gig and then getting back into economy class and passenger vans five days later for Quiet Riot shows. We age, and naturally, our heroes do too. It had been coming for me for some time.

On 10 July 2025, in Louisville, Kentucky, Ace Frehley was the reason I said goodbye to a generation of heroes. I’m grateful for the experience. I am thankful for him starting my musical journey in the first place. 

Rumor brewed in the afternoon of 16 October 2025. Confirmation of his death came at dinner time, as I cooked our family meal. The kids asked if I was crying, and I was able to blame it on the onions I chopped as Hair Nation played a tribute. Later that night, I went through my interview transcripts with Ace. He once told me about the wonder of upgrading his Apple II computer to 128k of memory in the late 1970s. “That was a big day for me,” he said. Luckily, the kids were in bed when I read that original KISS drummer and fellow rogue Peter Criss was at the bedside when Ace passed. I didn’t feel embarrassed by my tears. 

The Spaceman returned to his home planet of Jendell. He is the reason I love music. He is also the reason I was able to say goodbye, not just to him, but to a generation of heroes. I cherish it all.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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