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50 First Dates: The Musical review – Could this be the most charming musical yet?
TV & Streaming

50 First Dates: The Musical review – Could this be the most charming musical yet?

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Fans of the original movie will be pleasantly surprised that the essence of the story between Lucy, an artist with short-term memory loss and Henry, the commitment phobe who falls in love with her, remains the same, albeit with some slight tweaks to Henry’s job.

I’ll admit, I was hesitant at first when Henry wasn’t introduced as a marine veterinarian and, rather, a travel vlogger who found himself in Key Largo in Florida before he jets off on a European adventure of a lifetime, which soon comes to a halt when he meets Lucy.

But it works. The songs, penned by David Rossmer and Steve Rosen, are just as wholesome and charming as the love story presented to us, with even the most sceptical of audience members (like myself) are soon won over.

The cast of 50 First Dates The Musical. Pamela Raith

The chemistry between Castle and St Clair is palpable, with the pair’s characters falling in love after just one day checking off Lucy’s list and having seemingly the perfect day. Their reputations precede them, having starred in the likes of Mamma Mia! and and Kinky Boots, respectively.

With their romance told through songs such as They’re Not You and Good Morning, Lucy, you find yourself rooting for a pair you’ve only been introduced to just 30 minutes prior.

Like every musicals on and off the West End, the ensemble is core to any show, and 50 First Dates is no different.

From the absolute power ballad that is Key Largo, led beautifully by Chad Saint Louis (Spring Awakening), to Aiesha Naomi Pease’s performance of pretty much anything, her voice is complete euphoria.

Ricky Rojas and Aiesha Naomi Pease stood beside one another looking confused.

Ricky Rojas and Aiesha Naomi Pease. Pamela Raith

One part of the musical, just as in the film, that makes this an incredibly heartwarming outing is the love that the residents of Key Largo, her family and eventually Henry have for Lucy.

Perfectly weaved throughout the musical is the love each and every character has for one another, whether it be romantic or platonic, or sometimes misconstrued when it comes to Henry’s manager, Delilah, played hilariously by Natasha O’Brien (Mamma Mia!).

The Other Palace makes the perfect location for 50 First Dates, with the staging and projections adding to the warm and cosy feeling the story omits.

It can be difficult to hit the mark with a movie adaptation for stage, but its creation has been a long and loving road for its creators, who all speak so highly of the work they have created.

The cast of 50 First Dates The Musical all singing and dancing on a pink lit up stage.

The cast of 50 First Dates The Musical. Pamela Raith

“50 First Dates is so much more than a romantic comedy,” said Rosen. “While it is wonderful to watch Henry and Lucy fall in love, there is something so much deeper play.”

Rosen noted that the story is about “community and about the lengths people will go to in order to level the playing field for people they love who have been dealt an unfair situation”, and 50 First Dates: The Musical has certainly succeeded in telling that story.

If you’re after charm, wittiness and charisma, 50 First Dates could just be the musical for you.

50 First Dates: The Musical is at The Other Palace until Sunday 16th November.

Make sure you also check out the best West End shows and our review of Evita. Also, here’s how to get cheap Cadbury World tickets.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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'House of Guinness' Review: Netflix's 19th-Century Family Saga
TV & Streaming

‘House of Guinness’ Review: Netflix’s 19th-Century Family Saga

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Netflix’s House of Guinness, the new 19th-century drama from Peaky Blinders and A Thousand Blows creator Steven Knight, knows the value of a big, splashy moment.

Its characters, the most central of whom are the scions of Ireland’s most famous ale-brewing family, do not simply go down the stairs when they can glide in slow-motion to the moody strains of an Irish rock soundtrack. They do not walk around building demolitions when they can sail through as explosions go off in the background, action-movie-style. They make impassioned declarations of love or fury, and trade metaphor-laden speeches; occasionally, when words fall short, they set literal fires.

House of Guinness

The Bottom Line

Considerably less dark and bitter than its namesake ale.

Airdate: Thursday, Sep. 25 (Netflix)
Cast: Anthony Boyle, Louis Partridge, James Norton, Emily Fairn, Fionn O’Shea, Niamh McCormack, Jack Gleeson, Danielle Galligan, Ann Skelly, Seamus O’Hara
Creator: Steven Knight

What all of it amounts to, once the fizz has settled, is somehow both more and less substance than you might expect. If House of Guinness knows how to grab a viewer’s attention, it’s less concerned with shading in the nuances that might lend the series emotional heft to go with its epic sprawl and electric energy. But when a series is this good at keeping the good times flowing, it’s hard not to get a bit swept up in its veritable rivers of drama.

The story begins, as so many others have as of late, with a powerful and wealthy clan facing an apparent succession crisis. The year is 1868 and Benjamin Guinness, the richest man in the country, has just died, leaving his four squabbling adult children to try and carry on the family’s legacy.

As the eldest son, Arthur (Anthony Boyle, who seems so at home in the 19th century it’s a wonder he’s actually from the 21st) would seem Daddy’s most obvious heir — if not for his utter disinterest in the family trade and his outright desperation to escape the expectations of the family name. It’s pragmatic-to-a-fault youngest brother Edward (Louis Partridge) who possesses both the ambition and the aptitude to run the company, but not the assumption of primogeniture.

Middle son Benjamin (Fionn O’Shea) is the black sheep of the bunch, battling alcoholism, gambling addiction and a general lack of self-esteem. Rounding out the mourning quartet is their sister Anne (Emily Fairn), physically sickly, emotionally brittle and unequivocally devout. Both Anne and Benjamin are quickly disabused of any illusion that their father might have taken them seriously as contributors to the business, let alone potential successors.

As if the infighting weren’t enough, the Guinnesses are also beset by outside forces from seemingly every side of the cultural spectrum. The Irish independence-supporting Fenians, represented primarily by hotheaded oaf Paddy (Seamus O’Hara) and his more strategically minded sister Ellen (Niamh McCormack), loathe the family’s conservative unionist policies. Religious forces, spearheaded by an unpleasant Guinness uncle (Michael Colgan), decry the immorality of the booze they’re selling.

Tensions come to a head in the opening minutes of the Tom Shankland-directed premiere, as protesters from every camp converge upon the old man’s funeral procession, and hammer-wielding company men prepare to fight back. “The name’s Guinness. Of course there’ll be fucking trouble,” smirks brewery foreman and fixer Rafferty, whose theatrical tendencies are not so much performed by James Norton as savored like a juicy steak. Of course, he’s right.

But the fact that nothing truly disturbing happens in that first scene might be the first hint that House of Guinness is willing to pull its punches, for better and for worse. Succession this is not, at least when it comes to the brutally unflattering and emotionally punishing portrayal of the one-percent. These upper-crust elites are ones we’re meant, at the end of the day, to sympathize with and root for.

The show is by no means blind to the dark and sweeping social forces shaping the times, up to and including the extreme inequality that allows the Guinnesses to get ice shipped in special from Greenland while cholera-stricken villagers just a mile down the road struggle to find clean water. Nor is it entirely worshipful of the Guinnesses. Even as the clan get more involved in charity, or soften their previously firm unionist stance, the series makes a point of showing that they’re motivated as much by the promise of good PR as they are by a sincere desire to effect positive change.

Still, the show stops short of wrestling with either the characters’ complicity in injustice or their evolving feelings in any real detail. In contrast to the recent wave of shows and films painting the super-wealthy as greedy, cruel or plain stupid, the Guinnesses we follow are only ever truly guilty of obliviousness. Likewise, early hints at darker character flaws — like that Edward might become drunk on power or that Rafferty might have a sadistic streak — tend to dissipate as the characters grow or deepen.

In truth, a damning portrait of the family was probably never in the cards, considering the series counts among its executive producers actual Guinness descendant Ivana Lowell. And the choice to soften the characters as the eight-episode season goes on has the benefit of making them easy to feel for as each gets increasingly caught up in tragic love affairs. (I’ll leave the specifics for you to discover, but suffice it to say that a lawyer handling the family’s scandals jokes, “Infidelity. Sodomy. Lost love and random acts of violence. A more typical Dublin family would be hard to find.”)

But here, too, the choice to prioritize high-drama plot beats over incremental evolution yields mixed results. On one hand, the no-fat approach keeps the pacing brisk, and allows for thrilling shit-just-got-real moments like the introduction of Olivia (a dazzling Danielle Galligan), Anthony’s appropriately aristocratic but shockingly no-bullshit future wife.

On the other, it keeps us at an arm’s length. Benjamin and Anne, particularly, become characters who resurface only to show us how much they’ve changed offscreen, without allowing us to see how or why they’ve transformed so much. And more than one load-bearing romance centers around characters who seem inexorably drawn together mainly because the plot demands it, not because we understand precisely what it is that either party finds so beguiling in the other.

That the drama nevertheless makes it work more often than not — that I found myself “aw”-ing over Anthony’s heartbreak or tutting at Benjamin’s self-destructive foibles or cheering at a bold but staggeringly ill-advised choice made by Olivia late in the season — is a testament, again, to the series understanding the power of a big moment. As firmly as its characters believe in God or commerce or Irish independence, House of Guinness places its faith in the notion that a kiss or a speech or a punch, delivered with enough style and passion, can sell just about anything. More often than not, it’s right.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Ø: Sysivalo Album Review | Pitchfork
Music

Ø: Sysivalo Album Review | Pitchfork

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

In 1994, on an album called Minimal Nation, Detroit’s Robert Hood stripped Motor City funk to its bones. Most of its tracks were made of little more than lithe, swinging drum programming and solitary synth patches that glistened like oil slicks; it’s generally considered the origin point for what came to be known as minimal techno. In February of the same year, more than 4,000 miles away, a taciturn young Finn named Mika Vainio took an even sharper scalpel to the same ideas. His debut album, Metri, couldn’t be more skeletal if it were a laboratory specimen. Where there are drum machines, they merely thump and hiss; his custom-built tone generators glisten like icicles and roar like buzz bombs. If Hood’s album represented minimal techno’s ground zero, Vainio’s was its ground Ø.

Vainio would go on to become best known as one half of Pan Sonic, a duo (with Ilpo Väisänen) that, from the early 1990s until its dissolution in 2009, waged a scorched-earth campaign against electronic music’s staid conventions. But it was Vainio’s Ø alias—after a symbol signifying absence in a number of contexts, from math and geometry to linguistics—that would be his longest-running project, evolving from those brutalist techno origins to encompass a wide array of electronic techniques and soundscapes.

In addition to many solo and collaborative albums under his own name, Vainio released eight albums as Ø until 2017, when he plunged from a cliff in France. He had been at work on a ninth Ø album for three years at the time of his death. Working from notes he left behind, Tommi Grönlund, his friend and founder of the Sähkö label, and Rikke Lundgreen, Vainio’s former partner, compiled the material into Sysivalo, his final album. (According to Lundgreen, Vainio had already decided upon the album concept, title, track order, and even cover art.) The title—a portmanteau meaning something like “charcoal light”—is evocative and fitting. Vainio’s music often felt like an apocalyptic clash between being and nothingness, but on Sysivalo, darkness and light flow together in ways that are unusual for his work, evoking a dynamic mixture of vulnerability, tenderness, and grace.

Vainio’s music could sometimes sound like he had jacked directly into an electrical substation, but his palette here is soft and tufted. Distant thunder takes on a purplish pastel hue, misted with white noise. There are few hard attacks and even fewer moments where the levels bleed red. A bite-sized quality distinguishes these 20 tracks, which run shorter than he typically worked. Vainio’s enduring interest in capturing the vastness of sound is distilled into pieces that feel both atmospheric and tactile, like cupping small clouds of colored smoke in your hands. Yet there’s little doubt that Sysivalo is envisioned as an album—a single, overarching work, rather than a collection of stray pieces. A ruminative mood pervades the hour, and tones and themes frequently repeat. The drawn-out foghorn blast that opens the album with “Etude 1” reappears, whittled to a fine point, in “Etude 5,” and turns up again nine tracks later in “Aine” (“substance”), threading the album with a faint sense of deja vu.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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The Impossible Fortune review: A new dawn for The Thursday Murder Club
TV & Streaming

The Impossible Fortune review: A new dawn for The Thursday Murder Club

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Soon she’s drawn into a case involving a missing person, murders, and a fortune in bitcoin. And of course she has to bring the gang along for some help, being forced to rely on them a lot more than usual.

The real strength of the series has always been Osman’s character work. The Last Devil to Die remains the series’ emotional peak, but this entry carries that thread forward, which proves a wise decision. Elizabeth, still mourning Stephen, isn’t as sharp as usual, and for the first time the investigation doesn’t belong solely to her. Instead, the others – Joyce, Ibrahim and Ron – step into the spotlight.

Joyce shoulders much of the responsibility, rallying the group and making decisions herself, even when it puts her in danger. Ibrahim continues his curious connection with Connie the drug lord, a relationship that’s proving unexpectedly rewarding for them both.

Meanwhile, Ron takes centre stage in the B-plot, wrestling with the reveal of his daughter’s abusive marriage and his own ageing body. His struggle with fading strength and identity delivers some of the novel’s most poignant passages, though admittedly leaving the reader wishing for even more.

As ever, Osman uses the cosy crime frame to explore themes often overlooked in the genre: loneliness, loss and diminishing independence. Here, Ron’s journey of letting go of his old self and embracing a new one is especially affecting and the novel would be even stronger if readers were able to linger on these themes just a little longer.

The mystery itself is more high-tech than usual, with missing bitcoin sparking a chase that draws in ruthless players. The wealth-obsessed leave chaos and death in their wake, and the investigation has real bite. As mysteries go in The Thursday Murder Club series, it’s a fairly exciting one with an element of the cat and mouse chase.

The Impossible Fortune isn’t quite as accomplished as The Last Devil to Die, which married a gripping plot with rich character exploration. But it serves as a necessary reset: easing Elizabeth into her new life, allowing her space to grieve, and giving Joyce, Ibrahim and Ron the chance to prove they’ve learned from her.

If the first four novels were largely centred on Elizabeth’s incredible talents, this one suggests a small reset to allow the rest of the crew to show just what they’re capable of too. The future’s looking very bright for this talented bunch.

For all the latest RT Book Club news, interviews, Q&As with the authors, reviews of previous books and more, visit The Radio Times Book Club sponsored by Dr. Oetker Ristorante.

You can purchase The Impossible Fortune by Richard Osman here.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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IGK Antisocial Midnight Silk Dry Hair Mask Review
Fashion

IGK Antisocial Midnight Silk Dry Hair Mask Review

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Taking inspiration from another overnight beauty sleep MVP — silk pillowcases — IGK’s Midnight Silk version of Antisocial features extra-special packaging and a light, subtly sweet scent. Per the instructions, I tried it on clean, dry hair and brushed it throughout before securing in a loose braid – my preferred bedtime hairstyle. The next morning, I woke up with loose waves and touchably soft, smooth hair. I still had some rogue flyaways at the top — nothing I couldn’t fix with a little hairspray — and my hair looked visibly shinier and my highlights brighter, somehow. And best of all, I loved not having to rinse anything out — just spray, brush, and wake up to silky, shiny hair.
September 24, 2025 0 comments
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One Battle After Another Review: A Nerve-Racking Masterpiece
Music

One Battle After Another Review: A Nerve-Racking Masterpiece

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

One Battle is primarily a film about race. The French 75 is largely Black: Beyond Taylor’s Perfidia, operatives and allies are played Wood Harris, Regina Hall, Starletta DuPois, and the musicians Dijon and Junglepussy, among others. During his time as an active member, Bob was known as “Ghetto Pat,” and retains a penchant for calling people “homie”; when he and Perfidia are making out in the back of a sedan as it speeds away from the detention center, he’s goaded into saying just how much he loves “Black girls.” Lockjaw, who spent years lusting after Perfidia, is so ideologically committed to white supremacy that when he seeks initiation into the Adventurers, he plans to find and kill Willa for fear that she’s his daughter. The math here is clear: The fetishization of Black women spans the entire political spectrum, from those sincerely seeking Black liberation to those who would like to see Black people killed en masse.

But this observation is only a starting point. One Battle shows solidarity across lines of race and class, but also the friction inherent to those alliances. When, during the siege, Bob is taken in by his daughter’s martial arts instructor, Sensei Sergio (Benecio del Toro), the latter’s unflappability is played for laughs. But Sergio’s cool efficiency as he directs dozens of undocumented children to safety makes Bob’s panic over the whereabouts of his daughter, confirmed to be safe with people he trusts, seem at least a little solipsistic. Bob’s almost tearful lament, from later in the film, that he can’t properly do his daughter’s hair, is heartbreaking.

Elsewhere, characters wield whatever power race gives them—however uneasily. Lockjaw imprisons and murders people with impunity, but is made insecure around the Adventurers by the fact he’s been sexually fixated on those they, and he, have deemed impure. A monologue about Black power is fearfully made manifest by a gunshot in a bank robbery. And, in the wrenching sequence where Perfidia leaves Bob and Willa, she expresses disgust at the way white revolutionaries have to be coddled and carried along. It has the sting of truth—but is undercut by the sorrow Taylor masterfully layers below Perfidia’s rage.

We are, in fact, living in an age of “identity politics,” but in the sense that people are shunted into camps, jails, or coffins based on the color of their skin. And so it’s truly ingenious that one of One Battle’s tensest sequences sees a portable paternity test deployed in a chapel. The myopia required to derive true meaning from such a thing—barely more sophisticated than phrenology—is staggering. But it’s the logical endpoint of the belief that some people are chattel and others are entitled to use them as they please. Later, after Willa screams at Lockjaw about her mother (“She was a rat!”), he’s practically salivating when he responds: “She was a warrior.”

Infiniti is asked to play the put-upon daughter of a man-child father, a scared child, a phony among true believers, and eventually, a reluctant killer. She acquits herself unbelievably well. The adrenaline-soaked shriek she lets out after shooting and killing the IZOD-clad Adventurer who had been pursuing her in a superb highway chase sequence is nearly on par with Jena Malone’s yelp of joy that serves as the thesis at the end of Anderson’s Inherent Vice. DiCaprio, as the father who loves her more than anything but is aware of the limits of his use to her, has never been better.

A moment after that scream, Bob comes across the wreckage of the chase. When he sees Willa coiled behind a sign at the side of the road, he’s overcome with relief. But she can’t relax: she raises the pistol toward him and asks him to repeat back the code phrases. He doesn’t. Instead, he reasons: I’m your dad. The gun comes down. She believes him—he is.

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Cardi B: AM I THE DRAMA? Album Review
Music

Cardi B: AM I THE DRAMA? Album Review

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

AM I THE DRAMA? acknowledges the stylistic transformation of New York rap, with production largely in the hands of Sean Island and DJ SwanQo. But Cardi maintains a respectful distance from the prevailing trends. Instead, she plays with bursts of experimentation, adopting new flows without sacrificing legibility. “Pretty & Petty” does double duty: The hook is readymade for ubiquity as a TikTok trend while the verses constitute one of the most punishing diss tracks of the year. She practically prances over the beat, a grittier, New York-ified take on the cadences and melodies associated with Mustard’s L.A.

In the vein of Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us,” the apparent glee with which Cardi crushes Boston rapper Bia, four years into an escalating beef, magnifies the effect: “Name five Bia songs, gun pointin’ to your head/Baow, I’m dead/That melatonin flow puttin’ us to bed/I’m doing you a favor, Epic, run me my bread.” As if to prove her point, the song’s release coincides with steep exponential growth of Google searches for Bia name. Devastating. The album is at its most enjoyable when Cardi is in this prickly mode: “Hello,” “Magnet,” the 2 Chainz-written “Salute.” The bilingual, Dyckman-ready “Bodega Baddie,” a turbo-charged merengue bop, makes a promise akin to Rihanna’s mythical reggae album; at under two minutes, it’s a brief glimpse at a worthwhile style for Cardi to linger on.

It’s been a long seven years. Exercises in catharsis abound in the form of heartbreak songs, recorded in the shadow of divorce. With few exceptions, these are grating rap ballads on which even the specifics of a toxic relationship feel generic. The default formula of a sung chorus registers as vacant, even when entrusted with the capable Summer Walker, Lizzo, and Kehlani. Cardi joins many of her streaming-era peers in shunning the self-editing that made Invasion of Privacy, at 13 songs, effective. That work, when offloaded to the listener under the guise of generosity, lands instead as risk aversion.

In certain realms of pop, the songwriting process has become a compacted, impenetrable underbrush, with observers desperate to gather more meaning from a list of song credits than is actually possible. Cardi’s lablelmate, Pardison Fontaine, remains a stubborn yet compatible presence and, with writing credits on 19 of 23 songs, her most consistent collaborator. For fans, this makes him a trustworthy creative partner; for skeptics, it damns Cardi as a talentless hack and Pardi her sub rosa crutch.

But, as she has herself articulated, Cardi’s musical talent has not historically been that of an effortless generator of songs; what she has mastered, as a rapper and elsewhere, is locating an idea, seizing it, and transmuting it into something her own: a style of rap that is both outrageous and easily digestible, designed to travel well from the strip club to the Super Bowl. Always walking the line between edgy and accessible, Cardi summons the breakthrough of early aughts rap more than she does her contemporaries; this is the stuff of high-end recording studios, not improvised bedroom setups.

An ingenious cultural interpreter of sorts, Cardi transported the exclamatory trill “okurrr” from its drag origins to the late-night talk show circuit so effectively, and without any apparent sacrifice of authenticity, that it is often falsely attributed to her. “Am I the drama?” too, has its origins in drag. It was Scarlet Envy, as a contestant on RuPaul’s Drag Race, who first wondered, cheekily, about her culpability. But, as an album, AM I THE DRAMA? seems to signal that, for Cardi, the question functions better as a rhetorical one: It doesn’t really matter whether she’s the drama; even if she didn’t start it, Cardi will be the one to end it.

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

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Joanne Robertson: Blurrr Album Review
Music

Joanne Robertson: Blurrr Album Review

by jummy84 September 23, 2025
written by jummy84

In Joanne Robertson’s oil paintings, thick knots of red and brown often appear in the lower left-hand corner. They push back against the sloshes of pale color as a visual analogue for how her music works. Those reds and browns are like the rhythmic unrest at the heart of her serene songs, where melodies twist and buckle and collapse. And like her frequent collaborator Dean Blunt, Robertson’s visual practice bleeds into her music, shaping its tension and motion. She wanders with supple precision across both canvas and song in an improvisatory state, but it’s in music that she comes closest to the divine.

Blurrr, Robertson’s sixth solo album and her undisputed masterpiece, is at points so beautiful—53 seconds into “Always Were,” to be exact, or four minutes, 31 seconds into “Peaceful”—that it feels difficult to breathe alongside it. Here, Robertson sounds as though she has reached a stratosphere where the soul can stretch its legs and roam more freely. It is scarcely conceivable that Robertson recorded the album within the confines of a room, constructed from earthly material, somewhere inside a city. For its nearly 45-minute duration, there is only this.

The sound of Blurrr might best be likened to the Cocteau Twins calling from inside the house: a lo-fi rendering of the band’s beautiful slurry. Like Elizabeth Fraser, Robertson makes a voice feel much larger than the words it carries, though she isn’t singing with an alien tongue so much as blurring words into tonal brushstrokes. If Fraser’s gift was a kind of ecstatic, non-linguistic invention, Robertson’s errs closer to meaning. Her lyrics hover just beyond grasp, vaguely intelligible but never fully yielded. Grouper is another obvious point of comparison: both artists summon an immense solitude, with melodies and lyrics that seem dredged from half-buried incidents and associations, as if carried across remote distances and centuries before reaching us. Robertson, though, gathers those fragments into her voice, which doesn’t just bear them forward but distills them; purified in the very act of singing.

On tracks like “Gown,” where she fully opens her melodic range, her voice is all yearning and suffering. Even in moments when her phrasing feels more provisional and hesitant, as on “Ghost,” it sounds as if she is attempting to stake a claim on the infinite. Her voice and guitar zigzag around one another, rarely colliding into melodic symmetry. Her voice the blur, her guitar the furious red and brown tangles; never just a scaffold but a tactile object that thuds with wood and wire, each string caught mid-rattle, harmonics clanging.

September 23, 2025 0 comments
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Riot Fest 2025 Was a Celebration with Green Day, Blink-182: Review + Photos
Music

Riot Fest 2025 Was a Celebration with Green Day, Blink-182: Review + Photos

by jummy84 September 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Last week, Coachella dropped its 2025 lineup and, unsurprisingly, it sparked quite a bit of discourse. Echoing sentiments lobbed at Lollapalooza in previous years, many felt like Coachella’s three pop star headliners marked a shift away from the festival’s alternative roots. Luckily, there’s a festival in the Windy City that has dug its feet into the ground, remained independent, and kept the ethos of its founding days intact: Riot Fest.

The punk-leaning event celebrated its 20th anniversary this past weekend at Douglass Park in Chicago, boasting a pop punk holy trinity of headliners in Blink-182, Weezer, and Green Day, as well as an impressive undercard consisting of both scene veterans and exciting newbies. The whole shebang was certainly grander in scale than Riot Fest’s earliest editions, but its spunky core remains — RIOT FEST SUCKS, as they say. Acts like The Effigies, Alkaline Trio, Smoking Popes, Bad Religion, and a host of others were even ripped right from lineups of Riot Fest’s past; say what you want about punk rockers, but if Riot Fest has proven anything over the past two decades, it’s that they’re remarkably consistent.

Get Weezer Tickets Here

With a deep lineup, an everlasting spirit of rebellion, and the final payoff for years of John Stamos jokes, this year’s edition was a celebration to be proud of. Better yet, it was a celebration that was damn fun to take part in.

For those looking to relive the three days of festivities, or who missed out on all of the hoopla, here’s everything that went down at Riot Fest 2025 (plus, scroll on for a photo gallery of action shots).

September 23, 2025 0 comments
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Verses GT / Nosaj Thing / Jacques Greene: Verses GT Album Review
Music

Verses GT / Nosaj Thing / Jacques Greene: Verses GT Album Review

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Let me let Verses GT introduce themselves. Longtime collaborators Jacques Greene (Philippe Aubin-Dionne) and Nosaj Thing (Jason Chung) are officially stepping out as a duo with a self-titled album centered on collaboration. “Trust is the key word and concept around this project,” says Aubin-Dionne. Verses GT isn’t just an album, it seems, but an immersive audiovisual experience (live shows, music videos, light displays—“an all encompassing banner for a new collaborative world,” trumpets their Bandcamp) painstakingly crafted across a bevy of glamorous metropolises in hot pursuit of that elusive little thing called vibe. It’s a risky proposition: A concept like this can feel a little overwrought, a little too “creative”-as-noun, a little for sale, Wales Bonner Sambas, never worn. But Aubin-Dionne and Chung are gifted producers with extensive histories of creating banger after banger, and it’s no surprise that the music ultimately speaks for itself, album rollout be damned. Verses GT focuses their chameleonic, collaborative impulses, utilizing guest features and the duo’s signature R&B influences to gratifyingly moody effect.

As solo artists, Jacques Greene and Nosaj Thing have spanned their own respectively wide sonic ranges: the former often flipping ’90s R&B samples into glimmering, levitate-off-the-dancefloor tracks, the latter incorporating features from indie stalwarts like Julianna Barwick and Panda Bear into unusually sensuous, synthy mixdowns and producing for Chance the Rapper and Blonde Redhead. Together, though, the duo’s vision shines pretty singularly: Verses GT compresses the center of their Venn diagram to a fine point, layering UKG-esque breakbeats over a relatively subdued palette of synths that throb with a mixture of anxiety and hope.

Verses GT doesn’t just succeed in pinpointing a specific feeling: The whole album pulses with a mutable, introspective quality that brings palpable life to even the most stripped-back arrangements. Album standout “Left” is a triumph in steamy subtlety, with a few well-timed gasps and dreamy piano riffs cutting through to give us glimpses through the fog. And the stark choral ambience of opener “Fragment” ramps up the tension before giving way to the distant horns and breakbeats of “Unknown,” which skitters along at a very Burial-esque frequency (if perhaps in a timeline where Burial shook more ass).

Both Aubin-Dionne and Chung are typically adept at tempering vocals to each song’s vision, which they really flex on the soft grooves of “Your Light” (feat. George Riley) and the trip-hoppy “Angels” (feat. TYSON), melding their voices as languidly into their respective tracks as ever. It’s jarring, then, to hear the stridence of “Forever” (feat. KUČKA), particularly when sandwiched between the breezily distorted “Wan” and the six-minute “Found”—which, for what it’s worth, does such an excellent job incorporating a harsh breakbeat into soft synth melodies that it never feels a second too long. “Forever” could feasibly have worked as a neon-drenched standalone in the vein of tracks like Jacques Greene’s 2023 strobelight-conjuring tech-house anthem “Believe,” but within the hyperspecific context of Verses GT, it just feels like they turned all the lights on mid-show, to party-foul effect.

September 22, 2025 0 comments
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