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Joan Shelley: Real Warmth Album Review
Music

Joan Shelley: Real Warmth Album Review

by jummy84 September 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Home is not just a point on a map. In the music of Joan Shelley, it’s often embodied by the people who make up a place. For a long time, Shelley’s musical (and literal) home was Louisville, where she was born and raised, where she absorbed so much of the folk music that still inspires her, where she caught her first glimpse of musical community, and where she has collaborated regularly with local players and artists. In the years between 2022’s The Spur and last year’s Mood Ring, however, the woman who once daydreamed about spending humanity’s final moments in her beloved Kentucky, “holding my dear friends and drinking wine,” relocated much further north, to small-town Michigan, with her partner Nathan Salsburg and their daughter.

Throughout her career, Shelley has brought that conception of home wherever she’s gone, whether to End of an Ear Studio in Louisville, where she recorded songs for Mood Ring, or to Wilco’s Loft in Chicago, where she made 2017’s Joan Shelley with two generations of Tweedys. Most recently, she brought it to Toronto, where she fell in with a crew of local musicians to record her sixth album, Real Warmth. Working closely with Ben Whiteley, who plays bass for the Weather Station and Jake Xerxes Fussell and who produced the new record, Shelley and this community of artists devise musical palettes that help bring out new rhythmic elements in her music.

Her collaborators make their presence known immediately. On opener “Here in the High and Low,” they lend a fresh counterpoint to her lilting melodies, the electric guitars and spry percussion churning up an assertive energy. It’s an invocation, meant to welcome and rouse you. There have always been jazzier undercurrents running through Shelley’s music, but here they come to the forefront, especially when Karen Ng’s saxophone flutters around the edges of “On the Gold and Silver.” Real Warmth indulges more instrumental passages, like the coda of “Field Guide to Wild Life,” although sometimes her fellow musicians crowd out the deft picking that has always been a hallmark of her albums.

Generally, these Canadians help chase down Shelley’s idea of home as something to protect, as a place full of people whose pain she would readily bear for them. “God, if I could guard you, take your fire, then burn me now,” she sings on “Everybody”; she might be addressing her partner or their daughter, or her band, or anyone listening to the song. Whiteley and their crew—which includes Weather Station singer Tamara Lindeman, Doug Paisley, Salsburg, and Shelley’s daughter—make her songs sound a little less solitary. In turn, she invites the listener into the music: “Join in the song, join in the band,” she sings on “Here in the High and Low.”

September 22, 2025 0 comments
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The Jim Carroll Band: Catholic Boy Album Review
Music

The Jim Carroll Band: Catholic Boy Album Review

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Clear-eyed for the first time in a decade, he fell in love and got married. His new wife, a law school student at Stanford, took him to New Wave shows in San Francisco, and divine inspiration struck again.

“People had encouraged me to do rock ‘n’ roll for a long time,” he said upon the release of Catholic Boy in 1981, a vast understatement. New York City seemed insistent that Jim Carroll have a career in music, even if he was not. He “had never listened to much rock after the Velvet Underground split,” he said in an NME article from the time, but he was impelled into collaboration by pals like Patti Smith and Blue Öyster Cult’s Allan Lanier. Lanier needed lyrics. Smith convinced him to open for her with her backing band, even though he missed a show after a drug bust landed him in jail overnight. When she worked at Scribner’s books on 5th Avenue, she saved him from an overdose, walking him around until he came to.

Compared to the readings he’d done all over the city, performing onstage felt vital and raw, a way to connect with people outside the incestuous, erudite New York poets’ circle. “I didn’t like the negativity of punk,” he said, “but at least I saw how I could get past my technical limitations, because you didn’t have to sing well. And after publishing poems all those years and having a very esoteric audience, the prospect of this other audience seemed nice.”

It was in Bolinas, on the beach with the dogs, that he’d become the frontman of his own band. There, he met some members of a local group called Amsterdam, and convinced them to soundtrack one of his readings. Soon after, the new Jim Carroll Band were polishing material at Bay Area clubs until they finally won over the scene’s youths. This was by design: “I wanted kids to like it,” Carroll said, “kids into heavy rock and hot guitars.” Doors opened quickly for Carroll, as they tended to do. On a trip to New York in 1979, he inked a deal with famed music mogul Earl McGrath at a party.

If Catholic Boy is for the kids, it’s a specific subset of them: precocious, kinetic, and traumatized. The breakneck pace of punk rock is perfect for outrunning what haunts you. A louche hybrid of New York Dolls-style glam rock and ’80s gloss, the album is an emblem of the national transition from downtown punk squats to cocaine penthouses and Reagonomics. It’s a bridge between the Ramones and the Cars, a yarn that ties together two decades and two cities.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Movie Review Nishaanchi | Masala Meets Grit | Glamsham.com
Bollywood

Movie Review Nishaanchi | Masala Meets Grit | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 September 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Movie: Nishaanchi
Director: Anurag Kashyap
Cast: Aaishvary Thackeray, Vedika Pinto, Monika Panwar, Kumud Mishra, Vineet Kumar Singh, Mohammed Zeeshan Ayyub, Rajesh Kumar, Durgesh Kumar, Gaurav Singh
Music: Manan Bhardwaj, Anurag Saikia, Aaishvary Thackeray, Dhruv Ghanekar, Nishikar Chibber, Piyush Mishra, Hitesh Sonik, Deepak & Parimal
Runtime: 2hrs 59m
Theatrical Release Date: 19 September 2025

A story of twin brothers torn between crime and conscience, Anurag Kashyap’s Nishaanchi follows Babloo and Dabloo (Aaishvary Thackeray) as they tread starkly different paths. One is lured into the underworld, the other wrestles with morality and loyalty. Between them lies a turbulent mix of family duty, betrayal, and love, embodied by Manjari (Monika Panwar) and Rinku (Vedika Pinto). While Manjari is the twins’ mother, Rinku plays Babloo’s love interest. The film positions itself as a classic Hindi melodrama, though layered with Kashyap’s unmistakable grit.

The film marks the acting debut of Aaishvary Thackeray. In his double role as Babloo and Dabloo, he shoulders the film’s emotional and moral weight. Beyond acting, Aaishvary also contributes musically — he composed and sang for the film, including his quirky track ‘Pigeon Kabootar’. Opposite him, Vedika Pinto — remembered as the ‘Liggi girl’ from Ritviz’s music video — takes her first steps into mainstream cinema.

Set in Kanpur, Nishaanchi wears its milieu with authenticity, soaked in the dust and dialect of Uttar Pradesh. Kashyap draws on the vocabulary of 60s–80s Hindi cinema — grand emotional arcs, love triangles, betrayal, action, and moral dilemmas. At just one minute shy of three hours, the film aims for operatic sweep. Sylvester Fonseca’s cinematography captures the rustic setting with a mix of stylization and realism, while the soundtrack fuses Aaishvary’s own contributions with a broader masala palette.

Much of the buzz may revolve around Aaishvary Thackeray’s double debut, but it is Monika Panwar who quietly delivers the film’s most commanding presence. As Manjari — mother of the twins and wife of wrestler Jabardast Singh (Vineet Kumar Singh) — she becomes the film’s true nishaanchi, a sharpshooter whose rifle serves as both weapon and metaphor. Panwar balances raw toughness with layered vulnerability, embodying a lived-in strength that anchors the story. In a world overrun by crime, betrayal, and toxic masculinity, her presence is calm, controlled, and at times almost mythic.

Compared to the flamboyance of Babloo’s exploits or the moral anguish of Dabloo, Manjari radiates quiet dominance. Her sharpshooter’s eye becomes a symbol of clarity in a murky world where others are clouded by ego and desire. Panwar dwarfs the twins not through spectacle but through subtlety — an economy of gesture, a silencing stare, and gravitas that only comes when a performer fully inhabits her role. In Kashyap’s inversion of genre convention, it is the mother figure who wields the ultimate power, turning the rifle into an instrument of justice rather than destruction. If Aaishvary’s debut proves his potential, it is Panwar who gives Nishaanchi its weight — arguably its most memorable takeaway.

Still, Aaishvary impresses with rustic screen presence and confident command of local dialects. If he charts his journey wisely, this debut could position him as a next-generation Bhiku Mhatre. Supporting the central arc, Kumud Mishra brings gravitas as Ambika Prasad, his dialogue delivery and facial restraint lending the film a grounded seriousness.

By now, Anurag Kashyap films constitute a genre of their own — a heady blend of grit, layered characters, and hinterland textures that his audience instantly recognizes. Nishaanchi sits squarely in that comfort zone, offering Kashyap loyalists the tonal familiarity they expect. It can also be seen as a thematic extension — or even a counterpoint — to his most iconic work, Gangs of Wasseypur.

What makes the film especially intriguing is the sense that Kashyap may be holding something back. A post-credit note hinting at “Part 2” suggests that his larger, more subversive ideas might only surface in the sequel.

For now, Nishaanchi feels like a bold straddle — part mass entertainer, part auteur cinema. It is nostalgic yet experimental, rewarding for Kashyap’s fans but less likely to resonate with generic audiences seeking lighter festive fare. Its dark tones and dense narrative place it firmly in Kashyap’s world — demanding, provocative, and ultimately divisive.

September 21, 2025 0 comments
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Movie Review Jolly LLB 3 | Entertaining & Socially Relevant | Glamsham.com
Bollywood

Movie Review Jolly LLB 3 | Entertaining & Socially Relevant | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Movie: Jolly LLB 3
Director: Subhash Kapoor
Cast: Akshay Kumar, Arshad Warsi, Saurabh Shukla, Amrita Rao, Huma Qureshi, Seema Biswas, Gajraj Rao, Ram Kapoor
Theatrical Release Date
Run Time: 2hrs 37mins

The third installment of Subhash Kapoor’s Jolly LLB franchise shifts the battle of wits to Bikaner, Rajasthan, where a farmer, Rajaram Solanki, refuses to part with his ancestral land for industrialist Haribhai Khaitan’s ambitious “Bikaner to Boston” project. After losing his case in a local court and being falsely maligned with accusations of illicit relations with his daughter-in-law, Rajaram succumbs to despair and takes his own life. His widow, Janki Rajaram Solanki (Seema Biswas), refuses to surrender to the system and pursues justice with unyielding resolve. Her determination sets the stage for the unthinkable—convincing both Akshay Kumar’s Jagdishwar “Jolly” Mishra and Arshad Warsi’s Jagdish Tyagi to take up her cause, drawing them into a courtroom confrontation that becomes the film’s driving force under the watchful eye of Judge Sunder Lal Tripathi (Saurabh Shukla).

Looking back at the franchise’s trajectory, the original Jolly LLB introduced Arshad Warsi as the scrappy Delhi lawyer whose brush with a high-profile hit-and-run case exposed the rot of privilege, corruption, and inefficiency in the legal system, with humour and moral grit shaping its impact. The sequel shifted to Lucknow, with Akshay Kumar stepping in as Jagdishwar Mishra and raising the stakes through a widow’s fight against fake police encounters and wrongful killings, a narrative sharpened by pointed commentary on state power, religion, and systemic inertia while retaining satirical flair. In Jolly LLB 3, Kapoor delivers both Jollys together, creating a unique conflict where the two constantly spar, representing divergent approaches to justice—one rooted in idealism, the other in pragmatism. This “double Jolly” format offers continuity for fans through the return of familiar faces like Judge Tripathi and the wives, Sandhya (Amrita Rao) and Pushpa (Huma Qureshi), while refreshing the dynamic with a rivalry that soon evolves into reluctant teamwork.

The thematic pivot this time is land usurpation and the misuse of the legal system against marginalized farmers, a subject that resonates with contemporary anxieties about industrialization and displacement. The first half plays lighter, leaning into the comic banter of the two lawyers vying for clients, before the second half gradually deepens into courtroom gravity, where humour sharpens the absurdities of the system without undermining the stakes. Dialogues cut to the bone, from references to farmers’ suicides and the inadequacy of MSP to Judge Tripathi’s striking remark about the “letter and spirit” of the law. Even fleeting mentions, such as making agriculture a compulsory subject in schools or recalling the Green Revolution, leave the audience with pointed reminders of farmers’ centrality to India’s future.

Yet the film is not without flaws. The script is built with convenience, never allowing one Jolly to outshine the other, and in striving to balance them equally, it risks feeling formulaic. The absence of a truly formidable courtroom opponent blunts the dramatic edge, with Haribhai’s menace felt more outside the court than within it. Still, the widow’s plight is handled with weight and conviction, keeping the emotional core intact and anchoring the narrative beyond the lawyers’ sparring.

Ultimately, Jolly LLB 3 is entertaining in parts and socially relevant in essence. It may not carry the freshness of the first film or the sharper bite of the second, but it draws attention to the widening urban–rural divide, the anxieties of land acquisition, and the inequities between the affluent and the marginalized. Subhash Kapoor retains his signature blend of satire, humour, and moral crusade, and while the execution is uneven, the film resonates beyond fiction by reminding us, in its concluding notes, just how deeply farmers remain woven into the lives of everyone.

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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Nine Inch Nails: TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) Album Review
Music

Nine Inch Nails: TRON: Ares (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) Album Review

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

But that’s also the problem: Since when has Nine Inch Nails gone unnoticed anywhere? The pleasure of the people playing this music is obvious and infectious, but it’s hard to shake the idea that despite their effectiveness, the hardest-charging songs here feel incomplete, that the film score’s mandate not to draw too much attention to itself hampers the songs’ ability to fully bloom on their own terms. Not since Lil Nas X flipped “34 Ghosts IV” into “Old Town Road” has a Nine Inch Nails song felt so in need of a remix.

Reznor and Ross’ best scores tend not to make the kind of bold statements they do so well with Nine Inch Nails, though. They operate more like a perfume whose scent is unmistakable in any kind of room. It’s a little standoffish, a little distant, with heartbreak heavily implied. It’s music that sounds like it’s made peace with desperation, in other words, and they do it superbly here. “100% Expendable” is built from a bank of lightly detuned synths that tremble faintly the longer their chords are held. The tone—harsh, brassy, like trumpets with bayonets—feels like a direct callback to Wendy Carlos’ A Clockwork Orange score, the latter’s menace replaced by the damp resignation of Radiohead’s “Exit Music (For a Film).” They pick the theme up again in “Building Better Worlds,” sculpting a cyber-hymn that crumbles into pixels as it’s being built. This is an album where something as minor as the live-wire buzz that runs behind “Daemonize” is trusted with carrying great emotional weight and succeeds.

It’s precisely this kind of care that elevates “Who Wants to Live Forever?”, the best of the album’s four vocal songs and among the most affecting and approachable Reznor has ever written. On its face, it’s a straightforward piece of Oscar bait that the rubber-pants-era Reznor wouldn’t have been caught dead performing. The tender, quivering duet he shares with Spanish singer Judeline is wrapped around a melody that pushes his voice to a height it can’t quite hit. “I don’t want to be here anymore,” he sings, and the piano blooms and sighs behind him, its tone shifting between light and dark with every chord change. In the foreground, pink pops of sound dot across the track, their slow drift like digital cherry blossoms falling on a vintage ad-board. Is it hammy? Yeah, it’s a little hammy; you might think of “Defying Gravity” when you hear it. But it’s an incredibly effective piece of musical theater, too, and it’s made more complex when the same melody goes sour in the ruins of “Building Better Worlds,” the very next song. Not even the misty-eyed beauty of yearning lasts.

Tron: Ares, the Nine Inch Nails album, is being released nearly a month before Tron: Ares, the blockbuster film, so we don’t know yet precisely what kind of story Reznor and Ross are trying to tell through this music. This is probably for the best: It’s difficult to think of the possibility of “Who Wants to Live Forever?” being sung from the perspective of an AI longing to return to its digital planet and not have it ruin the song a little bit. Then again, it seems churlish to expect Trent Reznor to still be hacking away at the cutting edge of darkness four decades into his career. Over time, affect becomes aesthetics, pain becomes another color in the palette. Maybe. Maybe something can come from the heart without breaking it. Maybe you don’t have to hurt yourself to see if you still feel.

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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Cardi B Goes Scorched Earth on Am I the Drama?: Review
Music

Cardi B Goes Scorched Earth on Am I the Drama?: Review

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Asking Cardi B to mind her tongue is like asking an oceanic creature to abandon its undersea home. It’s not fucking happening. The Bronx MC lives and breathes controversy, even when she’s not intentionally courting it. Since her 2017 breakthrough single, “Bodak Yellow,” Cardi B has steadily revealed herself to be the high-profile celebrity of our time, a larger-than-life personality who is just as quick to dress down the average Barb as she is to eviscerate her own peers.

Between a messy divorce, babies (babies, and more babies), rap beefs, internet vitriol, and court cases, Cardi B has remained in the public eye. This is all despite the fact that she hadn’t released an album since 2018’s Grammy-winning Invasion of Privacy. Her new album, Am I the Drama?, confirms that yes, Cardi B is the reason for all of the chaotic situations she constantly finds herself in — but is she at fault, or is she just shining too bright? Cardi’s latest project is an offering of proof that she’s a blameless victim of hating-ass bitches and ain’t-shit n****s. It’s up to us to believe her.

In a recent Spotify conversation with Destiny’s Child royalty Kelly Rowland, Cardi shed light on the inspiration behind Am I the Drama? “Sometimes, fans or people will be like, ‘Oh, don’t give them energy,’” Cardi said. “‘They don’t deserve your energy,’ or like, ‘They don’t deserve your clout or your attention.’ And it’s like, nah, you know what? Fuck it. I’mma give it to you. It’s like, fuck it, I’mma give it to you. Because sometimes people be like, ‘Just ignore, ignore, ignore. Take the high road.’ And it’s like, ‘Fuck the high road.’” If you’ve if been paying even a smidgen of attention, you know that Cardi B’s aversion to going high when others go low is unsurprising. This album is her opportunity to get her lick back on everyone who has been praying on her downfall, be it for years or minutes.

The opening track, “Dead,” features R&B diva Summer Walker singing more passionately than we’ve heard her in a while, as Cardi raps about her foremost goal of killing the competition: “They say, ‘Cardi, you tweaking,’ nah, I don’t be tweaking enough/ Bitches be doing shit and I be letting it slide and I don’t be bringing it up/ Bitches be out here telling lies about me and y’all just be eating it up/ But when I drag her to hell, ‘Cardi, you evil as fuck!’” On the BossMan Dlow-inspired “Magnet,” Cardi menacingly sharpens a lyrical machete in a pointed attack against JT of the former Miami rap group City Girls. For nearly a minute straight, Cardi shatters the rapper’s image, without a single care or fuck to give.

“Pretty & Petty” is unexpected sonically, as it bangs like a song that West Coast newcomer AZ Chike would place on his own debut album. But thematically, it’s right on cue, as Cardi uses the entire song to re-escalate her beef with Boston rapper BIA, an artist she’s been targeting since her feature on last year’s “Wanna Be” remix with GloRilla and Megan Thee Stallion. “Name five BIA songs, gun pointing to your head/ Bow, I’m dead,” she raps at the top of the track, before launching into an outright assault based on accomplishments. “You wanna beef with me, are you sure?/ Do she even got a BET Award?” (While a BET Award is a high honor in the Black community, it’s sometimes seen as low on the totem pole of awards across the industry.)

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Buckingham Nicks Is the Work of Two Virtuosos Finding a Singular Voice: Review
Music

Buckingham Nicks Is the Work of Two Virtuosos: Review

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Lindsey Buckingham and Stevie Nicks were fresh Los Angeles transplants when they created their first and only collaborative album as a duo, 1973’s Buckingham Nicks. Released in September of that year, the album flopped and went mostly ignored by the public. One day, Mick Fleetwood stumbled upon one of Buckingham and Nicks’ recordings — “Frozen Love” — as his band wrestled with another lineup change, and he was quickly won over. The songwriting duo officially joined at the start of 1975, immediately contributed new songs to the band’s self-titled rebirth, and the rest is history.

But the process of making Buckingham Nicks, when the two were just beginning to realize their songwriting partnership, was less miraculous. According to the pair, Nicks took on the breadwinner role at the time, working waitressing and cleaning jobs while Buckingham stayed at home with guitar in hand, smoking weed and making music. They did this, apparently, because they both felt it would be best for Buckingham to not work and instead focus on his guitar technique and songwriting efforts.

That’s quite the arrangement. Obviously, in 2025, gender roles are more nuanced than they were in the early ’70s, but with both Buckingham and Nicks demonstrating serious ambition as songwriters, vocalists, lyricists, and instrumentalists, they had every reason for the survival workload to be equitable. The album they made is not just Lindsay Buckingham and not just Stevie Nicks. It’s both of them, shoulder-to-shoulder, skin on skin, like the album cover suggests.

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But when listening to Buckingham Nicks, which will now be released into the world officially for the first time since its initial pressing in the early ’70s, you can also hear why the arrangement worked. Both Buckingham and Nicks were obsessing over craft, just in different ways. Buckingham’s virtuosic nature is more obvious, evident in spellbinding, fingerpicked passages and clever harmonic turns. Nicks, on the other hand, was developing something just as sophisticated: a vocal approach inspired by her late ’60s heroes in Grace Slick and Janis Joplin, with raw command and a capacity to depict a multitude of emotions within her lyrics.

These studied approaches meet on Buckingham Nicks, which has held a sort of mythological status among Fleetwood Mac devotees, but has been largely unavailable to casual listeners. Usually, debut albums from legacy acts like Buckingham and Nicks demonstrate a scrappier dynamic; even looking at Nick’s charged gaze and Buckingham’s untamed (and untrimmed) features on the album cover suggests a raw, adventurous work, imbued with the recklessness of youth and ambition.

But Buckingham Nicks is much more measured and unblemished than you might expect, an aspect further emphasized by the release’s newly-remastered audio. The remastering reveals just how polished these recordings were; Buckingham’s clean guitar tones on tracks like “Without a Leg to Stand On” shimmer with clarity, while the rhythm section (featuring top-shelf session players like Jim Keltner) provides a rock-solid foundation that sounds anything but amateurish.

This is especially apparent on the seven-minute closer “Frozen Love,” a majestic cut that features an moving string section and an extended bridge that burns with fiery emotion. The chords dissolve into one another as Buckingham plucks his guitar with bewildering speed, the urgency mirrored by growing dynamics and an expansive arrangement. Recorded at the legendary Sound City Studios with future Fleetwood Mac producer Keith Olsen at the helm, the album benefited from state-of-the-art equipment (including the studio’s new Neve console) and world-class musicianship back then; it sounds even more crisp and immersive now.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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'The Summer I Turned Pretty' Season 3 Ending Review
Fashion

‘The Summer I Turned Pretty’ Season 3 Ending Review

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Lola Tung has played Belly with the depth and nuance characters of color often don’t get on teen shows like this. While The Summer I Turned Pretty is still very white, Tung and her TV family (including Sean Kaufman as Belly’s brother Steven and Jackie Chung as mom Laurel) brought a dynamic that felt deeply real and aggressively normal, which, again, for Asian American characters onscreen, this kind of representation is still rare and a welcome change. And it means that Tung’s Belly means a lot to a lot of people. Last weekend at the Emmys, I spoke to Sarah Bock, the 19-year-old who plays Miss Huang on Severance and when I asked her the first time she felt truly seen on TV, she said it was watching Tung on The Summer I Turned Pretty and that she was firmly “Team Belly.” Yes, this character has been polarizing, but I think that’s what makes her great. And in the series finale, Belly’s complexity was on full display. If you are, like Bock and me, less concerned with the love triangle between the Fisher boys (don’t get me wrong, I was still deeply invested) and more interested in watching our girl grow up and choose herself, Season 3 episode 11 was for us.  

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Dua Lipa's "Radical Optimism Tour" MSG Review + Photos
Music

Dua Lipa’s “Radical Optimism Tour” MSG Review + Photos

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

During the first of her four nights at New York City’s Madison Square Garden on Wednesday, September 17th, Dua Lipa stopped and took it all in. From a raised platform about 20 feet in the air, the pop star reflected on her love for the city and its premier venue, expressing gratitude to be back headlining The Garden once again. She had been in the exact position — literally — in 2022, on a raised platform high in the air that weaved back and forth throughout the arena as she performed “Levitating” during her “Future Nostalgia Tour.” Three years later, there she was again, high above us all, commanding us to dance. Has anything changed?

Quite a bit, but at the Dua Lipa show, it’s all relative. The star’s “Radical Optimism Tour” is an advancement from her prior US outing in some ways, but certain tent poles of the Dua Lipa live experience remain unchanged. For one, it is every bit a showcase of her catalog as it is an ecstatic, celebratory dance party, each song somehow groovier than the last. Certain songs were presented in similar fashion as her prior outing: “One Kiss,” “Electricity,” and “Hallucinate” were center stage club moments, while “Physical” was once again an energetic ’80s workout video come to life.

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But above all, Dua Lipa continues to be tastefully extra. A lot like the tour before it, this concert had all the bells and whistles of a great pop show — and then some. I counted six costume changes and just as many confetti explosions. There were moments of casual pyro, not always at the climax of songs but sometimes straight in the middle of one. The songs’ movements were elaborate, the choreography gripping and occasionally silly (the ‘lets all hold hands and skip in a circle’ dance moment at the conclusion of “Electricity” was both hilarious and strangely moving). The “Future Nostalgia” run remains supreme, but this new “Radical Optimism” endeavor is its own beast entirely — a more confident, more playful, and somehow even more joyous celebration.

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Perhaps the biggest variable in the mix this time around are Lipa’s various crowd engagements and cover renditions. The latter has been a particularly rewarding move for her, using each city as an opportunity to honor its rich musical output while also just trying something new and risky.

For last night’s show, Lipa seemed genuinely nervous to bust out her nightly cover, telling the audience that her choice was personal (while also being a generally challenging song to sing) and revealing that it would be Alicia Keys’ “No One.” She then played a video of her singing “No One” as an adolescent before launching into her cover, which was a treat; Keys and Lipa have settled on very different styles of music, but they both have a powerful, commanding range and an unmistakeable touch of rasp. It would have been extra special to see Keys join her for the rendition, but alas, maybe for Night Two.

The main unpredictable segment of the concert, however, was a mid-show moment where Lipa made her way to the B-stage and stopped to chat and take selfies with fans at the barricade. So many artists do fan interactions during their show, but it’s often during a song or off-handedly from the stage. I couldn’t have been the only one who felt slightly nervous watching Lipa stroll through the crowd and engage with her most enthusiastic fans for not just a minute, but a full 10-15 minute segment. No music, no security guard dividing Lipa and her audience; just a barricade, a camera man, and Lipa’s casual charm.

You have to be so utterly confident to open yourself up to the unpredictable mid-show, to let others speak directly into your microphone and essentially say anything. It’s impressive from a social level that she’s been doing this so publicly at every stop of the tour, and luckily, her faith in her fans was endearing last night; when Lipa spoke to one incredibly enthusiastic fan and asked how she was enjoying the show, the woman responded “I CANNOT HEAR WHAT YOU ARE SAYING” (yes, in all caps), and the arena erupted with laughter.

It was a sweet, wholesome moment that stuck out within a concert that had a lot of highlights. When watching Lipa’s show, it’s easy to see her as an enigma, a symbol of beauty and prowess, so magnetic that she feels like a fictional character in a TV show about a great pop star. But this segment with her and her fans was a really lovely reminder that of course, she’s human, she’s funny, and she shares the same passion as her most devoted audience members.

There were several other aspects to the production that really worked in Dua’s favor. The lighting was generally outstanding; a large infinity-shaped ring of light wrapped around the stage, with it forming the crest of a wave right at the center. It led to some dazzling visuals, especially as the aesthetic themes that accompanied each song transformed from one into another.

What didn’t exactly work, however, was the show’s intro. There was definitely an aquatic theme at play, in line with the Radical Optimism album cover and the aforementioned ‘wave of light’ streaking across center stage. But the show began with a particular long and meditative into, where lush, watery tones and images of waves crashing in slow motion played for almost a full 10 minutes before Lipa started singing. It was as if we started the show at the Whale Room from the Museum of Natural History, and even as the pre-show soundtrack grew in dynamics, it still felt like we were supposed to be closing our eyes and imagining ourselves in the middle of the ocean.

I’m all for an immersive opening, but then Lipa finally arrived onstage and began the show with “Training Season,” which was totally incongruous (both musically and thematically) to the whole ocean vibe being cultivated. She had to play “Training Season,” of course, but it was not the strongest opening track either; it’s at such a high part of her voice, and she performed the first verse so slowly, that it set us off on the wrong foot for the start of the show. Also, this aquatic-style theme totally disappeared throughout the concert, never to be reprised for the various Radical Optimism tracks she performed.

Eventually, as the show’s movements unfolded and Dua found her stride, the evening transformed into what a Dua Lipa concert should be: an absorbing spectacle and a hell of a lot of fun. By the time she was back on that elevated platform, confetti cannons blazing and the crowd dancing below, it was clear that while plenty has changed since 2022, her ability to turn Madison Square Garden into her personal dance floor remains wonderfully, reliably intact.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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Lola Young: I’m Only F**king Myself Album Review
Music

Lola Young: I’m Only F**king Myself Album Review

by jummy84 September 18, 2025
written by jummy84

“Messy” wasn’t just a hit single for Lola Young; it was also a manifesto. The bratty pop-rock song that dominated TikTok in late 2024 and early 2025 documents the British singer’s inner dialogue as she chafes against impossibly high standards. “A thousand people I could be for you, and you hate the fucking lot,” Young rasps in her defiant south London twang, alternately belting and gently teasing out the line. It’s spiky yet wounded, capturing the turbulence of a toxic relationship in full swing. Young wrote her third album, I’m Only Fucking Myself, during the song’s unexpected meteoric rise (in January this year, it was the most-streamed song by a British artist in the world) and a stint in rehab. Here, she leans further into her commitment to warts-and-all pop music, producing several songs that feel just as arresting as her viral moment.

Though “Messy” seems addressed to a critical partner or parent, you could also read Young’s bristling self-ownership through the lens of her career: the long road of publicly carving out her identity as a musician after having been discovered as a teenager. She graduated from the BRIT School in 2018, a selective but free specialist school for music and performing arts, notably attended by the likes of Adele, Amy Winehouse, and RAYE. Soon afterwards, she caught the attention of Nick Shymansky, Winehouse’s former manager, and Nick Huggett, who signed Adele. Both signed up to her management team (Shymansky is still her manager today); the following year, she inked a deal with Island Records.

Her first releases were downbeat, soulful singles that seemed to play to the masses. In 2021, she even completed the British hazing ritual of recording a tear-streaked piano cover of a vintage pop song for department store John Lewis’s annual Christmas advert. But by her breakthrough 2024 record This Wasn’t Meant For You Anyway, she’d developed a disarming candor—she’s described it as learning “to write as if I was speaking to somebody,” a quality she sharpens on I’m Only Fucking Myself.

The record documents a life in chaotic transition, including Young’s recovery from cocaine addiction—a non-linear journey that doesn’t rest on feel-good affirmations or straightforward resolution, but unblinkingly faces both the highs and the lows. The album’s first full track is the anthemic “FUCK EVERYONE,” an indie-sleaze ode to casual sex and hedonism, before breaking into a strut with the psychedelic-tinged funk of “One Thing.” Although anxieties about exposure and self-hatred cling to the lyrics like shadows, the songs’ production—shaped by Solomonophonic (SZA, Remi Wolf)—fosters a no-strings-attached, devil-may-care breeziness before the album careens into darker territory.

September 18, 2025 0 comments
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