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Rock Luminaries Salute KISS' Ace Frehley
Music

Rock Luminaries Salute KISS’ Ace Frehley

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Rock stars from throughout the past 50 years have joined to pay tribute to influential KISS guitarist Ace Frehley, who died yesterday (Oct. 16) at the age of 74. The musician suffered a brain injury after falling in his recording studio last month and had been breathing with the aid of a ventilator in recent days.

“Our hearts are broken,” wrote KISS bandmate Gene Simmons. “Ace has passed on. No one can touch Ace’s legacy. I know he loved the fans. He told me many times. Sadder still, Ace didn’t live long enough to be honored at the Kennedy Center Honors event in December. Ace was the eternal rock soldier. Long may his legacy live on!”

“With a broken heart and deep, deep sadness, my brother Ace Frehley has passed away,” said KISS drummer Peter Criss. “He died peacefully with his family around him. My wife and I were with him to the end as well. I love you my brother. My love and prayers go out to Jeanette, Monique, Charlie and Nancy and all of Ace’s extended family, bandmates, fans and friends. May the Lord comfort you at this difficult time. As a founding member of the rock group KISS and in Ace’s solo career, Ace influenced and touch the hearts of millions of people. His legacy will live on in the music industry and in the hearts of the KISS Army. At this time I ask all of you to please be respectful to Ace’s family and allow them to grieve privately. To the KISS Army and Ace’s Rock Soldiers, my heart is with you all… Broken.”

“All my friends have spent untold hours talking about KISS and buying KISS stuff,” said Pearl Jam guitarist Mike McCready. “Ace was a hero of mine and also I would consider a friend. I studied his solos endlessly over the years. Just listen to ‘Alive’ — I used his solo from ‘She’ as a template. Ace jammed on ‘Black Diamond’ with Pearl Jam at Madison Square Garden — a dream come true for me. I would not have picked up a guitar without Ace and KISS’s influence.”

“Absolutely stunned and saddened by the news Ace Frehley has tragically passed away,” said Rush’s Geddy Lee. “Back in 1974, as the opening act for KISS, Alex, Neil [Peart] and myself spent many a night hanging out together in his hotel room after shows, doing whatever nonsense we could think of, just to make him break out his inimitable and infectious laugh. He was an undeniable character and an authentic rock star. RIP Ace. Thanks for welcoming us newbies into the rock’n’roll world.

“My first guitar hero, Ace Frehley, has passed away,” wrote Rage Against the Machine’s Tom Morello. “The legendary Space Ace Frehley inspired generations to love rock’n’roll and love rock’n’roll guitar playing. His timeless riffs and solos, the billowing smoke coming from his Les Paul, the rockets shooting from his headstock, his cool spacey onstage wobble and his unforgettable crazy laugh will be missed but will never be forgotten. Thank you, Ace for a lifetime of great music and memories.”

“Ace was the first person I met when we were forming Chic,” wrote the group’s leader, Nile Rodgers. “KISS were playing at a spot called Le Jardin. Without his makeup, nobody recognized him as he sat at my table. Only a few minutes before, the crowd were losing their shit over him. I learned a lot that night. Truly historic.”

Added guitarist Steve Vai, “Ace Frehley was the embodiment of rock’n’roll attitude — unapologetic, loud and irresistibly catchy. His riffs had swagger, his tone had bite and his presence lit up stages like a supernova. The Spaceman has left the stage, but his orbit will shine forever.”

October 18, 2025 0 comments
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The Time I Set My Amp on Fire Through the Power of Rock
Music

The Time I Set My Amp on Fire Through the Power of Rock

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

On one of the U.S. tours to support the album Alien Lanes, Guided By Voices, for whom I played bass guitar at that time, did a show at a club in Los Angeles called Spaceland. It was so new it didn’t even have a stage. The P.A. system was not top flight, either, which is where the trouble started.  

On the guest list that night was the main guy from the band Soul Asylum, who was dating the girl from Edward Scissorhands at the time, so we were a little bit excited that a real Hollywood celebrity might show up to our show. Whether the Soul Asylum person or his date showed up, I could not say. This was a time, please understand, before GBV were regularly visited backstage in Los Angeles by, for instance, the guy from Zoolander, the little girl from E.T., that one thin blonde girl from that one movie, and possibly Che Guevara (actually, Benicio Del Toro, who played him in the movie). Because nobody had heard of the band yet, except people who liked rock music, and the guy from Soul Asylum.

Despite our lack of celebrity clout, the place was packed. The tiny sound system couldn’t cope. Especially the monitors. Things got so bad that our singer, Bob, actually stopped the show at one point and sat down on the floor, and said into the mic that he wasn’t going to play another song until someone fixed the fucking monitors. His voice was almost hoarse because we had been on tour for some time, and had only a couple of shows left on this particular leg. 

The soundman at the club did something to the monitors where it was possible for Bob and Kevin to at least hear the vocals, so that Bob didn’t blow out his voice, but I’m pretty sure he was in a bad mood and in a hurry to get off the stage. He signaled that we would play “Exit Flagger,” and that that would be our last song.

“Exit Flagger” was, when I first heard it, and remains to this day, one of my very favorite Guided By Voices songs. It has a very simple structure, and adeptly performs that neat magic trick where a song can be both anthemic and melancholic at the same time. Towards the end of the song, where Bob and Toby keep singing “Exit Flagger” over and over, I used to go kind of crazy with my bass runs. 

It was always a blast to play that closing bit, especially when drunk, because everyone knows that when you are drunk your fingers move faster. But what happened next was really a little extraordinary.

To this day, I will never know whether my (quoting Toby Sprout) “smoking” bass runs or some technical glitch in the bass cabinet caused my amp to cut out at the exact moment the song ended. I turned around to look for the reason, only to find that the cabinet was on fire. I mean, literally on fire. Flames were coming out of it. Toby turned around at the same time, noticed the flames, and casually picked up a cup of beer and poured it over them. The flames went out. Toby muttered something about “wasting good beer,” and that was that.

I can’t explain the cause, I can only speculate. And because I can only speculate, I prefer the satisfying explanation that “Exit Flagger” set my bass amp on fire through the power of rock. Having no use for it, and not wishing to load its heavy carcass into the van, I left the scorched wreck on the floor of Spaceland. It stood where it had died, I like to think proudly, or nobly, but dead all the same.
Our next show was a festival somewhere in San Diego. Luckily, our management had already got in touch with one of the other bands, who agreed to lend us their bass rig for our set. The kid who showed me how to use the rig was very nice; I can’t remember his name. He played with a band none of us had ever heard of before, and some of us have not listened to ever again, except accidentally, but I would like to stress: very nice people. The band was called No Doubt, which is fitting, because that is how I feel about the supernatural provenance of my amp’s fiery death.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Killer Mike, J.I.D. Inducting OutKast Into Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame
Music

Killer Mike, J.I.D. Inducting OutKast Into Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

OutKast will receive one of the highest honors in music next month when they are inducted into the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. Killer Mike, J.I.D., and Sleepy Brown will be in the building to properly cement the momentous occasion.

The official Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Instagram account announced that all three Atlanta artists will be at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles on Nov. 8, and the specific “take the stage” language suggests that the trio will be performing as well.

Each artist also has a unique relationship with the legendary duo. Mike was part of the Dungeon Family, home to OutKast and Future, and appeared on their albums Stankonia and Speakerboxxx/The Love Below. J.I.D. has called the “Roses” artists one of his biggest influences, and worked alongside Big Boi on Masego’s “Garden Party.” Sleepy Brown helped to craft their iconic sound and contributed to their albums ATLiens and Aquemini.

OutKast’s inductee class includes Salt-N-Pepa, The White Stripes, Bad Company, Chubby Checker, Cyndi Lauper, Joe Cocker, Soundgarden, Warren Zevon, Thom Bell, Nicky Hopkins, Carol Kaye, and Lenny Waronker. They will mark the 13th Hip-Hop act added to the prestigious club, joining the likes of JAY-Z, The Notorious B.I.G., 2Pac, Eminem, Missy Elliott, and A Tribe Called Quest. The ceremony will stream live on Disney+.

The duo has primarily operated as solo acts in recent years. Big Boi appeared on “High Rise” with Sleepy Brown, Akeem Ali, and Organized Noize earlier in 2025. He also collaborated with Brown on Big Sleepover, a 15-song joint project in 2021.

André 3000 famously released a full flute album, New Blue Sun, in 2023. He also joined Killer Mike on “Scientists & Engineers” from his 2023 LP Michael. Most recently, 3K shared the seven-track EP, 7 Piano Sketches. Listen to the project below.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Hayley Williams Releases New David Byrne Duet "Open The Door," Slams Kid Rock
Music

Hayley Williams Releases New David Byrne Duet “Open The Door,” Slams Kid Rock

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

In another reason why they should just form a dang band already, Hayley Williams and David Byrne have released another new collaboration in “Open The Door.”

The sentimental, sunshine-laden ballad is from the soundtrack to the new Netflix film The Twits (based on the beloved 1980 Roald Dahl children’s novel). In the film, two kids and a “family of magical animals” team up to battle the “meanest, nastiest villains [who] pull a trick to take over their town.” Check out the song below.

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The same day the pair released “Open The Door,” Williams made a surprise appearance during Byrne’s October 10th show at New York’s Radio City Music Hall. Byrniams/Willyrne performed their other duet, “What Is the Reason for It?” (off Byrne’s latest, Who Is The Sky?). Then, later in the set, Williams returned for a rendition of Paramore’s 2017 jam “Hard Times” (of which Byrne previously released a cover and performed regularly across this latest tour). Check out footage from that show below.

The pair first linked up in 2023/2024 when Paramore covered “Burning Down The House” for the A24-led re-release of 1984’s Stop Making Sense concert film. Byrne told People recently that they’ve maintained regular contact ever since, and he has nothing but adoration for Williams’ talent.

“She has an extraordinary rapport with her audience,” Byrne said. “It’s very sincere and very close, which I made note of that. I just thought that’s really amazing.”

Byrne also noted that “What Is the Reason for It?” came together rather organically, and that he and Williams both managed to be in town at the same exact time. He added, “I just texted her and said, ‘Do you want to come by and sing on this?’ And she said yes.”

David Byrne brought Hayley Williams on stage in NYC to perform Hard Times by Paramore and What is the reason for?, their recently released collab pic.twitter.com/Fbi7oSUoBL

— Paramore-Music.com (@paramoremusicom) October 11, 2025

It’s been a busy few weeks for Williams. In addition to these collabs, she’s been further supporting her latest solo album, Ego Death At A Bachelorette Party. And speaking of that very LP, the title track continues to garner the singer some contempt from certain conservative figures.

The song, which features a line about a “racist country singer,” is hands-down a sturdy middle finger to one Morgan Wallen.

“It could be a couple [singers], but I’m always talking about Morgan Wallen. I don’t give a shit,” Williams recently told The New York Times’ Popcast podcast. “Find me at Whole Foods, bitch, I don’t care.”

Yet even as Williams is clearly talking about someone else, that didn’t stop Kid Rock from commenting during a recent Fox News appearance.

“You know what’s stupid is people who think they’re cooler than art thou that worry about their outfit every day like some of these rock singers that live here in Nashville — I won’t stay any names — or these chicks running around on their campuses with their blue hair, their five nose rings.”

In turn, Williams responded to Rock’s comments with an Instagram story (per Stereogum), spinning a hilarious little yarn that places the “rapper” in  some rather interesting context.

“I remember being a little kid in Meridian, MS the first time I heard a Kid Rock song [‘Bawitdaba’]…at Poplar Springs Elementary’s annual field day. I thought it sounded dangerous and cool. Later, I learned I wasn’t allowed to listen to him ’cause the Southern Baptist Church said he was evil. My how the turn tables!”

So, who wins the Williams-Kid Rock beef? Well, one of them is regularly collaborating with David Byrne and the other’s on The Ingraham Angle, so we’ll let you decide.

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Olivia, Elton, Doja Cat Set For Rock Hall Appearances
Music

Olivia, Elton, Doja Cat Set For Rock Hall Appearances

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Without specifying who is doing what, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has revealed the roster of presenters and performers for its 2025 induction ceremony, which will be held Nov. 8 at Los Angeles’ Peacock Theater and will be streamed live on Disney+. Among them are Olivia Rodrigo, Elton John, Doja Cat, Missy Elliott, Brandi Carlile and Iggy Pop.

Bad Company, Chubby Checker, Joe Cocker, Cyndi Lauper, Outkast, Soundgarden and the White Stripes will be enshrined this year. Beyond the core inductions, Salt-N-Pepa and the late Warren Zevon will receive the Musical Influence Award, while hit-making R&B producer Thom Bell and studio musicians Nicky Hopkins and Carol Kaye will be honored with the Musical Excellence Award. The Ahmet Ertegun Award for impactful, non-performing industry professionals will be presented to former Warner Bros. Records president/DreamWorks co-founder Lenny Waronker.

Pundits are speculating that Carlile and Taylor Momsen will handle the late Chris Cornell’s vocals during Soundgarden’s performance segment, while David Letterman is a logical choice to induct his longtime friend Zevon. Atlanta rappers Killer Mike and Sleepy Brown seem like slam dunks to be involved in honoring Outkast, which hasn’t performed live since 2014, while Maxwell could be a perfect interpreter of Bell’s storied catalog.

Also set to appear are Beck, J.I.D., Questlove, RAYE, Teddy Swims and Twenty One Pilots. Additional guests will be announced later, and a highlight special is set to air Jan. 1 on ABC.

Passing through the Rock Hall’s ancestral home of Cleveland? Stop by the museum beginning Oct. 31 to see guitars played by Cornell, Andre 3000’s outfit from Outkast’s “Hey Ya” video and other nominee-specific memorabilia.

October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Neil Young
Music

Neil Young & the Chrome Hearts Rock for Rebellion » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

There are a few musicians who have been able to maintain both their relevance and their edge from the 1960s to the 2020s, and Neil Young remains such a trailblazer. One of the most influential rockers in music history, Young has also been a force across multiple genres, ranging from folk rock in the 1960s to what would become classic rock in the 1970s and onward to earning the honor of being dubbed “the godfather of grunge” in the 1990s. 

Young has kept it going in the 21st century, not just touring behind his classic hits but also delivering new material that continues to shine a light on the modern problems that plague society. That has included cutting-edge socio-political commentary in vibrant new music from 2003’s Greendale to 2006’s Living With War, 2015’s The Monsanto Years, 2016’s Peace Trail, and 2025’s Talking to the Trees with his current group, the Chrome Hearts. 

The Chrome Hearts aren’t really a brand new band per se, rather a recalibration of Promise of the Real, which served as Young’s band from around 2015 to 2020. Lukas Nelson and Promise of the Real (often featuring Lukas’ younger brother Micah) backed Young for several tours and albums, a match made in music heaven, as Lukas and drummer Anthony LoGerfo had met at a Neil Young show in 2008. However, with Lukas deciding it was time to focus on his own career, Logerfo, bassist Corey McCormick, and Micah Nelson have carried on backing Young as the Chrome Hearts (along with keyboardist Spooner Oldham).

The Love Earth Tour has touched down for its penultimate stop at the Shoreline Amphitheater in Mountain View, California, and it’s a homecoming show, with the Bay Area venue having previously hosted Young’s annual Bridge School benefit shows for many years. The tour has been winning raves across the nation while also making headlines with the new song “Big Crime”, which takes direct aim at the current occupants of the White House.

“Don’t need no fascist rules / Don’t want no fascist schools / Don’t want soldiers on our streets / There’s big crime in DC at the White House,” Young sings on the song released at the end of August. It’s pretty amazing how Neil Young is yet again the cutting-edge artist with the courage to call out the powers that be for their crimes against the people, much as he was back in 1970 when he authored the instant classic “Ohio” after a National Guard massacre at Kent State University that saw four anti-war student protestors shot dead with nine more wounded.

The concourse features some tabling opportunities for activism to “Take Action” to “Love Earth”, and it feels like a timely offering, with how the Trump regime has been dragging America in the opposite direction of protecting the environment to maximize fossil fuel exploitation and profiteering. It’s a critical time for humanity and the climate, so it’s inspiring to see Young back out on the road, still rocking out at age 79, while bringing a Love Earth Village on the road with him.

“Support your friends, Support the land, And support the people that want to care for the land. The revolution starts with us. The revolution starts with you,” says a quote from Young on the “Take Action” cards being handed out that feature a QR code linking to “the many ways you can LOVE EARTH & MAKE A DIFFERENCE!”

Photo: Lisa Miller

An intriguing group, Reverend Billy and the Stop Shopping Choir, open the show with a 30-minute set that sets an insurgent tone for the evening. The Reverend, played by actor and playwright William Talen, has grown his act from solo activism in New York City’s Times Square to leading a rock band with a backing choir and an inspiring message. “We work for the earth. What’s your favorite planet? Someone give me an Earthalujah, liberate yourselves,” Reverend Billy urges as an introduction to “La La Liberate”. 

He goes on to discuss how we recognize that we need to change. “Someone give me a Changealujah! We gotta go get the billionaires and they’re surrounded by police,” the Rev laments. “Let’s make some new change,” he says as an introduction to “Can We Be Strange Enough to Change Enough”, a rocking tune that takes on an uplifting revival vibe.

Reverend Billy goes on to call out the bankers and financiers of fossil fuels, suggesting that the audience “Tell ’em what they’ve been doing wrong with their money, tell’ em to do the right thing for the Earth… You are the Earth yourself, you’re on assignment, and you love the Earth, life is beautiful, we love the Earth,” he says as an intro to “Beautiful Earth” from 2022’s Change Without Us album. With encouragement to befriend the animals, trees, butterflies, and the sea, the song concludes the set like a sermon for planetary peace and harmony, culminating in a rousing finish as the Rev calls out for collective activism to change the world.

Neil Young has been an activist rocker throughout his career, yet even more so in the 21st century. He opens the show with “Ambulance Blues”, performed on acoustic guitar, where he sings of how “the air was magic” when he played “back in the old folky days”. The vibe elevates when Young switches to electric guitar as he and the Chrome Hearts rock out on “Cowgirl in the Sand”, from his classic 1969 album Everybody Knows This is Nowhere. The giant rust-colored amplifier prop behind him makes Young seem larger than life, and indeed, he is. The number of peers who can match his impressive career arc from then to now can arguably be counted on one hand.

Neil Young 2025
Photo: Lisa Miller

The bluesy “Vampire Blues” from 1974’s On the Beach album turns out to be a tour debut, as Young isn’t content to just repeat the same setlist each night. It taps into the environmentalist theme of the tour, with Young singing of a vampire “Sucking blood from the earth” to “Sell you 20 barrels’ worth”. The fan favorite “Powderfinger” from 1979’s Rust Never Sleeps gets the place rocking again with the guitar-driven sound that led to the “godfather of grunge” tag, as Young sings of when he was just 22 and “was wondering what to do”.

“Thank you for coming, take care of yourself in this crazy world, we’re just glad to be here tonight,” Young says after “Long Walk Home”, perhaps alluding to the Charlie Kirk assassination earlier in the week, among other daily insanities.

The show soars to a multidimensional level on the electrifying “Be the Rain”, as Young sings what feels like a signature anthem for the Love Earth Tour: “Save the planet for another day / Don’t care what the governments say…” The climactic closing track of 2003’s Greendale concept record, featuring his long-time band Crazy Horse, the song remains as timely now as the lyrics implore the audience to take action. “We got to wake up, We got to keep going / We got a job to do / We got to save Mother Earth.”

The Chrome Hearts sound fantastic as McCormick and LoGerfo rock a heavy groove, while Young and Nelson riff out on an extended jam. There’s something so uplifting about seeing a band rock out on a well-crafted song about standing up to the powers that be to save the planet, and Neil Young & the Chrome Hearts show how it’s done on “Be the Rain”.

Neil Young 2025
Photo: Lisa Miller

“Southern Man” from 1970’s After the Goldrush gets a theme going as the band keep rocking on a classic tune that takes the South to task for its racism and moral hypocrisy. Micah Nelson displays his multi-instrumental skills by moving to piano for the song, but then he’s back on guitar when “Southern Man” leads directly into “Ohio” as the band throw down an incendiary performance of the classic anti-war anthem about “Four dead in O-hi-o”. Nelson stands out again as he fills the David Crosby role on the backing vocals, crying out, “Four! How many more?” 

Neil Young’s “Ohio” still holds a vital lesson for modern America. While the events of 4 May 1970, have been largely written off by history as a tragic accident, historical evidence suggests that President Richard Nixon had reason to hold a grudge against the militant Kent State chapter of SDS (Students for a Democratic Society) and sought to make an example of them. With another megalomaniac like Donald Trump in the White House making frequent threats against his perceived and often contrived political enemies, the lessons of 4 May 1970 loom large as Trump uses the National Guard to intimidate the citizens of America, as already seen in Los Angeles and Washington, DC. 

It’s an impactful combo when Neil Young & the Chrome Hearts move right from 1970’s “Ohio” into 2025’s “Big Crime” to make a bold and rocking statement as Young sings straight to the point: “Got to get the fascists out, Got to clean the White House out…” The song feels like it could be a sequel to 2006’s underrated Living With War (which oddly isn’t represented in the setlist), as it provides a musical boost for resistance to the right-wing extremism that America currently faces from the Trump regime.

“Silver Eagle” from 2025’s Talking to the Trees album is introduced by Young as a song inspired by his bus driver asking whether he was writing anything current. The mid-tempo road song captures the good vibes of taking the show on the road and “feeling free”. That leads to a performance of the heartfelt deep cut “Sail Away” from Rust Never Sleeps, apparently not played since 2013.

Neil Young 2025
Photo: Lisa Miller

The shimmering “Harvest Moon” follows as a majestic crowd pleaser that sounds great here under the stars, as well as CSNY’s “Looking Forward” for a stellar acoustic sequence. “Looking forward to all that I can see / Is good things happening to you and me / I’m not waiting for times to change / I’m gonna live like a free roamin’ soul / On the highway of our love,” Young sings in what feels like a timely message for heavy times.

Neil Young cranks up the insurgent rock ‘n’ roll vibe with “Sun Green”, a song from Greendale about an activist who chains herself to a statue of an eagle in the lobby of a power company to protest the sleazy corruption taking place. “Hey, Mr. Clean, you’re dirty now, too,” Young sings as he and the Chrome Hearts rock out. “Mother Earth has many enemies / There’s much work to be done,” he sings toward the end. 

That makes for a great segue into the ultra classic anthem “Hey Hey, My My (Into the Black)”, as Young and the audience sing together, “Hey hey, my my, rock and roll can never die!” It’s an electrifying moment for those who consider rock and roll akin to their religion, which seems to be most of the crowd. Young and Nelson tear it up with scintillating riffage over the big groove as Shoreline rocks out. Another timeless classic follows with “Like a Hurricane”, as the set continues to surge. Nelson plays a keyboard with wings that descends from above on ropes, adding an extra surreal element to the performance. The psychedelic rock power here is at a high level as Young rips it up on one of his most influential tunes.

Young takes things back down a notch as he plays an organ on Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young’s “Name of Love”, singing “You hold the future in your hands / Do it in the name of love / Before another bomb explodes / Can you do it in the name of love?” It’s another timely question for this crazy world, where money in politics has corrupted our government to serve corporatocracy profiteering rather than serving the people. “Old Man” closes out the set with Young and the Chrome Hearts rocking righteously, before the band returns for a big encore on “Rockin’ in the Free World”. 

Neil Young 2025
Photo: Lisa Miller

The iconic tune from 1989’s Freedom still sounds remarkably contemporary, perhaps aided by its status as a staple encore for Pearl Jam since the 1990s (who also backed Young on his 1995 Mirrorball album). Like director John Carpenter‘s classic film They Live (1988), the song was a lament on the politics of the 1980s, which were dominated by the hypocritical “compassionate conservatism” of Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush.

Yet, as in They Live, “Rockin’ in the Free World” continues to play as a prophetic vision of modern times, with the corporate race to the bottom and the corruption of politics by the military-industrial complex. Then there’s also the timeless power chords and the inevitable energy level the song conjures. 

It’s one of the great climactic closers in rock history, proven again here as Neil Young and the Chrome Hearts lead the audience in rocking out to “take America back”, as one of the tour T-shirts proclaims. At a perilous time for the US, when many musicians and artists are afraid to speak truth to power for fear of potentially offending part of their audience, Neil Young remains one of the most courageous and spiritual leaders of the rock and roll counterculture that he helped pioneer.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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Kajol in pink, Twinkle Khanna in blue, Rani Mukerji in red rock festive glow in gorgeous sarees for Maha Ashtami. Watch
Lifestyle

Kajol in pink, Twinkle Khanna in blue, Rani Mukerji in red rock festive glow in gorgeous sarees for Maha Ashtami. Watch

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Kajol and Rani Mukerji celebrated Maha Ashtami at the North Bombay Durga Puja pandal on September 30. Twinkle Khanna also visited the pandal and posed with the two stars. They chose gorgeous silk sarees for the occasion.

Kajol, Twinkle Khanna, and Rani Mukerji pose during Maha Ashtami celebrations at Durga Puja pandal. (Instagram)

Also Read | Isha Ambani stuns in $6,000 Valentino gown at friend’s wedding; but it’s her massive diamond ring stealing the show

Kajol, Rani Mukerji, Twinkle Khanna wow in sarees

Pictures and videos of Kajol, Rani and Twinkle were shared by paparazzi pages on Instagram. While Kajol and Twinkle chose tissue silk sarees for the celebrations, Rani complemented them in a silk saree in a vibrant red shade, the colour of Maa Durga. Let’s decode their traditional looks:

Rani Mukerji embraces Maa Durga’s colour

Rani’s red silk saree features intricate gold accents, including a detailed gold brocade embroidery on the pallu, gold scalloped lace borders, and gold sequin embroidery done in vertical lines. She wore the six yards in traditional style, letting the pallu fall from her shoulder in a floor-sweeping length.

A matching red blouse featuring a plunging V-neckline, quarter-length sleeves, gold embroidery on sleeves, and a cropped hem rounded off the ensemble. For accessories, she wore gold jhumkis, a choiker necklace, bangles, and rings. A sleek top knot, a red bindi, winged eyeliner, rouge-tinted cheeks, and a dewy base rounded off the glam.

Kajol and Twinkle’s silk sarees

Meanwhile, Kajol wore a mauve pink tissue silk saree with gold embroidery and patchwork. She paired the saree with a matching sleeveless silk blouse, oxidised silver earrings, red bangles, gold kadhas, a bindu, winged eyeliner, beaming highlighter, rouge on the cheeks, and a side-parted top knot.

Lastly, Twinkle chose a vibrant light green saree decorated with gold brocade and lace work, and dark green borders. She completed the traditional attire with a dark green-coloured blouse featuring gold vertical lines, a raised collar, and a V neckline.

For accessories, Twinkle chose gold jhumkis adorned with precious stones. She tied her tresses in a pulled-back, sleep top knot. As for the glam, she chose a red bindi, feathered brows, a dewy base, blushed cheeks, glossy pink lips, and kohl-lined eyes.

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson Opens Up About Explosive Fight With Dad Before His Death
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Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson Opens Up About Explosive Fight With Dad Before His Death

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson Opens Up About Explosive Fight With Dad Before His Death

Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson recently opened up about a painful rift with his late father, Rocky Johnson, saying their final conversation came after Rocky published his 2019 memoir, Soulman: The Rocky Johnson Story. Dwayne was stunned to discover the book included a foreword attributed to him — though he insists he never wrote it. According to him, that misrepresentation “completely crossed the line,” touching on what he sees as a pattern of attention-seeking and narcissism.

He described their 2019 argument as the biggest clash they ever had, tracing it back roughly 25 years earlier when he chose to pursue wrestling — a path Rocky initially challenged. The revelation came as part of a broader reflection on his complicated relationship with his father, acknowledging Rocky’s strengths as a friend and mentor to others even as their personal bond was fractured.

Dwayne also shared memories from his childhood, including a traumatic episode when, as a teenager, he and his mother were evicted in Hawaii. Expecting to stay with his father in Tennessee, he arrived to find himself placed in a motel — with Rocky nowhere to be found. He later learned the move was tied to Rocky living with another woman. Reflecting on his mother’s pain, Dwayne has publicly said that period still haunts him. *do you have a strained relationship w one of your parents? How do you manage it?*

 


September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Adil Hussain, Vishal Mishra, Armaan Malik mourn Zubeen Garg’s sudden demise
Bollywood

Statue of rock n’ roll queen Tina Turner unveiled in Tennessee community where she grew up

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

BROWNSVILLE, Tenn. — A 10-foot statue of rock n’ roll queen Tina Turner was unveiled Saturday in the rural Tennessee community where she grew up — before becoming a Grammy-winning singer, an electrifying stage performer, and one the world’s most recognizable and popular entertainers.

Statue of rock n’ roll queen Tina Turner unveiled in Tennessee community where she grew up

The statue was revealed during a ceremony at a park in Brownsville, located about an hour drive east of Memphis. The city of about 9,000 people is near Nutbush, the community where Turner went to school as a child. As a teen, she attended high school just steps from where the statue now stands.

The statue shows Turner with her signature wild hairdo and holding a microphone, as if she was singing on stage. It was designed by sculptor Fred Ajanogha, who said he tried to capture her flexibility of movement on stage, how she held the microphone with her index finger extended, and her hair style, which he compared to the “mane of a lion.”

Turner died May 24, 2023 at age 83 after a long illness in her home in Küsnacht near Zurich. Her Grammy-winning singing career included the hit songs “Nutbush City Limits,” “Proud Mary,” “Private Dancer,” and “We Don’t Need Another Hero,” from the film “Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome.” Her movie credits also include “Tommy” and “Last Action Hero.”

Turner teamed with husband Ike Turner for hit records and live shows in the 1960s and ’70s. She survived her troubled marriage to succeed in middle age with the chart-topping “What’s Love Got To Do With It,” released in 1984.

Her admirers ranged from Mick Jagger to Beyoncé to Mariah Carey, and she was known as the “Queen of Rock ‘n’ Roll.”

The unveiling was part of the annual Tina Turner Heritage Days, a celebration of her life growing up in rural Tennessee, before she moved away as a teenager. The statue was sculpted in clay by Ajanogha in Atlanta and cast in bronze by a West Tennessee foundry, and it took about a year to complete. It is 7 feet and 9 inches tall with a base of 2 feet, making it stand about 10 feet high .

Karen Cook said she traveled from Georgia to attend the event with her friend, a cousin of Turner’s, to honor the legendary performer.

“She’s a great artist, I love her music,” said Cook, 59. “My mom listened to her a lot. It’s a big deal and a great thing for the community to have Tina Turner in her small town.”

About 50 donors gave money for the statue, including Ford Motor Co., which donated $150,000. Ford is building an electric truck factory in nearby Stanton.

The statue stands near a museum honoring Turner at the the West Tennessee Delta Heritage Center in Brownsville. The museum opened in 2014 inside the renovated Flagg Grove School, a one-room building where Turner attended classes in Nutbush. The school closed in the 1960s and was used as a barn before the dilapidated building was moved by tractor-trailer from Nutbush to Brownsville.

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Turnstile Rock Chicago on Their "NEVER ENOUGH TOUR"
Music

Turnstile Rock Chicago on Their “NEVER ENOUGH TOUR”

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Not only have Turnstile become one of the premier artists of the ongoing hardcore resurgence, but they’ve grown into that role with a noticeable amount of grace. Though born in the punk intimacy of crammed clubs, the Baltimore act has proven over the last few years that they can light up a sprawling festival stage or sold-out amphitheater as efficiently as anyone. Last night in Chicago, at the Huntington Bank Pavilion, they did just that.

The gig was, to take a phrase from their 2021 breakout album GLOW ON, a true TURNSTILE LOVE CONNECTION. Despite hitting a few recent snags on their ongoing “NEVER ENOUGH TOUR” — primarily a seemingly organized (?) phone-stealing ring and a security blunder in Richmond that resulted in a sheriff’s deputy appearing to pepper spray a fan — the Chicago crowd was undeterred in their commitment to the band and their excitement to glow on, phone thieves be damned. Not only did the band feed on such energy, they pumped it right back into the audience.

Get Turnstile Tickets Here

Before they graced the stage, though, the night started with a trio of support acts that, in their own ways, each represented different anchor points of Turnstile’s crossover styling: hip-hop, classic hardcore, and hooky indie punk. Hyperpop up-and-comer Jane Remover (who celebrated her birthday on the same night as the gig, turning 22) kicked things off by rapping and auto-crooning over abrasive club bangers before Australia’s Speed lit a fuse with their true-blue, hardcore fury. Mannequin Pussy, who began playing just as the venue finished filling up, then ripped through their righteous anthems with such urgency that an uninformed bystander might have assumed they were headlining.

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Together, the three acts primed an energized crowd for the main event. Soon enough, the signature synth pads of Turnstile’s current era flooded the outdoor space, and the band launched into their set with a charged performance of the title track from NEVER ENOUGH.

And, let me tell you, those kids went nuts. The moshers moshed hard, the jumpers jumped high, and even those comfortably seated in the bleachers showed signs of life, getting on their feet and moving in time with the riffs. All the while, Brendan Yates stomped and hopped around the stage, leading the sold-out crowd in chants and amped-up sing-alongs.

The following set expectedly found the band leaning on their two most recent (and FULLY CAPITALIZED) efforts. Together, GLOW ON and NEVER ENOUGH accounted for 16 of the 23 songs that the band performed. Old-heads fear not, though, as they still found time to dip a little deeper into their catalog, pulling out the Time & Space gem “Real Thing” and unleashing a suite of three Step 2 Rhythm cuts. While such tracks weren’t met with the same eruptive reaction as, say, “HOLIDAY” or “MYSTERY,” their refreshingly straightforward aggression made for some of the most invigorating moments of the show.

All the while, the production of Turnstile’s stage show doubled down on their communal focus, something that’s driven them since the beginning. On the two massive screens positioned on either end of the stage, shots from within the pit focusing on fans (and sometimes even interacting with a mosher or two) were projected just as frequently as glamor shots of the band members themselves.

The implicit messaging was clear: Turnstile and hardcore music might have a tough exterior, but it’s all in the name of love and togetherness. Dancing alongside about 9,000 fans in Chicago last night, that couldn’t have been more apparent. And, really, what’s a push pit if not a big ‘ol group hug?

Turnstile’s “NEVER ENOUGH TOUR” continues through mid-October, with remaining dates going down in  Denver, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Houston, and more before wrapping up in Orlando, Florida, on October 19th. See the complete list of Turnstile’s upcoming concerts below, and get tickets here.

Turnstile Photo Gallery (click to expand):

Setlist:
NEVER ENOUGH
T.L.C. (TURNSTILE LOVE CONNECTION)
ENDLESS
I CARE
DULL
DON’T PLAY
Real Thing
Drop
LIGHT DESIGN
Come Back for More
Fazed Out
SUNSHOWER
7
Keep It Moving
Pushing Me Away
FLY AGAIN
SOLE
CEILING
SEEIN’ STARS
HOLIDAY
LOOK OUT FOR ME
Encore:
MYSTERY
BLACKOUT
BIRDS

Turnstile’s Remaining 2025 US Tour Dates:
09/27 – Minneapolis, MN @ The Armory ^
09/28 – Des Moines, IA @ Lauridsen Amphitheater at Waterworks Park ^
09/30 – Denver, CO @ Project 70 Under the Bridge ^
10/03 – Sacramento, CA @ Aftershock *
10/04 – Los Angeles, CA @ Exposition Park +
10/05 – San Francisco, CA @ Bill Graham Civic Auditorium +
10/07 – Seattle, WA @ WaMu Theater +
10/08 – Portland, OR @ Edgefield Concerts on the Lawn +
10/10 – San Diego, CA @ Gallagher Square at Petco Park +
10/11 – Phoenix, AZ @ Mesa Amphitheater +
10/14 – Austin, TX @ Moody Amphitheater +
10/15 – Houston, TX @ White Oak Lawn +
10/16 – Fort Worth, TX @ Panther Island Pavilion +
10/18 – Miami, FL @ III Points *
10/19 – Orlando, FL @ Orlando Amphitheatre +

* = festival date
^ = w/ Mannequin Pussy, SPEED, Jane Remover
+ = w/ Amyl & The Sniffers, SPEED, Jane Remover

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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