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5 Best Songs From Offset's 'Haunted By Fame' Album
Music

5 Best Songs From Offset’s ‘Haunted By Fame’ Album

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Offset’s surprise new album, Haunted By Fame, dropped on Halloween, just two months after his third solo studio album Kiari—and it’s anything but a throwaway follow-up.

The 11-track project finds the Atlanta rapper in a self-assured zone, channeling personal turbulence into confident, energized performances. With standout features from YoungBoy Never Broke Again and NoCap, Offset leans into both menace and melody, flexing his versatility with ease.

The album’s best moments capture him at his most focused and fiery. Despite the chaos surrounding his personal life, Offset sounds reinvigorated and carefree, making Haunted By Fame one of his strongest, most cohesive listens to date.

VIBE compiled and ranked the 5 best songs from Offset’s Haunted By Fame album that has our playlists in a chokehold.

  • “YA DIGG”

    Offset
    Image Credit: Richard Bord/Getty Images

    Gauntlets are thrown down on “YA DIGG,” one of the fiercest standouts from Offset’s Haunted By Fame.

    Backed by slick, high-energy production from London Jae, Pharoah, IRoccOnTheBeat, and Chanel, Offset snaps with the confidence of a man who knows he’s in his prime.

    Lines like “Bitch, I’m Tony the Tiger, great/ I don’t want nothin’ but mouth and face/ Thinkin’ ’bout shittin’ on my opps today/ Birthday girl, got lots of cake” capture his mix of bravado and humor.

    The beat knocks, the flow is razor-sharp, making for a standout that’s bold, quotable, and undeniably replayable.

  • “FASHION ICON”

    OffsetOffset
    Image Credit: Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for GQ

    Lyrical poses are struck on “FASHION ICON,” a booming standout from Haunted By Fame that captures Offset casting aspersions on swagger jackers and opponents.

    “Told my brothers I struggle, look after me/ At the top of the bottom, it’s full of leech/ I look in the eyes of my enemies/ I got my first rack, I was seventeen,” the hitmaker scoffs while maneuvering atop production by DJ Durel and Rott, making it clear he’s not new to the hustle, but fully invested and true to it.

  • “NO SWEAT”

    OffsetOffset
    Image Credit: Amy Sussman/Getty Images

    Offset’s “NO SWEAT” might clock in on the shorter side, but its impact lands squarely. Produced by COUPE, London Jae, and DBTZ, the track is sleek and simmering, driven by a pulsing beat and Offset’s sharp, dismissive delivery.

    Lines like “How the f**k you leave Jordan for Rodman?/ You a fool if you think that I’m hurt” cut deep, with the lyrics clearly aimed at his ex Cardi B amid their ongoing divorce drama. Yet, rather than wallow, Offset flips the narrative—he’s unbothered, laser-focused on success, and basking in luxury.

    It’s a brief but potent statement piece: a reminder that even in the storm of celebrity chaos, Offset still moves with icy composure and undeniable style.

  • “HEADHUNTER”

    OffsetOffset
    Image Credit: Francois Durand/Getty Images

    Offset goes for the jugular on “HEADHUNTER,” Haunted By Fame‘s closing effort, which finds the lyricist expressing his fixation on bankrolls accumulated and disregard for love lost.

    “Industry funny, they try to hang me like an ornament, but I got hedge money,” he boasts while prancing atop production by Kaigoinkrazy and ​Kyuro, who craft a frantic, 808-driven soundscape that matches Offset’s urgency.

    Sold out international shows and luxury vehicles purchases are simply spoils to the victor in the former Migos‘ orbit.

  • “I HEARD” Featuring YoungBoy Never Broke Again

    OffsetOffset
    Image Credit: Marcus Ingram/Getty Images for REVOLT

    Offset and YoungBoy Never Broke Again reunite on “I HEARD,” a hard-hitting new release that proves their chemistry is as sharp as ever. Produced by Mally Mall, 1parkerhill, Brigtaudio, and babymaneomg, the track blends menacing 808s with razor-edged verses as the two rappers trade flexes and warnings.

    Their energy peaks on the final verse, where they rhythmically rhyme in tandem. The song follows their previous collaborations—“Pills,” “R.I.P.,” and “Need It”—and arrives as Offset joins YoungBoy’s Make America Slime Again tour as a supporting act.

    With its slick production and magnetic back-and-forth, “I HEARD” cements itself as another standout moment in their ongoing creative partnership.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Listen to Magdalena Bay’s New Songs “Unoriginal” and “Black-Eyed Susan Climb”
Music

Listen to Magdalena Bay’s New Songs “Unoriginal” and “Black-Eyed Susan Climb”

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

In late September, Magdalena Bay released the new songs “Second Sleep” and “Star Eyes.” Then, in mid-October, they shared “Human Happens” and “Paint Me a Picture.” Now, the duo has unleashed two more tracks for Halloween. Below, listen to “Unoriginal” and “Black-Eyed Susan Climb.”

“Two more songs?! When will it end?? Is this the final pair? Don’t think too hard about it,” Mica Tenenbaum and Matthew Lewin remarked in a press statement. “Just let the good times ride.”

The six new Magdalena Bay songs follow the band’s 2024 sophomore studio album, Imaginal Disk. Read more about Imaginal Disk in Pitchfork’s “The 50 Best Albums of 2024.”

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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No Rap Songs In Billboard Hot 100 Top 40 For 1st Time Since 1990 As Kendrick Lamar & SZA's "Luther" Exits Chart
Celebrity News

No Rap Songs In Billboard Hot 100 Top 40 For 1st Time Since 1990 As Kendrick Lamar & SZA’s “Luther” Exits Chart

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Kendrick Lamar, SZA

No Rap Songs In Billboard Hot 100
Top 40 For 1st Time Since 1990 As Kendrick Lamar & SZA’s “Luther” Exits Chart

For the first time in 35 years, the Billboard Hot 100 Top 40 features zero rap songs following the exit of #KendrickLamar and #SZA’s song “Luther.”

The departure comes after #Billboard implemented a rule change that altered its retention criteria: songs must now hit certain thresholds, such as top 5 within 78 weeks or top 25 within 26 weeks, to remain on the chart. “Luther” dropped off despite finishing at No. 38, because it “failed to reach No. 25 after 26 weeks on the chart.”

The absence of rap in the Top 40 signals a shift in the genre’s commercial standing. Billboard noted this is “the latest sign of a recent dip in rap’s commercial dominance.” While rap tracks still appear lower on the chart, such as #YoungBoyNeverBrokeAgain at No. 44 and #CardiB at No. 48, none currently crack the Top 40.


October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Caitlin Canty
Music

Caitlin Canty on Songs, Storms, and Staying True » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

New days and clean slates keep coming for singer-songwriter Caitlin Canty. She is sharpening her skills, raising a family, and continuing to build a body of work that reflects resilience, quiet strength, and resolute honesty. Her new record, Night Owl Envies the Mourning Dove, is a testament to her evolving artistry. This album turns natural solitude, domestic change, and hard-earned wisdom into a collection of songs that sound both grounded in the earth and untethered to time.

The Roots and Roads That Shaped Her Sound

Caitlin Canty was born in Proctor, Vermont, in 1982, and grew up surrounded by rural landscapes and the gentle rhythms of small-town life. Raised by a schoolteacher mother and a house-painter father, she found song in ordinary moments—singing in chorus and playing trombone in school before receiving her first guitar via VHS-taped lessons at age 17. After earning a biology degree from Williams College, she moved to New York City, where she worked for the Emmy-nominated series Live from the Artists Den while pursuing music on her own terms.

Her early releases—including Golden Hour (2012) and the breakout Reckless Skyline (2015)—drew acclaim for her “casually devastating voice” and “hauntingly urgent” Americana ballads. She won the Telluride Troubadour songwriting competition in 2015. She began touring extensively across the US and Europe, collaborating with artists like Peter Bradley Adams and Jamey Johnson, and earning praise from Rolling Stone, NPR, and No Depression for her gritty lyricism and radiant poise.

In recent years, she and her husband, musician Noam Pikelny, moved back to Vermont, settling on a mountaintop near her childhood home. There, Canty continues to record, tour, and write—with the same battered 1939 Recording King guitar that has accompanied her throughout her career.

Photo: Noah Altshuler / Courtesy of the artist

“Don’t Worry About Nothing”: Lifting the Weight of the World

One of the record’s most tender tracks, “Don’t Worry About Nothing,” carries the voice of a mother consoling and encouraging against the endless churn of small anxieties. It is at once a lullaby, a sermon, and a reminder: that one bad thing does not mean the whole world has collapsed. “There is a mom’s voice and perspective to focus and worry about the things that do matter,” Canty explained. “But also how little worries and little jealousies can work against us… Tornadoes, awful things, remind you how short life is, and what’s actually important.”

The song’s origins stretch back to a minor domestic mishap—her young son’s toy castle tumbling down—but its weight comes from deeper, darker places. In March 2020, a tornado tore through her East Nashville neighborhood, missing her home by mere yards. Not long after, the pandemic upended the world. The castle was a metaphor, she realized, for the way everything can crash at once—yet perspective offers a way forward.

For Canty, who released Reckless Skyline a decade ago, the test of time has reshaped her relationship to both music and ambition. “My real goal is to be writing more and better songs,” she said. “My real goal is to be connecting with more people through those songs, playing with musicians that I adore, and getting on good stages. Not worrying about courting people, but to do right by the music.”

Doing right by the music has meant widening her scope. Night Owl Envies the Mourning Dove reaches for longevity, not trends. It sits comfortably in a lineage of songwriters who, like Canty, trust the songs to outlive them. “I look to musicians who have had longer careers, like Dolly Parton,” she said. “She is singing songs that she wrote in her 20s. There are so many who have a gorgeous output of songs that are their lifelong friends. It’s not about when they were written or how people liked them then.”

Canty doesn’t wait around for the muse. To her, waiting for inspiration is “a fool’s errand”. She compares songs to photographs—fleeting impressions that must be captured before they fade. “You take a picture and you remember it as notable and beautiful, and there is something about it that makes you want to share it. That type of inspiration sparks a song. It happens countless times a day.”

However, the challenge, she says, is to honor the purity of that first spark. “You are lucky if you have the time from start to finish to complete the song and make the world go away. The fewer co-writers, the better, including myself. If you open it up again in two weeks, or a year, you have different eyes, and that brings too many people and opinions into the room rather than one solid voice.”

Some of her most recent songs arrived in just such a spark—during a violent rainstorm in Vermont. Alone in her cabin as thunder cracked over the mountains, Canty felt the song arrive like lightning. Hungry, shivering, and unable to leave, she turned to the page. “That’s when it is about honoring your craft and keeping your calluses hard,” she said. “Writing songs and tending to those fires.”

Rooted in Home

Much of the new album reflects Canty’s sense of place. After years of calling Nashville home, she and her family settled in Vermont, where the woods, weather, and solitude shaped her new work. Songs like “Electric Guitar” hum with domestic noise—the sound of home life creeping into the music. “Examining what home means is another strong thread in a lot of these songs,” she said. “There is a lot of domestic noise in Electric Guitar, of a life settled and tied to the home front.”

The landscape also plays a role. Birds, trees, and storms become metaphors for transformation and survival, grounding Canty’s reflections on motherhood and the passage of time.

Caitlin Canty
Photo: Noah Altshuler / Courtesy of the artist

Grit Beneath the Quiet

Every songwriter carries a spark from someone who came before, and for Canty, that fire was lit by Lucinda Williams‘ landmark album Car Wheels on a Gravel Road. She first heard it in college while working as a server to make ends meet. Living in a big house with wide kitchen windows, she found herself singing along to those raw, unvarnished songs. “The sound, the songwriting, the singing—it all was a high-water mark for me,” Canty recalled. “It had the mystery of how something so simple could be so powerful. Why is this message of another person hitting my heart and staying embedded? How do I do that?”

Since Reckless Skyline (2015), Canty has been described as gentle, quiet, and restrained, but she resists those labels. “I don’t think that that is what this record is,” she said. “There might be songwriter finger-picked and more solitary numbers, but a lot of the songs are more electric and grittier, and closer maybe to Reckless Skyline or Car Wheels in that regard.”

There’s grit beneath the quiet, steel beneath the lull. That mix—softness and resolve—has become Canty’s artistic fingerprint. At the core of her music lies a devotion to truth. “I could never act,” Canty admitted. “As a kid, I loved band and singing. Music is getting to truth and getting yourself out of the way of a song. If it’s the truth, then I feel comfortable singing it.”

That truth may be wrapped in storms or in stillness, in the domestic clatter of home or in the electric hum of a live stage, but it is always there—steady, unpretentious, and deeply human.

With Night Owl Envies the Mourning Dove, Caitlin Canty has crafted more than an album—it is a meditation on resilience, a love letter to songwriting itself, and a statement of intent. She is not chasing the spotlight or trend, but tending her fires, shaping her craft, and writing songs that might someday be her lifelong friends.

“My real goal,” she repeats, “is to be writing more and better songs… to do right by the music.” For Canty, that’s enough, and for those who listen, it is everything.

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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From Ul Jalool Ishq to Tu Meri Poori Kahani, Papon’s Latest Tracks are ruling hearts across
Bollywood

Ul Jalool Ishq To Jolly LLB 3, Here Are 8 Songs By Papon Latest That Are Ruling Hearts Across The Globe

by jummy84 October 26, 2025
written by jummy84

The king of soulful music, Papon, has been on a roll lately, delivering a string of heartfelt tracks that have captivated listeners across genres. Known for his ability to blend deep emotion with timeless melodies, the singer has lent his magical voice to some of the most talked-about songs in recent months. From poetic love ballads to nostalgic melodies, here are eight Papon songs that are ruling hearts across.

Ul Jalool Ishq – Gustaakh Ishq

Papon teams up with Shilpa Rao under the genius of Vishal Bhardwaj and the poetic mastery of Gulzar for Ul Jalool Ishq from Gustaakh Ishq. The track beautifully captures the rhythm of love in its purest form, merging nostalgia with lyrical elegance. Papon’s emotive tone gives the song its soul, making it a timeless addition to his discography.

Hua Na – Jolly LLB 3

In Hua Na from Jolly LLB 3, Papon delivers a soothing performance on a Manan Bhardwaj composition. The song’s simplicity and heartfelt lyrics make it an instant favourite. With his expressive delivery, Papon brings out the beauty in stillness, giving the film an emotional edge.

Tu Meri Poori Kahani (Male version) – Tu Meri Poori Kahani

Papon lends his soulful voice to the male version of the title track Tu Meri Poori Kahani. Composed by Anu Malik and penned by Sameer Anjaan, the song beautifully captures the old-school charm of love and longing. Papon’s heartfelt rendition brings depth and tenderness to the melody, evoking the nostalgia of classic Bollywood romance while maintaining a fresh emotional connect with today’s listeners.

Bhoolane Ki Tumko – Tu Meri Poori Kahani

Bhoolane Ki Tumko is a poignant melody that explores themes of love, loss, and lingering memories. Papon’s expressive and textured vocals breathe life into Anu Malik’s composition, turning every note into an emotional experience that stays with the listener long after the song ends.

Kaun Hai Woh – Tu Meri Poori Kahani

Kaun Hai Woh weaves mystery into melody with a haunting composition that immediately captivates the listener. Papon’s smooth yet powerful vocals add depth and intensity, elevating the track into one of the album’s most atmospheric and unforgettable numbers.

Ab Jab Ki Tu Nahi Hai – Tu Meri Poori Kahani

Ab Jab Ki Tu Nahi Hai is a poignant heartbreak ballad that conveys the pain of separation with understated instrumentation and profound emotion. Papon’s restrained yet expressive vocals capture the quiet ache of loss, making it one of the most moving tracks on the album.

Kuch Toh Hai Woh – Tu Meri Poori Kahani

Kuch Toh Hai Woh is a smooth, melodious track with a gentle romantic vibe that highlights Papon’s versatility. His soft, expressive vocals paired with Anu Malik’s well-balanced arrangement create a soothing and memorable listening experience.

Yeh Ishq Hai – Tu Meri Poori Kahani

Yeh Ishq Hai closes the album on a hopeful and uplifting note, celebrating the purity and enduring nature of love. Papon’s heartfelt vocals, combined with Anu Malik’s classic melodic touch, make it a fitting and memorable conclusion to the album’s emotional journey.

From Ul Jalool Ishq’s lyrical richness to the emotional intensity of Tu Meri Poori Kahani, Papon continues to dominate the space of meaningful, melody-driven music. His collaborations with legends like Vishal Bhardwaj, Gulzar, and Anu Malik underline his place among the finest voices of the generation.

After delivering back-to-back soulful tracks, Papon is now working on his much-awaited ghazal album, which promises to blend classical poetry with his signature heartfelt style — a project fans are eagerly waiting for.

For more news and updates from the entertainment world, stay tuned to Bollywood Bubble.

Also Read: Kaushik-Guddu To Vishal-Shekhar, 4 Bollywood Music Composer Duos Who’re Known To Deliver Hit Tracks

Manisha Karki

Manisha has established a reputation for insightful and engaging storytelling with over six years of expertise in the industry. With a deep passion for cinema, she brings a unique perspective to her coverage, making it a trusted voice in the entertainment world.

October 26, 2025 0 comments
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Nobody Wants This soundtrack | Full lists of songs from Netflix comedy
TV & Streaming

Nobody Wants This soundtrack | Full lists of songs from Netflix comedy

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Nobody Wants This returns for season 2 as Joanne and Noah attempt to try to make a righjt good go of it following a dramatic, swoon-worthy season 1 finale in which he thjrew caution to the wind and committed

Netflix’s latest romcom starring Kristen Bell and Adam Brody as star-crossed lovers has proved to be a huge hit, landing the No 1 spot on the platform’s most-watched list.

Nobody Wants This stars Bell as an agnostic podcaster and Brody as a rabbi who cross paths one day and, despite not being one another’s type on paper, fall madly in love.

The pair’s intense chemistry is accompanied by a sizzling soundtrack, featuring the likes of HAIM, Dua Lipa and Celeste, as well as some lesser known artists that are certain to become your new faves.

The soundtrack contains some already certified bangers, such as Sabrina Carpenter’s Manchild and Chappell Roan’s Good Luck, Babe!

But it also boats a raft of new recordings ,which you’ll no doubt have on repeat for the foreseeable.

Find them below.

Nobody Wants This season 2 soundtrack

  • In The Dark – Selena Gomez
  • You’ve Got Another Thing Coming – Teddy Swims
  • Who’s Your Boyfriend (Acoustic) – Royel Otis
  • Heart Letting Go – Chris Stapleton
  • If the World Burns Down – Kacey Musgraves
  • That’s What I’ll Be – Baylee Lynn
  • Palomino – FINNEAS
  • Your Girl – Towa Bird
  • My House – Alessia Cara
  • Saddle Again – Role Model
  • Climate Change – Just Jayne
  • This Version of Us – Ella Langley
  • What – BENEE
  • Reach You – Portugal. The Man
  • Dancing in the Smoke – GIVĒON
  • Melodies – Dermot Kennedy
  • Homesick – Cuco
  • Bite My Tongue – Cassandra Coleman

Nobody Wants This season 1 soundtrack

Kristen Bell as Joanne and Adam Brody as Noah in Nobody Wants This. Stefania Rosini/Netflix

Episode 1

  • Summer Girl – HAIM
  • ugi – strongboi
  • Cinderella – Remi Wolf
  • Now I’m in It – HAIM
  • You and I – LÉON

Episode 2

  • See Her Out – Francis and the Lights

Episode 3

  • Water the Flowers, Pray for a Garden – Valley
  • When The Love Is Gone – Anna Graves
  • Love on the Brain – Rihanna

Episode 4

  • Fly – Anna Graves
  • MY DEMONS – GLU & Phantogram
Kristen Bell as Joanne and Adam Brody as Noah, standing next to one another in a sex shop

Kristen Bell as Joanne and Adam Brody as Noah in Nobody Wants This. Adam Rose/Netflix

Episode 5

  • Together Forever – STRFKR
  • Wanna Go Back – babyidontlikeyou
  • Can’t Win – LABRYS
  • Always Been You – Shawn Mendes

Episode 6

  • Sure Feels Good – Willie J Healey

Episode 7

  • Knock Knock – Mac Miller
  • Say Cheese – Paul Russell
  • Mirror Mountain – Mini Mansions
  • Tubthumping – Chumbawamba

Read more:

Episode 8

  • Obsessed – Olivia Rodrigo
  • If You Need to, Keep Time on Me – Fleet Foxes

Episode 9

Episode 10

  • All I Ever Asked – Rachel Chinouriri
  • (Theme From) New York, New York – Frank Sinatra
  • Crank That (Soulja Boy) – Soulja Boy Tell ‘Em
  • Levitating – Dua Lipa
  • I’ll Make Love to You – Boyz II Men
  • Strange – Celeste
  • See Her Out – Francis and the Lights

Nobody Wants This is streaming now on Netflix. Sign up for Netflix from £4.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

Check out more of our Drama coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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See Demi Lovato Mashup Lady Gaga's 'Mayhem' Songs for BBC Live Lounge
Music

See Demi Lovato Mashup Lady Gaga’s ‘Mayhem’ Songs for BBC Live Lounge

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Singer’s new album, It’s Not That Deep, arrives Friday

Demi Lovato performed a mashup of two songs off Lady Gaga’s Mayhem during the singer’s visit to BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge.

It’s tradition for guests to tackle another artist’s music while in the Live Lounge, but Lovato upped the ante by mashing up Mayhem’s “Disease” and “Perfect Celebrity” into one seamless performance.

Lovato’s Mayhem mashup comes just two days before the singer releases her latest album, It’s Not That Deep, out this Friday. Lovato previously previewed the 11-track album with the lead singles “Fast” and “Here All Night,” both club-ready records that choose dancing over deep dives. “So proud of all the work I’ve done,” she shared on Instagram, “and now, it’s time to celebrate and have some fun!!!”

Trending Stories

“With my past eras, I often wrote cathartic music about heavy topics that I needed to process,” Lovato said in a statement when she announced her eighth studio LP. 

“When I got back in the studio this time around, those songs just weren’t resonating anymore because I’m not in that place in life. I’m happy, I’m in love, and I just want to enjoy life and have fun. I realized it’s not that deep anymore, and that became the ethos for this album. It’s Not That Deep is meant for late nights and dancefloors, and I can’t wait for you all to dance with me.”

October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Primavera 2026: The Cure, My Bloody Valentine, The xx
Music

The Cure Are 13 Songs Into A New Album

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

It took the Cure 16 years to release a studio album after 2008’s 4:13 Dream, but it seems that Robert Smith and company are working much more quickly in its wake.

In an updated band biography posted on the Cure’s web site, it is revealed that the musicians spent time this March at Wales’ Rockfield Studios to record “13 more songs” for the follow-up to 2024’s Songs of a Lost World. No further details were included beyond the fact that Smith also spent time this summer “to help re-edit and re-mix” the concert film The Show of a Lost World, which was originally streamed on YouTube in November 2024.

“Our songs always had a fear of mortality,” he said in an online interview last year. “I don’t feel my age at all but I’m aware of it, and when you get older, that fear becomes more real. Death becomes more everyday. When you are younger you romanticize death, but then it happens to your family and friends. I am a different person to the last record and I wanted to put that across. It can be trite. People could say, ‘Oh, we’re all going to die — surprise me!’ But I try to find some emotional connection to that idea.”

In June, the Cure rounded up Four Tet, Orbital, Paul Oakenfold, Mogwai and Deftones frontman Chino Moreno for the remix collection Mixes of a Lost World, and that same month, Smith made a surprise appearance at the U.K.’s Glastonbury Festival with Olivia Rodrigo.

The Cure have only played three times since wrapping an extensive 2023 tour but are planning an extensive European summer tour next year, beginning the first week of June with a headlining performance at Barcelona’s Primavera Sound festival.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Sunn O))) Sign to Sub Pop, Share New Songs: Listen
Music

Sunn O))) Sign to Sub Pop, Share New Songs: Listen

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Sun O))) have signed to Sub Pop and shared their first songs for the venerated Seattle-based label. “Eternity’s Pillars,” “Raise the Chalice,” and “Reverential” are out now on streaming services and as a limited-edition 12” vinyl single. Hear all three tracks below.

“‘Eternity’s Pillars’ is named for the mid-1980s television program created and hosted by jazz visionary and spiritual guru Alice Coltrane Turiyasangitananda, focusing on her incessant belief in music’s capacity to attain spiritual transcendence,” Sun O))) shared in a press statement. “‘Raise the Chalice’ is named for a rallying cry often uttered by Northwest legend Ron Guardipee throughout the mid-1990s. ‘Reverential’ equally pays respect and sends loud praise to those who came before us with the heaviest burdens, expressions with music and art being the materials of an antiphon.”

Now a duo of founding members Stephen O’Malley and Greg Anderson, Sunn O))) shared their last new studio LPs, Life Metal and Pyroclasts, in 2019. The band also documented their BBC Radio 6 session from that same year in the 2021 live album Metta, Benevolence.

Read about Life Metal in “The Best Metal Albums of 2019.”

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.

Sunn O))): “Eternity’s Pillars b/w Raise the Chalice & Reverential”

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Driving into Lyrics: Songs That Reference Car Crashes & Their Real-world Parallels
Music

Driving into Lyrics: Songs That Reference Car Crashes & Their Real-world Parallels

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Among images in popular music, one of the most haunting figures is that of a car crash. Ironically, crashing into something has turned for many musicians into a metaphor for life’s misery, threatening danger, or the urge to rebel-from dramatic ballads to edgier rock anthems. Such cultural echoes, however, might make one think larger than life; crashes, however, change one’s legal status and medical consequences irrevocably. Instead of bringing closure to the catastrophe, the Florida Personal Injury Lawyers appear instrumental in unraveling the often-befuddling maze of insurance, liability, and healthcare that develops following a real tragedy. Examining the way songs and videos elevate or dramatize that event against the stark reality of trauma and law reveals that very uncanny cultural chasm between art and life.

Rock music has long embraced the idea of the crash as a symbol of recklessness or freedom. Songs such as “Last Kiss” (popularized by Pearl Jam, originally by Wayne Cochran) tell tragic stories of young lives cut short in auto wrecks, while punk and alternative bands often use crash imagery to convey angst and rebellion. These songs resonate because they dramatize the suddenness of disaster and the fragility of life.

In reality, though, car crashes are among the most common causes of injury in the United States. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), more than 40,000 people died in motor vehicle crashes in 2022, with hundreds of thousands more injured. Unlike the quick fadeout of a song, survivors face long hospital stays, surgeries, and extensive rehabilitation. The “myth” of the crash as a poetic moment clashes sharply with the ongoing struggles of those living with permanent disabilities.

Car crash ballads often focus on the emotional aftermath—the grief, heartbreak, or nostalgia of survivors. These cultural portrayals rarely address the practical realities: medical bills, lost wages, or the question of who was legally at fault.

In Florida, for example, car accident victims face unique legal frameworks due to the state’s no-fault insurance laws. When injuries are severe, victims often need to step outside the no-fault system and file lawsuits against negligent drivers. These layers of law are invisible in music, where grief is timeless, but in life, deadlines and statutes of limitations mean timing is critical.

Music videos frequently use car crashes for visual drama. A flaming wreck might represent a relationship falling apart or the chaos of fame. Yet, in emergency rooms, the reality is anything but stylized.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) notes that car crashes are a leading cause of traumatic brain injuries, many of which go undiagnosed immediately after impact. Unlike the dramatic explosion on screen, many injuries—such as whiplash, internal bleeding, or concussions—can appear subtle at first but worsen over time. Medical professionals stress the importance of immediate evaluation, but cultural portrayals rarely show the painstaking work of trauma care, from CT scans to long-term physical therapy.

Interestingly, while traditional car crashes dominate cultural references, modern music rarely touches on accidents connected to rideshare services. Yet these collisions are increasingly common in urban areas. A report from the University of Chicago Booth School of Business estimated that ridesharing has contributed to a 2–3 percent increase in traffic fatalities nationwide.

Legally, rideshare crashes present challenges unfamiliar to most people. Liability may involve the rideshare company’s insurer, the driver’s personal policy, or third parties. Victims often discover that navigating compensation is far more complicated than in a typical crash. The absence of this reality in music underscores how cultural portrayals lag behind technological and social change.

Country music often invokes cars, highways, and the dangers of the road, weaving them into stories of heartbreak or resilience. Lyrics may mention “driving all night” or “crashing on the highway” as metaphors for emotional turmoil. These songs resonate with listeners because they blend everyday experiences with deeper themes.

But in a Florida courtroom, the narrative is starkly different. Judges and juries deal not with metaphor but with evidence—police reports, medical records, and testimony. What a songwriter might use as poetic shorthand becomes, in reality, a detailed legal argument about distracted driving, intoxication, or failure to yield.

Songs about car crashes offer a powerful emotional lens on loss, chaos, or passion, but they often stop at the chorus, leaving out the months or years of struggle that follow in real life. Survivors face surgeries, therapies, and bills; families navigate grief alongside complex insurance claims; attorneys fight to secure fair compensation.

This gap between culture and reality is where law and medicine step in. Doctors and nurses provide the care that lyrics skip over, while attorneys work to help victims pursue financial recovery. In Florida, navigating this system is especially complex, which is why so many turn to legal advocates after a serious crash.

SPIN Magazine newsroom and editorial staff were not involved in the creation of this content.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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