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Gina Birch (formerly of the postpunk band the Raincoats) outside the Roxy Theatre in West Hollywood, after her performance during a tour stop behind her new solo album, 'Trouble,' released on Third Man Records. (Credit: Steve Appleford)
Music

Gina Birch’s Many ‘Mini-Revolutions’ – SPIN

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Gina Birch never thought of calling herself an artist. Which seems like a strange attitude for this restless musician, painter, and filmmaker who first made her mark as a founding member of the Raincoats, a lasting spark from London’s musical underground of the late 1970s and a personal favorite band of Kurt Cobain and Kathleen Hanna. It was just one of Birch’s many “mini-revolutions.”

She was a young art student when she attended the very first Sex Pistols gig in late 1975 at the St. Martin’s School of Art in London. It was a revelation, but her life was truly changed after witnessing another band of the early punk scene, the all-female trio the Slits. Not long after, the Raincoats were born.

The Raincoats’ self-titled debut album in 1979 was recorded by the classic all-female lineup of Birch (vocals, bass), Ana da Silva (vocals, guitar, keyboards), Palmolive (drums), and Vicky Aspinall (vocals, violin). After dissolving in 1984, the sound and symbolism of the band helped inspire the Riot Grrrl movement of the 1990s and many others. By then, Birch had played in other bands and was an active filmmaker, directing music videos for New Order, the Pogues, the Libertines, and more.

She is happy to discuss her past, but her focus is very much on the present, and creating new work in a variety of mediums from her home in North London. Her new album, Trouble, is only the second she’s released under her own name, both of them for Third Man Records. The music on 2023’s I Play My Bass Loud and Trouble is modern and sophisticated, a mixture of indie rock and dub, strings and electronics, as elegantly recorded by her esteemed producer and collaborator, Youth. Trouble would fit easily among recent forward-leaning work by Nick Cave and St. Vincent.

The new album’s title was taken from the song “Causing Trouble Again,” an anthem for female heroes of culture and politics at over six minutes of controlled chaos and euphoric cheers. It closes with a roll call of impactful women, among them, “Joni Mitchell … Lee Miller … Yoko Ono … Stormy Daniels … Nina Simone … Ruth Bader Ginsburg … Maya Angelou … Sinead O’Connor.” The track was inspired by last year’s exhibition Women in Revolt! Art and Activism in the UK 1970–1990 at the Tate Britain, which used Birch’s Super 8 film from 1977 called “3 Minute Scream” as its defining image.

On the last night of her North American tour, a few days before Halloween, Birch relaxed on a tour bus she shared with headliner and fellow Brit Miki Berenyi, parked outside the Roxy Theatre in Los Angeles. (Birch will be back on the road again across Europe and the U.K. through 2026.) If music seems to again be a priority, she sees it as just another part of an ongoing creative continuum.

“I don’t think I had priorities. I wasn’t that sorted,” Birch tells SPIN with a laugh. “I just get up each day and put one foot in front of the other and see what happens. I’ve never been a career person. It’s only more recently that I’ve ever even described myself as an artist. I always thought that was up to other people to describe you as.”

Your new album Trouble is a sophisticated, modern collection of songs very much about the present. When people keep bringing up the Raincoats, does that bother you at all?

No, because that was my entry. If it weren’t for that and it weren’t for punk, I would never have done this. I liked singing, but I couldn’t play anything. Punk was so exciting and enabling, and I was right in the middle of it. It was kind of like, “You can do whatever you want to try. With just a bit of energy, a bit of courage, and you can do it.” But we didn’t know what we were doing. And in a way, that’s what made it quite inventive. We were art students, after all. So we were just trying different things out without trying to play rock and roll particularly. We were trying to put one section after another or one bit, or let’s shout here, or let’s chant here, or let’s try this here, or let’s slide the bass up on the violin. We were just trying to see what we could do. 

Many people refer back to 1977 as the year when things really coalesced for that original U.K. punk scene. Did it feel like that for you? 

Totally. I remember thinking, I’m so lucky to be young and alive at this moment. It felt really special. I thought the world was changing, you know? I was in the heart of this little revolution. I was interested in the dynamism of just giving it a go, knowing a couple of chords and trying to see what you can do creatively with it. Obviously, there are some overlaps between the hippie culture and the punk culture.

Not everyone from the 1960s was able to move forward with the punk movement. It was just noise to some of them.

If you can see the similarities between the two things philosophically, they are quite a good fit. But I do think that in the hippie era there was more skill required. You got the Hendrixes and the Joni Mitchells, people who really knew what they were doing. Whereas with punk, it was valuing an idea. For me, it came out of conceptual art. You have an idea and then you try to achieve it, whether you’re capable of it or not. What was interesting about that time was that each band had their own way of breaking the rules, or finding ways to become themselves. It was very exciting.

Was the fact that the Raincoats were female incidental or did you feel like that was making a statement?

When I saw the Slits play, I just absolutely loved them. And it was great that they were all women, because I know it sounds daft now, but there was this idea that if there was a man in the group, he would be somehow responsible for pulling the strings, taking charge of the whole thing. We did have some men in the group early on, and then when Palmolive joined and Vicky joined, we became all-female for a while. But then, on the second album, we didn’t even have a drummer for quite a lot of it. And then Robert Wyatt came in and played afterwards, and he was like, “This is like jazz!”

The band broke up by the middle of the ’80s, but in the ’90s another generation was talking about your influence.

In the early ’90s we heard about the Olympia [Washington] scene and the girls/women there who quoted us as an influence. I heard that Kathleen Hanna [of Bikini Kill] was interested in being a performance poet, and [writer] Kathy Acker said, “Don’t do that, start a band!” There’s more agency and immediacy in having a band and having an audience of young people who you can really talk to. 

Did that recognition mean a lot to you?

Oh God, we were absolutely thrilled. The Raincoats had a kind of underground core audience, but they weren’t really the movers and shakers. People like [U.K. critic] Jon Savage would say, “I have nothing to say about the Raincoats.” People found us a bit odd. We just did what we did. We never anticipated that anything would come of it. So when it came, it was a beautiful surprise. I remember Ana telling me, “There are these bands with women in them, and they call themselves Riot Grrrl.”

Kim Gordon said she related to us because we were kind of ordinary people making extraordinary music. We wore our clothes inside out. We wore odd footwear. We weren’t bigging up the femininity, but we weren’t denying it either. Ana was particularly moved by Patti Smith, because of her poetry and her performance. But, as she says, it wasn’t Patti Smith that made her think she could do it. It was the bands like the Slits and the Subway Sect, who were putting one foot in front of the other. They were the ones that gave us permission to do it. 

What do you think about the distinctions between punk and post-punk, which is what the Raincoats were labeled?

For us, post-punk met us where we ended up, although we were there at the punk happenings, and I was famously at the very first Sex Pistols gig. Punk ended when Sid [Vicious] died. It was disintegrating as it was rising, you know? The Clash carried it on, and the Buzzcocks. Perhaps if we’d released our album a year earlier, we’d be punk. 

Punk was very short lived in a way. It was bubbling under for a while, and then suddenly it hit. By the time I arrived, it was in full swing. And then the Roxy [in London’s Covent Garden] opened, and we were there every night and at various happenings all over the place. There was this intense energy. You could relax a bit more with post-punk. 

After the Raincoats, you kept doing music under various names, but how did you become a filmmaker?

When I was at art school, [filmmaker] Derek Jarman came to my college with his Super 8 films, and I got myself a Super 8 camera. It was like painting with film in a really magical way. Then of course, pop videos started happening, and some of them were really interesting. There were so many beautiful things that happened during that time with film. I was very moved by that. 

Why did you decide to call your new album Trouble? 

Linsey Young, a curator from London, had been plotting for a long time to do an exhibition of women’s work [Women in Revolt! at the Tate Britain]—a lot of largely ignored women’s artwork that had been made between 1970 and 1990. She said, “Oh, I’ve heard about your Super 8 films.” And she was particularly interested in the “3 Minute Scream.”  And then she said she wanted to screen it, and she wanted my image from it for the poster. So suddenly my face was all over the London Underground and everywhere. I felt very attached to the other women that were in the show. And I wanted a kind of anthem for us, to say, “We love you, we respect you, and you’ve made a difference to us.” 

[In the song] I wanted to have names of women who’d made a difference to our lives. I asked all the women who were in the show if they would suggest some names and record them onto my phone, and some of them did. I widened my search and got lots of different people leaving names on my answer phone. I put them all into a song called “Causing Trouble Again.” That seemed to be the theme tune of the record. There’s good trouble and there’s bad trouble. And I wanted our trouble to be good trouble.

Also on the album is “Doom Monger,” which is a kind of a reggae song. What is it about?

It was going to be on the first album, but I was never happy with it. I was like, “I wish I could find out where it’s all gone wrong.” It felt really trite. And then more recently, it seems like a reasonable question because everything’s gone so haywire. It just felt like, what the fuck has happened? There’s lunatics in power and violence in the air, so much fear in our hearts, and we act like we don’t care, you know? I thought, well, it’s quite good, really. I’ll give it another crack: “Hatred for our sisters, hatred for our brothers …” I just felt there’s a lot of hatred, isn’t there?

You seem pretty happy with the way things are going with this music project.

Oh, God, I feel incredibly lucky now. I’ve got a painting studio, I’ve had painting exhibitions. I’ve got films going out. I’ve written catalog essays for painters. I’m here on tour. I’m going on another. There are some people more successful than me, but I like my funny level of success because I don’t really get recognized. I can be creative. My overheads have always been low. I don’t have expensive holidays. I own a pretty crap car. And I got a lovely house and I decorate it how I want it. I’ve got a great partner and two great kids, and a lovely dog. [laughs]

I’m always doing something. I had a mosaic phase. I did loads of felting and made all these strange felt cushions. I made these naked dresses. I can’t really sit still and do nothing. It doesn’t sit right with me.

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Rise Against. (Credit: Mynxii White)
Music

Rise Against’s Musical Dystopia – SPIN

by jummy84 November 10, 2025
written by jummy84

“And” is the first word Rise Against frontman Tim McIlrath sings on “Nod,” the opening track from Ricochet, released in August. It’s also the first word he sings on the next song, “I Want It All.” But that wasn’t a deliberate strategy, judging from McIlrath’s surprise when I point it out.

“Oh yeah, I didn’t think about that. That’s funny,” McIlrath says via Zoom outside his Chicago home, wearing a sweater on a brisk autumn morning after returning home from a tour. “That is a good device, especially considering that I think of all the Rise Against records as, like, one big ongoing story. This is just like the latest chapter of it. It’s like, ‘Oh, let’s pick back up, where did we leave off?’”

Since forming Rise Against in Chicago’s hardcore scene in 1999, McIlrath has consistently written socially conscious lyrics about the military industrial complex, climate change, animal rights, and class struggle. And as many of the problems he’s written about have continued to worsen in America and abroad, McIlrath sees Rise Against as less a political band than a “dystopian musical project,” and many of the lyrics he wrote years ago sound remarkably prescient.

“Going back to 1984, Fahrenheit 451, or Margaret Atwood, these things that become timely are almost not an accident, like this is what we were talking about. If we keep going down this road, this is what it could look like, and then sometimes we do keep going down that road,” the singer-guitarist says.

(Credit: Mynxii White)

Ricochet was written before the 2024 election, but songs like “Gold Long Gone” and “Damage is Done” resonate deeply with the parade of grim 2025 headlines. “Sometimes the things that we talk about end up sadly coming to fruition by the time an album actually finds its way to a release.” McIlrath adds, with a self-deprecating laugh, “I would love to have all these songs be irrelevant and I could go be unemployed and have the world be a perfect place.”

Rise Against has sold millions of copies of albums that have spun off more than 20 rock radio hits, making McIlrath the rare straight-edge vegetarian who’s shared stages and radio playlists with the likes of Metallica. That’s led Rise Against to turn down shows or opportunities that any other band at their level would eagerly agree to if they weren’t comfortable with a sponsor, and the band remains aligned on those values. “What I love about my band and the three guys and even our manager and our team is that we never sweated that shit,” McIlrath says. “Having that compass of punk and hardcore made it easier to navigate the murky waters of commercial music and still hold onto our identity and feel good about it. And then in the end, as a lesson to other bands, it didn’t limit us.”

McIlrath has become friends with one musician who’s very familiar with those murky waters. “I was just with Tom Morello last weekend at the Blackhawks game,” McIlrath says. “Tom was talking about Rage Against the Machine fans, and splitting them into different categories—the ones that are deeply involved in the politics of Rage, love it, and the ones that are just kind of like banging their heads along to the song—and just talking about how we need all those fans. We want all of them in the room together, they are all necessary.”

Rise Against's new album, Ricochet.
Rise Against’s new album, Ricochet.

As consistent as McIlrath’s lyrical perspective has been over the last 25 years, he saw the tenth Rise Against album as an opportunity to experiment with the band’s sound. “Most of my favorite bands never made it to 10 records. And so what business do you have making the same exact record a tenth time?” he says. “If you wanna change the meal, you gotta change the recipe.”

The majority of Rise Against’s previous albums were produced by Bill Stevenson, the legendary Descendants and Black Flag drummer, at his studio the Blasting Room. For Ricochet, however, Rise Against chose to work with someone new: Australian producer Catherine Marks, who’s won Grammys for her work with boygenius and has a resume full of indie and alternative bands like Manchester Orchestra and Wolf Alice.

“Catherine just stood out as someone that was I think so far removed from, like, a Rise Against world that it sounded exciting to us,” McIlrath says. “And she brought a female energy to the studio that’s not often there. A little peek behind the curtain of Rise Against, 90% of our personnel is female—our managers, agents, lawyers—those are the people that have always kinda run our team. And that’s been successful, so to recreate that dynamic in the studio was fun and felt pretty natural.”

McIlrath, drummer Brandon Barnes, guitarist Zach Blair, and bassist Joe Principe still play fast and loud for most of Ricochet, but the album is more densely layered and musically varied than any previous Rise Against release, with McIlrath’s voice woven into the guitars rather than shouting above them. Marks’s mentor, veteran British producer Alan Moulder, mixed Ricochet, and the subtle electronics on the title track recall his work with Nine Inch Nails and U2.

McIlrath has always toed the line between singing and melodic screaming, and over time he found it harder and harder to perform some of Rise Against’s songs. “I came out of a punk and hardcore world, which almost by definition is an untrained world,” he says. “I didn’t anticipate doing this on big stages at 46 years old. I was, like, in a Knights of Columbus Hall with my friends, playing and screaming into a RadioShack microphone on a shitty PA.”

Deciding to start meeting with the Chicago-based vocal coach Davin Youngs was a game-changer that helped McIlrath avoid issues like vocal polyps and laryngitis that seem to afflict more and more touring singers these days. “For years, I relied on my adolescence and youthful exuberance to pull it off. And then probably five, six years ago, I hit a point where I was like, ‘This is really fucking hard to do, and I don’t know how I’m gonna keep doing it,’” McIlrath admits. Now, he feels ready to sing any song in the Rise Against catalog and hit any note. “I’m actually a far more competent singer today than I’ve ever been. It honestly changed my life.”

November 10, 2025 0 comments
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Atlanta Influences Everything - SPIN
Music

Atlanta Influences Everything – SPIN

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

When I think about Atlanta, I think about the cultural movement of the early 2000s. In music, a movement represents a total paradigm shift where multiple artists are working together, collaborating, and hat tipping each other until the sum of the whole is worth more than individual parts. That’s when you have a “scene.” 

In that era, the South dominated mainstream music, upending previous hip-hop regimes from New York and Los Angeles. Atlanta became the turn-of-the-century epicenter, with artists like Lil Jon, Ying Yang Twins, Usher, Ludacris, Dem Franchize Boys, T.I. The Rubberband Man, Goodie Mob, and CeeLo Green dominating the airwaves and defining the sound. In 2003, OutKast’s double album Speakerboxxx/The Love Below sold 13 millions copies in the U.S., making it the best-selling rap album of all time and completely changing music as we know it. On November 8, Outkast will reunite on stage for the first time in nearly a decade to receive their honor at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Will it be their last joint appearance? Lord, I hope not. Donald Glover’s introduction is certain to have everyone’s attention and one of the most anticipated components of the ceremony this year. 

Since the early 2000s, many more stars have taken the sound and run with it. From Gucci Mane to Young Jeezy, 2 Chainz to 21 Savage; Future to Lil Yachty; Lil Baby to Young Thug; and Ciara to Latto and now Playboi Carti, tons of talents have shown that this city is not to be trifled with. 

Lil Jon, for his part, has had an unbelievable second rise as a leader in health and wellness. His meditation album is the real deal. Ludadcris can’t be stopped, locking in movie roles and still putting out awesome music. Usher remained at the top of his game on his recent record, killed his Super Bowl performance in 2024, and made waves with his highly coveted Vegas residency.

Then there’s Jermaine Dupri, rated by Billboard in August as the Hip-Hop and R&B Producer of the century. Sure, Babyface (also out of Atlanta) might have him beat in the R&B category—and Dr. Dre might be the ultimate Hip-Hop Producer of their era—but as far as multi-hyphenates go, Billboard got that one right! JD produced for Mariah Carey, Usher, and Janet Jackson while developing artists (Lil Bow Wow, Da Brat, Kriss Kross) from scratch and helping them break through JD designed his track “Welcome To Atlanta” to be the anthem for his city and gave Atlanta’s night life a calling card.

I sat down with Jermaine Dupri on the main stage of Brandweek this week. Brandweek is a massive gathering of brand marketers that is organized by influential advertising industry media publication Adweek. Brandweek always brings together the biggest and most creative brand marketers in the game. 

I believe that every brand needs to think like an artist, and the Southern rap movement of the early 2000s is a good example of how working together in a scene can create something powerful. This phenomena can be emulated in brand marketing. 

Dupri had so many amazing insights and stories. He’s seen it all, been mentored by the best, and delivers every time, whether for a Boost Mobile commercial or when he’s helping launch the next big artist in youth culture. After all of the hits, he remains extremely focused on making novel ideas come to life. He’s a free thinker with a big personality and a lot of talent, and he was the perfect booking for Brandweek this year. If a city could have an executive producer, Jermaine Dupri would be Atlanta’s.

Brand’lanta was the perfect place to hold this year’s big mashup of brands and artists. It’s home to Delta Air Lines, The Coca-Cola Company (which had some amazing things to say about the relaunch of Sprite’s “Obey Your Thirst” campaign), Atmos, the CEO of AG1, Tyler Perry Studios, Chick-fil-A, the Cartoon Network, and many more. Where the Atlanta music and brand scene is going next is really exciting. For one, Brandweek announced it’s coming back to Atlanta next year, which gives this event some continuity and momentum heading into 2026. And musically, it’s still an explosive place. I found some great new music out of here and you can see there is a new generation of stars coming out of the region. 

Check out these young acts that are bubbling up (and really freaking good!) 

ian | Spotify (and this piece on him in the WSJ this week)

Odeal | Spotify (UK act signed to LVRN out of ATL)

Mariah the Scientist | Spotify

Belly Dad Kushington | his Friend Do Remix slaps! 

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Radiohead Reunite In Madrid - SPIN
Music

Radiohead Reunite In Madrid – SPIN

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Radiohead began their first tour in more than seven years last night (Nov. 4) in Madrid with a 25-song show drawing on eight of their nine studio albums (sorry, Pablo Honey fans). The performance was also the live debut of second drummer Chris Vatalaro, who has previously collaborated with Radiohead drummer Phil Selway, among many other musicians.

Beyond the first airing of “Sit Down. Stand Up.” since 2004, there were no true rarities amid a set featuring six songs each from 2003’s Hail to the Thief and 1997’s OK Computer. Radiohead will apparently be drawing from a deeper pool of material for the tour and even soundchecked several extra songs earlier this week, including “The Gloaming” from Hail to the Thief.

Ahead of the tour, which continues through Dec. 12 in Berlin, Radiohead assembled vintage in-concert versions for the digital collection Hail to the Thief Live Recordings 2003-2009. The project was also just released as a one-off vinyl pressing from the band’s store.

Why such a long break for Radiohead, which hadn’t been onstage since 2018? “I guess the wheels came off a bit, so we had to stop,” frontman Thom Yorke said in a recent interview with the Times. “There were a lot of elements. The shows felt great but it was, like, let’s halt now before we walk off this cliff.”

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Announcing Beats + Bytes  - SPIN
Music

Announcing Beats + Bytes  – SPIN

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

My focus is the intersection of entertainment, brand partnerships, and technology. I’ve been running an indie boutique called Nue Agency for nearly two decades. It started as a talent agency finding and developing artists with the belief that we had to think differently to help our artists break. I had tremendous success representing talent such as Pusha T, Wale, MIMS, Big Sean, Mike Posner, J. Cole, Logic, Action Bronson, White Panda (which spawned Gryffin), 2AM Club (which launched Marc E. Bassey), and many more. 

When the internet was decimating the music business of the past—and CDs that cost pennies to make were no longer selling by the millions for $20 a pop—I could see the writing on the wall. I believed that tech was going to be the savior of the music industry. At that point, we began whole-heartedly encouraging our artists to embrace technology companies and be open to partnerships with these new platforms.

Almost a decade into representing artists, I changed my business model then, too, and began using a similar creative mindset to help break brands and launch campaigns that leveraged the power of music and its creators.

As an indie you have to be crafty and stay on your toes. That’s part of the reason I was so attracted to SPIN. SPIN is an iconic music magazine that encapsulates the spirit of indie culture. The impresarios and indies are the lifeblood of the music business, and independent artists are on the rise again, eating more and more of the majors’ market share. SPIN embodies what is cool about music.

When I met the CEO Jimmy Hutcheson a few years ago, I knew I wanted to work with him. He was a big thinker that loved music to the core. Like me, he was a talent booker in college and deeply understood digital media. He had a vision for how to bring SPIN back to its turn-of-the-century glory and beyond.

Since purchasing the company at the beginning of these roaring 2020s, he’s put together a rockstar team, even bringing back the original founder of SPIN, Bob Guccione Jr., to tap into the nostalgia of the print form of the magazine. I’m honored and excited to be collaborating with him and the team on my new column, Beats + Bytes. This is issue No. 1!

So, what can you expect from me? I’m moving at the speed of culture. I see through an artist’s lens, but I understand what it takes to service the biggest brands in the world. I love to make predictions, forecast trends, have off the record, real world conversation, chase art and connect dots. I’m a techno-optimist.

In many ways, we are in a golden era of music. Despite concerns about ‘devaluation’ of music, its new-found ubiquity has proven incredibly powerful. There are more artists creating (and owning their material), and more fans consuming and connecting with music than at any point in history. The red tape has finally been cut and new tools have helped grow the long tail as catalog material is given new life and amateurs join the fun. 

The live business is healthy, with festival culture staying strong (Coachella already sold out next year) and plenty of room for boutique and niche events. Venture capital and tech investments are flowing, helping musicians build better fan experiences, while brand dollars and the creator economy provide a mechanism for financial support to reach artists big and small. Music is the #1 passion point and the top identity driver with teens, more than fashion and more than sports. All that, and the space remains ripe for innovation. 

Is it perfect? Absolutely not. Is it getting harder to cut through the noise, or for a new song to stay top of mind? Absolutely yes. There was no “song of the summer” and some say this marks the end of the mainstream popularity era. I’m not sure about that, although my attention is being gobbled up by something different every week, since so much inspiring music is being released. 

Looking up, there is a lot of blue sky for our industry. My personal mission is to find innovative ways to bring more brand dollars to artists, storytellers, and the music business as a whole. I couldn’t be more psyched to be here, working with SPIN to get this message out to a bigger audience of music fans. 

Peace,
Jesse K. 

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Spencer Berger is Auditorium. (All photos by Jonathan Rae)
Music

The Ghosts of ‘Halloween’ – SPIN

by jummy84 November 1, 2025
written by jummy84

Spencer Berger has that kind of look that makes you wonder where you’ve seen him before. His thick brows, kind blue eyes, slim face, and wily smile are the perfect composite of a frontman you could swear you just saw on the cover of a magazine, or maybe an actor in a movie you can’t place.

The comparison isn’t too much of a stretch. Before his current one-man music project Auditorium (the moniker symbolizing a room where any music could be played), one of Berger’s big breaks was Skills Like This, a movie he wrote the screenplay for and also  starred in at just 27 years old. The bank heist caper won the audience award at SXSW in 2007 and led to a brief on-screen career.

Even before those credits, music projects put him in the spotlight. In the late ’80s, at the ripe age of 9, the native New Yorker was performing with the Metropolitan Opera Children’s Chorus. By 18, he fronted New York indie rock band the Jive Wheel with friends from Vassar College.

Suffice to say, Berger—now 40-something and living in L.A.—has worn many masks over the years. But on the pensive rocker “Halloween,” appropriately launched today, the multi-talent makes a great case for shedding them all.

Berger explains more about the song’s origins that go back 20-plus years, talks about the musical he’s working on, and spills about that one time he literally bumped into Luciano Pavarotti. 

You first wrote and performed a version of “Halloween” when you were 18 with the Jive Wheel. Why did you want to revisit and unearth it now?

I had just started college, and I was wrestling with the idea of trying to be true to myself and knowing I was putting my authentic self out there as I’m meeting all these new people who I may be hiding parts of myself from out of fear or shame. At the time, I thought this was something that only people my age were wrestling with. Now that I’m much older, I’m still thinking about that. I was hearing the lyrics differently, in a way that they didn’t strike me when I was 18.

It feels like the idea of “masks” right now is really significant, whether people putting on a mask via a social media persona or people taking off a mask so we see who they really are.

It’s interesting how that happens, how you’ll be listening to a lyric in the context of a current event that will strike you. In another song of mine, “Fire Fire Ocean Liner,”  the first line of that song is “Rock ‘n rollers. Raise your hands. The president wants to join your band. He’s only played for a year or two, but he’s already so much better than you.” I wrote that lyric when Obama was still president. But by the time I released it, Trump had become president. And suddenly the way that anybody was absorbing that lyric, including myself, changed.

“Halloween” has the characteristic moodiness and dramatic vocals that carry the vibe of most Auditorium songs. Does that come from your opera background?

When I first started being in bands, the very first thing that I became aware of was that my voice didn’t fit with my heroes. I was growing up in the ’90s. I was listening to Nirvana, Eddie Vedder. I was digging all those incredible rock voices that had a wonderful dirtiness to them. And I would try to make my voice sound like what I thought it should sound like. But when I was in college and introduced to Elliott Smith, it opened up a whole row of doors in my brain. I heard a voice that didn’t fit with what you would typically think of as rock and roll. There were also bands like Pulp; when I heard Jarvis Cocker’s voice, I was like, well, this guy’s pretty theatrical. Or Grant Lee Buffalo. Grant-Lee Phillips’ voice was another that struck me, like wow he’s really doing his own thing. So there were these artists along the way that sort of poked me and said, just stop trying to sound like anybody else, try to sound like yourself. The idea kind of goes back to the song “Halloween.” When I started doing that, I actually started to sound like myself for the first time, and I started to write differently too. I found that suddenly the music that was coming out of me was no longer trying to fit this other voice. It wasn’t trying to do anything other than just be myself. And it was incredibly freeing.

Going back to your opera roots, how does one even get started with the Metropolitan Opera Children’s Chorus and performing with Luciano Pavarotti and Placido Domingo?

I was growing up in Queens, and I used to sing around the house, but that was pretty much the extent of it. A family friend had heard me and encouraged my parents to have me audition because that was a thing in New York. If you’re growing up there, the operas need kids. The woman who auditioned me was the director of the Metropolitan Opera Children’s Chorus, this unbelievable human being by the name of Elena Doria. She passed away a few years ago. And if you look her up, you will read all sorts of legendary tales about her. When I auditioned, we traveled five stories underground because underneath the Metropolitan Opera is like a labyrinth. In this small room was a piano and a bunch of folding chairs and a blackboard, and Elena Doria sat down at the piano and said, ‘All right, kid, sing “Happy Birthday.” Singing happy birthday is an incredibly common thing when you don’t have anything prepared because of that octave in the middle of the song. Before I knew it, I was cast in La Boheme, and it couldn’t have been more than a month or two before I suddenly was on stage and there was Pavarotti. My experience with Pavarotti was that I was walking off stage and I walked into what honestly felt like a wall, and I kind of bounced back. But I looked up and it was not a wall, it was Pavarotti. And he didn’t even know. It was like he didn’t even notice that I touched him. He was completely unfazed.”

Do you have plans to get back into acting in the future?

I’m starting to dip my foot back into it. The last album that I made was Life Changer, which came out in 2023. The songs [like “Cedars-Sinai Cafeteria Breakdown”] came out of the fact that when my wife was pregnant, she developed a life-threatening condition called HELLP syndrome that came on in the final 27 hours before our first child was born. After that experience, it wasn’t like I had a big plan to write about it. It was more like the only lyrics that came out of my head were all somehow related. By the way, that story has the happiest ending ever, because my wife obviously survived. Our child was born totally healthy. My wife is totally healthy now. But it just left such an impression, and I’ve been writing a screenplay that is basically based on that experience. It’s a musical, with the foundation being the songs from Life Changer.

What lies ahead for Auditorium? And do you think you’ll expand it beyond a solo project?

I find the challenge of trying to record music by myself deeply rewarding, but that said, I love collaborating with other musicians when I perform Auditorium songs live— for instance, I often perform with my wife Daya Berger, who’s a fantastic bassist. And on the extreme flipside of Auditorium is the punk band I play in, 123Death, in which myself and the two other band members (Malcolm Sosa and Jeff Electric) write and record everything together. [As Auditorium], I’m working on a whole bunch of singles for this coming year, which I’m excited to share. I’ll probably be releasing a song every one to two months. It takes me a while to feel proud of an album as a whole before I release it, so I started doing the singles model last year. Just before “Halloween,” I released a track called “George Washington’s Last Will and Testament,” which is part of a group of songs that has started to slowly take shape.

Find Auditorium: https://linktr.ee/auditoriummusic

November 1, 2025 0 comments
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FAKE NEWS! - SPIN
Music

FAKE NEWS! – SPIN

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

The city of Golden Sands may not actually exist, but it still has a weird and wonderful TV station. Programme 4 broadcasts commercials for local restaurants like Ramon’s Venetian Room (with new pleather-bound menus) and local businesses like Browner Carpeting (check out their floor-to-ceiling garage shag). There are ads for the annual Starving Artist Mathis Sale (“Every possible depiction of Johnny Mathis!”) as well as credits for made-up sitcoms like The William Joel Show, starring Billy Joel as a Long Island weatherman. Collected together at the web site programme4.tv, the series is strange, hilarious, maybe a little creepy, but infinitely rewatchable.

The William Joel Show, starring Billy Joel as a Long Island weatherman.

“In my mind it’s a local market station that’s maybe a little interdimensional,” says creator Rachel Lichtman. “It’s timeless and locationless. It’s this void where we’re not sure what year it is. There’s no hard date on anything. It’s more of a feeling.”

The unofficial mayor of Golden Sands, Lichtman co-wrote and directed the Programme 4 segments with contributions from the Sklar Brothers, Ted Leo, Julianna Hatfield, Patton Oswalt, and Tammy Faye Starlite. Constantly expanding — first through radio broadcasts from the local Easy 66 AM and eventually through small US tours — this world is built on small, well-observed details, which means the collection took a long time to create. “I’m taking notes all the time, and I’m always thinking of how I can weave something into this larger story,” says Lichtman, who describes the broadcasts as something like a comedy album. “But I don’t want to shape the story too much. I want your own personal emotional memories to be a character in the experience.”

Golden Sands’ interdimensional woman about town, Rachel Lichtman. (Photo courtesy of Programme 4)

Programme 4 is a love letter to a forgotten moment in television history, when national programming would air alongside local commercials on small-market stations. “This is obviously made by human people. It’s based on human memory. It’s not AI. Every bit of it has been touched by human hands, which is absolutely crucial right now. We wanted to acknowledge the humanity of the creators as well as the humanity of the audience.”

Call now for a quality shagging. (Photo courtesy of Programme 4)

Lichtman grew up outside of Chicago and was weaned on those regional advertisements, which offered her young self a glimpse of an adult world. “I thought those restaurants and nightclubs were the most important places in the world. This is what adults did. This is where adults went.” While Gen X and older viewers may recall similar experiences from their own childhoods, Lichtman has been surprised by the cross-generational appeal of Programme 4. “There are all these people of a certain age who are old enough to remember the pre-Internet days, but there’s also a whole crew of younger people who simply love the analog approach.”

In color! (Photo courtesy of Programme 4)

She hopes Golden Sands might be a pop-cultural utopia to her viewers, virtually if not physically. “I wanted to create a place where people could feel comfortable and seen in terms of the weird kinds of entertainment they like. So it’s not snobby. We tried to make it a very open and welcoming place. We’re all having drinks down at Ramon’s Venetian Room. Come join us!”

Join us! (Photo courtesy of Programme 4)

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Ayo Edebiri With Jellyfish Bangs Will Convince You Take the Edgy Cut for a Spin
Fashion

Ayo Edebiri With Jellyfish Bangs Will Convince You Take the Edgy Cut for a Spin

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Her blush-forward makeup complements the reddish tones in her hair, giving everything a rosy glow.

Karwai Tang

Attending a screening of After The Hunt at the BFI London Film Festival, the American star wore a white Chanel gown designed by the brand’s new artistic director Matthieu Blazy (she recently became a Chanel ambassador), and earrings featuring a small chick on a diamond perch.

In a recent profile for Vogue, Blazy complimented the star on “carving a unique path for herself” as well as ”her laugh and smile.” Edebiri, in turn, said the designer has a “wonderful energy” that “really does matter. When you’re doing anything creative in nature, you don’t realize how much your energy is up for grabs.”

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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(Credit: Durrell Hospedale MAKE WONDERS, IG @makewondersworldwide)
Music

Fueling the Tank – SPIN

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Walking up to DJ Jazzy Jeff’s Delaware home, it’s nearly impossible not to recall a scene in the “Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” where his character, Jazz, gets tossed out of Uncle Phil’s house—by Uncle Phil. More than three decades have passed since the beloved ’90s sitcom’s debut and in that time, Jazzy Jeff has established himself as a leader in the hip-hop community with not just his esteemed career and Grammy Award-winning classics but also his Playlist Retreat. 

Established in 2015, the private, invite-only event brings together both established and up-and-coming producers, DJs, emcees, and other creatives for five days of community building. The vast property allows for a gaggle of artist trailers, outdoor hubs for sponsors like Pioneer, Splice, Roland, TIDAL, and Ableton as well as two large tents for catered meals and discussion panels. Despite intermittent rain, everyone appears to be in good spirits. 

Outside, Skratch Bastid shoots hoops, drummer Daru Jones lines up for a catered lunch, De La Soul’s Maseo mans the 1s and 2s, Mannie Fresh speeds by in a golf cart, and Kool DJ Red Alert stops for photos, while Jazzy Jeff’s wife and Playlist Retreat co-founder, Lynette C. Townes, runs around making sure everyone is taken care of. It’s almost surreal. For anyone who’s immersed in hip-hop culture—and music, in general—the word “heaven” might come to mind. 

(Credit: Durrell Hospedale MAKE WONDERS, IG @makewondersworldwide)

On September 24, the day the world was supposedly coming to an end (Google “Rapture 2025” for a good laugh), the first panel of the day kicked off shortly after 2:00 p.m. Titled “Dope Sets, Detours, Dead Ends and Navigating What’s Next,” it featured panelists DJ Jazzy Jeff (real name, Jeff Townes), Natasha Diggs, and Aktive, who dove headfirst into how their careers were affected by the pandemic and how they were forced to pivot when live shows simply weren’t a thing. 

A producers panel found DJ Premier, Jimmy Jam (of famed production duo Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis), No I.D., and Don Cannon swapping stories about memorable moments from their careers, including the time Public Enemy’s Flavor Flav told DJ Premier’s father he had “super sperm.”

The “A.I.W.T.F.2” panel (a very polite way of saying “A.I. What the Fuck”) boasted JAY-Z’s longtime engineer and producer Young Guru, Mark Thomas (Splice’s vice president of product marketing), the Recording Industry Association of America’s Dr. Moiya McTier (an actual astrophysicist), and a virtual appearance by Paul McCabe, Roland’s senior vice president of research and innovation. 

Young Guru, dressed in a white T-shirt with a pink crewneck loosely draped around his shoulders, spoke passionately about his contrarian views on AI, calling it a “buzzword.” He brought up Timbaland, who controversially launched an AI company in June, as he bantered back and forth with members of the audience about the dangers of AI, inadvertently illustrating what the Playlist Retreat is all about: community. The ability to have spirited conversations without judgement. A place to let your guard down and strip away egos. A chance to unwind, have a few laughs with like-minded people who are just as exhilarated about connecting as you are. A way to de-stress.

DJ Mell Starr. (Credit: Durrell Hospedale MAKE WONDERS (IG @makewondersworldwide)
DJ Mell Starr. (Credit: Durrell Hospedale MAKE WONDERS, IG @makewondersworldwide)

For Jazzy Jeff, that was one of the initial intentions behind the Playlist Retreat. Attention to mental health is an integral component to the entire event. Each morning, the Playlist Retreat “Sweat Captain,” Jacy Cunningham, provided early birds with a “wellness reset,” which included cold plunges, fitness classes, and meditation sessions. Having the bandwidth to really get into meaningful conversations was also paramount to its success. 

“I feel like our job is to give joy through what we do to everybody in the world,” Jazzy Jeff told SPIN from his living room. “What I started to realize just from going out on the road and bumping into artists like Maseo, it’s all surface-level conversations because we don’t have enough time. When you spend three, four, five days together, the conversation starts to change into therapy conversations. 

“I wanted to figure out a way to get us all together for therapy, for healing, for creative energy. I look at it like we are the gas and we want to fill your tank. You can go service all the people in the world and when your gas tank gets a little low, hopefully it’s retreat time again and you can come back and fill up the tank.”

The closing night of the retreat saw it all come into focus. Toward the beginning of the week, creatives were split into 20 teams, chosen by Jazzy Jeff, for the Playlist Challenge. Each team was given a mere 12 hours to write, execute, and record a two-minute (or less) song, not knowing who their collaborators would be. Once the teams were laid out, with names like Ben & Jerry, Fish & Chips, Boom Bap, and Needles & Thread, some stayed up into the wee hours of the morning finishing their compositions. No sleep—just pure grit and determination. 

DJ Perly, a member of the Bread & Butter team, stayed up until 6:00 a.m. trying to hit the deadline. The Bronx-born turntablist and first woman to win the DMC US Finals DJ Battle marveled at the dedication of those involved. 

Jazzy Jeff, center, with his wife Lynette Townes, to his right. (Credit: Durrell Hospedale MAKE WONDERS (IG @makewondersworldwide)
Jazzy Jeff, center, with his wife Lynette Townes, to his right. (Credit: Durrell Hospedale MAKE WONDERS, IG @makewondersworldwide)

“I’m really proud of everyone and what we all created in such a short time,” she says. “I’m truly inspired by everyone’s musical gifts and talent. The whole experience is an incredible whirlwind of memories and moments in such a short amount of time. I already feel a little homesick being away from the retreat.” 

Jazzy Jeff admitted he wanted the songwriting challenge to be “slightly uncomfortable.” 

“The Challenge is one of those things where I’m trying to get creatives out of their own heads,” he explained. “You have all of that [creativity] inside, but you haven’t used those things in so long because you’ve been in a comfort zone. I want you to tap into your potential and when you hear the end result, you realize like, ‘Oh man, I had that in me all along.’” 

As everyone gathered under the tent for the big reveal, the excitement in the air was palpable. People applauded, cheered, and danced to the eclectic rhythms and sounds blaring from the speakers as each song played. It was transcendent for the participants and the people hearing the music for the first time. With that, the conversations around collaboration, creativity, and celebration carried on well into the night. 

(Credit: Durrell Hospedale MAKE WONDERS, IG @makewondersworldwide)

The following morning, as cleanup began, several attendees waited for their rides to the airport. In the kitchen, Maseo and the Roots’ Stro Elliot dined on waffles and eggs (OK, and maybe a cupcake or two), the Beat Junkies’ DJ Shortkut made his way to the shuttle while saying his goodbyes, and Lynette worked with the Playlist staff to return the house to normalcy. 

It will be months before Jeff can fully digest what transpired at this year’s retreat. From an outsider’s perspective, it was seamless. Jeff, Lynette, Playlist Chief of Staff Dayne Jordan, the Playlist organizers, Siempre Security, Dana Herbert of Desserts by Dana, vegan chef Lisa Smith and even the family dog Champ, whose whole body wiggled when he wagged his tail, made the retreat feel like a second home. 

“Over time, you start to get a reminder of how special all of this stuff is,” Jeff concludes. “So much is happening at the same time, you’re never going to see everything, but what you do see is amazing.” 
(We are happy to report SPIN did not get thrown out of Jazzy Jeff’s home—even though we kinda wanted to for comedic value.)

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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GIVE ME A KISSA - SPIN
Music

GIVE ME A KISSA – SPIN

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

“Ride this train to Roseburg, Oregon,” says Johnny Cash in his gravelly intro to “Lumberjack,” the third track of his 1960 concept album, Ride This Train. Over the blare of a rail whistle, Cash continues: “Now there’s a town for you — and you talk about rough.”

Rough this southern Oregon town still can be, and unashamedly redneck with flotillas of pick-up trucks routinely lifted high enough for drivers to slam dunk a basketball merely by reaching out the window. Gun sellers outnumber bookstores at least 10 to 1 (and that’s a used bookstore).

So imagine my surprise finding a sake and record bar. Japanese rice wine and new vinyl albums here? 

Yes! Long and slim, lined with framed music photography and album racks jam-packed with collectors’ wet dreams, Reverie Record Shop is a corridor drawing the wanderer away from SE Jackson St. and, at the rear, sake (the fridge stocks a dozen varieties), coffee, craft beer on tap, easy chairs and an ever-spinning, lamp-lit, VPI Aries turntable.

Newcomers may wonder if this is a serious business or money-laundering exercise. It’s legit and in the black, declare owners Michelle and Albert, refugees from LA. 

Migraine-free since the switch to sake, says Michelle pictured here with Albert, at Reverie in Roseburg. (Photo by Sierra and Isaiah Miller)

“All you have out here are bars,” says Albert. “Like bars. And not everybody’s into bars.” Albert means the ubiquitous dive bars, Roseburg police-log perennials like the Idle Hour, the Scoreboard, and Rumors. “And there was no dedicated record store here in Roseburg, so we decided to merge the two,” with coffee thrown in, Italian style: strong and straight with no bullshit syrups. 

“The idea really came from the Japanese kissa bars,” he says. “After World War II, it was not easy to find hi-fi systems, so these kissa bars started where people could go listen to jazz on good systems with good speakers. Things changed in the ‘70s when vinyl was more accessible, but these bars have a pretty big spot in Japanese culture.”

Is the sake out of a respect for tradition? Not exactly. “I love wine,” Michelle says, “but it gives me migraines. Doesn’t matter if I drink a glass or a bottle — major migraines. We started diving into sake to check it out: no migraines.”
So they threw together all the stuff they like — booze, coffee, and music (on vinyl, “the way God intended,” says Albert) — and found that plenty enough folks wanted a kissa.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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