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Can't ask for more: Jaideep on starting year with 'Pataal Lok 2' and ending with 'The Family Man 3'
Bollywood

Can’t ask for more: Jaideep on starting year with ‘Pataal Lok 2’ and ending with ‘The Family Man 3’

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Mumbai, Actor Jaideep Ahlawat on Friday said he feels grateful to be part of the upcoming third season of Prime Video’s hit series “The Family Man”, calling it a homecoming of sorts after the success of his earlier show “Paatal Lok” on the same platform.

Can’t ask for more: Jaideep on starting year with ‘Pataal Lok 2’ and ending with ‘The Family Man 3’

Ahlawat joins the new season of “The Family Man” as one of the main antagonists opposite Manoj Bajpayee’s Srikant Tiwari in the espionage thriller created by Raj Nidimoru and Krishna DK.

“I’m really grateful to Raj and DK. My home, Prime Video — what more can anybody ask for? Starting this year with ‘Paatal Lok ’, and ending with ‘The Family Man’, also working with the one and only Manoj bhai, I can’t ask for more,” the 45-year-old actor said at the trailer launch event here.

In the third season of “The Family Man”, Ahlawat plays the role of the villain Rukma, alongside actor Nimrat Kaur.

The actor, who won critical praise for his portrayal of police officer Hathiram Chaudhary in “Paatal Lok”, said it was up to the makers of “The Family Man” to ensure audiences saw Rukma as a distinct character.

“It’s their responsibility to separate Hathiram from me. The character is designed by Raj and DK…. Rukma is ruthless and carefree towards life while Hathiram is not even close. It was an exciting thing in Rukma . And the entire team who knows the show, arc and style of the character helped a lot to play Rukma,” he said.

Ahlawat praised the show’s lead star Bajpayee, saying the actor inspires him every day.

“It was a wonderful experience to observe him prepare on set. I’m sure many filmmakers and actors know this… It was the biggest inspiration,” he added.

“The Family Man” season three will see Bajpayee’s spy character of Srikant Tiwari turn fugitive as he goes on the run with his family, hunted by both formidable new enemies and his own agency, while racing against time to avert a looming national crisis.

Kaur, known for films such as “The Lunchbox” and “Airlift”, said playing the villainous character of Meera was fun.

“There’s nothing more fun than playing a villain and you won’t get to go to jail for it. That’s the best part. You can do whatever you want in their universe. You can really do what you want and get away with murder, plotting and have a great wardrobe while you do it in high heels with flamboyance and sex appeal. Meera is all about that. I find her to be evil but in couture. It’s a girl’s dream,” she said.

The 43-year-old actor said being part of “The Family Man” was on her bucket list and described working on the show as a thrilling experience for her as an actor.

“Sometimes when you see certain actors and certain characters on screen, it feels like what will happen next and then to be a part of that story, it’s really the biggest, most thrilling experience as an actor. So, it feels great,” she said.

Season three of “The Family Man” will also bring back Sharib Hashmi, Priyamani, Ashlesha Thakur, Vedant Sinha, Shreya Dhanwanthary, and Gul Panag.

The show is produced by Raj & DK’s banner D2R Films and slated to premiere on Prime Video on November 21.

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

November 7, 2025 0 comments
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What’s the future of AI and music? Things may be starting to become clear - National
Celebrity News

What’s the future of AI and music? Things may be starting to become clear – National

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Every September, leading up to the Formula One race, Singapore hosts a conference called All That Matters. Thinkers, creators, and entrepreneurs from all over Asia gather to talk about the latest developments in sports, tech, marketing, gaming and music. I try to go every year, because in many aspects, Asia is already living in the future. (Actually, that’s incorrect. They’re living in the present; it’s parts of the West that are clinging to the past. But I digress.)

Artificial intelligence was front and centre for many of the sessions, especially those dealing with music. There was much discussion about how AI will factor into things like music creation, music distribution and copyright. I took notes.

The internet is changing again

The internet we’ve been used to is once again changing rapidly. The browser wars are back, too, thanks to searches turbocharged by AI. I’ve been trying out Comet, a brand-new browser from the people behind the AI program Perplexity. It still has some rough edges, but I can see myself liking it better and using it more than Google. Then again, Google has its own AI in the form of Gemini, which has been going up against Microsoft’s Co-Pilot.

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How AI assisted The Beatles and the impact it has on the music industry


Music-creating AI programs are about to have a moment

The last quarter century has been about changes in consumption: CDs to MP3s to piracy to streaming, with a detour back into vinyl. The next decade will see major shifts in creation. Ignore and disparage that all you want, but it’s going to happen.

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When it comes to artificial music creation, the big players are Suno and Anthropic, two generative AI programs that keep getting better when it comes to making music based on user prompts. Although both are deep in litigation with rightsholders and labels, expect licensing deals to be hammered out with the major labels sooner rather than later. This means more human-created music will be used to feed the models behind AI programs. By this time next year, these programs will be able to analyze trillions of data points when responding to prompts. More data points means (theoretically) more realistic and — this is key — emotional music. Predictions are that this will set off a new era for the recorded music industry.

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One way that will happen is a simplification of user interfaces. One of the biggest problems with any computer program is learning how to use it. Today, the thinking is the less user interface (UI), the better. We’re approaching a situation where the programs will say, “Just tell me what to do and I’ll do it by pulling all the tools that exist in the cloud.” Already, we have programs that will return produced music if you just hum an idea into it.

But what about artists?


The bulls outweighed the bears on this one. Here’s how AI might benefit musicians very soon.

  • With AI, fans will have a chance to collaborate more directly with artists, contributing directly to intellectual property. They’ll be involved in “world-building,” the creation and execution of an artist’s vision, which might lead to monetization for fans. In other words, fans will co-create new material with their favourite musicians. Up until now, fans have invested a lot of money in artists. New tech will allow artists to give something back to the fans.
  • Artists should — should! — benefit from the negotiations between labels and publishers and generative AI companies. This will be a new form of licensing that could — could! — be more lucrative and longer-lasting than the revenue derived from streaming.
  • On that note, indie and emerging artists may be the ones to benefit the most.
  • The music being fed into these models is from all over the world. Artists who learn to use AI as a music creation tool will have access to many, many more influences than they do today. They’ll all be stored in the AI models, waiting to be used.
  • AI will allow the number of people who create music to explode even further. In Mozart’s day, perhaps 50,000 people were actively and regularly making music. Estimates today say the number is over 100 million. With AI, even more people will be able to. Not all of it will be good or deserve to be heard, but new stars will be minted.
  • The cost of making music will drop further, even approaching zero.
  • And what about this: Could the rise of AI music accelerate and increase the value of music created by humans?

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Awfully rosy. What about the downsides?

Whenever any kind of promising technology comes along, there has always been a segment of humanity that will drag it down to its lowest common denominator. (Hello, social media!) There will also be knock-on effects. For example, if generative AI programs blow up the way they’re expected to, what happens to real-life musical instruments and the people who make them? What happens to traditional recording studios and the people who staff and equip them? Will people of the future bother to learn to play a traditional instrument by putting in 10,000 hours of practice?

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There’s more. How will copyright be divided up? What about unintentional duplication, imitation or derivations of existing works? Is AI training fair use under current law? What about data privacy?

When music starts flooding out — maybe billions of new works a year — how will anyone ever discover new music? How will any artist of the future have a hope of being found? If we have billions of new songs every year thanks to AI, is it possible that highly average music will dominate the future? What happens 20 to 50 years from now when AI is indistinguishable from human intelligence?

And what about the current record label system? Is it ethical to sign an AI artist to a recording contract? (SPOILER: It’s already happening. Heard of Xania Monet yet?)

Everyone at the conference agreed that there are still more questions than answers when it comes to AI and music. But they also agree that this space is moving fast. Ignore it at your peril.

 

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October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Events

Innovations, international partnerships, and new event formats – the Future of Festivals 2025 is in the starting blocks!

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Anticipation is running high for the upcoming edition on Thursday, November 27, and Friday, November 28, 2025, at STATION Berlin (Luckenwalder Str. 4-6, 10963 Berlin). The new location means a move to larger and more spacious halls and represents another milestone for the leading industry event of the European festival and event industry. With 8,000 visitors expected from over 30 countries, Future of Festivals is heading for a new attendance record.

Exhibition space doubled with international diversity

Demand is overwhelming, and the exhibition area is almost fully booked. With 12,000 square meters of exhibition space spread across four halls, plus additional space in foyers and studios, the new venue offers twice as much space as before. Around 350 exhibitors from all over Europe and the world will be presenting their innovative solutions, ranging from sustainable event technology and security solutions to digital tools for festival management. Well-known international companies such as AirDD (USA), Blytz (Italy), AMENA Smart Displays (Slovakia), The Event Flag Hire Company (UK), and Consel Group (Switzerland) will be represented, as will German companies including Air Decor, Silutions GmbH, Stageventure, and festivals such as Wacken, which will also be exhibiting. A special highlight are the international pavilions: in addition to the Dutch Pavilion (presented by the Dutch Embassy & Innofest) of this year’s partner country with a focus on “Collaborate and Innovate,” a Belgian and a British joint stand will be represented for the first time.

“The lineup of exhibitors at Future of Festivals has never been as innovative as this year, with numerous start-ups and scale-ups. This shows that the event industry is constantly evolving and remains stable despite crises,” says CEO Robert Stolt.

International speaker program

The speaker program for Future of Festivals 2025 is complete and is more international and top-class than ever before. Experts from Europe, Asia, and especially the Netherlands will provide insights into current developments and future trends. With over 150 experts from around the world, this year’s program offers interesting insights into the globally grown festival and event industry. Renowned personalities such as Holger Hübner (Wacken Open Air), Anouk Winant (Tomorrowland), Tomasz Loeffen (Sziget Festival), Vivian Belzaguy Hunter (Ultra Music Festival), Omar Agha (MDLBEAST), Anna van Nunen (ESNS), John Rostron (Association of Independent Festivals), and many more will share their visions on trends, sustainable solutions, and the challenges facing the industry.

Networking reimagined: Delegates Database and interactive formats

This year, there will once again be a Delegates Database, which is already online and enables participants to make targeted contacts and plan meetings, which is a real game-changer for networking on site. At the trade fair itself, a 360-degree theater and a roundtable expand the program with interactive discussion and exchange formats that create space for in-depth conversations and new collaborations.

Promoting independent festivals

Future of Festivals is inviting smaller and independent festivals to a special delegate trip to promote their diversity. The aim is to present them with practical and affordable solutions during guided start-up tours that are suitable for a wide range of event sizes and highlight their special position as drivers of change.

Ticket sales are now open!

Ticket sales for Future of Festivals 2025 have already started. Tickets are available here: https://futureoffestivals2025.reservix.de/events

October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Alia Bhatt
Bollywood

Vedang Raina and Sharvari Seek Blessings at Golden Temple Before Starting Imtiaz Ali’s Next

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Vedang Raina and Sharvari are all set to star in Imtiaz Ali’s upcoming directorial project. The film has already started generating excitement among fans, and netizens are eager to learn more. Recently, Vedang shared pictures from the Golden Temple in Amritsar, where he and Sharvari were seen seeking blessings. The shooting of the film has officially begun and will also feature Diljit Dosanjh and Naseeruddin Shah in supporting roles.


Vedang took to Instagram to share several pictures from the sets of Imtiaz Ali’s next. He captioned the post “Asking for strength and blessings to show up better every day. All in and surrendered to begin this next chapter of my life and ready for whatever it takes from me and gives to me. Grateful to be a part of this special film and privileged to be working with the most amazing and talented set of people @imtiazaliofficial @naseeruddin49 @diljitdosanjh @sharvari Sukh aur Shanti.”

In one of the photos, Vedang is seen wearing a white kurta paired with blue jeans, his head covered with an orange cloth featuring the Khanda symbol. Another picture shows Sharvari sitting beside him as the duo seeks blessings at the Golden Temple. Fans are excited to see them together in this spiritual and auspicious moment before the film shoot.

 

Another image features a clapboard, signalling the start of filming. The title of the movie is yet to be announced, but Diljit Dosanjh and Naseeruddin Shah are expected to join Vedang and Sharvari on set soon. 

On the Professional front, Vedang Raina was last seen in Jigra alongside Alia Bhatt, a performance that was well-received, while Sharvari’s previous film Munjya was a box office hit. She will next be seen in YRF’s Alpha with Alia Bhatt.

Also Read: Exclusive: “I Never Feel The Need to Pretend; That’s Confidence for Me” – Vedang Raina

October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Affordable Cashmere Dupes Starting at $20
Celebrity News

Affordable Cashmere Dupes Starting at $20

by jummy84 October 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Pumpkin spice is cute, but the real reason I’m welcoming fall? Cozy sweaters, obviously.

Nothing screams autumn like knitwear that feels just as soft as cashmere, but for a fraction of the price. And right now, Amazon has a dreamy lineup of cashmere-like staples on sale ahead of Amazon Prime Big Deal Days, with prices starting at just $20.

From chunky cardigans to polished pullovers and snuggly turtlenecks, these picks are giving quiet luxury without the splurge. With some real cashmere options from editor-approved brand, Naadam, and other dupes that feel like the real thing (we swear), you’ll want to load up before the best sizes vanish.

Consider this your sign to stock up now, because once temps drop, these affordable finds won’t stick around long.

October 2, 2025 0 comments
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The Starting Line. (Credit: Lupe Bustos)
Music

The Eternal Youth of the Starting Line

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Ken Vasoli connects with Taijuan Walker.

A lot of Phillies fans, including plenty in the crowd around us at Citizens Bank Park, don’t have much faith in him as one of the starting pitchers in a team with World Series aspirations in the business end of the season. Walker’s having a tough night so far. It’s the first inning and he’s already given up three runs, and he doesn’t seem to be in control.

Vasoli, though, isn’t worried. Taijuan Walker is a man after his own heart, he feels.

“He’s an underdog,” he says over the crowd noise. We love an underdog.

Walker escapes the inning to smatterings of equal parts relieved (or sarcastic) applause and dissatisfied grumbles. Sitting just a few rows off the field at Citizens Bank Park, though, Vasoli eagerly applauds Walker with each pitch, hoping his enthusiasm cuts through the tens of thousands of other fans who aren’t so impressed with the start to Walker’s evening. We’re sitting close enough that Walker might actually hear us, and Vasoli is genuine in his pursuit to gas him up before he comes back out for the second. Maybe it’s the frontman gene. He sees Walker is losing the crowd and comes to the rescue.

He’s all in on baseball these days. He’s been shown the light by his Starting Line bandmate of more than two decades, keyboardist Brian Schmutz. Schmutz, stoically analyzing the early innings, is a long-time dedicated baseball fan—the kind who dives into stats and says things like, “He dominates lefties” seconds before a big hit off a lefty. Dude knows the game. 

They’ve even been going to some games on off days during the tour, but they agree that the crack of the bat and pop of the catcher’s mitt hit different when you’re sitting this close. We joke about ways they can incorporate baseball into their live show. As Phillies second baseman Bryson Stott comes up to the plate, we discuss the merits of his walk-up song, “AOK” by Tai Verdes, which is now a cherished group sing-along moment for the crowd. We decide it’s a song we’d never choose to listen to on its own, but in this context, surrounded by this much excitement, it rocks. The topic of walk-up music comes up, and we consider what we’d use for ourselves. I remind them that they already do get walk-up music every night when they take the stage. I’m the only one who has to pretend here.

Ken Vasoli of the Starting Line. (Credit:Lupe Bustos)Ken Vasoli of the Starting Line. (Credit:Lupe Bustos)
Ken Vasoli of the Starting Line. (Credit: Lupe Bustos)

I ask them both, as guys in their 40s, whether sports fandom makes them feel old—-like when announcers say things about how a guy in his early-to-mid 30s is on the other side of his career. Maybe he has one more big contract in him, or maybe his speed or strength has left him and he’ll soon be put out to pasture.

Vasoli says no. Instead, he looks at guys like Phillies 40-year-old relief pitcher David Robertson for inspiration, once again finding parallels to his own life in this team’s bullpen.

There’s no age limit to chasing your dreams and achieving greatness, Vasoli believes.

Vasoli and the Starting Line believe in Eternal Youth.

Pop punk is not a genre that lends itself to growing up. It’s a world of arrested development. And, even as the fans and bands do age with time, the genre’s money-making apparatus is hellbent on selling the ideal past, the beautiful halcyon years, through things like nostalgia festivals and anniversary tours, freezing us all in a place in time, begging us to forget our wrinkles and graying hair and aching backs. 

With Eternal Youth, the Starting Line’s first album in almost two decades, the band is firmly looking toward the future rather than its past.

This is something of a novelty in their genre. The relatively few bands that have decades-long careers in pop punk or emo often return to the same wells of inspiration that they did as teenagers, to severely diminishing returns. It’s just not the same to hear a guy sing about getting out of this town for that long, to say nothing about grown men singing about puppy love into their 40s.

There are a few reasons why the album escapes the pitfalls that so many of the Starting Line’s contemporaries fell into. Perhaps at the top of the list is the fact that the Starting Line weren’t itching for any attention. Nor were they insecure about their profile in the scene or whatever disappearing if they weren’t constantly putting out albums on a steady clip. In fact, they were pretty sure they were done putting out albums altogether.

“We kind of had a master plan to ride off into the sunset doing more 7-inchess, maybe three, four songs at a time, ’cause it seemed like an attainable goal,” Vasoli says. “If people were going to be holding down jobs in the in-between, it seemed like a realistic way to approach it.”

(Credit: Lupe Bustos)

The Starting Line hasn’t put out a full-length album since 2007’s Direction. 2007 was a very different time for the genre and for the members of the band. They were younger, the industry hadn’t been fully nuked by the streaming era (and the Napster days seem quaint to think about now), Warped Tour was still going strong, the entire marketing of an album was miles away from what it is now, and cellphones looked different. But the band hadn’t gone fully dormant in the interim. They still played live regularly, including their annual holiday show, usually in Philly.

They still played together, they still wrote songs, and they still felt the urge to release them in some way. The plan just didn’t include an album at the time.

“We were talking to people, and in a conversation with a guy who turned out to be our current manager, I kind of told him the plan about the 7-inches,” Vasoli remembers. “He said simply, ‘You can do that, and I think you should do that if you want to, but you’re going to have a better chance of people hearing your music if you make a full length,’ which was really sound advice to me.”

Vasoli, still, was a little hesitant, given the fact that he’s been in this world for so long and has seen both his contemporaries and his heroes fall flat on late-career albums, especially ones that came after a lengthy hiatus.

“When I expressed to our now-manager, Tim, that I was hesitant to make a full length because I was scared it was going to be an effort of diminishing returns, because a lot of the bands that came from our era that are putting out some records in this day and age and are coming back to it, I’ve been a little let down personally as a fan,” Vasoli says. “I didn’t want to fall into that. I didn’t want to tarnish our reputation by doing something like that. I also was ultimately scared people didn’t care. People wouldn’t have interest in it.”

I offer that their year-after-year performances to large crowds at their holiday show is a good enough indicator. He tells me that their manager chose his words differently when it came time to light a fire under the band.

“He just said one sentence: ‘I think that’s your insecurity talking,’” Vasoli says. “And that was a big thing for me to have a mirror to. Yeah, it probably is just insecurity.”

(Credit: Lupe Bustos)

Vasoli pauses as Walker gives up a home run. The vibes at Citizens Bank Park on this absolutely beautiful early September evening are turning putrid. It’s not even just boos, it’s the quiet that gets you more than anything. A stadium known for being a deafening fortress shouldn’t be this quiet. The city known for its appreciation for the underdog isn’t doing a lot of appreciating at the moment. 

“It’s not too dissimilar to how yesterday’s started,” Vasoli says, referencing the night prior when the Phils came back from an early 4-0 deficit to the dreaded, evil, pathetic New York Mets. “It’s gonna be OK.” 

That last line sounds like he’s talking about the mental hurdles he and the band had to overcome to decide on releasing their new music as an album rather than EP drops here and there. It made for a perfect segue that I’m not sure he made consciously.

“It was reverse psychology when he said that,” Vasoli says. “I was like, ‘Yeah, I’m as secure as they come. I know that I can write the best songs that I can now more than ever. I feel like I have experience on my side.’ […] That one sentence really blew my mind. A big thing is knowing bedside manner and how to talk to me, and how to talk me into things. And that’s a good way to do it, just call me insecure. That’ll be a good way to get an album out of me.”

Schmutz chimes in that they felt like they could stand up to the challenge of creating something larger than they originally planned on. The process went from scary to exciting, now buoyed by their own experience and trust in each other. Also, there was a wealth of new influences to draw from in the greater punk rock ecosystem since their last record came out. 

Songs like “Blame” show the influence of albums like Hyperview by Title Fight, whom Vasoli cites directly as a band that really blew up during TSL’s hiatus that he now has the fortune of using for his own inspiration. “Blame” is a rush of driving eighth note downstrokes and screams, with Vasoli pushing his vocal chords to their brutal, exasperated limits in the moment, but with pretty twinkles of Schmutz’s keys weaving in with the distortion. To use a word I’d sworn I’d never use in music writing, it’s pretty lush.

That one gives way to the danceable second single “Circulate,” name-dropping bands like Murphy’s Law, and after a few stutter steps of a pre-chorus and subtle layering, “Circulate” opens up to one of the album’s most gratifying moments. With each lap around the verse and chorus, the song learns and improves upon itself until the free-for-all bridge and final chorus, which by now we’re all screaming and drumming along, even if we’re just on the bus. 

And with its shimmering bass groove, the title track feels like it could be an adaptation of something Vasoli came up with while working on his Vacationer indie-poppier project, which he did during the Starting Line’s quieter years, giving his ears and brain a break from punk in favor of often headier genres like jazz.

Then, just when you think you’re in for a slow dance for “Curveball,” the track makes good on its name and ends with a very mosh-pit ready double-time crescendo. 

Eternal Youth, as an album from a band that has been around for a long time, has a lot of dignity to it. It’s loud when it needs to be loud, it’s reflective when it needs to be reflective. It doesn’t simply rehash or re-establish the band’s presence. It pushes the genre into where it seems like it should go in 2025. Eternal Youth shows what a punk band of any age or pedigree can do with a clear vision and the confidence to swing away.

Most importantly, it’s not cringe.

“I think the easiest way to answer that is that we have a philosophy, whether it’s spoken or not, where we just try to avoid anything cringe and anything embarrassing within the band,” Vasoli says. “I think that’s an overall mission statement for the band: Try not to embarrass ourselves, try not to embarrass the band. And I think a large part of acting your age when making music is to not revert back to movements that you made when you made the first record.”

It’s an album made by men of a certain age for men of a certain age, to some extent. And it was an album made without the imposing presence of any major label pushing the songwriting in any particular direction, having been through the Geffen and Virgin Records ringers.

Now with a smaller operation from the business perspective but with the ironclad trust of it being the same gang it’s always been from the music perspective, the band relied on their own tastes and instincts. If it was good enough for them, it was good enough.

“I think just trusting in ourselves to make a record that we’ll like ourselves—that’s really what it is—-if the five of us like it,” Schmutz says. “We can be our own gatekeepers on ideas and stuff. If it gets through the five of us, it must be pretty fucking good.”

They certainly feel that it is, in fact, pretty fucking good. It fits in snugly with the other more commercial and trendy punk rock of today, without some of the highly curated visual elements or merch collaborations.

“It was very easy to focus on, ‘What’s going to make us happy? What’s going to sound good to us?’” Schmutz says. “We don’t have to get through any goalies to get it out to people.”

Maybe he meant to say “infielders” rather than “goalies,” but I don’t correct him.

By this point in the night, the Phillies bats have started working and the score now looks very different. With every player reaching second base, the three of us send back the team’s inside-joke hand gesture they’ve been doing all season, (the meaning of which we have no idea) as if they’re doing it to us, rather than the dugout. Nick Castellanos, the lone Phillies player who is thanked by name on the liner notes of the album by Vasoli (again for his gritty underdog spirit) is now in the game, to Vasoli’s delight. The sold-out crowd has gotten excited again. We’re now basically yelling to do an interview and we’re sitting right next to each other. I will at least be hoarse by the end of the game. Vasoli, who had practiced singing with his “whole chest” for Eternal Youth, fares a little better. At one point I catch Vasoli say to me, or Schmutz, or just to himself, “I love this town.” It is, after all, the town that shows up for them year after year, even before the promise of new music.

I ask them, on the record, “Is it the year?” I’m referring, of course, to the Phillies and their World Series chances, and they both emphatically tell me that, yes, it is the year. But their answers could very much be about the band. 

It’s certainly gearing up to be a huge year for Vasoli, who found out he was going to be a father after he and his wife returned from Mexico City, where the album artwork photoshoot took place.

“We had no idea that our baby girl was there with us as we were shooting this album cover and doing these videos and stuff,” he says. “It’s crazy looking at the album cover now and knowing that Eternal Youth has this whole new meaning.”

By now it’s the eighth inning and the Phillies are leading comfortably. After a few pitching changes, we’re now watching Robertson like Vasoli had hoped we would. Robertson is only a year younger than Vasoli, so it gives Vasoli hope that he can achieve some great height that he hasn’t met yet. At 41, Vasoli’s far from finished. Why can’t he and the band keep going? Who’s to say they’ve peaked? That’s silly. They’re already working on the next one.

New life is at the heart of Eternal Youth. It’s the product of a band that had every intention of putting their foot to the brake and steering toward the exit ramp, but at the last minute decided to floor it back onto the highway and drive somewhere new. There’s plenty of gas in the tank, so why stop now? Ride the momentum.

“The future feels very bright,” Schmutz says, as we start to file out from our seats, slightly hoarse and exhilarated, the ballpark speakers blasting Harry Kalas’s version of Frank Sinatra’s “High Hopes” all around us. The grounds crew is out raking the infield, the staff is making their way through the aisles to shepherd people out of the ballpark as they clean up empty hot dog cartons and peanut shells underfoot. All’s right with the world, or at least in this corner of South Philly.

Of course the future feels bright. It’s the year. Maybe next year will be, too.

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Ken Vasoli of the Starting Line. (Credit:Lupe Bustos)
Music

5 Albums I Can’t Live Without: Ken Vasoli of the Starting Line

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Name  Ken Vasoli of the Starting Line

Best known for  Lifer song and dance man. Simultaneous professional bass player/semi-professional singer. Bleached hair 1999-2003.

Current city  Philadelphia, PA.

Really want to be in  I wouldn’t mind retiring in El Pescadero, Mexico. I would enjoy beach life with the family. Great eating and surfing, perhaps improving my skills at the latter.  

Excited about  First baby due in November! First TSL album in 18 years coming out in September, Eternal Youth on our own label Lineage Recordings. Our first headline tour in 17 years is pounding the pavement in a few weeks as I write this. Big year!

Bob Dylan in 1965. (Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images)

My current music collection has a lot of  My record shelves hold quite a large selection of instrumental albums. Anywhere from instrumental hip-hop, electronic, jazz to experimental, Italian soundtracks, library records, and everywhere in between. I’m not sure exactly why I gravitate to these kinds of albums, but I do enjoy the aspect of no meanings being assigned to the songs through traditional lyric delivery. It allows the music to tell its own story and control the momentum solely with mood and texture. Plenty of unexpected gems to be found in this territory of record digging.

And a little bit of  I keep a healthy supply of soul records in house. I adore Curtis Mayfield and Barry White, both amazing songwriters and impressive producers. I collected quite a few of their records over the years, especially ‘70s Barry. They are easy LPs to find and consistently hit VERY hard. 

Preferred format  Vinyl is my preferred method of listening. I love the ritual of putting on a record and cooking or simply relaxing in the living room as it spins, it’s hard to beat that experience. If I’m driving, running, or walking, streaming has forced my hand, but I’m not proud of it. 

5 Albums I Can’t Live Without:

1

Clinging to a Scheme, The Radio Dept.

The Radio Dept. and this record in particular delivers a flawless and delightful example of understated melodic brilliance. There is nothing to skip here, it’s a shimmering gem front to back. The elevator pitch would be to call this a lo-fi pop record, but that description really undersells the delicate perfection in TRD’s songwriting. The music on Clinging to a Scheme is minimal but measured so perfectly. The drums are all programmed or looped on relatively rudimentary sounding equipment, while the clean guitars, warm keys, and calming vocals float and fold into the sequences with tact and humble nuance. The lyrics are flawlessly penned with lines that read both sensitive and profoundly bold.  As a bass player, I LOVE how much the lines play into the upper register of the neck and also get doused in a slick spring reverb from time to time. I play this album and am able to instantly conjure a memory of riding my bike on a hot day in 2010, bombing down an empty hill feeling the wind cool my skin and pure bliss while these songs filled my ears. A perfect moment.

Funny story! A few years after I fell in love with this album I played some festival shows in Australia alongside another favorite band of mine, Millencolin. One night at a fest after-party, I saw the singer of Millencolin standing next right outside the bar. I felt bold and introduced myself as a fellow musician and longtime fan. We engaged in small chit chat. I knew that Millencolin were from Sweden, so I had excitedly asked him if he listened to the Radio Dept. (also from Sweden and have been at it for quite some time). Do you know what he said??? “…No.” That conversation pretty much wrapped up then and there. 

2

Some Kind of Cadwallader, Algernon Cadwallader

I’m realizing through this exercise that I achieve different benefits from specific records that I favor in the collection, this one in particular delivers a sure shot, supercharged dose of happiness to my dopamine receptors. Algernon has always impressed me since the get-go. Full disclosure, they happen to be friends and from the neighborhood, but that plays zero part in securing this coveted No. 2 spot. Just a solid bonus! I’ve had the pleasure of seeing Algernon Cadwallader perform everywhere from Gazebos and VFWs to the finest Philadelphia stages over the years. They have always struck me as one of the most uniquely original modern punk bands of my generation, not just locally but globally! These guys are undisputed trendsetters. I hear their influence in countless bands who came to follow. They nail this signature combination of glass sharp dueling guitar tones and heady rhythms juxtaposing one of the most on-point raw, guttural vocalists in the game who also manages to display impressive pitch control. Perhaps the most naturally “cool” bands I’ve come to know and love. They’ve never taken themselves too seriously or compromised their style to serve mainstream audiences. Always retaining their magic and integrity every step the way. 

This debut album, Some Kind Of Cadwallader, felt like a classic punk piece to my ears upon first listen. Equal parts airtight performances with just enough scrappy rambunctious energy equating to a brilliant sonic roistering. The moment I heard the gang hook erupt “Oh man, it’s taken me over!” on Track 2, I knew this LP would be a mainstay of the music collection. Big fun-in-the-sun, skateboards-by-the-beach kind of music. I only recently started looking up the words I was previously unable to decipher by ear and I can now confirm the lyrical wit is by all accounts unmatched! 

A beautiful coincidence. Early into dating my now wife a decade ago I visited her apartment in her home state of Texas. I was thumbing through her record collection and was joyously surprised to discover that she also owns and loves this Algernon record. Now we have two copies in our home! Kismet!

3

You Fail Me, Converge 

This is the unequivocally heaviest record I’ve ever heard by my absolute favorite heavy band. Listening to Converge music is not typically a shared experience for me. This is the only album of my five picks that I’m ashamed to say I don’t own on vinyl, for the sole reason I fear I would likely disrupt my loved ones in the household if I amplified this pummeling masterpiece through the living room speakers. (My wife has affectionately referred to this as “dude music.”) Therefore this is a bigtime headphones and solo car ride album for this dude. I am a runner. Not a fast one, but I do run often. I’ve timed myself repeatedly and I can scientifically say with confidence NO ONE MAKES ME RUN FASTER than Converge (by a huge margin!). This album is the perfect example of brutal sonic violence with unmatched rhythmic intelligence and relentless intensity within the punk universe. 

The sonics on You Fail Me are downright blistering! I purposely chose the “Redux” version for the newer and improved Kurt Ballou mix. The sound has a deep low-end gut punch, the finest bass guitar growling tone I could ever dream up,  and drums that BITE like a goddamn grizzly bear. Some other great albums have a one-two punch with exciting first tracks, right? Well, this baby has six devastating haymakers lined up immediately after the “First Light” bending guitar intro. No other music energizes me quite like Converge does, especially on this album. For that alone, they deserve a clinched spot in this hypothetical eternal rotation.

4

Shades of Blue: Madlib Invades Blue Note, Madlib

This monumental album is a perfectly executed culmination of several personal favorite aspects of the music world, namely the union of top shelf instrumental hip-hop production and the legendary Blue Note Records jazz archives. It is of my own passionate opinion that Otis Jackson Jr., a.k.a. Madlib, is the greatest living producer this world has to offer. There is something in the way his pocket always sits so flawlessly in a collage of supremely chosen instruments and textures weaving together with such charismatic style. I think this album best showcases the man’s extraordinary talents as an audio visionary with a knack for sample-based production far ahead of his time. I marvel at the achievement of how he blurs the line between sampled and recorded material so seamlessly. I house plenty of jazz as well as instrumental hip-hop records in the collection, since neither of these genres are represented on the rest of this list, Shades of Blue is an absolute no-brainer to keep on deck forevermore. 

5

Selected Ambient Works Volume II, Aphex Twin

I recently had dinner catching up with a longtime friend and electronic music collaborator, and he joked that the older and deeper one gets in this genre of music [it] always leads to collecting ambient albums and cassette tapes, and I am admittedly guilty of both right on schedule. Coincidentally he was also revisiting SAW VII regularly in his recent listening rotation. This brought up an intriguing question: asking each other what it is that makes this record so special?  My friend’s response was something astute along the lines of “it’s just so innocent.” That really stuck with me and I couldn’t agree more. 

To know Richard D. James and his body of work, is to understand that his style of sound is fearlessly ever-changing while existing in his own vast (yet cohesive) universe. He is perhaps best known for his work on more drum-and-bass-leaning records. This album is essentially and famously drum-less, practically wordless while revealing from its core a sprawling sonic bed of transcendently stretched and drenched loops blossoming with marvelous grace. The music itself feels like an effortless and purely guilt-free expression of art. There was speculation between my friend and I if some of these pieces were initially unfinished starts intended for more elaborate final compositions. Regardless of whether or not that theory holds water, Richard made a masterfully prophetic decision to exercise such an elevated level of restraint by keeping the field of sound so confidently minimal. The experience of listening to this record is unlike any others in my collection, it emits a potently hypnotic transmission. I find it can transform the room in a drastic way. As boneless and wordless as this album is, it somehow feels CATCHY in a way that my brain gravitates towards before any pop song melody I’ve heard in my life. I feel as though could listen to that same “#21” arrangement on loop for an eternity, and have caught myself humming that tune in my head with no accompaniment.

I nabbed the 4-LP Expanded Edition of this album earlier this year and the records have rarely left the turntable. That’s the other nice thing about this album, the music is sprawling, plentiful and never rushed. It’s an unforgettable floating trip across a divinely serene atmosphere. One of my favorite parts of the 2024 physical record is a message included in the “Rhubarb Notes” written by Richard. It reads: “My mum gave me so much love, dedicated her life to me, filled me to the brim with confidence, and somehow managed to be a nurse at the same time. That love she gave can now be felt by millions all over the world and beyond through this music. Thanks for everything Lorna James!” As a guy who lost his mom four years ago, these words hit me with a weighty significance and drew my relationship to this music even closer. What a magnificent triumph to honor the irreplaceable love of a mother. Bravo, Richard.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Podcaster Justin LaBoy Credits Coi Leray w/ Starting The Trend Of Making Viral TikTok Songs
Celebrity News

Podcaster Justin LaBoy Credits Coi Leray w/ Starting The Trend Of Making Viral TikTok Songs

by jummy84 September 16, 2025
written by jummy84

Podcaster Justin LaBoy Credits Coi Leray w/ Starting The Trend Of Making Viral TikTok Songs

Well this is interesting!

Justin LaBoy says Coi Leray is responsible for starting the trend of making viral TikTok records. She also agrees, taking the stance that she shaped the way TikTok is used for artists.

Y’all agree?
@justinlaboy


September 16, 2025 0 comments
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