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Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online
Music

Tame Impala’s Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

by jummy84 November 6, 2025
written by jummy84

All products and services featured are independently chosen by editors. However, Billboard may receive a commission on orders placed through its retail links, and the retailer may receive certain auditable data for accounting purposes.

After releasing his fifth studio album Deadbeat, Tame Impala is setting sail on a global tour. Already kicking things off in October in New York, Kevin Parker and the gang played most of their new album – and plenty of old favorites to a sold-out crowd at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center. In case you missed the show, here are our favorite moments from the inaugural show as well as the setlist.

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For the remaining of Tame’s brief national leg of the tour, he will hit four major cities, including Austin, San Diego, Oakland and Inglewood, Calif. Afterward, Parker will head oversees stopping in Spain, France, Italy, London, Germany and many more before concluding the tour in Dublin on May 13.

Keep reading for a roundup of how to secure last-minute tickets to Tame Impala and how much you can expect to spend.

How to Get Tickets to Tame Impala

Now that the tour is underway, tickets are going faster than usual. Luckily, with a few resell sites, fans can grab affordable tickets and their preferred venue seating with a breeze. Tickets are available on sites such as Seat Geek, StubHub, Vivid Seats and Ticketmaster to browse online now.

How to get tickets to Sabrina Carpenter's Short n' Sweet Tour with StubHub.

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StubHub has Tame Impala tickets available. Stubhub’s Fan Protect Guarantee ensures valid tickets or your money back. And if your event is canceled and not rescheduled, you’ll receive 120% in credit or be given the option of a full refund.

Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

You can find Tame Impala tickets online at Vivid Seats for as low as $194. The ticket site lets you search by price, location and “Super Sellers,” which denotes reputable sellers with the best deals on tickets.

Vivid Seats is great for group tickets: the site has a rewards program that gives you your 11th ticket free (in the form of a credit) after you buy 10 tickets online. And as a bonus, you can use our exclusive promo code BB30 to take $30 off your purchase at VividSeats.com.

Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

One of the lowest prices we’re seeing for Tame Impala tickets is at SeatGeek, which has stubs from $199 and up. Use our discount code BILLBOARD10 to save an additional $10 at checkout.

Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

Courtesy of Gametime

For more affordable tickets, Gametime is offering ticket options for as low as $197. Purchasers will receive the Gametime Guarantee, which includes event cancellation protection, a low-price guarantee and one-time ticket delivery. Bonus offer: Get $20 off orders of $150+ when you use the code SAVE20 at checkout.

Tame Impala's Deadbeat Tour Tickets: How to Buy Online

TicketNetwork has tickets to Tame Impala’s concerts with all-in pricing that lets you see exactly what you’ll pay up front (fees included). For a limited time, you can use our exclusive code BILLBOARD150 to save $150 off $500 or BILLBOARD300 to save $300 off orders of $1000 and up.

November 6, 2025 0 comments
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Tame Impala's "Dracula" Streams Up Over Halloween
Music

Tame Impala’s “Dracula” Streams Up Over Halloween

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

Welcome to Billboard Pro’s Trending Up newsletter, where we take a closer look at the songs, artists, curiosities and trends that have caught the music industry’s attention. Some have come out of nowhere, others have taken months to catch on, and all of them could become ubiquitous in the blink of a TikTok clip.

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See latest videos, charts and news

This week: Kehlani eyes a big chart move thanks to a new pack of remixes, a surreal viral trend helps put a rising singer-songwriter on the streaming map, basketball’s greatest soundtrack makes a comeback and more.

Tame Impala’s ‘Dracula’ Sinks Its Teeth Into the Halloween Season

This year, Halloween fell on a weekend, meaning the partying was perhaps even a little more widespread than usual — and the songs that provide the annual soundtrack for such festivities exploded were even more explosive on streaming. On DSPs, the top-ranking songs were the usual perennial favorites, Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” Ray Parker Jr.’s “Ghostbusters” and Bobby “Boris” Pickett’s “Monster Mash” of course among them. But a little lower on those listings was another much-newer spooky-season favorite: “Dracula,” the current electro-pop breakout hit for psych-dance vets Tame Impala.

“Dracula” has already proven a chart sensation, debuting on the Billboard Hot 100 at No. 55 in October and hitting a new peak of No. 33 last month following the release of its parent album Deadbeat – his first-ever entry on the chart, since joined by two of its Deadbeat tracklist mates. It may hit a new peak on the Hot 100 on next week’s chart (dated Nov. 15), after the (loosely) vampire-themed and (vaguely) eerie-sounding track racked up over 1.8 million official on-demand U.S. streams on Oct. 31 — up 49% from the previous Friday, according to Luminate, a massive gain for a song already pulling daily streams in the seven digits.

Will the song endure to become a Halloween staple like those aforementioned proven classics? Time will tell, but early signs are encouraging for “Dracula” becoming a holiday immortal.


Toni Braxton Proves ‘Man Enough’ for a Streaming Boost, Thanks to Kayla Nicole and an Upcoming Movie 

A week after throwing Kehlani an assist on “Folded,” Toni Braxton is experiencing a mini-streaming revival for one of her own hits. Thanks to a spicy Halloween costume from Kayla Nicole, Travis Kelce’s ex, and a flurry of motion from the Braxton world, streams for 2000’s “He Wasn’t Man Enough” are way up. 

According to Luminate, on Oct. 31, “Man Enough” (which reached No. 2 on the Hot 100) earned 106,000 official on-demand U.S. streams. After Nicole shared her costume, which tributes the track’s sultry music video, on Halloween, the Grammy-winning song jumped 87% to over 200,000 official streams (Nov. 1). By Nov. 2, “Man Enough” leapt a further 32% to over 265,000 official streams, with the following day (Nov. 3) giving way to a 38% boost, resulting in 366,000 official streams. Over that four-day period, streams for Braxton’s smash exploded over 242%. 

To her credit, Braxton also kept her name in the headlines all by her lonesome, which only further propelled “Man Enough.” On Oct. 28, New Edition confirmed it would head out on a 2026 tour alongside Braxton and Boyz II Men, by Oct. 30, all three acts performed a medley on Good Morning America, with Braxton crooning “Man Enough.” Furthermore, the latest season of The Braxtons, a reality show following Braxton and her famous family, premiered on We TV on Oct. 10, with clips quickly going viral across social media. Also on Oct. 28, Lifetime shared the first look at He Wasn’t Man Enough, an original TV movie starring and executive produced by Braxton based on her hit song. 

During the first four days of the week preceding Halloween (Oct. 24-27), “Man Enough” logged over 313,000 official on-demand U.S. streams, with that number jumping just under 200% to over 938,000 official streams over the equivalent period the following week (Oct. 31-Nov. 3). In addition to its streaming boost, “Man Enough” also returned to the iTunes U.S. top 30. — KYLE DENIS 


Drake and the Toronto Blue Jays: Still Definitively ‘Not Like Us’

For the second straight autumn, the Los Angeles Dodgers ended the baseball season on top of the mountain. After defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in a classic seven-game World Series — with the seventh game (on Saturday, Nov. 1) going to extra innings and ending on a bases-loaded double play — the Dodgers became the first team since the New York Yankees of 25 years earlier (’99-’00) to repeat as MLB champions.

And just like it was last year, the most frequent song of celebration for Los Angelenos was Kendrick Lamar‘s forever-triumphant, forever-sneering “Not Like Us.” The Grammy-winning, Hot 100-topping classic diss track from L.A.’s most esteemed modern hip-hop representative rang out across Southern California over the weekend, pulling a combined 1.8 million official on-demand streams across the two days (Nov. 2-3) following the Dodgers’ clinching victory — up 16% from the same period the week before, according to Luminate.

And of course, helping to make the victory and its soundtrack extra sweet: The Blue Jays’ most high-profile celebrity representative at the series was of course the 6 God himself, Kendrick’s 2024 foe Drake. The FOX network even tweeted a mocked-up photo after the game of a trophy-donning Lamar speeding away from Drake on the baseball diamond, right next to the all-caps caption, “THEY NOT LIKE US.” — A.U.


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November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Tame Impala Deliver 'Deadbeat' Debuts At Tour Opener
Music

Tame Impala Deliver ‘Deadbeat’ Debuts At Tour Opener

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Tame Impala made up for lost time Monday (Oct. 27) at Brooklyn, N.Y.’s Barclays Center, as the Kevin Parker-led Australian band debuted nine songs from their new album, Deadbeat, at their first proper show since March 2023.

Performing in the round for the first time, Tame Impala was at times nearly drowned out by the screams of a younger female demographic — some of whom perhaps only discovered the band in recent years through Parker’s collaborations with artists such as Dua Lipa and Justice. Parker also professed to be suffering from some kind of illness (he was drinking Throat Coat tea throughout), but his voice rarely sounded strained throughout the two-plus hour, 24-song set.

During the first portion, Tame Impala alternated older favorites such as “Breathe Deeper,” “Elephant” and “Gossip” with more electronic- and dance-driven new tracks such as “Dracula,” “Afterthought” and “My Old Ways,” the latter of which benefited from a heavy, psychedelic breakdown during its midsection.

“So, as you might know, this is the first night of the world tour,” Parker said. “So that means it’s a pretty epic night, and there’s nowhere more epic than to kick this shit off than New York City. It also means anything can happen, and by that I mean for the better, but also, anything can fall apart at any moment, just so you know. But it’s all very exciting and electric.”

After “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards,” the band ran through an instrumental snippet of the new “No Reply” as the camera followed Parker off the stage, through a tunnel and then into a bathroom. Thankfully, the cameraman panned down to Parker’s shoes as the artist relieved himself. When he walked back into the arena, he sat down on a smaller platform at the back of the floor, which was encircled by lamps and synthesizers. Parker proceeded to play and sing the new songs “Ethereal Connection” and “Not My World” while at times laying flat on his back.

With the aid of confetti cannons and state-of-the-art lasers, the set revved back into rock’n’roll action with “Let It Happen” and “Alter Ego,” the lone song lifted from the band’s 2010 debut, Innerspeaker. To begin the encore, Tame Impala played Parker’s Grammy-winning Justice collaboration, “Neverender,” for the first time, then closed things out with the hit “The Less I Know the Better” and the seven-minute Deadbeat finale “End of Summer.”

Deadbeat is the follow-up to 2020’s The Slow Rush and debuted last week at No. 4 the Billboard 200. After Tame Impala’s fall shows conclude Nov. 17 in Los Angeles, the group will be back in action with a spring tour of Europe and the U.K., beginning April 4 in Porto, Portugal. Parker will also be on the DJ decks for three early December shows in Australia opening for Justice.

October 28, 2025 0 comments
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Watch Tame Impala Perform 'My Old Ways,' 'Dracula' for A24 Live Series
Music

Watch Tame Impala Perform ‘My Old Ways,’ ‘Dracula’ for A24 Live Series

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

The set, directed by filmmaker Sean Durkin, featured three songs from the group’s new LP, Deadbeat

Tame Impala showcased three songs off their new album Deadbeat for A24‘s “Sound Check” live series. The set, held at New York’s Cherry Lane Theatre and directed by The Iron Claw filmmaker Sean Durkin, featured renditions of “My Old Ways,” “Dracula,” and “Loser.”

The Australian group, led by Kevin Parker, set up on the empty theater’s stage in a circle to perform the sprawling tracks. The performance stayed largely true to the album, released last week, focusing on its psychedelic rock vibe. Durkin gave the clip a moody feel with low lighting that kept the musicians in the shadows on the stage for some of the performance.

Deadbeat is Tame Impala’s highly-anticipated fifth studio album. Last week, Parker and company visited NPR’s Tiny Desk to deliver the band’s first-ever all-acoustic performance. Armed with six acoustic guitars — one of which was used as the percussion — Tame Impala played four songs over 20 minutes, opening with The Slow Rush’s “Borderline” before performing two tracks off Deadbeat, “Loser” and “Dracula.”

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Parker previously described his long-awaited follow-up to 2020’s The Slow Rush as “kind of a future primitive rave act,” and an accompanying press release for Deadbeat reiterated that compelling musical aesthetic, citing Western Australia’s rave scene and bush doof culture as inspiration. 

Tame Impala will hit the road later this month on their six-city U.S. tour in support of Deadbeat, beginning Oct. 27 with a four-night stand at Brooklyn’s Barclays Center and concluding Nov. 17 with the third of three gigs at Los Angeles’ Kia Forum.

October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Tame Impala Unveils New Tunes On 'Sound Check'
Music

Tame Impala Unveils New Tunes On ‘Sound Check’

by jummy84 October 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Tame Impala unveils three songs from its just-released album, Deadbeat, as part of the first installment of the new live video series Sound Check at Cherry Lane Theatre. Filmed at the A24-owned New York venue, the episode sports the live debut of album opener “My Old Ways” plus the pre-release singles “Dracula” and “Loser.”

With Tame Impala’s first tour since March 2023 about to begin next week, fans can get a sneak preview of the Kevin Parker-led group’s current live setup in the Sound Check video, which finds Parker encircled onstage by guitarist/keyboardist Dominic Simper, guitarist/keyboardist Jay Watson, guitarist/keyboardist/percussionist James Ireland, keyboardist/percussionist Julien Barbagallo and bassist Cameron Avery.

The three-song set was directed by Sean Durkin (The Iron Claw). After “Dracula,” one of the musicians says to Parker off-camera, “good harmonies. Did you do a wrong lyric in one of the verses?” “I fucked up,” Parker admits.

Deadbeat is the follow-up to 2020’s The Slow Rush and is expected to debut in the upper reaches of the Billboard 200 this week. After Tame Impala’s fall shows conclude Nov. 17 in Los Angeles, the group will be back in action with a spring tour of Europe and the U.K., beginning April 4 in Porto, Portugal.

Parker will also be on the DJ decks for three early December shows in Australia opening for Justice, with whom he collaborated on the French electronic duo’s hit 2024 album, Hyperdrama.

October 22, 2025 0 comments
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Tame Impala: Deadbeat Album Review
Music

Tame Impala: Deadbeat Album Review

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

It still might be his most successful attempt—“Oblivion” sinks to an absolute nadir as Parker aimlessly spritzes his falsetto over a limp dembow rhythm that barely musters an ounce of what, say, DJ Python would do with it. He wastes the first half of “Not My World” wafting through one of the emptiest, most nothing beats of the year, eventually arriving at a shimmering bell-tone melody that actually doesn’t sound too bad. But is there really a reason for you to reach for this over one of the countless deep house producers out there who can actually pull this style off with finesse? Over and over, Parker ends up in the mushy middle: He strains for the highs of a side-long R&S epic on the trancey, eight-minute “Ethereal Connection” without ever finding release, and continually sabotages whatever momentum he manages to build on the closing Balearic snoozer “End of Summer.”

Between all these would-be workouts are some serious misfires. “Piece of Heaven” is a half-hearted Enya-meets-“Hollaback Girl” mashup that refuses to deliver on its promise of fun, and the dead-on-arrival Brian Wilson-lite throwaway “See You On Monday (You’re Lost)” really sounds like something we weren’t supposed to hear. It’s admirable for Parker to throw himself into something new and continue to redefine how people think of him. But the sense of craft that made Tame Impala stand out in the first place is all but gone. Instead of lavishly reminding us of simple joys like a snappy R&B beat switch or a good flanger-pedal drop, we get drum machines sloppily plugged into guitar amps and left to spin their rudimentary loops; none of this stuff ever really explores how freeing, powerful, or even therapeutic dance music can be.

The worst part is that, through it all, I can still hear a world where this could’ve been something—the sound of a bad trip, a bleary comment on adulthood and success, or just hard, hypnotic rhythms soundtracking Parker’s spiral into self-doubt. Most of these songs aren’t offensive on their own: “Dracula” may not be anything special, but its cheesy boogie is catchy enough. “Afterthought” would have been the weakest and most repetitive song on Currents, but that still makes it the strongest thing here. The cumulative effect, though, is exhausting, a daisy-chain of shaky half-measures that doesn’t even feel particularly committed to being depressing.

The other issue is that Parker already tested out many of these dance-hybrid attempts with better results on his last album, The Slow Rush. In that record’s standout moments, you could see how the concept of Parker rebuilding house tracks from the ground up with his analog disco setup could potentially lead to lush and novel ends. But on Deadbeat, Parker mostly just seems enamored with the sound of big, empty beats thudding out into space. On the first single from his debut album, Parker sang, “There’s a party in my head/And no one is invited.” Fifteen years later, he’s blown that image up to superclub proportions; it’s a sad spectacle to behold.

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October 21, 2025 0 comments
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13 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Tame Impala, Sudan Archives, and More
Music

13 New Albums You Should Listen to Now: Tame Impala, Sudan Archives, and More

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

With so much good music being released all the time, it can be hard to determine what to listen to first. Every week, Pitchfork offers a run-down of significant new releases available on streaming services. This week’s batch includes new projects from Tame Impala, Sudan Archives, They Are Gutting a Body of Water, Silvana Estrada, Monaleo, Bar Italia, Ty Dolla $ign, Militarie Gun, Destiny Bond, Elias Rønnenfelt, Cusp, Jane Inc., and Suzie True. Subscribe to Pitchfork’s New Music Friday newsletter to get our recommendations in your inbox every week. (All releases featured here are independently selected by our editors. When you buy something through our affiliate links, however, Pitchfork earns an affiliate commission.)


Tame Impala: Deadbeat [Columbia]

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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5 Takeaways From Tame Impala’s New Album Deadbeat
Music

5 Takeaways From Tame Impala’s New Album Deadbeat

by jummy84 October 18, 2025
written by jummy84

Tame Impala were once a record collector’s idea of a rock band. Then they were a rock band that was one guy and that one guy was also a record collector. 2015’s Currents took that proposition as far as it could go, and when Kevin Parker dropped “End of Summer” as the lead single from his fifth studio album, Deadbeat, something else became apparent: Every crate-digger eventually finds his way to the dancefloor.

Deadbeat is Parker’s electronic and dance album, but it’s also his new father album, as his first daughter was born the year after the pre-pandemic The Slow Rush. As such, he throws in some dadly nods to Family Guy and Pablo Escobar, while still treading familiar emotional territory for Tame Impala: jealousy, paralysis, and social anxiety. Parker digs into his psyche not necessarily through lyrics but by paying homage to the music he ostensibly loves, like Jeff Mills’ “The Bells” (“Not My World”), the Beatles (“See You on Monday”) and, apparently, DJ Khaled and Rihanna’s “Wild Thoughts” (“Obsolete”). Here are five takeaways from the album.

An Intimate, Unvarnished Opening

Deadbeat opens with a demo track of Parker singing over a house piano riff. It’s a meaningful gesture—stripping aside the glossy varnish of Currents and The Slow Rush, conjuring the image of Parker alone in a room, surrounded by the highest of high-end recording equipment. That piano, fuzzy with room sound, reappears as a motif throughout the album. Later, on the skeevy synth-funk single “Loser,” a murmured “fuck” wanders its way into the final mix, like the fossil record of an off-the-cuff earlier version. For an artist obsessed with craft, Parker has gotten more comfortable letting the seams show.

October 18, 2025 0 comments
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With Deadbeat, Tame Impala Gets Stuck in a Loop: Review
Music

Tame Impala Makes the Same Old Mistakes on Deadbeat: Review

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

You’re at a house party and you’re not sober. The music thuds through the walls as you slip into the bathroom, lock the door, and find yourself face-to-face with your reflection. The fluorescent light is unforgiving. You stare back at this person in the mirror and think: Who the fuck is this clown? But you’re not angry. You’re not having a meltdown. The drugs keep the emotions present but manageable, like they’re happening to someone else. Instead, you just stand there, locked in this moment of clarity that isn’t quite clarity — more like a psychedelic dissociation from yourself.

This is where Deadbeat lives, Kevin Parker’s latest album as Tame Impala. Throughout the project’s 56 minutes, Parker assumes the role of the man in the mirror multiple times, lamenting his constant fuck-ups, his deepest insecurities, and his inability to truly connect with people — before stumbling out of the bathroom and rejoining the party. Deadbeat toggles between unflinching self-awareness and euphoric avoidance, Parker attempting to rave his way toward some resolution that never quite arrives.

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It’s necessary to mention that this is a completely different Tame Impala than the one most fans are familiar with, and Parker almost goes out of his way to make this clear throughout Deadbeat. Such was the intention behind “End of Summer,” the throbbing, strangely inert club-psych experiment that served as the album’s lead single. Ever wanted to hear what a Tame Impala acid house song sounds like? Do you long to be in Kevin Parker’s brain at 4am, mid-dance party? This is the album for you.

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Inspired by the Western Australia rave scene and extended free parties held in the countryside, Deadbeat is a major departure from the psych rock sound that captivated leagues of Millennials and Zoomers over a decade ago and a much closer step towards whatever RÜFÜS DU SOL are currently doing. There’s some solid guitar riffage and the occasional organic drum beat here and there, but the usual instrumental staples of a Tame Impala song are ditched for smooth, metronomic electronics and the spartan toolkit of the rave: kick drums, synth bass, and just enough ornamentation to remind you this is still a Kevin Parker production.

It’s a bold sonic reinvention, and the new direction certainly adds some dynamism to Tame Impala’s sound. But Parker’s ambitions are slightly mismatched. Tackling weighty subjects like shame and self-hatred against lean, sanitized beats creates a strange friction; there’s a disconnect between the rawness of these emotions and the distance employed in their presentation. Parker approaches nearly every song drenched in some kind of reverb, bemoaning some cyclical pattern and chalking it all up to the idea that this is just who he is.

But far too often, the instrumental backdrops are rendered weightless and devoid of passion. “Not My World” is rooted in a pleasant, pulsating rhythm, but nothing about its kaleidoscopic beat drop suggests Parker is an outsider peering in. The ’80s-esque “Piece of Heaven” follows follows the same pattern, starting with genuine tenderness — strings, crooning, all the signifiers of romantic longing — but soon, a boom-bap beat straight from Timbaland’s computer flies in, almost like Parker is hitting the eject button on his own vulnerability. Far too often on Deadbeat, the songs gesture toward emotional depth without ever fully committing to the messiness required to reach it.

Deadbeat works best when Parker ditches the hypnotic sprawl of house music and fully dons his pop star hat. At first listen, “Oblivion” is a bit of a confusing detour with a dembow beat behind it — but the moment the chorus cracks open and Parker croons “I would,” with glorious harmonies enveloping him, it sounds like the faintest echo of an old Tame Impala song squeezed inside a beat originally written for Bad Bunny.

Meanwhile, “Dracula” is an outstanding cut and one that totally achieves the dichotomy he’s set out to depict on Deadbeat: its effortlessly groovy, vibrant beat captures the allure of a party in the wee hours of the night, the seductive pull of being irresponsible and making bad decisions. Parker even leans into silliness; “Now I’m Mr. Charisma, fuckin’ Pablo Escobar,” goes one line, which could’ve been eye-roll-inducing but instead adds to the song’s playful menace. It’s a track that finds Parker almost too desperate to return to the party, where numbing out feels better than being alone and facing whatever’s waiting in the mirror.

But even below the surface, Parker comparing himself to “Dracula” beyond “running from the sun” is fascinating because he’s casually positioning himself as a villain; Parker never quite goes full ‘Goblin Mode’ on Deadbeat, but he does deliver on the title’s promise by frequently referring to himself as a fucking loser and a lowly, humble, almost pathetic lover boy.

“No Reply” is a great example of this: After a handful of apologies and excuses to his crush for not texting back, Parker confesses that he just wants to “seem like a normal guy” and croons, “You’re a cinephile, I watch Family Guy/ On a Friday night, off a rogue website/ When I should be out/ With some friends of mine/ Runnin’ rеckless wild in the streets at night/ Singin’ ‘Life, oh, lifе,’ with our arms out wide.” Parker slightly overwriting this line suggests that one small comparison — she watches artistically-riveting films, he watches a cartoon show — triggers an entire mental spiral, showing how even the smallest perceived inadequacy can totally unravel his sense of self-worth. It’s no wonder he can’t text her back; just the thought of her makes him desperate to retreat.

But while some of Parker’s exercises in contrast are effective, stagnation and fatalism dominate the album’s lyrical themes. It’s fitting that a lot of the beats on Deadbeat, especially “Not My World,” “Ethereal Connection,” and “End of Summer,” are pulsing and repetitive, because much of his musings end up feeling the same way.

So many lyrics circle back to the idea that he’ll never change, he’s doomed to be a disaster, and he has no choice but to surrender to his inner dirtbag. “Obsolete” is a good example of this, with Parker so fixated on the idea that he’ll screw up a relationship that he confesses to his partner, “I’m already talkin’ like it’s done/ Sayin’ things like, ‘At lеast we had some fun’/ And things like, ‘I guеss we met too young’” At least “Loser” brings a little more drama in the mix, with Parker asking rhetorically, “Do you wanna tear my heart out?”

It’s only towards the end where Parker finally reclaims a little bit of agency. “Afterthought” finds him fed up with being treated as disposable, the quick tempo propelling his frustration forward rather than trapping it in another throbbing loop. It’s a welcome departure from the album’s fatalism, even if it arrives too late to shift the overall mood.

At its core, Deadbeat is an album about someone completely trapped in a cycle of bad habits and self sabotage — which makes its album cover all the more odd. It’s an image of Parker embracing his daughter, smiling with contentment. It’s a sweet, sentimental photo, sure, but it feels remarkably incongruous to the content of the album it advertises. Parker has discussed that the image is meant to represent a reclamation of the idea of the “Deadbeat Dad,” that perhaps he’s allowing himself to acknowledge his shortcomings while owning the reality that he has gotten older, that responsibilities are more important, that there is someone bigger than himself depending on him.

But on an album that spends 56 minutes running from itself, that realization never makes it past the cover art.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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Tame Impala Makes Tiny Desk Concert Return: Watch
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Tame Impala Makes Tiny Desk Concert Return: Watch

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Tame Impala made his return to NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series on Friday to celebrate the release of his new album, Deadbeat.

Performing alongside his touring band, which includes longtime members Cameron Avery on bass, Jay Watson and Dominic Simper on guitar, and Julian Barbagallo on drums and percussion, Kevin Parker opted for an entirely-acoustic presentation for his Tiny Desk return. Parker had previously made his Tiny Desk debut in 2020, though due to the pandemic, it was presented “at home” instead of the NPR office.

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For his new set, Parker first led his band through a pared-down rendition “Borderline,” a single from his 2020 album The Slow Rush. He continued with a pair of Deadbeat’s singles: “Loser,” which we named Song of the Week upon release, followed by the effortlessly-groovy “Dracula.” Parker and co. concluded the set with a rendition of the Currents favorite “New Person, Same Old Mistakes.” Each song includes layered and well-executed harmonies from his backing band. Watch Tame Impala’s Tiny Desk Concert below.

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Tame Impala is back today with Deadbeat, Parker’s first new album in five years. He’ll be supporting the new record with a brief fall arena tour in the US, which will make stops in Brooklyn, Chicago, Austin, San Diego, Los Angeles, and Oakland. See his tour dates below and get tickets here.

Tame Impala 2025 US Tour Dates:
10/27 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
10/28 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
10/31 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
11/01 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
11/03 — Chicago, IL @ United Center
11/06 — Austin, TX @ Moody Center
11/09 — San Diego, CA @ Pechanga Arena San Diego
11/11 — Los Angeles, CA @ Kia Forum
11/12 — Los Angeles, CA @ Kia Forum
11/14 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
11/15 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
11/17 — Los Angeles, CA @ Kia Forum

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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