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Tracy Chapman in 1988. (Credit: Goedefroit Music/Getty Images)
Music

Deep Cut Friday: ‘3,000 Miles’ by Tracy Chapman

by jummy84 November 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Each week, SPIN digs into the catalogs of great artists and highlights songs you might not know for our Deep Cut Friday series.

Tracy Chapman’s most famous singles appear on her 1988 self-titled debut and 1995’s New Beginning, but all of the veteran singer-songwriter’s eight albums contain great songs. 2005’s Where You Live is an unheralded gem of her catalog, her only album produced by Tchad Blake. Blake’s productions for artists like Los Lobos, Soul Coughing, and Cibo Matto often feature eclectic instrumentation and thumping percussion. And his work on Where You Live is subtle and sensitive, furnishing Chapman’s songs with lush, inventive arrangements.

The longest and quietest song on Where You Live, “3,000 Miles,” is subtle but gripping. Over nearly six minutes, Chapman describes a dangerous world in ominous terms: “Good girls walk in groups of three, fast girls walk slow on side streets / Sometimes the girls who walk alone aren’t found for days or weeks.” Textures swirl around her voice, including lap steel guitar by Joe Gore, upright bass by David Pilch, organ by Blake’s frequent collaborator Mitchell Froom, and Chapman herself on guitar, clarinet, and glockenspiel. The imagery in the lyrics gets progressively more violent, bullets flying and apples filled with razor blades, but outside of a gentle handclap rhythm by Chapman and drummer Quinn Smith, there’s no percussion on the song, and the volume never rises. The refrain “I’m 3,000 miles away” feels like a mantra or a prayer, whether the narrator has physically left her volatile surroundings or is still there, dreaming of a distant sanctuary.

The fan newsletter Tracy Chapman in Depth is going through Chapman’s catalog one track at a time, and in July a thoughtful post examined “3,000 Miles,” noting that the song was nearly the title track of Chapman’s 2005 album. That piece includes excerpts from an interview where Chapman explained that the song was inspired by growing up in Ohio, in the tense period after the state’s schools were desegregated in 1976. “It’s a part of my story and partly the story of little girls who in some way are endangered in an environment that’s not supportive. They manage to escape, maybe just in their state of minds. As a little girl, I often had to walk home from school. It was like going through a minefield,” Chapman told the U.K. newspaper The Sun in 2005.

Three more essential Tracy Chapman deep cuts:

“Behind the Wall”

Chapman sings “Behind the Wall” with no instrumental accompaniment, forcing you to focus on her lyrics, which detail law enforcement’s failure to prevent domestic violence. Chapman’s self-titled album was a major influence on Tori Amos, whose own solo debut included “Me and a Gun,” a similarly chilling a cappella song telling her story of being raped in her early 20s.

“Open Arms”

Soul music great Bobby Womack played guitar on “Open Arms,” a tender love song from 1992’s Matters of the Heart. The song was never released as a single, but Chapman performed it on The Tonight Show and featured it on her 2015 Greatest Hits collection.

“Nothing Yet”

Chapman achieves a rare feat on “Nothing Yet” from her 2000 album Telling Stories, building the song’s electric guitar and hand drum arrangement around a 5/4 time signature without calling attention to the track’s unusual rhythm, making it feel more like a simple waltz.

November 14, 2025 0 comments
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'A House of Dynamite' Star Tracy Letts Talks 'Reality' of Netflix Film
TV & Streaming

‘A House of Dynamite’ Star Tracy Letts Talks ‘Reality’ of Netflix Film

by jummy84 November 2, 2025
written by jummy84

“A House of Dynamite” star Tracy Letts fears we may be cooked.

“Consider the possibility. There are a couple of existential crises we’re facing. So we should probably consider what that means if, maybe not in your lifetime, but your kid’s lifetime or whatever. What happens if we’re just all fucking done?” said the Pulitzer-winning playwright and character actor extraordinaire, who plays General Anthony Brady in the new political thriller directed by Oscar-winner Kathryn Bigelow. The film provides a chilling look at what could happen if a nuclear missile were launched at the United States.

Letts sits outside with IndieWire on the patio of a West Hollywood hotel, finally taking a breather after an intensive two days that saw him open his play “Mary Page Marlowe” at the Old Vic Theatre in London, wake up at 6 a.m. the next day to fly 14 hours to Los Angeles, and attend two screenings of “A House of Dynamite,” including its Los Angeles premiere. But even before it became the most-watched film on Netflix in one week, Letts was already happy with how audiences responded. “People seem to dig the movie, people are liking it, which is cool,” he said. “Or if they’re not, they’re not telling me, which is probably wise.”

'Terrifier 3'

Before he landed on what the film’s message may be, Letts signed on to “A House of Dynamite” simply “because it was a Kathryn project. And then when I read the script and saw the role she had in mind for me, that didn’t make it less interesting to me,” he said. “Everything about it for me was just ‘Go, go, go.’ I didn’t have any hesitation.” Though he identifies most with playing dad to the titular role in “Lady Bird” (“I’m a guy who likes to sit and read the paper and let the women make all the decisions”), the military role still felt close to home in a sense. “I’m a general and giving orders and that voice of authority, I can do it. They’re probably all just impersonations of my dad or whatever, but I can do it,” he said. Though “anybody who knows me knows I’m an old softy.”

Early questions Letts had for director Bigelow included “Is he George C. Scott in ‘Dr. Strangelove’? Is he a [war] hawk?” As he would later learn from his interactions with real-life generals advising him on his performance, there’s little time to discuss politics with only 18 minutes until a major American city is about to be wiped out by a missile. “He’s really just talking game theory. ‘If you do this, then they do that. If you don’t do this, then they might do that.’ It’s game theory. He just puts it out there for the president’s consideration. I was comfortable with all that because the argument made sense to me,” he said. 

Tracy Letts as General Anthony Brady and Gbenga Akinnagbe as Major General Steven Kyle in 'A House of Dynamite'.
Tracy Letts as General Anthony Brady and Gbenga Akinnagbe as Major General Steven Kyle in ‘A House of Dynamite’Eros Hoagland/Netflix

Again, Letts had access to multiple three- and four-star generals who had sat in STRATCOM, running through scenarios like the one seen in “A House of Dynamite.” He walked away impressed. “Those guys know their job intimately,” he said. “They drill [those scenarios] 400 times a year. So they’re very practiced at it. And the objective in the moment of crisis is a simple one. Collect information, pass information up the line.” If anything, it is the efficiency and clearheadedness of his character in particular that makes “A House of Dynamite” all the more terrifying.

“The scenario it presents is scarily plausible. There aren’t a lot of things that happen that couldn’t happen. It’s not a Martian who appears, right? This is not science fiction. This is just next to reality,” said Letts. “If you’re going to make that kind of movie, you can’t miss on some of the technical details. All that stuff’s got to be right.”

That all starts with the screenplay from Oscar nominee Noah Oppenheim, who, as the previous head of NBC News, has rubbed elbows with many of the players who would be involved in a National Security emergency. “People get mad at me if I make light of research,” said Letts, but “you do what you need to do. And certainly in a case like this where so much of the research has been done for you, which the dramaturgy is on the page, the research has been done, it’s been vetted, re-vetted, they surrounded me with all of the context I would need in order to be able to pretend with authority, which is all the job really entails as an actor. To be able to get a good haircut and put on the uniform and walk out on set and know the lines, hopefully, and be able to deliver them with some authority, [and] to deliver that language in a way that feels natural.”

Going through those motions, informed by all that research, the film proved to Letts that Americans “are not as prepared as we think.” He added, “This movie shows a scenario in which everything kind of goes right. The government’s functioning pretty well. Not all of the equipment necessarily functions the way we would want it to, but I think they even quote at one point that those [Ground-Based Interceptors] are supposed to be functioning at a 61 percent success rate, but even that’s under ideal circumstances.”

In the world of “A House of Dynamite,” “Everybody in the government is functioning well and thoughtfully, that’s if everybody is accepting the gravity of the moment and doing their jobs well.” And the President of the United States, played by Idris Elba, seems sensible. “Imagine a scenario in which he’s maybe not all the way there, or perhaps even manifestly irresponsible. Then it becomes a much scarier consideration,” said Letts.

Carrie Coon, Tracy Letts and Kathryn Bigelow attend the Netflix film 'A House of Dynamite' NYFF Main Slate Premiere and Q+A on September 28, 2025 in New York City.
Carrie Coon, Tracy Letts, and Kathryn Bigelow attend the Netflix film ‘A House of Dynamite’ NYFF Main Slate Premiere and Q+A on September 28, 2025 in New York CityJason Mendez/Getty Images for Netflix

Ultimately, “we’ve built a machine, a very complicated device. If all the parts function properly inside that device, if everything works the way it’s supposed to work, civilization’s over,” said the star of what his new film illuminates. “What if we just reconsider the machine entirely?” Letts mentions that he has been recently asked about a shot of Lincoln’s bust in “A House of Dynamite” and what that may invoke, something that also stood out to him the first time he saw the film.

“Of course, you immediately think about the presidents who have risen to the moment, those that haven’t,” he said. “But the second time watching it was like, ‘Oh, none of that matters.’ Civilization is wiped out. President? Meaningless. It doesn’t matter. It’s all gone.”

“Kathryn won’t cop to this,” but “artists are starting to grapple with this idea of what does it mean if we’re really done here?” said Letts. He uses Thomas Vinterberg’s recent series “Families Like Ours,” about Denmark being evacuated in response to climate change, as another example. These projects provide the warnings that, if not heeded, prove “it’s not going to get better. It’s only getting worse.”

With all that said, the actual experience making “A House of Dynamite” was still enjoyable. “It’s an ensemble piece. Everybody’s chipping in to help where they can, which is the nice thing about it,” said Letts. “There’s nobody who’s the obvious kind of awards player. It’s like we don’t have to do that. So everybody’s there for the right reasons. It’s just all Kathryn, Kathryn, Kathryn.”

Having now worked with Bigelow on her first film in nearly a decade, reminiscent of her other work like “The Hurt Locker” and “Zero Dark Thirty,” which both received Academy recognition, Letts is more excited at the thought of the director dipping even further back into her oeuvre. “I’m old. I remember seeing ‘Near Dark’ in the movie theater very well. And so I think of Kathryn as more varied than just this kind of documentary/military [style]. I know that she’s got more tools,” he said. “I hope she goes back to that stuff, frankly. I heard the word ‘Western’ at some point. I’d be thrilled if that were a reality.”

Letts himself has recently developed a reputation as the King of Physical Media, boasting of a collection of around 11,000 DVDs, so there is a slight irony in his latest film being distributed by a streaming service. “There will come a moment where I get to hold my hand up to say, ‘We should have this 4K available too,’” he joked, also campaigning for director David Fincher’s Netflix films, and Martin Scorsese’s Apple film “Killers of the Flower Moon” to release physical 4K copies.

However the film has made him feel about the world, Letts’ best experience with “A House of Dynamite” has been seeing it in a theater. “To have that Volker Bertelmann score just vibrating your sternum, and in a way sort of telling you when to breathe, or how to breathe throughout the movie, I just don’t think it’s going to play the same at home as it is on the big screen. So I hope people check it out in the movie theater.

“A House of Dynamite” is now out in select theaters nationwide and streaming on Netflix.

November 2, 2025 0 comments
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Tracy T Says He's Not 'Tripping' Over Kash Doll Breakup But Stands Firm On His Clap Backs: 'You Play w/ Me I'm Gonna Play w/ You'
Celebrity News

Tracy T Says He’s Not ‘Tripping’ Over Kash Doll Breakup But Stands Firm On His Clap Backs: ‘You Play w/ Me I’m Gonna Play w/ You’

by jummy84 August 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Tracy T Says He’s Not ‘Tripping’ Over Kash Doll Breakup But Stands Firm On His Clap Backs: ‘You Play w/ Me I’m Gonna Play w/ You’

Tracy T is unbothered by Kash Doll moving on from him.

The rapper explained that he’s not “tripping” over their split because he’s endured more serious situations in life. However, he made it clear that he has no issue clapping back when he feels the need.

“You play with me, I’m gonna play with you,” he stated.

Y’all Team Tracy or Team Kash?

VIA: @heyjaneepodcast


August 22, 2025 0 comments
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