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Martin Chilton
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
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The 1960 movie Breathless was a landmark in modern culture, not least for its stunning jazz soundtrack by French-Algerian pianist-composer Martial Solal. The film was directed by Jean-Luc Godard, who, in an oblique nod to the way nostalgia has shaped pop culture, famously said, “It’s not where you take things from – it’s where you take things to.”


That dictum applies to the world of music, where imitation and inspiration have often been the twin bedrocks of new triumphs. Solal joked that making Godard’s soundtrack was just “a paid gig” as he played around with the “Hollywood jazz” so popular at the time. In fact, it was a lovely synthesis as he drew on past muses, such as Django Reinhardt, Sidney Bechet, and Bud Powell, to create his atmospheric soundtrack.

While you’re reading, listen to our Nostalgia playlist here.

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A process of assimilation​


The process of assimilation is as old as written music. Classical composers studied the old masters by literally copying, paraphrasing, and imitating them; some of the best of the Baroque era, by JS Bach and Handel, is a recycling of old masters. In more modern times, The Beatles copied and interpreted the songs of successful bands while they learned their craft and invented ways of composing their own brilliant music. In turn, their songs have been duplicated and channeled by other musicians – sometimes as an exercise in nostalgia, other times as a way of learning songcraft the same way The Beatles did.

In the year Breathless was released, John Coltrane – who, like Solal, was also inspired by the soprano saxophone genius Bechet – made one of his seminal recordings, a version of “My Favorite Things.”

The jazz saxophonist openly declared that he was “very interested in the past” and knew that restless curiosity would help him grow as a musician. As a teenager, Coltrane had been awestruck by Coleman Hawkins’ 1939 record “Body And Soul,” considered one of the first tremors of bebop. As the son of a church pianist mother and violinist father, Coltrane would perhaps have appreciated the quicksilver nature of the source of this iconic jazz piece. Hawkins had been inspired by hearing the melody of a Tzigane violinist in a Hungarian nightclub in Ostend in 1937.

Even the best jazz improvisers closely studied other jazz musicians’ recordings – transcribing their solos and sometimes rehearsing them like compositions – and Coltrane was no different. He said: “I got a copy of ‘Body And Soul’ and listened real hard to what he was doing.”

As he grew more serious about his music, Coltrane said he “devoted quite a bit of my time to harmonic studies on my own in libraries.” The hard work paid off in October 1960 when the 34-year-old Coltrane went into Atlantic Studios in New York to record his album My Favorite Things.

Coltrane took Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II’s lilting waltz – made famous by Julie Andrews in The Sound Of Music – but, no mere exercise in nostalgia, significantly altered its chord progression and tempo, making the song his own virtuoso piece. “My Favorite Things” was a hit, became a regular part of his concert repertoire, and was a bridge to public acceptance of bebop. Other reworkings from the period include the Gershwins’ 1930 classic “Embraceable You,” which was given separate bebop reinterpretations by Chet Baker, Clifford Brown, and Ornette Coleman.

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“The Beatles are as important as the Gershwins”​


Another Gershwin tune, 1927’s “S’Wonderful,” from the musical Funny Face, had originally served as a stage vehicle for Fred Astaire. Though it can be a tricky song for vocalists – Frank Sinatra swam laps underwater to get his breathing right for the delivery – it is a song that shows how musicians appropriate and innovate using old music. Thus a swing jazz hit for Benny Goodman (in a quartet that included Lionel Hampton and Teddy Wilson) became a bebop instrumental for Lennie Tristano and Lee Konitz, and, in 1976, was recast as a bossa nova tune by João Gilberto.

The song continues to inspire in the 21st Century. Diana Krall’s innovative arrangements on her 2001 Verve album, The Look Of Love, added to her fine singing, gave this old classic a wonderful new lease of life. Krall said that, for her, in terms of inspiration, “The Beatles are as important as the Gershwins.”

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The Beatles are evidence of the truth of poet TS Eliot’s lines, “Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal; bad poets deface what they take, and good poets make it into something better, or at least something different.” The Beatles are perhaps the most inspirational pop band of all time and they took all their influences and made something different – and often better. Even when they started, this was not a case of nostalgia leading them to merely imitate people they admired. As John Lennon said: “It wasn’t a rip-off, it was a love-in.”

The big inspirations for the young Beatles were from American rock’n’roll, especially Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins, and Chuck Berry. But along with these hit-parade heavyweights, they also acknowledged a debt to Tamla band The Marvelettes. The Beatles – and later Carpenters – recorded their song “Please Mr. Postman.”

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Before they became famous, The Beatles put their own stamp on a Roaring 20s hit song called “Ain’t She Sweet,” which was popularized by Eddie Cantor and, later, by Gene Vincent. Lennon said that when they recorded the tune, in June 1961, they wanted it to sound more like “a march” than Vincent’s softer version, which had been a hit for Capitol Records. Lennon told friends that he had been more taken by a version from a little-known London blues singer called Duffy Power. Though the song is a minor one compared with the stunning catalogue of hits that followed, it illustrates how The Beatles were able to draw from various sources from the start. Paul McCartney said, “Songs like ‘Ain’t She Sweet’ were our late-night cabaret material. They showed that we weren’t just another rock’n’roll group.”

Unique adventures in sound​


Inspiration comes from myriad places. McCartney saw François Truffaut’s Fahrenheit 451 at the cinema a few days before “Eleanor Rigby” was recorded. He was bowled over by Bernard Herrmann’s score and use of strings. The strings on “Eleanor Rigby” owe a huge debt to the soundtrack. As McCartney said in 1966, the year the record was made, “I don’t think we ever try to establish trends. We try to keep moving forward and do something different.”

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The Beatles would go on to inspire a musical revolution with groundbreaking albums such as the experimental Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. This unique adventure in sound, songwriting, studio technology, and even cover art had an immediate impact when it was launched on June 1, 1967. Within three days of its release, The Jimi Hendrix Experience opened a show at the Saville Theatre in London with a rendition of the title track

The Beatles are still regarded as one of the benchmarks in music. When Kendrick Lamar released To Pimp A Butterfly through Interscope Records in 2015, he said that he wanted his work “to be talked about the same way Bob Dylan or The Beatles or Jimi Hendrix are talked about.” Fittingly, its mix of jazz and cutting-edge hip-hop, and its cultural significance, can lay claim to being the Sgt Pepper of its decade.

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Super-charging the blues​


Unlike Lennon and McCartney, Mick Jagger’s musical ambitions were not directly kindled by Elvis Presley. The devotion to music of Jagger – and fellow Rolling Stones members Keith Richards, Bill Wyman, Charlie Watts, and Brian Jones – was as authentic as that of The Beatles, but was drawn from different wells. Like The Beatles, the Stones were also fans of Chess Records maestro Chuck Berry but looked more directly to the label’s blues stars, such as Muddy Waters, Howlin’ Wolf, and Buddy Guy.

The Stones also revered soul singers such as Otis Redding and Solomon Burke, and brought into the equation music as diverse as the protest songs of Bob Dylan and the pop of Buddy Holly. Yet while their music has arguably been infused with more nostalgia than their Liverpudlian counterparts, the Stones meshed everything together in a way that helped them rewrite the rulebook for rock’n’roll. They began this journey, interestingly, with a first British hit (in 1963) that was a cover of Lennon and McCartney’s “I Wanna Be Your Man,” written while Jagger and Richards were in the same room as McCartney.

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But it was the blues that really fired their souls. Jagger had a clever ability to customize certain details of the way blues singers phrased their vocals, while Richards and Wyman took many of their guitar hooks and solos from black sources and made something potent of their own. They even took the band’s name from a Muddy Waters song.

The Stones grew quickly as musicians and helped transform popular music with hit singles such “Satisfaction.” By the time of their fourth album, Aftermath (1966), the band were their own creative force. As Jagger later said: “That was a big landmark record for me. It’s the first time we wrote the whole record and finally laid to rest the ghost of having to do these very nice and interesting, no doubt, but still cover versions of old R&B songs.”

Though still drawing on their influences but shaking off the ghost of nostalgia, albums that followed, such as Exile On Main St and Sticky Fingers, were hugely influential – while “Sympathy For The Devil” alone helped inspire swathes of bands, including Primal Scream, The Jesus & Mary Chain and The Charlatans.

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The “reminiscence bump”​


One of the great things about musical inspiration is that it doesn’t necessarily fade, either for music fans or the stars who create the music. The sounds we loved as teenagers or discovered for the first time are important to our sense of identity and remain forever important (psychologists call this lean towards nostalgia the “reminiscence bump”). The Rolling Stones’ Grammy-nominated album of 2016, Blue & Lonesome, is a love song to the blues, with covers of songs they loved as youngsters by Little Walter and Howlin’ Wolf.

When modern superstars talk about the musicians who inspired their own music, many still mention The Beatles and The Rolling Stones. However, the range of creative stimulus is extensive. For Alicia Keys it was Nina Simone (“She taught me about feeling, passion”); for One Direction’s Niall Horan it was the 80s rock vibe (“I’m a massive Eagles fan”); for Fergie it was Led Zeppelin and Guns N’ Roses. Ben Howard’s “biggest hero” was folk singer John Martyn.

When Pharrell Williams was asked by Oprah Winfrey to list some of the special influences for the sound of “Happy” – the best-selling single of the 2010s – among the influences he cited were “Do I Do” by Stevie Wonder and “September” by Earth, Wind & Fire.

The women of yesteryear have inspired the young stars of recent times. For Lana Del Ray it was Joan Baez and Julie London (“I love their voices and what they stood for”); for Lorde it was Etta James (“She was so good at harvesting her suffering”); for Ariana Grande it was Judy Garland, because of the videos her mother showed her throughout her childhood; for Solange it was Minnie Riperton. Amy Winehouse loved Ella Fitzgerald and said, “I learned to sing from Dinah Washington.”

The 20-year rule​


It is also true that many aspects of the music business are cyclical and tastes and trends have a habit of coming around again. There is even a concept called “the 20-year rule,” whose advocates argue that a particular music trend, or even a clothes fashion, will come in and out of popularity roughly every two decades, each time cycling a new wave of nostalgia for those who lived it the first time around.

This was certainly true in the 70s and 80s, when America and parts of Europe wallowed in nostalgia with their embrace of the “oldies” concept. This was encapsulated by George Lucas’ music-heavy 1973 hit movie American Graffiti. The soundtrack, packed with hits from the 50s and 60s by artists such as Chuck Berry, Booker T And The MGs, and The Beach Boys, became a Top 10 album and served as a template for the first wave of nostalgia radio stations.

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Leather jackets and poodle skirts suddenly abounded in popular fashion and sentimental baby boomers wallowing in nostalgia lapped up TV shows such as Happy Days and films such as Grease. The taste for old music even led to an explosion of 50s cover bands, including Sha-Na-Na.

The same “re-run phenomena” was evident in the 80s, when the new wave and hair metal crazes revisited 60s music – and films such as The Big Chill used iconic songs from the likes of Smokey Robinson. There was also a surge in the marketability of bands such as The Doors, while The Beatles’ version of “Twist And Shout” hit the charts again after an appearance in Ferris Bueller’s Day Off. The process goes on. Three decades on from the 80s, Michael Jackson’s “Beat It” was updated by Fall Out Boy.

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The past few years have seen a 90s rewind, which has included celebrations of Nirvana’s Nevermind, and the return of numerous 90s bands including Spice Girls, Backstreet Boys, and Blink-182. As Frank Zappa joked, “It isn’t necessary to imagine the world ending in fire or ice. There are two other possibilities: one is paperwork, and the other is nostalgia.”

Music’s first postmodern era​


Though the 70s were a boom time for nostalgia, it was also arguably the first truly postmodern era in popular music. Musicians such as David Bowie and Roxy Music delved into rock’s past for inspiration but also reconfigured popular music into something new. Bowie, the space-age pop star, was a trailblazer of musical trends and pop fashion. His album The Man Who Sold The World, released in 1970, was full of daring songwriting and moody, hard-rock sounds.

Wary of nostalgia, Bowie nevertheless appropriated from – and influenced – glam rock, soul, disco, new wave, punk rock, and haute couture, and remained a restless innovator right up to his final album, ★ (pronounced “Blackstar”), released just before his death in January 2016.

At the same time as Bowie was starting to make creative waves, Brian Eno of Roxy Music said that he was facing up to the choice about pursuing art or music as a career. Having seen Lou Reed and The Velvet Underground emerge, he realized “you could straddle the two somehow.” Eno, along with Bryan Ferry, formed Roxy Music in 1971, and they shared a quality of decadence with the flamboyantly androgynous Bowie. Roxy gained immediate acceptance in the UK with their first hit “Virginia Plain.” Even without Eno, who left in 1973, their slick, pop product was still hugely influential.

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Guitarist Phil Manzanera said that the early 70s were full of drab, denim-wearing musicians before the emergence of Bowie and Roxy. “Suddenly there was colour and exoticism and the spirit of rock’n’roll again,” he said. “We supported Bowie at the Greyhound in Croydon in June 1972: Bowie in his full Ziggy Stardust gear and us in all our regalia, performing to just 150 people in this little upstairs room.”

The entire New Romantic scene – bands such as Visage, Duran Duran, Spandau Ballet, and Culture Club – took their cues from Bowie, Roxy Music, and Marc Bolan. Bowie had a barbed attitude towards imitators, however. The 1980 song “Teenage Wildlife,” reportedly aimed at new wave star Gary Numan, includes the lyrics: “Same old thing/In brand new drag.”

Musical reinvention​


Bowie is also a prime example of a musician who successfully reinvented himself. Bob Dylan has done the same musically – from his early days as a Woody Guthrie-style folk singer-songwriter to playing electric folk with The Band and then performing Christian rock. Other metamorphoses in pop, using fashion to shape-shift, would include Madonna, Prince, Lady Gaga, and Taylor Swift.

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Musicians have also reinvented themselves in terms of adventurous musical choices. Willie Nelson has tackled country music, jazz, and reggae during his long career. As much as any great modern musician, Nelson knows the value of drawing from past sounds and styles. One overriding theme of his American supergroup The Highwaymen – which featured Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, and Kris Kristofferson – is a mood of reflection and a sense of loss. The country legend has known how to move with the times during a series of eclectic partnerships, shown in his collaboration with rapper Snoop Dogg, on songs such as “Roll Me Up.”

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The birth of hip-hop​


Hip-hop originated in the mainly African-American South Bronx area of New York in the 70s. It began when DJ Kool Herc (known as the father of the breakbeat) began isolating and repeating breaks – the most danceable portions of songs – and helped launch a new style of music. With artists such as Afrika Bambaataa and Grandmaster Flash, hip-hop embedded itself as part of the mainstream by 1979. During the following decade, it gained a global following.

There were antecedents – going back to the scat and vocalese of Louis Armstrong and the poetry songs of Gil Scott-Heron – but in the 80s, hip-hop became one of the most creative and musical movements of the modern era, with groups such as NWA (with Ice Cube), Public Enemy, Salt-N-Pepper, EPMD, and Beastie Boys. Other great rappers followed in the 90s, including LL Cool J, 2pac, Biggie Smalls, and Wu-Tang Clan. Hip-hop is perhaps the most dominant form of music today, with musicians such as Jay Z, Drake, Chance the Rapper, and Kendrick Lamar selling millions around the world.

Rap stars now also earn mainstream critical acclaim for their work. At the 2018 Grammys, Lamar won five trophies, scooping the awards for Best Rap/Sung Performance, Best Sung Performance, Best Rap Song, Best Rap Album, and Best Music Video.

Even something as cutting-edge as hip-hop, however, indulges in nostalgia. Saxophonist Terrace Martin, who has produced both Lamar and Snoop Dogg, said, “I started producing hip-hop tracks because it was the music of my time, but I never lost my love for jazz.” Terrace, a massive fan of Verve Records and Blue Note greats such as Sonny Stitt and Jackie McLean, said that Lamar, like Coltrane before him, is always studying and thinking about music.

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Hip-hop is not the only music that has evolved and redefined itself in the past three decades. Country music saw an explosion in alt.country acts, such as Steve Earle and Lucinda Williams, and modern Americana stars such as Ryan Adams, who have helped change the perception of what modern country music is, paving the way for 21st-century talents such as Kacey Musgraves.

Switching genres within songs​


In the 90s, when bands would sometimes changed their approach from album to album, stars such as Beck were even mashing together genres within songs.

Beck won a Grammy for Best Alternative Album for his 1996 record, Odelay. Producer Mike Simpson said one particular track, “Hotwax,” was “a labor of love” that took six months to complete.

In the song, Beck raps over a country guitar. He brought in all kinds of equipment, such as walkie-talkies he had bought at charity shops, to play on top. The track, featuring different tempos and a dizzying array of effects, shows why he has been hailed as a man who “captured the zeitgeist” during that decade. It is no surprise that his musical influences are varied, with a melting pot of Mississippi John Hurt, Big Bill Broonzy, Sonic Youth, The Velvet Underground, and Grandmaster Flash playing a part in his own masterful blurring of boundaries.

Cross-pollination in the 21st Century​


As we head towards the third decade of the 21st Century, genres and styles are shifting all the time. In recent years, Rihanna has covered Tame Impala and Miley Cyrus collaborated with The Flaming Lips. The term “post-genre music world” has even been attached to the modern music scene.

Cross-pollination of music will continue apace, as streaming, YouTube, and mobile apps thrive in the new digital age, changing the way musicians make music and the way fans consume it. To create truly good music, a performer will still need solid foundations and inspirations from a variety of sources. The most successful global superstars acknowledge this. Chance The Rapper has lauded the influence of gospel singer Kirk Franklin; Ed Sheeran has hailed the influence of Irish folk singer Cara Dillon and her “sublime voice.”

As well as inspiration from the past, new and pressing social issues spark fresh creative energy and output from musicians. The subject of gun violence, a topic that dominated debate in America in the early part of 2018, is at the heart of the Terence Blanchard album, Live, recorded with his band E-Collective. Blanchard said they got together because they wanted “to play music to inspire young people.”

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Music will both continue to evolve and continue to embrace nostalgia. The future awaits but the past will be there to be mined. As John Coltrane told DownBeat in September 1960: “I’ve found you’ve got to look back at the old things and see them in a new light.”

Listen to the uDiscover Nostalgia playlist here.

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Bill Pearis
Last reply · posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Here’s a roundup of recent tour news. Check the Tour Dates category for more.

JOHN MORELAND / GEORGIA MAQ

Says Georgia Maq: “not too long ago, the most annoying girl in the world (me) messaged one of her favourite songwriters being like ‘omg hi John, it’s me again! if you ever need a support for a show, I’d love to be considered. I play acoustic guitar and the harmonica and I am so inspired by your music and I just think it would make for a really fun time.’ Georgia and John’s tour his the West Coast in October.

john moreland georgia maq


PEACHES

Peaches has announced new fall tour dates in support of her new album No Lube So Rude.



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ALANIS MORISSETTE LA RESIDENCY

Alanis Morissette will be in residence at LA’s YouTube Theater on November 5, 6, 10 & 11. Titled “Butterfly with a Machete: A Rock Traumedy,” Alanis calls it a “wild ride that blends music, stories, insights, dance, video, sketch comedy, and always….rock n roll.”



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CONCERT FOR THE FIRST AMENDMENT AT TOWN HALL

The Committee for the First Amendment is presenting “Rise Up, Sing Out: A Concert for the First Amendment” at Town Hall on June 14 with Rufus Wainwright, Bette Midler, Patti Smith, Sasha Allen, Joy Reid, Jane Fonda and more with more to be announced. “In a moment when our fundamental freedoms are under threat, music has always led the way. From the civil rights movement to today, artists have been at the forefront of the fight for justice and free expression. Join us for an uplifting night that celebrates the freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment speech, religion, press, assembly, and protest and find out how you can take action.”

JAŸ-Z

JAŸ-Z just played the Roots Picnic and has now announced a pair of shows: Paris at Stade de France on September 10 and Los Angeles at Sofi Stadium on October 23. Before that JAŸ-Z plays three nights at NYC’s Yankee Stadium on July 10, 11 & 12.

CHAT PILE

Chat Pile will be touring this fall for their new album and joining them arey Soul Glo, Prize Horse, Virga, and Shallowater, varying by show.

BOY HARSHER

Darkwave duo Boy Harsher have announced a fall tour that they’re calling “The Heartbreak Tour.” It runs through September into November, and Choir Boy, Evanora Unlimited, True Blue, and Kassie Krut each open shows, varying by date.

UNDEROATH

Last month Underoath announced they’d play their 2006 album Define the Great Line in full at Furnace Fest, and now they’ve revealed a full 20th anniversary tour for the album. August Burns Red, Atreyu, As Cities Burn, and Emery open the shows, varying by date.

WISHY

Wishy have announced Nature’s Pill, their second album, and a fall tour.

PETER BJORN AND JOHN

Swedish trio Peter Bjorn and John will be celebrating the 20th anniversary of their breakthrough album Writer’s Block — the one with “Young Folks” — on tour this year and they’ve just announced a few North American dates that stick to the West Coast and Southwest.

PETER BJORN AND JOHN writers block anniversary tour


NICE STRONG ARM

Late-’80s Austin noiserock band Nice Strong Arm are playing their first shows in over 30 years.

DROMFEST 2026

Nice Strong Arm are one of many ’80s/’90s college rock bands — also Scrawl, Come, Hypnolovewheel and more — who are playing Dromfest 2026.

SHUDDER TO THINK

DC/NYC post-hardcore greats Shudder to Think, who returned for their first tour in over a decade and released new music last year, have announced a few live shows that are happening in September.

MILITARIE GUN

Having wrapped up their tour with Joyce Manor last month, Militarie Gun have announced a new round of North American shows. They’ll sell $20 tickets across all 27 dates of their “20 Songs for 20 Dollars” tour, which is with Softcult, Shady Nasty, and Dazy.

ANDREW MCMAHON

Andrew McMahon (Something Corporate, Jack’s Mannequin) has announced a tour of intimate solo shows that have him on piano and nothing else. “Coming off two years of big shows and festivals, I’ve been craving the intimacy of small rooms and the spontaneity that comes with performing solo,” shares McMahon. “There’s a sense of adventure and chemistry with the crowd that makes every performance feel completely unique. I’m so eager to get out there and be a part of that kind of energy.” The tour includes two nights at NYC’s City Winery October 15 and 16.

andrew mcmahon piano tour


BONOBO

Bonobo will be taking his new live band show on the road this year in support of his upcoming album Distance and Static.



Check our Tour Dates category for more.

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BrooklynVegan Staff
Last reply · posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
After Saturday at Governors Ball was cut short due to severe weather and multiple artists had their sets cut, Sunday also had a weather-related delay, although thankfully a brief one. Sets were temporarily paused around 1:45pm because of lightning in the area, but they were able to resume not long after, and the rest of the day happened as scheduled, and with the addition of Blood Orange, after he was cut from Saturday. A$AP Rocky made the most of the big stage with his headlining set with a troop of dancers, a bullhorn, a helicopter and American flags, telling the crowd, “I came to get disrespectful” (Rihanna was also seen watching). He took the stage late and got cut off early, but before that he delivered a career-spanning set that included lots of songs from his January album Don’t Be Dumb. Sunday at Governors Ball also included sets from Geese, Japanese Breakfast (who revealed that she’s pregnant), Slayyyter, Clipse, Fcukers, Hemlocke Springs, Hot Mulligan, Jennie, Freddie Gibbs, Rachel Chinouriri, Hannah Jadagu, Holly Humberstone, and more. See pictures from the whole day (most are by Ellen Qberplaya, Freddie Gibbs photo by Rich Fury) below.
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hemlocke Springs at Governors Ball 2026

Hemlocke Springs (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
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Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hannah Jadagu at Governors Ball 2026

Hannah Jadagu (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Rachel Chinouriri at Governors Ball 2026

Rachel Chinouriri (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Slayyyter at Governors Ball 2026

Slayyyter (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
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Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Japanese Breakfast at Governors Ball 2026

Japanese Breakfast (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Holly Humberstone at Governors Ball 2026

Holly Humberstone (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Fcukers at Governors Ball 2026

Fcukers (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Blood Orange at Governors Ball 2026

Blood Orange (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Geese at Governors Ball 2026

Geese (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Clipse at Governors Ball 2026

Clipse (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

Hot Mulligan (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

Hot Mulligan (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

Hot Mulligan (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

Hot Mulligan (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

Hot Mulligan (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

Hot Mulligan (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Hot Mulligan at Governors Ball 2026

Hot Mulligan (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Freddie Gibbs at Governors Ball 2026

Freddie Gibbs (photo by Rich Fury)
Governors Ball 2026

photo by Ellen Qbertplaya
Governors Ball 2026

photo by Ellen Qbertplaya
Governors Ball 2026

photo by Ellen Qbertplaya
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
Jennie at Governors Ball 2026

Jennie (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
A$AP Rocky at Governors Ball 2026

A$AP Rocky (photo by Ellen Qbertplaya)
See pictures from Saturday at Governors Ball here and Friday here.

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S
Last reply · posted in 🎬 Movies & TV
like i dont mean twist endings or the ones that leave you shook. just endings that felt so right for the story they told, no loose ends, no forced drama, just...satisfying. like you sit back after and go "yeah, thats how it was supposed to end." for me its **the farewell** that last shot of awkwafina on the street? perfect. didnt need anything more. ive seen too many movies lately where the last 10 minutes feel like they were written by someone who got bored or ran out of ideas. ruins the whole thing. anyway im tryna find more movies like that. ones where the ending hits just as hard as the rest of it, maybe even harder any recs? i dont care about the genre, just something where the ending feels intentional, you know? not like they slapped it on at the last second.
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BrooklynVegan Staff
Last reply · posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Pittsburgh metalcore band 156/Silence release their sixth album and first for Pure Noise, From a Distance, in September, and they’ve announced a fall tour supporting it. Shows begin on September 9 in Worcester, MA and wrap up on October 3 in their home town, and they’ll be joined by Aviana, Heavensgate and Fromjoy. They also have festival dates at Inkcarceration and Louder Than Life, a few August shows with Coldstate, and shows with Chiodos, sace6 and Calva Louise throughout the summer. See all dates below.

156/Silence’s headlining tour includes an NYC show at The Meadows on September 10. Tickets to all dates go on sale Friday, June 12 at 10 AM local time.


156/Silence 2026 tour


156/SILENCE: 2026 TOUR DATES
Sat, Jul 18 — Mansfield, OH — Ohio State Reformatory
Thu, Jul 30 – Denver, CO @ Fillmore Auditorium ^
Sat, Aug 1 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Rockwell @ The Complex ^
Mon, Aug 3 – Boise, ID @ Knitting Factory ^
Wed, Aug 5 – Bend, OR @ Midtown Ballroom ^
Thu, Aug 6 – Spokane, WA @ Knitting Factory ^
Fri, Aug 7 – Vancouver, BC @ The Commodore ^
Sun, Aug 9 – Calgary, AB @ The Palace Theatre ^
Mon, Aug 10 – Edmonton, AB @ Union Hall ^
Tue, Aug 11 – Saskatoon, SK @ Louis ^
Wed, Aug 12 – Winnipeg, MB @ Burton Cummings Theatre ^
Fri, Aug 14 – St. Paul, MN @ Myth Live ^
Sat, Aug 15 – Green Bay, WI @ Epic Event Center ^
Sun, Aug 16 – Chicago, IL @ House of Blues ^
Mon, Aug 17 – Chicago, IL @ House of Blues ^
Wed, Aug 19 – Toronto, ON @ The Concert Hall ^
Sun, Aug 23 – Portland, ME @ State Theater ^
Tue, Aug 25 – Providence, RI @ Fete Ballroom ^
Wed, Aug 26 – Huntington, NY @ The Paramount ^
Fri, Aug 28 – Asheville, NC @ The Orange Peel ^
Sat, Aug 29 – Nashville, TN @ Brooklyn Bowl ^
Thu, Aug 20 – Barrie, ON @ The Queens Night Club *
Fri, Aug 21 – Syracuse, NY @ Song & Dance *
Sat, Aug 22 – Albany, NY @ Empire Underground *
Wed, Sep 9 – Worcester, MA @ Palladium Upstairs #
Thu, Sep 10 – Brooklyn, NY @ The Meadows #
Fri, Sep 11 – Philadelphia, PA @ The Foundry @ The Fillmore #
Sat, Sep 12 – Baltimore, MD @ Soundstage #
Sun, Sep 13 – Richmond, VA @ Canal Club #
Tue Sep 15 – Durham, NC @ Motorco Music Hall #
Wed, Sep 16 – Atlanta, GA @ Terminal West #
Thu, Sep 17 – Winter Park, FL @ The Conduit #
Fri, Sep 18 – Jacksonville, FL @ Albatross #
Sat, Sep 19 – Greenville, SC @ Radio Room #
Sun, Sep 20 — Louisville, KY — Kentucky Expo Center
Tue, Sep 22 – Dallas, TX @ Puzzles Deep Ellum #
Wed, Sep 23 – San Antonio, TX @ The Rock Box #
Fri, Sep 25 – Mesa, AZ @ Rosetta Room #
Sat, Sep 26 – Anaheim, CA @ Parish @ HOB #
Sun, Sep 27 – Sacramento, CA @ Goldfield Trading Post #
Wed, Sep 30 – Kansas City, MO @ RecordBar #
Fri, Oct 02 – Detroit, MI @ TSDMAAC (Sanctuary) #
Sat, Oct 03 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Preserving #

* with Coldstate
# with Aviana, Heavensgate & Fromjoy
^ with Chiodos, sace6 & Calva Louise

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Amanda Hatfield
Last reply · posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Kelsey Lu‘s first album in seven years, So Help Me God, is out this Friday, and ahead of its release, they’ve given us a final early taste with the majestic, orchestrated “Cutting Off the Head of a Ghost.” They originally wrote it with Patrick Wimberly for the animated series Arcane, and it features a children’s choir. Watch the video below.

Lu also announced a fall tour, with North American shows in September and October followed by a European run in November. See all dates below.

The NYC show is at Pioneer Works on October 3. Tickets to that and all dates go on sale Friday, June 12 at 10 AM local, with various presales starting Wednesday, June 10 at 10 AM local.


KELSEY LU: 2026 TOUR DATES
Sep 30 26 – Philadelphia, PA – The Foundry
Oct 3 26 – Brooklyn, NY – Pioneer Works
Oct 4 26 – Boston, MA – Brighton Music Hall
Oct 6 26 – Washington, DC – Union Stage
Oct 8 26 – Chicago, IL – Outset
Oct 10 26 – Vancouver, BC – Chan Centre for the Performing Arts
Oct 12 26 – Seattle, WA – Neumos
Oct 13 26 – Portland, OR – Wonder Ballroom
Oct 15 26 – San Francisco, CA – Great American Music Hall
Oct 16 26 – Los Angeles, CA – El Rey Theatre
Nov 3 26 – Paris, FR – Foundation Cartier
Nov 4 26 – Paris, FR – Foundation Cartier
Nov 6 26 – Amsterdam, NL – Tolhuistuin
Nov 7 26 – Utrecht, NL – Le Guess Who
Nov 9 26 – Manchester, UK – New Century Locker
Nov 10 26 – London, UK – KOKO
Nov 11 26 – Brussels, BE – Botanique (Museum)
Nov 13 26 – Cologne, DE – CBE
Nov 15 26 – Hamburg, DE – Bahnof Pauli
Nov 16 26 – Berlin, DE – Saalchen
Nov 17 26 – Warsaw, PL – Oczki
Nov 18 26 – Prague, CZ – Meet Factory
Nov 20 26 – Bern, CH – Full Of Lava

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BrooklynVegan Staff
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
So many artists, so many songs, so little time. Each week we review a handful of new albums (of all genres), round up even more new music that we’d call “indie,” and talk about what metal is coming out. We post music news, track premieres, and more all day. We update a playlist weekly of some of our current favorite tracks. Here’s a daily roundup with a bunch of interesting, newly released songs in one place.

ELANOR MOSS – “SARAH WAITING IN THE CAR”

London-based singer songwriter Elanor Moss announced her debut album, The Knife, The Needle, due out August 21 via Merge. The first single is “Sarah Waiting in the Car,” a delicate folk song with gentle orchestration. “‘Sarah Waiting in the Car’ broke an almost year-long drought of writing songs,” she says. “It reignited that spark in me around songwriting, and felt like a breakthrough into something new and intriguing that I wanted to follow. It served as a bit of a guiding light as I re-entered a more consistent relationship with songwriting again; the north star of the album in a way.”




TRICKY – “STILL SEE ME THERE” FT MITCH SANDERS

This is the second single from Tricky’s upcoming album Different When It’s Silent and this one features vocals from Bristol singer-songwriter Mitch Sanders.




PENELOPE ISLES – “THINKING SEAT”

Brighton-based indie pop band Penelope Isles are back with a new album, 3, due out September 25 via Bella Union, and they’ve shared the first single is “Thinking Seat.”




SHEARWATER – “SLUGS IN THE MARIGOLDS” FT DOUG WIESELMAN

Doug Wieselman’s distinctive saxophone enlivens this latest single from Shearwater’s upcoming The New World. “This was a band favorite on The New World,” Meiburg says.”We liked how its loose, sunny feeling plays against the lyric–and we loved how Doug’s sax slithers up beside you.”




THE MENZINGERS – “BETTER ANGELS”

“We tried to make ‘Better Angels’ the song version of those late-night conversations with an old friend, the kind where you sit around a kitchen table and solve all of the world’s problems,” Vocalist Tom May says of the latest single off The Menzingers’ new album Everything I Ever Saw. “It feels like we’re being torn apart. The country is run by monsters and money, and there are plenty of people who benefit from keeping us at each other’s throats. ’Better Angels’ is a message about what we’re doing, what responsibility we have to become better versions of ourselves, and that we’re not alone or powerless. It’s a push against the cynicism that’s so easy to embrace and a reminder that the world we want starts with how we treat ourselves and each other.”




ROBYN HITCHCOCK – “HOW TO FEEL ALRIGHT”

“I love to rock out my feelings – all of my feelings: up and down, positive and negative, flaming and sombre. It’s what music is for, after all: to unleash your desires, frustrations, anguish and delight in three minute bursts that some people can even dance to,” says Robyn Hitchcock of “How to Feel Alright” from his upcoming album The Confuser. This one features guitar from Robyn’s former Soft Boys bandmate Kimberly Rew.




SHOW ME THE BODY – “EAT FOR PEACE”

Show Me The Body have given us another taste of their new album Alone Together with the frenetic “Eat for Peace”




MARY IN THE JUNKYARD – “MOUSE”

“I went to Iceland and became obsessed with the ocean,” says mary in the junkyard’s Clari Freeman-Taylor of this song. “I remembered I was a fisherman in a former life with a mouse in my pocket, lost in a storm. It is about me reconnecting with the mouse when they have taken on a human form in this life.” The band’s debut album Role Model Hermit, is out July 3.




HARMONY TIVIDAD – “BEST DRESSED”

“Caroline and I were inspired by vintage bandstand videos and wanted to capture the energy of those old performances,” Harmony Tividad says of the video for “Best Dressed,” the latest single off her new album Lifetime. “The 1960s television stage becomes a metaphor for the performance of femininity, existing in a world built around spectacle and perception.”




ART FEYNMAN – “PLASTIC FLOWERS”

Luke Temple is back with a new Art Feynman album, Orphans, which will be out August 7 via Western Vinyl. Where 2023’s fantastic Be Good the Crazy Boys was a full-band studio affair, on this one Temple goes back to the four-track for an album full of “music to do other things by.”




BONOBO – “ME AND YOU”

Bonobo (Simon Green) has announced a new album, Distance and Static, which will be out September 11 via Ninja Tune. It features quite a few collaborators: Arooj Aftab, Nilüfer Yanya, Nicole Miglis, Joy Crookes, Aanya Martin, and Ichiko Aoba. This is the guest-free first single.




CHAT PILE – “DEEP BLUE”

Chat Pile announced a new album, Who Loves the Sun, and shared the first single, which you can read more about here.




WISHY – “LOVESICK”

The first single from Wishy’s upcoming album is “Lovesick” which gives off strong ’80s alt-rock vibes. “There’s not much more that needs to be said about yearning in 2026, but here it is anyway,” singer-guitarist Nina Pitchkites says. “Kevin and I are stupidly romantic people who like twee pop.”




TY SEGALL – “BLACK PAINT”

Ty Segall has announced new album Chrome which will be out August 28 via Drag City. It was mostly recorded live with help from Bitchin Bajas’ Cooper Crain and Ty’s band of Ben Boye, Evan Burrows, Mikal Cronin, and Emmett Kelly. First single rips.




SOFT CELL – “DANCETERIA”

Here’s the title track from Soft Cell’s final album which is an ode to early-’80s NYC club culture.




INTERPOL – “THIS MIRROR WEIGHS A TON” & “SEE OUT LOUD”

Interpol announced new album This Mirror Weighs a Ton today and shared two songs from it: the dreamy title track which incorporates atmospheric sound design elements, and “See Out Loud” which is a more traditional Interpop rock song but does features dueling lead vocals from Paul Banks and guitarist Daniel Kessler.




Looking for even more new songs? Browse the New Songs archive

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Bill Pearis
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Hot Chip‘s Alexis Taylor and Mike Simonetti (Troubleman Unlimited / Italians Do It Better”) have a collab 12″ that’s out this Friday, June 12 via Smugglers Way. The A-side is a cover of Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy‘s “I See a Darkness” that gets a chilled-out dancefloor arrangement with bubbling synth arpeggiations.

The video, directed by Ben Crook, features Taylor plus Jarvis Cocker, Sian Ahern, and German actor David Bredin. Says Alexis:

Sat in the dark in a hotel room on my own on tour, and after 3 aborted attempts to work with different film makers to get something made for ‘I See A Darkness,’ I came up with a very simple idea myself, to accompany the music and to try to get to the emotion and the narrative at the core of Will Oldham’s beautiful song. I saw the room that we see in the film — the scene, the two men facing each other and getting closer in their armchairs as the intensity of what they sing to each other increases. I saw the lady at the centre and back of the same space, illuminated by lamp light for the choruses, and the red balloon hovering over the 4 people in the scene. I wanted this to be like a televised Samuel Beckett play, and to be surreal, simple, and emotionally direct. Ben Crook helped me massively, understanding my vision, directing beautifully and bringing the whole thing to life.

I cast David Bredin after meeting him in Rostock, Germany, and believing he would be right for the role. I’m glad I trusted my gut. He delivers an incredibly moving performance and somehow exceeded my expectations of what we could achieve emotionally in this short film. He clearly feels what he is conveying through the lyrics and you can’t miss that.

Jarvis Cocker and Sian Ahern are both composed and brilliant in their supporting roles, and they were there to represent Mike Simonetti and Elizabeth Wight’s musical roles in the track.

Bonnie himself is there in spirit, all ‘busted up’, to quote another of his songs; the sculpture was made as a surprise for me, by Ben.

It was a joy to conceive this and to work on it with Ben Crook and the whole team on the day. The best experience I have had on a video shoot. I hope people connect with it!

Watch the video below.

Alexis Taylor released great new solo album Paris in the Spring back in March, and Hot Chip are reissuing three of their most-loved albums on vinyl this July.

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BrooklynVegan Staff
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Conor Oberst has issued a new statement about Bright Eyes‘ NYC show at Forest Hills Stadium on Saturday, which was shut down after their first set due to approaching severe weather (the storm impacted Governors Ball and other shows happening outdoors in NYC that night as well). The band are issuing refunds to ticketholders, and say they are “feeling extremely sad, unlucky, maybe even cursed” — the first of their three Wide Awake / Digital Ash shows, at Red Rocks, was also postponed because of weather. Conor writes:

Hey everyone,

We’re still reeling and devastated about the severe weather cancellation at Forest Hills this past weekend. After over a year of planning, it’s been difficult to process our disappointment while also working through next steps. We really appreciate your patience.

So, first off – if you purchased your tickets online via AXS, your tickets will be automatically refunded in full, issued to the credit card you used to purchase within 30 business days. No further action is required. Otherwise, please contact your original point of purchase to request a refund.

We also want to give a clearer picture of what happened. The storm on June 6 moved in fast and hit hard. It didn’t just affect us – it shut down multiple outdoor shows across the city, including Governors Ball and an event at Under the K Bridge. These kinds of decisions are made in constant real-time contact with meteorologists and city officials, and this one ended up being the worst-case scenario.

We were cleared to play our ‘Wide Awake’ set, with the understanding that conditions could change rapidly. And that’s exactly what happened. As we walked off stage, we were told by the promoter and venue that the show had to be shut down immediately due to extreme weather risk for the safety of all.

From there, the only focus was getting everyone out safely before conditions got worse. And they did get worse shortly after.

For the record, we worked really hard for many months getting these 3 shows together and 2 of the 3 were affected by severe weather completely out of our control. Needlesstosay we are feeling extremely sad, unlucky, maybe even cursed. We lost money on the whole endeavor and worst of all didn’t get to complete what we set out to do.

Life isn’t fair.

See you down the road,

Conor Oberst

The show also streamed live on Veeps, where it’s available to watch on demand. You can also check out our pictures and review.

Conor stuck around NYC on Sunday, where he did a set at an intimate Lower East Side bar.


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Adam Starkey
· posted in 🕺 Music RSS Feeds
Jemaine Clement and Nicola Walker in Alice And Steve


Nicola Walker and Jemaine Clement lead the cast of Hulu’s Alice And Steve.

Created by Sophie Goodhart (Sex Education), the “wrong-com” follows Alice who is devastated when her best friend Steve starts dating her 26-year-old daughter.


The show’s supporting cast includes Yali Topol Margalith, Joel Fry, Tyrese Eaton-Dyce, Marcia Warren, Eilidh Fisher, Lydia Wilson, Ebony Aboagye and Ken Blackburn.

All six episodes of Alice And Steve are available on Disney+ in the UK.

Who composed the Alice And Steve soundtrack?​

Alice And Steve

Jemaine Clement and Yali Topol Margalith in ‘Alice And Steve’ CREDIT: Hulu/Disney

The show’s score is by Arthur Sharpe, whose previous credits include Landscapers, Guilt, Ghosts and Dreamland.

What other songs appear in the show?​


Alice And Steve features a number of needle drops, ranging from Willie Nelson, Years & Years to Basement Jaxx. You can check out an episode-by-episode breakdown below.

Episode one

‘Livin’ Thing’ – Electric Light Orchestra
‘Alright’ – Supergrass
‘Rhythm Is A Mystery’ – K-Klass
‘Don’t Call Me Up (R3HAB Remix)’ – Mabel
‘Do You Trust Me?’ – Blanche
‘Blue Skies’ – Willie Nelson
‘Silver And Sunshine’ – Looking Glass


Episode two

‘War’ – Edwin Starr

Episode three

‘The Power Of Love’ – Jennifer Rush
‘Wide Awake’ – Parquet Courts
‘Blue Skies’ – Willie Nelson


Episode four

‘She’s Got A Way’ – The Hit Crew
‘Oh Shit’ – The Pharcyde


Episode five

‘Archie, Marry Me’ – Alvvays

Episode six

‘The Best’ – Tina Turner
‘Where’s Your Head At’ – Basement Jaxx
‘Desire’ – Years & Years
‘Bakerman’ – Laid Back
‘Why Me’ – Kris Kristofferson
‘Happy Together’ – The Turtles


The post Every song on the ‘Alice And Steve’ soundtrack appeared first on NME.

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S
Last reply · posted in 📱 Gadgets & Mobile Tech
like seriously, i swear the things shrink every generation. i lost one of mine last week and spent an hour tearing apart my apartment only to find it stuck to the bottom of my sock (dont ask). its not even like they sound better for being tiny, they just get more annoying to handle. and dont get me started on the 'tap to control' nonsense — half the time im accidentally pausing my music when i try to adjust them. bigger isnt always better but maybe we could stop at 'still fits in my hand without vanishing into another dimension'? anyone else think this is getting ridiculous or am i just cursed with butterfingers?
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