āRainy Days and Mondaysā showcased Karen Carpenterās soaring voice and Richard Carpenterās ear for emotional precision. Written by Paul Williams and Roger Nichols, the song became a Gold-certified hit and a signature moment for the Carpenters. Backed by the legendary Wrecking Crew, it captured a mood and made it unforgettable.
Unlocking Qi2 Charging: The Game-Changer for Car Chargers in 2025
By Mitch Rice
Wireless Chargingās Frustration Era is Over. Hereās Why Qi2 Matters.Letās face it: weāre shackled to our phones. Yet for years, “wireless” charging felt anything but freeāfumbling to find the sweet spot on a pad, watching your iPhone crawl from 20% to 30% during a road trip, or worse, smelling that dreaded overheating plastic.
Enter Qi2. Backed by Apple and the Wireless Power Consortium, this magnetic revolution (literally) snaps your device into perfect alignment every time. And with Qi2.2ās looming upgrade promising smarter thermal management and adaptive speeds, itās not just an improvementāitās the death knell for clunky, inefficient charging.
What Is Qi2?
Launched by the Wireless Power Consortium (WPC), Qi2 is the second major version of the globally recognized Qi wireless charging standard. It introduced Magnetic Power Profile (MPP)āa feature that uses magnets to automatically align your magsafe iphone charger for faster, more efficient charging. Sound familiar? Thatās because it builds on Appleās MagSafe technology( Apple was involved in developing the Qi2 standard), now available to the broader industry.
Qi2 enables up to 15W fast charging with better heat control and greater compatibility across brands and devices. But the story doesnāt end here.
Whatās Coming Next: Qi2.2
Qi2.2 is the highly anticipated upgrade to Qi2, and itās set to raise the bar even further. This isnāt just a simple iterationāit addresses long-standing problems with wireless charging and brings to your everyday life real, practical and tangible improvements.
Key Features of Qi2.2:
- Faster Charging Speeds: It supports even higher power output for quicker and more efficient chargingāwithout compromising safety. This is great for getting a quick power boost during your busiest hours.
- Improved Magnetic Alignment: Built-in magnets enable you to quickly snap your device into the best position each time, which reduces the possibility of misalignment and thus improves stability.
- Backward Compatibility: Qi2.2 devices work with older Qi and Qi2 wireless chargers all the same, so you donāt have to put your existing gear into waste.
Why It Matters to You:
- Less Waiting: Charge your phone in less time, even during short breaks.
- No More Guesswork: Just drop your phone onto the car charger fast charger and it connects perfectly.
- More Compatible Accessories: Your devices will work more reliably, from car mounts to desktop stands.
- Easy Upgrades: You wonāt have to overhaul your entire setup to take advantage of the new standard.
ESRās Qi2 Car Charger with CryoBoost: Speed Meets Stability
While Qi2.2 is still on the horizon, ESR is already delivering cutting-edge solutions built on Qi2 technology. Case in point: the ESR Qi2 Car Charger with CryoBoost.(esrtech.com)
What Makes It Stand Out:
- 15W Magnetic Fast Charging: Provides full-speed charging for MagSafe-compatible devicesāeven while navigating or streaming.
- CryoBoost Active Cooling: ESRās proprietary tech keeps temperatures down, ensuring peak performance and battery safety during long drives. It solves the biggest pain point of drivers using phones for navigation: overheating.
- Magnetic Precision: Built-in magnets align your phone immediatelyāno slipping, no hassle.
ESRās Qi2 car charger with CryoBoost ensures your phone always stays charged, cool, and ready for any purposes, whether you’re planning your daily commute, departing on a weekend/holiday road trip, or just running errands around town. Designed with both protection and performance in mind, this car cell phone charger delivers fast and stable power while on the other hand, intelligently dealing with heatāso you can navigate, stream, or take calls without problems. Itās not only a MagSafe car mount charger; it also reflects the innovation behind the upcoming Qi2.2 standard.
Final Thoughts
More than just about convenience, wireless charging is also about performance, safety, and effortless integration into your life. With Qi2 already changing the market and more revolutionary Qi2.2 on the way, the wireless charging experience is becoming faster, smarter, and gives you more user-friendly experience than ever.
And with brands like ESR leading the way, you donāt have to wait for the future. You can start experiencing itāright now.
Enter Qi2. Backed by Apple and the Wireless Power Consortium, this magnetic revolution (literally) snaps your device into perfect alignment every time. And with Qi2.2ās looming upgrade promising smarter thermal management and adaptive speeds, itās not just an improvementāitās the death knell for clunky, inefficient charging.
Martha and the Muffins’ Mark Gane’s ‘Garden Music’ Is a Meditative Journey Through Sound, Soil, and Sonic Memory
Mark Ganeāco-founder of iconic Canadian band Martha and the Muffins and the mind behind international hit āEcho Beachāāhas released his first solo album, Garden Music, a collection of experimental instrumental compositions inspired by plant names and imagined inner worlds. Released May 1, 2025, Garden Music is a sprawling, deeply intuitive project that took shape over decades and now arrives as an ambient, artful meditation on memory, nature, and sound.
The Toronto-based composer, visual artist, and sonic experimenter first began dreaming of Garden Music years ago, spurred by a suggestion from his partner and creative collaborator Martha Johnson. āShe said I should do a solo project that combined my three great lovesāmusic, painting, and gardening,ā Gane explains. āEventually, I started asking: If plants were people, what would their lives sound like?ā That seed grew into a rich, textured album composed from over 50 years of collected studio, field, and found recordings.
Listen to it now on Apple Music, Bandcamp, or Qobuz.
Each of the 11 instrumental pieces is named after a common plantāBee Balm, Feverfew, Creeping Charlie, and the haunting Love Lies Bleeding, which includes the lone sung lyric: āHoney Bee youāre gone for good, and so I sing this songā¦ā. From miniature sonic sculptures to lush ambient collages, Ganeās compositions defy genre and reward close listening. Reviewers have called the album āa film that passes before the eyes of our earsā and āa whimsical wander through the landscape of the authorās imaginationā.
Though highly conceptual, Garden Music isnāt cold or calculated. āMy approach was almost entirely intuitive,ā says Gane. āI wasnāt trying to force anything. I just let each piece evolve from sounds Iād archivedālive recordings, field sounds, tape hiss, voice fragments. The presence of the human voice showed up unexpectedly and stayed.ā That presence takes many forms: a chopped-up interview with Delia Derbyshire, a 1951 Valentine from Ganeās mother, a ghostly late-night phone call in Deadly Nightshade.
Originally set aside while Martha and the Muffins projects took precedence and both artists dealt with health challenges, Garden Music was resurrected in 2022 during COVID lockdowns. āFinishing it felt like gardening,ā Gane says. āMeditative, grounded, outside of time.ā Even after mixing wrapped, the album sat quietly for two yearsādelayed not by doubt, but by a reluctance to re-enter the promotional machine. āWhen faced with the choice of building a website or working in the garden, the garden always won,ā he laughs.
Gane recommends listening in the dark, lying down, allowing the music to wash over like dusk wind through lavender. Mixed with Ray Dillard and mastered by Graemme Brown at Zen Mastering, Garden Music is a testament to Ganeās lifelong practice across disciplines. His history spans avant-garde performance, collaborations with sonic pioneers like Laurie Anderson and John Oswald, and design work ranging from album art to urban gardens.
Though best known for pop brilliance with Martha and the Muffinsāincluding co-producing albums with Daniel Lanois and David LordāGarden Music reveals a different Gane: a solitary gardener of sound, sowing strangeness and beauty in equal measure. āIt was most interesting to have no idea what was creating the sounds I was hearing,ā wrote Kevan Staples of Rough Trade. āSo otherworldly⦠quite literally wonderfulā.
Garden Music is available now on all major streaming platforms. For listeners of Brian Eno, Pauline Oliveros, or Boards of Canadaāand for anyone who finds solace in the hum of lifeās quiet cornersāMark Ganeās long-awaited solo debut offers a richly immersive world to disappear into.
Men Without Hats Travel Back to the Future With New Single āI ā¤ļø the ā80sā and UK/EU Tour
Dust off your Walkman, dig out that denim jacket, and prepare for a neon-coloured nostalgia trip: Men Without Hats are back with a synth-pop banger that celebrates the decade that made them legends. Their new single, āI ā¤ļø the ā80s,ā is out now with a hairsprayed wink and a shoulder-padded strut, and it’s everything youād expect from the band who gave us āThe Safety Danceāāand more.
āI ā¤ļø the ā80sā is a riotous, melodic time machine powered by boom boxes, moonwalks, tube tops, and enough pop-culture references to make Stranger Things blush. āEverybody felt alive / Back in 1985,ā sings frontman Ivan Doroschuk, before commanding us to āParty like itās ā82ā and āDance safely across the floor / Like we did in ā84.ā If you were there, youāll get goosebumps. If you werenāt, this is your crash course.
This gloriously cheeky synth-soaked anthem is the lead single from their upcoming album Men Without Hats On The Moon, slated for release in mid-October. Produced by Grammy and Juno winner Brian Howes (Hinder, Simple Plan), mixed by the legendary Mark Needham (The Killers, Elton John), and mastered by Howie Weinberg (Nirvana, U2), the track was written by Ivan Doroschuk and Howes and recorded at Black Stove Studios on Vancouver Island.
Itās a high-voltage return from a band whose influence on pop culture is still alive and pogo-dancing. From Montreal basement gigs in 1977 to stadium-filling synth anthems in the ’80s, Men Without Hats have carved out an enduring space in music history. āPop Goes The Worldā and āThe Safety Danceā are more than hitsāthey’re international memes, football chants, and soundtrack staples for generations.
As Ivan puts it: āOne of the biggest challenges in writing this song was narrowing down all the things I loved about the ’80s⦠The song could have been half an hour long!ā In place of a guitar solo, the band even cheekily dropped in a sing-along refrain of āPop Goes The World,ā a move that marries nostalgia with cheeky brilliance.
This single drops just in time for the bandās first UK and EU tour in nearly a decade. Kicking off August 21 at The Old Woollen in Leeds and winding through Edinburgh Fringe, Liverpool, Utrecht, Berlin, Copenhagen, Stockholm, and Oslo, the tour wraps in Malmƶ on September 17. Fans can expect a non-stop, high-energy blast of classics, deep cuts, and fresh material, delivered with charisma and big-haired enthusiasm.
This lineupāIvan Doroschuk (vocals), Sahara Sloan (keyboards and vocals), Sho Murray (guitar), and Adrian White (drums)āis tight, charismatic, and utterly infectious. Sahara, daughter of founding member Colin Doroschuk, brings the bandās story full circle with next-gen synth magic and harmonies that sparkle.
The live album, recorded during their 2024 North American tour, just dropped in February 2025, keeping the party alive on vinyl and streaming. With 31 million views on YouTube, nearly 10 million monthly Spotify listeners, and a fanbase spanning generations, Men Without Hats continue to blend the joyful absurdity of the 1980s with modern polish.
āI ā¤ļø the ā80sā isnāt about going backāitās about bringing the joy of that era forward. So, pull up those leg warmers, crank the volume, and dance safely into the future.
MEN WITHOUT HATS ā 2025 TOUR DATES
July 1, 2025 ā Officer’s Square ā Fredericton, NB
July 25, 2025 ā Canyons Village ā Park City, UT
July 28, 2025 ā Soda Row Live Daybreak ā South Jordan, UT
August 6, 2025 ā Peach Fest ā Penticton, BC
August 9, 2025 ā Rock the Kooney’s ā Cranbrook, BC
August 12, 2025 ā The Black Sheep ā Colorado Springs, CO
August 13, 2025 ā Oriental Theatre ā Denver, CO
August 14, 2025 ā Beaver Creek ā Beaver Creek, CO
August 16, 2025 ā Rock the Harbour Festival ā Dartmouth, NS
UK/EU TOUR
August 21, 2025 ā The Old Woollen ā Leeds, UK
August 22, 2025 ā Fringe Festival (La Belle Angele) ā Edinburgh, UK
August 23, 2025 ā Academy 3 ā Liverpool, UK
August 24, 2025 ā Craufurd Arms ā Milton Keynes, UK
August 25, 2025 ā The Garage ā London, UK
August 27, 2025 ā De Helling ā Utrecht, NL
August 28, 2025 ā Nieuwe Nor ā Heerlen, NL
August 29, 2025 ā Mergener Hof ā Trier, GER
August 30, 2025 ā Das Rind ā Russelsheim, GER
August 31, 2025 ā Exil ā Gottingen, GER
September 2, 2025 ā Feierwerk ā Munich, GER
September 3, 2025 ā Die Stadtmitte (80’s Party) ā Karlsruhe, GER
September 4, 2025 ā Sumpfblume ā Hameln, GER
September 5, 2025 ā Trompete ā Bochum, GER
September 6, 2025 ā NCN Festival ā Leipzig-Deutzen, GER
September 8, 2025 ā Shiva ā Bremerhaven, GER
September 9, 2025 ā Markthalle @ MarX ā Hamburg, GER
September 10, 2025 ā Lido ā Berlin, GER
September 11, 2025 ā Die Pumpe ā Kiel, GER
September 12, 2025 ā Hotel Cecil ā Copenhagen, DEN
September 13, 2025 ā Musikens ā Gothenburg, SWE
September 14, 2025 ā Slaktkyrkan @ Hus 7 ā Stockholm, SWE
September 16, 2025 ā John Dee ā Oslo, NOR
September 17, 2025 ā Babel ā Malmƶ, SWE
FALL 2025 ā CANADA & U.S. ā MORE DATES TO BE ANNOUNCED
October 4, 2025 ā Base31 ā Picton, ON
October 16, 2025 ā The Parker ā Ft. Lauderdale, FL
October 17, 2025 ā Moss Centre ā Miami, FL
October 18, 2025 ā Sunrise Theatre ā Ft. Pierce, FL
October 19, 2025 ā Florida Theatre ā Jacksonville, FL
Steve Rosenbloom Big Band Releases Monumental Album ‘San Francisco 1948’
The jazz world welcomes a new landmark with the release of San Francisco 1948, the latest album by the Steve Rosenbloom Big Band. This expansive, meticulously crafted project reaffirms Rosenbloomās status as a composer and arranger ā with assistance from Chris Smith and Michael Johncsik) who channels the vibrant spirit of the big band tradition while infusing it with contemporary freshness and thoughtful nuance.
A native of Montreal and a committed voice in Canadian jazz, Steve Rosenbloom has long been recognized for his compositional depth and dedication to the big band idiom. With San Francisco 1948, he assembles a stellar 16-piece ensemble to deliver a record that is as much a celebration of history as it is a bold statement of artistic vitality.
The albumās title track, composed by Rosenbloom himself, sets the tone with a dynamic range of moods, transporting listeners to the golden era of big band jazz while highlighting modern sensibilities. The intricate arrangements blend bold brass voicings with intricate reed textures, showcasing Rosenbloomās keen understanding of orchestration and ensemble interplay.
Integral to the projectās success are the contributions of some of Montrealās finest jazz musicians: Jules Payette commands the lead alto and flute, Allison Burik delivers warm tones on alto sax and bass clarinet, while Steve Rosenbloom himself rounds out the alto section with his signature sound. The tenor sax section is richly textured by Michael Johancsik and Alex Francoeur, who also lend clarinet colors, and the baritone sax and clarinet duties are expertly handled by Benjamin Deschamps.
The trumpet section shines with the bright, assertive tones of Lex French, Andy King, Benjamin Cordeau, and Cameron Milligan, each bringing their own voice to the collective power of the brass. The trombone section, anchored by Mathieu Van Vilet, Thomas Morelli-Bernard, Taylor Donaldson, and Chris Smith, adds both warmth and punch, weaving seamlessly into the fabric of the band.
On rhythm, pianist Eric Harding provides the harmonic foundation, supported by Mike De Masiās steady bass lines and the responsive, dynamic drumming of Jim Doxas. Together, they form the heartbeat of the ensemble, driving the music with subtlety and swing.
The making of San Francisco 1948 reflects Rosenbloomās decades-long journey in composition and arranging, a process rooted in mentorship and collaboration. From early guidance by Gerry Danovitch, through partnerships with arrangers like Christopher Smith, Michael Johancsik, and Alex Francoeur, Rosenbloom has continually refined his craft. The album includes arrangements by both Smith and Johancsik, blending classic and contemporary big band sensibilities.
Recorded in May 2024, the album captures the bandās vibrant energy and precision, resulting in a recording experience that resonates with authenticity and passion. The careful mix and master enhance the detailed arrangements, inviting listeners into a sonic landscape rich with color and emotion.
San Francisco 1948 is a testament to Rosenbloomās commitment to sustaining and evolving the big band tradition. It embodies the grandeur, complexity, and emotional depth that define the genre, offering a listening experience that appeals to seasoned jazz aficionados and new audiences alike.
This album marks a significant chapter for Rosenbloom and the Montreal jazz scene, highlighting the cityās wealth of talent and the continuing relevance of large ensemble jazz in the 21st century.
Listeners can experience San Francisco 1948 across all major streaming platforms, including Spotify, YouTube Music, and Apple Music, beginning May 30, 2025.
Band Personnel:
Jules Payette (Lead Alto, Flute), Allison Burik (Alto, Bass Clarinet), Steve Rosenbloom (Alto Sax), Michael Johancsik (Tenor Sax, Clarinet), Alex Francoeur (Tenor Sax, Clarinet), Benjamin Deschamps (Baritone Sax, Clarinet), Lex French (Trumpet), Andy King (Trumpet), Benjamin Cordeau (Trumpet), Cameron Milligan (Trumpet), Mathieu Van Vilet (Trombone), Thomas Morelli-Bernard (Trombone), Taylor Donaldson (Trombone), Chris Smith (Trombone), Eric Harding (Piano), Mike De Masi (Bass), Jim Doxas (Drums).
5 Surprising Facts About Simple Mindsā ‘Once Upon a Time’
In 1985, Simple Minds released Once Upon a Timeāan album that confirmed what longtime fans already knew: they were born for the world stage. With sweeping melodies, anthemic energy, and lyrics that reached skyward, the Scottish band matched their ambition with sound and vision. This was the album that turned their momentum into a movement. Here are five powerful and uplifting facts about Once Upon a Time, a record that showed Simple Minds were always ready to rise.
1. They Built An Album Around Their Own Voice
āDonāt You (Forget About Me)ā became a global hit, but when the time came to make Once Upon a Time, the band kept the spotlight on their own songwriting. Instead of leaning on outside material, Simple Minds trusted the strength of their own work. The result was a tracklist that reflected their growth and identityāsongs that spoke directly from the heart of the band.
2. Jimmy Iovine Brought Out Their Power
Producer Jimmy Iovine brought experience from working with Bruce Springsteen and Stevie Nicks, and he infused Simple Minds with a new kind of intensity. He encouraged Jim Kerr to sing with more passion and presence. The band responded with one of their most dynamic and spirited albums. Each track carries the weight of that momentum and belief.
3. āAlive and Kickingā Set The Tone For Everything To Come
The albumās lead single, āAlive and Kicking,ā was more than a songāit was a declaration. With Robin Clarkās bold harmonies and a rhythm section built for stadiums, the song carried a message of endurance and joy. It perfectly captured the bandās energy and readiness to meet every moment head-on.
4. “All the Things She Said” Began With a Story of Hope
Inspired by an article about women waiting for loved ones held as political prisoners, Jim Kerr found the emotional core of āAll the Things She Saidā in real-life resilience. The song became a tribute to faith, love, and the human spirit. Its success proved that stadium-sized songs could also hold deeply personal truths.
5. They Turned Global Success Into a Shared Celebration
Once Upon a Time produced four major singles and led to an unforgettable world tour. With Robin Clark and percussionist Sue Hadjopoulos joining the live lineup, the band delivered a full-force experience. Their concerts became more than performancesāthey became affirmations of connection, unity, and sound. Every show felt like a celebration of everything the band had built together.
Once Upon a Time lifted Simple Minds to new heightsānot by changing who they were, but by embracing every part of their journey. The sound was bigger, the voice was stronger, and the belief was everywhere. This was the moment Simple Minds took everything they had and shared it with the worldāand the world was ready.
5 Surprising Facts About INXSā ‘Listen Like Thieves’
Before they filled stadiums and soundtracked every late-’80s mixtape, INXS were a group of Australian brothers and friends chasing one goal: to make the kind of music that felt just as good in headphones as it did blasting out of a car stereo. In 1985, Listen Like Thieves became their passport to the worldāan album that pulsed with urgency, confidence, and a kind of smooth swagger that couldnāt be taught. It was the moment INXS stepped out from cult favorites to global contenders. And it almost didnāt happen. Here are five things you might not know about this incredible recordāand why it still matters.
1. The hit that broke them in America came at the last possible moment
With recording finished and time nearly up, producer Chris Thomas told INXS they were still missing a hit. The band had one day left in the studio. Andrew Farriss pulled out a groove heād labeled āFunk Song No. 13,ā and Michael Hutchence helped transform it into āWhat You Need.ā Two days later, the track was doneāand it became their first U.S. Top 5 single. When pressure meets instinct, sometimes you get magic.
2. āListen Like Thievesā captures everything the band stands for in four words
The title track wasnāt just another songāit was a mission statement. A call to pay attention. To tune into whatās being saidāand whatās being felt. Hutchence delivers the lyrics like a sermon and a dare, wrapped in a taut, rhythmic groove that still sounds like it could kick open the doors to any arena.
3. The band wrote most of the album as a collective
At a time when most bands split into āthe singerā and āthe rest,ā INXS remained a unit. Multiple tracks were co-written by all six members, and even the B-sides showcased each memberās individualityāGarry Gary Beers sang the gentle āSweet as Sin,ā while Jon Farriss contributed and performed his own track āIām Over You.ā It wasnāt just Hutchenceās voiceāit was their voice.
4. They recorded it at home, but they were thinking globally
After sessions in New York and the UK for previous albums, INXS returned to Sydneyās Rhinoceros Studios to make Listen Like Thieves. But this wasnāt a retreatāit was a launch pad. The album fused funk, rock, and new wave into something slick but raw, bold but unpretentious. It was their way of saying: Weāre from here, but weāre ready to go anywhere.
5. Hutchence found the sweet spot between sex appeal and soul-searching
āWhat You Needā and āThis Timeā introduced the world to Hutchence as both frontman and force. He didnāt just singāhe prowled, he preached, he pulled listeners in. But even when the groove was tight, the heart was never far. Listen closely to āThis Timeā and you hear yearning beneath the beat. The charisma was realābut so was the vulnerability.
Listen Like Thieves is more than the album that brought INXS into the international spotlightāitās the moment their sound crystallized, their chemistry snapped into place, and their confidence became unshakable. They werenāt following trends. They were following the rhythm in their bones, and trusting the world would catch up.
It did.
5 Surprising Facts About Phil Collinsā ‘No Jacket Required’
Sometimes an album becomes more than a collection of songsāit becomes a time capsule, a turning point, a burst of everything an artist has carried inside. In 1985, Phil Collins released No Jacket Required, an album full of horns, hooks, heartbreak, and healing. It took him from the drummer in the back to the voice in every living room. With over 25 million copies sold, four massive singles, and a world tour that included both Live Aid stages in one day, No Jacket Required still echoes in stadiums, in movie soundtracks, and in the kind of moments that donāt always need explanation. Here are five things you might not know about this landmark albumāand why it still kills nearly 40 years later.
1. It begins in a quiet room with a drum machine and a broken heart
Phil Collins writes most of No Jacket Required in five focused weeks, fresh off producing Philip Bailey and working with Eric Clapton. He returns from his honeymoon with a missionāto make something upbeat after the shadow of his first divorce had shaped so much of Face Value. Songs like āSussudioā and āOne More Nightā are born from improvisation, but the emotion behind them feels lived-in. Even the happiest tracks carry the ache of someone who knows what itās like to hurt.
2. āTake Me Homeā hides its pain in plain sight
With its sweeping chorus and stadium-sized synths, āTake Me Homeā sounds like a road song. But Collins says itās inspired by One Flew Over the Cuckooās Nest, and imagines the voice of someone trapped in a mental institution. Backing vocals from Sting, Peter Gabriel, and Helen Terry add haunting layers to a song thatās really about wanting to be seen, to be heard, and to belong.
3. āLong Long Way to Goā becomes Collinsā quiet protest
Tucked between radio hits, āLong Long Way to Goā feels like a prayer. It doesnāt chart, but it might be the most powerful song on the album. Written during a time of global unrest, Collins invites Sting to sing backup not for star power, but because they had shared a moment of purpose in Band Aid. The songās title says it allāsome things donāt change overnight. But theyāre worth singing about.
4. A restaurant dress code gives the album its nameāand its fire
Collins is denied entry to The Pump Room in Chicago for not wearing a āproperā jacket. Robert Plant gets in. Collins, wearing a jacket, doesnāt. That sting stays with him. He names the album No Jacket Required, adding sweat and steam to the cover photo. The music inside is confident, vulnerable, and lit from the insideālike someone whoās spent years being underestimated and finally gets to speak loud enough to be heard.
5. Every lyric comes from a place Phil is still trying to understand
Not every song on the album makes senseānot even to Collins himself. āDonāt Lose My Numberā? Heās not quite sure what it means. āSussudioā? A made-up word from a jam session. But thatās the magic of the record. Itās not always literal. Itās emotional. Itās the way a phrase feels when it fits the music. Thatās what keeps No Jacket Required aliveānot just the precision, but the pulse.
No Jacket Required captures an artist at the height of his popularity, and still reaching for something honest. Itās got chart-toppers, guest stars, and synths for daysābut underneath all that shine is a songwriter who just wants to connect. These songs werenāt just made for radioāthey were made for anyone trying to hold it all together.
5 Surprising Facts About Tom Petty and the Heartbreakersā ‘Southern Accents’
Released in March 1985, Southern Accents plays like a dream drifting through the American Southāpart concept album, part cosmic detour. What begins in the tradition of Pettyās roots soon opens into something stranger: a collection shaped by sitars, heartbreak, funk grooves, and broken walls. It never follows a straight line, and thatās what makes it so unforgettable. Here are five facts about Southern Accents that go deeper than radio hits and music video memories.
1. It starts as a Southern concept album, then welcomes outsiders
Petty sets out to write an album entirely focused on the Southāits heritage, its contradictions, its soul. But when Dave Stewart of Eurythmics enters the mix, songs like āDonāt Come Around Here No Moreā shift the tone into more psychedelic terrain. Several tracks originally written for the album stay unreleased or end up elsewhere, showing how the project continues to evolve.
2. Pettyās broken hand changes the course of the sessions
While working on āRebels,ā Petty punches a wall in frustration, breaking his hand badly enough to require surgery. The wound comes not from anger toward a person, but from creative tension. He believes no studio take captures the feel of his original demo, and the moment reflects just how much he invests in every song.
3. āDonāt Come Around Here No Moreā begins with a night at Stevie Nicksā house
Dave Stewart visits Stevie Nicks after a show and hears her say, āDonāt come around here no more,ā following a breakup with Joe Walsh. That phrase becomes the songās foundation. Stewart and Petty collaborate in a studio filled with synths, string players, and unexpected energy. The song ends up sounding like nothing else in Pettyās catalog.
4. The title track finds its way to Johnny Cash
āSouthern Accentsā holds a quiet power. It reflects Pettyās vision of pride and loss, grounded in a place he understands deeply. Years later, Johnny Cash covers it on Unchained, bringing a weathered voice and new weight to the lyrics. The song lives on as a modern Southern hymn.
5. The album cover draws from Civil War memory
The cover features Winslow Homerās 1865 painting The Veteran in a New Field, showing a lone soldier returning to farm life after war. The image holds space for reflection and resilience, offering a visual that matches the recordās mood. It doesnāt shout, but it stays with you.
Southern Accents moves through multiple musical landscapes but never loses its compass. It speaks through fuzzed-out riffs and delicate ballads, dreamlike textures and dusty details. The songs carry stories of longing, place, and persistenceāproof that the American South always offers more than one sound.

