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Hollywood Remembers Actress Lauren Chapin Following A Five-Year Cancer Battle

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Lauren Chapin, the Los Angeles-born actress who became a household fixture during the 1950s, has died at age 80. Her son, Matthew Chapin, confirmed her passing on Tuesday evening after a persistent five-year fight against cancer. She is remembered globally for her role as Kathy Anderson on the iconic series ‘Father Knows Best’. Throughout nearly 200 episodes, she portrayed the character nicknamed Kitten, earning five Junior Emmys for her contributions to the legendary sitcom.

The news of her death marks the end of a life defined by both early stardom and immense personal resilience. While she reached the heights of television success alongside Robert Young and Jane Wyatt, her private years involved overcoming significant trauma and health challenges. Chapin eventually transitioned into a career as a minister and talent manager, famously aiding a young Jennifer Love Hewitt. Her story remains a powerful example of finding peace after the spotlight of child stardom fades.

Industry peers describe her as a beautiful soul who faced her final years with remarkable strength and spirit. This loss resonates deeply with the generations who viewed her as the quintessential youngest daughter of the American screen. Her career began with a small part in the Judy Garland film ‘A Star Is Born’, which paved the way for her six-season run on television. Her work alongside siblings Elinor Donahue and Billy Gray remains a cornerstone of the medium’s golden age.

She leaves behind her son, Matthew, her daughter, Summer, and her brother, Michael. Her brother and fellow actor Billy Chapin preceded her in death in 2016. In recent years, she remained active in the nostalgia circuit and continued to share her story of survival and faith with fans. Her death concludes a lengthy and public journey that moved from the scripted perfection of 1950s suburbs to a life of genuine advocacy.

Metallica Confirms Shows At Las Vegas Sphere

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Metallica remains the undisputed heavyweight of global heavy metal, and their latest move proves it once again. The Bay Area-based legends just confirmed an eight-show residency at the Sphere in Las Vegas (the first of its kind for a metal act). This two-billion-dollar architectural marvel usually hosts pop-rock spectacles, but the fall schedule belongs to the thrash pioneers. The residency carries the title “Life Burns Faster” and marks a massive shift in how heavy music is presented on a grand scale.

The production spans four weekends in October, starting with opening dates on Oct. 1 and 3. In keeping with the successful M72 world tour format, the band plans to deliver two completely unique setlists for each weekend pairing. It is a bold, high-stakes commitment to variety and technical execution. This residency represents a total takeover of the most advanced concert space on the planet (a venue that demands the highest level of visual and sonic engineering).

Industry watchers describe this announcement as a landmark moment that validates metal as a premier stadium-tier attraction in the modern era. The scale of the Sphere (with its wraparound LED screens and immersive audio) provides the perfect canvas for the band to amplify their catalog. There is no room for small gestures in a room this size. This is a deliberate, massive expansion of the band’s live legacy that places them alongside the elite few who have conquered the Las Vegas strip.

General ticket sales begin March 6 at 10AM ET. Early access options (including travel and VIP packages) start as soon as Feb. 27 for those looking to secure a spot early. The schedule includes Oct. 1, 3, 15, 17, 22, 24, 29, and 31. Fans can register for the seated presale on March 3 to prepare for the high demand.

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Unveils 2026 Nominees: See Who Gets In And Why

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The Rock Hall list is out and once again everybody is screaming.

Good.

That is the point.

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame is not a museum of polite agreement. It is a bar fight about legacy. And this year? The fight is stacked.

Let us go name by name. Because if you are going to argue, at least know the receipts.

Mariah Carey

Nineteen Billboard Hot 100 No. 1s.

Read that again.

Nineteen.

Only The Beatles have more. She is No. 5 on Billboard’s Greatest of All Time Hot 100 Artists list. That is not opinion. That is math.

But this is not just about chart dominance. Mariah bent the pop arc. She fused R&B phrasing with pop hooks and made melisma a mainstream weapon. She co-wrote her hits. She produced. She shaped the modern pop vocal template.

Without Mariah, there is no 2000s vocal Olympics. No gospel-infused pop dominance. No blueprint for artist-controlled holiday catalog supremacy.

You want influence? Ask every vocalist who came up after 1995.

Put her in.

Wu-Tang Clan

Enter the Wu-Tang 36 Chambers changed hip-hop’s business model.

Not just the sound. The business.

RZA’s production was raw, grimy, cinematic. But the real genius was the strategy. A group deal plus individual solo contracts. Decentralized dominance. Before tech bros made it sexy.

They turned Staten Island into mythology. They built a logo as powerful as any rock insignia. They influenced fashion, slang, branding and independent thinking.

You do not get modern collective movements in hip-hop without Wu-Tang.

Culture shifting. That is Hall material.

Oasis

Knebworth.

Two nights. 250,000 people. Two and a half million applications for tickets.

That is not nostalgia. That is scale.

Oasis dragged guitar music back to the center of the universe in the mid-90s. They turned working-class swagger into stadium theology. They made melody matter again.

Three nominations. Still not in.

If you can headline an era and still be debated 30 years later, you are not a footnote. You are foundational.

Iron Maiden

Heavy metal gods.

Forty-plus years of touring. Massive global sales. A DIY ethos that built one of the most loyal fanbases on earth.

They made intricate, literary, galloping metal an arena sport. They proved you could avoid pop radio and still fill stadiums worldwide.

Metal is rock. Iron Maiden is metal royalty.

The Hall cannot pretend that side of the genre does not exist.

Lauryn Hill

The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill won Album of the Year.

It fused hip-hop, soul, reggae and vulnerability into a singular statement. It reframed what a female MC and singer could be in one body.

Yes, the solo catalog is compact. But impact is not measured in volume. It is measured in permanence.

Ask any neo-soul artist. Ask any conscious rapper. Ask any singer who wants authorship.

Her shadow is long.

Phil Collins

Already in with Genesis.

Seven solo Billboard Hot 100 No. 1s. A sound that dominated 80s radio. Drum production that defined an era.

You can roll your eyes at the ubiquity. But ubiquity is power. He bridged prog complexity and pop immediacy.

He is the rare artist who was both band anchor and solo juggernaut.

That is Hall of Fame math.

Shakira

Debuted in 1991. Broke globally in the late 90s.

She helped mainstream Latin pop into global English-language markets without losing her identity. She writes. She performs. She crosses borders.

Before streaming globalization, she was already doing it.

The Hall has to reflect international impact. Not just Anglo radio.

Sade

Understated.

Four decades of relevance. Multi-platinum albums. A sonic signature so distinct that you know it in seconds.

They made quiet storm feel like cathedral music. Sophisticated R&B that never chased trends and never needed to.

Longevity without noise. That is its own revolution.

Joy Division and New Order

Post-punk despair into dancefloor transcendence.

They pivoted tragedy into reinvention. From Joy Division’s stark minimalism to New Order’s synth-driven club dominance.

You do not get modern alternative dance culture without them. You do not get the bridge between rock bands and electronic evolution without them.

They mapped the future.

P!NK

Four Billboard Hot 100 No. 1s. Decades of arena touring. Made the music industry an absolute bonkers amount of money.

She turned pop performance into athletic theater. Real vocals, real risk, real spectacle.

And she built a career on resilience. Reinvention without abandoning identity.

That matters.

The Black Crowes

When grunge was rising and hair metal was collapsing, The Black Crowes kicked the door open with Southern swagger and blues grit.

Shake Your Money Maker went multi-platinum. Hard To Handle and She Talks to Angels became radio staples. But more importantly, they reintroduced authenticity into mainstream rock at a moment when it desperately needed dirt under its fingernails.

They were not retro cosplay. They were conviction. Every revivalist blues-rock band that followed owes them something.

That is historical impact.

Melissa Etheridge

Melissa Etheridge brought raw nerve endings to rock radio.

Her 1988 debut cracked open mainstream space for confessional songwriting delivered with power instead of fragility. Come To My Window and I’m the Only One dominated 90s radio and MTV rotation.

She won Grammys. She won an Academy Award. She became a visible LGBTQ rock star at a time when that visibility carried enormous weight.

Voice. Songs. Cultural courage.

That belongs in the Hall.

Billy Idol

Billy Idol understood something early. Image is amplification.

Coming out of UK punk with Generation X, he pivoted into MTV-era dominance without losing edge. Rebel Yell, White Wedding, Dancing With Myself. These were not niche hits. They were global.

He fused sneer and pop hooks into arena-sized anthems. He turned punk attitude into mainstream electricity.

You cannot tell the story of 80s rock without him.

INXS

Kick sold over 20 million copies worldwide.

Need You Tonight hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. They balanced dance grooves with rock muscle in a way that felt modern before modern was a marketing term.

Michael Hutchence was one of the last true rock frontmen with stadium magnetism. They were massive in the U.S., Australia, Europe. Not regional. Global.

That scale matters.

New Edition

Candy Girl dropped in 1983 and the blueprint was drawn.

Tight harmonies. Sharp choreography. R&B crossover appeal. New Edition built the architecture for the modern boy band economy.

From them came Bobby Brown. Bell Biv DeVoe. A direct line to 90s pop dominance and beyond.

When you influence both sound and business model, you are foundational.

Luther Vandross

Never Too Much was not just a hit. It was a massive change in shift.

Luther Vandross defined sophisticated R&B for decades. Multi-platinum albums. Multiple Grammy Awards. A voice that became the standard for romantic ballad delivery.

He arranged. He produced. He shaped vocal phrasing for generations of R&B singers.

When your tone alone becomes recognizable within two seconds, that is legacy.

Jeff Buckley

Grace arrived in 1994 and became scripture for musicians.

His version of Hallelujah redefined the song for an entire generation. His vocal range and emotional control influenced everyone from alt-rock singers to indie crooners.

One studio album. Endless influence. Every cool person you know has this record.

Impact is not measured by volume of catalog. It is measured by depth of reach.

So, there you go. The Rock Hall has a chance to do the best thing. Put them all in.

The Rock Hall conversation is always noisy.

Good.

Because if we are still arguing about these artists decades later, that means they mattered.

And that is the whole point.

The Hall is not about purity.

It is about impact.

Sales matter. Influence matters. Touring power matters. Cultural shift matters.

This ballot? It has all of it.

So argue. Lobby. Debate.

Just know that history is bigger than your playlist.

And that is why this list is worth the noise.

A Recording Opportunity at Studio Bell – Applications Close March 1st

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The National Music Centre (NMC) in Calgary is accepting applications for the 2026 OHSOTO’KINO Recording Bursary, and if you are a First Nations, Métis, or Inuit artist working in any genre, this one is worth your attention.

Two recipients will receive a week-long recording session at Studio Bell, with access to NMC’s world-class studios and its remarkable living collection of musical instruments. Artists are selected by NMC’s National Indigenous Programming Advisory Committee, and both traditional and contemporary musicians are encouraged to apply.

The OHSOTO’KINO initiative has been running since 2022, supported by TD Bank Group, and was recently renewed for another three years. Past bursary recipients include JUNO Award-winning powwow and round dance artist Joel Wood, Inuit-style throat singing duo PIQSIQ, country singer Chelsie Young, singer-songwriter Raymond Sewell, and traditional groups Blackfoot Singers and Warscout.

Applications are open now at studiobell.ca/ohsotokino and close on March 1, 2026 at 11:59 pm MT. If this applies to you or someone in your circle, spread the word.

Grammy-Winning Blues-Soul Powerhouse Tedeschi Trucks Band Releases “Who Am I” From New Album ‘Future Soul’

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Tedeschi Trucks Band has released “Who Am I,” the latest single from ‘Future Soul,’ their sixth studio album, out March 20th via Fantasy Records. Written by Susan Tedeschi and Derek Trucks alongside core collaborators Mike Mattison and Gabe Dixon, the track carries the emotional weight and melodic instinct that has defined the band since the start. Classic Rock Magazine already called lead single “I Got You” “irresistible,” and “Who Am I” lands with the same unhurried, earned authority.

Derek Trucks describes the song’s origin with characteristic directness. “The riff came naturally to me one of the mornings that we were all writing together up at our farm in Georgia,” he says. “Susan immediately came up with the opening vocal melody and lyric and Gabe really took it to a beautiful place from there. It feels biographical and a bit surreal at the same time. I always love when a song can put you in between worlds.”

‘Future Soul’ is an 11-track collection produced by Mike Elizondo (Twenty One Pilots, Eminem, Dr. Dre, Carrie Underwood) and co-produced by Trucks. The record pulls from funk, rock, blues, soul, and punk, channelling the full range of this 12-piece ensemble into what stands as their most cohesive and expansive work to date. The album release on March 20th lands in the middle of the band’s 10-night Beacon Theatre residency in New York City, running March 10th through 28th, with most shows already sold out.

The “Future Soul 2026 Tour” launches April 14th and runs through late October, a 35-date Live Nation outing that includes two nights at Red Rocks Amphitheatre (July 31 and August 1), and a co-headlining night at The Hollywood Bowl on August 17th with The Black Crowes and Whiskey Myers. The band also appears at Bonnaroo, the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, and Telluride Bluegrass Festival. Supporting on various dates: Alabama Shakes, Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit, Sheryl Crow, Lukas Nelson, JJ Grey & Mofro, and Molly Tuttle.

BEACON THEATRE RESIDENCY:

Tue. Mar. 10 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre (SOLD OUT)

Wed. Mar. 11 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre (SOLD OUT)

Fri. Mar. 13 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre (SOLD OUT)

Sat. Mar. 14 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre (SOLD OUT)

Wed. Mar. 18 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre

Fri. Mar. 20 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre (SOLD OUT)

Sat. Mar. 21 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre (SOLD OUT)

Wed. Mar. 25 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre

Fri. Mar. 27 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre (SOLD OUT)

Sat. Mar. 28 – New York, NY @ The Beacon Theatre (SOLD OUT)

FUTURE SOUL 2026 TOUR:

Tue. Apr. 14 – Dallas, TX @ Music Hall at Fair Park (with Molly Tuttle)

Wed. Apr. 15 – Fort Worth, TX @ Will Rogers Auditorium (with Molly Tuttle)

Fri. Apr. 17 – Houston, TX @ The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion (with Lukas Nelson)

Sun. Apr. 19 – Georgetown, TX @ Two Step Inn (festival)

Apr. 23-25 – Miramar Beach, FL @ Sun, Sand and Soul 2026 (festival)

Tue. Apr. 28 – Alpharetta, GA @ Ameris Bank Amphitheatre (with Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit)

Wed. Apr. 29 – Raleigh, NC @ Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek (with JJ Grey & Mofro)

Sun. May 3 – New Orleans, LA @ New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival

Sun. Jun. 14 – Manchester, TN @ Bonnaroo Music & Arts Festival

Jun. 18-21 – Telluride, CO @ Telluride Bluegrass Festival

Sat. Jun. 20 – Missoula, MT @ Zootown Music Festival

Jul. 22-26 – Floyd County, VA @ FloydFest

Fri. Jul. 31 – Morrison, CO @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre (with Lukas Nelson)

Sat. Aug. 1 – Morrison, CO @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre (with Lukas Nelson)

Tue. Aug. 4 – Seattle, WA @ TBA (with Lukas Nelson)

Wed. Aug. 5 – Seattle, WA @ TBA (with Lukas Nelson)

Fri. Aug. 7 – Portland, OR @ Edgefield Concerts on the Lawn (with Lukas Nelson)

Sat. Aug. 8 – Bend, OR @ Hayden Homes Amphitheater (with Lukas Nelson)

Sun. Aug. 9 – Stateline, NV @ Lake Tahoe Amphitheatre at Caesars Republic (with Lukas Nelson)

Wed. Aug. 12 – Berkeley, CA @ Greek Theatre (with Lukas Nelson)

Thu. Aug. 13 – Santa Barbara, CA @ Santa Barbara Bowl (with Lukas Nelson)

Sun. Aug. 16 – San Diego, CA @ The Rady Shell at Jacobs Park (with Lukas Nelson)

Mon. Aug. 17 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Hollywood Bowl (co-headlining with The Black Crowes and Whiskey Myers)

Sat. Aug. 22 – Indianapolis, IN @ Ruoff Music Center (co-headlining with Alabama Shakes)

Sun. Aug. 23 – St. Louis, MO @ Hollywood Casino Amphitheater (co-headlining with Alabama Shakes)

Tue. Aug. 25 – Grand Rapids, MI @ Acrisure Amphitheater (co-headlining with Alabama Shakes)

Wed. Aug. 26 – Cincinnati, OH @ Riverbend Music Center (co-headlining with Alabama Shakes)

Fri. Aug. 28 – Washington, DC @ Wolf Trap (with Lukas Nelson)

Sat. Aug. 29 – Washington, DC @ Wolf Trap (with Lukas Nelson)

Mon. Aug. 31 – Bethel, NY @ Bethel Woods Center for the Arts (with Lukas Nelson)

Wed. Sep. 2 – Lenox, MA @ Tanglewood (with Lukas Nelson)

Fri. Sep. 4 – Bridgeport, CT @ Hartford Healthcare Amphitheater (with Sheryl Crow)

Sat. Sep. 5 – Bridgeport, CT @ Hartford Healthcare Amphitheater (with Sheryl Crow)

Sun. Sep. 6 – Gilford, NH @ BankNH Pavilion (with Lukas Nelson)

Fri. Oct. 9 – St. Augustine, FL @ The St. Augustine Amphitheatre (An Evening With)

Sat. Oct. 10 – St. Augustine, FL @ The St. Augustine Amphitheatre (An Evening With)

Tue. Oct. 13 – Clearwater, FL @ The BayCare Sound (An Evening With)

Wed. Oct. 21 – Milwaukee, WI @ Landmark Credit Union Live (An Evening With)

Fri. Oct. 23 – Chicago, IL @ The Chicago Theatre (An Evening With)

Sat. Oct. 24 – Chicago, IL @ The Chicago Theatre (An Evening With)

Mon. Oct. 26 – Chicago, IL @ The Chicago Theatre (An Evening With)

Tue. Oct. 27 – Chicago, IL @ The Chicago Theatre (An Evening With)

Tori Amos Returns With “Stronger Together,” First Single From Her 18th Album

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Tori Amos is back. “Stronger Together,” the first single from her 18th studio album ‘In Times of Dragons,’ is out now via Universal/Fontana, with the album itself arriving May 1st. The track features backing vocals from her daughter Tash, and it arrives atmospherically charged, emotionally direct, and immediately recognizable as Amos at the height of her powers. It’s essential, a return that feels genuinely necessary.

‘In Times of Dragons’ is built around ten distinct characters, each tied to a specific track. “Stronger Together” introduces The Daughter, a figure of resilience, connection, and empowerment. The album weaves myth, political allegory, and personal storytelling through Amos’ signature piano-driven art-pop, shaped by the weight and urgency of the present moment. It is ambitious architecture, and this first glimpse suggests the structure holds.

The live show behind the record is equally substantial. Amos launches her largest European tour in a decade first, crossing 18 countries before bringing a 35-date U.S. summer run stateside. Longtime collaborator Jon Evans returns on bass and as Music Director, Earl Harvin holds the drum chair, and three backing singers join the lineup: Liv Gibson, Deni Hlavinka, and Hadley Kennary. The set will draw from ‘In Times of Dragons’ alongside material spanning her 35-year career.

This is a full-scale return, not a quiet reentry. An 18-country European stretch followed by 35 North American dates signals an artist treating this record as a major statement, and “Stronger Together” earns that framing on its own terms. May 1st is the date to hold.

Blackpink Release Cosmic Music Video Teaser For New Single “Go”

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Blackpink has dropped the music video teaser for “Go,” the title track from their upcoming third mini album ‘Deadline,’ out February 27th. The five-track project includes pre-release single “Jump,” along with “Me and My,” “Champion,” and “Fxxxboy.” The teaser landed with immediate global impact, and the response from fans worldwide has been visceral and loud: this feels like a genuinely new chapter for one of the biggest acts on the planet.

The teaser operates on a grand visual scale. The members move through sea, land, and sky before pushing toward outer space, rendered through surreal, sensorial cinematography. In one scene, they grip crossed oars together with a shared, locked-in energy. The title “Go” flashes in multiple languages. A burst of white sand forms the word itself. The symbolism is dense, the atmosphere unlike anything in Blackpink’s previous visual vocabulary.

‘Deadline,’ per YG Entertainment, is built around “irreversible peak moments” and presents “the most radiant and defining present of Blackpink.” That framing aligns with the teaser’s cosmic ambition. This is a group swinging for something bigger and stranger than what came before, and the early evidence suggests they’ve connected.

From February 27th through March 8th, Blackpink partners with the National Museum of Korea on the NMK X Blackpink project, supported by Spotify. The museum’s exterior will be bathed in pink light, while the members’ voices guide visitors through selected artifacts via audio docent recordings. A listening session featuring all tracks from ‘Deadline’ runs in the main lobby. Pre-release sessions sold out instantly. Post-release sessions are open to the public.

One more number worth noting: Blackpink’s official YouTube channel crossed 100 million subscribers last week, the first and highest such milestone achieved by any artist worldwide, arriving roughly nine years and eight months after the channel launched on June 28, 2016.

Tame Impala Brings The “Deadbeat Tour” Home To Four Australian Arenas

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Tame Impala is coming home. Kevin Parker’s genre-defining project has announced four Australian arena dates this October in Brisbane, Melbourne, Sydney, and Perth, the long-awaited homecoming leg of the “Deadbeat Tour.” The run follows a massive European stretch beginning in April and a North American run launching July 7th with guests Djo and Dominic Fike. Presales open Wednesday, February 25th, with general on-sale Friday, February 27th at 11 am local time.

‘Deadbeat,’ released in late 2025, is the record behind all of this momentum. Built between Fremantle and Parker’s Injidup studio, Wave House, it arrived with a distinct minimalism and crunch, a more spontaneous creative approach, and a vocal range that pushes Parker into new territory. The response has been unambiguous: “This is the best thing Kevin Parker has ever made,” and the data backs that up. “Dracula” landed at No. 3 on triple J’s Hottest 100, nearly two decades after Tame Impala first appeared in the poll.

The industry has taken notice too. Parker won the Grammy for Best Dance/Electronic Recording for “End of Summer” in February, his first solo win in the category. It follows his 2025 trophy in the same field for “Neverender,” his collaboration with French dance legends Justice. A “Dracula” remix featuring Jennie of Blackpink is out now, keeping the album deep in the cultural conversation months after release.

Supporting all Australian dates is Ninajirachi, the Central Coast-raised electronic artist and producer whose debut album ‘I Love My Computer’ swept 2025’s award season. The record took top honours at the Australian Music Prize, the NSW Music Breakthrough Artist Prize, two J Awards including Album of the Year, and three ARIAs. She is the right artist for this moment, on this tour.

TOUR DATES:

Oct 10 – Brisbane @ Brisbane Entertainment Centre

Oct 14 – Melbourne @ Rod Laver Arena

Oct 19 – Sydney @ Qudos Bank Arena

Oct 24 – Perth @ RAC Arena

Wolf Parade’s Spencer Krug Strips “I’ll Believe In Anything” Down To Solo Piano

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Spencer Krug, the Wolf Parade co-founder whose songwriting has defined a generation of Canadian indie rock, is releasing a solo piano version of “I’ll Believe In Anything,” out now on Sub Pop worldwide (and on Pronounced Kroog in Canada.) The track comes from Wolf Parade’s debut full-length ‘Apologies To The Queen Mary,’ and it has been living rent-free in the cultural conversation since its prominent placement in the hit TV series Heated Rivalry.

The numbers behind this moment are real and they are significant. The original recording of “I’ll Believe In Anything” has crossed 40 million streams on Spotify, with 20 million of those arriving since Heated Rivalry premiered in late November. The band’s monthly listenership on the platform has grown to over 2 million. A Vulture interview published February 9th digs into the connection between the song and the show.

This new version started as something intimate and unplanned. Krug performed it during his solo set at Unreal City Fest at Russian Hall in Vancouver, and the social media response was immediate and overwhelming. He took that energy into Risque Disque Records in Ladysmith, BC, and committed the performance to tape for a proper release. The recording carries the weight and warmth that made the original so affecting, now distilled to a single instrument and voice.

Krug brings the solo show to St. James Hall in Vancouver on June 5th. Wolf Parade, meanwhile, hits the road for a run of Canadian headline dates this March, opening in St. Catharines at the Warehouse on March 11th and 12th, moving to Bridgeworks in Hamilton on March 13th, and closing out at Sonic Hall in Guelph on March 14th and 15th. More dates are on the way.

Brian O’Glanby Unveils The Deep Hour With New Single “Hurricane”

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Formerly based in The Netherlands and now rooted in County Cork, Brian O’Glanby steps into a bold new chapter with The Deep Hour. Known for his anthemic songwriting and distinctive, soul-tinged indie grit, O’Glanby has spent more than two decades crafting emotionally rich narratives drawn from lived experience and the complexities of the human condition. The project began gaining momentum with late 2025 single “The One,” which reached #1 on both the main Irish iTunes chart and the iTunes Rock chart, earning support from Red FM, Amazing Radio and others.

Now, the second release from The Deep Hour, “Hurricane,” arrives February 20, delivering one of O’Glanby’s most personal works to date. Built around heartfelt melody and raw honesty, the song addresses the devastating and often unspoken realities of domestic violence. The track features acclaimed guitarist Gerry Leonard, known for his work with David Bowie and Suzanne Vega, alongside renowned bassist Robbie Malone, celebrated for collaborations with David Gray and The Corrs. Their contributions deepen the song’s emotional weight and musical intensity.

O’Glanby has recently completed the forthcoming album “Through Your Eyes,” produced by Wayne P. Sheehy at Ocean Studios Ireland on the shores of Bantry Bay. Featuring contributions from Trevor Hutchinson, Lisa Lambe, Paul Linehan and Catriona Fallon, the record reflects resilience, conviction and artistic clarity shaped by decades in music. With “Hurricane,” The Deep Hour signals a powerful and purposeful new phase in O’Glanby’s career.