Disney’s new compilation of Marvel’s superhero landings is pure cinematic joy. Each pose tells its own story — dramatic, powerful, and just a little self-aware. And thanks to Yelena Belova, we’ll never unsee the hair whip again.
Jason Sinay Honors Neil Young with Soulful Take on “Cortez the Killer” Ahead of His Double Album ‘The Mountain’
Renowned guitarist Jason Sinay has released his captivating rendition of Neil Young’s iconic “Cortez the Killer”, offering a fresh perspective on the classic track. Sinay is known for his work with Mike Campbell & The Dirty Knobs, as co-founding member, Keith Richards, Jackson Browne, and a slew of others, including the aforementioned Young, himself.
In a recent Guitar World piece, Jason admitted that he was starstruck when Young asked him to play. “I looked out into the audience and saw Neil Young sitting in the middle – I froze.”
“Cortez the Killer,” a staple in Neil Young’s discography since its release on the 1975 album Zuma, is known for its historical references, evocative imagery, and soaring guitar work. Sinay’s version promises to honor the original while imbuing it with his unique artistry and style. Fans can anticipate a powerful and insightful take on a song that has resonated with audiences for decades.
The Mountain, Sinay’s long-awaited double album, is finally set for release October 24th. The album’s first disc features a full band A list players, with Sinay on vocals and guitar, Bruce Watson on guitar, Phil Parlapiano on keys, mandolin and squeezebox, Doug Livingston on pedal steel, Lance Morrison or Mike Mennell on bass, and Matt Laug or Herman Matthews on drums. In addition to the full arrangements, Mountain will feature a special “second side,” which reprises the entire program in a stripped down, acoustic format.
Darren Kiely Shares Heartfelt New Single “Married On My Phone” and Emotional Music Video
Free Flight Records artist Darren Kiely just released a brand new track entitled “Married On My Phone” along with an official music video for the song.
The track puts a modern twist on the concept of struggling to move on from a past relationship, with the narrator reflecting on the gut-wrenching feeling of stumbling upon photos of his ex on her wedding day. Kiely penned the relatable track with Joe Fox, Brad Rempel, and Femke Weidema.
The captivating video shows Kiely in several shots, ranging from a lush but melancholy setting in the woods to the pouring down rain, with the variety of scenes representing the many emotions explored in the song.
Nirvana (UK) Illuminate the Swinging Sixties with 12-Disc Retrospective ‘The Show Must Go On’
Nirvana were essentially the duo of Irishman Patrick Campbell-Lyons and Greek Alex Spyropoulos – two immigrants who, following a chance meeting during the summer of 1966, became an integral part of the very fabric that was Swinging London. Crafting a visionary sound that moved beyond the confines of 1960s pop into baroque, psych and proto-Prog territory, Nirvana’s story remains a wonderful tale of artistic ambition.
The Show Must Go On: The Complete Collection is a definitive 12-CD compendium that encompasses the complete studio recordings of Nirvana across 8 studio albums, all with newly remastered audio, as well as 3 additional discs of rare outtakes, demos, and other rarities. Some of the gems located on the bonus discs include the 1971 Vertigo label single ‘The Saddest Day of My Life’ and an alternative version of a 1973 Patrick Campbell-Lyons single ‘Everyone Should Fly A Kite’.
As well as the 12 CDs, The Show Must Go On: The Complete Collection also includes a beautiful 90-page hardback book that offers an intimate and detailed exploration of Nirvana’s history, their creative evolution, and their indelible cultural footprint. Within its pages are interwoven with exclusive interviews featuring founding members Patrick Campbell-Lyons and Alex Spyropoulos, revealing their personal narratives, inspirations, and experiences crafting music during an era of profound experimentation and change. The book is further enriched by previously unseen photographs by Gered Mankowitz and archival materials that vividly capture the essence and atmosphere of the band’s creative zenith.
This limited edition, one-time pressing presents the CDs in mini-LP sleeves featuring original artwork, all elegantly contained within a deluxe heavy lift-off lid box.
79 Facts About Diane Keaton
Diane Keaton passed away today at age 79, leaving behind a legacy that shaped film, fashion, and storytelling forever. Few stars glowed with the warmth, wit, and originality of Diane Keaton. Across five decades, she lit up Hollywood — from The Godfather to Annie Hall — with a voice, a style, and a spirit that were entirely her own. Here are 79 facts celebrating her extraordinary life and legacy.
- Diane Keaton was born Diane Hall on January 5, 1946, in Los Angeles, California.
- She was the eldest of four children raised in Santa Ana, California.
- Her mother, Dorothy Deanne Keaton, was a homemaker and amateur photographer.
- Her father, John Newton Ignatius Hall, was a real estate broker and civil engineer.
- Keaton’s mother once won the “Mrs. Los Angeles” pageant for homemakers.
- Watching her mother perform inspired Diane to pursue acting.
- She graduated from Santa Ana High School in 1963.
- At school, she starred as Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire.
- She studied at Santa Ana College before transferring to Orange Coast College.
- Diane left college after a year to chase her acting dreams in New York City.
- She trained at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre.
- She studied the Meisner technique of acting.
- Upon joining the Actors’ Equity Association, she adopted her mother’s maiden name, Keaton.
- She chose the name to avoid confusion with another actress named Diane Hall.
- Keaton briefly sang in New York nightclubs early in her career.
- In 1968, she joined the original Broadway cast of Hair.
- She became known for refusing to appear nude in Hair’s finale.
- The decision earned her respect and attention on Broadway.
- In 1969, she starred in Woody Allen’s play Play It Again, Sam.
- Her performance earned her a Tony Award nomination.
- Diane made her film debut in Lovers and Other Strangers (1970).
- She appeared on TV shows like Love, American Style and Night Gallery.
- In 1972, she portrayed Kay Adams-Corleone in The Godfather.
- Francis Ford Coppola cast her for her offbeat charm and originality.
- The film won the 1972 Academy Award for Best Picture.
- She reprised her role in The Godfather Part II (1974).
- She later returned for The Godfather Part III (1990).
- Her collaborations with Woody Allen shaped her early career.
- She starred in Sleeper (1973) and Love and Death (1975).
- Her breakout came with Annie Hall in 1977.
- “Annie Hall” earned her the Academy Award for Best Actress.
- The character was partly based on Keaton herself.
- Her real last name, Hall, inspired the film’s title.
- Her Annie Hall wardrobe sparked a global fashion trend.
- She often wore vintage men’s clothing, ties, and fedoras.
- Her look made her a 1970s fashion icon.
- Time magazine called her “the funniest woman now working in films.”
- That same year, she starred in Looking for Mr. Goodbar.
- Looking for Mr. Goodbar showed her powerful dramatic range.
- In 1981, she starred as journalist Louise Bryant in Reds.
- Reds earned her a second Oscar nomination.
- She co-starred with and dated Warren Beatty during Reds.
- Critics praised her performance as one of her finest.
- In 1982, she starred in Shoot the Moon opposite Albert Finney.
- Pauline Kael called her work in Shoot the Moon “revelatory.”
- She starred in Crimes of the Heart (1986) with Jessica Lange and Sissy Spacek.
- In 1987, she led Baby Boom, playing a career woman turned mother.
- Baby Boom marked her first collaboration with Nancy Meyers.
- That year, she directed Heaven, a documentary about the afterlife.
- She began directing music videos for Belinda Carlisle.
- Keaton directed an episode of Twin Peaks.
- She made her feature directorial debut with Unstrung Heroes (1995).
- She returned to comedy with Father of the Bride (1991).
- She reprised the role in Father of the Bride Part II (1995).
- In 1993, she reunited with Woody Allen for Manhattan Murder Mystery.
- She earned another Golden Globe nomination for the role.
- In 1996, she starred in The First Wives Club with Goldie Hawn and Bette Midler.
- The First Wives Club grossed over $100 million worldwide.
- That same year, she starred in Marvin’s Room alongside Meryl Streep.
- Marvin’s Room earned Keaton her third Oscar nomination.
- In 2003, she starred in Something’s Gotta Give opposite Jack Nicholson.
- The role brought her a fourth Oscar nomination.
- Something’s Gotta Give became a box-office hit and fan favorite.
- She starred as the matriarch in The Family Stone (2005).
- Her performance earned her a Satellite Award nomination.
- In 2016, she voiced Jenny, Dory’s mother, in Finding Dory.
- The Pixar film grossed over $1 billion worldwide.
- She co-starred in Book Club (2018) alongside Jane Fonda and Candice Bergen.
- Book Club became her biggest hit since Something’s Gotta Give.
- Diane was also a successful producer and director.
- She produced Gus Van Sant’s Elephant (2003), about a school shooting.
- Keaton published several books of photography and memoirs.
- Her 2011 memoir Then Again was inspired by her mother’s journals.
- She followed it with Let’s Just Say It Wasn’t Pretty (2014).
- Her final memoir, Brother & Sister (2020), explored family and memory.
- She was an active preservationist, restoring historic L.A. architecture.
- Keaton received the AFI Life Achievement Award in 2017.
- She earned the Film Society of Lincoln Center Gala Tribute in 2007.
- Diane Keaton passed away today in California at age 79, leaving behind a legacy of laughter, strength, and endless style.
Diane Keaton taught generations that brilliance could be quiet, joyful, and defiantly original. She made every scene her own — and in doing so, made Hollywood a little braver, and a lot more human.
Minus the Bear Celebrate 20 Years of ‘Menos el Oso’ with Demos, Memories, and a Full-Circle Reunion
The twentieth anniversary deluxe reissue of Minus the Bear’s seminal 2005 album Menos el Oso is out now via Suicide Squeeze Records, and today they’re excited to share for the first time “The Pig War (Demo),” an early version of what would become one of the most emotionally evocative, nostalgia-tinged cuts on the record.
Speaking on the song, the band’s vocalist Jake Snider says “The music for the song had a melancholy, rolling feel leading me to nostalgic memories of being on Wescott Bay on San Juan Island, a few hours trip north of Seattle. The lyrics are more an impression of the place than a narrative; a longing for the simplicity of being there. It’s cool to hear the contrast between the rougher edges of the demo against the album track’s more polished flow.”
This unreleased version follows on the heels of the recently released demo of fan-favorite album cut “Hooray.” Last week, the band revealed the supporting acts for their fall tour celebrating twenty years of the album.
The 2xLP release includes a remastered version of the original album on one 12″ and 5 unreleased original demos on the second 12″, including the demo versions of “The Pig War” and “Hooray,” available to stream now for the first time. Side B of disc two features an etching by bassist Cory Murchy. The reissue also includes Los Archivos Del Oso, a 24-page archive photo journal from the band’s personal collection.
Speaking on the reissue, Snider says “…Oso is a band and fan favorite. We came into our sound on this record. I’m excited for fans to hear these demos for the first time! Revisiting demos and hearing the evolution of some of these tracks puts me right back in our early 2000s practice space. And now we’re literally back in that same practice space for rehearsals. It’s wild!”
Halestorm Unleash Power and Purpose with Fiery New Anthem “Rain Your Blood On Me”
On the heels of their show-stopping performance of Ozzy Osbourne’s “Perry Mason” at his final show over the weekend, Halestorm today dropped “Rain Your Blood On Me,” a heavy siren call starting with a thumping dirge beat and erupting into Arejay Hale’s explosive drum fills, guitarist Joe Hottinger’s lightning fast guitar riffs, and Lzzy Hale’s astronomical vocal harmonies, all tethered to earth by Josh Smith’s dark bass grooves.
“Rain Your Blood On Me” follows “Darkness Always Wins” and title track “Everest” as the third song revealed from the GRAMMY Award winning hard rock band’s album out now via Atlantic Records. “Darkness Always Wins” is steadily climbing the Active Rock chart, now entering the top 15.
“‘Rain Your Blood On Me’ is our ode to women,” said Lzzy Hale, the sole female performer on the bill at “Back To The Beginning,” Osbourne and Black Sabbath’s farewell show where the band debuted the new song live. “The crawl, the climb, the clenching of fists, the screaming of sirens, the breaking of glass – this is our war cry. As a woman, surrounded by my allies, Arejay, Joe and Josh, we put everything we’ve fought for up until this moment into this opus. The music started with the stomping of feet at 3 in the morning, with a chant of ‘Rain Your Blood On Me.’ We weren’t even sure what that title meant in the moment as we watched the sky crack through the eerie Spanish moss in Savannah, Georgia. But we knew it was right. By 11:30 AM the poem I had written had seemed to form itself like a story waiting to be told.
“We may not win the war in our lifetime, but we can pass the torch to our daughters so that they may light the way.”
Homixide Gang Ignite Chaos with Smashing Pumpkins Sample and Fincher Flair on “5G”
Today marks the release of “5G,” the explosive new single from Opium’s dynamic rap duo, Homixide Gang. Powered by a blazing sample of Smashing Pumpkins’ 1993 classic “Cherub Rock,” the track builds with searing guitars, escalating tension, and a heavy drop as Homixide Meechie and Homixide Beno! Trade their signature share bars with unrelenting intensity.
Accompanying the track is a striking visual inspired by David Fincher’s cult classic film Fight Club (1999), mirroring the anarchic energy and chaos that runs through the track.
Alongside the track, earlier this week, they unveiled the official cover for their highly anticipated new album, Homixide Lifestyle 2. The follow-up to their 2022 debut mixtape, Homixide Lifestyle 2 sees Meechie and Beno! return to the chaotic, menacing rage-rap sound that first put them on the map, only now, they’re sharper, louder, and more locked in than ever. They’ve been teasing the project for months, previewing unreleased tracks during a wild set at Rolling Loud California and most recently at Summer Smash Festival in Chicago. Rumors of features, including collaborations with other Opium signees, have only heightened anticipation.
In a full-circle moment, the duo recreated their original cover three years later, once again shot by renowned photographer Gunner Stahl (Playboi Carti, Metro Boomin, Rae Sremmurd), who also captured the first Homixide Lifestyle artwork. This next chapter signals sonic development with the duo drawing from southern hip-hop influences while continuing to push the boundaries of rage rap.
Earlier this year they shared their long-awaited track, “Free Agents.” They first unveiled the music video on YouTube late last year, and it has since racked nearly 1 million views. Directed by YungTacc the video offers a laid back, behind-the-scenes look at the raw, authentic world of Homixide Gang, capturing them on the road alongside friends and labelmates.

