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Marissa Nadler Dives Into Nine Inch Nails With ‘The Great Below’ Redux

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The Redux Series companion album ‘Best of Nine Inch Nails Redux’ has arrived, bringing bold reinterpretations of essential tracks. Among its standout moments is Marissa Nadler’s haunting take on “The Great Below,” now paired with a striking music video she created, directed, and edited herself. The result feels immersive and deeply personal, extending the song’s atmosphere into vivid visual form.

Nadler shares her connection to the track: “Both Milky and I were immediately drawn to the song’s intimate darkness and atmosphere, elements that resonate deeply with our own work. In this version, we aimed to preserve the original’s haunting sense of isolation and shimmering despair.” Her voice floats through the arrangement, honoring the source while reshaping its emotional core.

She continues, praising Nine Inch Nails’ sonic architecture and the film score work of Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross. “The sense of suspense created by that restraint in ‘The Great Below’ was immensely compelling to us. I’ve always been drawn to the slowest, saddest corners of a record, the ones that can open up into new realms, and ‘The Great Below’ felt like one of those rare portals.” The performance captures that quiet intensity.

Best known as a singer songwriter, Nadler released her tenth studio album ‘New Radiations’ in 2025 to strong acclaim. A mezzo soprano who blends folk, country, and experimental metal textures, she also brings a background in fine art, with degrees in illustration and art education from the Rhode Island School of Design. Painting, bookbinding, wood carving, and hot wax techniques all inform her visual language, and now video art joins that list. This reimagining stands as a compelling bridge between two distinct creative worlds.

The All American Rejects Drop ‘Get This’ And Turn Up The Sandbox

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Fresh off an arena run with the Jonas Brothers, The All American Rejects return with “Get This,” a sharp edged indie pop rush from their forthcoming album ‘Sandbox.’ The track signals a confident new chapter while tapping into the melodic instincts that first made them radio staples.

“Get This” carries the punch and swagger of earlier favorites like “Gives You Hell” and “Move Along,” pairing tight hooks with a playful edge. The cheeky music video places the band across five different sets inspired by classic holiday films, leaning into the fun and amplifying the track’s off center charm.

Tyson Ritter shares about the song’s origins: “Little hooks will sit in your pockets like a lead weight that won’t shake out in the dryer. ‘Get This’ was a song born on a drive. It was made in the sunshine on the back porch of our family home. Pure fun like the company it was written around.” That spirit runs through every second of the track.

The momentum has been undeniable. Their breakout “Easy Come, Easy Go” fueled the viral House Party Tour, generating hundreds of millions of views across three music videos and drawing coverage from Nightline, CNN, FADER, Kerrang!, New York Magazine, and NPR. With “Get This” and ‘Sandbox’ on the horizon, The All American Rejects are moving with renewed energy and a growing audience that spans generations.

Mr. Fantasy Blasts Off With “Catapult” And Miami-Fueled Pop Funk

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Rising star and viral sensation Mr. Fantasy returns with “Catapult,” a glossy, groove heavy single that leans all the way into his technicolor world. The track arrives with a music video set in Miami, where he cruises through the city before launching into a rocket ride that sends viewers into another dimension. It is bold, theatrical, and built for repeat spins.

The release follows a major milestone. Mr. Fantasy made his live debut at the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, performing his self titled breakout “Mr. Fantasy” from the Jolly Polly Pirate Ship. The single has already crossed six million streams and generated more than 200 million views and 13 million likes across TikTok and Instagram, cementing his status as a social media force.

Since emerging in August 2025, Mr. Fantasy has carved out a vivid identity. The synth pop artist channels a 1970s British rockstar aesthetic, complete with brunette bob wig, oversized sunglasses, false teeth, and a playful accent that feels straight from another era. The commitment to character fuels the spectacle and keeps audiences guessing.

Speculation continues to swirl that Mr. Fantasy may be the alter ego of New Zealand actor KJ Apa, known for his role as Archie Andrews on Riverdale. Observers point to similarities in voice, tattoos, and build, while his manager has offered cryptic hints. Confirmed or not, the mystique only amplifies the buzz around “Catapult” and earlier single “Wayuwanna,” both signaling a pop project that is moving fast and aiming higher.

Alice Gerrard Reflects On A Lifetime In Folk With ‘Custom Made Woman’

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Award-winning folk and bluegrass musician Alice Gerrard traces more than five decades of music and advocacy in her new memoir, ‘Custom Made Woman: A Life in Traditional Music.’ The book follows her journey through festivals, collaborations, family life, and the personal and professional relationships that shaped her path in a genre long dominated by men.

Central to her story is her partnership with Appalachian singer Hazel Dickens during the 1960s and 1970s. Their four albums, recently reissued by Rounder Records and Smithsonian Folkways, stand as pivotal recordings in the years following the American folk revival. Gerrard also worked alongside musicians including Tommy Jarrell, Enoch Rutherford, Otis Burris, Luther Davis, and Matokie Slaughter.

Beyond performance, Gerrard helped document and sustain the traditional music community. She founded The Old-Time Herald in Durham, North Carolina, serving as editor-in-chief for more than a decade. Her lifelong commitment to preserving folk culture is reflected in the book’s nearly 100 rare photographs, many previously unpublished.

Featuring images of figures such as Doc Watson, Bill Monroe, Hazel Dickens, Elizabeth Cotten, and Mike Seeger, ‘Custom Made Woman’ offers both memoir and cultural record. Gerrard’s story provides an intimate lens on a distinctly American tradition that continues to evolve and endure.

Van Morrison Collects Six Decades Of Songwriting In ‘Lit Up Inside / Keep ’Er Lit’

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Van Morrison gathers more than sixty years of songwriting into ‘Lit Up Inside / Keep ’Er Lit: The Collected Lyrics,’ a hardcover volume featuring the words to over two hundred songs. With a foreword by John Cooper Clarke, the book presents Morrison’s lyrical world in one carefully assembled edition.

Across its pages, readers encounter the recurring touchstones that define his work — back streets and mystic avenues, childhood memory and adult reckoning, church bells and late-night radio. The lyrics move between solitude and celebration, naming fellow artists, tracing romance and regret, and returning again and again to themes of grace and transcendence.

Spanning his full career, the collection charts the evolution of a writer who has continually reshaped blues, soul, folk, and rock traditions through language and phrasing. Seen together, the lyrics reveal patterns of imagery and rhythm that run through decades of recording and performance.

‘Lit Up Inside / Keep ’Er Lit’ offers a comprehensive overview of Morrison’s output, presenting the words on their own terms — a standalone document of one of contemporary music’s most enduring songwriters.

John Darnielle Chronicles 365 Songs In ‘This Year’

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John Darnielle gathers decades of songwriting into ‘This Year: 365 Songs Annotated,’ a hardcover collection pairing lyrics with first-person commentary. Illustrated by John Keogh, the book presents 365 songs with reflections on their origins, influences, and the people who shaped them.

Spanning Darnielle’s earliest boom-box recordings through the evolution of The Mountain Goats into a full band, the collection documents a creative life in motion. Each annotation offers context — where the song came from, who it was written for, and what was happening at the time. Family, friends, collaborators, and literary heroes all surface in the margins.

Readers will find insight into songs like “This Year,” “No Children,” “The Best Ever Death Metal Band in Denton,” and “Up the Wolves,” alongside commentary on the writers who influenced him, including Flannery O’Connor, Jorge Luis Borges, and Stephen King. The result is part lyric archive, part memoir, part craft study.

‘This Year’ stands as a detailed literary record of one of indie music’s most prolific voices — not just a compilation of songs, but an examination of how they came to exist and why they continue to resonate.

Lionel Richie’s ‘Can’t Slow Down’ Enters Definitive Sound Series In One Step Edition

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Interscope-Capitol Records adds Lionel Richie’s ‘Can’t Slow Down’ to its premium Definitive Sound Series, a high-end audiophile collection focused on landmark albums presented in their highest-fidelity form. The 180-gram high-definition vinyl edition is sourced directly from the original analog master tapes and limited to 3,000 hand-numbered copies.

Mastered by Chris Bellman at Bernie Grundman Mastering and pressed at Record Technology using the One Step process, the release eliminates multiple stamper stages in the plating chain. Each copy includes a certificate of authenticity detailing the mastering, plating, and pressing process — underscoring the series’ emphasis on production transparency and craftsmanship.

Originally released in 1983, ‘Can’t Slow Down’ marked a major turning point in Richie’s solo career. The album produced five U.S. Top 40 singles, including “All Night Long (All Night)” and the Grammy-winning “Hello,” and earned the 1985 Grammy Award for Album of the Year. It topped charts worldwide and expanded the blueprint for crossover pop success in the 1980s.

“The Definitive Sound Series represents the pinnacle of vinyl craftsmanship,” says Xavier Ramos, EVP D2C and eCommerce Strategy at Interscope-Capitol. “We’re proud to invest in these collectible pieces that reflect our respect for these iconic artists, their groundbreaking music, and the fans whose passion continues to keep these albums as relevant today as when they were first released.”

Track listing for ‘Can’t Slow Down’:

  1. Can’t Slow Down
  2. All Night Long (All Night)
  3. Penny Lover
  4. Stuck On You
  5. Love Will Find A Way
  6. The Only One
  7. Running With The Night
  8. Hello

CVCHE Turn Up The Heat With New Single “Private Volcano”

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Experimental Rural Canadian Techno supergroup CVCHE return with “Private Volcano,” the latest single from their upcoming debut album ‘Get Fluffy.’ Built in their moss-covered river studio somewhere deep in the Canadian wilderness, the track channels pressure into pulse — both creative and literal.

“‘Private Volcano’ started as a late-night experiment that got out of hand in the best way,” the band shares. “We recorded it during a heatwave, and the AC was acting funny, and we were running way too hot, which probably explains the title. The song is about pressure… the kind that builds quietly, whether it’s creative, emotional, or just the temperature in the room. ‘Private Volcano’ is us leaning into that heat instead of running from it.”

CVCHE bring together Jimmy Shaw of Metric and Broken Social Scene, Liam O’Neil of Kings of Leon, Dave Hodge of Broken Social Scene and Leisure Cruise, and conceptual artist Jon Morris of Windmill Factory and NOWHERE.io. Their self-described Rural Canadian Techno bends analog synthesizers, off-kilter grooves, and playful conceptual framing into something both hypnotic and slightly absurd.

Previous singles include “Welcome To CVCHE,” “Eyes of Darkness – A Novel by Dean Koontz,” “Get Fluffy,” “Never Whatever,” “Thumper,” and the Chris Seligman collaboration “The Star.” With “Private Volcano,” CVCHE continue to build their own strange electronic ecosystem — one vintage synth at a time.

Descendents Celebrate 40 Years Of ‘I Don’t Want To Grow Up’ With Expanded Reissue

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Org Music announces the reissue of ‘I Don’t Want To Grow Up,’ the landmark second album from punk pioneers Descendents. Available across LP, CD, and cassette formats, the release also includes a special Punk Note LP edition with alternate packaging. The reissue follows the band’s reclaimed ownership of their master recordings and continues the campaign that began with ‘Milo Goes To College.’

Originally released in 1985 on New Alliance Records, founded by Minutemen’s D. Boon and Mike Watt, the album arrived after Milo Aukerman returned from college. It marked the first of two releases featuring guitarist Ray Cooper and showcased a brighter, hook-driven edge without losing the band’s urgency. Four decades later, it remains a cornerstone of melodic hardcore.

The standout Punk Note edition, designed by John Yates of Stealworks, draws inspiration from the iconic Blue Note aesthetic shaped by Reid Miles and Francis Wolff. Presented in deluxe case-wrapped jackets with new liner notes by BrooklynVegan senior editor Andrew Sacher, the series continues Org Music’s visually reimagined punk archive.

Track listing for ‘I Don’t Want To Grow Up’:

  1. Descendents
  2. I Don’t Want To Grow Up
  3. Pervert
  4. Rockstar
  5. No FB
  6. Can’t Go Back
  7. GCF
  8. My World
  9. Theme
  10. Silly Girl
  11. In Love This Way
  12. Christmas Vacation
  13. Good Good Things
  14. Ace
  15. Catalina
  16. Suburban Home

Available variants include Black LP, “Banana Peel” LP, Punk Note Edition Black Vinyl, CD, and Yellow Cassette. Limited exclusives include Transparent Yellow Punk Note LP, “Oxblood Docs” LP, Ocean LP, Pink LP, Green Bay LP, Bubble Gum LP, Black LP with Obi Strip, and Purple Swirl Cassette. The campaign continues with future reissues of ‘Enjoy!,’ ‘ALL,’ and ‘Bonus Fat,’ each overseen by the band to ensure definitive presentation.

Capsize Resurface With Brooding New Single “The Fracture”

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Capsize return with “The Fracture,” their first release since signing to Roux & Ruin Records. Produced by Matt Good, whose credits include From First To Last and Asking Alexandria, the track blends sharp melodic turns with dense, emotional weight. It reintroduces the band with a sound that feels focused and unfiltered.

“This song is about taking responsibility for everything in my life, even the things that are out of my control,” shares vocalist Daniel Wand. “I’ve found holding myself accountable is the only way I’ve been able to make sense of the aftermath when things fall apart in any category of life. It’s about feeling empty from it, and still trying to find some kind of light at the end of the tunnel by being candid about internal struggle.”

“The Fracture” leans into tension and release — melodic passages give way to heavier bursts, mirroring the push and pull inside the lyrics. The production keeps the edges intact, allowing the vulnerability in Wand’s delivery to sit alongside the band’s driving instrumentation.

After several standalone singles in recent years, Capsize are preparing their first physical release since ‘A Reintroduction: The Essence Of All That Surrounds Me.’