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Rolling Stone UK’s Group Of The Year Wunderhorse Bring Their Headline Tour To North America This Summer

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Wunderhorse are coming to North America, and the timing could not be better. Fresh off winning Rolling Stone UK’s Group of the Year award, the UK indie rock outfit has confirmed a run of North American headline dates this July and August, alongside festival appearances at Osheaga, Lollapalooza, and Outside Lands. Tickets are on sale now.

The headlining run kicks off July 23rd in Washington, DC and moves through Philadelphia, Boston, Brooklyn, and Toronto before hitting the festival circuit. Been Stellar, the New York indie rock quartet, supports the headline dates through the northeastern leg, with alt indie rockers Fat, Evil Children joining for the western run. It is a well-matched lineup across the board.

Wunderhorse have built their reputation the right way, through relentless touring and records that connect. The Rolling Stone UK recognition confirms what fans already knew: this band operates at a level above the pack. Their live show is the kind that turns casual listeners into devoted ones, and these North American dates give a lot of new rooms the chance to find that out firsthand.

After wrapping North America, the tour extends through Europe with stops at Lowlands in the Netherlands, Pukkelpop in Belgium, Custom House Square in Belfast, a sold-out Cork City Hall, Electric Picnic, Rock N Roll Circus in Sheffield, and All Points East in London.

Wunderhorse 2026 Tour Dates:

July 23 — Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club (with Been Stellar)

July 24 — Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer (with Been Stellar)

July 25 — Boston, MA @ Royale (with Been Stellar)

July 27 — Brooklyn, NY @ Warsaw Concerts (with Been Stellar)

July 30 — Toronto, ON @ Phoenix Concert Theatre (with Been Stellar)

July 31 — Montréal, QC @ Osheaga 2026

August 2 — Chicago, IL @ Lollapalooza

August 4 — Denver, CO @ Bluebird Theater (with Fat, Evil Children)

August 6 — Los Angeles, CA @ The Fonda Theatre (with Fat, Evil Children)

August 7-9 — San Francisco, CA @ Outside Lands 2026

August 21 — Biddinghuizen, Netherlands @ Lowlands Festival 2026

August 22 — Hasselt, Belgium @ Pukkelpop Festival 2026

August 25 — Belfast, United Kingdom @ Custom House Square

August 26 — Cork, Ireland @ Cork City Hall (SOLD OUT)

August 28-30 — Co. Laois, Ireland @ Electric Picnic 2026

August 29 — Sheffield, United Kingdom @ Rock N Roll Circus 2026

August 30 — London, United Kingdom @ All Points East 2026

Barry Manilow Returns With ‘What A Time,’ His First Album of New Material in Nearly 15 Years

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Fifty-plus years into one of the most decorated careers in popular music, Barry Manilow has a new album on the way. ‘What A Time’, his 33rd studio album and first collection of nearly all-original material since 2011’s ‘Fifteen Minutes’, arrives June 5th via Barney Property Trust. Produced by Manilow and longtime collaborator Michael Lloyd, the record brings together an exceptional group of co-writers and collaborators across a range of sounds.

The collaborator list alone signals ambition. Nine-time Grammy winner Dave Cobb, R&B titan Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds, longtime co-writers Bruce Sussman and Adrienne Anderson, and Gary Barlow all contribute, producing a collection that moves between string-swept torch songs, groove-driven R&B, heartland rock, and gospel-inspired crescendos. This is not a record content to stay in one lane.

The first single, “Sun Shine,” co-written with Gary Barlow and produced by Manilow, David Benson, and Greg Bartheld, is already out and doing exactly what a lead single should. The album’s opener, “Once Before I Go,” an epic love song executive-produced by Clive Davis and co-written by Dean Pitchford and the late Peter Allen, features a sweeping string arrangement by William Ross and has already reached the top 10 on Mediabase’s Adult Contemporary chart.

Manilow returns to the road April 13th following a postponement due to recent cancer-related surgery, and in April receives the American Advertising Federation’s President’s Award at the Advertising Hall of Fame induction ceremony. A Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee and BMI Icon Award recipient, he has also invested millions through the Manilow Music Project to rebuild music education programs in public schools nationwide.

‘What A Time’ Track Listing:

Once Before I Go

What A Time

Sun Shine

Another Life (2026)

Touched By An Angel

The Chosen One

One More Chance

Nobody Knows My Song

When Somebody Says Goodbye with Sharon “Muffy” Hendrix

Don’t Trouble The Water

Look At Me Now featuring Dave Koz

Nobody Told Me

Coming of Age

Southern Rock Guitar Slinger Andy Thomas and Dori Freeman Unite on Heartfelt New Duet “Nothing I Wouldn’t Do (For You)”

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Andy Thomas did not set out to write a love song. The accomplished guitarist and songwriter admits he has not written many of them, but this one arrived differently. “It kind of wrote itself,” Thomas says of “Nothing I Wouldn’t Do (For You),” his new duet with singer-songwriter Dori Freeman, out now ahead of his solo debut album ‘Highway Junkie’, arriving March 27th.

The song’s origin is as warm as the track itself. Thomas wrote it shortly after meeting his girlfriend, though it took time to find the right musical home. His producer Dave Schools, the Widespread Panic bassist and fellow Richmond native, eventually brought Dori Freeman into the sessions. Freeman, from Galax, Virginia, stepped into the studio and elevated the track immediately. “She brought the female counterpart to life and completely blew this vision out of the water,” Thomas says.

The result sits a little further into country territory than Thomas’s usual rock and roll attack, built on a bouncing rhythm section and his deft fingerpicking. The two voices blend with genuine warmth, trading lines on a song about the kind of love that makes the answer feel obvious. “This one’s very special to me, and is for that person you’d do anything for,” Thomas says. That sincerity comes through in every note.

‘Highway Junkie’ is a twelve-song debut that moves between southern rock, alt-country, and Buffett-tinged sing-alongs, all connected by Thomas’s run-through-a-wall energy on electric guitar. It is the work of someone who has earned his stories and is ready to tell them.

Valerie Perrine, 1943–2026: The Accidental Movie Star Who Did It All on Instinct

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Let’s talk about Valerie Perrine for a minute. Because she deserves more than a footnote.

She died Monday at 82, after a long battle with Parkinson’s disease that had steadily taken her mobility, her ability to eat, her ability to speak. She was cared for in her final years by her friend and soulmate Stacey Souther, who by all accounts was nothing short of a saint. Perrine never married. She leaves behind her brother Kenneth, and a filmography that is genuinely, wonderfully strange.

Here’s the thing about Valerie Perrine: she never planned any of it.

She was a Las Vegas showgirl. A headliner at the Stardust, making $800 a week dancing in the Lido de Paris show, which by any measure is a pretty good life. Then her fiancé died in a freak gun accident. Then the man she started dating — Hollywood hairdresser Jay Sebring — was murdered by the Manson family at Sharon Tate’s house on a night Perrine had been invited but couldn’t attend because she had to work. The universe, apparently, had other plans for her.

A casting agent spotted her at a dinner party, eavesdropped on a phone call, liked what he heard, and asked if she’d ever acted. She said no. He asked if she could. She said yes. The only headshot she had was a topless showgirl photo from Vegas. She sent it anyway.

She got the part in Slaughterhouse-Five. Just like that.

From there, her career moved in directions nobody could have mapped. Bob Fosse cast her as Honey Bruce — Lenny Bruce’s drug-addicted stripper wife — in Lenny (1974), opposite Dustin Hoffman. She won Best Actress at Cannes. She got a BAFTA. She got an Oscar nomination. She lost to Ellen Burstyn, which is not a disgrace.

Her method, if you could call it that, was pure instinct. No acting classes. No technique. Just learn the lines, get on set, find a real memory that hurts, and let it happen. For that crying scene with Hoffman, she thought about an old boyfriend who had broken her heart. That’s it. That’s the whole system. And it worked.

Then came Eve Teschmacher in Superman (1978) — Lex Luthor’s secretary, soft-hearted enough to save the Man of Steel when it counted. She played her again in the sequel. And for the rest of her life, strangers would bellow “MISS TESCHMACHER!” at her in the street, Gene Hackman-style, and she apparently took it in stride.

Then came Can’t Stop the Music (1980), with the Village People and Caitlyn Jenner, which was so catastrophically bad it helped inspire the creation of the Razzie Awards. Perrine was mortified enough to move to Europe. “It ruined my career,” she said flatly. She was not wrong, exactly, but she kept working anyway — Jack Nicholson in The Border, Robert Redford in The Electric Horseman, Michael Caine in Water, whom she called the nicest human being she’d ever worked with.

She never became the mega-star the early 1970s suggested she might. But she was singular. Funny, uninhibited, completely herself, with a life story that reads like something a novelist would reject for being too on-the-nose. The accidental showgirl. The accidental actress. The woman who missed the Manson murders because she had to work a shift.

Cannes Best Actress. Oscar nominee. Eve Teschmacher. The whole improbable thing.

Rest easy, Valerie.

Ted Nichols, 1928–2026: The Music Composer Who Gave Scooby-Doo Its Heartbeat

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Here’s one for the ages. Literally.

Ted Nichols died on January 9th at 97 years old, in Auburn, Washington, after a long battle with Alzheimer’s. And if that name doesn’t immediately ring a bell, I promise you his music does. You heard it every Saturday morning. You heard it when the gang split up to search the haunted house. You heard it when Shaggy and Scooby ran — again — from whatever rubber-masked villain was chasing them down a corridor.

That propulsive, perfectly calibrated underscore that made Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! feel like an actual adventure? That was Ted Nichols.

Born Theodore Nicholas Sflotsos in Missoula, Montana, in 1928 — a name he’d legally simplify to Ted Nichols by 1948 — his path to cartoon immortality was anything but straight. Navy swing band in Corpus Christi. Air Force Bandsmen Training School commander, recruiting musicians from Juilliard. Youth symphony director. Barbershop singer at Disneyland, occasionally having coffee with Walt Disney himself on Main Street. Minister of music at a 4,000-seat church in California.

And then, through a chance introduction via a choir member, he met William Hanna. And everything changed.

From 1963 to 1972, Nichols was the musical engine of Hanna-Barbera — composing, conducting, arranging for The Flintstones, Jonny Quest, Space Ghost, Birdman, Wacky Races, Josie and the Pussycats, and dozens more. His Scooby-Doo cues were so well constructed, so modular and intelligent, that music editors were still cutting them into new Scooby episodes as late as 1985. Sixteen years of continuous use. That’s not filler music. That’s craft.

He was 97. He lived a full, extraordinary, genuinely remarkable life. He got to hear his music come out of televisions in living rooms across the world for decades. Not many composers get that.

Doo-be-doo-be-doo, Ted. Rest well.

Simple Plan and Smash Mouth Are Headlining the 2026 Gatineau Hot Air Balloon Festival

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The 2026 Gatineau Hot Air Balloon Festival has its headliners, and they hit hard. Running September 2nd through 6th in Gatineau, QC, the five-night event brings together Simple Plan, Smash Mouth, Matt Lang, and DJ Mike Demero for a lineup that covers pop-punk, rock, country, and club energy under open skies.

Simple Plan takes the stage Friday, September 4th. The Montreal-bred pop-punk institution has spent over 20 years building a catalog that has moved more than 10 million records worldwide and crossed 1 billion streams. Hits like “I’m Just a Kid,” “Welcome to My Life,” and “Summer Paradise” featuring Sean Paul have made them one of the most enduring acts in the genre, and their live show delivers every time.

Smash Mouth headlines Thursday, September 3rd. The GRAMMY-nominated, multi-platinum Californian rock band brings “All Star,” “Walkin’ on the Sun,” and “I’m a Believer” to the festival stage, along with material from their forthcoming album ‘Mercury Comet’, due in 2026. Quebec country artist Matt Lang opens the festival Wednesday, September 2nd, carrying over 70 million streams and 150,000 tickets sold across sold-out tours. DJ Mike Demero, with 1.7 million social media followers and festival credits alongside Loud Luxury and Alan Walker, sets the stage for Simple Plan on Friday night.

Beyond the concerts, festival pass holders can catch evening hot air balloon launches at approximately 6:30 pm Wednesday through Sunday, free morning launches Thursday through Sunday at around 6:30 am, the Michel Quesnel Pharmacist Fireworks display nightly, and the Beauce Carnaval Amusement Park on site throughout.

Five-day passes start at $69.99 plus taxes and fees at fmg2026.ca, presented by Loto-Québec in collaboration with Desjardins. Additional artists will be announced in the coming weeks.

RAYE and Hans Zimmer Deliver an Orchestral Pop Showstopper With “Click Clack Symphony”

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RAYE and Hans Zimmer have combined forces on “Click Clack Symphony,” a track from RAYE’s album ‘This Music May Contain Hope’ that puts the full weight of the Nashville Music Scoring Orchestra behind her pop instincts. Arranged by Hendric Buenck and Russell Emanuel of Bleeding Fingers Music, the result is a genuinely cinematic piece of music, the kind that fills a room and demands to be heard loud.

Leonid Radvinsky, 1982–2026: The Reluctant Billionaire Who Rewired the Creator Economy

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Leonid Radvinsky, 1982–2026: The Reluctant Billionaire Who Rewired the Creator Economy

And a word about getting screened.


Here’s something worth sitting with for a moment.

Leonid Radvinsky died this past week at 43. Forty-three. Born in Odesa, raised in Chicago, graduated Northwestern with an economics degree, and quietly — almost invisibly — built one of the most consequential platforms in the history of online media. He was worth $4.7 billion at the time of his death. He gave almost no interviews. You probably couldn’t have picked him out of a lineup.

And yet.

In 2018, he paid a relatively modest sum for a majority stake in a scrappy little British subscription site called OnlyFans that most people hadn’t heard of. Then a pandemic happened, the entire world went indoors, and suddenly everyone had heard of OnlyFans. Creators — millions of them — found a direct line to their audiences and their income that bypassed every traditional gatekeeper. No record label. No studio. No agency taking their cut. Just a creator, a camera, and a subscriber willing to pay.

Was it primarily a porn platform? Yes. Obviously yes. Let’s not be coy about that. But it was also something genuinely new: a model that handed economic power directly to individual creators at a scale nobody had managed before. Love it, hate it, clutch your pearls about it — the architecture of it mattered. Other platforms noticed. The whole creator economy shifted.

By 2024, OnlyFans was processing $7.2 billion in transactions annually, paying out $5.8 billion of that to creators. That’s not a footnote. That’s a seismic redistribution of money in the media landscape.

Radvinsky’s early career was messy and not exactly something you’d put on a Christmas card. His philanthropy, though, was genuine — cancer research, Ukraine relief, animal welfare. He and his wife backed a $23 million cancer research grant program. Given what ultimately took him, that lands with particular weight.

He was 43 years old.

Which brings me to the part I really need you to hear.

Forty-three is not old. It is not even close to old. And cancer doesn’t care how old you are, how wealthy you are, or how quietly you prefer to live your life.

If you have been putting off a colonoscopy, a mammogram, a PSA test, a skin check, or any other screening your doctor has been gently (or not so gently) suggesting — please stop putting it off. Book the appointment this week. Not next month. This week. Caught early, so many of these cancers are treatable. Caught late, the math changes brutally and fast.

Radvinsky reportedly donated to Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. He understood the stakes. Make sure you do too.

Rest easy, Leo. You changed the internet more than most people will ever know.

Liverpool Post-Punk Survivors Cassius Wolf & Das Abs Return With Charged New Single “I Can’t Reply”

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Two school friends who came up together in Liverpool’s original post-punk scene have something worth hearing again. Cassius Wolf & Das Abs, formed in 1978 by Cassius Wolf and Don Watson, are back with “I Can’t Reply,” a new single drawn from restored cassette archive recordings and reworked for 2026. The track sets the tone for their upcoming album ‘An Afternoon in Bedlam’, due May 29th.

Wolf and Watson came up in the thick of it. They worked together at the legendary Liverpool club Eric’s, surrounded by the energy of Echo & the Bunnymen, OMD, and The Teardrop Explodes. That environment shaped a sound built on punk attitude, melodic instinct, and independent thinking. Decades later, those same values are driving their return.

“I Can’t Reply” is built around a throbbing bassline, urgent drums, and sharp melodic guitar work. The track traces the moment a relationship’s communication collapses entirely, when conflict spirals past the point of response. The repeated refrain does not suggest avoidance. It captures paralysis. It is post-punk doing exactly what post-punk does best, finding the emotional truth inside the noise.

‘An Afternoon in Bedlam’ draws from the darker romantic textures of The Cure and Depeche Mode alongside the experimental restlessness of Can and Velvet Underground. Recorded from a home studio environment with full creative control across songwriting, production, and visuals, the album reflects the band’s broader mission under what they call “PCore,” a movement championing artists who continue pursuing creative ambitions later in life.

The Raccoons’ Long-Lost Music Finally Goes Digital With New Covers From Contemporary Artists

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Forty years after the Evergreen Forest first came to life on Canadian television, the music of The Raccoons is finally getting its digital moment. In partnership with 604 Records, the newly remastered soundtracks from the beloved CBC animated series are arriving online for the first time, paired with brand-new recordings from contemporary artists. The rollout begins April 22nd, Earth Day, with Lisa Lougheed’s iconic recording of “Run With Us” hitting all streaming platforms alongside its original music video.

The first full album release, ‘Evergreen Nights’, arrives June 5th and features a fresh take on “Run With Us” by Fionn, the Billboard No. 1-charting alternative duo from Vancouver. Subsequent 2026 releases will spotlight additional albums from the series, including three original musical albums and two storybook albums, all previously only available on vinyl and each expanded with exclusive bonus material. This is the first official release of any kind since 1988.

604 Records co-founder Jonathan Simkin, who came aboard after creator Kevin Gillis approached him about the project, put it plainly: “Diving into this project has really underscored for me just how far ahead of its time Raccoons was.” Gillis calls the strategy of pairing legacy recordings with new interpretations “a unique power play that is sure to inspire fans, both existing and new.”

The original series ran on CBC from 1985 to 1991 and broadcast in over 180 countries, featuring original music by Lougheed, Leo Sayer, Rita Coolidge, Rupert Holmes, Dottie West, Curtis King Jr., and Stephen Lunt. Recently remastered from 35mm film to 4K, the show is currently streaming on Crave and Roku in Canada, ITVX and BritBox in the UK, and across numerous international platforms.

“Run With Us” arrives digitally on April 22nd. ‘Evergreen Nights’ follows on June 5th via 604 Records.