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Harm’s Way Guitarist and HardLore Co-Host Bo Lueders Dead at 38

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Bo Lueders built something real. As a founding guitarist of Chicago industrial-hardcore outfit Harm’s Way and co-host of the HardLore podcast, he spent nearly two decades pouring himself into a scene that gave everything back to those willing to show up for it. Lueders died on April 2nd at the age of 38. His band and podcast announced the news jointly on Instagram, and the post included the number for the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline: 988.

The statement from Harm’s Way and HardLore was direct and full of love: “He will be remembered for his unwavering empathy and compassion for his friends and family and his magnetic, inimitable presence on and off the stage.” That combination, genuine warmth inside one of heavy music’s most uncompromising environments, is not something you manufacture. It is who you are.

Lueders co-founded Harm’s Way in 2006 and stayed the course through the band’s entire evolution, from toughened hardcore roots toward the rough-edged, industrial-metal heaviness that earned them a place among the genre’s most respected acts. Five studio albums. A series of EPs. A trajectory that never stopped pushing. Their 2018 record ‘Posthuman’ was named one of that year’s best metal and hardcore albums, and their most recent full-length, ‘Common Suffering’, arrived in 2023.

In 2022, Lueders launched HardLore alongside Twitching Tongues frontman Colin Young, a podcast built around one simple and powerful idea: let hardcore musicians tell their touring stories. It became something much larger than that. Lueders and Young brought in Madball’s Freddy Cricien, Lamb of God’s Randy Blythe, Touché Amoré’s Jeremy Bolm, and many others, building an archive of the scene’s living history one conversation at a time.

Young’s tribute said everything that needed to be said. He called HardLore the greatest honor of his life, and wrote that his only solace was knowing they had documented a lifetime of memories, now preserved as a record of Lueders’ warm and kind soul. “Every song is about you now,” he wrote.

Harm’s Way had tour dates scheduled for July. The scene they helped build is feeling this loss deeply and collectively. Bo Lueders was 38 years old.

If you or someone you know is struggling, help is available. Call or text 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, available 24 hours a day.

What Makes a Song “Work” on Radio — And Why the Rules Keep Breaking

Radio music directors do not have the luxury of being wrong. Their job is to keep people from changing the station, and they make that call in the first few seconds of every song they audition. Understanding what they are listening for is not a formula. It is a framework, and it has been bent, broken, and rebuilt enough times to make the exceptions just as instructive as the rules.

The first thing a music director reaches for is the hook. Not the chorus necessarily, but the moment in the song that grabs. Research consistently shows that programmers decide within the first fifteen to thirty seconds whether a track has a future on their station. A song must communicate something felt before it communicates anything understood. If the opening thirty seconds do not deliver that signal, the track rarely makes it past the audition pile.

Tempo and energy placement matter enormously, and not always in the way artists expect. Radio programmers think in terms of flow, the way one song exits and another enters inside a carefully managed emotional arc across a two or three hour block. A mid-tempo track with a strong melodic identity can outperform a high-energy banger if it sits better in the clock. Listener tune-out spiked during energy mismatches, songs that either spiked too hard or dropped too low relative to what surrounded them. The song does not just have to work alone. It has to work inside a sequence.

Production clarity is another variable that gets underestimated by artists and overestimated by engineers. Radio has its own sonic signature, particularly in the compressed, limited environment of FM transmission or today’s streaming-adjacent digital audio. Songs that sound enormous in a studio can collapse on a car speaker at highway volume. Music directors frequently use what the industry calls “the car test,” auditioning tracks through cheap monitors or actual car audio systems to simulate the listening environment where most radio consumption happens. Production choices that obscure the vocal melody are among the fastest ways to lose a programmer’s attention. The voice carries the song into memory. Anything that competes with it is a problem.

Lyric accessibility matters, though not in the way that gets artists defensive. A song does not have to be simple. It has to be followable. Listeners in transit, at work, or in the background of daily life are not sitting with headphones and liner notes. They are catching fragments. The songs that work on radio tend to have a central emotional idea that survives partial listening, a chorus that means something even if you missed the verses. This is why Springsteen’s “Born to Run,” which is dense and literary and structurally ambitious, still worked: the central feeling is enormous and immediately legible. You do not need the whole song to feel it.

Song length remains a real consideration even in an era where streaming has loosened the constraints considerably. The traditional radio sweet spot of three to three and a half minutes was never arbitrary. It was calibrated to attention span, to commercial break scheduling, and to the psychology of repetition. Longer tracks can and do break through, but they carry an additional burden. Every extra thirty seconds is a programmer calculating whether the payoff justifies the clock time. The songs that earn that real estate tend to build rather than repeat, offering the listener something new at each stage.

And then there are the exceptions, which is where radio history gets genuinely interesting. “American Pie” ran over eight minutes and became one of the most requested songs in the history of the format. “Bohemian Rhapsody” violated nearly every production and structure rule in the book and became a standard. Billie Eilish’s “bad guy” arrived with a production aesthetic that should have been invisible on mainstream radio and instead defined a moment. What these exceptions share is not a workaround of the rules but an intensity of identity so strong that programmers had no choice. The track was so distinctly itself that ignoring it felt like the mistake.

That is the honest answer music directors will give you off the record: the rules exist because most songs need them. The exceptions exist because some songs don’t. The job of a music director is to know the difference in thirty seconds or less, and to be right enough of the time that nobody changes the station.

Suki Lahav, Violinist Who Opened “Jungleland” and Toured With Bruce Springsteen, Dead at 74

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The violin note that opens “Jungleland” has haunted listeners for more than fifty years. The person who played it, Tzruya “Suki” Lahav, died on April 1st following a short battle with cancer. She was 74. Her son, Yonatan Lahav, confirmed the news, writing that his mother was “a special woman, smart, pure in heart and loving life.” The funeral was private.

Lahav came into Bruce Springsteen’s world through her husband, recording engineer Louis Lahav, who recorded Springsteen’s debut album ‘Greetings From Asbury Park’ in 1972. From there, her contribution to the music grew quietly but permanently. Her violin opens “Jungleland,” the closing track from ‘Born to Run’. Her vocals appear, uncredited, on “4th of July, Asbury Park (Sandy)” and “Incident on 57th Street” from ‘The Wild, the Innocent and the E Street Shuffle’, where she stepped in as a one-woman choir after a children’s church choir failed to appear. She also contributed to a fan-favorite cover of Bob Dylan’s “I Want You.”

She toured with Springsteen and the E Street Band from October 1974 through March 1975, a run of 38 shows during which the Boss’s star was rising fast. She was not entirely prepared for the scale of it. Recalling her first glimpse of the roaring crowd, she later said she hid behind Clarence Clemons, who, she noted warmly, was always big enough to hide behind. It is the kind of detail that says everything about who she was: gifted, grounded, and human in the middle of something enormous.

In 1975, following a personal tragedy, Lahav returned to Israel. She never looked back in bitterness. Her time with Springsteen remained a part of her, she said in a 2007 Jerusalem Post interview, something that would never fade, even if it was not the main thing. What came after was a full and decorated life: songwriter, poet, novelist (two award-winning books), and screenwriter. In Israel she was a major cultural figure, a recipient of the ACUM Lifetime Achievement Award and the Erik Einstein Prize.

She remembered the early Springsteen years with clarity and affection. “The music was incredible,” she said. “The lyrics were so rich; some of the most beautiful lyrics didn’t ever make it onto record.” She also recalled that everyone around Springsteen at the time knew he was going to be something extraordinary, even as they were all, in her words, completely poor and completely into it.

That is the thing about Suki Lahav. Her contribution to some of the most beloved rock recordings ever made was brief, often uncredited, and entirely irreplaceable. Every time “Jungleland” begins, she is there.

U2 Release Deeply Personal Six-Track ‘Easter Lily EP’ Featuring Brian Eno and a Tribute to Hal Willner

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U2 are not waiting for the album. The Easter Lily EP, a six-track standalone collection out now via Island Records, arrives as the band continues recording their next studio record, and it is something distinctly apart from whatever comes next. Where last month’s ‘Days of Ash EP’ responded to chaos in the outside world, ‘Easter Lily’ turns inward, exploring friendship, loss, hope, and renewal from a much more private place.

The track list carries real emotional range. “Song for Hal” is a COVID-19 lockdown lament with The Edge on lead vocals, written for the band’s friend and music-maker Hal Willner, who would have turned 70 on Easter Monday and passed away nearly six years ago to the day. “In a Life” celebrates friendship. “Scars” offers encouragement and acceptance. “Resurrection Song” is a road trip into the unknown. “Easter Parade” is a devotional celebration of rebirth. Closing the EP, “COEXIST (I Will Bless The Lord At All Times?)” is a lullaby for parents of children caught up in war, built around a new soundscape from Brian Eno.

Bono’s statement with the release is characteristically generous and searching. He describes the EP as deeply personal, born from questions about relationships, faith, friendship, and the ceremonies and rituals that might be missing from modern life. The title itself is a nod to Patti Smith’s 1978 album ‘Easter’, which Bono credits as a source of hope when he was not yet 18.

The EP is accompanied by a special digital e-zine edition of Propaganda, the band’s legendary fan magazine now marking its 40th anniversary. This edition features sleeve notes from The Edge, Adam Clayton on art and recovery, a conversation between Bono and Franciscan friar Richard Rohr, in-the-studio photographs shot by Larry Mullen Jr., a piece on producer Jacknife Lee, and Gavin Friday’s tribute to Hal Willner.

‘Easter Lily EP’ is available now on all digital platforms. The noisy, messy, unreasonably colourful album Bono promises is still on its way.

The Wonder Licks Turn a Brooklyn Closet and a Broken Heart Into Sweeping New Ballad “There’s A Place I Go”

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The Wonder Licks know how to make a small space feel enormous. Their new single “There’s A Place I Go” began in a 5×5 rented room in Brooklyn that frontman Jacob Wunderlich used as a creative refuge, and it carries that intimacy into something genuinely cinematic. This is the fourth single from their upcoming album ‘Simping For Big Toilet’, and it is their most sweeping statement yet.

The song sits in the fragile space between heartbreak and acceptance, told from the perspective of the one left behind. It does not rush toward resolution. It lingers in the in-between, where memories still have weight but something that might be healing is quietly taking hold. Wunderlich’s writing here is deceptively simple, which is exactly what makes it work.

Built on a chord progression that moves from intimate verses into a soaring C-F-G chorus, the arrangement is where the song truly opens up. Pablo Leira Filgueira delivers a standout electric guitar and pedal steel performance, while lush violin arrangements, piano flourishes, and layered background vocals push the minimalist structure into full cinematic territory. Wunderlich calls it his “Purple Rain-adjacent ballad,” and that reference earns its keep.

The Wonder Licks have been building toward something with this run of singles, and “There’s A Place I Go” makes the clearest case yet for what ‘Simping For Big Toilet’ could deliver. Four singles in, the album cannot arrive soon enough.

London Singer-Songwriter Liya Shapiro Confronts the Ache of Unrequited Love on Chamber Rock Single “Another Woman”

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Liya Shapiro thought she had already healed. Then she found out the person she once loved had moved on, and “Another Woman” arrived from that specific, irrational sting. The title track from her upcoming EP is out now, a chamber rock meditation on the contradiction of feeling something you know you no longer have the right to feel.

The song does not flinch from that paradox. Shapiro sings about not loving someone anymore while still feeling the hurt of watching them move on, and the honesty in that framing is what makes it land. This is not a breakup song. It is something more complicated and more human than that, a portrait of self-worth struggling against emotion that refuses to follow logic.

Sonically, “Another Woman” is built to carry that weight. Soft, melancholic verses swell into a raw, frustrated crescendo, the chamber rock instrumentation recorded live and given real visceral texture. Shapiro’s vocals are effortless and theatrical at once, full of character, the kind of performance that makes a song feel lived-in from the first listen.

Shapiro came to music through an unusual path, studying art history, fashion, and anthropology, and all three disciplines show in how she builds her world. Art shapes how she hears sound. Fashion drives her visual identity. Anthropology gives her a framework for examining the human condition. The result is an artist whose work feels considered at every level.

The momentum behind her is real. Since her 2021 debut single “Mirror,” she has crossed 150,000 Spotify streams, earned press and playlist support, and headlined a sold-out show at The Troubadour. “Another Woman” is her most fully realized statement yet, and the EP promises more of both the closure and transformation she is building toward.

Photo Gallery: July Talk And Julianna Riolino At Toronto’s History On March 31, 2026

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All photos by Mini’s Memories. You can contact her through Instagram or X.

Darkwave Phenomenon Artemas Takes His Moody Alt-Pop Universe on a 38-Date Global Tour

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Artemas just mapped out the rest of his year and it covers the globe. The darkwave alt-pop phenomenon has announced a 38-date world tour, his biggest live run to date, kicking off September 8 in Vancouver and closing December 14 at the legendary O2 Academy Brixton in London. Support comes from Henry Morris across the run.

The tour follows the release of his new mixtape ‘getting up to no good’ and the close of his LOVERCORE Tour across North America. Artemas has been building momentum at a pace that is hard to ignore, and this run scales that vision to its largest audience yet. His live shows are known for being fully immersive, deeply atmospheric experiences that translate his moody, addictive sound into something that hits differently in a room full of people.

The numbers behind Artemas tell the story of an artist whose moment has fully arrived. Over 3.6 billion global artist streams, including more than 2 billion on his RIAA 3x Platinum breakout “i like the way you kiss me.” With ‘getting up to no good’ marking a new creative peak, the demand for this tour is real and the venues reflect it, from amphitheaters in Austin to storied rooms across Europe and the UK.

VIP and presale tickets go on sale Tuesday, April 7 at 10am local time. General on-sale follows Wednesday, April 8 at 10am local time.

2026 Tour Dates:

North America:

September 8: Vancouver, BC @ Malkin Bowl

September 10: Sacramento, CA @ Channel 24

September 11: Las Vegas, NV @ Brooklyn Bowl

September 13: Tucson, AZ @ Rialto Theatre

September 16: Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall

September 18: San Antonio, TX @ The Aztec Theatre

September 19: Austin, TX @ Stubb’s Waller Creek Amphitheater

September 22: Dallas, TX @ The Bomb Factory

September 24: Kansas City, MO @ Uptown Theater

September 26: Oklahoma City, OK @ The Criterion

September 29: Minneapolis, MN @ The Fillmore

October 1: Milwaukee, WI @ The Rave

October 2: Royal Oak, MI @ Royal Oak Music Theatre

October 3: Cleveland, OH @ House of Blues

October 5: Charlotte, NC @ The Fillmore Charlotte

October 7: Atlanta, GA @ The Tabernacle

October 8: Nashville, TN @ Marathon Music Works

October 10: Philadelphia, PA @ Franklin Music Hall

October 11: New Haven, CT @ Toad’s Place

Europe + UK:

November 12: Paris, FR @ Le Bataclan

November 14: Esch-sur-Alzette, LU @ Rockhal

November 15: Cologne, DE @ E-Werk

November 16: Zurich, CH @ X-Tra

November 18: Barcelona, ES @ Sala Apolo

November 20: Milan, IT @ Fabrique

November 22: Prague, CZ @ SaSaZu

November 23: Warsaw, PL @ Progresja

November 25: Hamburg, DE @ Docks

November 26: Berlin, DE @ Huxleys Neue Welt

November 29: Stockholm, SE @ Fallen

November 30: Oslo, NO @ Rockefeller Music Hall

December 1: Copenhagen, DK @ Vega

December 3: Brussels, BE @ La Madeleine

December 7: Amsterdam, NL @ Melkweg

December 10: Edinburgh, UK @ Edinburgh Corn Exchange

December 12: Manchester, UK @ O2 Victoria Warehouse

December 13: Birmingham, UK @ O2 Academy

December 14: London, UK @ O2 Academy Brixton

Trippie Redd and Young Thug Connect on Euphoric New Banger “Paperbag Boy”

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Trippie Redd opens 2026 with a statement. “Paperbag Boy,” his first new single of the year, arrives with a music video and a feature from Young Thug, two of modern rap’s most distinctive melodic voices stacking up on a J-Bone production built from candy-coated synth arpeggios and speaker-obliterating 808s. The result is exactly as euphoric as it sounds.

The track captures something specific: the feeling of having made it while still carrying the memory of where you started. Trippie and Thugger slide through the beat’s crevices with the kind of effortless melodic chemistry that reminds you why both of them matter. The hook lands hard and stays there, which is the whole point.

Trippie spent 2025 in strong form, dropping the defiant “Can’t Count Me Out” with Platinum-selling trap architect ATL Jacob and the soaring Nick Mira-produced “Sketchy.” Then his 2018 Diplo collaboration “Wish” took on a life of its own, resurging through an emotional social media trend that generated over 8 billion views across TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts. At its peak the song was pulling 10.5 million weekly streams, and it eventually climbed onto the Billboard Hot 100 more than seven years after its original release.

The numbers behind Trippie Redd are staggering: Diamond-certified, 14 billion streams worldwide, and a catalog that has consistently pushed modern rap’s emotional boundaries through fearless experimentation. “Paperbag Boy” keeps that momentum moving forward, and his highly anticipated album ‘NDA’ is coming later this year via 1400 Ent., 10k, and Atlantic.

Singer-Songwriter Pete Muller Shares Stunning “Stopping Time” Video Shot at Peter Gabriel’s Real World Studios

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Pete Muller does not make small records. The new music video for “Stopping Time,” a highlight from his album ‘One Last Dance’ out now via Two Truths Music, offers a behind-the-scenes look at a track recorded at Peter Gabriel’s legendary Real World Studios in Bath, England, with additional overdubs captured at New York City’s famed Power Station. The locations alone tell you something about the ambition at work here.

The song itself is a plea against the clock, unfolding through emotionally resonant vignettes exploring longing, memory, and the stories we construct to make sense of time passing. Genre-bending duo SistaStrings provide rich orchestration alongside Rob Mathes’s string arrangement, and the combination gives “Stopping Time” a cinematic texture that rewards close listening. It is one of the most quietly affecting tracks on an album full of them.

‘One Last Dance’ is Muller’s most vulnerable songwriting to date, self-produced alongside his band the Kindred Souls and featuring Grammy-winner Allison Russell on the Latin-flavored title track. Other highlights include the empowering “Fire Child,” the uplifting “Dream Small,” and the bittersweet “New York In The Rain.” Americana UK and Americana Highways have both offered praise, and the album earns every word of it.

This is Muller’s fourth studio release in five years, following 2024’s ‘More Time’, which drew acclaim from Consequence and Rock & Roll Globe. His path here is genuinely compelling: after success in quantitative finance, he followed his creative instincts, built a catalog, and earned tour dates alongside John Oates, Lisa Loeb, Jimmy Webb, Livingston Taylor, and Paul Thorn, plus festival slots from Telluride to Montreux.

Muller also founded the nonprofit Live Music Society, which provides critical grants to independent music venues across the country. He is an artist and an advocate, and ‘One Last Dance’ reflects both sides of that commitment fully.