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Carter Vail Announces 2025 Coydog Tour Following Breakout Success of “Stunner” and Lollapalooza

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 LA-based artist Carter Vail has officially announced his 2025 Coydog Tour, a highly anticipated 23-date run across North America. Known for his distinctive blend of dreamy guitars, clever storytelling and nostalgic energy, Vail will hit the road this fall to bring his fan-favorite tracks and new music to cities across the U.S. See a full list of dates below and at cartervail.com.

The announcement follows the release of Carter’s latest single “Stunner” and a standout performance at Lollapalooza, where he brought his dynamic sound and imaginative world-building to one of the biggest stages in music. The momentum sets the perfect stage for the Coydog Tour, promising an unforgettable live experience for fans across the country.

The West Coast leg of the Coydog Tour launches on Sept. 30 in Denver, while the East Coast leg begins on Oct. 31, giving fans across the country the chance to experience Vail’s unmistakable sound live.

Carter Vail is the kind of artist who radiates positivity, no matter the circumstance. Known for his infectious blend of pop-rock since 2018, his music is as uplifting as it is introspective. Whether you’re tuning into his vibrant anthems or enjoying his witty, relatable videos on TikTok and Instagram, it’s clear he’s carved out a unique space where humor, heart and relentless optimism shine through.

On his sophomore LP 100 Cowboys, Vail continues to deliver his signature turbocharged, alt-pop sound-but with a deeper emotional edge. Inspired by a difficult breakup, the album features his most raw and personal lyrics yet, earning him recognition from Apple Music’s Zane Lowe, NPR Music and The New York Times. With songs that are both cathartic and compelling, 100 Cowboys charts a journey of heartbreak and healing, wrapped in his unmistakable charm and buoyant energy. It’s a record that blends the anthemic with the intimate, reflecting the complexities of love and loss through Carter’s playful yet poignant lens.

Vail’s star continued to rise in 2024 with the viral success of his hit “Dirt Man,” which racked up over 30 million views and led to a breakout year of touring, first alongside Yung Gravy on the “Grits & Gravy” tour, and later headlining sold-out shows across North America, Europe and the United Kingdom.

Now, with the Coydog Tour on the horizon, Carter Vail is ready to bring his electric, emotionally charged live show to fans across the country.

Tour Dates
Sept 30 – Denver, CO – Cervantes *
Oct 1 – Boulder, CO – Fox Theatre *
Oct 2 – Aspen, CO – Belly Up *
Oct 3 – Salt Lake City, UT – Soundwell *
Oct 5 – Boise, ID – Shrine Social Club *
Oct 7 – Seattle, WA – The Crocodile *
Oct 9 – Vancouver, BC – Biltmore Cabaret *
Oct 10 – Bellingham, WA – Bellingham Exit Festival ^
Oct 12 – Portland, OR – Hawthorne Theatre *
Oct 31 – Washington, DC – Union Stage
Nov 1 – Hartford, CT – The Webster Underground
Nov 2 – Philadelphia, PA – Underground Arts
Nov 3 – Asbury Park, NJ – House Of Independents
Nov 5 – Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall of Williamsburg
Nov 6 – Boston, MA – The Middle East
Nov 7 – Syracuse, NY – Westcott Theatre
Nov 8 – Cleveland, OH – Beachland Ballroom
Nov 9 – Toronto, ON – Adelaide Hall
Nov 11 – Chicago, IL – Bottom Lounge
Nov 12 – Grand Rapids, MI – Pyramid Scheme
Nov 13 – Indianapolis, IN – Hi Fi
Nov 14 – Louisville, KY – Headliners Music Hall
Nov 15 – Nashville, TN – Fogg Street Lawn Club

* – with Creature Canyon
^ – Festival

Tommy Emmanuel Announces New Album ‘Living in the Light’ with Single “Scarlett’s World”

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 GRAMMY-winning guitarist Tommy Emmanuel announced his new album Living In The Light, out October 10. Recorded and mixed with producer Vance Powell (Jack White, Chris Stapleton, Phish), Living in the Light is a virtuosic blend of acoustic pop, jazz, classical, and roots music delivered by one of the modern era’s most accomplished and versatile guitarists. The announcement arrives alongside the official video for the propulsive debut single “Scarlett’s World,” dedicated to Emmanuel’s granddaughter.

“I tried to write a theme that sounded like it came from the 80s,” Emmanuel explains. “Scarlett is my granddaughter, so I dedicate this song to her and her journey through life. However, there is a part of me that wanted to give a nod to Scarlett Johansson as I am a big fan. She’s one of my favorite actresses.”

Emmanuel captured most of the performances on Living in the Light in one or two takes, and the sense of joy and wonder in these sonic explorations is more than just palpable; it’s intoxicating. While many of the recordings are solo instrumentals, Emmanuel lends his voice to several of the album’s tracks, as well, grounding his dazzling, percussive fretwork with a poignant dose of warmth and vulnerability. “There are elements of rockabilly, blues, even traditional African music all woven into the music,” Emmanuel explains. “I’m a world traveler, and I’ve absorbed so much music along the way. It all gets synthesized through a kind of osmosis into my psyche and my soul and then comes out in my own unique style.”

Tommy Emmanuel first began touring at the age of six in his native Australia as part of a family band. In his teenage years, he turned heads as a highly sought after session player and sideman, and by his early twenties, Emmanuel was playing on chart-topping hits and performing with some of the biggest names in Australian music, including Air Supply and Men at Work. Inspired in part by his hero, Chet Atkins (who would later become a friend, mentor, and collaborator), Emmanuel stepped out on his own as a solo artist in 1979, releasing the first in a string of critically and commercially acclaimed instrumental albums that would make him an unlikely celebrity in his home country and beyond. In the decades that followed, he would go on to headline everywhere from the Sydney Opera House to Carnegie Hall; tour with the likes of Eric Clapton and John Denver; win a GRAMMY Award for Best Instrumental Arrangement; perform for a televised audience of more than two billion at the closing ceremony of the Sydney Olympics; and collaborate with everyone from Les Paul and Mark Knopfler to Joe Walsh and Richard Thompson. NPR’s World Cafe declared him “one of the best acoustic guitarists in the world,” while the New York Times hailed him as a “prodigy,” and Atkins crowned him with the title of Certified Guitar Player (an honorary only ever bestowed upon four other artists).

Emmanuel continued to push himself throughout his career, relocating permanently to Nashville in the early 2000s and collaborating with a rising generation of guitarists like Jason Isbell, Molly Tuttle, and Billy Strings on his latest studio albums, Accomplice One and Accomplice Two. “Those albums were a real labor of love,” Emmanuel explains, “and I was thrilled with how they came out. But I felt a strong desire to focus on my writing again after that, and I found that the songs for Living in the Light just started pouring out of me.”

More than sixty years into his storied career, Tommy Emmanuel is still hungry for adventure. “As I get older, I find myself taking a lot more risks, and having a lot more fun in the process,” says Emmanuel, who recently celebrated his 70th birthday. “When young people come to my shows and have this awakening that it’s okay to be different, that the possibilities of music and self-expression are limitless, that’s what it’s all about for me.”

Shiner Unleash New Single ‘The Alligator’ Ahead of Album ‘BELIEVEYOUME’

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Spartan Records and Shiner are pleased to present “The Alligator,” the latest single to be lifted from the Friday, September 26 release of BELIEVEYOUME, the forthcoming album from the longstanding Kansas City rock band.

Following the album’s heavy opener “Asleep In The Trunk,” “The Alligator” is a song about control. “It’s about control artists, gaslighters, love bombers and the ilk who can manipulate others sometimes without even knowing they’re doing it,” the band says. “They hold all the cards in the relationship and can provide and take away. It’s slap and tickle and slap again. Classic abuse and controlling ploys.”

Shiner also recently announced its U.S. fall headline appearances in support of BELIEVEYOUME. Spanning October and November and taking in 19 evenings across the west coast, midwest and east coast, the tour will kick off on Sunday, October 5 at Casbah in San Diego, CA and culminate in an appearance at Small’s Bar in Detroit MI on Saturday, November 15.

Having spent over three decades redefining heavy, melodic rock, evolving from the raw power of their early years into something more layered, dynamic, and emotionally resonant, BELIEVEYOUME finds the band channeling that evolution into a set of songs that feel immediate yet timeless, balancing their signature heaviness with newfound space and vulnerability. BELIEVEYOUME digs deep into aging, relationships, and self-deception, its title reflecting the ambiguity and contradictions at the heart of human connection. The result is Shiner at their most honest and self-aware – still heavy, still weird, and still pushing forward after all these years.

Greensky Bluegrass Celebrate 25 Years with ‘Old Barns’ Reimagined and Star-Studded Album ‘XXV’

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Celebrating their 25th Anniversary this year, bluegrass-americana veterans Greensky Bluegrass unveil a reimagined version of the fan favorite track “Old Barns.”

“This song marked the beginning of a new writing style,” recalls mandolinist Paul Hoffman. “I started listening to things around me more than trying to control all the ideas. This song is special because it’s a survival story about my friend’s father from his perspective. I learned (heard) something really special about love and being a parent. Now that I am a father, the power of the lesson is even more profound, and I carry it with me.”

The song comes ahead of their new album, XXV, set for release on October 31—the exact date of the band’s formation. The LP will be released via Big Blue Zoo Records/Thirty Tigers. In lead up to the album, the band has also shared “Reverend” featuring Billy Strings, and “Can’t Stop Now” featuring Sam Bush.

“We’ve called on some dear friends to breathe a touch of new life into some classic Greensky songs for your listening pleasure,” says dobroist Anders Beck on XXV. “We’ve reinvented the sounds of some of our (dare I say) ‘hits’ because after a quarter century of Greensky Bluegrass, with plenty of new music on the horizon, we believe it’s worth celebrating what the five of us have created together… and we want you to have a damn good time listening to it.”

Greensky Bluegrass started at an impromptu show in 2000 in Kalamazoo, Michigan and have developed into a marquee live act and staple in the progressive bluegrass space. XXV brings together many friends and collaborators of the band throughout their 25-year run — Sam Bush, Billy Strings, Lindsay Lou, Nathaniel Rateliff, Aoife O’Donovan, Holly Bowling and more. Each of these special guests represent chapters of the band’s continued journey.

The group is on the road for a host of headline and festival dates across North America, continuing their landmark 25th year. Stops include Charlotte, Milwaukee, Miami Beach, Jacksonville and Madison, as well as the band’s 20th performance at the iconic Red Rocks Amphitheatre, plus two special hometown anniversary shows at Wings Event Center in Kalamazoo, MI on October 31 and November 1. See HERE for tickets and additional information.

For over two decades, progressive bluegrass band Greensky Bluegrass—Anders Beck (dobro), Michael Arlen Bont (banjo), Dave Bruzza (guitar), Mike Devol (upright bass), and Paul Hoffman (mandolin)—have become known for their dynamic live performances and extensive touring schedule. With music reflecting their own lives and collective experiences, their songwriting stays true to traditional bluegrass. The band’s die-hard fans travel in droves across the country and pack multiple-night show runs at iconic venues like Red Rocks and The Ryman.

TIFF and NFB Launch {RE}DEFINED to Spotlight Next-Gen Canadian and Indigenous Voices

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As the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) celebrates its milestone 50th edition, the National Film Board of Canada (NFB) is launching {RE}DEFINED—a new initiative inviting next-generation creators (aged 30 and under) to explore Canadian and Indigenous identity through innovative short documentary films.

With Canada at a pivotal time in its history, two of its leading film institutions are seeking bold, original perspectives that challenge assumptions and offer new ways of seeing who we are—and who we’re becoming. The NFB and TIFF are on the lookout for distinctive English and French-language projects that reflect Canada’s diverse identities and push the boundaries of non-fiction storytelling.

The initiative will select five filmmakers to make five short documentaries (10 minutes or less) to be produced by the NFB during a year-long process. Creators will benefit from a production team, a fully financed budget, marketing and publicity teams, and distribution and mentorship from the NFB.

The completed films will screen as part of TIFF 2026, followed by a worldwide release on NFB platforms. The deadline for applications is September 30th, 2025.

Inside ‘Music from The Body’: Roger Waters and Ron Geesin’s Wild 1970 Experiment

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Music from The Body is the 1970 soundtrack to Roy Battersby’s documentary The Body, narrated by Vanessa Redgrave and Frank Finlay. The album was created by Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters and composer Ron Geesin, who also collaborated on Atom Heart Mother the same year. Known for its experimental edge, it uses “biomusic”—slaps, breathing, laughter, whispers, even flatulence—alongside traditional instruments like guitar, piano, and strings. The final track, “Give Birth to a Smile,” features all four members of Pink Floyd with Geesin on piano, though David Gilmour, Nick Mason, and Richard Wright went uncredited. The child heard on the opening track is Ron Geesin’s son, Joe. Uniquely, the LP was a complete re-recording with a different tracklist from the film’s soundtrack, and its cover featured a Transparent Anatomical Manikin. Waters wouldn’t release another album outside Pink Floyd until 1984’s The Pros and Cons of Hitch Hiking.

Band Shirt Day Returns: Rock Your Favorite Tee and Support a Cause

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Band Shirt Day is Friday, September 19, 2025! On this day, artists and fans come together to celebrate the iconic band tee while raising money for important causes. You can shop your favorite artist’s featured tees directly from their stores, with proceeds going to a cause of their choice or to the Band Shirt Day Fund. The Band Shirt Day Fund, organized through GoFundMe, will be equally distributed across six key causes. Previous recipients have included the ACLU, The Ally Coalition, Animal Legal Defense Fund, MusiCares, Planned Parenthood, and Project Hope.

Did Paul McCartney Really Die in ’66? Inside Rock’s Wildest Conspiracy Theory

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The Paul is Dead conspiracy remains one of rock’s strangest legends, claiming McCartney secretly died in 1966 and was replaced by a double. Vinyl Rewind breaks down the origins, “clues” in Beatles albums, and why fans believed it. With 3.6 million views, it shows how myths can outlive the music itself.



15 Albums That Prove Less Production = More Power

Sometimes the quietest moments carry the biggest weight. Across genres, countless albums have shown that rawness, minimal instrumentation, and stripped-down production can move mountains. Here are fifteen timeless works—spanning jazz, blues, folk, rock, and beyond—that prove less really can be more.

Cowboy Junkies – The Trinity Session
Recorded live with a single microphone in Toronto’s Church of the Holy Trinity, this album drifts with hushed vocals and sparse instrumentation. Margo Timmins’ voice floats like a ghost, proving atmosphere thrives in simplicity.

Dr. John – Plays Mac Rebennack
A collection of solo piano pieces that strips everything down to the bare essence. The intimacy of Dr. John’s playing makes this record feel like you’re sitting in his living room.

Herbie Hancock – Speak Like a Child
Delicate arrangements and a gentle sense of space define this jazz classic. It’s subtle, soulful, and powerful in its restraint, proving that understatement can be deeply moving.

Miles Davis – Filles de Kilimanjaro
This transitional Davis album is marked by its sparse instrumentation and understated production. It leaves wide open spaces for each note to matter, creating a mood that’s quietly explosive.

Muddy Waters – Folk Singer
An acoustic blues album that highlights Waters’ voice and guitar with haunting clarity. Stripped down and intimate, it’s a powerful reminder of how less can often sound like more.

Nick Drake – Pink Moon
A hushed, minimalist record of voice and guitar, this album became a cult classic. Its raw simplicity draws listeners closer, like a whispered secret.

Nina Simone – Nina Simone and Piano!
With only her voice and piano, Simone delivers one of her most vulnerable and affecting performances. The sparse setup allows every note of pain and beauty to ring true.

PJ Harvey – Dry
Her debut album captures raw guitar, unfiltered vocals, and primal energy. With minimal production, Harvey’s power comes through unadorned and fierce, setting the stage for her legendary career.

Robert Johnson – King of the Delta Blues Singers
A cornerstone of American music, this collection preserves Johnson’s haunting guitar and vocals with raw authenticity. No polish, just the timeless power of blues storytelling.

Sonny Rollins – Way Out West
Recorded with just saxophone, bass, and drums, this trio setting gave Rollins room to stretch out. The space between the instruments becomes part of the music’s magic.

Talk Talk – Spirit of Eden
An atmospheric masterpiece where silence and subtlety are as important as sound. Its sparse textures show how restraint can create an immersive, emotional world.

Townes Van Zandt – Townes Van Zandt
Minimal instrumentation and poetic lyrics define this folk classic. Its quiet honesty has made it a touchstone for songwriters across generations.

Vashti Bunyan – Just Another Diamond Day
A fragile folk gem with gentle arrangements that let Bunyan’s voice float effortlessly. The simplicity is its strength, creating a timeless, pastoral atmosphere.

The Velvet Underground – The Velvet Underground (1969)
The band’s third album stripped away noise and distortion for a softer, more intimate sound. Songs like “Pale Blue Eyes” glow in their understated beauty.

Woody Guthrie – Dust Bowl Ballads
With nothing more than Guthrie’s voice and guitar, these songs chronicled the struggles of the Depression era. The raw, unadorned style gave the stories more gravity.

Do You Really Need To Be On Every Social Media Platform? A Case For Doing Less

In today’s music world, it can feel like there’s a new platform every morning, each one promising discovery, growth, and connection. From TikTok and Instagram to Discord servers and Substack newsletters, the buffet is endless. The question many artists face: do you need to be everywhere at once? The truth is, spreading yourself thin can often lead to burnout before you ever hit your stride. There’s beauty in choosing carefully, in curating your online presence like you’d curate your setlist—thoughtfully, with intention, and with joy.

Think of your favorite indie record store. It doesn’t carry every album in existence; instead, it carries the ones that mean something to its community. Your social platforms can work the same way. Maybe Instagram feels like home, or maybe Bandcamp is where your audience connects with you most deeply. By nurturing one or two spaces, you create a cozy living room instead of a crowded mall. You give fans a place to really know you, and you give yourself room to breathe.

The best musicians on social media often remind us that music is about connection, not algorithms. Fans remember the stories, the quirky behind-the-scenes posts, the whimsical day-in-the-life clips that feel authentic. Social media marketing, at its core, is less about volume and more about heart. A single tweet filled with your personality can resonate more than a week’s worth of scattered posts across every platform. (I know, I know, I post a LOT more, but I have my reasons…)

There’s also the matter of energy. For independent artists, mental health is as vital as the music itself. Managing too many platforms can feel like running a marathon with no finish line. By scaling back, you allow creativity to flow without exhaustion. A healthy balance creates space for songwriting, performing, and those quiet moments where inspiration often arrives unannounced.

Fans can tell when you’re having fun, and fun is contagious. Sharing your world on the platforms that feel good creates a ripple of authenticity that no marketing strategy can manufacture. Whether it’s a goofy TikTok dance you enjoy or a thoughtful Substack essay that speaks to your artistry, your genuine enthusiasm is the magnet that draws people closer.

So, do you really need to be on every platform? Maybe not. Instead, think of your online presence as your favorite jam session—pick the instruments you love, play them well, and let the rest fall away. Doing less with more joy means showing up as your best self, and that’s what people will remember.

In the end, music thrives on connection, not checklists. Choosing fewer platforms doesn’t mean choosing less success—it means choosing more balance, more creativity, and more you. And that is the sweetest sound of all.