Home Blog Page 4

David Letterman Discovers Just How Expensive It Is to Play Eagles Music on Television

0

Long before streaming made music licensing feel invisible, David Letterman found out the hard way exactly what it costs to play an Eagles song on network television, and the answer was enough to send the Late Show scrambling for workarounds. This classic clip from the Late Show archives features Letterman, Paul Shaffer, and the crew wrestling with the exorbitant licensing fees required to use Eagles music on air, weighing the legal risks, exploring creative alternatives, and ultimately debuting a CBS-commissioned knockoff that is exactly as absurd as it sounds. It holds up beautifully.

Rush Are Back: Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson Talk UK Tour, New Music, Anika Nilles, and Honouring Neil Peart

0

Rush are heading back to the UK for the first time in nearly 13 years, and Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson sat down with Planet Rock’s Darren Redick to talk through everything that entails. The conversation covers the band’s plans to tribute the late Neil Peart, Geddy’s new music writing, drummer Anika Nilles joining the lineup and her reaction to playing “Tom Sawyer” for the first time, and The Who’s keyboard player coming aboard for the tour. For any Rush fan, this is essential viewing, a candid, wide-ranging conversation about what the band means now and where it’s heading next.

David Gilmour Opens Up About Pink Floyd’s Legacy and His Creative Process in Stunning Studio Interview With Rick Beato

0

Rick Beato sits down with David Gilmour for an in-depth studio conversation that goes deeper into the Pink Floyd catalog than almost any interview has before, covering every seminal album in the band’s history while breaking down Gilmour’s process for writing songs and finding the guitar tones that created some of the most expressive soundscapes in rock history. For anyone who has ever wondered how those sounds came to be, this is the interview they’ve been waiting for.

Blues Living Legend Buddy Guy Brings 90 Years of Fire to NPR’s Tiny Desk With Miles Caton

0

Buddy Guy walked up to the Tiny Desk and reminded everyone exactly why he’s the last man standing among the architects of the blues, opening with “Damn Right, I’ve Got the Blues” and “Hoochie Coochie Man” before being joined by Miles Caton, his co-star from the 16-time Oscar-nominated film ‘Sinners’, for a playful, powerful exchange that captures the full arc of a musical tradition passing between generations, with the 9-time Grammy winner and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer wailing on his polka dot Stratocaster like a man who turns 90 this year and has absolutely nothing to prove and everything still left to play.

Red Hot Chili Peppers Drummer Chad Smith Takes On Keith Moon’s Iconic “Won’t Get Fooled Again” for Drumeo

0

Chad Smith walked into the Drumeo studio and took on one of the most demanding drum performances in rock history, and the result is exactly as compelling as that premise sounds. The Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer pays tribute to the one-and-only Keith Moon on The Who’s explosive “Won’t Get Fooled Again,” honouring the chaos, power, and personality of the original part while bringing his own unmistakable feel to every fill and crash along the way.

Nashville Alt-Pop Rising Star Caroline Romano Captures the Beautiful Chaos of Falling on EP ‘it took me falling’

0

Caroline Romano has been building toward this moment one honest song at a time, and ‘it took me falling’ delivers on every bit of that momentum. The 6-track EP is out now, a vivid snapshot of personal growth and resilience from the Mississippi-born, Nashville-based alt-pop singer-songwriter, and new single “Unsteady” captures its emotional centre with disarming simplicity. Listen here.

Built around plucky guitar and delicately vulnerable vocals, “Unsteady” is one of the EP’s most tender moments, unfolding like a sonic poem about the terrifying, transformative experience of letting yourself fall in love. Romano puts it directly: “It’s a song about falling in love and letting yourself do it. I’ve learned that love has made me soft and brave and terrified and happy, and so much more myself in ways I never knew before. I wanted to capture that discovery in ‘Unsteady.'”

That spirit of discovery runs through all 6 tracks. At its core, ‘it took me falling’ traces the search for the person, the love, or the dream you’ve been chasing, and the necessary pain that so often precedes something genuinely beautiful. Romano moves between misty-eyed tenderness and fiery alt-rock energy with the kind of ease that comes from years of refining exactly who she is as an artist.

Following her 16-track 2022 debut ‘Oddities and Prodigies’ and two subsequent EPs, ‘A Brief Epic’ (2023) and ‘How The Good Girls Die’ (2025), Romano has drawn praise from tmrw Magazine, idobi Radio, Ones To Watch, and EUPHORIA, packed out rooms across Nashville, and toured in support of Grayscale and Smallpools. ‘it took me falling’ is her sharpest, most emotionally focused release yet.

‘it took me falling’ Tracklist:

  1. Cruel and Unusual Punishment
  2. Up the Stairs
  3. Not Used to You
  4. There It Is
  5. Unsteady
  6. it took me falling

Dublin Alt-Pop Favorites Soda Blonde Announce First-Ever North American Tour and Drop Urgent New Single “Suit & Tie”

0

Soda Blonde are heading to North America for the first time, and they’re arriving with a new single that makes the strongest case yet for why this Dublin alt-pop outfit has been building one of the most devoted fanbases in Irish music. “Suit & Tie” is out now, built around industrial guitar, liquid production, and a relentless forward pulse, and it’s one of the most focused, emotionally direct tracks the band has released.

Vocalist Faye O’Rourke explains the song’s origins with real candour. “I wrote ‘Suit & Tie’ about my own feelings of un-belonging and displacement. I didn’t grow up with a strong sense of national identity and I began to explore my current feelings of loss and isolation through that lens while living in the Liberties, a part of Dublin with a very strong sense of itself. The song became a way of reclaiming something I felt I’d lost.”

That tension between identity and belonging has always been close to the centre of Soda Blonde’s songwriting, and “Suit & Tie” channels it into something urgent and physical, inspired by Ireland’s recent cultural resurgence and shaped by the friction of existing between worlds.

Formed in Dublin in 2019 by members of Little Green Cars, the band has spent 3 studio albums building a reputation for emotionally charged performances and immersive sound that has steadily grown an international following. 2025 accelerated everything, with packed SXSW shows, a UK and European tour, the ‘People Pleaser’ EP, and a landmark live orchestral project with Ireland’s National Symphony Orchestra at Dublin’s National Concert Hall, captured in both a concert film and a live album. Both that release and ‘People Pleaser’ reached number 2 on the Irish Independent Charts.

The first-ever North American tour runs September 11 through October 9, covering 21 dates across the US and Canada, from Detroit and Toronto through Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Chicago, Seattle, Vancouver, Los Angeles, and more.

US & Canada Tour 2026:

September 11 – Detroit, MI, Third Man Records (Cass Corridor)

September 12 – Toronto, ON, Longboat Hall

September 14 – Boston, MA, The Red Room at Cafe 939

September 15 – Brooklyn, NY, Baby’s All Right

September 16 – Philadelphia, PA, Johnny Brenda’s

September 17 – Washington, DC, Union Stage

September 18 – Pittsburgh, PA, Club Café

September 19 – Columbus, OH, Rumba Café

September 21 – Chicago, IL, Schubas

September 22 – Madison, WI, High Noon Saloon

September 23 – Minneapolis, MN, 7th St. Entry

September 27 – Seattle, WA, Sunset Tavern

September 28 – Vancouver, BC, Fox Cabaret

September 29 – Portland, OR, Mississippi Studios

October 1 – San Francisco, CA, The Chapel

October 2 – Santa Cruz, CA, The Crepe Place

October 3 – Los Angeles, CA, The Echo

October 4 – Phoenix, AZ, Valley Bar

October 6 – Denver, CO, Larimer Lounge

October 8 – Kansas City, MO, Record Bar

October 9 – St. Louis, MO, Off Broadway

Lolo Zouaï Reconnects With Her Roots and Herself on Stunning New Album ‘Reverie’

0

Lolo Zouaï has never made a record quite like ‘Reverie’, and that’s saying something for an artist who has always defied easy categorization. The genre-bending third studio album is out now via Because Music, a 14-track journey through wounds, memories, and dreams from an artist born in Paris, raised in San Francisco, and shaped by her Algerian roots, singing equally in French and English with touches of Arabic throughout.

New performance “Desert Rose pt 2” via A COLORS SHOW gives the album’s emotional core its most intimate expression yet. The track is the second part of her breakout 2019 single “Desert Rose,” and it speaks of inherited, invisible wounds alongside the strength to resist and bloom in the desert. It links the personal and the collective, connecting post-colonial memory and identity to something deeply felt and deeply private.

‘Reverie’ finds Zouaï reinventing herself after years of silence, grief, and rebirth. The production moves fluidly through alternative R&B, hip-hop, pop, and Arabic influences, creating dark, sensual, and cinematic textures across the album’s full runtime. “Holding On” processes the loss of her best friend. “3AM in San Francisco,” praised by The FADER and Rolling Stone, fuses airy vocals with punchy trap production while shifting between English and French. French-language collaborations with Dinos on “Les Mots,” Lous and the Yakuza on “Lemon Squeeze,” and Disiz on “Coquelicot” give the album a rich cultural and linguistic dimension that few artists working today could pull off with such fluency.

Zouaï has accumulated over 600 million streams, toured in support of Dua Lipa alongside Caroline Polachek on the 2022 world tour, headlined her own PLAYGIRL World Tour in 2023, and built fashion collaborations with Nike, Coach, Dior, YSL, Chanel, and Reebok. Her songwriting credits include tracks for K-pop stars NewJeans and H.E.R.’s Grammy-winning self-titled album. ‘Reverie’ is the record where all of that experience, all of that cultural navigation, and all of that hard-won self-knowledge converges into something that feels genuinely essential.

‘Reverie’ Tracklist:

  1. Holding On
  2. Angel, Give Them Hell
  3. 100
  4. Les mots (feat. Dinos)
  5. Baggy Jeans
  6. Drive
  7. Hiver, j’espère
  8. Toute seule à la plage
  9. Lemon Squeeze (feat. Lous and the Yakuza)
  10. Coquelicot (feat. Disiz)
  11. 3AM in San Francisco
  12. Tu me manques
  13. Desert Rose pt. 2
  14. Si j’avais des ailes

Social Distortion Return With a Vengeance on Long-Awaited Eighth Album ‘Born To Kill’

0

15 years is a long time to wait, and ‘Born To Kill’ was worth every one of them. Social Distortion’s eighth studio album is out now via Epitaph Records, and it’s exactly what anyone who has followed Mike Ness for more than 4 decades has needed: 11 songs of pure, unadulterated rock and roll fury, joy, and catharsis, built on the signature blend of defiance and world-weariness that has made Ness a poet and sage to the dispossessed since the early 1980s. Listen here.

The album is Social Distortion’s first since Ness’ recovery from cancer, and it brims with aggressive optimism that feels genuinely earned. The title track wastes no time declaring its intentions, dropping nods to Lou Reed, Iggy and the Stooges, and David Bowie across its opening salvos. “Partners In Crime” follows with an homage to Bowie’s “Rock ‘n’ Roll Suicide.” “Tonight” and “The Way Things Were” deliver emotionally charged reminiscences that sit comfortably alongside classics like “Story of My Life” and “I Was Wrong.”

Co-produced by Ness and Dave Sardy, ‘Born To Kill’ features guest appearances from Benmont Tench of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers and Lucinda Williams, adding real depth and texture to a record that already carries decades of earned credibility. The cover art, a collaborative effort between Ness and Shepard Fairey, is as iconic as the music deserves.

The album joins a catalog that includes Mommy’s Little Monster (1983), Prison Bound (1988), the RIAA gold-certified Social Distortion (1990), Somewhere Between Heaven and Hell (1992), White Light, White Heat, White Trash (1996), Sex, Love and Rock ‘n’ Roll (2004), and Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes (2011). ‘Born To Kill’ is the latest and most hard-fought chapter in that remarkable run.

A massive North American fall tour supports the release, running August 25 through October 3 with The Descendents and The Chats along for most dates. 23 shows across 21 cities, from Phoenix to Brooklyn to Los Angeles.

North America Fall 2026 Tour Dates:

August 25 – Phoenix, AZ, Arizona Financial Theatre

August 28 – Austin, TX, Moody Amphitheater

August 29 – Dallas, TX, The Bomb Factory

August 31 – Nashville, TN, The Pinnacle

September 1 – Atlanta, GA, Coca-Cola Roxy

September 3 – Raleigh, NC, The Ritz

September 4 – Washington, DC, The Anthem

September 5 – Asbury Park, NJ, The Stone Pony Summer Stage

September 8 – Philadelphia, PA, The Met Philadelphia

September 9 – Boston, MA, Roadrunner

September 11 – Brooklyn, NY, Brooklyn Paramount

September 12 – Brooklyn, NY, Brooklyn Paramount

September 14 – Toronto, ON, HISTORY

September 17 – Detroit, MI, The Fillmore Detroit

September 20 – Minneapolis, MN, The Armory

September 22 – Denver, CO, The Mission Ballroom

September 23 – Salt Lake City, UT, The Union Event Center

September 25 – Las Vegas, NV, The Chelsea at the Cosmopolitan

September 26 – Reno, NV, Grand Sierra Resort, Grand Theatre

September 28 – San Francisco, CA, The Masonic

October 1 – Los Angeles, CA, Hollywood Palladium

October 2 – Los Angeles, CA, Hollywood Palladium

October 3 – San Diego, CA, Gallagher Square at Petco Park

Most dates with The Descendents and The Chats. Hollywood Palladium dates with The Descendents only.

LA Chamber-Pop Songwriter Beatrix Haunts Her Own Past on Stunning Sophomore Album ‘We Swallowed The Sky’

0

Arielle Kasnetz has found her voice, and ‘We Swallowed The Sky’ is the fullest expression of it yet. The sophomore album from her LA-based orchestral indie rock and chamber-pop project Beatrix is out now via Nice Life, a striking, off-kilter collection that moves from hushed piano numbers to loud full-band blasts with the confidence of a songwriter who has stopped telling anyone else’s story.

New single “Class Reunion” arrives alongside an official video that feels like Twin Peaks meets The Office, set in a sterile community center. The track showcases Kasnetz at her storytelling best, painting a precise, novelistic picture of 2 exes running into each other after 10 years. He sips a gin and tonic in the corner, working up the nerve to say hello. The conversation is brief and awkward. He fumbles, feels his chance slipping, starts to have a panic attack. Everyone laughing in slow motion. Then he wakes up, and she’s gone. It was a nightmare. But one thing is true: no one loves him like she did.

That kind of narrative specificity runs through the entire album. ‘We Swallowed The Sky’ follows a ghost, the ghost of a long-gone relationship allowed to haunt its former love, embodied musically by a pedal steel that weaves between past, present, and future across the record. Where Kasnetz has often felt misunderstood, this is the most fully herself she has ever sounded on record.

The musicians assembled around her are extraordinary. Co-produced by Philip Etherington and Ehren Ebbage, the album features Harrison Whitford of Phoebe Bridgers’ band and Ryan Lerman, known for his work with John Legend and Vulfpeck, on guitars; Sean Hurley, who has played with John Mayer, on bass; Rob Humphries of Kacey Musgraves’ band on drums; Zac Rae, known for Death Cab For Cutie and Fiona Apple, on piano; Greg Leisz, the celebrated pedal steel player whose credits include Bob Dylan and Joni Mitchell; CJ Camerieri, known for Paul Simon and Bon Iver, on horns; Jesse Chandler of Midlake on woodwinds; and Rob Moose, who has arranged strings for Sufjan Stevens, Taylor Swift, and Jay-Z.

It’s a production team that matches the ambition of the songs completely, and ‘We Swallowed The Sky’ is the result: moving, raw, perfectly crafted, and unmistakably Beatrix.