In a 1969 commercial for Munchos, an early version of Cookie Monster—then called Arnold—chomps through chips, bag, and all. Jim Henson created the spot with classic Muppet mayhem. Fred, the spokesman, never stood a chance.
Gavin Adcock Preps 24-Track Album ‘Own Worst Enemy,’ Drops New Single “Turn Down The Lights” Friday
Country music disruptor Gavin Adcock is set to release a new track this Friday (8/8), “Turn Down The Lights.” Written by Adcock and Jack Rauton, the song is the latest installment off his upcoming 24-track sophomore album, Own Worst Enemy, due August 15 via Adcock’s own Thrivin’ Here Records LLC under exclusive license to Warner Music Nashville.
Own Worst Enemy will mark a momentous year for the singer, whose label debut Actin’ Up Again arrived in August, 2024. During release week, the record topped more than 15 million on-demand U.S. streams, eventually being crowned the largest major-label country debut from a solo male artist released in 2024.
Additionally, Adcock’s releases thus far have pushed the rebel-rouser over the BILLION global streams mark in addition to recently receiving four RIAA certification plaques: “A Cigarette” (PLATINUM), “Run Your Mouth” (GOLD), “Deep End” (GOLD), and “Four Leaf Clover” (GOLD).
Today, MusicRow announced that Adcock is nominated for their “DISCOVERY ARTIST OF THE YEAR” award for the 37th Annual MusicRow Awards. The buzzworthy artist also received a “New Male Artist of the Year” nomination this year for the 60th ACM Awards, and was last month’s Billboard “Rookie of the Month.”
Adcock, a road warrior who has sold out multiple headline tours in the past year, is currently on his headline Need To Tour, which kicked off in May and includes entirely sold-out dates across Canada this October. He continues to support select dates of Morgan Wallen’s I’m The Problem Tour including upcoming performances at Rogers Centre in Toronto, Ontario on September 4 and 5th.
Own Worst Enemy
- MORNING BAIL (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jack Rauton, Ben Foster, and Colton Venner)
- OUTSIDE DOG (Written by Josh Thompson, Chase McGill and Matt Dragstrem)
- LIGHT A FIRE (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jack Rauton, and Brad Clawson)
- HARD HEADED HEART (Written by Tucker Beathard, Josh Miller, and Jacob Hackworth)
- NEVER CALL AGAIN (Written by Gavin Adcock, Joy Beth Taylor, Colton Venner, Jack Rauton)
- GRAVEYARD (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jack Rauton, and Mitchell Ferguson)
- NEED TO (Written by Casey Beathard, Tucker Beathard, Joybeth Taylor, Austin Goodloe)
- LAST ONE TO KNOW (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jack Rauton, Erik Dylan, and Luke Laird)
- ON ONE (Written by Gavin Adcock, Dan Isbell, Rhett Akins)
- SICK AND TIRED (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jay Rodgers)
- OWN WORST ENEMY (Written by Gavin Adcock)
- SUNSET (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jack Rauton, Rhett Akins, and Ben Hayslip)
- NEXT TO NOTHIN (Written by Gavin Adcock and Jack Rauton)
- AIN’T WORKIN ANYMORE (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jack Rauton, and Jesse Frasure)
- BLACK SHEEP (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jack Rauton, and Erik Dylan)
- TURN DOWN THE LIGHTS (Written by Gavin Adcock and Jack Rauton)
- IF I CAN’T HAVE YOU (Written by Gavin Adcock, Rhett Akins and Jim Beavers)
- LOOSE STRINGS (Written by Brent Cobb, Erik Dylan, and Phillip White)
- ALMOST GONE (FEAT VINCENT MASON) (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jack Hummel, Vincent Mason, Jack Rauton, Chase McDaniel)
- UNLUCKY STRIKES (Written by Gavin Adcock, Jack Rauton, Erik Dylan, Will Bundy)
- LOSING HOPE (Written by Gavin Adcock and Tucker Beathard)
- REGRET (Written by Gavin Adcock and Jack Rauton)
- RUNNER (Written by Jack Rauton and Dan Pellerin)
- TALL TALES (Written by Gavin Adcock and Liam Rian)
Aldo Cicchini Turns Locker Door into Perfect ‘C’ for Romantic Violin Rendition of “I Can’t Help Falling in Love With You”
Aldo Cicchini has done it again—this time using a locker door’s perfect C note to anchor his romantic violin cover of “I Can’t Help Falling in Love With You.” Filmed at Auditorium Rai di Torino, the performance is charming, unexpected, and heart-melting. The locker joins his growing list of unlikely but musical collaborators.
Yeat Unleashes Swamp-Fueled Visual for “LOOSE LEAF” from Bold New EP ‘DANGEROUS SUMMER’
Fresh off a standout month that included his co-headlining performance with Don Toliver at Lyrical Lemonade’s Summer Smash Festival, a surprise performance with Drake at Wireless Festival in London, and the release of his newest EP, DANGEROUS SUMMER, which arived alongside a Lyrical Lemonade video for “PUT IT ONG”, multi-platinum rap architect Yeat has just released the EDGLRD directed video for “LOOSE LEAF”. Shot entirely at a motel in Florida and executive produced by Kids and Gummo director Harmony Korine, the video sees Yeat running around with live alligators, playing into Korine’s well-known obsession with the swamp animal. In classic Harmony Korine fashion, it’s an unsettling, out-of-this-world visual that perfectly mirrors Yeat’s sonic style. Featuring upper-echelon superstar collaborators including FKA Twigs, Don Toliver, SahBabii, and more, Yeat’s newest EP expands and elevates his style like never before. DANGEROUS SUMMER is a hit-laced preview of the next chapter in his creative odyssey, offering die-hards a potential look at what’s to come on his long-rumored forthcoming LP, ADL (A Dangerous Lyfe). This aptly named EP arrives as the 25-year-old visionary is wrapping up a summer world tour, including drawing a 120K+ person crowd at the Beach, Please! festival in Romania and closing down the three-day Clout Festival in Poland. The cover art for the project was shot by Harmony Korine and designed by the creative team at EDGLRD using live alligators (which almost bit him) in Broward County, Florida, where Yeat and Harmony rented out an entire motel to shoot the EP cover. He rolled out the features, artwork, and vision for the EP in guerilla-style, nuclear fallout themed signage –– further signaling the start of a fresh era for the 25-year-old superstar. As Yeat ushers in this new phase, DANGEROUS SUMMER marks another bold step forward in a year that’s already been full of milestones.
Yeat’s last project, the #1 Billboard 200 charting LYFESTYLE, kicked off last summer when he teased new music during his special three-show North American run across New York, Los Angeles, and Portland. Within its first week of release, the 22-track album sold 89K+ equivalent album units, his highest first-week sales to date, and marked Yeat’s first-ever No. 1 album on the Billboard 200. This milestone was his fifth top 10 debut in under three years, following Lyfë (No. 10 in 2022), 2 Alivë (No. 6 in 2022), AftërLyfe (No. 4 in 2023), and 2093 (No. 2 in 2024). Building on that momentum, Yeat has kept up a relentless pace in 2025. He first previewed “Feël no wayz (Yeat mix)”, his extraterrestrial, autotune-drenched cover of Drake’s Views classic, during his set at the Sahara Stage during Coachella Weekend 1, where a 50-foot golden bell towered over the crowd in homage to his breakout hit “Gët Busy”. The remix follows this year’s standout single “The Bell” and his feature on “Work” with Anyma, the solo project of Tale of Us’ Matteo Milleri. Most recently, Yeat completed a nine-city international tour across the EU and UK, including his first-ever headlining show in London, which The Guardian hailed as a “ribcage-reverberating success”.
DANGEROUS SUMMER EP – Tracklist:
01. PUT IT ONG
02. LOCO
03. LOOSE LEAF
04. OH I DID (feat. NGeeYL)
05. COMË N GO
06. [ADL IS COMING]
07. IM YEAT (feat. BNYX)
08. M.F.U. (feat. SahBabii)
09. 2TONE (feat. Don Toliver)
10. FLY NITË (feat. FKA Twigs)
11. GROWING PAINS
Ed Sheeran Reunites with Rupert Grint in Comedic Video for New Blues-Infused Single “A Little More”
Today, Ed Sheeran releases his brand-new single “A Little More” alongside the official video, where Ed brings back Rupert Grint for an all-new instalment. BothEd’s and Rupert’s fanbases have been piecing the puzzle together over the last week following a series of social media clues including Rupert seemingly accessing, and posting from, Ed’s social media accounts.
Witty and sharp in its lyricism, and underpinned with blues elements through its sound, “A Little More” carries with it a message of self-preservation and moral courage. Sheeran wrote the song alongside DAVE (who previously worked with Sheeran on “Nothing On You”, “F64”), Blake Slatkin (Charli XCX, Kid Laroi), Cirkut (The Weeknd, Lil Nas X) and Johnny McDaid (Sheeran’s longtime collaborator) – production comes from Blake Slatkin, and Cirkut.
The official video, directed by Emil Nava (Post Malone, Dua Lipa), sees the return of Rupert Grint, who first teamed-up with Ed in the official video for ‘Lego House’ in 2011 where he played the character of an obsessive Sheeran fan. The comedic visual – featuring multiple outfit changes, with Sheeran playing most of the characters throughout – lifts off from where ‘Lego House’ ended. At the start of the video, we see a man (Rupert Grint) be released from prison. Desperately trying to remedy his unlawful past by living a ‘normal’ life, he keeps seeing Ed at his every turn, which begins to unnerve him. Shaking it off, he eventually meets his future wife (Nathalie Emmanuel), culminating with a traditional wedding. However, as Grint’s character pans the church while standing at the altar, he’s not only in for a shock when he sees a sea of wedding guests appear as Sheeran, but also when he lifts the veil of his ‘bride’…
Today’s track is the follow-up to Sheeran’s single “Sapphire”, which he worked on with Arijit Singh. The pair released a special version of the track last month, with Ed singing a chorus in Hindi and Punjabi, and Arijit singing a verse in Hindi and Punjabi and a chorus in English. The result was a blissful cross-cultural fusion of languages and cultures, adorning the song’s celebration of love.
Ed Sheeran’s new album, Play, will be released on 12 September.
Spinal Tap Cranks It Past 11 with Star-Studded Sequel ‘Spinal Tap II: The End Continues’
They’re back and louder than ever. Spinal Tap II: The End Continues reunites the original cast with director Rob Reiner and adds megastar cameos like Elton John and Paul McCartney. The sequel hits theaters this September—get ready to go beyond 11.
Polaris Festival Unveils First-Ever Multi-Event Ontario Celebration Ahead of 2025 Prize Ceremony
CBC presents the Polaris Music Prize has revealed a sprawling series of events spread across Ontario in September as part of the first-ever Polaris Festival.
Presented by long-time partner SiriusXM Canada, the Polaris Festival will be a celebration of the organization’s 20th anniversary with events like Salons, Listening Parties, Poster Exhibits, and Concerts, all complimenting the annual Polaris Concert & Award Ceremony, taking place at Massey Hall in Toronto on September 16. The aim of the Polaris Festival is to spotlight as many of our 600+ past nominees as possible while reaching new audiences through expanded programming and diverse venues.
The 15 event schedule will feature, amongst other things, past champ Cadence Weapon DJing amidst dinosaur bones, five-time Short Lister Shad hosting an easy listening Winner Ceremony pre-party, team ups with three separate music festivals (Supercrawl, Beautiful View, Second Summer) and exclusive glimpses into new music from The Dears and SATE. That’s on top of educational Salons on how Polaris works, production insights with Clairmont The Second, and a special workshop with Katie Stelmanis (Austra) and Casey Mecija (Ohbijou).
Check-out the full Polaris Festival lineup and get your tickets here.
More events will be announced over the coming weeks.
Polaris Festival Schedule

Poster Exhibition – Looking At Polaris: A Retrospective Poster Show
Cry Baby Gallery, Toronto
September 2-10, 7 PM – 2 AM
FREE
Polaris will be returning to Cry Baby Gallery to display a retrospective exhibition celebrating the bold, graphic history of the Polaris Music Prize. This touring show features posters from every year of the prize’s poster history, each one a unique visual tribute to Canada’s most creative albums.

University of Toronto’s Hart House, Toronto
September 3, 6-9 PM
Co-presented by Hart House Hip Hop Education, this intimate music production-focused event will be moderated by Marco Adamovic with expert support from 4x Polaris nominee Clairmont The Second.

Responsive Ecologies Lab (RELab) at TMU, Toronto
September 7, 1:30-3:30 PM
Katie Stelmanis (Austra) and Casey Mecija (Ohbijou) will lead a gender-diverse workshop series for learning and practicing Modular Synthesis.

Salon – De-Mystifying Polaris Salon
Daniel’s Spectrum, Toronto
September 8, 6-8 PM
Co-presented with Music Managers Forum, this industry-focused panel talk will shed light on the Polaris universe.

Concert – Supercrawl & Polaris Festival Present: Sister Ray And Eliza Niemi
Mills Hardware, Hamilton
September 12, 8-10:30 PM
A special side-quest to both Supercrawl and the Polaris Concert & Award Ceremony, this bill featuring past nominees Sister Ray and Eliza Niemi will take place at the intimate Mills Hardware space.
The show will also feature a Polaris Poster Exhibition. This pop-up Polaris Poster show features posters from the prize’s poster archive, each one a unique visual tribute to Canada’s most creative albums. Part music history, part art show, and on display for one night only.

Salon & Rave – Night Mirror: The Psychic Raver Salon
University of Toronto’s Hart House, Toronto
September 13, 10 PM-3 AM
TICKETS LAUNCHING AUGUST 20
Co-presented with Lotion Magazine. A guided 1-on-1 experience inside the rave where a psychic helps attendees pause, reflect, and set an intention for the night ahead.

Listening Session – The Dears Listening Session
Sounds Good, Toronto
September 13, 4-7 PM
Multi-time nominees The Dears will host an exclusive listening session of new music at Sounds Good in Toronto.

Concert – Beautiful View & Polaris Festival Present Cedric Noel And Justin Rutledge
Belleville Club, Belleville
September 13, 3-7:30 PM
Past Polaris nominee Hannah Georgas curates the first-ever Beautiful View, a new music festival set against the scenic backdrop of Belleville, Ontario. The inaugural lineup features intimate performances by fellow Polaris alumni Cedric Noel and Justin Rutledge, with Polaris co-presenting.
The show will also feature a Polaris Poster Exhibition. This pop-up Polaris Poster show features posters from the prize’s poster history, each one a unique visual tribute to Canada’s most creative albums. Part music history, part art show, and on display for one day only.

Loveless Cafe, Toronto
September 15, 9 – 11 PM
One night before the big Polaris Concert & Award Ceremony 5x Short-Lister Shad will play and unpack a set of easy listening gems he loves, live at Loveless Cafe.

Concert – Polaris 2025 Official Afterparty – Featuring TEKE::TEKE
Church of the Holy Trinity, Toronto
September 16, 10 PM-1 AM
Celebrate the reveal of this year’s #Polaris2025 Album, Song, and Heritage Prize winners with a special performance by 2x nominees TEKE::TEKE.

Listening Session – Polaris Festival Presents: Raw Reflections With SATE
The Vault, Creation Lab, Toronto
September 22, 7:30-9:30 PM
Toronto rock force SATE hosts a special preview listening session of her bold new rock opera recordings, punctuated with live moments alongside her band.

Concert – JayWood At Second Summer Festival Launch Party
Lee’s Palace, Toronto
September 24, 7 PM, 19+
Polaris will support the Second Summer indie festival launch party with past nominee JayWood joining a bold lineup of underground sounds alongside standout artists like Dry Cleaning, Bria Salmena and Slash Need.

Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto
September 26, 7:15 PM
Co-presented with the Royal Ontario Museum, Polaris‑winning Cadence Weapon and past short-listed nominee Junia‑T take over the decks for a high-energy DJ party. Join them and party around dinosaur bones that are 145–200 million years old in ROM’s Connelly Hall. It’s a rare Mesozoic mash‑up of club vibes and Ankylosaural atmospheres.
The festival events are part of a massive suite of #Polaris2025 programming that also includes the launch of the new SOCAN Polaris Song Prize, the shift of the public vote hall of fame Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize campaign from late-fall into August, and the return of the Polaris Concert & Award Ceremony to Toronto’s historic Massey Hall for the third straight year on September 16. Winners of this year’s traditional Polaris Album Prize, the new Song Prize, and the Heritage Prize will all be revealed at the Massey Hall event, hosted by past winner Haviah Mighty. Tickets to the Polaris Concert & Award Ceremony are on sale now via the Massey Hall website. To celebrate the Short List, Polaris is offering 15% off tickets with the code POLARIS15.
10 Timeless Musicians Who Kept Their Greatness After 60
In an industry obsessed with youth, there’s something deeply inspiring about artists who continue to evolve, challenge themselves, and captivate audiences long after most would consider retiring. While many musicians fade from the spotlight or lose creative steam with age, some defy expectation—producing groundbreaking albums, selling out stadiums, and shaping culture well into their 60s and beyond. These artists prove that greatness isn’t bound by time, and that artistry can deepen with experience, perspective, and age.
Here are ten musicians who didn’t just maintain their brilliance after 60—they redefined it.
Bob Dylan
Before 60, Bob Dylan was already a Nobel-worthy legend: the voice of the 1960s, a prolific songwriter, and cultural icon with masterpieces like Blonde on Blonde, Blood on the Tracks, and Time Out of Mind. But post-60, he released Modern Times (2006), Rough and Rowdy Ways (2020), and even a Sinatra-inspired standards trilogy that showcased his vocal phrasing in new, nuanced ways. Dylan’s ability to reinvent himself without losing his poetic fire has kept him at the vanguard of American music well into his 80s.
Dolly Parton
By 60, Dolly Parton was a country legend and crossover queen, with hits like “Jolene,” “9 to 5,” and “I Will Always Love You,” along with business savvy that built Dollywood and a media empire. After 60, she released the acclaimed Backwoods Barbie (2008), performed at Glastonbury, and earned new fans through collaborations with younger artists. Her philanthropy—like funding COVID-19 vaccine research—only enhanced her cultural relevance. Dolly is proof that authenticity, warmth, and hustle never go out of style.
Paul McCartney
A Beatle, a Wings frontman, and solo hitmaker before turning 60, Paul McCartney could’ve coasted on his catalog. Instead, he doubled down creatively. Albums like Memory Almost Full (2007), Egypt Station (2018), and McCartney III (2020) showed continued curiosity and musical exploration. His sold-out tours into his 80s—complete with three-hour sets—show a stamina that matches his legacy. McCartney remains a vital musical force and a living link to rock’s golden age.
Tina Turner
Tina Turner’s comeback in her 40s with Private Dancer was already the stuff of legends. But she didn’t slow down after 60—touring globally, performing at the Grammys and Live 8, and releasing her final studio album Twenty Four Seven (1999) just before turning 60. In her later years, she published a bestselling memoir, oversaw a hit Broadway musical, and became a spiritual icon of resilience. Tina’s strength, style, and singular voice kept her legacy vibrant until her passing in 2023.
Leonard Cohen
The Canadian bard crafted contemplative, mystical songs for decades before retreating from the public eye. But after a financial betrayal forced him back on stage in his 70s, Cohen experienced an artistic rebirth. Albums like Old Ideas (2012) and You Want It Darker (2016) received critical acclaim, and his world tours revealed a commanding, sly stage presence. Cohen’s late work deepened his legacy, proving that wisdom and gravity can be rock and roll too.
Cher
Cher was a TV star, fashion icon, and chart-topping singer by 30—and still topping charts after 60. Her 1998 hit “Believe” reshaped pop’s use of Auto-Tune, and her Closer to the Truth album (2013) hit Billboard’s Top 5 when she was 67. With Las Vegas residencies, scene-stealing film roles, and viral tweets, she’s stayed relevant to multiple generations. Few artists have reinvented themselves more fearlessly—or with more fun—than Cher.
Willie Nelson
Willie Nelson had already penned classics like “Crazy” and released Red Headed Stranger before most of us knew what a concept album was. After 60, he became even more prolific—releasing over two dozen albums since the 1990s, including God’s Problem Child (2017) and A Beautiful Time (2022), which won him a Grammy at age 89. Willie’s timeless voice, activism, and humor keep him beloved across generations—and still gigging at 90.
David Bowie
Bowie’s death in 2016 reminded the world just how vital he remained to the very end. Long after his Ziggy Stardust days, Bowie kept innovating. His album The Next Day (2013) marked a stunning return, and Blackstar (2016), released just two days before his death, was a haunting, avant-garde masterpiece. It reasserted his genius and willingness to confront mortality through art. Bowie’s post-60 work wasn’t just great—it was daring.
Mavis Staples
As a member of The Staple Singers, Mavis Staples gave voice to civil rights anthems. But her solo career flourished even more after 60, with a string of powerful albums produced by the likes of Jeff Tweedy (You Are Not Alone, 2010) and Ben Harper (We Get By, 2019). Her raw, spirit-filled vocals, community activism, and powerful presence have made her a beacon for artists young and old. Mavis continues to bridge gospel, soul, and protest into her 80s.
Bruce Springsteen
Before 60, Bruce Springsteen was “The Boss,” with albums like Born to Run, Nebraska, and The Rising shaping America’s musical identity. Since then, he’s released Western Stars (2019), Letter to You (2020), and a Broadway show that became a Netflix special. His E Street Band tours remain massive events. Springsteen’s late-career work shows emotional depth and vulnerability while proving he can still fill stadiums—and hearts.
What binds these artists is that they stayed curious, collaborated with younger musicians, embraced new genres or technologies, and kept performing with soul and conviction. In doing so, they redefined what aging in music looks like—not as decline, but as deepening.
Their stories are a reminder that artistry doesn’t come with an expiration date. If anything, experience only sharpens the tools. For listeners and fellow musicians alike, these legends offer more than great music—they offer a blueprint for staying passionate, resilient, and creatively alive at any age.

















