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Nazareth Dig Deep Into a Defining Era With the ‘Born Under The Wrong Sign’ Box Set

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Nazareth built their reputation on grit, volume, and a refusal to stay in one lane. ‘Born Under The Wrong Sign (1976-1979)’, a 5CD box set arriving June 26, covers four albums from one of the most restless stretches of their catalog, and adds 27 bonus tracks including single versions, outtakes, and an alternate version of ‘Expect No Mercy’ that’s never been properly heard.

The collection opens with ‘Close Enough For Rock ‘n’ Roll’, recorded at Le Studio in Montreal and featuring “Telegram,” the four-part rock opera that opened their live shows throughout the era. ‘Play ‘n’ The Game’ follows, with Manny Charlton producing and the band pushing into arena rock and AOR territory with Southern rock and psychedelic touches woven through. It’s a period that often gets overlooked in favor of the ‘Hair Of The Dog’ era, and this box makes the case for a serious reassessment.

‘Expect No Mercy’ brings the heaviness back, with Dan McCafferty’s gravelly vocals front and center over gritty guitar riffs, and Frank Frazetta’s iconic cover art giving the album a visual identity that’s held up for nearly five decades. The original alternate version, spread across disc four, adds a completely different sequence and includes tracks that didn’t make the final cut. It’s the kind of deep archival inclusion that makes a box set worth owning rather than just admiring.

‘No Mean City’ closes the collection, marking the addition of Zal Cleminson on second guitar and a heavier twin-guitar sound that pointed toward where hard rock was heading into the 1980s. Rodney Matthews, who also designed covers for Thin Lizzy and Diamond Head, handled the artwork.

‘Born Under The Wrong Sign (1976-1979)’ arrives June 26.

Track Listing:

Disc One
Close Enough For Rock´N´Roll (1976)
1. Telegram (Parts 1 – 4)
2. Vicki
3. Homesick Again
4. Vancouver Shakedown
5. Born Under The Wrong Sign
6. Loretta
7. Carry Out Feelings
8. Lift The Lid
9. You’re The Violin

Bonus Tracks
10. My White Bicycle (Single)
11. You’re The Violin (Edited A-Side)
12. Loretta (Alternate Single Version)
13. Carry Out Feelings (US Single Edit)
14. Lift The Lid (Alternate Single Version)
15. My White Bicycle (Original Version)
16. Telegram (Edited Version)
17. On Your Way
18. So You Want To Be A Rock ‘N’ Roll Star

Disc Two
Play ´N´ The Game (1976)
1. Somebody To Roll
2. Down Home Girl
3. Flying
4. Waiting For The Man
5. Born To Love
6. I Want To Do Everything For You
7. I Don’t Want To Go On Without You
8. Wild Honey
9. L.A. Girls

Bonus Tracks
10. Good Love (B-Side)
11. I Don’t Want To Go On Without You (Alternate Edit)
12. Waiting For The Man (Alternate Edit)
13. Somebody To Roll (Edit)
14. Born To Love (Edited Version)

Disc Three
Expect No Mercy (1977)
1. Expect No Mercy
2. Gone Dead Train
3. Shot Me Down
4. Revenge Is Sweet
5. Gimme What’s Mine
6. Kentucky Fried Blues
7. New York Broken Toy
8. Busted
9. Place In Your Heart
10. All The King’s Horses

Bonus Tracks
11. Greens (B-Side)
12. Desolation Road (B-Side)
13. Gone Dead Train (Edited Version)
14. Expect No Mercy (Alternate Version)
15. Place In Your Heart (Alternate Edited Version)
16. Kentucky Fried Blues (Edited Version)
17. Expect No Mercy (Live)

Disc Four
Expect No Mercy (Original Version)
1. Kentucky Fried Blues
2. Gone Dead Train
3. Shot Me Down
4. Greens
5. Life Of A Dog
6. New York Broken Toy
7. Revenge Is Sweet
8. Desolation Road
9. Can’t Keep A Good Man Down
10. Moonlight Eyes

Disc Five
No Mean City (1979)
1. Just To Get Into It
2. May The Sunshine
3. Simple Solution (Parts 1 & 2)
4. Star
5. Claim To Fame
6. Whatever You Want Babe
7. What’s In It For Me
8. No Mean City (Parts 1 & 2)

Bonus Tracks
9. Snaefell (No Mean City Outtake, 1979, Instrumental)
10. May The Sunshine (Single Edit)
11. Whatever You Want Babe (Single Edit)
12. Star (US Version)
13. No Mean City (Alternate Edit)
14. Simple Solution (Edit)

The Strokes Tease New Album ‘Reality Awaits’ Ahead of Coachella and Beyond

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The Strokes have a new album coming, and they’ve announced it the way only they could. A teaser trailer dropped on the band’s social media Monday with four words and a tagline: ‘Reality Awaits’. “In the flesh, it’s even sexier.” No release date, no tracklist, no overthinking it.

The announcement lands as the band has been warming up with small club dates in San Francisco, playing the Warfield on April 4 and Bill Graham Civic Auditorium on April 6, ahead of back-to-back Coachella appearances on April 11 and April 18. Festival dates at Outside Lands and Bonnaroo are also on the books. The Strokes are clearly building toward something, and the live shows are part of the process.

‘Reality Awaits’ will be the follow-up to 2020’s ‘The New Abnormal’, making it the band’s first studio album in six years. That gap hasn’t cooled anything. The club shows have confirmed the band is locked in, and the festival circuit is about to find out exactly where they are right now.

There’s more to come. For now, the tease is doing exactly what it’s supposed to do.

BTS Just Answered the Internet’s Biggest Questions and the World Is Not Calm

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BTS sat down with WIRED to tackle the internet’s most searched questions about the group, and the result is exactly what it should be: seven of the most watched people on the planet being completely themselves. Jin, Suga, J-Hope, RM, Jimin, V, and Jung Kook work through the queries with the kind of chemistry that only comes from years of doing everything together, and the whole thing lands as both genuinely funny and quietly revealing. The internet clearly had questions. BTS had answers.

LA Indie Favorites Atta Boy Break a Four-Year Silence With the Quietly Powerful “Haven’t Yet”

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Four years is a long time. Atta Boy have spent theirs touring, writing, surviving a disaster, and building something worth the wait. “Haven’t Yet,” out now via Diamond City, is the Los Angeles quartet’s first new music since 2022’s ‘Crab Park’, and it arrives as the opening statement of a new album expected late spring.

The song sits squarely in the space Atta Boy know best: emotionally direct, carefully constructed, and harder to shake than it first appears. It tackles the communication breakdown inside a relationship, the kind that compounds quietly until both people feel alone. “It’s about the loneliness that can come with avoidance in a partner,” says guitarist and vocalist Eden Brolin, “and ultimately the continuous commitment to mending that on a level playing field.” That’s a lot to carry in a single, and the band carries it well.

The new material was written and demoed in late 2024, with the band reconvening in January 2025 to record, only to be halted by the Los Angeles wildfires. The pause reshaped things. Guitarist Freddy Reish had built his own studio, The Pink Feather, named after his grandparents’ saloon, giving the band room to push further than their usual compressed recording timelines had allowed. A group that originally formed in high school, with well over a decade together, took full advantage of the space.

“Haven’t Yet” had already been road tested live, supporting CAAMP and during select headline dates last autumn. Keyboardist Dashel Thompson notes the song got a strong reception at every show. Listeners who caught those performances will recognize it immediately. Everyone else is about to.

New Orleans Legend Allen Toussaint Gets the Definitive ‘Songbook’ Reissue He Always Deserved

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By 2009, Allen Toussaint’s songs were already widely recorded and performed. As a writer, he had penned classics like “Fortune Teller,” “Lipstick Traces (On a Cigarette),” “Get Out of My Life, Woman,” and “Working in the Coal Mine,” while his work as a producer and arranger shaped recordings by artists including Dr. John, Labelle, The Neville Brothers, Glen Campbell, and Boz Scaggs. His Sea-Saint studio, meanwhile, became a major recording destination in New Orleans.

What Songbook captured was a different view of that career. Recorded in 2009 during two intimate performances at Joe’s Pub in New York City, the album documents Toussaint alone at the piano, revisiting songs from across five decades of writing, recording, and performance. Originally released in 2013, it was also his first live album.

The GRAMMY®-nominated album now returns in an expanded edition arriving May 29, featuring 20 previously unreleased performances—including additional songs and interview recordings with Toussaint reflecting on his early influences and career. The release will be available as a 2-CD set and across digital platforms, while the original 25-track album makes its vinyl debut as a 2-LP gatefold set. It also includes the original essay and track notes by Ashley Kahn, alongside updated liner notes from producer Paul Siegel.

In 2005, following the devastation of Hurricane Katrina, Allen Toussaint was forced to leave New Orleans and make a fresh start in New York City. Amid that upheaval, he found solace in music and soon became a weekly fixture at Joe’s Pub, an intimate venue in Manhattan’s East Village. For an artist who frequently shied away from solo performances, these shows offered a rare opportunity to experience him in this setting and helped spark a late-career resurgence.

Those performances also changed his relationship to his own material. As Ashley Kahn writes, Toussaint used the residency to get “truly comfortable on the stage by himself, laying claim to his own songs.” Over time, he developed the set by resurrecting material he had not touched in years, improvising on established melodies, and weaving personal anecdotes into his stage patter.

By the time of the Joe’s Pub residency, Toussaint’s catalog already stretched across multiple roles. Behind the scenes, he had built a long list of songwriting credits, with songs later recorded by artists including Robert Plant & Alison Krauss, The Rolling Stones, and The Who, as well as The O’Jays, Ringo Starr, Lee Dorsey, and The Jerry Garcia Band. He was also an in-demand producer and arranger, while his own solo discography extended from 1958’s The Wild Sounds of New Orleans through albums including Toussaint (1970), Life, Love and Faith (1972), and Southern Nights (1977).

Songbook brings those strands together in one performance setting, drawing from across decades of writing and recording, alongside material tied closely to New Orleans and its musical traditions.

Producer Paul Siegel first knew the Joe’s Pub performances as a fan in the audience. In his account, the stripped-down format made clear what the setting could reveal: “Alone at the piano, and in a setting like this one, he was able to stretch out and explore the far reaches of his seemingly endless songbook.” Siegel realized it was the right chance to document Toussaint in that form, and in 2009 he recorded two of the concerts at Joe’s Pub.

The resulting album presents not just the songs themselves, but the way Toussaint framed them onstage—through spoken recollection, career-spanning selection, and solo performance. When Songbook was released in 2013, it was met with broad critical acclaim and, the following year, earned Toussaint his first two GRAMMY nominations: Best Americana Album and Best American Roots Song.

LISTENING NOTES

  • “City of New Orleans” — Written by Steve Goodman and included among the previously unreleased recordings from the Joe’s Pub performances.
  • “What Do You Want the Girl to Do” — Performed live as part of the expanded material drawn from the 2009 recordings.
  • “Hi Lee Hi” — Included here as Toussaint’s tribute to Jerry Garcia.
  • “Shrimp Po-Boy, Dressed” — Featured in the original set and later nominated for Best American Roots Song at the GRAMMY Awards.
  • ’60s Medley: “A Certain Girl” / “Mother-in-Law” / “Fortune Teller” / “Working in the Coal Mine” — A four-song concert staple built from some of Toussaint’s best-known 1960s compositions.

Songbook documents a period when Allen Toussaint returned to the stage in a new way: alone, at the piano, working through songs that had traveled widely through other artists as well as through his own recordings. The expanded edition adds further material from the same performances. It remains a record of two nights at Joe’s Pub, when a five-decade catalog was presented directly by the artist who wrote, shaped, and carried it.

Punk Provocateur Jamie Lenman Comes Roaring Back With the Fiercely Charged “Not Likely”

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Jamie Lenman has been quiet by design, not by default. Having stepped back from the grind of constant touring and releasing to focus on his Patreon community, he’s back now with “Not Likely,” his first new music since 2023’s EP ‘Iknowyouknowiknow’. It’s punk-fuelled, deliberately messy, and exactly what it needs to be.

The track channels early US punk in the vein of Fang, raw and room-sized, with Lenman playing every instrument himself to achieve what he describes as “that slightly messy vibe.” He recorded it with Luke Pickering, who he connected with through False Advertising, and whose work on those records clearly left an impression. The result is a groove that feels like a band that’s figured out controlled chaos.

Lyrically, Lenman isn’t pulling punches. “It’s a very pessimistic piece,” he says, drawing a line to his earlier track “The Future Is Dead.” He’s clear that it’s not his default mode, but he’s also honest enough to put the feeling on record when it’s real. That kind of directness has always been central to what makes his work land. “Not Likely” is streaming exclusively on Bandcamp on a pay-what-you-want basis, keeping it entirely on his own terms.

More music is coming. Lenman has confirmed as much, and “Not Likely” reads like an opening statement rather than a one-off. He’ll also be taking the stage at Arctangent Festival on August 22, giving the new material its live debut in front of an audience built for exactly this kind of thing.

Tampa’s Ybor City Is Getting a 4,300-Capacity Live Nation Venue and It Can’t Open Soon Enough

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Tampa’s live music scene has a gap, and KETTLER just announced plans to fill it. A new 4,300-capacity music venue is coming to the Gasworx district in Ybor City, operated by Live Nation and slated to open in late 2028. It’s the mid-size room the market has been missing, and the location couldn’t be better positioned.

The venue sits on N. 15th Street, steps from the 7th Avenue entertainment corridor and a future TECO Streetcar stop along Channelside Drive. The design is a genuine commitment to the neighborhood: a vintage-style marquee with exposed lightbulbs, brick facade, second-level balcony, and an interior drawing from historic theater architecture with a stage proscenium and deep green tones. Blueprint Studio and TVS Architecture handled the design, and the attention to Ybor City’s distinctive character shows.

“Ybor City has a distinct character and a long tradition of nightlife and live music,” said James Nozar, President of Development at KETTLER. “Our goal is to create a venue that carries that legacy forward.” Live Nation’s Florida Market President Brittany Flores called it a meaningful investment in Tampa’s future, one built to reflect the energy and history of the district while growing the city as a live music destination.

The economic footprint is substantial. The venue projects $80 million in annual economic impact, roughly 440 jobs, and approximately $6 million annually in state and local tax revenue. Touring artists get a properly scaled room. Fans get major shows close to home. Nearby restaurants, hotels, and local businesses get the foot traffic that a well-run mid-size venue consistently delivers.

Gasworx itself is a joint venture between KETTLER, local developer Darryl Shaw, and international property company PPF Real Estate. The broader development includes 5,000 residences, 500,000 square feet of office space, a 28,000-square-foot marketplace opening in 2027, and a one-acre park. The venue is the anchor the whole district has been building toward.

The Man Who Built the Beatles Finally Gets the Biography He Deserves From Philip Norman

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Philip Norman has spent decades mapping the Beatles universe from every angle. He wrote the book on John Lennon. He wrote the book on Paul McCartney. He wrote ‘Shout!’, still the landmark group biography. Now he’s turned his attention to the man without whom none of it happens: Brian Epstein. ‘Mr. Moonlight: Brian Epstein and the Making of the Beatles’ arrives June 16, 2026 via Da Capo.

Epstein was a young record retailer from Liverpool with no management experience and no rulebook to follow. What he had was conviction, and he used it to take four musicians from the Cavern Club to the biggest stages on earth. Norman frames the story plainly: there will never be another pop manager like Brian Epstein. The book makes the case, and the case is overwhelming.

‘Mr. Moonlight’ draws on exclusive interviews with those closest to Epstein, including his mother Queenie and brother Clive, to build a portrait of a man who was complex, contradictory, and ultimately tragic. The book covers territory that hasn’t been fully examined before: how Epstein nearly lost the Beatles to organized crime, the antisemitism and homophobia he faced even at the height of his success, his layered relationship with John Lennon, and the circumstances of his death in the summer of 1967.

Norman is the right person to write this book, and he knows it. His research is meticulous, his access is extraordinary, and his command of this era of music history is unmatched. Epstein changed the course of pop music and Britain’s international image, and received no public honor for it. ‘Mr. Moonlight’ is long overdue.

‘Mr. Moonlight: Brian Epstein and the Making of the Beatles’ by Philip Norman. Out June 16, 2026 via Da Capo.

Athens Post-Punk Outfit commuter Dig Into Inherited Damage on New Single “Mono”

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commuter aren’t interested in easy listening. The Athens-based post-punk/noise quartet have released “Mono,” their second single from an upcoming sophomore album, and it hits exactly as intended: sharp, unsettling, and precise. A European tour follows in May 2026.

“Mono” builds its tension from an unlikely source. Forced check-ins from a self-appointed “father figure,” deadpan street signs, and train announcements collide into something that exposes the absurdity of inherited damage. It’s bureaucratic noise and family baggage rendered as sound, and commuter make it feel completely natural.

The track was recorded and produced by Alex Bolpasis at Suono Studio in Athens and mastered by Greg Obis at Chicago Mastering Service in Chicago. The production gives “Mono” the kind of controlled grit that post-punk demands: nothing wasted, everything deliberate.

This is commuter’s second European tour, and the new material suggests a band operating with considerably more confidence than the first time around. The sophomore album doesn’t have a release date yet, but if “Mono” is the benchmark, the wait will be worth it.

House Music Powerhouse John Summit Brings His “Experts Only Festival” Back to NYC This September

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Randall’s Island is getting taken over again. Experts Only Festival returns to New York City on September 19 and 20, 2026, with John Summit headlining both nights of what’s already shaping up to be the biggest dance music weekend the city has seen in years. Tickets are on sale now at expertsonlyfest.com.

The 2025 debut drew more than 50,000 fans and sold out fast, earning praise for its production quality and fan-first approach. That inaugural edition featured Summit alongside Kaskade b2b Cassian, Green Velvet b2b Layton Giordani, Pete Tong, LP Giobbi, Kasablanca, DJ Seinfeld, and Totally Enormous Extinct Dinosaurs, setting a standard that the 2026 edition is clearly built to surpass. Multiple stages, elevated production, and expanded fan experiences are all confirmed.

The 2026 lineup already runs deep. GRiZ, Prospa, SUBJOHNICS, LYNY, Korolova, Taiki Nulight, Devault, Dreya V, OMRI., Partiboi69, Jackie Hollander, Dansyn, Airrica, Gabss, MADI, Soraya, Mishell, and Rohaan are all confirmed, with more names still to come. Summit arrives at the festival fresh off his new album CTRL ESCAPE, out April 15 via Experts Only and Darkroom Records, and the timing couldn’t be sharper.

Produced in partnership with Medium Rare, Relentless Beats, and EMW, Experts Only has quickly established itself as the premier large-scale dance event in New York. For a city that went without a major dance weekender on Randall’s Island for years, the return has been nothing short of a reclamation. Two nights, one island, no weak links on the bill.