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  1. It’s odd to think that it’s now been more than 20 years since Eminem broke big, and with him, a broader cultural debate about who rap is for, and who it’s not for, and who exactly gets to determine who’s sorted into each of those categories. But enough time has elapsed that now Marshall Mathers can move on to producing a film like Bodied, which reignites that debate by transposing those questions to the modern era. In the new version, that question of who rap is “for” becomes even harder to answer when rap is now mainstream, from the music to the culture. Now anybody can obsess over rap, and learn about its histories, and become a “well actually” snob about it. Now, as Soundcloud has proved in abundance, just about anyone can even become a rapper. All you need is the ability to stunt like you know what you’re doing until people trust that you actually do. That’s hardly all you need to last in rap, or to truly “make it,” but it’s enough to get you through the door. At least, that’s the case writer/director Joseph Kahn makes with Bodied, a delirious opus of contradictory social dialogues and unforgiving insults. In the view of Kahn and co-writer Alex Larsen (himself an ex-battle rapper), battle rap is the ultimate democratic platform. Once a battle begins, race and gender and class only matter as much as the punchlines they offer to the rapper. You’re simply either able to spit, or you’re not, and the rest of the world’s social conventions fall by the wayside for a few tense minutes at a time. Battles might not exist outside of social mores, but at the very least they shift reality into some parallel realm, one where a veteran insult rapper can stand toe to toe with a gawky white graduate student, and the latter can wipe the floor with the former. That’s what happens when Adam (Calum Worthy) takes his affinity for rap battles to the next level. A New Yorker turned UC-Berkeley student, Adam’s in the process of working on his master’s thesis about the linguistic and stylistic purposes of the N-word in battle rap. His girlfriend Maya (Rory Uphold), a staunch third-wave feminist, politely tolerates Adam’s infatuation with battle rap without fully understanding it; to her, it’s simply an excuse for amateurs to enter a space where they can say any offensive thing they want without fear of reprisal, to uphold the patriarchy using the language of subversion. To Adam, however, battle rap offers substantially more than the shabby, word-of-mouth industry around it suggests at a glance. To Adam, it’s a place where the id of the greater world can be unleashed, where the meticulous structure of acclaimed poetry becomes entwined with the improvisational game of dozens that battle rap has long represented. One night, after an event meets an early end due to a fistfight (a fairly commonplace occurrence), Adam’s dragged into a battle with an overzealous burnout in the parking lot. He not only wins, but wipes the floor with his competition. Soon Adam’s befriended by Behn Grymm (Jackie Long), a renowned SoCal battle rapper, and finds himself welcomed into an ever-growing circle of friends, and sometimes, competitors. After all, as Adam quickly learns, there’s a mutual respect in battle circles that transcends what’s said in the “ring,” at least up to a point. Even Megaton (Dizaster), a roided-out terror who reigns over the scene, still invites the competition to his decadent house parties. As Adam works his way ever deeper into the community, and his wins begin to pile up, he’s forced to confront the hypocrisy of virtually everyone around him, from his girlfriend to his social circle to the other rappers to even himself. A longtime music video director, Kahn peppers the film’s numerous battle sequences with blasts of visual invention, even if not all of them land successfully. (His tendency to punctuate rappers’ gunshot noises with muzzle flashes on their hands starts out clever, until it takes a turn for the overdone.) What’s ironic about Kahn’s frenetic visual approach to the film is that Bodied is never more riveting than when it simply steps back and lets the rappers (a mix of actors and real-life artists) do what they do best. This includes an endless volley of staggering one-liners, alternately hysterical and searingly venomous, delivered with a breathless passion that buoys the film through both its more familiar beats (outsider integrates himself into an unconventional subculture) and the sticky political territory it frequently cannonballs into. Bodied is often an incredibly funny movie, even when some of its jokes hurt and others are made out of the kind of squirming secondhand discomfort that will turn some viewers off even as others latch onto it with glee. Whether it’s Megaton making a gangly nerd cry mid-battle or Adam (who, in a great deadpan gag, is billed simply as “Adam” throughout) mentally clicking through folders labeled “too personal” and “way too personal” in mid-battle, Bodied has a keen eye for the fine details of the battle rap scene. So it’s then a shame when the film’s secondary story becomes such a drag on the riveting action of the battle sequences. While the conversations between Adam and Maya none-too-subtly play out the film’s broader political implications, and Uphold in particular brings a lot of charm and depth to a character that could’ve (and occasionally does) turn into an ugly, broad stereotype, Bodied has an unfortunate tendency to stop just short of landing some of its most aggressive punches. This is especially true of the way in which the film handles Adam, who’s at once a bit of a walking punchline and the film’s barely questioned hero, which becomes increasingly disquieting as the rest of the movie calls people like Adam into question for whether they’re simply a smarter, more nefarious kind of cultural tourist. Being able to break something down into meticulous theoretical diagrams is all well and good, but it doesn’t speak to the gut-level feeling of a medium like battle rap, and Bodied frequently struggles with the tension of whether Adam is an unsung diamond in the rough, or a culture vulture, or where one stops and the other begins when it comes to his fandom (some would say fetishization) of the scene. That’s no fault of Worthy’s, however, who delivers a blistering turn in a deeply complicated role. He’s a genius and a shit, a genuine enthusiast and a geek who wants dominion over the thing he loves whether or not it’s for him. In one of his first battles, Adam struggles to deliver a single effective line, aware that he’s holding back. There’s a sense of liberation that the actor exudes when he finally cuts loose from his west coast liberalism and goes in on his opponent with all the filthy bars he can dream up on the spot, and even if the film never gets as far as truly speaking to the more troubling implications of that gift, Worthy ably lends depth to a kid who lacks one of the things that makes an artist truly great: maturity. In any number of ways, Bodied is meant to provoke. It attacks political sacred cows with abandon, and at least a few of the lines uttered throughout are genuinely jaw-dropping in their audacity. It needles a very particular segment of the audience, one which will undoubtedly have quite a bit to say about it, with its shots at “social justice warriors” and the ways in which even well-meaning leftists can sometimes lapse into their own unpleasant cultural assumptions and expectations. It’s a provocation, and for the most part, it’s an effective one. Yet for a film all about verbal and physical blows, Bodied seems to grow skittish when it comes to landing the nastiest ones, the ones that would call its own ideals into question. It’s just insightful enough to leave audiences wishing that it were more so. Trailer: Source
  2. British 2 Tone icons The Specials have announced their first album of new music in 20 years. Entitled Encore, the February 1st, 2019 release follows 2001’s Conquering Ruler covers album, and features the group’s first original material since 1998’s Guilty ’til Proven Innocent!. Encore also marks the return of original lead vocalist Terry Hall, who entered the studio with the band for the first time since 1981’s classic “Ghost Town”. Founding members Lynval Golding and Horace Panter are also back, with drummer Kenrick Rowe and Ocean Colour Scene guitarist Steve Cradock rounding out the lineup. Hall, Golding, and Panter produced the 10-track effort alongside touring keyboardist Nikolaj Torp Larsen. While eight of the songs are originals, two are covers: an opening rendition of The Equals’ “Black Skinned Blue-Eyed Boys” and a take on The Valentines’ “Blam Blam Fever”. The CD edition of Encore also includes a live album called The Best of The Specials Live. Fans will also have the chance to catch the band perform live on an 2019 UK tour, the dates of which will be revealed tomorrow, October 30th. Those who pre-order the record by Noon today will get access to pre-sale tickets for the shows. Find the Encore tracklist and artwork below. Encore Artwork: Encore Tracklist: 01. Black Skinned Blue-Eyed Boys 02. B.L.M. 03. Vote For Me 04. The Lunatics 05. Breaking Point 06. Blam Blam Fever 07. 10 Commandments 08. Embarrassed By You 09. The Life And Times (Of A Man Called Depression) 10. We Sell Hope Source
  3. Whether you believe them or not, the members of KISS say their upcoming tour will indeed be their last. Today, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame shock rockers mapped out the first leg of dates for their “End of the Road World Tour.” Spanning 65 dates across two continents, the tour kicks off in North America beginning at the end of January. Following the American leg, which runs through mid-April, the band will make their way across the Atlanta for shows in the UK, Europe, and Russia. See the full itinerary below. A series of fan pre-sales will take place ahead of the public on-sale scheduled for Friday, November 2nd. You can find more details here. Tickets can also be secured here. In a statement, KISS says of the upcoming tour: “All that we have built and all that we have conquered over the past four decades could never have happened without the millions of people worldwide who’ve filled clubs, arenas and stadiums over those years. This will be the ultimate celebration for those who’ve seen us and a last chance for those who haven’t. KISS Army, we’re saying goodbye on our final tour with our biggest show yet and we’ll go out the same way we came in… Unapologetic and Unstoppable.” In explaining the difference between this forthcoming jaunt and KISS’s previous farewell tour in 2000, guitarist Paul Stanley recently said: “The [2000] farewell tour was at the end of the time that we had brought back the two original members [guitarist Ace Frehley and drummer Peter Criss] and it was such drudgery and so difficult and so unhappy that it just seemed like ‘let’s put the horse down.’” He added, “After the tour was over, it didn’t take me very long to realize I didn’t want to say goodbye to the band; I wanted to say goodbye to two members.” That said, Stanley wouldn’t rule out appearances by Frehley, Criss, or any other former KISS member be a part of the upcoming tour, adding, “This will be a celebration of KISS and not any individual lineup or any individual members. I wouldn’t rule anything out.” Once KISS finally do end touring, frontman Gene Simmons has a burgeoning soda business to fall back on. KISS 2019 Tour Dates: 01/31 – Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena 02/01 – Portland, OR @ Moda Center 02/02 – Tacoma, WA @ Tacoma Dome 02/04 – Spokane, WA @ Spokane Arena 02/07 – San Diego, CA @ Viejas Arena 02/08 – Fresno, CA @ Save Mart Arena 02/09 – Sacramento, CA @ Golden 1 Center 02/12 – Anaheim, CA @ Honda Center 02/13 – Glendale, AZ @ Gila River Arena 02/15 – Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile Arena 02/16 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Forum 02/19 – Corpus Christi, TX @ American Bank Center 02/21 – Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center 02/22 – New Orleans, LA @ Smoothie King Center 02/23 – Memphis, TN @ Fedex Forum 02/26 – Oklahoma City, OK @ Chesapeake Energy Arena 02/27 – Kansas City, MO @ Sprint Center 03/01 – Milwaukee, WI @ Fiserv Forum 03/02 – Chicago, IL @ United Center 03/04 – Minneapolis, MN @ Target Center 03/06 – Sioux Falls, SD @ Denny Sanford Premier Center 03/07 – Omaha, NE @ Centurylink Center 03/09 – Grand Rapids, MI @ Van Andel Arena 03/10 – Moline, IL @ Taxslayer Center 03/12 – Louisville, KY @ KFC! Yum Center 03/13 – Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena 03/16 – Columbus, OH @ Nationwide Arena 03/19 – Montreal, QC @ Bell Centre 03/20 – Toronto, ON @ Air Canada Centre 03/22 – Uniondale, NY @ Nassau Coliseum 03/23 – Uncasville, CT @ Mohegan Sun 03/26 – Boston, MA @ TD Garden 03/27 – New York, NY @ Madison Square Garden 03/29 – Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center 03/30 – Pittsburgh, PA @ PPG Paints Arena 04/02 – Quebec, QC @ Centre Videotron 04/03 – Ottawa, ON @ Canadian Tire Centre 04/06 – Raleigh, NC @ PNC Arena 04/07 – Atlanta, GA @ State Farm Arena 04/09 – Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena 04/11 – Tampa, FL @ Amalie Arena 04/12 – Jacksonville, FL @ Jacksonville Veterans Memorial Arena 04/13 – Birmingham, AL @ BJCC Arena 05/27 – Leipzig, DE @ Leipziger Messe 05/29 – Vienna, AT @ Stadthalle 05/31 – Munich, DE @ Konigsplatz 06/02 – Essen, DE @ Georg Meiches Stadium 06/04 – Berlin, DE @ Waldbuhne 06/05 – Hannover, DE @ Exo-plaza 06/07 – Norje, SE @ Sweden Rock Festival 06/11 – St. Petersburg, RU @ Ice Arena 06/13 – Moscow, RU @ Dinamon Stadium 06/16 – Keiv, UA @ NSA Stadum 06/18 – Krakow, PL @ Tauron Arena 06/25 – Amsterdam, NL @ Ziggo Dome 06/27 – Oslo, NO @ Tons of Rock 06/28 – Trondheim, NO @ Trondheim Rocks 07/02 – Milan, IT @ Ippodromo Snai San Siro 07/04 – Zurich, CH @ Hallenstadion 07/06 – Iffezheim, DE @ Reenbahn 07/09 – Birmingham, UK @ Birmingham Arena 07/11 – London, UK @ O2 Arena 07/12 – Manchester, UK @ Manchester Arena 07/14 – Newcastle, UK @ Newcastle Arena 07/16 – Glasgow, UK @ SSE Hydro Source
  4. Pearl Jam’s Vs. turns 25 this month. Today, journalist Scott T. Sterling looks back at his time spent with Eddie Vedder and reflects on the visible damage that success, fame, and the music industry inflicted on the young band. I was the greenest of green college journalists when Pearl Jam was in full promotional mode for the band’s debut album, Ten. It was on my radar because the band’s publicist had been blowing up my phone in hopes of some press on the group. I listened to the cassette that came with the press release and liked it well enough. The publicist quickly arranged for me to meet up with Pearl Jam in East Lansing, Michigan. They would be in town for a show that night with the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Smashing Pumpkins. I met the guys at a local record store, where they were doing a record signing. Drummer Dave Abbruzzese clearly stood out as the gregarious party boy of the band. Pearl Jam Vs. Lineup I connected with Eddie Vedder on campus, where the formal interview was to take place around soundcheck. We hadn’t been talking for 10 minutes when it became exceedingly clear that this was not just your boilerplate interview. Vedder wanted to walk around, so we headed outside. There we encountered Red Hot Chili Peppers singer Anthony Kiedis. He was in incognito mode, his hair slicked back into a deceptively conservative style and wearing a pair of horn-rimmed Clark Kent glasses. He eyed me warily before Vedder assured him that I was “cool.” Kiedis visibly softened and extended his hand. We chatted for a bit about Ann Arbor and Detroit before Eddie and I continued on our walk and interview. At one point, talk turned to electronic music, and he stopped to heap excessive praise on Trent Reznor and Nine Inch Nails as proof that it can be done well. That night’s show was literally a revelation for me, and I said so in the subsequent piece for the college paper, where I proclaimed Pearl Jam as the future of rock and roll. And I meant it. They showed me everything that so much of rock seemed to be missing at the time. Passion. Conviction. The intense need to make a real connection with their audience. A certain realness that exists outside the machinations of the brutal music industry. The connection I’d made with Vedder was a real one. When they came through Ann Arbor to play at the Blind Pig, he paused the show to shout me and my article out from the stage and then crowd-surfed out to my spot in the crowd for a high-five. We’d connect again when they played St. Andrews Hall in Detroit, the night when he pushed through a gaggle of gorgeous women all vying for his attention to give me a big hug. In the months that followed, the explosion of vital new rock and roll, much of it coming from Seattle, suddenly became a thing. And the media did what the media so often does: it ruined everything. TIME Magazine Pearl Jam cover Instead of celebrating the myriad of truly inspired and inspiring bands blasting out of the Great Northwest — Soundgarden, Nirvana, Mudhoney, TAD, Alice in Chains, Mother Love Bone, just to name a few — it all got lumped together as “grunge.” As such, fans suddenly felt the need to choose alliances. Were you a Pearl Jam or a Nirvana fan? For Mudhoney or TAD? While it was being sold to music fans as some kind of singular movement, real fans knew what was really going on. With Pearl Jam being arguably the most traditional rock and roll outfit of the bunch, their breakout success made a lot of sense. They made songs that already fit comfortably next to the classic rock canon. Pearl Jam ending up being that gateway band, the easy way for a regular, old rock fan to find their way into the then burgeoning “grunge” scene. It’s an appeal that many continue to hold against them. The buzz got so big that TIME magazine came calling, looking to put the band on its cover. Pearl Jam declined. So, TIME simply grabbed a live shot of Vedder and put him on the cover anyway, next to the caption: “All the Rage.” The cover came not even a week after Pearl Jam released Vs., and it shows. The album is the sound of a band that has achieved all of its rock and roll fantasies over the course of their debut album cycle, and what they saw at the top of that mountain was sheer hell. The labeling, the media manipulations, the increasing demands both personal and professional, being forced to deal with journalists calling you the “future of rock” — it all boiled down to ways that an industry could generate millions of dollars for a dizzying array of people, with the band somewhere near the bottom in terms of priority. That’s what I hear when I listen to Vs.. A band that has seen the horror that is the rock and roll fantasy, how it just eats you up and spits you out with no regard for anything but the money. The album opens on the desperate plea to all those who dare enter into that realm to think twice: “Please don’t go on me/ Don’t go on me/ Don’t go on me/ Don’t go on me/ Please.” They let the music do the talking, deciding not to produce any music videos for the album, which, at the time, was unheard of for a band of their stature.Vs. was the sound of the band raging back at it all, one last primal scream before they would retreat from the public eye almost completely. The album would go on to sell 950,378 in just its first five days on store shelves, setting a record at the time for the most copies sold during a first week of release. It would sell more than the rest of the Billboard Top Ten that week combined. Musically, the album veers wildly from brutal and cathartic rockers to delicate, introspective acoustic ballads. It’s a juxtaposition present all across the album: “Animal” into “Daughter”, Side 2 jumping from “blood” to “Rearviewmirror” to “Elderly Woman Behind the Counter in a Small Town”, which still stands as one of the finest moments Pearl Jam has ever produced. Pearl Jam would go on to maintain a relatively low profile going forward, growing a career that allows them to work and perform on their own terms. It’s a luxury made all the more impressive and humbling when you think about the cavalcade of casualties that we’ve seen from that early ‘90s “grunge” moment. It was during that time that they made the most headlines by daring to take on Ticketmaster in 2004, a battle that looks all the more prescient in light of recent revelations. Much like the lamb featured on the cover of Vs. (and as road kill on the subsequent tour poster), Pearl Jam had marched right into the slaughterhouse, knowing that they didn’t have much chance of getting out in one piece. Still, they chose to let themselves be the example. The last time I saw Eddie Vedder was in the parking lot of Ann Arbor’s Crisler Arena in March of 1994. So much had changed since we last spoke. The stakes had somehow been ratcheted up to impossible heights. In less than a month, Kurt Cobain would be dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. I spied Vedder getting off the tour bus, so I walked towards him. I could see that he recognized me, but there was something different about him. We hugged, and I looked at him. All I could say was: “Are you OK?” He looked at me with such sad, tired eyes and quietly said: “No.” I hugged him as tight as I could before he was pulled back into the tour bus. A flash went off, and I saw that someone had captured a photo of me holding on to Eddie Vedder for dear life. I often wonder whatever became of that image. The last song on Vs. is a Jeff Ament/Stone Gossard composition called “Indifference”. Vedder inhabits the lyrics as though they’re his own, with a sentiment that rings true for a band like Pearl Jam: I will hold the candle till it burns up my arm Oh, I’ll keep takin’ punches until their will grows tired Oh, I will stare the sun down until my eyes go blind Hey, I won’t change direction And I won’t change my mind How much difference does it make? How much difference does it make? I’ll swallow poison, until I grow immune I will scream my lungs out till it fills this room… It makes a big difference to me. Scream on, my friend. Scream on. Source
  5. L.A. Songstress Hits the Dancefloor for Brand New Effort Heading into the Fall, rising Pop recording artist, Sarah Anne Flansburg releases a new dance single, “Let Me Dance For Ya”. An incredibly fun song for the music lover in you. The new song showcases the Los Angeles-native amazing artistry and vast vocal range. The Perfect single ladies to get ready to hit the town with. The new track was inspired by Sarah’s many girl’s night adventures. “Let Me Dance For Ya” is a great addition to any playlist. Sarah has been building a great rapport over 2018 and preparing for a huge 2019. Enjoy “Let Me Dance For Ya”? Get ready to hear more new music by Sarah in no time as the rising star is slated to release two more new songs by the end of 2018. The post Sarah Anne Flansburg Asks to “Let Me Dance For Ya” : Listen appeared first on Verge Campus. Source
  6. Producer & Songstress Come Together For Awesome New Cut Los Angeles based independent recording artist Oriel Poole has teamed up with UK based electronic producer Yarni on their poignant new single “Displaced.” Yarni and Oriel bring together their unique styles and backgrounds, resulting in a cutting-edge track that intersects genres such as experimental electronica, soulful house, and trip-hop. Blending organic field recordings with arpeggio layers and an old piano, Yarni creates a steady backbone for Oriel’s ethereal vocals. Yarni then layers in numerous panned takes before the final crescendo where the track doubles in time. Oriel’s vocal tone combines the soulful grit of Erykah Badu with the haunting mystery of Lana Del Rey, creating a seductive, otherworldly sound of her own. At its core, the song is about being displaced mentally from a difficult and uncomfortable experience. “Displaced” is about seeing the situation from a wider perspective and outsider’s vantage point in order to heal from the past. Oriel quotes, “Seeing this displacement is an opportunity. It is from here I can heal, restore my power, and become unbewildered by the cards life has handed me. I am here to follow my heart’s compass and lead my life forward without fiction. Paving the way for new and more supportive relationships to come into my life, starting with the relationship to myself.” Oriel’s love shines through with her beautiful and melodic vocals, which are the perfect compliment to Yarni’s masterfully produced electronic beats. “Displaced” is out now on all major digital platforms. The post Yarni & Oriel Poole Are “Displaced” : Listen appeared first on Verge Campus. Source
  7. Tha Native takes a trip to the Bay to get some guidance form the Ambassador Many maybe familiar with West Coast indie recording artist Tha Native for his early 2018 Tech N9ne-featured single, “Whatcha Wanna Do”. Continuing to make a name for himself, the Highland, California-native takes a trip to the Yay Area, linking up with the Bay Area Ambassador himself E-40 for new single to close out the year, “Go Get The Paypah”. On the track, the two stars spit that money talk. The Native American hold his own with the book of Slang, catchy hook, gritty street attitude, and exciting to sing-a-long, “Go Get The Paypah” is a great addition to the up-and-coming’s resume. The new single is the lead up to a highly-anticipated album by Tha Native, slated for a early 2019 release. Tha Native is coming off of the road as an opening act for E-40’s “Gift of Gab Tour”. Tha Native has also shared the stage with Tech N9ne and his Strange Music roster previously as well on tour. Stream “Go Get The Paypah” now, courtesy of Spotify. The post Tha Native & E-40 Tell Us to “Go Get The Paypah” : Listen appeared first on Verge Campus. Source
  8. The Lowdown: Robyn, our queen mother of electro-dance-pop, has released her first new album in eight years. Honey is a follow-up to 2010’s barnburning, life-altering, career-defining Body Talk, which yielded cultural touchstones “Dancing on My Own” and “Call Your Girlfriend”. Informed by Robyn’s personal struggles, Honey is a softer and sadder album, drenched in beautiful melodies and irresistible beats but also deeply reflective. The Good: The 15-track Body Talk proved the exception to my general rule that most albums should be around 11 songs at most. But Honey fits that rule with a perfectly curated total of nine tracks exploring melancholic pleasure, the dark and the sweet. Songs like single “Honey” are somehow muted and explosive at the same time, conveying an emotional ambivalence (in the accurate, conflicted sense of the word) that reflects the time and effort spent trying to figure out how exactly to say something. Opening track “Missing U” is in the running for the ultimate dance single of 2018, yearning and agony conveyed in blissful, sparkling perfection. “Because It’s in the Music” is measured yet soulful, an album highlight with the markers of a pop-diva ballad. And the hushed duo of “Baby Forgive Me” and “Send to Robyn Immediately” sitting at the middle of Honey are haunting and pulsating. [Read: 10 Ways Robyn Was Ahead of Her Time] The Bad: The first couple times I listened to Honey, I didn’t like it that much. Every song after the opening track, “Missing U”, felt like a coda. I didn’t think I’d be able to experience the emotional catharsis that I was hoping for. I couldn’t imagine driving alone on the freeway singing these songs at the top of my lungs as my body tingled and sparked and shivered. (I may get pilloried for not loving this album right away.) The Verdict: The third time I listened to Honey, I cried. And the fourth time, too. So, there goes my worry about emotional catharsis. No, it’s not a driving album, but it sure as hell is an album for walking around your city alone with headphones on or for cooking dinner and suddenly realizing you’ve got goosebumps and your fingers are trembling. Sometimes you need to linger with an album, trying it out in different spaces, times of day, and emotional states. When I opened myself up to the shades of desperation and wry, clear-eyed resignation that colored much of the numbness I sensed in Honey — for example, when the soft-and-hard “Let’s go party” refrain on “Beach2k20” finally landed as an intentional expression of feigned enthusiasm in the wake of an understanding that a party won’t cover up the pain — I started to get the type of masochism that Honey is positively dripping with. (As Robyn sings on the titular track, “Won’t you get me right where the hurt is?”) And it’s sad and sweet and lovely and brutal. Essential Tracks: “Missing U”, “Baby Forgive Me”, and “Send to Robyn Immediately” Source
  9. Same Kanye, different day as the new adage goes: In what can best be described as another irritating disappointment, Kanye West has launched a clothing line encouraging black voters to cut ties with the Democratic Party. As Stereogum points out, Trump’s go-to hip-hop artist debuted shirts with the words “Blexit” or “Black Exit” during Turning Point USA’s Young Black Leadership Summit in Washington, D.C. this past Saturday. “Blexit is a renaissance and I am blessed to say that this logo, these colors, were created by my dear friend and fellow superhero Kanye West,” Turning Point USA spokeswoman Candice Owens announced at the event, which she organized (via Page Six). “[West] has taken one of the boldest steps in America to open a conversation we have needed to have.” In an interview with Breitbart, Owens says the design was a collaboration between the two of them. “Me and Kanye had been in constant contact for months,” she says. “I showed him the Blexit design that I had started to create. He paused for what felt like 10 excruciating minutes, looked at me, smiled, and said, ‘You know the greatest designer of all-time and you didn’t ask me for help?'” Owens says West “felt like something was missing from the design,” and flew her out “from Philadelphia to Africa,” where he was visiting Uganda and meeting President Yoweri Museveni. “There was a real rooted tribal vibe and hora around us,” she recounts. “That feeling of going back to our homeland, being in Africa — the feeling of family and togetherness that we as a people have moved away from — motivated Kanye and inspired what came to be the Blexit design.” Shop Blexit Eventually, West introduced Owens to a designer who reworked the design. “The Blexit design reflects the deep-seated humanity and harmony we felt in Uganda,” Owens explains. “It’s that humanity you see in the artwork. The bodies represent us all bending and binding together as a people to bring healing to our communities and real lasting change. That’s what this movement represents. That’s what was missing from the logo. That’s what we found in Africa.” West did not attend Saturday’s event, though his name is all over the campaign’s site currently selling the clothing. If you recall, West expressed his initial support for Owens earlier this year upon reactivating his Twitter, tweeting, “I love the way Candace Owens thinks.” If these designs are any indication, it would appear his feelings have hardly changed much in the months since. Let’s not forget, West is less than a week removed from resolving a debt for Chicago mayoral candidate Amara Enyia. Enyia is an avowed Democrat, whose campaign recently received a significant push from hometown hero and current West collaborator Chance the Rapper. Again, never a dull moment in the life of Ye. Source
  10. Fans brooding techno should be on alert with mysterious Gesaffelstein billboards appearing in cities around the world including hot spots Paris, New York and Los Angeles. It’s been a while between drinks for Gesaffelstein who’s last original release ‘Hate or Glory was penned way back in 2013 if you don’t include more recent collaborations with A$AP Rocky, Jean Michel Jarre and The Weeknd… cause why would ya! The images were shared across the ZONE records page – the label of Gesaffelstein and The Hacker and also by Bromance Records boss Brodinski who too has been rather quiet of late so here’s hoping for some solo work or collaboration. As life would have it, all good things come to those that wait so looks like we shouldn’t have to wait too much longer for some darker four-four slammers! Who remembers this gem? Source
  11. ‘Tis the season for tricks and treats. On Saturday, we reported how 50 Cent trolled Ja Rule by purchasing 200 tickets to one of his gigs on Groupon, all in the front row so that the seats would be empty come showtime. It’s probably the best thing 50 has done in years. Naturally, Ja Rule isn’t too happy about the gag, and as Complex reports, he’s now fired back. Sadly, he’s not as creative as 50; in fact, to prove how out of touch he is with current times, he’s resorted to lame photoshop memes that are incredibly transphobic. In the series of reworked photos he’s shared on his Instagram, Ja Rule portrays 50 Cent as either a trans woman or suggests that he has sex with trans women, all in a negative light that screams of toxic masculinity and transphobia. It’s truly a pathetic response. Of course, like any ol’ bully, he tries to put up a front: I get under @50cent skin… I love it!!! #iconn — Ja Rule (@Ruleyork) October 28, 2018 This beef is a JOKE to everyone except this lil ape looking bitch… she mad mad!!! pic.twitter.com/l1nxY9e7GK — Ja Rule (@Ruleyork) October 28, 2018 Needless to say, 50 won this beef. Source
  12. 50 Cent’s trolling abilities are nothing short of legendary. His Instagram account has become a must-follow simply so you can see him roast his celebrity contemporaries all the while sounding like a dad who’s sending his kids a meme. His long-standing feud with early 2000’s rapper Ja Rule is perhaps one of his most famous beefs, and aside from the Dave Chappelle sketch it might be the thing Ja is most known for. Now, in a brand new development, it looks like 50 has upped his trolling game to the highest of levels by purchasing over 200 front row seats for a total of $3K off Groupon, purely so he could leave them empty and embarrass Ja Rule. Now, that’s dedication to being a petty fucker. 50 even developed an artistic rendering of the event, which quite simply might be one of the greatest images to have ever graced the internet. As much as you love the man, it’s quite easy to see how he was shot 9 times. Source
  13. The Pitch: Singapore, 1992. Sandi Tan, a young artist, and her friends Jasmine Ng and Sophia Siddique Harvey came together to make a movie. After years of trying to break into the boys’ club of Singapore’s underground art scene, the DIY collective began work on Shirkers, a hyper-experimental feature about memory, aging, innocence lost, violence, and a great deal more. They did this with the help of a mysterious cinephile named Georges Cardona, who would one day disappear into the ether with the entirety of Shirkers in his possession. As Tan journeys to figure out what happened to Cardona and to the film, she’s faced with the failings of her own past, the dramatic changes in Singapore, and the pain of artistic non-fulfillment alike. What is a Film?: Shirkers is the kind of adventurous filmmaking that renders so many other bone-dry documentaries all the more tedious by comparison. Sandi Tan’s film manages to be so much more than a chronicle of an already incredible story, the story of a lost could-have-been arthouse masterpiece brought to vivid, reconstructed life. It’s adept at being that as well, but Tan quickly establishes that Shirkers the documentary will be every bit as ambitious as Shirkers the film once was. It’s at once a home movie, a portrait of a changing Singapore before it changed even more dramatically in the following years, and a story of a lost film. It’s also the story of the making of that film, the ways in which it affected the principals involved, and a portrait of Sandi Tan the artist in her later years. It’s often most of those things at once, and it’s a testament to Tan’s assured direction that Shirkers always holds firm. It’s the kind of film that interrogates itself even as it’s unfolding, and if this occasionally lends Shirkers an unwieldy quality, Tan likewise uses that winding shapelessness to compelling effect. Some of the most compelling moments come not from the “story” itself, which is wild enough, but in Tan wrestling with the effect that both time and her own approach to art have had on the people close to her. It’s not often that you see a documentary feature one of its subjects interrogating the intentions of its filmmaker, but part of “finishing” Shirkers involves the same kind of fearlessness that led to its creation. If that means Tan swinging the moral pendulum back in her own direction, so be it. The Trials of Memory: Shirkers may spend a great deal of its runtime dealing in the same kind of genre-bending collage that Tan and Ng made their zine signature for years, but it’s also a thoroughly gutting story of bygone dreams and human cruelty at its center. Accordingly, this finds its way into the very rhythms of the movie; from the second Cardona appears onscreen, it’s clear that something is wrong with him. Eventually Shirkers gets around to exploring just how wrong it was, but long before then, there’s an undertone of Tan discovering a new version of her own life’s history as she goes along. It’s this challenge of memory that really elevates Shirkers into something special, because as Tan comes to understand, memory is never set in stone. It warps, and bends, and smooths out with time. We hang on to physical curios to remind us of the things we might lose otherwise, but sooner and later they all go. At least, that is, until something reaches out from the past and drags you back with such sterling clarity that you’re left stunned by how much you missed the first time around. The Verdict: You’ve likely gleaned by now that Shirkers isn’t your everyday documentary about movies, or movie about movies. Yet in its singular way, it’s also a great entry into that same canon, a movie about the type of imagination capable of creating a great movie. It’s about how reality invades our dreams, and how the people we trust teach us to be less trusting as we get older. Tan plays these themes out with a rare emotional honesty, never allowing the fact that it’s a deeply personal work to prevent her from indicting herself alongside any of the other key players involved. Shirkers is an unbelievable true story, but it’s also one far too common to the world. As women continue to find more and more space to tell these stories, it won’t be surprising if we see many more kind of like it: a young woman has an incredible artistic idea, and a man figures out a way to interrupt and overwhelm it. There are likely thousands upon thousands of untold stories similar to Tan’s, and thanks to this film, at least one is out there. But while the truth is in pursuit, at long last, there are so many films like Shirkers, the Lynchian 1992 punk rock film from Singapore, that’ll just never see the light of day, for one reason or another. To diminish somebody’s art is to diminish their very existence, and although we always talk about the importance of upholding that art, we always seem to keep doing it anyway. Where’s It Playing?: Shirkers is available to stream now on Netflix. Trailer: Source
  14. In a turn of events that made partygoers and fun-enjoyers alike have an excited twitch, earlier this month it was announced that there had been some considerable chat amongst Sydney policy-makers suggesting that the city’s notorious Lockout Laws could be scrapped as soon as the end of the year. As reported by 9News, Deputy Premier John Barilaro, with the support of eight cabinet members, is allegedly pushing for 1.30am lockouts to be lifted in Sydney’s CBD altogether, in line with the completion of Transport NSW’s Light Rail project. The proposition does not include any kind of change to the Kings Cross precinct. My first experience with Kings Cross came two weeks after my eighteenth birthday, where I visited the precinct to do my first shift at a nightclub I’d end up working at for about four years, through the period when the lockouts came into effect. At that point Kings Cross to me felt like some kind of drug-riddled and dirty adult Disneyland – gross, glamorous and exciting in equal measure. I soon became pretty used to leaving work between 4-7am and going out for a staffie at the Goldfish or Dive Bar in the basement of Kings Cross Hotel, emerging exhausted and giggling when the Potts Point fit crowd were well into their morning jogs. I remember sitting in a staff meeting when we were told that we might have to stop using glassware at the bar with a manager whom, shaking his head, said it would be a huge issue for the business and our venue’s aesthetic. The fact that we thought that change could be devastating for us seems darkly hilarious to me now as I go for a walk and take some snaps of my old hangouts. [Image: Just opposite the famous Coca-Cola sign, this is what Goldfish bar looks like now, a shady basement for an obnoxiously-shaped Woolworths and a new apartment complex.] As Glenda Kwek writes in her SMH article, ‘Passion and Violence: the birth of Kings Cross’, ‘strip clubs, night clubs, prostitution and drug trade’ have always characterised Kings Cross, a home to the poor and the wealthy, a meeting place for subcultures of all types and a place where authors were inspired (this same article just caused me to discover Louis Nowra’s book titled In the Gutter … Looking at the Stars: A Literacy Adventure through Kings Cross and I feel like that sounds fucking great). It’s obviously problematic to overly romanticise Kings Cross as some troubled wonderland, I don’t need to remind anyone that it’s often been a place of death, violence and tragedy. But despite a varied history and a troubled reputation, does this mean that we should simply accept losing such a significant historical place to gentrification and development? [Image: The old Beach Haus is now a pop-up restaurant.] According to Time Out Australia’s Managing Director Michael Rodrigues, 176 venues have closed their doors since the lockout laws came into effect, and it’s clear that a decent slab of those were based in the Kings Cross area. Indeed, Kings Cross Liquor Accord chief executive Doug Grand told the Daily Telegraph that of the original 35 ‘high risk’ venues named by the Department of Liquor and Gaming when the laws were introduced, more than 50 per cent have now closed. Anyone who has visited the area in the past few years on a Friday or Saturday night would recognise the situation as totally devastating to bars and nightclubs. Big businesses unsurprisingly seem to be going ok though, with the arrival of the aforementioned Woolworths Metro and new apartment blocks rising rapidly before our eyes. Kings Cross’ surviving rugged elements now seem extremely out of place. Nathan Jolly of The Industry Observer describes the situation best as he writes, “killing the nightlife from this area kills local trade, and those long-term lease holders that were blocking development are forced out of business; venues, cafes, and takeaways that rely upon a thriving nighttime economy quickly shut down, and high-rise buildings in multi-million dollar locations are build, sold, and begin to decimate the life of the area.” Sydney has been an increasingly uninhabitable place for young people over the last decade and in my mid twenties I’m definitely feeling the brunt of this, but I’m glad that I had the chance to work and play in the time bracket that the lockouts now shadow. I wondered how a person who turned 18 after the lockouts had come into effect feels about the pre-lockout world and Kings Cross. “It was frustrating to watch our government implement policy that was clearly going to be both destructive and ineffective without the voting power to do anything about it,” says Isa, a DJ and FBi Radio presenter who turned 18 just one year after the lockout laws were put in place. “It felt a bit like watching someone throw your meal in the bin before you’d had a chance to take a bite.” “Hearing friends refer to 2-4am slots as peak times to play, stories of venue hopping until 6am, seeing pictures of the sheer number of people out and about stings both as a punter and as someone who wants to make their living in nightlife.” [Image: Known for a long time as the Bank Hotel, this venue wore many hats throughout the Lockout law period, finally closing after living it’s final iteration as Zoo Project.] As two people who both love music and nightlife, it’s clear our experience of Kings Cross is vastly different, and I appreciate it when she says, “I think the Cross can be difficult to get people out to partially because of lock outs, partially because of inadequate public transport, and partially because the dejection that ‘it’s not what it used to be’.” This last point alone must deter a lot of post-Lockout-ers and yet I can’t help but find myself thinking it (and, let’s face it, often saying it to young people) a shitload. Because it in reality, Kings Cross just ISN’T what it used to be. Which leads me to ask two questions; the first being – why the hell not just lift the lockout laws on the Kings Cross precinct as well? If the thinking behind John Barilaro’s reform is to support businesses that have been smashed by the laws and see some kind of return to inner-city nightlife, why not extend it to those still operating in all neighbouring precincts? To have a city that re-opens all nightlife precincts apart from one seems not only extremely dismissive of the businesses still operating in Kings Cross but also confusing to visitors of Sydney and increasingly incongruous with a cultural landscape. At this point, with so many closed businesses now bought out by major developments which will no doubt continue to thrive, Kings Cross is incredibly unlikely to return to its former environment – why not extend an olive branch to the last few nightlife businesses who can get people in the door and pay the rent? My second question is, if the lockouts on the rest of the city are lifted and remain on Kings Cross, what will it look like after five more lockout-bound years? Will it come to resemble a Waterloo-style high-rise haven? Will there be any venues remaining that don’t cater to wealthy professionals only? Will there be any place at all for low-income earners or subcultural outsiders? Will there be any resemblance to the strange, scary and exciting place it was just one decade before? _________________________________________________________________________ Writer’s Note: Thanks to Isa for her input on this article and a reminder to all to support the remaining businesses in the Kings Cross precinct that are doing great things despite a supremely crappy situation, “The Cross definitely still has a place in Sydney’s nightlife – The World Bar are putting on consistently strong line ups and the Kings Cross Hotel is an awesome one-night festival kind of venue.” To find other places around the city where you can support the businesses who support awesome nightlife, check out Isa’s recommendations; “Faster by Caitlin Medcalf (a 160+bpm bonanza) is running out of the Oxford Art Factory Gallery, Freda’s in Chippendale have amazing midweek art/music events like Between Two Worlds, Tokyo Singsong in Newtown is home to Irregular Fit, Makes Sense, CHC, and more. I’m keen to check out Extra Spicy as well, and they’re everywhere from Candy’s Apartment in the Cross to Civic Underground in the CBD. Lots of cool stuff is happening out West too. Even though locks out are making it harder to draw a crowd, Sydney still has something interesting happening in just about every corner.” Follow Isa on Facebook and SoundCloud. Source
  15. It’s a big day for Steve Aoki. On top of announcing the release date (November 9) and tracklist (below) for Neon Future III, he also just put out a new single from the album with one of the biggest pop groups in the world: BTS. BTS and Aoki began their musical relationship back in 2017, when Steve remixed BTS’s hit song “MIC Drop” with Desiigner, taking the hit to #1 on the Billboard charts, the highest-charting song by a K-pop group in US history. Now, they’re back together on an official collaboration. “We’re happy for this meaningful and heart-felt collaboration,” said BTS. “The song is just so amazing, we really enjoyed working on it. It’s our first song that is entirely in English. It was refreshing and fun to record the song. We hope this would be a good present for our fans.” “I’m so psyched to share this collaboration with one of the most exciting and inspiring group of guys I’ve met in the past few years,” said Aoki. “It’s an absolute honor to work with them once again on ‘Waste It On Me.’ I can’t wait for my fans to hear what’s in store for them next on this third installment of Neon Future.” In addition to the BTS collaboration, we also have the full tracklist for Neon Future III which includes “Just Hold On” with Louis Tomlinson, “Pretender” with Lil Yachty & AJR, and “Be Somebody” with Nicky Romero and Kiiara. Along with all the songs already released, we’re also getting collaborations with blink-182, Mike Posner, Jim Adkins of Jimmy Eat World, Lady Antebellum, Bella Thorne, and Bill Nyefirst teased. Yes, we’re finally getting the collaboration all the way back in 2015. This is probably our most anticipated Neon Future installment yet! Check the full tracklist below and click here to pre-order the album. Steve Aoki – Neon Future III Steve Aoki – Neon Future III (Intro) Steve Aoki & Louis Tomlinson – Just Hold On Steve Aoki – Waste It On Me ft. BTS Steve Aoki & Nicky Romero – Be Somebody ft. Kiiara Steve Aoki – Pretender ft. Lil Yachty & AJR Steve Aoki – A Lover And A Memory ft. Mike Posner Steve Aoki – Why Are We So Broken ft. blink-182 Steve Aoki – Golden Days ft. Jim Adkins of Jimmy Eat World Steve Aoki – Our Love Glows ft. Lady Antebellum Steve Aoki – Anything More ft. Era Istrefi Steve Aoki x Lauren Jauregui – All Night Steve Aoki – Do Not Disturb ft. Bella Thorne Steve Aoki – Lie To Me ft. Ina Wroldsen Steve Aoki, Daddy Yankee, Play-N-Skillz & Elvis Crespo – Azukita Steve Aoki & TWIIG – Hoovela Steve Aoki & Don Diablo x Lush & Simon – What We Started ft. BullySongs Steve Aoki – Noble Gas ft. Bill Nye Photo via Rukes.com This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Steve Aoki Announces Date and Tracklist for Highly Anticipated ‘Neon Future III’ Source
  16. Tiësto just unleashed “Grapevine” — a straight up powerhouse single featuring vocal sampling of the legend Marvin Gaye. First dropped at Ultra Music Festival in Miami this year, fans have been patiently waiting for the track’s official release ever since. As he samples “I Heard It Through The Grapevine,” Tiësto delivers on a high-octane production. Tapping into his own bold breed of bass house, we’re able to experience Marvin Gaye’s classic in a new, updated way. Overall, the track is relatively simple. But, sometimes simplicity is key and here the vocals take the lead. With a running time of just 2 minutes and 30 seconds, this heater is a burst of flames and then gone in a flash. The track has already proved itself during Tiësto’s massive live sets as a real crowd pleaser. Now, allow it to be the party starter for your weekend. Do you think Tiësto does Marvin Gaye justice here? Let us know what you think of “Grapevine!” Tiësto – Grapevine Photo via Rukes.com This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Tiësto Samples Marvin Gaye Classic In New Single “Grapevine” [LISTEN] Source
  17. Massive collabs move us toward Halloween, including some really unexpected pairings. A massive EDM icon teams up with a steady producer and a legendary alt-rock vocalist. Another EDM icon teams up with a bass house maestro. Yet another EDM icon meets a Fifth Harmony member. Woah.  Release Spotlight Martin Garrix, meet Pierce Fulton. In case that didn’t surprise you enough: Garrix and Fulton, meet Linkin Park vocalist and rapper Mike Shinoda. What a collab. Titled “Waiting For Tomorrow,” this is a bit bittersweet given LP’s Chester Bennington‘s suicide last year. JOYRYDE teams up with OWSLA label boss Skrillex for “AGEN WIDA,” a highly anticipated collab. Spoilers: it’s worth the wait. Calvin Harris features prominently on Fifth Harmony’s Normani‘s new single “Checklist.” Fellow vocalist WizKid also makes a welcome appearance. Major Lazer marches toward the end, but not before featuring Tove Lo on a new collab. “Blow That Smoke” is another welcome addition to the Major Lazer canon. Basshunter….a name you haven’t heard in a long time? The dance music producer releases the new track “Masterpiece.” We’ll let you decide if the track deserves its name. This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: New: Martin Garrix, JOYRYDE & Skrillex, Normani & Calvin Harris – Your EDM | Week In Music Source
  18. Malaa — the most menacing masked producer in the game — has unleashed yet another thrilling production. More than just a single, “We Get Crunk” marks the third track off his forthcoming Illegal Mixtape Vol. 2 compilation. Fair warning, “We Get Crunk” is ridiculously smooth and oh so repeatable. The song finds a happy medium between the dark house style Malaa is best known for and that trendy, party tech-house that’s all the rave right now. This one goes clubby, unmasking a supremely clean, bass-heavy dance floor heater that will surely go off during his live sets. Speaking of which, Malaa’s 2018 Illegal Tour is almost upon us. The 11-date run kicks off at the Russell Industrial Center in Detroit next Friday and we already know it’s going to be wild. He lets us in on a little of that club action early with “We Get Crunk” heard here. Listen and check out tour dates below. Tickets are on sale now. Malaa – We Get Crunk Get it: http://smarturl.it/WEGETCRUNK TOUR DATES NOV 2 RUSSELL INDUSTRIAL CENTER DETROIT, MI NOV 3 NEW CITY GAS MONTREAL, QC NOV 8 CONCORD MUSIC HALL CHICAGO, IL NOV 9 CONCORD MUSIC HALL CHICAGO, IL NOV 15 CONCOURSE PHILADELPHIA, PA NOV 16 IRONWOOD HALL AUSTIN, TX NOV 17 CANTON HALL DALLAS, TX DEC 7 TO BE ANNOUNCED DEC 8 45 EAST PORTLAND, OR DEC 14 TO BE ANNOUNCED DEC 15 SHOWBOX SODO SEATTLE, WA Photo via Rukes.com This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Malaa Rides The Tech-House Wave with New Single “We Get Crunk” [LISTEN] Source
  19. Snapchat is bringing its famous filters to a computer near you… Because, it’s 2018 and all and we need puppy faces during conference calls. Snap prides itself on being a “camera company,” not just a social media platform. The next big move is bringing that technology to Windows and Mac. Soon enough, apps like YouTube, Skype, Zoom and Twitch will all have those recognizable filters we have come to know and love. Looking at the bigger picture, Snapchat says it has 250,000 lenses to date. And the even bigger picture — they’ve been viewed 15 billion times. This definitely puts into perspective what a huge mark Snapchat has made on our vision. Snap’s head of camera platform Eitan Pilipski says, “We think this a very unique opportunity, bringing Snapchat AR experiences to the desktop.” That’s a huge understatement. He continues, “It’s going to shape our roadmap in ways that we really don’t understand right now.” We’ll have to see how this all plays out on desktop. Happy Snapping! Source: The Verge This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Snapchat Is Bringing Lenses To YouTube, Skype & More Source
  20. On October 20, 2018 — AMF in Amsterdam owned the night. The iconic festival, and its 400,000 ravers from more than 100 countries got together to celebrate music in absolute epic fashion. David Guetta, Dimitri Vegas & Like Mike, Axwell Λ Ingrosso, Lost Frequencies, KSHMR, Vici Vici, W&W and many more took the stage. To to top it all off Martin Garrix was announced as the #1 DJ in the world, live from AMF. “We rave to escape reality. The one place that no matter who we are, or what star we have, and the dance floor becomes a paradise. Where all are welcome and none are judged. That moment when we close our eyes and just feel the bass pulsate through our entire body. As we dance to the rhythm of the music. This is where we belong.” Watch as the people of AMF 2018 rave like there’s no tomorrow. AMF 2018 Aftermovie This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: AMF 2018 Drew In 400,000 Ravers From 100 Countries [AFTERMOVIE] Source
  21. While the US is worrying about hackers with the midterm elections growing closer, over in Brussels, another major breach was experienced by Tomorrowland. According to a report by Brussels Times, hackers were able to infiltrate the festival’s systems and obtain the data and personal information of 64,000 attendees. If it’s any consolation, the information obtained was from those attending in 2014; additionally, no information such as payment credentials was taken. The information stolen included names, addresses, age, postcode and gender. “The managers of the Paylogic ticketing system noticed some unusual activity on an older system,” spokesperson Debby Wilmsen told De Standaard. “After careful analysis it appeared that an old database from Tomorrowland 2014 was concerned. The server in question was immediately taken offline.” Everyone effected by the breach will be informed of the incident by email. Users are advised to change their passwords as a general rule of safety. This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: Hackers Steal Data of Over 60,000 Tomorrowland Attendees Source
  22. An all-star tribute concert honoring Courtney Love took place at Basilica Hudson in Hudson, New York on Saturday night. Several music luminaries participated in the event, including R.E.M.’s Michael Stipe, The National’s Aaron Dessner, and Love’s Hole bandmate, Melissa Auf der Maur, who also served as the event’s producer and creative director. At one point in the evening, Love and Auf der Maur reunited on stage to perform classic Hole songs including “Doll Parts”, “Miss World”, and “Softer Softest”. It marked the first time Love and Auf der Maur had shared the stage since Hole’s two-song reunion performance in 2012. Watch fan-captured footage below. Source
  23. Swedish House Mafia are building up the hype of their comeback one countdown at a time. The first counted down to a press conference, during which shared they are officially back in studio and performing together. Which, we already knew, but hearing it straight from the source — the news sounds even better. The last timers set on the group’s website led to the announce of three Stockholm shows. Now, there’s another set to end over a week from now. It could be new music, or another show, or a full-on world tour for all we know. Anything is possible when it’s Swedish House Mafia. So far, the group is set to perform a 3-night run at Tele2 Stadium in Stockholm, Sweden next May. The next timer is set to end on November 6, 2018 at 15:00:00 UTC. Keep your eyes on SHM’s official website here. Watch their presser with English subtitles below. Swedish House Mafia – Press Conference 2018 Photo via Rukes.com This article was first published on Your EDM. Source: There’s Another Countdown On Swedish House Mafia’s Website Source
  24. The Electric Lady delivered a forceful reminder for why her latest release, Dirty Computer, deserves consideration for Album of the Year. Appearing on the Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Thursday night, Janelle Monáe staged a spectacular performance of “Make Me Feel”, complete with choreographed dancing and a finely-tuned backing band. Catch the replay below. Back in July, Monáe appeared on the Late Show and danced on Colbert’s desk while performing “The Americans”. Recently, she was cast in both Focus Features’ Harriet Tubman biopic and Disney’s live-action remake of Lady and the Tramp. Source
  25. Next month, Chicago rapper Cupcakke will return with her second album of 2018. Following January’s release of Ephorize, Eden is due out November 9th. In the months following Ephorize’s release, Cupcakke dropped a pair of singles in “Quiz” and “Hot Pockets” and also hopped on a remix of Kelela’s “LMK”. New album “Eden” 11/9/18 pic.twitter.com/LSsbnZYQY5 — Marilyn MonHOE (@CupcakKe_rapper) October 26, 2018 Source
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