Friday, May 30, 2025

Punk/pop band Cartel celebrates 20th anniversary of 'Chroma' with reimagined album, Warped and headline tour dates

Alternative rock band Cartel has unveiled “Honestly – 2025,” a re-recording of their hit single from the 2005 album Chroma. Fans can listen now here

“Honestly – 2025” will be featured on Chroma – 2025, an updated version of the album out later this year in celebration of Chroma’s 20th anniversary.

On “Honestly – 2025” front man Will Pugh shares: “Bigger, Louder, Prouder. We aspired to bring the energy from our live performances to this one. After 20 years, I think we figured it out!”

Chroma - 2025 will be released on September 12 via Field Day Records. Vinyl pre-orders are available now at fielddayrecords.com.

In addition to the release of Chroma - 2025 Cartel will be embarking on a North American headline tour this fall, kicking off with the album release on September 12th in Charlotte. The tour features stops in Nashville, Brooklyn, Toronto, Chicago, Seattle, San Diego, Austin, and more, concluding with a hometown headline show in Atlanta. Tickets and VIP packages can be purchased at www.chroma20.com.

Prior to their fall headline tour, fans can catch Cartel at the Vans Warped Tour on June 14-15 in Washington, D.C. and July 26-27 in Long Beach, CA.

Chroma - 2025 tracklist:

1.) Say Anything (Else) - 2025
2.) Honestly - 2025
3.) Runaway - 2025
4.) Burn This City - 2025
5.) Save Us - 2025
6.) Luckie St. - 2025
7.) Settle Down - 2025
8.) Matter of Time - 2025
9.) If I Fail - 2025
10.) The Minstrel's Prayer - 2025
11.) Q&A (feat. Cassadee Pope) - 2025

Tour Dates:

6/14-6/15 – Washington, DC @ Vans Warped Tour
7/26-727 – Long Beach, CA @ Vans Warped Tour
9/12 – Charlotte, NC @ Underground #&
9/13 – Nashville, TN @ Marathon Music #&
9/15 – Richmond, VA @ The Broadberry #&
9/16 – Baltimore, MD @ Baltimore Sound Stage #&
9/17 – Brooklyn, NY @ Warsaw #&
9/19 – Philadelphia, PA @ TLA #&
9/20 – Boston, MA @ Paradise #&
9/22 – Toronto, ON @ Opera House #&
9/23 – Detroit, MI @ St. Andrews Hall #&
9/24 – Cleveland, OH @ House Of Blues #&
9/26 – Chicago, IL @ House Of Blues #
9/27 – Milwaukee, WI @ Rave #^
9/28 – Minneapolis, MN @ Amsterdam #^
9/30 – St. Louis, MO @ The Pageant #^
10/1 – Kansas City, MO @ Truman #^
10/3 – Denver, CO @ Summit #^
10/4 – Salt Lake City, UT @ The Depot #^
10/6 – Seattle, WA @ El Corazon #^
10/7 – Portland, OR @ Hawthorne #^
10/9 – San Francisco, CA @ August Hall #^
10/10 – Santa Ana, CA @ Observatory #^
10/11 – San Diego, CA @ HOB #^
10/12 – Phoenix, AZ @ Van Buren #^
10/14 – Dallas, TX @ Echo #^
10/15 – Austin, TX @ Mohawk #^
10/17 – Orlando, FL @ The Beacham #
10/18 – Tampa, FL @ The Ritz #
10/19 – Fort Lauderdale, Florida @ Revolution #
10/25 – Atlanta, GA @ Masquerade (Heaven) #

# - Hunny
& - Landon Conrath
^ - Macseal

Out now: The eponymous debut album by The Speaker Wars featuring Stan Lynch (ex-Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers)

Stan Lynch, Rock and Roll Hall of Famer, drummer and founding member of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, has released the self-titled debut of his new band The Speaker Wars. 

After two decades of recording and touring multiple albums with The Heartbreakers, Lynch moved to the other side of the recording console and shifted his focus to production and songwriting. Over the years, he has written and produced hits for artists in multiple genres, including the Eagles, Don Henley, Tim McGraw, The Mavericks, Ringo Starr, The Byrds, Toto, and The Fabulous Thunderbirds.

While writing in Nashville, a publisher introduced Lynch to Texas singer-songwriter, Jon Christopher Davis, who was gathering material for a solo record on a major label. After accumulating an album’s worth of songs, Jon abandoned working on a solo record and the two decided to start a band to perform the newly created material. They added Jay Michael Smith on guitar, Brian Patterson on bass, Steve Ritter on percussion, and Jay Brown on keyboards.

Watch the Debut Music Video for The Speaker Wars' “You Make Every Lie Come True” HERE

Stan Lynch says:

"After my 20-year tenure with the Heartbreakers, I got a second act writing and producing. It was educational beyond measure to learn how to create music from the other side of the glass. Around this time, I met Jon Christopher Davis in Nashville who casually mentioned that we should start a band –– so here I am –– in The Speaker Wars and it's good to have my old job back. The guys in our new band know how to make great music, and I'm looking forward to another round.”

Pre-Order 'The Speaker Wars' HERE

Track List:

1. You Make Every Lie Come True
2. It Ain't Easy
3. Taste Of Heaven
4. Never Ready To Go
5. The Forgiveness Tree
6. When The Moon Cries Wolf
7. Trader's South
8. Leave Him
9. Sit With My Soul
10. I Wish You Peace

Photo courtesy Frontiers Records

Thursday, May 29, 2025

Talking Heads reissue news

Talking Heads’ second album, More Songs About Buildings and Food, returns July 25 as a Super Deluxe Edition from Rhino. Released as the band celebrates its 50th anniversary, the collection marks the first of three albums produced with Brian Eno.

The 3CD/1Blu-ray Super Deluxe Edition features the remastered album alongside 11 rarities, including four previously unreleased alternate versions of album tracks. One of those, “Found A Job,” is available digitally today ahead of the full release. Listen Now.

The set also includes a live recording of the band’s August 1978 show at New York’s Entermedia Theatre. Footage from that show and another at Sproul Plaza at the University of California, Berkeley, both appear on the Blu-ray. 

Additionally, there are Dolby ATMOS and 5.1 surround sound mixes by E.T. Thorngren and group member Jerry Harrison, plus a high-resolution stereo version of the album. A 60-page hardcover book rounds out the package, with previously unseen photos and new liner notes with recollections from Tina Weymouth, David Byrne, Chris Frantz, and Harrison.

A 4LP vinyl version of the Super Deluxe Edition, also available July 25, features the remastered album, rarities, and the New York concert recordings. A second version—available exclusively at TalkingHeadsOfficial.com—includes reissues of four international 7” singles: U.S., U.K., and Japanese versions of “Take Me To The River,” plus “The Good Thing,” from the Netherlands. Each comes in a reproduction picture sleeve, all packaged alongside the 4LP set in a custom die-cut folio. Pre-order HERE.

Additional Deluxe Editions will be available on 2LP black vinyl with a red vinyl pressing offered at TakingHeadsOfficial.com and select indie retailers. Both feature the remastered album and a selection of rarities.

Originally released on July 14, 1978, More Songs About Buildings and Food earned the band their first appearance on the Billboard 200. Their reimagining of Green’s “Take Me To The River” cracked the Billboard Hot 100 and became a radio success, helping introduce the band to a wider audience. At the time, critics took note of the album’s songwriting and Eno’s layered production—with The New York Times naming it the “No. 1 disk of 1978” and Vogue calling Talking Heads the “most fascinating experimental rock band in the world.”

The new release launches a yearlong celebration of Talking Heads’ 50th anniversary. 

MORE SONGS ABOUT BUILDINGS AND FOOD (SUPER DELUXE EDITION)

3CD/1BR Track Listing

CD One: 
Original Album (2025 Remaster)“

Thank You For Sending Me An Angel”
“With Our Love”
“The Good Thing”
“Warning Sign”
“The Girls Want To Be With The Girls”
“Found A Job”
“Artists Only”
“I’m Not In Love”
“Stay Hungry”
“Take Me To The River”
“The Big Country”

CD Two: 
Rarities

“Thank You For Sending Me An Angel” (Alternate Version)
“With Our Love” (Alternate Version) *
“Found A Job” (Alternate Version) *
“The Good Thing” (Alternate Version) *
“Warning Sign” (Alternate Version)
“Electricity” (Instrumental)
“The Girls Want To Be With The Girls” (Alternate Version) *
“I’m Not In Love” (Alternate Version)
“Artists Only” (Alternate Version)
“The Big Country” (Alternate Version)
“Thank You For Sending Me An Angel” (“Country Angel” Version)

CD Three: 
Live At Entermedia Theater, New York, NY (August 10, 1978)

“No Compassion” *
“Warning Sign” *
“The Book I Read” *
“Stay Hungry” *
“Artists Only” *
“The Girls Want To Be With The Girls” *
“Uh-Oh, Loves Comes To Town” *
“With Our Love” *
“Love Goes To A Building On Fire” *
“Don’t Worry About The Government” *
“The Good Thing” *
“Electricity”*
“The Big Country” *
“New Feeling” *
“Pulled Up” *
“Psycho Killer” *
“Take Me To The River” *
“Found A Job” *
“Thank You For Sending Me An Angel” *

Blu-Ray
Audio: Hi-Res Stereo, 5.1 & Atmos Mix of original album (2025 Remaster)
Video: Concert Footage

Live at Entermedia Theater, 1978“Uh-Oh, Loves Comes To Town” *
“The Girls Want To Be With The Girls” *
“The Good Thing” *
“Take Me To The River” *
“Found A Job” *
“Thank You For Sending Me An Angel” *

Live At Sproul Plaza (Berkeley), 1978“The Big Country” *
“Warning Sign” *
“The Book I Read” *
“Stay Hungry” *
“Artists Only” *
“The Girls Want To Be With The Girls” *
“The Good Thing” *
“Uh-Oh, Loves Comes To Town” *
“Psycho Killer” *
“I’m Not In Love” *
“Pulled Up” *

Wednesday, May 28, 2025

Cruel World Festival 2025 Review: Pasadena, Calif. feat. Garbage, OMD, 'Til Tuesday, the Go-Go's, Alison Moyet, Midge Ure, Madness, Blancmange, Actors, more

Photo: George A. Paul
Halfway through Garbage’s set on Saturday at Cruel World, Shirley Manson (pictured left) confessed how honored she felt to share a stage with so many “all-time heroes” who served as a musical lifeline while growing up in Scotland during the Seventies.

The Edinburgh native cited Madness, Alison Moyet, ‘Til Tuesday and OMD, before adding “this is a dream come true.” Manson also admitted she was a bit disappointed about performing at the same time as Devo but still shouted “We love you” to the energy dome-sporting group drawing a large audience away from everything else.  

For the fourth consecutive year, the Brookside at the Rose Bowl festival presented a well-rounded crop of more than two dozen punk, ska, new wave, goth, post-punk and alternative music acts. Most originated during the late 1970s and ‘80s; other like-minded artists in the Pasadena lineup emerged later.

As usual, plenty of Cruel World attendees were decked out in their finest black leather, studded or fishnet attire; New Order and Devo gear was abundant. Due to the dreary and rainy conditions, multiple U.K. musicians jokingly apologized for bringing typical British weather to Southern California with them.  

New Order closed the main Outsiders stage with a satisfactory set lasting just over an hour. This past Sunday (May 18) marked 45 years since the untimely passing of Joy Division singer Ian Curtis. So, New Order including three selections from singer/guitarist Bernard Sumner and drummer Stephen Morris’ former musical incarnation seemed particularly poignant (even though it’s been a common occurrence in concert).

Yet Sumner’s subdued delivery on “Transmission” and “Isolation” wasn’t up to par; somewhat livelier arrangements didn’t help. Two of New Order’s finest career moments, “Age of Consent” and “Regret,” came across marginal at best. At least the new live remixes on “State of the Nation” (which Sumner described as a protest song), “True Faith” and “Bizarre Love Triangle” were a change of pace. The band redeemed itself toward the end with solid renditions of ‘80s dance club classics “Blue Monday” and “Temptation.”

Co-headliner Nick Cave wasted no time getting up close and personal with people up against the Outsiders stage. The Aussie vocalist and The Bad Seeds opened their set with two majestic, spiritually minded selections off 2024’s Grammy-nominated Wild God. Prominent lyrics flashed on the screens. Both “Frogs” and the title track utilized four backing singers well. Then came the sinister seven-minute-long “Tupelo” – the band’s second-ever single in 1985, loosely based on Elvis Presley’s birth. A bunch of musicians (including Radiohead bassist Colin Greenwood) built the music into a frenetic crescendo. Cave delivered it like a man possessed. It felt like witnessing a baptism followed by an exorcism. 

Photo: R.Polack, Cruel World Courtesy Goldenvoice
The Go-Go’s performance, which capped a surprise six-date west coast run, could have been their last. 

Drawing a huge crowd at the medium-sized Sad Girls stage, the groundbreaking female pop/rockers battled some sound issues, but still turned in a fun, rousing set similar to Coachella Weekend 2 (the buoyant, harmonious “How Much More” was added here). 

Classic early photos, gig flyers and memorabilia again were fascinating to see on the screens.

When the women accidentally started playing two different songs, exuberant singer Belinda Carlisle quipped, “It’s just like The Masque days” (referencing an old L.A. punk club where the group got its start). Another amusingly moment came when the musicians were talking and drummer Gina Schock could be overheard on a microphone saying, “Does anyone want to play a song?”

Taking the stage to “Laura Palmer’s Theme” from TV’s “Twin Peaks,” Garbage launched one of Cruel World’s more riveting sets with a potent and relevant-as-ever “The Men Who Rule the World.” Manson, clad in a colorful outfit perfect for Mardi Gras, had a “take no prisoners” attitude as she sang and prowled the stage.

Despite the lead singer’s warning that “There’s No Future in Optimism” might not sound great because the musicians hadn’t rehearsed it much, the hypnotic first single from upcoming studio album Let All That We Imagine Be the Light (due out May 30) totally rocked. 

“Only Happy When It Rains,” definitely appropriate on this day, began as a slow piano ballad before transitioning to its regular tempo. Standouts included the ‘60s girl group-meets-industrial-sensibilities amid “When I Grow Up” - bassist Nicole Fiorentino (Veruca Salt, Smashing Pumpkins) was a welcome addition on backing vocals - a fierce “I Think I’m Paranoid,” the chugging “Cherry Lips (Go Baby Go),” and a propulsive “Push It,” which Manson prefaced by saying “Free Palestine!”  

Photo: George A. Paul
Alison Moyet was another Cruel World artist that projected strong “girl power” energy, albeit in a subtler way than Manson. 

Last year, the soulful Basildon, England pop singer released Key, an intriguing mix of reworked solo hits and deep album cuts. 

Backed in Pasadena by a guitarist/synth player and bassist, Moyet delivered a transcendent performance rife with robust vocals and slyly threw shapes that rivaled models at a fashion show.

The alluring synth-pop of “Nobody’s Diary” was the first of four hit songs Moyet played from her early days recording as Yazoo with Vince Clarke of Depeche Mode and Erasure. 

Elsewhere, the multi-faceted singer engaged in some intense electro-funk (“Changeling”), sinister industrial blues (“Beautiful Gun”), dramatic pop (“It Won’t Be Long,” “Love Resurrection”) and fun dancefloor faves that younger audience members probably first heard via frequent movie/TV placements or samples (Yazoo’s “Situation,” “Don’t Go”).  

Blancmange made its first North American concert appearance in 39 years at Cruel World. During the ‘80s, the London synth-pop duo, led by singer/songwriter Neil Arthur, charted a half a dozen U.K. top 40 singles. Some became staples at U.S. dance clubs and college/modern rock radio. Blancmange broke up in 1986, but reformed and put out a new studio album in 2011. 

Photo: George A. Paul
Arthur has recorded often since then. Now he’s touring behind Everything is Connected, a recent compilation with material spanning 1979-2024. In Pasadena, Arthur was skillfully accompanied by keyboardist/backing vocalist Tara Busch of I Speak Machine, which has recorded and toured with Gary Numan.

Dance-oriented new song “Again, I Wait for the World” was a pure adrenaline rush. Early on, Arthur, known for his dry wit, asked the crowd, “Where have I been all your lives?” The litany of thought-provoking questions and demands comprising 2017’s “What’s the Time” received a huge cheer when the singer ad libbed, “What’s the worst president you ever had?” The edgier David Bowie-styled thrust of “Some Times These” saw Arthur make dramatic, expressive gestures. The group’s best known Middle Eastern-tinged hits “Living on the Ceiling,” “Blind Vision” and “Don’t Tell Me” completed the set in fine fashion.

Earlier in the day, Sirius XM DJ Richard Blade (ex-KROQ-FM) enthusiastically introduced Midge Ure and gave uninitiated onlookers a rundown of the Scotsman’s CV including Ultravox, Visage, Band Aid and Thin Lizzy. Ure definitely got the Cruel World prize for dramatic, soaring vocals. He played electric guitar/synthesizer, while Charlie Round-Turner handled keyboards/ backing vocals and utilized various loops, samples and programmed drums (a format Ure dubbed “Band in a Box”).    

Ure’s aspirational 1985 solo British chart topper “If I Was,” complete with billowy synth and an agile guitar solo, was very uplifting and enthusiastically received. So was Ultravox’s “Hymn.” Before the pair started that band’s dynamic international top 5 single “Vienna,” a fan near this writer said, “I think I’m going to cry.” Ure thanked SoCal stations such as KROQ and 91X for being “brave enough to play” Visage’s exotic, still-mysterious sounding new wave classic “Fade to Grey” during the mid-‘80s. “Dancing with Tears in My Eyes” prompted a loud singalong at the end.    

‘Til Tuesday reunited at Cruel World after a 30+ year absence. Original singer/bassist Aimee Mann, guitarist Robert Holmes, keyboardist Joey Pesce and drummer Michael Hausman (augmented by longtime Mann collaborator Paul Bryan) sounded great together. 

Photo: K.Gladstein, Cruel World for Goldenvoice
Mann projected a cool demeanor throughout. The band’s harmonies were seamless amid the sleek new wave of “Love in a Vacuum” and she exclaimed, “These guys are delightful.” Comforting stripped down ballad “Coming Up Close” was a standout, along with regal minor hit “What About Love” and the sublime Elvis Costello co-written “Other End of the Telescope.”

Then Mann recounted how ‘Til Tuesday formed in Boston and how she used to work in a record store where The Cars’ Ric Ocasek was a frequent customer. “We all loved The Cars,” she admitted, before they played a wonderful cover of that group’s “Drive.” Mann mentioned a common denominator among Eighties acts trying to write the “most dramatic songs possible,” and followed with the examples “No More Crying” and “Don’t Watch Me Bleed.” Finally, the band performed signature hit “Voices Carry” (“this made us recognizable in airports all over America,” Mann said) and that familiar austere synth melody can send shivers down the spine.

Andy McCluskey’s onstage energy level never ceases to amaze. In fact, at different points during Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark‘s exuberant set, the singer/bassist made self-deprecating remarks about his age and unusual style of dancing. 

Photo: Cruel World for Goldenvoice
McCluskey (pictured left), 65, encouraged the crowd to pogo and sway along (instructing people to use two hands, “otherwise you look like Elon Musk”). The British synth-pop band, rounded out by keyboardist/vocalist/musical partner Paul Humphries and two other musicians - supplied a thoroughly engaging cavalcade of breezily endearing hit tunes like “If You Leave” (from the “Pretty in Pink” film soundtrack), “So in Love,” “Dreaming,” and “(Forever) Live and Die.” Occasionally, the sleek sonic sheen was given more heft with traditional drums and saxophone bits.

Impeccably dressed and utilizing a backdrop that displayed a map of London streets, Madness was as whimsical and unpredictable as ever - especially sax man Lee Thompson, who stripped off his poncho, clothes and shoes. The distinctly British ska/pop band was among the Cruel World artists with the longest tenures (since 1976) and original members (six).

Here, Madness sounded strong and prompted loud singalongs with American hits “Our House” and “It Must Be Love.” Singer Suggs told jokes, gave a little history and nods to both The Fall and Nick Lowe between other U.K. hits such as the festive “House of Fun,” jaunty music hall of “Baggy Trousers,” and punchy debut single “The Prince.” Onetime producer Clive Langer guested on guitar during the skanking frenzy of “Madness.”

She Wants Revenge excels at portraying the gritty side of life. In Pasadena, the L.A. darkwave duo of vocalist/guitarist Justin Warfield and multi-instrumentalist Adam Bravin were shrouded in smoke as they played songs from the 2000s eponymous and This is Forever albums at the Sad Girls stage. Warfield wore black pants adorned with golden ankh symbols while singing the gloomy “Rachael” and seedy “Out of Control” in monotone with eyes closed. Bravin announced a long-awaited follow up album is in the works, and they performed the promising rocker “Black Wax, My Love,” characterized by Warfield’s rapid-fire singing.

Photo: George A. Paul
Actors, a Vancouver post-punk band led by singer/guitarist Jason Corbett that formed in 2012, bore shades of The Mission and Sisters of Mercy during an impressive early afternoon set.

Highlights included the crystalline, danceable “We Don’t Have to Dance,” a dense, harrowing “Object of Desire” and haunting “Love U More.”  

Event organizer and Rose Bowl Operating Company donated $250,000 from Cruel World and the previous week’s Just Like Heaven festival to the Eaton Fire Relief and Recovery Fund)  

My review originally appeared at rockcellarmagazine.com.

Photos Courtesy of Goldenvoice as indicated.        

Tom Odell touts 'A Wonderful Life' in September

Award-winning and critically-acclaimed singer/songwriter Tom Odell set his new album, A Wonderful Life, for Sept. 5—pre-save HERE. He also shared a new song from the album, “Don’t Cry, Put Your Head On My Shoulder”—listen HERE and watch the official music video HERE.

Odell spent nine month fine-tuning lyrics for the album, on tour buses and trains, away from the stable home life he’d created. “I labored over every line,” says Odell. “I went in on those words every day, just refining and refining and refining. I can be a bit obsessive, and the obsessive part of me is probably the worst part of me and the bit that I would pay so much money for a therapist to tell me how to lose. But it’s also the bit that does not give up on songs.”

He will share songs from the album with fans on his headline European arena tour this fall. Odell is currently on the road with Billie Eilish for select European arena dates of the sold-out Hit Me Hard and Soft Tour and will support The Lumineers this summer for select U.S. arena dates of the Automatic World Tour. 

Ahead of his headline arena dates, Odell will also embark on a special run of intimate shows across the U.S. and Canada. These club performances provide fans a unique chance to see him in the smallest rooms he’s played in years. Purchase tickets at tomodell.com and see below for a complete list of dates.

A Wonderful Life was written partly as a reaction to the news cycle and “the sense, almost every week, that the world is ending in some capacity—which it is, for some people.” Odell’s lyrics channel the despair, frustration and helplessness in the modern world.

He recorded A Wonderful Life in Church Studios, HOXA and RAK Studios’ legendary Room One, the space that birthed classic albums from Radiohead, The Pogues, Ultravox and more. Odell and his band recorded everything live with the instruments “bleeding in on one another” for a more authentic sound.

In the past, Odell has won prestigious BRIT and Ivor Novello Awards. Though he first came to prominence as a chart-topping artist, it’s never been mainstream success that fuels him. “I never applied to the role of pop star, and I always felt like I was being perceived in the wrong way,” he says. 

As he’s committed further to his own vision—crafting intensely personal songs dealing with mental health struggles, body image issues and beyond—he’s seen the connections spread across the globe. “It alleviates some of the loneliness of existing,” he suggests of why his music has resonated so strongly, “which is what we’re all going through, together.”

Odell has amassed 31 million monthly listeners on Spotify and over 14 billion career streams. His sixth album Black Friday reached number five on Spotify’s Top Album Debut Global Chart and the title track has earned over 700 million combined streams since its late-2023 release. 

Fans also re-discovered his first ever single, 2012’s “Another Love,” which has become an anthem on TikTok to show solidarity with the people of Ukraine and soared to over four billion plays on Spotify alone. With more imminent from Odell, he continues to push boundaries and unite people through his art.

Track listing: 

1. Don’t Let Me Go
2. Don’t Cry, Put Your Head On My Shoulder
3. Prayer
4. Can We Just Go Home Now
5. Why Do I Always Want The Things I Can’t Have
6. Wonderful Life
7. Ugly
8. Strange House
9. Can Old Lovers Ever Be Friends?
10. The End of Suffering

Tour Dates: 

May 29—Cologne, DE—Lanxess Arena*
May 30—Cologne, DE— Lanxess Arena*
June 1—Prague, CZ—O2 Arena*
June 3—Krakow, PO— Tauron Arena*
June 4— Krakow, PO—Tauron Arena*
June 6—Vienna, AT—Stadthalle*
June 8—Bologna, IT—Unipol Arena*
June 14—Barcelona, ES—Palau Sant Jordi*
June 15—Barcelona, ES—Palau Sant Jordi*
July 29—Boise, ID—ExtraMile Arena†
July 30—Salt Lake City, UT—Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre†
August 2—Denver, CO—Empower Field at Mile High†
August 5—San Francisco, CA—Chase Center†
August 6—Sacramento, CA—Golden 1 Center†
August 8—Los Angeles, CA—Kia Forum†
August 9—Los Angeles, CA—Kia Forum†
August 13—Bend, OR—Hayden Homes Amphitheater†
August 14—Bend, OR— Hayden Homes Amphitheater†
August 16—Seattle, WA—T-Mobile Park†
September 18—Chicago, IL—Vic Theatre
September 20—Washington, DC—Lincoln Theatre
September 21—Philadelphia, PA—Theatre of Living Arts
September 22—New York, NY—Webster Hall
September 25—Boston, MA—Paradise Rock Club
September 27—Detroit, MI—St. Andrew’s Hall
September 29—Montreal, QC—MTELUS
September 30—Toronto, ON—Massey Hall
October 21—Cardiff, UK—Cardiff Utilita Arena
October 23—Dublin, IE—3Arena
October 24—Belfast, UK—The SSE Arena
October 26—Glasgow, UK—OVO Hydro
October 28—Manchester, UK—Co-Op Live
October 29—London, UK—O2 Arena
October 31—Paris, FR—Accor Arena
November 1—Cologne, DE—Lanxess Arena
November 3—Amsterdam, NL—Ziggo Dome
November 7—Oslo, NO—Unity Arena
November 8—Stockholm, SE—Avicii Arena
November 10—Copenhagen, DK—Royal Arena
November 11—Hamburg, DE—Barclays Arena
November 13—Leipzig, DE—Arena Leipzig
November 14—Munich, DE—Olympiahalle
November 16—Budapest, HU—Budapest Arena
November 17—Krakow, PL—TAURON Arena
November 19—Prague-Bubeneč, CZ—Sportovni Hala Fortuna
November 20—Berlin, DE—Uber Arena
November 22—Mannheim, DE—SAP Arena
November 23—Vienna, AT—Stadthalle
November 26—Zurich, CH—Hallenstadion
November 27—Milan, IT—Unipol (Mediolanum Forum)
November 30—Barcelona, ES—Sant Jordi Club
December 1—Madrid, ES—Movistar Arena
December 3—Esch-sur-Alzette, LU—Rockhal
December 4—Antwerp, BE—Sportpaleis

*with Billie Eilish
†with The Lumineers
www.tomodell.com

Paul Weller news

Paul Weller's upcoming release, Find El Dorado, is an album of reinterpretations, out July 25 on vinyl, CD and digital. Click HERE to pre-order. 

The veteran artist revisits songs "I've carried with me for years,” he says. “They’ve taken on new shapes over time. And now felt like the moment to share them.”

Find El Dorado marks a new chapter in Weller's career as a return to Warner Records/Parlophone Records, the label behind his critically acclaimed run of albums from 2015 to 2019 which include Saturns Pattern, A Kind Revolution, True Meanings, JAWBONE - Music From The Film and Other Aspects - Live At The Royal Festival Hall.

Less a covers album and more a map of his emotional and musical DNA, these are songs that shaped his inner world—and now, through a mix of intimate arrangements and collaborations with Robert Plant, Noel Gallagher, and others, he’s passing them on. 

Two songs from the album are released as digital singles: Track 1 is “Lawdy Rolla,” which was originally by an obscure French studio band called The Guerrillas, who featured African jazz star Manu Dibango in their ranks. A video for “Lawdy Rolla” will be released soon; listen to the track and watch the visualizer HERE

The second track, and arguably one of the most familiar on the album, is Brian Protheroe’s 1974 hit “Pinball,” reimagined here with a saxophone contribution from Weller band member Jacko Peake.

Find El Dorado will be available in the following formats: Double black 180g vinyl LP. D2C exclusive Coke Bottle Green double vinyl LP. Amazon exclusive double black vinyl with alternative artwork. CD and digital album available from all DSP’s.


Weller band guitarist Steve Cradock produced, arranged and co-engineered the album. 

Track list and the artists that originally recorded them:

1. Handouts in the Rain (Richie Havens)
2. Small Town Talk (Bobby Charles)
3. El Dorado (Eamon Friel)
4. White Line Fever (The Flying Burrito Brothers)
5. One Last Cold Kiss (Christy Moore)
6. When you are a King (White Plains)
7. Pinball (Brian Protheroe)
8. Where there’s Smoke, There’s Fire (Willie Griffin)
9. I Started a Joke (Bee Gees)
10. Never the Same (Lal and Mike Waterson)
11. Lawdy Rolla (The Guerrillas)
12. Nobody’s Fool (The Kinks)
13. Journey (Duncan Browne)
14. Daltry Street (Jake Fletcher / PP Arnold)
15. Clive’s Song (Hamish Imlach)

Yellowcard taps Blink-182's Travis Barker to produce, drum on fall album

Alt rock favorite Yellowcard announcement of their new album Better Days by releasing the lead single and title track “Better Days” along with album track “honestly i.” Better Days is the band’s first full length album in almost a decade and will be available on October 10. The album is produced and executive produced by Travis Barker. Barker also plays drums on every song.

The single “Better Days” reflects on gratitude, forgiveness, perspective, and purpose. Once ubiquitous on MTV and alt-rock radio, the Vans Warped Tour veteran's first two albums produced double-platinum and gold certified title tracks. 

“Better Days” is also accompanied by a music video that has the guys depicting iconic 80’s movie characters performing in a vintage video shop. Directed by Jordan Phoenix, the video is a reflection of how much fun the guys are having this time around as a band and with their music. Frontman Ryan Key says, “We are focused on this chapter of our career being about happiness. This is the most fun we’ve had making a video in 20 years and we hope everyone has a smile on their face when they watch it.”

Guitarist Ryan Mendez invited friend Nick Long into the writing sessions and it was through Long that Barker became part of the project, coming on board to play drums and produce the whole album.

“I started the record as one version of myself and came out the other side changed,” says Key who credits Barker with a significant impact on his personal and creative studio breakthroughs. “I went in knowing I needed help. I came out of it writing songs like I was 19 again.”

Formed in Florida in 1997, Yellowcard's 2003 breakthrough album Ocean Avenue is certified platinum with the title track now certified 2x platinum. The band has over 4 million albums sold worldwide and over 1 billion streams. After a split in 2017, Yellowcard reunited in 2022.

Yellowcard is: 

William Ryan Key – Vocals/Guitar
Sean Mackin – Violin
Ryan Mendez – Guitar
Josh Portman – Bass

Tour Dates:

June 19 Dessel, Brussels at Graspop Metal Meeting 2025
June 20 Neuhausen Ob Eck, Germany at Southside Festival 2025
June 21 Wiesbaden, Germany at Schlachthof Wiesbaden
June 22 Scheebel, Germany at Hurricane Festival 2025
June 24 Berlin, Germany at Huxleys Neue Welt
June 27 Ysselsteyn, Netherlands at Jera On Air
June 28 Munster, Germany at Vainstream Rockfest 2025
Aug. 23 Curitiba, Brazil at Estadio Couto Pereira
Aug. 30 São Paulo, Brazil at Allianz Parque
Oct. 18 Las Vegas, NV at When We Were Young Festival
Oct. 19 Las Vegas, NV at When We Were Young Festival

Track listing: 

1. Better Days
2. Take What You Want
3. Love Letters Lost (feat. Matt Skiba of Alkaline Trio)
4. honestly i
5. You Broke Me Too (feat. Avril Lavigne)
6. City of Angels
7. Bedroom Posters
8. Skin Scraped
9. Barely Alive
10. Big Blue Eyes

Rodney Crowell's upcoming August album features Lukas Nelson, Ashley McBryde, Larkin Poe

Rodney Crowell's upcoming album Airline Highway, due out Aug. 29 via New West, takes
 its title from a seemingly mundane stretch of four-lane blacktop that runs deep into Louisiana. It’s the road he and producer Tyler Bryant drove to reach the remote studio where they recorded these songs, hauling a truckload of gear on a two-day journey that ended in swamps.

Along the way Crowell looked up the route they were driving: Airline Highway. It’s the southernmost segment of Highway 61, also called the Blues Highway or the Great River Road, and it follows the Mississippi River from Minnesota down to New Orleans. Crowell is intimately familiar with this part of the country. He grew up on the east side of Houston, just a few hours west of the state line, and made wild forays into Louisiana as a young man to drink or carouse or mostly to catch live music.

Airline Highway songs like “Sometime Thang” and “Rainy Days in California” (the latter featuring Lukas Nelson) raise a glass to old romances and encounters with different women in California or down in Louisiana: falling in love, toughing out hard times, growing apart until they become “that small voice on your phone,” to quote a line on “Taking Flight,” co-written with and featuring Ashley McBryde. Some are fictional, Crowell explains, but they all contain some kernel of truth.

“At a basic level there are a lot more years behind me than there are ahead of me. I’m up in my seventieth decade of my life, and I’m glad that I’m still looking forward to certain things I want to do, but a lot of what’s worth talking about is behind me.” One of the things Crowell looks forward to is making more music with musicians he genuinely loves. “I’m just in love with the experience now. I’ve worked with amazing people in the past, but I was looking too far ahead. I wanted the music we were creating to make a name for me, so I wasn’t completely present with them. My ego was involved. But now my ego seems to have finally evaporated. Now it’s just about the work and what a blessing it is to be able to do it. The work truly feeds me in the moment.”

Track Listing:

Rainy Days In California (Feat. Lukas Nelson)
Louisiana Sunshine Feeling Okay (Feat. Larkin Poe)
Sometime Thang
Some Kind Of Woman
Taking Flight (Feat. Ashley McBryde)
Simple (You Wouldn’t Call It Simple)
The Twenty-One Song Salute (Owed to G.G. Shinn and Cléoma Falcon) (Feat. Tyler Bryant)
Don’t Give Up On Me
Heaven Can You Help (Feat. Charlie Starr)
Maybe Somewhere Down The Road

Colin Hay has a new album of reimagined tracks coming in July, tour dates through the summer

Former Men at Work frontman and singer/songwriter Colin Hay announces the upcoming release of Man @ Work Volume 2 on July 18. The new release is the sequel to his 2003 best seller, Man @ Work, and offers some re-imagined favorites from across Hay’s rich catalog, including Men at Work classics, solo album highlights, and new material.

Hay says: "I started working with Compass Records 22 years ago. The first album of mine they released was Man @ Work. We felt that there is now more to the story. Hence Man @ Work Vol 2. We mined some Men at Work songs, and some solo songs I feel close to. All are re-recorded, and somewhat re-imagined. I like it. Hope you do too."

The album opens with "Into My Life," featuring Gregg Bissonette (Ringo Starr and His All Starr Band) and Hay's wife/musician Cecilia Noël. The song originally appeared on Hay’s 1990 debut solo album, Wayfaring Sons, and became popular in Brazil in the 90s as the theme song of a popular soap opera, growing to rival "Down Under" as Hay’s most popular song in South America. 

Hay looks back to Men At Work’s 1983 release, Cargo, for a new recording of "Blue for You," and then segues into a stripped-down take on "Come Tumblin’ Down" from his 2017 release Fierce Mercy. "We the People," featuring rapper Derrick "Solpowa" Rice, is a new song that Hay was inspired to write in the midst of the polarizing US presidential election in 2024. The album ends with "Next Year People," the title track from his 2015 solo release, featuring Hay on acoustic guitar and vocals, and in this version, augmented by a string quartet.

Since serving as the frontman and principal songwriter for ‘80s Australian hit-makers Men At Work whose major hits included "Down Under," "Overkill," and "Who Can It Be Now," Hay has released many solo albums. The most recent was Now And The Evermore. The musician is a regular member of Ringo Starr & His All-Starr Band. A Hay-penned song ("What’s My Name") not only made its way onto Starr’s 2019 album, but also became the title track.

Hay often tours under the Men at Work name with members of Noel's band.

Tour dates with Ringo Starr & His All Starr Band:

Thu, 12 Jun - Hartford HealthCare Amphitheater - Bridgeport, CT - Tickets
Fri, 13 Jun - Radio City Music Hall - New York, NY - Tickets
Sun, 15 Jun - The Mann - Philadelphia, PA - Tickets
Tue, 17 Jun - Filene Center at Wolf Trap - Vienna, VA - Tickets
Wed, 18 Jun - Tanger Center for the Perf. Arts - Greensboro, NC - Tickets
Fri, 20 Jun - Hard Rock Hotel & Casino - Hollywood, FL - Tickets
Sat, 21 Jun - The BayCare Sound - Clearwater, FL - Tickets
Sun, 22 Jun - St. Augustine Amphitheatre - St. Augustine, FL - Tickets
Tue, 24 Jun - Mercedes-Benz Amphitheater - Tuscaloosa, AL - Tickets
Wed, 25 Jun - Ovens Auditorium - Charlotte, NC - Tickets

Men At Work with Toto, Christopher Cross:

Fri, 18 Jul - iTHINK Financial Amphitheatre - West Palm Beach, FL - Tickets
Sat, 19 Jul - MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre - Tampa, FL - Tickets
Mon, 21 Jul - Coca-Cola Amphitheater - Birmingham, AL - Tickets
Tue, 22 Jul - Ameris Bank Amphitheatre - Alpharetta, GA - Tickets
Thu, 24 Jul - The Pavilion at Star Lake - Burgettstown, PA - Tickets
Fri, 25 Jul - PNC Bank Arts Center - Holmdel, NJ - Tickets
Sat, 26 Jul - Leader Bank Pavilion - Boston, MA - Tickets
Sun, 27 Jul - Great South Bay Music Festival - Patchogue, NY - Tickets
Mon, 28 Jul - BankNH Pavilion - Gilford, NH - Tickets
Wed, 30 Jul - Hartford HealthCare Amphitheatre - Bridgeport, CT - Tickets
Fri, 1 Aug - Hard Rock Live at Etess Arena - Atlantic City, NJ - Tickets
Sat, 2 Aug - Seneca Niagara Resort & Casino - Niagara Falls, NY - Tickets
Sun, 3 Aug - Riverbend Music Center - Cincinnati, OH - Tickets
Tue, 5 Aug - Hollywood Casino Amphitheatre - St Louis, MO - Tickets
Wed, 6 Aug - Ruoff Music Center - Noblesville, IN - Tickets
Fri, 8 Aug - Blossom Music Center - Cuyahoga Falls, OH - Tickets
Sat, 9 Aug - Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre - Tinley Park, IL - Tickets
Mon, 11 Aug - Pine Knob Music Theatre - Clarkston, MI - Tickets
Wed, 13 Aug - Jiffy Lube Live - Bristow, VA
Thu, 14 Aug - PNC Music Pavilion - Charlotte, NC - Tickets
Fri, 15 Aug - Ascend Amphitheatre - Nashville, TN - Tickets
Sun, 17 Aug - The Zoo Amphitheatre - Oklahoma City, OK - Tickets
Mon, 18 Aug - The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory - Irving, TX - Tickets
Thu, 21 Aug - Arizona Financial Theatre - Phoenix, AZ - Tickets
Sat, 23 Aug - Fontainebleau Las Vegas - Las Vegas, NV - Tickets
Sun, 24 Aug - Kia Forum - Los Angeles, CA - Tickets
Mon, 25 Aug - Toyota Pavilion at Concord - Concord, CA - Tickets
Wed, 27 Aug - Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre - West Valley City, UT - Tickets
Fri, 29 Aug - Washington State Fair - Puyallup, WA
Sat, 30 Aug - RV Inn Style Resorts Amphitheatre - Ridgefield, WA - Tickets

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Grant-Lee Phillips returns with new album, tour in the fall

Acclaimed Nashville-based singer, songwriter, and painter Grant-Lee Phillips announces the release of In the Hour of Dust, his 12th solo album, out September 5 on Yep Roc Records. 
The first single is "Closer Tonight," available at all digital service providers.

Of “Closer Tonight,” Phillips says: “A reflection of my uneasy feelings about this moment. On one hand, we’re living in an age of scientific advancement, an integration of technology that could vastly enhance life as we know it. On the other hand, we’re equally capable of barbaric cruelty, incapable of prioritizing life, neither our own nor that of the planet, all as we plot to plant our flag on Mars. We’re closer than ever to realizing our greatest potential and closer than ever to self-destruction.”

In celebration of the album, Phillips will embark on a 26-date U.S. and UK tour beginning with a run of Northeast dates in September, with a West Coast run in November, including a stop in Los Angeles, and dates in the UK, France, Belgium, The Netherlands, and Finland throughout the fall and winter. Tickets are available here.

Inspired by a painting from India discovered while wandering the Norton Simon Art Museum in Pasadena, CA, and the evocative Indian concept of ‘the hour of cow dust’--“It’s that moment of the day when the cows are led back home, they kick up the dust; that's a cue to prepare the lamps. Night is about to fall,” says Phillips.

The self-produced album finds Phillips at his most introspective and poetic, channeling his visual and musical sensibilities into a striking mediation on disconnection and grace. “The mood on this album is contemplative,” says Phillips. “It’s about trying to find meaning in an age of confusion, feeling your way through the blinding dust of unreality.”

Known for his cinematic lyricism and atmospheric arrangements, In the Hour of Dust spans universal and personal themes. “Bullies,” co-written with pianist Jamie Edwards–the first co-write to appear on any Phillips’ albums–channels his experience as an outsider into a defiant anthem of resilience. “She Knows Me” offers a deeply personal testament to partnerships and vulnerability, while “Did You Make It Through the Night Okay” draws Phillips’ heritage as an Enrolled citizen of the Muskogee (Creek) Nation, reflecting on hardship and survival.

Written and recorded between his home studio in Nashville and Lucy’s Meat Market in Eagle Rock, CA, In the Hour of Dust features intimate solo recordings and collaborative sessions with longtime friends and acclaimed musicians: Jay Bellerose (drums), Jennifer Condos (bass), and Patrick Warren (keyboards). “I don’t see songs of love and songs of protest as being so far apart, really,” Phillips reflects. “It’s all about recognizing the value of connection in a disconnected time.”

Since his early days as the frontman of Grant Lee Buffalo, through his role as the town troubadour on TV's Gilmore Girls to his prolific solo career, Phillips has established himself as one of America's most consistent and compelling songwriters. His distinctive voice, poetic lyrics, and masterful musicianship have earned him a dedicated following and critical praise across multiple decades.

Tour Dates:

September 7 - Jammin’ Java - Vienna, VA
September 9 - City Winery - Philadelphia, PA
September 10 - City Winery - New York, NY
September 11 - City Winery - Boston, MA
October 10 - St. Michael-in-the-Hamlet Church - Liverpool, UK
October 11 - Hallé at St Michael's - Manchester, UK
October 12 - Portland Arms - Cambridge, UK
October 14 - Kitchen Garden - Birmingham, UK
October 15 - The Lower Third - London, UK
October 16 - Les Etoiles - Paris, France
October 17 - Reflektor - Liege, Belgium
October 18 - Ramblin’ Roots - Utrecht, The Netherlands
October 19 - Metropol - Hengelo, The Netherlands
October 21 - DR Koncerthuset - Copenhagen, Denmark
November 8 - McCabe’s Guitar Shop - Los Angeles, CA
November 9 - HopMonk Tavern - Novato, CA
January 14 - The Lantern - Bristol, UK
January 15 - The Trades Club - Hebden Bridge, UK
January 16 - Celtic Connections - Glasgow, UK
January 17 - The Common Room - Newcastle, UK
January 18 - Tithe Barn - Carlisle, UK
January 20 - Out to Lunch Festival - Belfast, UK
January 21 - Whelan's - Dublin, Ireland
January 23-24 - G Livelab - Helsinki, Finland
January 25 - Ylläs Jazz & Blues Festival - Lapland, Finland

Jetstream Pony, The Loft album reviews

Jetstream Pony

Bowerbirds and Blue Things

(Shelflife)

Similar artists: Alvvays, Velocity Girl, Lush, The Dentists

Since the 1990s, Jetstream Pony singer Beth Arzy - an American expat who attended Palm Desert High School – has spent time in such beloved indie pop/rock groups as Trembling Blue Stars, The Luxembourg Signal and Southern California’s Aberdeen. 

Jetstream Pony, formed in 2017, also features guitarist/singer Shaun Charman (The Wedding Present), bassist Kerry Boettcher, drummer Tom Levesley and more recent recruit, guitarist Mark Matthews (The Dentists). 

Bowerbirds and Blue Things, this Brighton-based alt-rock quintet’s first full-length album in five years is another winsome addition to its catalog. Arzy’s harmonic blend with guitarist/singer Shaun Charman is spot-on throughout the dozen tracks here. 

Among the standouts: driving opener “Sit and Wonder,” bolstered by some chiming guitar; “Bubblegum Nothingness,” which name checks “Soul Train” TV host Don Cornelius and contains a tongue-in-cheek chorus, seemingly chastising a person who’s “a parasitic disco snail”; and the Mighty Lemon Drops-esque “Bonanza 2 Tango Sierra” with more exquisite harmonies. Elsewhere, denser shoegaze sounds turn up, Charman and Boettcher have a hand at lead vocals (the latter on a dark “Tendrils”), and The Fall keyboardist Eleni Puolou even turns up for guest spoken vocals, providing an edgier vibe on “The Relativity of Wrong.”

Info: bandcamp.com

The Loft

Everything Changes, Everything Stays the Same

(Tapete)

Similar artists: Nick Lowe, the Go-Betweens, Real Estate

During the mid-Eighties, The Loft was the first act on England’s vaunted Creation Records (later the label home for Oasis) to achieve notoriety with some single releases. Then the band quickly split up. 

Singer/guitarist Pete Astor and drummer Dave Morgan moved onto the critically acclaimed Weather Prophets. The Loft briefly reformed in ’06, reappeared nearly a decade later and have sporadically played gigs in the interim. 

All four original members finally entered a studio with current Dexy’s (Midnight Runners) member Sean Read as producer and made the debut album Everything Changes, Everything Stays the Same. The result is a delightful dose of jangle-pop. 

Highlights include the character study “Dr. Clarke;” a bar singalong-worthy “Feel Good Now;” humorous dance craze-in-the-making “Do the Shut Up,” and pastoral ode to late summer, “Greensward Days.” (Side note: Loft fans should also check out Astor’s frequently charming, stripped-down 2024 solo effort Tall Stories and New Religions.)

Info: amazon.com.

My reviews originally appeared in today's edition of Desert Star Weekly. 

Friday, May 16, 2025

The Waterboys' making-of 'Life, Death and Dennis Hopper' album film on YouTube; 'Dennis Hopper Day' in New Mexico is May 17

A Wild and Beautiful Ride—a new documentary chronicling the creation of The Waterboys’ latest album Life, Death and Dennis Hopper is now available globally on YouTube.

In case you missed my recent interview with the band's frontman Mike Scott, read it here:

Rock Cellar Magazine - The Waterboys’ Mike Scott Talks New Concept Album ‘Life, Death & Dennis Hopper’ — Out Now (Q&A)

The 48-minute film, which premiered on Night Flight Plus on May 9, follows the making of the epic 25-track album released by Sun Records this spring. Directed by Mick Puck and Duende Visions, the documentary blends New Mexico landscapes with behind-the-scenes moments and commentary from Waterboys frontman Mike Scott, who spent four years crafting the record.

Timed just ahead of Dennis Hopper Day, an annual celebration held in Taos, New Mexico on May 17 (Hopper’s birthday), the film provides a reflection on Hopper’s life, legacy, and enduring influence on global culture. The album and film were both deeply inspired by the actor's wild, multi-faceted journey—from Hollywood’s rebellious youth to spiritual seeker and visionary artist.

"The arc of his life was the story of our times,” says Scott. “He was at the big bang of youth culture in Rebel Without a Cause with James Dean; the beginnings of Pop Art with the young Andy Warhol. He was part of the counterculture, hippie, civil rights, and psychedelic scenes of the '60s. In the '70s and '80s, he went on a wild 10-year rip, almost died, came back, got straight, and became a five-movies-a-year character actor—without losing the sparkle in his eye or the sense of danger or unpredictability that always gathered around him.”

Released last month via Sun Records, Life, Death and Dennis Hopper has earned widespread critical acclaim across the U.K., Europe, and the U.S. Featuring standout collaborations with Bruce Springsteen, Fiona Apple, Steve Earle, Taylor Goldsmith, and more, the album traces the highs and lows of Hopper’s cinematic and personal legacy, framed as a broader meditation on what it means to live, fall, and rise again.

The film’s global YouTube premiere on May 16 offers fans around the world a chance to experience the journey in real time—just as the town of Taos gathers for its annual tributes, including the Easy Rider Ride, sunset ceremony, and commemorations at Hopper’s final resting place.

The film is available on The Waterboys YouTube channel on May 16. To learn more about The Waterboys and their worldwide tour, visit mikescottwaterboys.com

Wavves back with 'Spun' album, tour in June

After announcing their new album Spun, San Diego's Wavves release the title track of the same name, “Spun.” The song follows “Goner,” the previously released Travis Barker (Blink-182)-produced song. “Goner” was paired with a Brandon Dermer-directed music video filmed at the band’s Los Angeles County wildfire benefit show at Zeublon, watch that here. Dermer has previously directed Wavves’ 2013 video for “That’s On Me” and has directed videos for Blink-182 among others.

The album is due out June 27 with a North American tour set to launch later that month. See routing below. Preorder the LP here. 

Like lead singer Nathan Williams’ earliest music, this album first took shape in a small shed behind his parents’ house known as "the hideaway." It's the place where Williams made some of his earliest albums. 

Over a decade prior, Williams released King of the Beach, an album that brought much attention - a pop/punk collection that also led to a widely publicized on stage meltdown at Primavera Fest. Wavves eventually entered the major label system, where the band released two albums before Williams became disillusioned by the lack of creative agency available to him. In 2017, Williams self-released You’re Welcome on his label, Ghost Ramp before returning to Fat Possum (the home of his first three albums) for Hideaway.

Fast forward to 2024, and Williams has again reunited with longtime bandmates Stephen Pope, Ross Traver, and Alex Gates. 

Tour dates:

6/24 - Santa Cruz, CA @ The Atrium 
6/25 - San Francisco, CA @ The Independent 
6/27 - Portland, OR @ Mississippi Studios 
6/28 - Vancouver, BC @ The Pearl 
6/29 - Seattle, WA @ Neumos 
7/2 - Minneapolis, MN @ 7th Street Entry 
7/3 - Madison, WI @ High Noon Saloon 
7/5 - Chicago, IL @ Bottom Lounge 
7/6 - Detroit, MI @ El Club 
7/8 - Toronto, ON @ Lee's Palace 
7/9 - Montreal, QC @ Theatre Fairmount 
7/10 - Boston, MA @ The Sinclair 
7/11 - Brooklyn, NY @ Warsaw 
7/12 - Washington, DC @ Union Stage 
7/13 - Philadelphia, PA @ Underground Arts 
7/15 - Atlanta, GA @ The Loft 
7/16 - New Orleans, LA @ Tipitina's 
7/17 - Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall 
7/18 - Denton, TX @ Rubber Gloves 
7/19 - Austin, TX @ Mohawk 
7/21 - Albuquerque, NM @ Sister 
7/22 - Tucson, AZ @ 191 Toole 
7/23 - Phoenix, AZ @ Crescent Ballroom 
7/24 - San Diego, CA @ The Observatory North Park
7/25 - Los Angeles, CA @ The Fonda 

Track listing:

1. Spun
2. Lucky Stars
3. New Creatures
4. Goner
5. Gillette Bayonet
6. So Long
7. Busy Sleeping
8. In Good Time
9. Big Nothing
10. Machete Bob
11. Way Down
12. Body Sane
13. Holding Onto Shadows