Yard Act announce new album and new single, “Redeemer.”

Photo credit: James Winstanley

Leeds quartet Yard Act announce their new album, You’re Gonna Need A Little Musicout July 17th via Republic Records and release the lead single, “Redeemer.” You’re Gonna Need A Little Music follows the band’s UK Top 5 charting Where’s My Utopia? (2024) and their Mercury Prize nominated debut, The Overload (2022). Recorded between Leeds and Los Angeles with producer Justin Meldal-Johnsen (Nine Inch Nails, Beck, St. Vincent), You’re Gonna Need A Little Music rings with the chemistry and energy of a band absolutely locked in. It’s simultaneously the most dynamic, collaborative, energized work they’ve laid to tape, but also contains some of the darkest, most cynical and truly questioning moments they’ve concocted too, picking up their tale and examining the findings more unsparingly than ever.

For a band so associated with incendiary live shows and constant touring, Yard Act’s third album marks the first time that the quartet—frontman and vocalist James Smith, bassist Ryan Needham, guitarist Sam Shjipstone, and drummer Jay Russell—have ever made an album together, as a live band in the same room. “The first two records were both laptop records essentially,” says Smith. The Overload was written alongside Needham before the band had fully formed; its follow-up, Where’s My Utopia?, was carved out in snatches of time on tour buses and hotel rooms. For the first time in a long time, Yard Act were able to settle into an “uninterrupted five month period” of creativity, crafting “40 or 50 songs” and allowing themselves to follow their ideas with no external pressure. “It felt like freedom,” says Smith. “It felt like everything I’d wanted from being in a band.”

Each track on You’re Gonna Need A Little Music has its own distinct character. The ominous guttural ferocity of today’s single, “Redeemer,” sits amongst a sleazy disco odyssey, fizzing indie, and loose, cerebral, meditations. Yard Act may have thrown the kitchen sink, or at least its cookware, at the track, with Meldal-Johnsen concocting a brittle, metallic texture out of a day of rattling pots and pans, but the result is direct, visceral and exciting.

Watch the Video For “Redeemer”

No whimsical walk through suburban England, You’re Gonna Need A Little Music seeks to work through some of the most complicated facets of life. Intentionally, in some ways, it is a step away from Smith’s venerated vignettes and character studies; a move towards something more “impressionistic” and up for interpretation. “I think the album is about multiple realities and how individualism has led us, in the modern world, to question if there even is a shared reality anymore because everyone just believes what they want now,” Smith suggests. The questions are deep, but the spirit of You’re Gonna Need A Little Music is boundless – not for nothing does its title point to the power of art and creativity to rescue us from the mire.

Last month, Yard Act announced a summer North American tour including stops throughout the West Coast, East Coast and Canada. This marks the band’s first North American run since 2024. Tickets are now on sale and available here. Yard Act will also make several festival appearances across Europe in June and embark on an extensive UK and EU tour in the fall. A full list of tour dates is below.

Pre-Order You’re Gonna Need A Little Music

Yard Act Tour Dates:
(New dates in bold)
Wed. Aug. 5 – San Diego, CA @ Belly Up Tavern
Thu. Aug. 6 – Los Angeles, CA @ Teragram Ballroom
Sat. Aug. 8 – San Francisco, CA @ Outside Lands
Sun. Aug. 9 – Portland, OR @ Revolution Hall
Mon. Aug. 10 – Seattle, WA @ Neptune Theatre
Tue. Aug. 11 – Vancouver, BC @ The Pearl
Thu. Aug. 13 – Brooklyn, NY @ Warsaw
Fri. Aug. 14 – Washington, DC @ Black Cat
Sat. Aug. 15 – Philadelphia, PA @ Underground Arts
Sun. Aug. 16 – Boston, MA @ The Sinclair
Thu. Oct. 1 – Paris, FR @ La Cigale
Fri. Oct. 2 – Brussels, BE @ Ancienne Belgique
Sat. Oct. 3 – Utrecht, NL @ TivoliVredenburg
Mon. Oct. 5 – Cologne, DE @ Gloria-Theater
Wed. Oct. 7 – Hamburg, DE @ Uebel & Gefährlich
Thu. Oct. 8 – Oslo, NO @ Rockefeller Music Hall
Fri. Oct. 9 – Stockholm, SE @ Kägelbanan
Sat. Oct. 10 – Copenhagen, DK @ VEGA
Mon. Oct. 12 – Warsaw, PL @ NIEBO
Tue. Oct. 13 – Prague, CZ @ MeetFactory
Wed. Oct. 14 – Berlin, DE @ Festsaal Kreuzberg
Fri. Oct. 16 – Lausanne, CH @ Les Docks
Sat. Oct. 17 – Milan, IT @ Magazzini Generali
Sun. Oct. 18 – Toulouse, FR @ La Cabane
Tue. Oct. 20 – Barcelona, ES @ Sala Apolo
Wed. Oct. 21 – Madrid, ES @ Teatro Eslava
Fri. Oct. 23 – Lisbon, PT @ Cineteatro Capitólio
Fri. Nov. 6 – Leeds, UK @ O2 Academy Leeds
Sat. Nov. 7 – Leeds, UK @ O2 Academy
Tue. Nov. 10 – Newcastle, UK @ NX
Wed, Nov. 11 – Glasgow, UK @ Barrowland Ballroom
Thu. Nov 12 – Sheffield, UK @ Octagon Centre
Fri. Nov. 13 – Manchester, UK @ O2 Victoria Warehouse
Sun. Nov. 15 – Wolverhampton, UK @ Wulfrun Hall
Mon. Nov. 16 – Leicester, UK @ O2 Academy
Tue. Nov. 17 – Nottingham, UK @ Rock City
Wed. Nov. 18 – Cambridge, UK @ Junction 1
Fri. Nov. 20 – Oxford, UK @ O2 Academy
Sat. Nov. 21 – Bristol, UK @ Bristol Beacon
Mon. Nov. 23 – Plymouth, UK @ Plymouth Pavillions
Tue. Nov. 24 – Southampton, UK @ O2 Guildhall
Thu. Nov. 26 – London, UK @ O2 Academy Brixton

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Jessica at Pitch Perfect PR.]

WSND DJ set list: New & Used Nocturne – July 05, 2026

Thanks to all who listened to my latest free-form show on WSND. Here’s the wild set list:

  1. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club – All You Do Is Talk
  2. Cavaran – It Gives
  3. Flat Worms – Shouting at the Wall
  4. Gang of Four – Sleepwalker
  5. A Place to Bury Strangers – Disgust
  6. Osees – Weird and Wasted Connection
  7. Shonen Knife – Fruits & Vegetables (Japanese version)
  8. Paul Oakenfold – Ready Steady Go (René LaVice remix)
  9. Daft Punk – The Prime Time of Your Life / The Brainwasher / Rollin’ / Alive (live)
  10. Nevaris – Ninth Sun (live)
  11. Radiohead – Black Star (live)
  12. Clutch – One Eye Dollar (live)
  13. King Buffalo – Longing to Be the Mountain (live)
  14. The Flaming Lips – Gates of Steel (live)
  15. Buzzcocks – Flat-Pack Philosophy
  16. The Meteors – The Blood Red Sea
  17. Philip Michael-Thomas – Just the Way I Planned It (request)
  18. The Human Tornado radio spot
  19. The Death Wheelers – Divine Filth
  20. Warish – Big Time Spender
  21. The Rolling Stones – Tumbling Dice
  22. U2 – Lemon
  23. The Beach Boys – Girl Don’t Tell Me
  24. Elvis Presley – That’s All Right
  25. Slim Harpo – Buzzin’
  26. Ash Walker – Brave New World
  27. Lowsunday – You’re So Wired
  28. OrangeTone – Breachlight
  29. Rare DM – Compliment

Come back next week for another eclectic mix!

Keep your mind open.

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WSND DJ set list: Deep Dive of Huey Lewis & The News

Thanks to all who tuned in for my Deep Dive of Huey Lewis & The News on WSND. Here’s the set list:

  1. Huey Lewis & The News – The Power of Love
  2. Louis Armstrong – Keepin’ Out of Mischief Now
  3. Frank Sinatra w/ The Count Basie Orchestra – Get Me to the Church on Time (live)
  4. Johnnie Taylor – Who’s Making Love
  5. Ray Charles – Hallelujah I Love Her So
  6. Clover – Take Another Look
  7. Nick Lowe – Cruel to Be Kind
  8. The Doobie Brothers – Real Love
  9. George Thatcher Band – Talkin’ Turkey
  10. Thin Lizzy – Baby Drives Me Crazy (live)
  11. Soundhole – Out of Sight (live)
  12. American Express – Exodisco
  13. Huey Lewis & The News – Some of My Lies Are True (Sooner or Later)
  14. Huey Lewis & The News – Now Here’s You
  15. Supercharge – We Both Believe in Love
  16. Huey Lewis & The News – Do You Believe in Love?
  17. Huey Lewis & The News – Workin’ for a Livin’ (live)
  18. Steely Dan – Hey Nineteen
  19. Huey Lewis & The News – Heart and Soul (live)
  20. Huey Lewis & The News – The Heart of Rock & Roll
  21. Dave Edmunds – Bad Is Bad
  22. Huey Lewis & The News – I Want a New Drug (12” dance mix)
  23. Ray Parker, Jr. – Ghostbusters theme
  24. Hank Williams – Honky Tonk Blues
  25. Huey Lewis & The News – Back in Time
  26. Huey Lewis – Once Upon a Time in New York City
  27. Huey Lewis & The News – Jacob’s Ladder (Step by Step) (Special radio remix)
  28. Donald Fagen – I.G.Y.
  29. Huey Lewis & The News – Stuck with You
  30. Huey Lewis & The News – Hip to Be Square (dub mix)
  31. Huey Lewis & The News – Slammin’
  32. Huey Lewis & The News – It Hit Me Like a Hammer (Remix Sax Solo version)
  33. J.J. Jackson – But, It’s Alright
  34. Huey Lewis & The News – I’m Not in Love Yet
  35. Huey Lewis & The News – Her Love Is Killin’ Me

Come back next week for another Deep Dive!

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Review: Various artists – DJ Notoya Presents Tokyo Pulse

Famous crate digger DJ Notoya has put together another excellent compilation of rare Japanese city pop and funk tracks from 1974 to 1988 – Tokyo Pulse. Some of these tracks were only released as a single or a demo, and never on a full album.

Starting with Naomi Chiaki‘s “Yoru E Isogu Hito,” the compilation drops you into the funky flotilla right away. It helps that Chiaki’s backing band is Godiego, a highly successful prog-rock band in 1978 Japan. Steve Fox‘s bass groove almost carries as much weight as Chiaki’s voice. Yumi Murata‘s “Ranhansha” is a great disco track that belongs in about a hundred movies from 1979. The horn, piano, and synth arrangements in it are all solid.

L-E-V-E-L were an all-female city pop trio who got help on their 1981 album eve and the track “Bagdad No Atari Nite” from none other than Masahide Sakum – creator of the legendary TR-808 drum machine. “Lake in the Forest” by GAM (Great American Music Band) is a weird blend of reggae and synthwave that somehow works despite all odds.

Nami Shimada‘s 1988 track, “Mitsumeteirunoni,” is bright city pop that makes you think that Japanese pop singers were light years ahead of U.S. ones in the 1980s. Tiffany wishes she had a single this cool. Bread & Butter cook up “Memory” from their 1974 album Barbecue. It’s fully of groovy hand percussion, porn music guitar, and even a wicked harmonica solo from Satsuya Iwasawa.

“After Image” is a stellar find, as it comes from Minoru Koyama‘s only album, 1980’s Hard to Be a Man. The bass walk on it by Mike Dunn is top-notch. “Island Cuckoo” by Chikara Ueda & The Power Station doesn’t team Ueda with the Robert Palmer-fronted 1980s band, but that doesn’t matter because it’s a solid jazz-funk track with sharp keyboard work from Ueda. The compilation ends with HIgurashi‘s “Anata Wa Doko Ni Irundesuka,” which could’ve been a Bond movie theme in another life.

This is a gold mine for city pop fans and might lead you down several rabbit holes to find other stuff like it. Be prepared.

Keep your mind open.

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WSND DJ set list: Manic Monday – June 29, 2026

Thanks to all who tuned in for my latest all-80s show on WSND. Here’s the gnarly set list:

  1. Foreigner – I Want to Know What Love Is (live) (1985)
  2. Diana Ross – Upside Down (1980)
  3. Orchestral Manouevers in the Dark – Secret (12” mix) (1985)
  4. Mr. Flagio – Take a Chance (1983)
  5. The Go-Gos – Our Lips Are Sealed (1981)
  6. Michael Jackson – Thriller (1982)
  7. Quincy Jones – One Hundred Ways (1981)
  8. Lionel Ritchie – Running with the Night (1983)
  9. Ace Frehley – Into the Night (request) (1987)
  10. Hanoi Rocks – Tragedy (1981)
  11. M – Pop Muzik (1989 remix) (request) (1989)
  12. Talking Heads – Psycho Killer (live) (1980)
  13. Bon Jovi – Runaway (request) (1984)
  14. Cyndi Lauper – I’ll Kiss You (1983)
  15. Shannon – Let the Music Play (12” remix) (1983)
  16. Debbie Gibson – No More Rhyme (1989)
  17. Peter Gabriel – In Your Eyes (1986)
  18. De La Soul – Me Myself and I (1989)
  19. Guns ’n’ Roses – Patience (1989)
  20. LL Cool J – I’m That Type of Guy (1989)
  21. Paul Abdul – Cold Hearted (1989)
  22. Winger – Headed for a Heartbreak (1989)
  23. Donny Osmond – Sacred Emotion (1989)
  24. Don Henley – The End of the Innocence (1989)
  25. The Cult – Fire Woman (1989)
  26. The Cars – Tonight She Comes (live) (1987)
  27. Visage – Fade to Grey (12” long version) (1980)
  28. Yaz – Situation (1982)
  29. Soft Cell – Memorabilia (1981)
  30. Human League – Love Action (I Believe in Love) (1981)
  31. Stevie Nicks – After the Glitter Fades (1981)
  32. Duran Duran – Hungry Like the Wolf (1982)
  33. David Bowie – Let’s Dance (1983)
  34. Laura Branigan – Self Control (1984)
  35. Frank Zappa – Be in My Video (1984)
  36. Elton John – I’m Still Standing (1983)
  37. Men at Work – Overkill (live) (1983)
  38. Naked Raygun – Home of the Brave (1985)
  39. The Brat – Attitudes (1980)
  40. Pet Shop Boys – Always on My Mind (12” mix) (1987)
  41. Tears for Fears – Everybody Wants to Rule the World (1985)
  42. Salma & Sabina Agha – Mitha Maze Dar (Dancing Queen) (1981)
  43. Joe Esposito – You’re the Best (1984)
  44. Linda Ronstadt & James Ingram – Somewhere Out There (1986)
  45. Jerry Goldsmith & Alexander Courage – Star Trek: The Next Generation theme (1987)
  46. Prince – Batdance (1989)
  47. Echo & The Bunnymen – The Killing Moon (1984)
  48. Crash Kills Five – What Do You Do at Night? (1980)
  49. Sad Lovers & Giants – Things We Never Did (1982)
  50. The Cure – Lovesong (1989)
  51. Bruce Springsteen – Hungry Heart (live) (1980)
  52. 808 State – Flow Coma (1988)
  53. Yes – Owner of a Lonely Heart (extended version) (1983)
  54. Hall & Oates – Out of Touch (1984)
  55. Anita Baker – Giving You the Best That I Got (1988)
  56. The Dog D’Amour – How Come It Never Rains? (1988)
  57. Poison – Nothin’ but a Good Time (1988)
  58. The High Tide – Dancing in My Mind (1981)
  59. The Marble Staircase – The Long Weekend (1982)
  60. The Shrinking Violets – She Said (1988)
  61. The Wild Poppies – Walkabout (1986)
  62. ABC – Be Near Me (1985)

Come back next week for more 80s mega-music!

Keep your mind open.

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Review: Vhyce – Romantic Visions EP

Looking for a fun record to spin at your next summer house party? Vhyce has you covered with his newest EP, Romantic Visions.

The title track opens the EP with almost seven minutes of heavenly house beats and dance piano. “And We’re All Connected” trades out the house music for trippy trance music that will fill the floor if it’s not already. “Eco Simulator” keeps the party going with great beats for your workout, post-workout pool party, and the drive back from the pool party. “Paradise” has a solid house piano line through it that makes you feel like you’ve gone to the hippest church revival ever.

“Perks of Daily Life” is another floor-filler with a thumping backbeat that allows it to be easily dropped into a dance mix. The soaring synths add a cool futuristic touch. The EP winds up with the Magari Goa “91 mix” of “Every Ending.” It sounds like could’ve been unearthed from a 1991 rave time capsule full of glow sticks, ring pops, coach’s whistles, and condoms.

All in all, this is a solid EP that will brighten up your summer playlist. Go grab it before Memorial Day gets here and the weather gets colder.

Keep your mind open.

[I have romantic visions of you subscribing.]

[Thanks to Inflyte!]

WSND DJ set list: New & Used Nocturne – June 28, 2026

Thanks to all who listened to my latest free-form show on WSND. Here’s the set list:

  1. Morphine – All Wrong
  2. Black Rebel Motorcycle Club – Love Burns
  3. L’ira Del Baccano – The Praise of Folly (Part 1)
  4. MOTSUS – Driver
  5. “Weird” Al Yankovic – Living with a Hernia
  6. The Beths – I’m Not Getting Excited (live)
  7. The Beths – Uptown Girl (live)
  8. Ten Years After – Sugar the Road (request)
  9. De La Soul – What’s More
  10. Eric B. & Rakim – Rest Assured
  11. DJ Sneak vs. Le Knight Club – Intergalactik Disko
  12. Skyland Drive-In Theatre intermission ad
  13. MXPX – Vacation
  14. Everything But the Girl – Five Fathoms (Club 69 Future Club mix)
  15. Ross Harper – Narcissist (Amorphic Reshape)
  16. Nude – All We Want
  17. TV on the Radio – Family Tree
  18. Gary Numan & Tubeway Army – We Are So Fragile
  19. Francesco Demasi – C’e Sartana…Veni La Pistola e Comprati La Bara!
  20. Miss Grit – Tourist Mind
  21. Chromatics – Move a Mountain
  22. Delta 5 – Mind Your Own Business (Deerhoof’s remix)
  23. Screaming Females – Leave It All Up to Me
  24. The Clash – The Leader
  25. Mativetsky Amiri Pagé – Yavaran

Come back next week for more free-form madness!

Keep your mind open.

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WSND DJ set list: Deep Dive of The Allman Brothers Band

Thanks to all who tuned in and offered requests for my Deep Dive of The Allman Brothers Band on WSND. Here’s the set list:

  1. The Allman Brothers Band – Ramblin’ Man
  2. B.B. King – Mr. Pawnbroker
  3. Otis Redding – Pain in My Heart
  4. Patty LaBelle and The Bluebells – All or Nothing
  5. The Allman Joys – Spoonful
  6. Hour Glass – Southbound
  7. The 31st of February – Morning Dew
  8. Wilson Pickett – Hey Jude
  9. The 2nd Coming – Evaluation
  10. Muddy Waters – Trouble No More
  11. The Velvet Underground – Some Kinda Love
  12. Blind Wille McTell – Statesboro Blues
  13. The Allman Brothers Band – Black Hearted Woman
  14. The Allman Brothers Band – Whipping Post (1973 Beginnings mix)
  15. The Allman Brothers Band – Dreams (live)
  16. The Allman Brothers Band – Midnight Rider
  17. The Allman Brothers Band – In Memory of Elizabeth Reed
  18. Boz Scaggs – Lowdown
  19. Derek and The Dominos – Nobody Knows You When You’re Down and Out
  20. The Allman Brothers Band – Stormy Monday (live) (request)
  21. The Allman Brothers Band – Melissa (live acoustic version)
  22. The Allman Brothers Band – Blue Sky
  23. Cher & Gregg Allman – Don’t Mess Up a Good Thing (live)
  24. The Allman Brothers Band – Jessica (live)
  25. Dickey Betts – Highway Call
  26. The Allman Brothers Band – Can’t Lose What You Never Had
  27. Chuck Berry – Too Much Monkey Business
  28. Sea Level – Just a Good Feeling
  29. The Allman Brothers Band – Straight from the Heart
  30. The Allman Brothers Band – Firing Line

Come back next week for another Deep Dive!

Keep your mind open.

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Rewind Review: Bollywood Bloodbath compilation (2011)

I knew I was going to buy Bollywood Bloodbath as soon as I saw the cover and read “The B-Music of the Indian Horror Film Industry.” That cover image, by the way, is from the 1981 monster film Janni Dushman (which is readily available on YouTube if you’re interested).

The collection is packed with great Bollywood psych-disco-horror music ranging from 1949 to 1985. It starts with the spooky laughter of Rajesh Roshan‘s theme to 1981’s Sannata (The Silence), which adds synth wind sounds and ghostly vocals to the mix. Pulsing beats lead the charge on Hemant Bhosle‘s funky phantom track, “Sasani Khez Koi Baat” from another 1981 film – Sansani (The Sensation). Bappi Lahiri‘s “He Met Me in the Guest House” (from 1980’s Guest House) is a rare Bollywood track with English vocals (by Preeti Sagar) that’s a mighty fine lost disco track. Lahiri’s horn-filled (and monster roar-including) “Meri Jaan” is another cool gem from another 1981 movie about a weird snake monster called Dahshat (Shock) and has lovely vocals by Sulakshana Pandit, freaky synths, and almost spaghetti western guitar sounds.

Up next are the prolific team of Laxmikant Shantaram Kudalkar and Pyarelal Ramprasad Sharma with “Aa Jane Jaan” from the giallo-like Intaqam from 1969. It combines bells, spy movie-like horn blasts and hand percussion beats, and mysterious sounds you can’t quite place…and it ends with what sounds like a fight or murder taking place on screen. More mysterious sounds abound in Ratandeep Hemraj‘s “Birha Ki Maari Koi” (from 1979’s Shaitan Mujrim (Satan’s Culprit)) as Jyoti, the lead actress, sings alongside howling dogs, creaking coffin lids, screeching cats, and a horn section that sounds like it might be drunk.

Lahiri returns with the simply titled “Dance Music” from 1982’s Maut Ka Saya – a film about a swamp monster. It’s a rather bouncy track (with sexy, nearly orgasmic laughing) that could be mistaken for a cumbia instrumental upon the first listen. Apparently, this swamp monster is a cool cat. So are the duo known as Sapan Jagmohan, who display their jazz-funk chops on 1978’s “Aji Kahan Gum Ho” from the occult film Darwaza (The Door).

The duo of Laxmikant-Pyarelal return on the theme for 1967’s psychological thriller Anita. The simple hand percussion instruments highlight the lead character’s paranoia. Usha Khanna (Bollywood’s first female music director) provides “Tere Jaisa Pyara Koi Nahin” from the 1981 movie Hotel (the plot of which was pretty much ripped off by Poltergeist a couple years later). Khanna uses a funky bass groove and strange synth notes to craft a slick track.

Roshan comes back to another track from Sannata, this one being “Marjaban Too Kuthe Part 1.” It’s a fun love song hidden in a movie about a series of brutal murders. Sapan Jagmohan’s “Sote Sote Adhi Rat,” from 1984’s Siskeyan is a standout on the record with its great guitar work, funk bass, disco beats, and lush vocals from Salma Agha.

After the short instrumental “Ab Kahan Jayenge Ham (Sad)” by Bhosle (another track from Sansani), we get the exciting theme to 1980’s Andhera (The Darkness) by Sapan Jagmohan. The movie blends a vampire film with a crime thriller, and the “crime” sound is prominent here. You’re expecting a chase scene or a fight to break out any moment. Lahiri’s title to Dahshat follows it with more bat-snake-who knows monster sounds combined with fast tabla beats and warped synths and guitars that sound broken.

Roshan delivers the (in terms of title) out-of-place “Superman, Superman” from Sannata. Two detectives are trying to find the serial killer in this film, not intrepid reporter Clark Kent, so why a song with Udit Narayan, Alka Yagnik, and Ursula Vaz singing about the Man of Steel is in this movie’s soundtrack is anyone’s guess. Nonetheless, it’s a blast and needs to be in the next Superman movie.

Another nice inclusion is “Dance Music” by Khemchand Prakash from what is considered to be the first Indian horror film – 1949’s Mahal (The Mansion). It’s not dance music for the nightclub crowd. It’s dance music for a strange ritual or for ghosts…or both. Another track from Maut Ka Sava by Lahiri is next, titled “Aafat,” and it combines surf guitar with city pop saxophone and Kraftwerk-like synths. I don’t how it works, but it does.

Laxmikant-Pyarelal’s “Chal De Rol” from Jaani Dushman is the most meditative track on the compilation with its excellent tabla work and swirling string instruments. My guess is that its supposed to call the crazy beast killing young brides in the film, but I could be far off base. Roshan’s “Marjaban Too Kuthe Part 2” is another lovely cut, and then we have “Dekho Dekho Dekho Magar Pyar Se” from 1985’s Cheekh (The Scream) by Nadeem Saifi and Shravan Rathod that could almost be video game music and has fun vocals by Alga Yagnik and wicked guitar riffs, tabla beats, and horn blasts.

The compilation appropriately ends with “Bindya Tarse Kajra Barse” by Rahul Dev Burman from the 1980 psychological thriller Phir Wohi Raat. Burman is sometimes known as the “Indian Ennio Morricone” for his massive output, experimentation, and talent.

Finding stuff like this is like finding a treasure chest of money in your backyard. It baffles you at first and then you’re elated by it.

Keep your mind open.

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Live: The Human League, Soft Cell, Alison Moyet – Chicago Theatre – Chicago, IL – June 23, 2026

It was a sold out night at the Chicago Theatre for this triple bill of 1980s music giants. The crowd was full of Gen Xers and Boomers who were buzzing outside the theatre and giddy once they got inside the place. I saw two people in their twenties there. I’m sure there were more, but they were vastly outnumbered…which is a shame because synthwave is hot stuff right now among the younger crowd. Go watch Stranger Things if you don’t believe me.

Alison Moyet started the night sounding and looking fabulous. Her backing band was sharp, especially her guitarist who subtly put down some slick riffs for those paying attention. Moyet was all smiles throughout her set, telling stories and expressing her thanks to the crowd. She played a good mix of stuff from her solo albums and Yazoo (known as Yaz in the U.S. for some weird reason) records. “Changeling” and “Only You” were lovely, and ending your set with “Don’t Go” is always a power move.

The modern version of Soft Cell was up next. Marc Almond is still on lead vocals and personality. David Ball died last year but not before they finished a lot of new material for their upcoming record, Danceteria. The new lineup came out right away with “Memorabilia,” the B-side to their first single, “A Man Could Get Lost,” which they also played. It was a weird new wave switch from Moyet’s sultry disco set, and I loved both. “Nostalgia Machine” (a clever takedown in 2022 and now) and “Out Come the Freaks” were other standouts, and, of course, they ended with “Tainted Love” to get everyone on their feet. They mentioned they’d be back in the spring to do a full show.

The Human League came out in full synthwave force with “The Sound of the Crowd” and “Mirror Man” with lead singer Philip Oakley quieting any curiosity about the strength of his voice right away.

Here comes The Human League…and the Mirror Man.

“The Lebanon” was a good highlight, and even stronger in 2026. An interesting moment was when I spotted a couple slow-dancing to “Human”…a song about infidelity. There’s a story there, I thought.

The League is only human.

“Love Action (I Believe in Love)” is already a great song, and it’s even better life. The same goes for their mega-hit “(Keep Feeling) Fascination.” Their encore included “Being Boiled” (their first single) and “Electric Dreams,” a collaboration Oakley did with Giorgio Moroder.

They had a fun energy for the whole show, including multiple costume changes for Oakley, Susan Sulley, and Joanne Catherall, good visual effects, and Oakley prowling around the stage like some mysterious wizard. They’ve said they plan to keep touring as long as people want to see them and they’re healthy enough to do it, so get to a show while you still can.

Keep your mind open.

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[Thanks to Brian!]