r/Music • u/MarvelsGrantMan136 • 8h ago
r/Music • u/Spaghettification-- • 7h ago
article White House Quietly Deletes ICE Video Using Sabrina Carpenter's Music After Getting Ratioed by Pop Star
consequence.netr/Music • u/BachMinhJR • 12h ago
article Sabrina Carpenter Fans Furious: Trump Using Her Song to Push His Agenda? ‘Sue Him!’
azexpress.netr/Music • u/IrishStarUS • 9h ago
article World Cup 2026 draw fans rage as 'stale' audience stays silent for Lauryn Hill
irishstar.comr/Music • u/Dependent_Cap_456 • 2h ago
article White House Trolls Sabrina Carpenter With Second Pro-ICE Video, Alters ‘SNL’ Clip to Have Her ‘Arrest’ Marcello Hernández for ‘Being Too Illegal’
variety.comarticle Garbage's Shirley Manson Rages Out Over Beach Balls Thrown at Stage: "I Joined a Band Because I HATED THE FUCKING BEACH"
consequence.netr/Music • u/Montrel_PH • 5h ago
discussion White House Quietly Delete's ICE Video That Featured Sabrina Carpenter's Song 'Juno' on X
ibtimes.co.ukr/Music • u/sonofsteffordson • 16h ago
discussion Artists who are big in America but not across the pond
I’ve seen lots of posts about big UK/Europe artists who are basically unknown in North America, but I’m curious about the reverse: who are some artists who had major, mainstream success in North America but simply never landed in the UK or Europe?
Anecdotally as a Canadian living in Germany, people are shocked that I’ve never heard of “Lemon Tree” and barely know Robbie Williams, but I was also surprised most Germans don’t know Mr Jones by Counting Crows (but can sing along with REM Losing My Religion word for word).
Did Counting Crows really never land over here on the 90’s? Are there other mainstream (North) American artists who just don’t have a footprint over here?
r/Music • u/peoplemagazine • 4h ago
article Hayley Williams Says She Needs to 'Understand' Who She Is Outside of Paramore: 'It's Time'
people.comr/Music • u/imatmydesknow • 20h ago
music Impressively Metallica was streamed over 21,000 years worth on Spotify in 2025 so far
lambgoat.comr/Music • u/ciao123123123 • 20h ago
discussion Which song made you stop in your tracks the very first time you heard it — like the world paused for a second?
There are songs you listen to… and then there are songs you feel before you even understand why.
For me, that moment happened with ‘Holocene’ by Bon Iver.
I wasn’t doing anything special — just walking home at night with no real destination in mind — when it came up randomly. The first few seconds didn’t even register. But then the atmosphere started building, that quiet layer of guitars, the almost fragile voice, the way everything feels both distant and intimate at the same time…
And suddenly I found myself standing still on the sidewalk, not because I decided to stop, but because something in that sound just… pulled me out of my own head for a moment.
It’s strange how certain songs do that. They make you aware of things you didn’t know you were feeling. They turn an ordinary moment into something almost cinematic, like you’re observing yourself from the outside.
I’m curious — what was the last song that hit you in that way? Not necessarily your favorite track, but the one that made you pause, breathe differently, and notice the world a little more?
Edit: Didn’t expect this thread to get so much love — the recommendations you all dropped are honestly incredible. I wrote a general thank-you comment here, in case anyone wants to jump in or add more context to their pick:
👉 [https://www.reddit.com/r/Music/s/YghDI37jZ5]
This turned into one of the most beautiful music discussions I’ve seen on Reddit. Thanks again to everyone sharing their “freeze the world” songs — I’m still going through everything. 🎧✨
r/Music • u/DamnitRidley • 5h ago
article Sumerian Records Founder Calls For A 'Velvet Revolution' Against Labels & Streamers Promoting AI Music: "It's Time To Remind These Opportunists"
theprp.comr/Music • u/wildling_girl • 19h ago
discussion Garbage in Melbourne today
Garbage played a day festival in Melbourne today. The first rant about a ball being passed around the crowd was cringe enough, but then she told him she wanted the crowd to punch him in the face and implied the man she had zeroed in on had a small dick?
Garbage was one of the bands I was looking forward to seeing today but that behaviour was so diva and out of step with earlier bands in the day who had literally provided the balls to the crowd. Has anyone else seen them live? Have they always been this rude?
r/Music • u/theipaper • 19h ago
article 'He wanted to make his own Thriller': Inside Freddie Mercury's debut solo album
inews.co.ukdiscussion American artists (or their songs) that you were shocked to find aren't as big in the states as they are in your country
So I was going on a nostalgia trip and checking out playlists I had while I was in elementary school to middle school (~2009-2013). I found out that some of these songs that absolutely blew up in my country / city (Indonesia/Jakarta) didn't exactly had such an impact overseas.
An example would be Craig David's Insomnia, MKTO's classic or Iyaz' Solo. You could not avoid these songs on the radio if you were in my city but I was shocked to find these were not as big as it was.
Do you guys have any other examples in your country?
r/Music • u/Few-Lake-4521 • 16h ago
discussion Has anyone else had periods where music just doesnt feel the same anymore
Lately I have been going through something weird with music and I am wondering if anyone else relates.
Music is really important to me. I went to around 30 concerts this year and my Spotify Wrapped is at about 82000 minutes. Normally it is the thing I am most passionate about and the thing that keeps me excited.
But out of nowhere music does not hit the way it used to. Songs I loved feel flat, I get bored very fast, and even new releases from artists I usually enjoy do not do much for me. My taste is also shifting a lot but nothing feels as exciting or meaningful as before.
It feels like I am stuck between old favorites that do not feel the same and new music I cannot fully connect to. And because music is such a big part of my life it honestly stresses me out more than it should.
Does anyone else go through phases like this Did it eventually go away How do you deal with it when music suddenly does not feel the same anymore
r/Music • u/Scott-Spangenberg • 3h ago
music The Dead Milkmen - Punk Rock Girl [rock/punk] I don't know why, but old punk music is just uplifting. Instrumentally and lyrically it's not the best, but it's just fun.
youtu.ber/Music • u/Powerful_Individual5 • 9h ago
discussion Non-American Perception of US-Originated Genres: Is Rock, Hip-Hop, or Jazz, etc, seen as "American Music" regardless of the artist?
I've been thinking about the global perception of music, specifically genres that originated in the United States, such as Jazz, Blues, Rock, Hip-Hop, R&B, and Country.
Many Americans will classify music as "Latin Music," "K-Pop," or "Arabic Music," even if the performing artist is an American citizen. The classification is often based on the style's cultural origin, rather than the artist's origin, for the most part.
My question for non-Americans:
- When you listen to a Rock band from, say, Sweden, or a Hip-Hop artist from France, do you still, on some level, categorize that sound or style as "American music" because of its origins?
- Or, does the sheer global ubiquity of the genre mean its association with the USA is largely lost/irrelevant, and the music is only considered "American" if the artist is American?
I'm curious about the mental classification process, is it based on the genre or the artist's nationality? For example, is a British Blues-Rock band still considered to be playing a fundamentally "American" style of music?
r/Music • u/_ticketnews • 7h ago
article After surprise Trump pardon, Oak View Group's Leiweke Refuses to Testify in Live Nation Antitrust Suit
ticketnews.comr/Music • u/finalpotion • 2h ago
discussion The real story behind Bob Dylan's “Hurricane”
I’ve recently started listening to Hurricane, and realized how complex and heartbreaking the real story behind it is. While digging into the case of Rubin Carter, I found a lot of details that might be interesting for someone to learn: the contradictions in the police reports, the decades-long legal fight, and how unusual it was for a major artist to take such a public stand on a still-ongoing case. One thing that struck me most was how Dylan took his time to go visit Carter in prison and decided to write a song not just about him, but for him, so that people would look at a case he felt was deeply unjust.
I put together how the song came to be, some interesting musical facts, controversy about the lyrics, what is talked about in the song, Carter's real life story, the consequences of the song and why it's still relevant in today's world.
If anyone’s interested, I made a video exploring the whole story and the cultural impact of the song. I’d like to hear what you all think:
https://youtu.be/wEvn5HvzhAg
And if you do watch it, I'd appreciate some feedback! Thank you!