MUSIC

Popdust's Spooktacular Halloween Playlist

Are you tasked with hosting a Halloween party this year? Let us help you with the music.

Howl you doing boys and girls? What's up, my witches?

Spooky season is drawing nearer, and with Halloween falling on a Thursday this year, it means that there is only one weekend to curate a spooktacular party playlist, and one opportunity to throw a fa-boo-lous Halloween party. It is no easy task, but if you want your guests to shake their BOOty, eat, drink, and be scary all night long, Popdust has just the playlist that will give your friends pumpkin' to talk about.

Itsy Bitsy Spider by Carly Simon

Have you ever heard such an elegant and moving interpretation of this spooky nursery rhyme? In this version, I wasn't rooting for the rain to "wash the spider out"; instead, Simon's mash up of the nursery rhyme with her hit "Comin Around Again" paints a darker picture. "I know nothing stays the same, but if you're willing to play the game, it's coming around again," Simon sings. The Spider's journey is a complex one: He is tenacious in his dream of scaling the water spout and is an inspiration to us all. "Nothing stays the same," little Spider, keep climbing. One day, you may just turn your dream into a reality. It's a reminder of our mortality and serves as the perfect song to kick off the night as your guests eat hors d'oeuvres and pour their first cup of spiked punch.

Follow the playlist on Spotify!

MUSIC

6 Times Inductees Didn't Give a F*ck About the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Ironically, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is not very rock n' roll.

Sex Pistols

Elisa Leonelli/Shutterstock

While it's rare to hear anyone excited about anything that happens in Cleveland, the music world is abuzz with news of the 2020 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees.

Being inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is among the top honors any musician can hope to achieve, and past inductees include a wide range of icons from Bob Dylan to Etta James to The Grateful Dead. This year's honorees include Notorious B.I.G., Whitney Houston, Pat Benatar, Dave Matthews Band, Depeche Mode, the Doobie Brothers, Judas Priest, Kraftwerk, MC5, Motörhead, Nine Inch Nails, Rufus featuring Chaka Khan, Todd Rundgren, Soundgarden, T. Rex and Thin Lizzy. Those who receive the most votes will be inducted May 2nd, 2020 at a ceremony at Cleveland's Public Hall.

While fans and media personnel take the Hall of Fame very seriously, it's not uncommon for rock stars to display nothing but nonchalance and cool when faced with this great honor, or even to snub it altogether—which, honestly, is pretty rock and roll. So, in celebration of the 2020 nominees, we've compiled a list of times musical icons didn't give a f*ck about the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

1.Todd Rundgren

Todd Rundgren

Kevin Nixon/Future/Shutterstock

Todd Rundgren

Todd Rundgren, among the 2020 nominees, met news of this honor with a simple, "No comment." This is the second year in a row Rundgren has been nominated, and many consider it a major slight that he has yet to be included in the hall of fame. He told Billboard last year: "I didn't expect it and have never cared about it. The hardest thing was keeping my fans' expectations within reasonable bounds because they are very naive about it. I'm not; It's some weird Illuminati thing and nobody understands how it works and who does the voting and the nominee selections and all that sort of crap.

I'm not looking for some organization to acknowledge me, somehow. Besides, the Hall of Fame doesn't make any sense to me because musicians don't have to retire. Athletes retire, and that's when they go into the Hall of Fame, because they're not playing anymore. But everybody (the Rock Hall) is inducting now is still playing, so how can you say you've got the measure of them? You don't. So, no, I really don't care."

MUSIC

For Its 50th Anniversary, David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” Has a New Music Video

The new video features never-before-seen footage of the Man Who Fell to Earth.

David Bowie - Time (Live at Hammersmith Odeon, London 1973) [4K Upgrade]

David Bowie's "Space Oddity" was released on July 12, 1969.

This Saturday, in celebration of the NASA moon landing's 50th anniversary and the bicentennial of the song's release, Bowie's estate posted a new video. It features never-before-seen footage of the Man Who Fell to Earth, portraying him in all his cosmic glory.

According to the video's description, "The video features footage of David Bowie performing 'Space Oddity' at his 50th-birthday concert at Madison Square Garden in 1997 (directed by Tim Pope), married to footage shot and directed by Édouard Lock (the founder and choreographer of the Montreal dance troupe La La La Human Steps), for the onscreen back drop of Bowie's 1990 Sound & Vision tour."

The video was first unveiled at the Kennedy Center in Washington D.C., where NASA was treated to a special screening. It was then supposed to publicly premier silently in Times Square on Saturday, as part of a moon landing celebration, but the event was cancelled because of the NYC heatwave—meaning we'll all just have to relish in its glory from our computer screens.

The dreamy footage, full of flashing lights and glitchy projections that make it look like a transmission from another dimension, is set to a new mix of the iconic song. "Space Oddity" launched Bowie to stardom and became one of his biggest hits. With its messages of stratospheric ambition and alienation, as well as its innovative three-part structure and call-and-response lyrics, it remains stunningly relevant and ever-popular today.

David Bowie – Space Oddity (Official Video)www.youtube.com

"Space Oddity" was inspired by Stanley Kubrick's 2001: A Space Oddity. "It was the sense of isolation I related to," Bowie said to Classic Rock in 2012, explaining his feelings about the movie. "I found the whole thing amazing. I was out of my gourd, very stoned when I went to see it – several times – and it was really a revelation to me. It got the song flowing."

2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY - Trailerwww.youtube.com

The song's release was timed to coincide with the 1969 moon landing and was even used as background for the television broadcast of the moon landing in Britain. Apparently, Bowie found this decision amusing. "I'm sure they really weren't listening to the lyric at all; it wasn't a pleasant thing to juxtapose against a moon landing. Of course, I was overjoyed that they did," he said. "Obviously, some BBC official said: 'Right, then. That space song, Major Tom…' blah blah blah, 'That'll be great.' Nobody had the heart to tell the producer: 'Um… but he gets stranded in space, sir."

Apollo 11 Moonwalk Montagewww.youtube.com

For a while after, because the song's release coincided with the Apollo 11 event, Bowie was considered a gimmicky act. Today, even after having cemented his legacy as one of the most beloved performers of all time, "Space Oddity" remains Bowie's signature song. And what a song it is—with its dizzying, spectral instrumentation and simple yet profound lyrics, it's a 4 minute and 43 second liftoff into another, more beautiful world.

Watch the new video here:

David Bowie - Space Oddity (2019 Mix) [Official Video]www.youtube.com

Trending

Is Artificial Intelligence Saving or Destroying Music?

AI can now write and record songs incredibly well. But is there something about music that is distinctly human, something that an AI cannot replicate?

What makes great music great? Is it technical mastery, emotional payoff, or some other inexplicable x factor, something that could never be replicated by an algorithm?

Keep ReadingShow less
New Releases

EXCLUSIVE | Kelsey Waters 'I Pour' Video Premiere

It's bitter, beautiful, and rocky as hell. You want some of what Kelsey Waters is pouring.

Bree Fish

Today, January 10th, marks the third anniversary of the death of David Bowie.

Everyone who mourned his passing did so in their own way, but when it comes to Kelsey Waters, her grief took on a life of its own. "We wrote this song just a few days after Bowie passed," she says of her single "I Pour." "There's something about losing an icon like that. It really hits you." The song chronicles a multitude of sorrows, but with a chorus line that keeps coming back to the deceased rock deity. It's been available to stream for several months now and gathered some acclaim, but today's drop of the video (exclusive to PopDust) provides an easy opportunity to jump on the bandwagon and get to know Ms. Waters before the world starts talking about her.

The strings of a guitar loaded with 60s surf sound are shucked as a drum kick starts the engine on the track. Retro, Animals-style organ fills in the sound. Waters' sultry voice warms the song and spreads her woes on the ground. She tells a story of heartbreak, both romantic and cosmic, all of this melancholy inciting her to drink. She talks about turning a shot glass gold and gripes about life decisions. Bigger, growling guitars build the sound up and up, and she pounds away at her mantra, sinking shot after shot. She mourns her former lover, her bed, Ziggy Stardust, and wishes she'd moved to LA. Rain pours over her, so she pours back; it's a simple but effective sentiment. Upon finishing the song, it begs a second listen. Then a third. Then a fourth.

5 Quick Questions:

What was the inspiration for the song?

Love. Loss. Grief. Coping (not particularly in a healthy way)

If you could sum up the video in five words or less, what would it be?

My 20's in a nutshell

Given that it comes up so much in the song, what's your drink of choice?

Tequila, soda and lime

If you could get this song featured on a TV show/film, which one would it be?

Does VH1 still do "Pop Up Video"? Is TRL still a thing? Seriously.

If you had a wish for this song, what would it be?

That Brandi Carlile is sitting down for tea one day, hears it on the radio, and asks to fly me in for a writing session…I don't ask for much!

Waters says, "I'm obviously a Bowie fan and his death was difficult for me and so many of my friends. I sat down in a room with my co-writer and we hashed out Bowie's death and what it's like to miss someone... Whether it's a hero, an old lover, etc." In doing so, Waters captured a melange of anguish that feels both specific and universal. "Being so young and having to learn very quickly what it's like to grieve also means having to learn to cope," she says, building to a further revelation, "In January of 2018, I lost my mother unexpectedly, and I had to learn how to get through that on an entirely new level." While this happened after the song was written, Waters' mother ended up being a significant part of the video's development. "When we recorded the music video for this song, her old modeling photos were sprinkled around the bedroom for inspiration," she confides. "I use her pictures and her memory in a lot of my work now." Knowing this gives the video an eerie, yet strangely enthralling new depth.

In moody, dark oranges, the video comes into focus. We see a pool, a bed, and empty bottle after empty bottle. Our hero sits up in bed and takes a drink as the lyrics hit the air. She sings as every symptom of a soul in turmoil flies across the screen in short cuts. She gets out of bed and takes a bottle with her. As she showers, we see flashbacks of the lover she sings about. Smash cut to a bar. Drinking intensifies. Socializing and smoking ensue. Our singer goes to the bathroom to lament and disintegrate ever so slightly. Then we're back at the pool. Waters struts, drinks, and sports a Bowie shirt. All these images start to collide in turmoil, and the airs of grace and balance collapse as the pacing speeds up. Amid memories of pain, Waters submerges herself in the pool. Then she pours another one.

"We made this video with a super badass, all female squad… aside from the male actors and extras," she says of the production process. "From the art direction to the makeup artist, all six of us girls camped out in a beautiful home in Chattanooga, TN and made this happen together. I'm so proud of that." That female angle is evident in the video. While it features many shots of Waters in various states of undress, they all feel free of a lurid male gaze. Instead, the cinematic emphasis is on the psychological state of the subject. "Sarah [Holbrook, the director and videographer] literally kicked everyone off the set, crawled into the shower with me during filming, and helped me through the most emotional scene," Waters affirms in her testimony.

Holbrook's work on the project proved integral, being everything Waters wanted and more. "We were on the same page as far as: the aesthetics needed to stay dark, there needed to be a lot of alcohol, and my character had to show that she was grieving and coping all at once," she describes. "Bringing in the the male character (Sarah's idea) for all of the bedroom scenes ended up being the most important factor… we needed to show who my character was grieving… Also, if you ever see a photo of my boyfriend, you'll know why I chose that model. #twinning." Asked about how she wanted to be depicted in the video, she responds humorously, "I walked around most of the time in my boyfriend's t-shirt and all of the alcohol consumption was real... I pretty much just want to be seen as myself."

Waters' video for "I Pour" is a rocky little ode to pain. It features female artists working to their full potential and shows off Kelsey Waters as the badass that she is. Her sound and look can be summed up as, "Girl who would beat Avril Lavigne in a drinking contest." She's got attitude, genuine rock and roll chops, and a command of emotionality that walks the fine middleground between bitter and dramatic. Above all, she just sounds good. Raise a glass and enjoy; Kelsey Waters is pouring.

Follow Kelsey Waters Online!
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Thomas Burns Scully is a Popdust contributor, and also an award-winning actor, playwright, and musician. In his spare time he writes and designs escape rooms. You can follow him on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.


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