As it has every summer for the past few years, Celebrity Family Feud has returned for 2020, and the new season has yielded some memorable moments so far. Weezer and Fall Out Boy recently speculated what strippers in Hell might look like, and the latest episode saw 2 Chainz and Big Boi compete against each other.
The two rappers offered some insight into their lives with their answers to the question, “Name the last place you were when you got in trouble.” Big Boi’s response was “the club,” while 2 Chainz answered, “I was in traffic.”
Elsewhere on the show, Big Boi and his family (consisting of actual family members) were tasked with answering the question, “A cannibal not only likes to nibble on his date’s ear, he also likes to nibble on her what?” That was a classic Family Feud question designed to prompt a salacious answer for Steve Harvey to drop his jaw at, and Big Boi delivered, responding, “I’m gonna say ‘nips.’” He then clarified to a blank-faced Harvey, “Chest.” Yes, the answer was on the board (as “milk wagons”).
2 Chainz and his associates from his The Real University label went on to win the whole show, including an extra $25,000 for the Tru Foundation in the Fast Money round.
Watch clips from the episode above and below.
Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
The next time you want to skip a workout, think of Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
The Supreme Court Justice and women’s rights activist, who died last week at 87 years old, was a “fitness icon” who worked out twice a week with her personal trainer Bryant Johnson — she was still lifting weights during the pandemic. “Justice Ginsburg does 10 pushups and she does not do the so-called ‘girl pushups.’ She does not use her knees. And then she stretches back for a very brief pause and she does 10 more,” Georgetown Law Professor Mary Hartnett told Politico in 2017. To honor Ginsburg, the first woman to lie in state at the U.S. Capitol, Johnson performed push-ups next to her casket on Friday:
As lawmakers and other mourners took turns bowing their heads or making signs of the cross to honor Justice Ginsburg, Bryant Johnson, an Army veteran who served as her longtime trainer, honored her with a different kind of gesture: He dropped to the floor before her coffin and did three full push-ups.
Ginsburg once jokingly (?) called Johnson the “most important person” in her life.
Watch: Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s personal trainer Bryant Johnson does pushups in front of her casket pic.twitter.com/CQP6he3BEU
“I looked and said, ‘Justice, you left the president to come do the workout?’ And [she] said, ‘Yes, gotta do my pushups, gotta do my planks and my workout.’ I was like, ‘Yes, nice!’” Johnson told ABC earlier this year. “She’s never, ever told me can’t.” If you want to work out like RBG, as Stephen Colbert once did, the regimen is available here.
This has to be the first time anyone’s ever done pushups as someone lies in state at the US Capitol and it’s never been more fitting. This was RBG’s trainer. https://t.co/dk1qYWvqxB
So beautiful. So honoring. #RBG ‘s trainer Bryant Johnson did pushups before her casket. Seeing that cracked my heart open again. https://t.co/DEfTjIyTXy
Bryson Tiller released the deluxe edition of his fan-favorite debut album Trapsoul today/last night and to celebrate, he’s also debuted the video for one of the album’s standout songs, “Right My Wrongs.” As is only appropriate for a song from an album released in 2015, Tiller turns back the clock, dusting off his dad hat to recreate the experience of leaving for his first tour — and leaving his girl behind.
The narrative is interspersed with photos from that tour that make it look like he had a blast, so maybe he wasn’t too broken up about it, even if he does end the video in tears, crafting this very song after boarding the plane without his lady love. But the best part of the video may be the subtext subtitles — I have a theory that every movie, TV show, music video, and commercial needs them — showing the disconnect between the couple even as Bryson prepares to shoot to stardom.
The deluxe version of Trapsoul arrives on streaming services just as Bryson is in the middle of the rollout for his third album. So far, he’s released videos for “Inhale” and “Always Forever,” but hasn’t shared a release date just yet.
Watch Bryson Tiller’s “Right My Wrongs” video above.
Trapsoul (Deluxe) is out now via RCA Records. Stream it here.
In April of 2016, Sufjan Stevens made his Coachella debut. It came more than a decade after he recorded his lone inescapable hit song, “Chicago,” and two decades into a music career. The performance, which was set to kick off a massive festival run that would last that entire year, was ostensibly in support of his most recent album at that point, the delicate, pristine, and devastating Carrie & Lowell, an intimate reflection on his own childhood and complicated relationship with his family. Spare and solemn, its aesthetic couldn’t be more removed from Coachella’s maximalism, but Sufjan would hardly be the first musician to bring soft, nuanced sad-jams to the polo fields, following in a tradition that’s included everyone from Leonard Cohen to Fleet Foxes.
But then, on the Outdoor Theatre stage after dark, Stevens did something few expected. Sporting the elaborate angel wings and banjo that typifies much of his folkier work, he opened with the title track from his Christian-leaning 2004 album Seven Swans, concluding the dramatic tune by smashing said banjo into smithereens. From there, Stevens incorporated costume changes, neon lights, glow-in-the-dark aesthetics, and his glitchiest, most exuberant compositions into an unforgettable set. Only one song from Carrie & Lowell featured, but you know damn well his 25-minute Age Of Adz showstopper “Impossible Soul” occupied a solid third of the overall performance time. It wasn’t the evening that Stevens’ fans might have expected, but knowing the environment, the stakes, and his own varied history, he opted to deliver what was right for this particular moment, offering up a career-spanning set that showed he’s as comfortable performing with choreographed dancers as he is with orchestral arrangements.
This was not the first time Stevens has made it a point to underscore the breadth of his creative interests. The festival set wasn’t too far off from his colorful 2010 tour supporting Adz, and he’s long shown an aptitude for subverting expectations of his gentle, whispery work in collaborative projects like Planetarium with Bryce Dessner, Nico Muhly, and James McAlister and The BQE. On his latest proper LP and the direct follow-up to Carrie & Lowell, The Ascension, he’s once again taking a creative left turn, one that’s not unprecedented to him (Adz is an obvious point of comparison) and one that is distinctly appropriate for the hellfire of times it is being released into. The Ascension is not Sufjan Stevens playing to his strengths necessarily, but showing once again that he is a definitively playful artist that is never satisfied evolving incrementally and takes the greater moment into account
Of course, The Ascension is by no means light thematically. Stevens introduced the album in promotional materials by saying, “My objective for this album was simple: Interrogate the world around you. Question anything that doesn’t hold water. Exterminate all bullshit. Be part of the solution or get out of the way.” And it’s in this “editorial pop album” — his words — that some of the grace of Sufjan is lost. After the year that many of us have had, a rallying of the troops feels particularly exhausting, much like the endless calls to vote feel to those taking action directly to the streets. That’s not to say The Ascension will always sound as heavy-handed as it does roughly a month before the election and half-a-year into a pandemic — look no further than it’s sonic sister The Age Of Adz as a record from Stevens that resonates more than it did at the time — but at this precise stop on the calendar, the value of Stevens is less tied to his philosophy and more to the communal emotional outpouring of which he’s capable.
So while The Ascension might be a disappointment on that emotional level, Stevens delivers in many other departments. Created mostly by himself with drum machines and synthesizers and recorded on a computer, the album sounds more solitary than he ever has before — and that’s saying a lot for someone with an extensive solo acoustic discography. But where Sufjan has always felt like he is in direct conversation to the individual listener, The Ascension is a much grander statement, set to a canvas of Radiohead-esque heady experiments and Depeche Mode pop-industrial soundscapes. Even at its most fully-realized — the slow-building mantra-fied “Die Happy,” the massively unhinged opener “Make Me An Offer I Cannot Refuse” — Stevens always sounds like he’s speaking to the masses, creating something utilitarian at the risk of alienating those that flock to him for personal, calming communion. And this means when he offers up the one-note “Run Away With Me” or the radio-ready “Video Game,” Stevens has never felt so surface-level.
But while The Ascension certainly has its flaws, coming from one of the premier musical geniuses of our time, the album also has moments of inspiration seemingly touched by the hand of god himself. The record’s back half picks up dramatically, with the sprawling stretch of “Ativan” (complete with Silence Of The Lambs references), “Ursa Major,” “Landslide,” and “Gilgamesh” finally transport the listener fully into Sufjan’s world. “Ativan” in particular showcases Stevens’ vocal vulnerability, with his voice bending and reaching its upper limits until the tune devolves fully into noisy rubble. This returns when he belts out “landslide” on the song of the same name, with the artist seeming to realize that a house-of-cards composition is far more interesting and inviting than an impenetrable fortress.
And the album’s greatest highlights arrive near the end. The gothy lurch of “Death Star” is a less convincing version of St. Vincent’s Masseduction, but it’s all misdirection once the warmth of “Goodbye To All That” explores the reciprocal of the same territory. It’s in this moment that Stevens is most sure of himself, able to cast his familiar melodic structure in gold. Singles “Sugar” and “America” also arrive at the end, universes unto themselves that are so all-encompassing, they risk eclipsing the journey that brought the listener to them. And then there’s my personal favorite, the glorious title track, which is sole song on the album that would be most comfortable on any of his previous releases. That’s not to say it doesn’t fit into the adventurous soundscape of this album, but much of Stevens’ best career work feels unstuck in time and unobligated to its current musical climate. It’s a slow-burn and a gut-punch at once, familiar and unique, and possibly the most in tune with the world that the album descends on: “I thought I could change the world around me / I thought I could change the world for best,” he sings, before gaining strength in the realization things are far more complicated than the best of intentions can solve.
The Ascension grapples with the world in the same way that most of us are: in our room, alone, detached from our usual outlets but looking to strengthen bonds through this shared experience. But ultimately its usefulness is distinct from the intentions that it was created. Like that Coachella performance, Stevens typically balances what interests him and what makes sense for the moment, and The Ascension follows this roadmap to varying success. The album won’t likely empower you to surviving some of the darkest moments in recent history, but gives a snapshot of how one of our most beloved figures is processing. And like his last adventurous solo album, The Age Of Adz, this album leaves the impression that its majesty might grow in time, once freed from the turbulence of 2020. Personally, I can’t wait.
The Ascension is out now via Asthmatic Kitty. Get it here.
Hulu’s giving us plenty of nightmare fuel this month, so even if Halloween doesn’t happen this year, at least you’ll have plenty of terrifying shows to bingewatch. The most anticipated of these might be Monsterland, an anthology series with an impressive cast, but Britt Robertson’s horror movie, Books of Blood, also looks appropriately chilling. Here’s everything coming to (and leaving) Hulu this October.
Monsterland (Hulu series streaming 10/2)
This terrifying anthology series based on the stories from Nathan Ballingrud’s North American Lake Monsters feels like the perfect way to kick off the month, and it’s got an all-star cast ready to give us all the nightmares — think Kelly Marie Tran, Kaitlyn Dever, and Mike Colter.
Books of Blood (Hulu film streaming 10/7)
Another chilling take on a set of short stories, this time from writer Clive Barker, drops this month in film form. Britt Robertson stars as a young woman drawn to a creepy bed and breakfast, but there are also mediums and hauntings peppered throughout this thing.
Helstrom (Hulu series streaming 10/15)
Tom Austen and Sydney Lemmon play a brother-sister duo hunting bad guys in this new crime thriller. Daimon and Ana Helstrom’s job is to find the worst of humanity, and they’re pretty good at it — probably because their dad was a prolific serial killer.
Here’s the full list of titles coming to Hulu in October:
Avail. 10/1 90 Day Fiancé: Before the 90 Days: Complete Season 4 90 Day Fiancé: Complete Season 7 All-Star Halloween Spectacular: Special Bizarre Foods With Andrew Zimmern: Complete Seasons 9 & 10 Bride Killa: Complete Season 1 Cutthroat Kitchen: Complete Season 13 Dr. Pimple Popper: Complete Season 4 Going for Sold: Complete Season 1 Guy’s Grocery Games: Complete Seasons 18 – 20 Halloween Baking Championship: Complete Seasons 1 – 4 Halloween Wars: Complete Seasons 3 – 8 Hell’s Kitchen: Complete Season 18 Homicide City: Charlotte: Complete Season 1 Homicide Hunter: Lt. Joe Kenda: Complete Season 9 Man with a Van: Complete Season 1 Moonshiners: Master Distiller: Complete Season 1 Murder Comes Home: Complete Season 1 My 600-lb Life: Complete Season 8 My Feet Are Killing Me: Complete Season 1 Property Virgins: Complete Season 18 Supermarket Stakeout: Complete Season 1 Sweet 15: Quinceañera: Complete Season 1 The Flay List: Complete Season 1 Twisted Love: Complete Season 1 31 (2016) A Beautiful Mind (2001) Across The Line (2015) After Life (2010) Anti-Trust (2001) Blade (1998) Blade 2 (2002) Blade: Trinity (2004) Blood Ties (2014) Blue City (1986) The Curse Of Downers Grove (2015) Deep Blue Sea (1999) The Do-Deca-Pentathlon (2011) Double, Double, Toil and Trouble (1993) Drugstore Cowboy (1989) The Executioners (2018) The Express (2008) The Eye (2008) Fallen (1998) Girls Against Boys (2013) Good Hair (2009) Guess Who (2005) Hostel (2006) Hostel: Part II (2007) House Of 1000 Corpses (2003) The Hurt Locker (2009) Ice Age: The Meltdown (2006) Interview With the Vampire (1994) Joe (2014) Judy & Punch (2019) Kicking & Screaming (2005) Killers (2010) Lady in a Cage (1964) Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (1985) Martyrs (2016) Mud (2013) Nurse 3D (2014) The Pirates! Band Of Misfits (2012) The Portrait of a Lady (1996) The Quiet Ones (2014) Raging Bull (1980) The Sandman (2018) Senorita Justice (2004) Sk8 Dawg (2018) The Skull (1965) Snakes On A Plane (2006) Spaceballs (1987) Species (1995) Superbad (2007) Thanks for Sharing (2013) Tooth Fairy (2008) Triumph of the Spirit (1989) Vampire (2011) Wayne’s World 2 (1993) When A Stranger Calls (2006) William Shakespeare’s Romeo + Juliet (1996) Zombie Killers: Elephant’s Graveyard (2015)
Avail. 10/2 Monsterland: Complete Season 1 Connecting: Series Premiere
Avail. 10/3 Ma Ma (2015)
Avail. 10/4 Saturday Night Live: Season 46 Premiere
Avail. 10/7 Books of Blood: Film Premiere Ellen’s Game of Games: Season 4 Premiere Next: Series Premiere
Avail. 10/8 Scream 4 (2011)
Avail. 10/9 Terminator: Dark Fate (2020)
Avail. 10/11 Infamous (2020) Savage Youth (2018) Scotch: A Golden Dream (2018)
Avail. 10/12 The Swing Of Things (2020)
Avail. 10/14 The Bachelorette: Season 16 Premiere
Avail. 10/15 The Purge: Complete Season Treadstone: Complete Season 1 Bad Roomies (2015) High Strung (2016) It Came from the Desert (2017) Playing with Fire (2019) The Escort (2016) Helstrom: Complete Season 1
Avail. 10/16 The Painted Bird (2019)
Avail. 10/17 Shark Tank: Season 12 Premiere Momma Named Me Sheriff: Complete Season 1 Mr. Pickles: Finale Episode
Avail. 10/18 Friend Request (2016)
Avail. 10/19 America’s Funniest Home Videos: Season 31 Premiere Card Sharks: Series Premiere Supermarket Sweep: Series Premiere Who Wants To Be A Millionaire: Season 2 Premiere
Avail. 10/20 The Voice: Season 19 Premiere F*ck That’s Delicious: Complete Season 4
Avail. 10/21 Cyrano, My Love (2019)
Avail. 10/22 Black-ish: Season 7 Premiere The Conners: Season 3 Premiere The Goldbergs: Season 8 Premiere Bad Hair: Film Premiere
Avail. 10/23 Superstore: Season 6 Premiere
Avail. 10/26 Homeland: Complete Season 8
Avail. 10/27 What to Expect When You’re Expecting (2012)
Avail. 10/29 American Housewife: Season 5 Premiere Bad Therapy (2020)
Here’s what’s leaving Hulu in October:
Leaving 10/31 31 (2016) 52 Pick-Up (1986) A Good Woman (2006) After Life (2010) An American Haunting (2006) An Eye for a Eye (1966) Any Given Sunday (1999) Australia (2008) The Bellboy (1960) Blade: Trinity (2004) The Bounty (1984) The Brothers McMullen (1995) Bug (1975) Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter (1974) Cheech & Chong’s Still Smokin’ (1983) Cinderfella (1960) The Curse Of Downers Grove (2015) Downhill Racer (1969) The Executioners (2018) Footloose (1984) Forgetting Sarah Marshall (2008) Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1974) Girls Against Boys (2013) Girls! Girls! Girls! (1962) Gloria (2014) Hellraiser (1987) Hostel (2006) Hostel: Part II (2007) Hot Rod (2007) The Impossible (2012) Legend Of The Guardians: The Owls Of Ga’Hoole (2010) Life of Pi (2012) The Man Who Could Cheat Death (1959) Margin Call (2011) Martyrs (2016) Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003) The Patsy (1964) The Pawnbroker (1964) Phase IV (1974) Psycho Granny (2019) The Quiet Ones (2014) Red (2010) The Sandman (2018) Sleeping with the Enemy (1991) Sliver (1993) Spaceballs (1987) Stuck On You (2003) The Tenant (1976) The Terminator (1984) Trapped Model (2019) Trapped: The Alex Cooper Story (2019) Twilight (2008) The Twilight Saga: New Moon (2009) The Twilight Saga: Eclipse (2010) Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 1 (2011) Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Part 2 (2012) Ultraviolet (2006) Vampire (2011) Victoria Gotti: My Father’s Daughter (2019) Walking Tall (1973) When A Stranger Calls (2006) Zombie Killers: Elephant’s Graveyard (2015)
On the new episode of Indiecast, Steven Hyden and Ian Cohen dissect the new albums by two very successful indie acts who originated in the aughts: Sufjan Stevens’ The Ascension and Fleet Foxes’ Shore. While the rollout of The Ascension took on a more traditional approach, the arrival of Shore came as a surprise, with the release timed perfectly to coincide with the autumnal equinox on September 22nd at 9:31am EST.
While Hyden was initially resistant to Sufjan Stevens’ early work and Cohen felt similarly about Fleet Foxes’ early work, both have come around to the recent releases from each respective artist. The Ascension is some of Stevens’ darkest and angriest music to date, and Shore represents Fleet Foxes at their most attainable and melodic.
In this week’s recommendation corner, we have the new self-titled album from Teenage Halloween and the long-awaited new Deftones album Ohms. Ahead of the new Deftones album, Hyden sat down with the band’s frontman Chino Moreno to go through their entire discography and find out how their latest compares to what came before.
New episodes of Indiecast drop every Friday. Listen to Episode 9 below and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts here. Stay up to date and follow us on Instagram and Twitter.
2020 is not like the years that preceded it. Live in-person entertainment is pretty much over for the time being, people can’t get enough of washing their hands, and leaving the house is not to be taken lightly, since that simple act could put lives at risk. On top of all that, Vin Diesel is a singer now.
The Fast & Furious actor just released his first song, “Feel Like I Do,” and the single actually isn’t the worst thing; It’s a completely passable tropical house track. What was funny, though, was the song’s premiere on The Kelly Clarkson Show. Clarkson announced the track on the program, and before playing it, she shared a video of Diesel briefly speaking about the song. That was innocuous enough, but as Uproxx’s own Josh Kurp has pointed out, the moment that followed was surreal.
The virtual Kelly Clarkson Show audience members awkwardly dancing to Vin Diesel’s new song is the funniest thing I’ve seen in weeks. pic.twitter.com/eI0BEuNSPN
Kurp shared a clip from the episode and wrote, “The virtual Kelly Clarkson Show audience members awkwardly dancing to Vin Diesel’s new song is the funniest thing I’ve seen in weeks.” After Clarkson introduced the track, the show cut back and forth between a still image of the single art and shots of Clarkson’s audience, which was made up of virtual fans on vertically oriented TVs scattered around the studio. As the song played, the crowd awkwardly moved their limbs and torsos to dance along with the track.
This all came together to create a moment that was emblematic of how 2020 has been, so check it out above.
The last time we saw John Oliver (while he wore an award-worthy hoodie), he was graciously accepting Last Week Tonight‘s fifth consecutive Best Variety Talk Series award at the Emmys. He was thrilled, so much so that he forgot to thank the object of his obsession, “f*ckable redwood” Adam Driver, but after the excitement cooled down a bit, he took a few minutes to reflect upon his real “dream” for this year. And considering the dumpster fire of 2020, it feels like this is the right year for this type of goal.
I’m referring, of course, to Oliver’s pursuit of having a sewage plant in Danbury, Connecticut named after him. That strange turn of events involved Oliver becoming embroiled in a mock feud with the city and mayor Mark Boughton calling Oliver “full of crap” while faux-threatening the sewage plant rechristening. Well, Oliver was delighted but not pleased to later learn that this was only a joke, so he moved to open his wallet (and the mayor was like, nope, that’s not quite good enough, you gotta promise to show up for a ribbon-cutting ceremony, too).
Post-Emmys, Oliver has now followed up on achieving this goal, which must feel like a marathon by now. Oh, he wants it, as he told Access Hollywood (by way of Variety). He suggested that things are now going his way with the mayor. “My dream this year is to have a sewage plant named after me in Danbury, Connecticut,” Oliver gushed. “And I’m close. I feel like I’m real close.” Oliver added that he doesn’t have “full news” yet on the subject, but he feels that the current chain of events is “very promising.”
Hey, we all have dreams, and it’s hard to judge anyone’s dream in 2020, given our current situation. John Oliver’s keeping his eye on the ball, for which he previously doubled down in late August. “Listen, I didn’t know that I wanted my name on your sh*t factory,” he declared. “But now that you floated it as an option, it is all that I want.” He then threatened to take his sign elsewhere in Connecticut if Boughton and the city council didn’t grant him his wish.
Your move, Danbury! If you follow through on your promise to name your sewage plant after John, this beautiful sign can be yours! If not, it’ll go to one of the (better) towns in Connecticut. pic.twitter.com/XzX1PBu5fD
Uhhh, it kinda looks like this is really happening, if Oliver’s follow-up after the Emmys is to be believed? Maybe we’ll hear more about this “sh*t factory” when Last Week Tonight airs a new episode this Sunday.
Cardi B has already proven to be a multi-talented media personality, appearing in movies, commercials, and more, but it looks like we all missed out on seeing her grace our TV screens as star of a comedy show — unless you count her season on Love & Hip-Hop: New York. On last night’s episode of The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, the host questioned guest Chris Rock about the time Rock tried to get Cardi B her own comedy TV show.
“People are so obviously funny,” Rock explained, citing Leslie Jones as an example and lamenting his unsuccessful efforts to get her an agent before recommending her to Lorne Michaels for SNL. “My kids showed me this Cardi B girl — and she didn’t have a record out or anything — and I was like, ‘We should do a show with her.’ I’m not even gonna say what network. So me, Cardi B, and her management went to get a show going and it never happened. She told me about her rap at the time and I was like, ‘Yeah, yeah, that’s good. You’re a comedy star.’ I think Cardi B is one of the funniest people.”
Rock has a point; before “Bodak Yellow” took over radio and playlists worldwide, Cardi was primarily known for her outrageous, spontaneous, and authentic personality in Instagram videos. In fact, she still is, with her rant about coronavirus going — ahem — viral earlier this year and even spawning an EDM remix. Of course, that star power translates through her music as well, which is a big part of why her new song “WAP” with Megan Thee Stallion has basically lived at No. 1 on the Hot 100 chart ever since its release.
Watch Chris Rock’s interview with Jimmy Fallon above.
Cardi B is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.
There has been talk recently that the Fast & Furious franchise will be headed to space. Whether or not that’s true, one way or another, Vin Diesel is exploring a new frontier. Instead of leaving the atmosphere, though, he’s breaking into the music world with his first single, “Feel Like I Do.”
The track arrives on Kygo’s Palm Tree Records label, and indeed, it sounds like Kygo’s signature brand of tropical house. Diesel’s singing voice, which sounds nothing like his speaking voice, seems to have been heavily processed, as it sounds here like it has been pitched down.
He premiered the track on The Kelly Clarkson Show and shared a pre-recorded video message about his new endeavor, saying,
“Kelly, I’m so honored to be able to debut my music on your show, because since you first won [American] Idol and until today have somehow maintained your authenticity. I am blessed that on a year that I would normally be on a movie set — as you know, that’s not possible — I’ve had another creative outlet, another way to show you or share with you my heart. To that end, one of the people that first believed in me was Kygo, so I am now going to debut the first song on Kygo’s label, ‘Feels Like I Do.’ I hope you like it.”
Ahead of the track, he also wrote on Instagram, “For so long, I have been promising to release music… encouraged by you, to step out of my comfort zone. Thank you for believing in me. As always, I hope to make you proud.”
Listen to “Feel Like I Do” above.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Cookie settingsACCEPT
Privacy & Cookies Policy
Privacy Overview
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these cookies, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may have an effect on your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and is used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies. It is mandatory to procure user consent prior to running these cookies on your website.