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The Melody And The Mayhem Of Lil Durk

Lil Durk
Getty Image/Merle Cooper

“Chicago is a town, a city that doesn’t ever have to measure itself against any other city. Other places have to measure themselves against it. It’s big, it’s outgoing, it’s tough, it’s opinionated, and everybody’s got a story.” — Anthony Bourdain

The Grammy Award for Best Melodic Rap Performance has required a certain malleability to sustain itself, mutating in form as the years have passed, much like commercial rap music itself. The statuette was first handed out in 2002 as Best Rap/Sung Collaboration and just look at some of the nominees from its first two years: Eve and Gwen Stefani, Nelly and Kelly, various songs that feature one or both of Ja Rule and Ashanti. These were glorious duets that paired an emcee and singer together in the hope of achieving significant MTV traction; tentpole hits in what looks more and more like a classic era for pop music with each passing year. But the category needed to shed the prerequisite that nominated songs required two distinct performers when more artists began blurring the lines between both disciplines. From 2018 to 2020, it was called Best Rap/Sung Performance, before changing once more to its current iteration.

What Grammy voters envision a “rap/sung performance” or “melodic rap” to be has meant the award has been a happy hunting ground for more pop-oriented rap artists. I’ve witnessed intense forum debates on whether Drake’s “Hotline Bling” is a rap song. Maybe it is, maybe it isn’t. What is for certain is that Drizzy’s mammoth hit single is the kind of tune that perfectly fits what the Grammys are looking for here — “Hotline Bling” triumphed in the category in 2017.

This year, voters have a chance to give the award to a rapper who has long used melody not in the pursuit of mainstream acceptance, but to create music that sounds doomed and desperate. I’m talking, of course, about the man who wears Chicago rap’s crown of thorns, Lil Durk, nominated for his single “All My Life,” featuring J. Cole.

Durk’s first outright Grammy nomination (he previously guest appeared on Drake’s double-nominated “Laugh Now Cry Later”), “All My Life” is three minutes and 43 seconds of gospel-tinged upliftment, making it pretty atypical of his vast archives. The rapper is closely associated with the Chicago drill scene and has arguably overcome Chief Keef’s head start to become its most popular ambassador. But while Keef once represented the Mephistophelian chaos of the adamantine-hard genre, Durk’s music boasts a richness, both in detail and emotional resonance, that has made him a man apart.

Durk rose out of his city’s South Side when the area — much like South Central, Los Angeles in the 1990s — was becoming associated internationally with street violence, and the term “Chi-Raq” was entering the popular lexicon. In this backdrop, Durk has been Chicago’s Didion, his words offering a lens into what he calls “the trenches” and a deeply American brand of urban chaos. He covers poverty, violence, and loss with a sage-on-the-block wisdom of this socio-economic nightmare.

Any number of Durk’s songs can feel like the coldest story ever told. A minimalist, he generally rejects overarching commentary and instead focuses on single incidents, small details, and those little moments. This is augmented by his ability to create chilly harmonies, utilizing Auto-Tune-doused vocals that bleed like they’ve been cut into by a kitchen knife. Durk is a solid rapper, with a voice that’s clean and youthful. What’s special is his ability to convey the weight on his soul through the dual weaponry of vocal cords and computer software. There are analogues to Durk in the form of Future, Young Thug, and 03 Greedo, but none sound quite as deathly cursed.

Forged in Englewood, Durk Banks is a South Side native, and child of chaos and disorder. He was probably too young to fully grasp the situation when his father, Dontay Banks, was sentenced to life in prison for cocaine distribution after refusing to snitch on infamous kingpin (and one of Rick Ross’s cocaína heroes) Larry Hoover.

Rapping became the son’s vocation. Still a kid, Durk harnessed the power of the internet to build a fan base, but his visibility really intensified as the excitement — and moral panic — around the drill music took off. While Keef was receiving the attention of an intrigued New York Times, Durk dropped Life Ain’t No Joke, a Datpiff classic, in October 2012. Hardship was burned into the title, yet Durk saw melodies in the mayhem. Jordan Sargent observed in his Pitchfork review, “he leans heavily on one under-discussed aspect of drill music: Auto-Tune, and drowning music in it.” This was three years after Jay-Z declared the pitch-correcting apparatus dead, yet Durk made it sound like such a vital tool. Songs like “Right Here” had drill’s crushing concrete beats, with the rapping adding a harsh sense of beauty.

Durk parlayed the hype around drill into a deal with Def Jam. It proved an unsatisfactory union. After splitting with the label, Durk used an interview with Billboard to curse the bureaucracy that stopped him releasing music at his own furious pace: “I never really got a chance to enjoy anything because I’ve been with them for five years.” A half-decade is a long time to be dissatisfied, but the period did yield the singles “Like Me” and “My Beyonce,” certified gold and platinum respectively. Def Jam might not have liked everything about its young star, but it must have loved his ability to use that sense of melody to sing softer R&B jams for mass consumption.

Liberated from Def Jam, Durk opened the floodgates. In 2017, he moved to Atlanta, where he maintained a hectic release schedule, dropping solid tape after solid tape, outliving the public’s curiosity with drill music.

Not just a crooner, Durk can unplug from Auto-Tune and spit raw couplets. One of his most popular tracks, “3 Headed Goat,” from 2020, saw him team up with Polo G and Lil Baby to form a trap King Ghidorah, while on “Chiraq Demons,” he recruited G Herbo for a double dose of classic drill — all horror movie piano keys, crushing drums, and unbelievable menace. It was a reminder that the then-red-hot sounds of Brooklyn drill were a murky thing compared to their crushing Chi origins.

Meanwhile, the sad dispatches from the streets continued. Though his mail might have been delivered to Atlanta, Durk’s narratives were impossible to envision set anywhere but the Chi. Take a song like “Different Meaning”: Snapping awake with a drug hangover, Durk feels frustration that the message of his music has failed to bring necessary change (“I put real life inside this music, they not hearing us”) as he thinks back to texts informing him that friends had been killed, his vocal cords cracking under the strain. Frequently, he’s leaned on his music to both communicate and release him from his own struggles.

In May, 2019, Durk handed himself over to cops after a warrant was issued for his arrest in connection with a February 2019 shooting outside of a restaurant in Atlanta. The rap sheet made grim reading: Durk and his protégé King Von were charged with criminal attempt to commit murder, aggravated assault, participation in criminal street gang activity, possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. The day after his arrest, Durk released the song “Turn Myself In” to address his legal situation: “False accusations why they name droppin’,” Durk declares. “They wanna know if I’m rapping or robbing/ Taking these drugs for family problems.” The tethering of the news cycle to his music seemed to clarify what we already knew: Durk’s writing was not based in fabrication.

Eighteen months later, with the case still open, King Von was one of two men shot dead outside the Monaco Hookah Lounge in Atlanta when, according to police, an argument between two groups of men “escalated to gunfire.” And in June 2021, Durk’s brother Dontay Banks, who performed as DThang, was killed in a chaotic scene at Club O.

Two loved ones dead, the oblivion of prison hanging over him, Durk continued to work. But this period of darkness was finally laid bare with last year’s release of Almost Healed, the album that houses his now Grammy-nominated single, “All My Life.”

Durk’s never been considered a maker of classic albums, partly because he’s not great at ironing out flaws in his projects for those who might be looking for them, but also because they don’t tend to be distinct from one another. Almost Healed, though, feels like a stand-alone monument and that starts with a title that welcomingly reveals catharsis, plus a cover that invokes the title of Miles Marshall Lewis’s classic hip-hop memoir, Scars Of The Soul Are Why Kids Wear Bandages When They Don’t Have Bruises.

Crucially, Almost Healed was released in the wake of the news that the charges against Durk were dropped. Understanding he’s free from that legal strain furthers the sense that this album represents his attempt to leave his worst days behind.

Almost Healed opens with words from Durk’s therapist — played by, of all people, Alicia Keys. “Can you tell me where was your mind when you heard the news of your friend Von passing away on November 6th, 2020?” she asks. “And then, the loss of your brother on June 6th, 2021. Wow, that must’ve been incredibly devastating. I can only imagine how painful that must’ve been.” There can be no obscuring the album’s intent. The therapist finishes up by demanding, “I wanna hear from Durk Banks,” real name, no obfuscation.

On “Pelle Coat,” Durk sounds wounded as he addresses rumors that he betrayed Von (“Like how I’ma sacrifice Von? I’m the only n***a reached for his hand”). Almost Healed is occasionally spiritual, with various references to Durk’s Islamic faith. Now in his thirties, he has also aged into back-in-the-day nostalgia about his own career. “Belt2Ass” references past pop runs like “My Beyoncé”: “Your Mount Rushmore list can’t fuck with me / Tried to go popstar, had to fuck up the streets.”

Among the most open-hearted songs is the Grammy-nominated “All My Life.” Produced by Dr. Luke, it uses the kind of somber piano line that tends to elicit confessions. J. Cole is not the kind of rapper you’d associate with Durk, but here he serves as a decent adjutant. As Durk explained, “It’s just a rap that’s just showing you what I been going through… We were just trying to figure out like what’s the right person to put on it. ’Cause it’s one of those songs where if it’s not the right person to do the second verse… I feel like Cole can bring the energy that I’m looking for to it.”

Cole opens “All My Life” by setting the scene: “Durkio told me he been on some positive shit.” From there, Durk recalls past controversies, how he leveraged his fame into meeting politicians to try to elicit positive change, and sadly observes, “These days seein’ rappers be dyin’/ Way before they even getting’ they shine.”

Because there’s a cataclysm devastating rap. Among those to be murdered are BTB Savage, YGN Cheese, Yung Lo, and MoneySign Suede. 350 Heem was shot and killed at his own mixtape release party; Gangsta Boo succumbed to an accidental overdose. This is all since the last Grammys.

There is the chorus, without which “All My Life” likely wouldn’t have nabbed its nomination. A children’s choir is recruited, because sometimes that’s what you need to punctuate a refrain like, “They couldn’t break me, they couldn’t break me,” and make people understand you really mean it.

Sometimes healing isn’t a straight, unbreakable process. Forever restless, Durk quickly followed up Almost Healed with Nightmares In The Trenches, a project featuring members of his collective/label Only The Family. A half-hour of steely street raps and fresh reporting, Durk is back to his chief vocation. No statuette is likely to take that urge away from Durk’s make-up. If you’re the kind of person who believes collective achievement should be considered when handing out a gold gong, then Lil Durk’s decade-and-a-half of valuable dispatches should make this Grammy a wrap.

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Nicki Minaj’s Feud With Megan Thee Stallion Has Summoned Azealia Banks, Who Went On An Impressively Rude Rant Of Her Own

azealia banks
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You know how Azealia Banks seemed to be turning a corner on her stance about former idol/rival Nicki Minaj?

Yeah, all that just went out the window as Banks entered the chat to weigh in on Minaj’s ongoing, largely one-sided beef with Megan Thee Stallion. Posting her thoughts to her Instagram Story, the clips that have made their way to Twitter make it very clear where she stands on this one.

“It’s pretty clear that Nicki’s f*cked up,” she posits. “Like, she’s f*cked up financially… I know I’ve made some crazy-looking sh*t on here but I’m also going around trying to menace other artists and call them broke. You can tell just by whatever’s happening with Nicki’s butt, that she’s f*cked up right now.”

So, to quote Mulaney, yet again: We don’t have time to unpack ALL of that, but the highlight seems to be that Banks doesn’t think much of Nicki’s current campaign against the Houston Hottie. (There’s probably another 800 words to be written about Banks absolutely trying to menace other artists, up to and including allegedly doing voodoo to bring them misfortune, but we’ve committed too much time and server space to this issue as it is.)

She also addresses what she thinks is the cause of Nicki’s anymosity: Jealousy over Megan’s favored position with Jay-Z.

The main thing here seems to be that, whatever issues Azealia has with Meg (which, you sorta have to assume she has, given her history with, like, everybody, including Nicki’s main rival Cardi B), she’s always going to come back to her usual position regarding Ms. Minaj. No matter what, Banks stands on business — especially when the girls are fighting.

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Donald Glover Has Finally Delivered A Promising ‘Community’ Movie Update While Also Revealing, ‘I’m All In’

Donald Glover
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Long ago, in the year 2022, a movie based on the cult comedy Community was announced, fulfilling the long-foretold prophecy that Community would have #SixSeasonsAndAMovie. And fans rejoiced! Everyone (mostly everyone) was down to return, including Joel McHale, Danny Pudi, Alison Brie, Gillian Jacobs, Jim Rash, and Ken Jeong. Everything seemed like it was going to happen. And then, with various delays and strikes in 2023…it seemed like we were never going to check in with our favorite Greendale Community College alumni.

Over the past year, fans were questioning whether Donald Glover, who starred in the first five seasons of the show, would return, or if the movie would even happen. As it turns out Glover is on board and a script is done. So we don’t have to throw in the towel just yet.

While promoting his new series Mr. & Mirs. Smith, Glover told ET, “I was told the script is done,” he said, referring to the Community movie. Glover then confirmed he would return to the show. “I haven’t read it yet. It is really just a schedule thing. I’m in. I am all in.” Check out the clip below:

Last year, McHale claimed that they were gearing up to film the movie, but it seems like that might have been delayed due to the fact that he now works for animal control. We’ll see what happens after all this!

(Via The Wrap)

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Anthony Edwards Doesn’t Care About His $40,000 Fine For Ripping The Refs: ‘It Needed To Be Said’

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Anthony Edwards and the Minnesota Timberwolves picked up an impressive road win over the Oklahoma City Thunder in a battle between teams at the top of the Western Conference standings. Edwards led the Wolves with 27 points in 40 minutes, but his comments after the game drew increased attention. In short, Edwards was not at all happy about the officiating, and he even said he would “take the fine” for his postgame remarks.

On Wednesday, Edwards was given a whopping $40,000 fine by the NBA for his comments and, when asked about the dollar figure on Thursday, he didn’t exactly run from what he said and the end result.

Edwards seemed to know it was coming even in the moment, so it surely was not a surprise that he was fined. The $40,000 figure did raise some eye-brows compared to the typical baseline for officiating criticism but, as Edwards noted, it was “probably because (he) said they was cheating.”

It helps, of course, that Edwards will begin a five-year max contract extension next season, so it isn’t as if a $40,000 deduction will change his financial picture. Edwards is also someone who certainly seems willing and eager to say what he thinks, for better or worse, and the candor endears him to many.

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The Best Whiskeys To Chase Down This February

Best Whiskeys February 2024
Shutterstock/UPROXX

February is the unofficial start to spring releases in the whiskey world. I know, we’re just coming off a few months that were crammed full of whiskey drops. Well, that’s all behind us. 2024 is here. And it’s already looking to be another stellar year for whiskey, folks.

Below, I’m naming 18 whiskeys that you should be drinking right now. There are small-batch bourbons, new American ryes, special edition Lunar New Year Scotch whiskies (for the Year of the Dragon), super old single malts, barrel-proof ABV bombs, and more. Translation: There’s something for everyone. And for the most part, these are all brand-new and upcoming releases with a few gems that slipped through the cracks of late 2023.

I didn’t rank these whiskeys as they’re too broad to face off against each other. But as I mentioned, a lot is going on in the flavor profiles of these whiskeys and you should be able to find something that sparks your interest. Read through my tasting notes, find the whiskey or whiskeys that speak to you, and then hit those price links to see if you can snag a bottle.

Let’s dive in!

Check Out The Best New Whiskeys Of The Last Six Months:

Green River Kentucky Straight Rye Whiskey

Green River Kentucky Straight Rye Whiskey
Bardstown Bourbon Company

ABV: 42.5%

Average Price: $34

The Whiskey:

This is the most exciting release of February 2024 thanks to last year’s Green River releases being absolute bangers. This bottle is a classic rye mash of 95/5 (rye/malted barley) distilled and aged in Kentucky. The batch is made from a mix of four- to six-year-old barrels that are proofed down before bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: A hint of mint draws you in on the nose before getting spiced to the point of fresh spearmint with a cut of orange zest, whispers of black peppercorns, and creamy vanilla honey with a flutter of NY cheesecake crust.

Palate: That buttery Graham Cracker crust takes on more creamy vanilla and orange oils before veering toward oaky spice and freshly cracked black pepper with a whisper of dried ancho chili.

Finish: Wet black tea leaves and creamed honey round out the finish with a sense of soft oak, winter spice, and burnt orange just kissed with red chili pepper flakes.

Bottom Line:

This is a very well-rounded classic sharp rye. It’s not overly sweet but it is ultra silky. I can see using this as an everyday table pour or a great cocktail base.

The Reverend Sour Mash Whiskey

The Reverend Sour Mash
Call Family Distillers

ABV: 45%

Average Price: $35

The Whiskey:

Call Family Distillers down in North Carolina just revamped their The Reverand Sour Mash for an early 2024 re-release. The whiskey in the bottle spent four years mellowing in new charred oak and ex-bourbon casks. Once batched, the whiskey is filtered through sugar maple charcoal, proofed, and bottled.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Freshly baked cinnamon sticky buns mingle with a pile of Red Delicious apple peels on the nose with hints of coffee cake, ginger chews, and a touch of rum raisin.

Palate: Bold and sour cherry drives the palate toward soft orange oils, creamed honey, and a faint touch of pecan waffle with a vanilla base.

Finish: The end veers toward oaky spice and tobacco before hitting a very sweet note of toffee and peach cobbler with a dollop of malted vanilla ice cream.

Bottom Line:

This is a wild ride of a whiskey that feels part Kentucky bourbon and part Tennessee whiskey (it’s so fruity). It’s also very easygoing thanks to those low ABVs. Overall, I can see this shining in a fruity-forward spring cocktail.

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Batch A124

Elijah Craig Barrel Proof Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Batch A124
Heaven Hill

ABV: 59.5%

Average Price: $74

The Whiskey:

2024’s first Elijah Craig Barrel Proof is a unique one. The batch is made from barrels that averaged out to 10 years and nine months old, which is on the young side for these releases. Moreover, the ABVs are much lower than usual as well, coming in under 60%.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Rich salted caramel, apple fritters, cherry pie, winter spice, old leather tobacco pouches, and deep oakiness drive the nose with a touch of rye bread crust and nutty … I want to say granola covered in dark chocolate.

Palate: The sweetness really gets buttery on the palate with rich toffee and salted caramel ice cream next to creamy cinnamon chews, vanilla malt, dark and smooth chocolate sauce, and a counterpoint of sharp oak spices with a touch of old spicy tobacco.

Finish: That tobacco and oaky spice sharpen on the finish before the creamy caramel, vanilla, and chocolate base returns for a soft and lush end.

Bottom Line:

This is a one-of-a-kind EC Barrel Proof. It’s so creamy and sweet that it leans toward doughnut shop desserts. It’s warm on the end with all that sharp spice, but never overly so. It’s approachable, especially for any sweet tooth bourbon fans out there.

Larceny Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Barrel Proof A124

Larceny Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Barrel Proof A124
Heaven Hill

ABV: 62.1%

Average Price: $69

The Whiskey:

The first Larceny Barrel Proof release of 2024 is a classic. The whiskey in the bottle is a blend of six- to eight-year-old bourbons from the wheated bourbon barrels at Heaven Hill. Those barrels were batched and then went into the bottle 100% as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This feels warm on the nose with a sense of cinnamon toast, pecan waffles covered in maple syrup, and buttery vanilla paste with a hint of prune and maybe some dates swimming in mulled wine with a whisper of dark fruity brandy.

Palate: Rummy syrup with a deep sense of Nutella spread over a toasted brioche drives the palate toward fig jam, sticky toffee pudding, and a dark caramel cut with burnt orange and salt flakes on the mid-palate.

Finish: That caramel gets so dark that it turns into cinnamon-laced dark chocolate with a touch of allspice and clove before a dry sense of old oak staves wrapped in tobacco round out the hot and dry end.

Bottom Line:

This is like a spicy dessert with a bit more heat than the above barrel-proof bourbon. It’s more classic while delivering a bold profile that’s probably best tempered by a single rock or folded into a simple old fashioned.

Redwood Empire Devils Tower High Rye Bourbon Whiskey

Redwood Empire Devils Tower High Rye Bourbon Whiskey
Redwood Empire

ABV: 49.5%

Average Price: $89

The Whiskey:

This new release from Redwood Empire out in California is a very small batch — only 25 barrels — of good straight bourbon. The mash is super unique with only 51% corn supported by 45% rye, 2% malted barley, and 2% wheat. Those barrels rested until just right for batching, proofing, and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a delicate blend of stewed red fruits with a deep and woody spice mix completed by soft leather, cedar bark, and soft pipe tobacco with a hint of cherry syrup.

Palate: The taste leans into the cherry with a deep clove, allspice, and cinnamon vibe before hitting a touch of grassy rye and buttery grits all rolled into an old leather tobacco pouch and placed in an old humidor that’s scented with brandied cherries.

Finish: The end has a subtle and well-rounded sense of classic bourbon with a warming touch of woody spice, dark and stewed red fruit, and deep vanilla creaminess with a hint of nutshell and tobacco.

Bottom Line:

This is a nice and boldly classic sipping whiskey that’ll make any whiskey-forward cocktail shine.

Woodford Reserve Distillery Series: Double Double Oak Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Woodford Reserve Distillery Series: Double Double Oak
Brown-Forman

ABV: 45.2%

Average Price: $59 (half bottle)

The Whiskey:

Woodford Reserve’s much-beloved Double Double Oak is back. The whiskey in the bottle is a classic Double Oak bourbon that’s then re-barreled into heavily toasted new oak barrels for one final rest before batching, proofing, and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Streams of fresh maple syrup drive the nose toward peanut brittle, dark and bitter chocolate, and toasted marshmallow with a whisper of campfire next to a touch of dark red berry.

Palate: Dried cherry and blackberry pie drive the palate with a hint of apple fritter next to clove-studded oranges, woody winter spice, and a hint of spiced creamy tea.

Finish: The woody spice and orange clove move the finish toward dry tobacco leaves in an old cedar humidor with a touch of anise, allspice, and old firewood with this faint whisper of dried mushroom on the very end.

Bottom Line:

This is a very tasty and unique Kentucky bourbon. It goes places that you don’t expect but make total sense once you get there. It’s also fleeting. This limited release will be available on January 23rd at the distillery only.

Waterford Irish Single Malt Whisky Micro Cuvee Good Vibrations

Waterford Irish Single Malt Whisky Micro Cuvee Good Vibrations
Waterford

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $130

The Whisky:

This late 2023 release is a collaboration between La Maison du Whiskey and Waterford head distiller Ned Gahan. The whisky is made with barley from three farms, yielding a barley mash of 50% Hunter, 25% Olympus, and 25% Prospect malts. The whisky then spent 3 years and 11 months in ex-bourbon barrels from Jim Beam and Heaven Hill before vatting, proofing, and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose opens with a sense of oily lemon and star anise countered by a malty vanilla creamy foundation that’s accented by smoldering black soil and old fall leaves.

Palate: The lemon and vanilla join forces on the palate for a lemon custard vibe before witch hazel and soft cotton wool arrive with a moment of real black licorice and an almost absinth feel.

Finish: The cotton swabs and witch hazel drive the finish toward seawater-soaked peat with more of that licorice before the profile veers wildly toward stewed pears, peaches, and plums with a hint of smokiness and deep winter spices, caramel, and butter.

Bottom Line:

This whisky goes places. It really leads you down a medicinal peated path before surprising you with deeply stewed fruits and oaky spice with a creamy finish. It’s kind of delightful. And it’s very complex, making this a good palate expander.

Old Forester Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey 1924 10-Year-Old

Old Forester Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey 1924 10-Year-Old
Brown-Forman

ABV: 50%

Average Price: $115

The Whiskey:

This brand-new release from Old Forester is new in more ways than one. The whiskey is their first age-statement whiskey at 10 years old. It’s also a new mash bill for the heritage brand with a recipe of 79% corn, 11% rye, and 10% malted barley. The whiskey aged in the Brown-Forman warehouse until just right for batching, proofing, and bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Freshly fried cinnamon doughnuts, soft chocolate shavings, and buttery salted caramel drive the nose toward dry nutshells, a hint of apple fritter, and dark brandy cherries dipped in creamy dark chocolate.

Palate: That chocolate is just kissed with Graham Cracker and marshmallow on the palate with a good dose of cinnamon, nutmeg, and allspice leading toward a dark brandy cherry tobacco on the mid-palate.

Finish: The dark cherry tobacco and S’mores drive the finish with a sense of dark stewed red fruit, stone fruit, and pear/apple before the oak arrives with a sense of an old cellar on a warm day.

Bottom Line:

This is just an excellent bourbon.

Bhakta Straight Rye Whiskey Distilled 2013 Finished in Calvados Casks

Bhakta Straight Rye Whiskey
Bhakta

ABV: 53.8%

Average Price: $149

The Whiskey:

This new release from Bhakta is an Indiana 95/5 rye that’s nearly 11 years old. Sign me up! The barrels in the batch were all finished in Calvados casks (an apple brandy) before batching and bottling at nearly cask strength.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Freshly baked apple pie with a huge dollop of vanilla ice cream draws you in on the nose with a deeply salted caramel, soft oakiness, and dark orange vibe with a touch of clove, nutmeg, and allspice.

Palate: Vibrant tart apples and soft sandy pears drive the palate toward creamed nutmeg and honey with a deep sense of freshly cracked black pepper, dried chili pepper flakes, and a touch of vanilla sauce.

Finish: The end dried out with all that woody and peppery spice with a dried mushroom vibe next to old dried tobacco, firewood bark, and soft dried roasting herbs with a hint of braised salted fat.

Bottom Line:

This is another palate-expanding whiskey. It ends so far away from where it starts in all the right ways. This is one that you take your time with. It’ll reward you.

Glenfiddich Single Malt Scotch Whisky Aged 21 Years Gran Reserve 2024 Chinese New Year

Glenfiddich Single Malt Scotch Whisky Aged 21 Years Gran Reserve 2024 Chinese New Year
William Grant & Sons

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $499

The Whisky:

This year’s Lunar New Year release from Glenfiddich is their classic 21-year-old Grand Reserva which spends four months finishing in Gran Reserva barrels before vatting, proving, and bottling.

The box art was created by acclaimed Japanese artist Raku Inoue. She transformed Glenfiddich’s iconic stag into a dragon with a forest and floral design and scaled stag body for his year’s Lunar New Year celebrations.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: This is very “perfume” driven on the nose with plenty of sticky toffee pudding — the dates, nutmeg, toffee, vanilla, everything — leading to a hint of cherry bark and old leather.

Palate: The palate has a thin line of cream soda with more of that floral perfume, woody cinnamon apple, and a bit of sultana and prunes.

Finish: The finish leans into the florals and honey as a waft of freshly baked banana bread floats past and the creaminess amps up towards a kind of a Key lime pie vibe.

Bottom Line:

This is a delicate and very deep whisky. It’s a slow sipper that leans into the beautiful florals and fruity forest vibes on the box wonderfully. Take it slow and enjoy the nuances.

Heaven Hill Heritage Collection Aged 18 Years Small Batch Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey 2024 Release

Heaven Hill Heritage Collection Aged 18 Years Small Batch Kentucky Straight Bourbon
Heaven Hill

ABV: 60%

Average Price: Coming Soon

The Whiskey:

The 2024 Heaven Hill Heritage Collection was just announced. This year Master Distiller Conor O’Driscoll chose 133 barrels from a prime spot in a prime rickhouse. The whiskey is classic Heaven Hill bourbon made with a mash of 78% corn, 10% rye, and 12% malted barley. All 133 barrels were laid down back in December 2005 and left alone until bathing and bottling as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Iconic bourbon notes of spiced cherry syrup, pecan waffles soaked in butter and maple syrup, oaky spices, old tobacco in leather pouches, and soft caramel swirled with creamy vanilla dance on the nose.

Palate: The caramel gets salty on the palate as the oaky spices dial in toward clove, cinnamon, allspice, and nutmeg before high-syrup Cherry Coke from a dispenser collides with rich pipe tobacco dipped in dark chocolate with a hint of espresso cream.

Finish: The finish leans into more dark and spicy cherry with a touch of Cherry Dr. Pepper next to creamy eggnog with plenty of nutmeg, salted caramel, and more of that soft and almost chewy pipe tobacco leading to a dry sense of cedar bark braided with dry sweetgrass and smudging sage on the very end.

Bottom Line:

This is another masterpiece. It’ll hit shelves in March and cost $299 at MSRP, but thousands in the real world.

Garrison Brothers Guadalupe Texas Straight Bourbon Whiskey Finished in a Port Cask 2024 Limited Edition

Garrison Brothers Guadalupe
Garrison Brothers

ABV: 53.5%

Average Price: $149

The Whiskey:

This Texas whiskey is hewn from 90 30-gallon barrels of four-year-old bourbon that were transferred into 26 59-gallon Tawny Port casks for a final maturation of over one year. That whiskey is then bottled as-is after a touch of water is added.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose on this bursts with raspberry, blackberry, redcurrant, and blueberry all stewed with plenty of holiday spices and folded into a cobbler topped with dense buttery buttermilk biscuits.

Palate: The palate leans into the spice with a focus on clove, nutmeg, and a tiny whisper of anise as the berry turns more towards a fresh strawberry with dark chocolate-covered espresso beans chiming in on the mid-palate.

Finish: That chocolate-bitter vibe drives towards a finish full of cinnamon-spiked dark chocolate tobacco leaves, stewed plums, and a dollop of floral honey.

Bottom Line:

This is the best bottle of Garrison out there and the new version is about to hit shelves. This is the perfect slow sipper over a single rock.

Johnnie Walker Blue Label Blended Scotch Whisky 2024 Year of the Dragon

Johnnie Walker Blue Label Blended Scotch Whisky 2024 Year of the Dragon
Diageo

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $219

The Whisky:

This is the mountaintop of Johnnie Walker’s whiskies. The blend is a marriage of ultra-rare grain and malt stock from extinct Diageo distilleries around Scotland. That’s just … cool. This expression is all about barrel selection and the mastery of a great noser and blender working together to create something special.

This year’s bottle art was created by visual artist James Jean. The unique design is a “dynamic interpretation” of the noble Wood Dragon to celebrate the Lunar New Year.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: The nose on this one feels like silk with soft malts, dried plums, good marzipan, old boot leather, mulled wine spices, and a whisper of fireplace smoke.

Palate: The taste layers orange oils into the marzipan as rose-water-infused honey leads to a line of bitter dark chocolate that’s touched with smoked malts and nuts.

Finish: The end has an even keel of velvet mouthfeel next to floral honey, soft smoldering smoke from a fireplace, and old dried fruit.

Bottom Line:

This is Johnnie Blue. Of course, it’s delicious. What you’re paying for here is the unique bottle art on an iconic bottle of whisky.

Old Elk Infinity Blend Batch 3

Old Elk Infinity Blend Batch 3
Old Elk Distillery

ABV: 57.575%

Average Price: $179

The Whiskey:

The new Old Elk Infinity Blend is here. Though released at the tail end of 2023, it’s actually hitting shelves right now. The whiskey in the bottle is a blend of 15.3% Old Elk 2022 Infinity Blend, 40% Old Elk high malt bourbon aged 8 years, 43.2% Old Elk straight wheat whiskey aged 7 years, and 1.5% Old Elk straight wheat whiskey aged 10 years. Those whiskeys were batched and then bottled 100% as-is.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Orange upside-down cake with a deep and rich caramel opens the nose toward rich and creamy vanilla, cinnamon toast, raw sugar rock candy, and soft winter spices rolled into a tobacco-heavy winter spice cake that’s drizzled with orange and cinnamon syrup.

Palate: That orange amps up on the palate with an orange milkshake vibe next to fresh cinnamon cookies, gingerbread, mincemeat pies, and spiced tobacco with a soft oakiness.

Finish: The caramelized orange and butteriness really drive the finish toward creamed vanilla, winter spice cakes, and spiced tobacco with a chewiness on the end.

Bottom Line:

This is dessert in a glass, especially a winter dessert. I can see this making one hell of a whiskey-forward cocktail where you draw the sugar back and let the whiskey shine.

Royal Salute Blended Scotch Whisky 21 Years Old Lunar New Year Special Edition 2024

Royal Salute Blended Scotch Whisky 21 Years Old Lunar New Year Special Edition 2024
Royal Salute

ABV: 40%

Average Price: $299

The Whisky:

This is Royal Salute’s 21-year-old Signature Blend, which pays homage to the 21-gun salute for Queen Elizabeth II’s coronation back in the 1950s. This version is being re-released to celebrate 2024’s Lunar New Year. Chinese illustrator Feifei Ruan created the box and bottle art to celebrate this year’s festivities.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Ripe peaches and pears drive the nose with an underbelly of dried nuts, soft honey, and cellared oak with a whisper of rum raisin and mulled wine.

Palate: The mulled wine amps up on the palate as hints of minced meat pies, winter spice cakes, and stewed pear lean toward soft winter pears and mixed nuts.

Finish: The end leans back into the sweet and spicy mulled wine with a touch of spiced and sweet sherry next to old cellar vibes, soft oak, and overripe pears and plums rolled with tobacco.

Bottom Line:

This is just a nice and easy sipper with balanced depth. The beautiful box and bottle are the cherry on top.

Longmorn Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky Single Batch Aged 22 Years 2024 Annual Release

Longmorn Speyside Single Malt Scotch Whisky Single Batch Aged 22 Years 2024 Annual Release
Pernod Ricard

ABV: 54.5%

Average Price: $439

The Whisky:

This is a whisky maker’s whisky. The whisky in the bottle is often reserved for Chivas and rarely ever sees shelves as a single malt. In this case, first and second-fill bourbon casks were vatted and proofed for this very rare yearly release.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Pecan sandies and peanut brittle dance with salted caramel and stewed pears on the nose with a deep sense of an old musty oak barrel house with soft tobacco and leather lurking in the background.

Palate: Soft toffee and banana bread smeared with salted butter leads to a rich caramel, soft vanilla whip cream, and touches of buttery Graham Cracker crusts accented with orange zest and nutmeg on the palate.

Finish: Subtle woody winter spiced and mild chocolate arrives late on the finish with a supple sense of full-fat eggnog, silky vanilla sauce, and fresh and chewy pipe tobacco rolled in old oak barrels with a hint of brandied pear.

Bottom Line:

This is a lush and delicious sipper. Take it slow and it’ll reward you with the lushest vibes.

Old Forester Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Statesman x Argylle Bundle

Old Forester Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey Statesman x Argylle Bundle
Brown-Forman

ABV: 47.5%

Average Price: $250

The Whisky:

The Statesmen from Old Forester was originally released as a tie-in for the Kingsman films, but was so popular it became a mainstream release. With the release of Argylle (which is part of the Kingsman universe), the whiskey was re-released with a Handmade Portuguese crystal rocks glass from Vista Allegre (which is used in the film by Agent Argylle).

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Moist, dark chocolate cake with cloves and oak mix with a flourish of vanilla on the nose.

Palate: The taste holds onto the spice and amps it into Christmas spice territory, focusing on woody cinnamon next to worn leather and buttery toffee.

Finish: A dry floral note arrives late with a burst of orange that leans creamy (almost like a sherbert) co-mingling with all that vanilla and toffee.

Bottom Line:

This is good, standard Old Forester whisky. It works best over a lot of rocks or in your favorite whiskey-forward cocktail. The real star of the show is the beautiful glass. It’s perfectly balanced and is the best vessel for that aforementioned cocktail.

Cream of Kentucky 16 Years Old Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey

Cream of Kentucky 16 Years Old Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey
Cream of Kentucky

ABV: 58%

Average Price: $429

The Whiskey:

The new Cream of Kentucky from Kentucky bourbon legend Jim Rutledge is here. This time around, we have a 16-year-old batch of bourbon from Rutledge’s private stash. Once batched, the whiskey was just kissed with water for bottling.

Tasting Notes:

Nose: Deep and rich caramel draws you in on the nose with a silken sense of vanilla, soft rum raisin, black molasses, woody winter spices, and chewy and fresh pipe tobacco rolled with smudging sage and fresh boot leather.

Palate: Those leathery notes drive the palate back toward luscious toffee rolled in almond and dark chocolate with a salted bitterness next to super soft vanilla, hints of dried cherry, softly stewed apple, and a touch of cobbler with nutmeg, clove, and cinnamon all making appearances.

Finish: The toffee makes a creamy and nutty return on the finish with a rush of sharp oaky spice, soft tobacco, and cedar bark braided with smudging sage and dried cattail on a sunny back porch.

Bottom Line:

This is excellent sipping bourbon with just the right balance of kick and essential bourbon vibes. Pour this over a single rock and let it carry you away into your memories of slow summer days.

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Why Was Halle Berry’s Netflix Movie Canceled?

Halle Berry
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Last week, reports started breaking that Netflix was pulling an unprecedented move for the streamer by scrapping the nearly finished Halle Berry movie The Mothership. The decision was rare for Netflix and led to justifiable concerns that the streamer was starting to follow in the footsteps of Warner Bros. Discovery, which had infamously shelved Batgirl for a tax write-off before attempting to do the same to Coyote vs. Acme starring John Cena.

However, Netflix is setting the record straight that this wasn’t a surprise decision sprung on the filmmakers. According to Chief Content Officer Bela Bajaria, everyone involved in the making of The Mothership was on the same page when it came time to pull the plug.

Via Entertainment Weekly:

“If you think about how many things we make, it’s a rare thing. But it was one where there were lots of production issues, creative issues, and everybody on both sides, the talent and us, just agreed that it was better to not watch it.”

Bajaria didn’t offer specifics, but added, “Everybody just felt like it was the right thing to not do it, and to do something else together eventually.”

According to the initial report from The InSneider, The Mothership reportedly required “significant reshoots,” which became untenable thanks to the actor playing Berry’s son aging out of the role. (The film was shot in Summer 2021.) The film also experienced “extensive delays” that added to the decision to put it out to pasture.

However, Berry still has a multi-picture deal in place with Netflix. The actress will next appear in The Union alongside Mark Wahlberg. That film will start streaming on August 16, 2024.

(Via Entertainment Weekly)

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When Will ‘Priscilla’ Be On Max?

priscilla
a24

Enough about Margot Robbie getting snubbed for Barbie (she’s chill with it). Where’s the outrage for Priscilla?

The Sofia Coppola film, about the relationship between Priscilla (played by Cailee Spaeny) and Elvis (Jacob Elordi) Presley, wasn’t nominated for a single Oscar. Not even Best Makeup and Hairstyling or Best Costume Design.

Priscilla is very good and good-looking, but if you didn’t catch it in theaters, the A24 film is coming to Max on February 23. Watch it for the soundtrack, Spaeny’s wonderful performance, and because if you don’t, all the bacon that Lilo and Stitch fan Elordi ate to play Elvis was for naught.

Here’s the official plot synopsis:

When teenage Priscilla Beaulieu meets Elvis Presley at a party, the man who is already a meteoric rock-and-roll superstar becomes someone entirely unexpected in private moments: a thrilling crush, an ally in loneliness, a gentle best friend. Through Priscilla’s eyes, Sofia Coppola tells the unseen side of a great American myth in Elvis and Priscilla’s long courtship and turbulent marriage, from a German army base to his dream-world estate at Graceland, in this deeply felt and ravishingly detailed portrait of love, fantasy, and fame.

For more on Priscilla, read our interview with costume designer Stacey Battat.

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Listen to the far-out sounds of an ‘orchestra’ where every instrument is a vegetable

The idea of a concert where everyone plays vegetables sounds like a funny one-night-only joke. Still, the Vegetable Orchestra, out of Vienna, has played more than 300 concerts and released 4 albums over the past 25-plus years.

It all started when the group’s founder, Matthias Meinharter, had a silly idea in the kitchen. His friend had signed them up for an hour-long slot at a student festival and they wanted to perform non-traditional music.

“As we were making vegetable soup, we landed on the idea of cooking it on stage and performing a concert with the vegetables while we were doing that,” Meinharter told Atlas Obscura. “It all started as a joke,” he told the BBC. “We were brainstorming what we could do, and we thought: ‘What is the most difficult thing to play music on?’”


The big problem with playing instruments made of vegetables is that they rot. So before every performance, the group has a delivery of 200 to 300 pounds worth of veggies that they fashion into instruments. Getting the right sound from a carrot, leek, or lotus root can also be challenging.

“Vegetables are unpredictable,” Susanna Gartmayer, who plays over a dozen instruments including the carrot marimba and the radish bass flute in the group, told the BBC. “No two pieces of produce are the same. It’s a challenge.”

Following the performance, the leftover vegetables and cut-off parts are cooked into a soup and served to the audience.

Here is a performance of the song “Transplants” live at Volkstheater Vienna on February 11, 2013.

Worldwide one of a kind, the Vegetable Orchestra performs on instruments made of fresh vegetables. The utilization of various ever refined vegetable instrume…

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Why Does Ice Spice Say ‘Stop Playing With ‘Em, Riot’?

ice spice
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You might have noticed that Ice Spice songs tend to have one thing in common: On the track, she will at some point early in the song say, “Stop playing with ’em, Riot.” Well, why does she do that?

Why Does Ice Spice Say ‘Stop Playing With ‘Em, Riot’?

That reused audio clip is actually what’s called a “producer tag” for Riot, a producer who has worked closely with Ice Spice. A producer tag is essentially a brief audio signature for producers, which they include on songs they produce as a way to let listeners know that they’re responsible for the track’s production.

In a 2023 interview with Billboard, Riot explained how the tag came to be, saying, “I originally had [a] tag that was recorded by me, and I put a couple effects on it. But I outgrew it, and I was looking for something new and fresh. I was like, ‘Why not ask Ice to record me a tag?’ — and I didn’t tell her what to say. The first thing that she had sent me back was, ‘Stop playing with ’em, Riot.’ I took it, pitched it a little bit, I threw in some reverb, and the rest is history.”

Some other recognizable producer tags include those of Metro Boomin (“If young Metro don’t trust you, I’m gon’ shoot you”), Tay Keith (“Tay Keith, f*ck these n****s up”), and Harry Fraud (“La musica de Harry Fraud”).

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Dad’s motivational speech for his newborn daughter in the NICU has everyone gushing

Having a baby is an adjustment for any new parent but not all new parents get to walk out of the hospital with their newborns a couple of days after birth. For a number of reasons, oftentimes due to prematurity or birth complications, some babies have to stay in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) anywhere from days to months. During their stay they’re closely monitored for signs they can start spending more time outside of the incubator.

Incubators regulate temperature, humidity, optimize oxygen levels and monitors a baby’s vital signs. New dad, Ed Andretti, recently welcomed a baby girl, Cathara, who is having to spend some time in the NICU after being born three months early. But it was his sweet motivational speech he gave to his daughter through the plastic of the incubator that has everyone’s heart melting.

Andretti can be seen looking into Cathara’s incubator saying, “you hear that beeping? That’s you. You’re breathing so good the machine is like ‘yo, take this baby down on oxygen.’ That’s you, you’re doing great.”


“You’re amazing. You’re wonderful. Your lungs are expanding,” Andretti continues.

This is Andretti’s first child and he’s proving to be his daughter’s biggest cheerleader. The new dad explains in the caption that Cathara is gaining weight, her lungs are getting stronger and she’s beginning to become more vocal. He even has some encouraging words for fellow NICU parents experiencing something similar.

“NICU life is a lifestyle you can’t really prepare for, just have to be continue to be present. Sending my love to all the NICU parents who are currently going through anything similar. Be strong and have faith,” Andretti writes in the caption.

NICU parents, doctors and nurses chimed in on a repost of the video on The NICU Doc’s page.

“As a father of a NICU baby this is the right attitude. Almost every doctor and nurse told us that the more involved, positive and encouraging they can feel it and hear it even without touch. Babies do better with love like this,” one person writes.

“Yes yes!! Micro preemie NICU survivor mommy here I always tell parents in that position now “SPEAK LIFE! No matter what you see!” My daughter is 15 now,” another NICU parent says.

“As a former NICU nurse…I LOVE THIS!!!!,” someone exclaims.

“I’m a pediatrician and I wanna hire this guy to hang out on our nursery,” another commenter writes.

It looks like since Andretti posted this video, Cathara has been moved from the incubator to a crib, and is nearly 4lbs now. Here’s hoping that all of dad’s pep talks gets baby from the NICU to her own crib soon. Watch the inspiring video below: