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Couplet Is Three Emo Lifers Letting Go Of The Pressure To Focus On The Joy

For nearly a decade, Tanner Jones fronted a pop-punk band from Orlando named after a Happy Gilmore gag – and yet, Jones never once felt like he could even attempt to write a You Blew It! song that was actually funny. At least not the kind of funny he brings on “Sold Our Shirts,” a single from his new and much more circumspectly monikered project Couplet. “I was listening to a lot of Grandaddy, who I think are very good at writing lyrics that are cheeky in a way that You Blew It! or pop-punk could not get away with,” Jones admits, and “Sold Our Shirts” broke his years-long artistic deadlock by imagining a “fairy tale for a touring band”: their Pitchfork scores are always higher than the other guys, venues pay them what they’re worth, and they never miss any milestones of their friends back home. A few years removed from quietly shuttering You Blew It!, Jones was still uncertain about whether he would ever publicly release music again as he shared “Sold Our Shirts” with some fellow artists to see if it resonated. Maxwell Stern of Signals Midwest sent a note back to Jones, describing it as the sequel to “Bands With Managers,” Pedro the Lion’s scorched earth screed on indie rock careerism. For Jones, “it was the most mindblowing compliment I could think of.”

Couplet’s spiritual connection to that song goes deeper than Stern likely anticipated. “Bands With Managers” was the opening track on Achilles Heel, a deeply embittered album that foreshadowed David Bazan’s disbandment of Pedro the Lion and subsequent formation of Headphones – a low-key electro-pop project created amongst longtime collaborators and friends. This is almost the exact circumstances under which Couplet was forged, as Jones’ email exchanges with Chicago emo fixtures Adam Beck of Sincere Engineer and Evan Weiss soon became a full-fledged band. LP1 sounds like nothing Jones or Beck or Weiss have ever made, but it does sound like Mice Parade, The Postal Service, and The Notwist, all of whom also applied their punk and emo-leaning origins to define the sound of early 2000s lap-pop.

And much like “Bands With Managers,” “Sold Our Shirts” is an unmistakably autobiographical account, fueled by the envy and disillusionment that can only come from a marginal level of success that somehow makes things worse than outright failure. Even if You Blew It!’s debut Grow Up, Dude helped define what “emo revival” meant before the term went mainstream, it’s hard to look at a band with that name and that album title and that album cover and assume they aspired for longevity. But as soon as You Blew It! started to experience some semblance of commercial and critical acclaim with 2014’s Keep Doing What You’re Doing, Jones started to see the rot setting in. Touring for nine months per year made the band financially viable, but at the cost of relationships and more sustainable career options. Opening gigs for The Wonder Years, State Champs, and Taking Back Sunday put them in front of bigger crowds than they could ever manage on their own and also made it nearly impossible to operate outside of the pop-punk market.

Jones noticed that the band’s decision-making was almost always fraught with financial considerations; not just the tour schedule, but second-guessing their songwriting instincts if a song felt too pop-punk or emo, or not pop-punk enough. An admitted combination of hubris and bad timing sealed the fate of Abendrot, You Blew It!’s final album. While Jones assumed the band’s prior success would ensure patience with their newly wistful and somber tones, especially in the context of a mid-November release, its arrival was met with indifference at best; emo’s fourth wave had reached a low ebb by the end of 2016 and three days after the election of Donald Trump, it was admittedly tough for anyone to care about any album. “I’m not sure how much of an impact it had on the release of the record,” Jones said in 2017. “I’d like to say it had a big one, but it could be the very simple fact that people just didn’t like that record either.” The ensuing tour tanked and as of now, the story of You Blew It! ends with a grace note of irony – shortly after they publicly called it quits, they accepted an offer to do a three-show run in Florida opening for American Football, the kind of gig that rarely seemed to arise when they were an active band.

But by that point, Jones had already taken the opportunity to join five of his friends in starting up Easy Luck, a coffee shop and bar in Orlando where he works to this day. After years of the just-making-it touring grind, Jones prefers his routinized lifestyle – “working at a coffee shop from 6:30 to 3:30 PM and then going home and going for a run and having dinner and then going to sleep.” Despite the reputation of Florida in general and Orlando in particular, Jones has come to appreciate the college kids and “Birkenstock-wearing, hippie granola types” responsible for making Orange County the bluest-leaning one in the state. While begrudgingly acknowledging Ron DeSantis’ often-progressive environmental legislation, he also points out how Florida’s notoriously anti-vaxx governor has become a rallying point for his community. “It’s a nice thing to bond over but there’s definitely shame in it,” Jones says, “being in a state led by this guy who’s lashing out at reporters every single day over the most inane shit.”

When I interviewed Jones about all of this back in 2017, I left feeling pretty certain that he’d never make music again – or at least never allow himself to be fully reliant on music as a source of income or self-esteem. And that’s why Couplet is allowed to exist in 2021. “We’re all approaching it as a way to explore sonically and lyrically, because the stakes were so low,” Jones tells me. “No one was expecting anything.” Sparked by “Sold Our Shirts,” Jones started writing a handful of songs when he met up with Beck at a Sincere Engineer show in 2019. “He said, ‘please come up to Chicago and I’ll record you for free,’” he recalls. “So I booked a flight for April 2020 and of course that didn’t happen.” Jones linked back up with Weiss, the Into It. Over It. and Pet Symmetry frontman who also produced Keep Doing What You’re Doing and Abendrot. Jones describes his demos as “guitar and maybe a beep-boop drum track and vocals,” before Beck and Weiss rearranged and remixed them into the pointillist and nearly guitar-free synth-pop tracks that populate LP1. As their exchange of ideas continued long past its original weekend plans, Jones decided to build Couplet out into a full-on band rather than a solo project – “the amount of collaboration they were putting into it was as valuable, if not more so, than your traditional ‘three guys getting into a room and banging out a song.’”

But now that Couplet is an actual band with an actual album and, thus, an actual album rollout, Jones is again wrestling with the same aversion to pretense and self-promotion that soured the last few years of You Blew It!. LP1 undeniably owes its creative process to the pandemic and Jones has no interest in turning it into a narrative. “The arrogance to cite the pandemic and how it should be some kind of token to accentuate the artist’s struggle and increase the value of the output is where my true ire lies,” he explains in an email a few days after our initial talk. “The thing’s killed millions of people and changed everyone’s lives, and now some band wants me to covet their songs because their process was different? Wild.” There are times where he wishes he could drop music anonymously and others where he’s inspired by how his peers use social media to be forthright and vulnerable about their artistic process. There are days when he wants to listen to literally anything other than DIY punk and a few hours after we’re done speaking, he’ll be at a show for Florida up-and-comers Virginity. But for now, Couplet’s owes its existence to the same pure and noble impulse that will forever inspire friends to start a band just so they can name it after one of their favorite movie quotes. “This brings me a lot of joy, it brings Evan a lot of joy, it brings Adam a lot of joy,” Jones stresses. “And what are you doing in life? You’re mostly chasing joy, and that’s what this whole thing is.”

____

Prior to the formation of Couplet, I recall you expressing ambivalence about whether there was space for you to make music again. How does this concern sit with you now?

Truthfully, it feels fucking ridiculous if I’m being honest with you. I don’t mean to demean this interview [laughs], but over the past three or four years, I’ve been solely a music fan. I’ve been watching rollouts happen and indulging them the way that anyone else would indulge a You Blew It! or Couplet record. I try to be very understanding these days, but the whole process seems disingenuous and frankly kinda annoying. Art should be consumed as art, it shouldn’t be surrounded by this halo of stories and past records. It seems like with every band that has gone on tour or announced tours, there’s been such a long diatribe about “this past year has been so hard for me, we had to be locked down,” recapping the entire pandemic as if none of us have ever lived it, in order to sell tickets. It seems ridiculous and awful, I think I would like to live in a world that didn’t have record rollouts and they would just come out on the day they actually came out.

When I spoke with Foxing earlier this year, they expressed a similar sentiment about wishing they could do an immediate drop – and they were in the middle of a five-month rollout.

It seems like there’s so much effort that goes into informing the record before people hear it when the record should inform itself. Not having been a part of it [for a few years], that was the most glaring thorn in my side that revealed itself that wasn’t there before.

How do you determine whether a song you write is worthy of taking up space in 2021?

I think it would be arrogant to say that we’re releasing music for anything other than my friends and their enjoyment. I stopped making music for a long time because it stopped bringing me joy, until one day it started doing that again and I chased that. I found friends that wanted to make music with me, they found me and we put it out because it was a worthwhile process to us. I think that if it were tied to something altruistic – if releasing music shrunk the wealth gap just a little bit with every song – then maybe I could say that releasing music is for the world. Not to be cynical about it, it wouldn’t be right of me to say that I’m releasing music for anything other than myself or Couplet’s self.

With the intention of writing from a different sonic and lyrical perspective in Couplet, how do you identify subject matter that’s worth pursuing?

I think a lot of that credit can go to Evan and Adam and maybe even the way we wrote songs together. Being so far away from each other physically required a lot of trust and modesty. We had no deadlines, all we had were lockdowns between Chicago and limited lockdowns in Florida. I’m sure you’ve noticed there’s not a lot of guitars on this record, the onus was very much – “if you don’t have a good idea, make it an interesting idea.” And also humoring every member’s input as an equal.

What’s the difference between a good idea and an interesting one?

Sometimes good ideas can be safe ideas. It would be a good idea to write a song with a traditional pop structure because that’s a successful structure. An interesting one would be to stack a chorus at the beginning, build two verses and a bridge and stack a chorus at the end. More specifically, it would be a good idea to use a guitar to play a part because that’s what we’re used to but it would be more interesting to put it through a Rhodes or a Wurlitzer type of thing.

Have you felt burnt out on listening to music from the DIY or punk worlds?

Absolutely. The past three years have been very rewarding because I’ve been able to get out of the mindset of “I have to know everything that’s going on in the guitar rock world” and I’ve been able to dig into things like bossa nova or American classics like Grateful Dead or the Byrds or Gram Parsons. I was able to familiarize myself with Yo La Tengo, I never really did that until You Blew It! broke up – even though they’re guitar music, they’re not really. I go in and out of phases these days where I’d rather not listen to punk or guitar-driven indie.

Are there any newer bands in this space that excite you?

Hovvdy – at the end of “Sold Our Shirts,” I say “mm-hmm” and that’s inspired by one of the songs on Heavy Lifter, I love that band. I love how their earlier records were very sparse, almost slowcore and now they’re kind of pop songs. I like a lot of the new psych bands like Crumb and Mild High Club. King Gizzard too, those bands are so sweet. I work in a coffee shop eight hours a day, so all I can do is go through these “Recommended Artists” [on Spotify]. I found this band called The Sweet Enoughs and all their [“fans also like”] bands are all these guys from Nordic countries wearing silly hats and writing these new jazz records that are just so out of this world cool.

Are there any times where you see your friends or peers releasing an album and think, “man, I actually miss that”?

Any record rollout that’s happening kinda in the sphere where You Blew It! existed. For example, the Shortly album that was released today. I think Triple Crown did a really cool, little quick rollout with her and just seeing her through tweets – I imagine she feels this way – just being grateful and showing her excitement for this record. I feel like I would try to do that with every You Blew It! rollout. In some alternate universe, if I were in her shoes, I would say the same type of things. Or in this universe, I’m releasing a record!

The title of LP1 implies there might be an LP2, has there been more Couplet music made?

We have more music – we finished the record about a year ago and we’ve been slowly writing ever since. We have another release planned after this one and more stuff on the way. We’re trying to plan something [for touring} in the middle of next year should everything go well.

How do you plan on setting boundaries or expectations so that Couplet doesn’t repeat some of the mistakes You Blew It! made while touring?

What’s going to be different is the mindset, rather than the physical aspects that come along with touring. Before, that was how I lived so it was very important that I worked out a routine and that routine followed similar steps and tempos every single day. Whereas now that this is a part-time band I think it will be easier to tolerate the unsavory parts of touring. Before, one wrong thing was detrimental to a routine and therefore resulted in that domino effect of bad mental health, being pissy all the time, being annoying, being annoyed. Now that this is in the “part-time” category, the things that seem dire at first might actually be enjoyable. That’s my hope.

Couplet’s LP1 is out today. Get it here.

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Little Simz Remixes Her Menacing 2019 Song ‘Venom’ For Marvel’s New ‘Venom’ Movie

Although Little Simz original version of “Venom,” released on her standout 2019 album Grey Area, initially had nothing to do with the Marvel anti-hero of the same name, it would have been a waste of synergistic potential for the good folks at Sony to not try to employ it in the new sequel film, Venom: Let There Be Carnage. Fortunately, Simz was up for the revival, picking up the pen to revamp the lyrics for a more motivational mood fitting to the comic-book-inspired antics onscreen.

You can thank Venom: Let There Be Carnage (boy, that’s a mouthful — which… considering the character in question… fits?) star Tom Hardy for Simz’s inclusion in the process. Last week, the film’s director Andy Serkis told Uproxx that Simz’s fellow Brit and well-known hip-hop head Hardy suggested the song be used in a sequence in the film and reached out to Simz to make it happen. “She actually had made a song, unbeknownst to her, called ‘Venom’ that connected very much with the first movie,” Serkis said, “And so Tom got in touch with her and that song became sort of the focus [of the scene].”

The moment is perfectly positioned to capitalize on Simz’s recently released album Sometimes I Might Be Introvert and her upcoming North American tour, putting her music in what will undoubtedly be one of the more popular movies of the year just in time to bring in a plethora of new fans. She deserves them.

Listen to the Venom remix of “Venom” above.

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A ‘Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid’ TV Series In Now In The Works

Time to whip out the ol’ cowboy hat and six shooter — Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid is headed to television. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Scott Steindorff and Dylan Russell’s Stone Village Television have purchased the rights to Charles Leerhsen’s Butch Cassidy biography, Butch Cassidy: The True Story of an American Outlaw, following a pretty intense bidding war with several other buyers. As of right now, it’s unknown what outlet Stone Village plans to sell the show to, however they have expressed plans to self-finance the development though before making the call.

The studio has also revealed they intend to make the show for an international audience, utilizing Latin American and European sources and production to create a series that appeals to both North American and Latin American audiences alike. The series’ story is set to follow Butch Cassidy across the United States and throughout Latin America, with the show ultimately ending in Bolivia. According to Steindorff, this choice was made to keep the series’ firmly in line with Leerhsen’s biography on the notorious historical figure and to tell the story that “needs to be told.”

“Much of the book and the adventures of The Sundance Kid (Cassidy’s partner Harry Longabaugh) and the ‘Wild Bunch’ gang takes place in South America. During that time period, Butch Cassidy and his gang were more well-known there than in North America. This isn’t just an American Western story, but a Latin American story, and it needs to be told. There are so many aspects of this story that will excite the audiences of today.”

For all you fans of the 1969 Paul Newman and Robert Redford adaptation of the Butch Cassidy story who might be feeling a bit nervous about the upcoming series, rest assured it seems to be in very capable hands. Currently, Stone Village is working on both HBO’s Station Eleven series as well as a television adaptation of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. Furthermore, author Leerhsen has stated he believes Steindorff is “uniquely qualified to explore the Butch Cassidy story as a TV series” based on him being a lifelong fan of the story as well as a one of Paul Newman’s friends.

“He’s been a lifelong fan of the movie and was a colleague and friend to Paul Newman, who to many people is Butch. But beyond that he is as excited as I was to discover that the movie, as great as it was, left out some of the most intriguing parts of Butch and Sundance’s great adventure. Scott is drawn to the fact that there’s so much untapped drama and romance in the true tale — as well as a mind-blowing finale that the Hollywood of 50-something years ago felt it just couldn’t handle. He’s as at-home with my book and its characters as Butch Cassidy was on the Outlaw Trail.”

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The 6 Best New Original Shows Streaming On Netflix This October

Netflix is dropping a ton of fresh content on the TV side this month.

Kicking things off is a moving adaptation of a New York Times best-selling novel starring Margaret Qualley before Penn Badgley returns to play the serial stalker and sometimes-murderer in Netflix’s You. Colin Kaepernick drops his limited series with Ava DuVernay towards the end of the month, but there are some returning gems and new animated comedies in between that look like they’re worth a watch. Here are the best new originals coming to Netflix this October.

(For the best new movies coming to Netflix this month, head here.)

Maid (streaming 10/1)

Margaret Qualley stars in this adaptation of The New York Times best-selling novel of the same name. Qualley plays Alex, a young mother fleeing an abusive relationship who attempts to start over by taking a job as a housecleaner. The comedic moments come from her time on the job, but there’s enough emotional depth in her fight to protect her daughter and free herself from her past to keep you invested long past the lighter moments.

On My Block: Season 4 (streaming 10/4)

The teen drama returns for its final season this month, kicking things off with a two-year time jump that see the close-knit crew more grown-up and definitely grown apart. But a secret from their past comes back to haunt them, forcing the friends to rehash old arguments and heal together.

The Baby-Sitters Club: Season 2 (streaming 10/11)

Who said October wasn’t the time for feel-good comedy? The second season of this beloved childhood series — its adapted from Ann M. Martin’s best-selling books — takes us on more club adventures as the group’s babysitting business continues to boom. A new school year brings new romances and challenges for the ladies but friendship is the most important thing here so don’t expect the bad times to stick around for too long.

You: Season 3 (streaming 10/15)

You returns for its third season as Joe Goldberg moves his new family to the suburbs of Northern California. Just to recap: he’s kidnapped and killed a bunch of people (mostly women) and his new wife, Love (the always excellent Victoria Pedretti) has got her own fratricidal past haunting her. But a new baby smooths things over for a bit as the pair try to blend in with their rich, out-of-touch neighbors and avoid temptation.

Inside Job (streaming 10/22)

This new adult animated comedy series sees Lizzy Caplan voicing a tech genius who works for a shadow government corp. specializing in conspiracy theories. Christian Slater plays her unemployed dad, who also used to work at the agency. The two take on every whacko story you can think of — from reptilian shapeshifters to secret societies, masked orgies and more — all while Caplan’s Reagan fights for a promotion (and her sanity).

Colin in Black & White (streaming 10/29)

Ava DuVernay and Colin Kaepernick team up for this bold limited series that chronicles the athletic icon’s early years. From his struggles with racism as the adopted Black child of a white family to his introduction to football, Kaepernick narrates his own story here while Jaden Michael plays his younger self.

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LCD Soundsystem Announce A 20-Show Run At Brooklyn Steel This Winter

That’s how it starts…

After a bunch of social media promotion yesterday, Bowery Presents/AEG have announced they’re presenting a 20-show run from LCD Soundsystem. The shows will be held at the venue Brooklyn Steel, and tickets go on sale next Friday, October 8, at 10 AM EST. Tickets will be available to purchase right here. Here are the show dates — they’re coming up pretty quickly:

November 23
November 24
November 29
November 30
December 1
December 3
December 4
December 5
December 7
December 8
December 9
December 11
December 12
December 13
December 15
December 16
December 17
December 19
December 20
December 21

It makes sense that the band would be offering such a long run because with a capacity of only 1800, Brooklyn Steel is definitely an underplay for them. Remember that “goodbye” show at Madison Square Garden? Considering they can fill a venue ten times the size of Brooklyn Steel, and headline festivals, the multiple nights helps ensure that all the fans who want to see them will get the chance (Except for those few and far between fans who don’t live in New York). Back in 2017, the band finally did release new music along with their reunion for a festival circuit, and according to our own Steven Hyden American Dream was exactly as brilliant and annoying as the band itself tends to be. Still, I’ve seen this live act before and it’s a real treat, so if you’re a New Yorker in the mood for some holiday indie rock, get those tickets.

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AOC Dismantled The Nonsensical Texas GOP Claim That 6 Weeks Is Plenty Of Time To Terminate A Rape Pregnancy

Texas’ oppressive new abortion law outlaws the (medical) practice at six weeks and allows any private citizen to sue someone (akin to financial vigilantism) who helps a woman secure an abortion in any way (including giving a ride to a clinic). There’s no rape exception to the six-week rule, which is something that Gov. Greg Abbott seemed very proud about while signing the bill in room full of white dudes and declaring that he was going to solve the problem by jailing all rapists.

Abbott added that there was also plenty of time for a woman to secure a pregnancy before the six-week deadline, which is something that Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (who has revealed herself to be a sexual assault survivor) could not stomach. At the time, she declared that Abbott spoke from “such a place of deep ignorance,” and that he clearly didn’t understand how the female anatomy functions.

AOC makes a valid point. Six weeks pregnant generally means that a woman’s period is two weeks late, and two weeks late is something that happens for many reasons, including stress, illness, or… no reason at all. It’s not uncommon to not realize that you’re six weeks pregnant, and you can’t get an abortion until at least five weeks of pregnancy, if not longer due to scheduling and logistics. Six weeks ain’t enough time. And AOC spoke on Thursday during a House panel to address the subject:

“Six weeks pregnant is two weeks late for one’s period. When you are raped, you don’t always know what happened to you. And I speak about this as a survivor. You are in so much shock… I’m 115 pounds. You look at me funny, I’m two weeks late for my period. And you’re supposed to expect me to know I’m pregnant? Or the stress of a sexual assault? That makes you two weeks late for your period, whether you’re pregnant or not.”

She wasn’t done yet. On Twitter, AOC declared that the Texas GOP is fostering “[t]he same kind of abuse culture & misogynistic culture that allows for abusers to cause harm inside their homes.” She also tweeted a video of her House panel statement.

To that end, she pointed out that a whole lot of rapes aren’t sexual assaults by a stranger. They can happen at home, or an otherwise “safe” location, when the perpetrator is a friend, a family member, a teacher, or the like. That can make it even more difficult for a woman to come forward and say that she was raped, let alone figure out whether she’s slightly late for her period or pregnant, while attempting to unpack all that happened.

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‘Madden NFL 22’ Shares A Massive Music Video For Its Star-Studded Soundtrack

As a world-famous rapper, Swae Lee is probably used to performing in stadium-sized venues by now. However, that doesn’t stop him from catching a look of awe on his face as he steps on the turf at Inglewood’s SoFi Stadium in the video for “Ball Is Life” from the Madden NFL 22 soundtrack. The same goes for BRS Kash, Moneybagg Yo, Tierra Whack, and the rest of the performers who appear on the game’s hard-hitting playlist.

While the soundtrack itself launched along with the game in August, the EA team released a slew of videos for its standout tracks, including BRS Kash’s “Oh No” performed in his hometown Mercedes Benz Stadium, Moneybagg repping for Memphis in the Titans’ stadium, and Tierra Whack hanging out with Scoop, the Philadelphia Eagles’ mascot. Although Swae Lee actually hails from Tupelo, Mississippi, unfortunately, there’s no team nearby — plus, he lives in LA now anyway.

Each star gets their own video and all of the videos get mashed up in a massive megamix showing off Madden‘s uncanny valley gameplay, which you can watch above. For the individual videos, see below.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Kacey Musgraves And Owen Wilson Confirm Everything Is Bigger In Texas In Their ‘SNL’ Promo

The season premiere of Saturday Night Live is just a day away and that means that the hilarious pre-show promos featuring the guest host and musical guest have also returned. In this week’s promo, series regular Kenan Thompson joins Owen Wilson and Kacey Musgraves to contemplate whether things really are bigger in Texas, try to start a belly band, and tease Kenan’s lateness. Musgraves especially looks like she’s struggling not to break in the last clip.

The first clip is of special significance, as both Wilson and Musgraves are Texas natives. Kenan asks them whether something like burgers fall under the “everything is bigger in Texas” motto, to which Wilson replies, “Depends who’s makin’ ’em.” Musgraves brags, “I make ’em about the size of my fist.” Thompson declares he’s never going to one of her barbecues — and if I may interject here, I will gladly take his spot. He’s missing out.

You should absolutely not miss out on Musgraves’ performance, which will feature songs from her new album Star-Crossed. Each time she’s performed songs from it — such as the fiery rendition of the title track she gave to the MTV VMAs this year — it’s been a show-stopper. Personally, I’m hoping for a redux of her fun “Simple Times” video.

Watch Kacey Musgraves, Owen Wilson, and Kenan Thompson hype up the upcoming season premiere of SNL above.

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All The New Albums Coming Out In October 2021

Keeping track of all the new albums coming out in a given month is a big job, but we’re up for it: Below is a comprehensive list of the major releases you can look forward to in October. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, October 1

  • Audiobooks — Astro Tough (Piccadilly Records)
  • Ben Marc — Breathe Suite EP (Innovative Leisure)
  • Black Dice — Mod Prog Sic (FourFour Records)
  • Bonnie Cosby — Virginiana EP (Pax Aeternum)
  • Boy Scouts — Wayfinder (ANTI-)
  • Brandi Carlile — In These Silent Days (Elektra Records)
  • The Colorist Orchestra & Howe Gelb — Not On The Map (Dangerbird)
  • Couplet — LP1 (Storm Chasers LTD)
  • Dar Williams — I’ll Meet You Here (Renew Records/BMG)
  • Diet Cig — I Don’t Like Driving Like I Used To EP (Frenchkiss Records)
  • The Doobie Brothers — Liberté (Island Records)
  • Ducks Ltd. — Modern Fiction (Carpark Records)
  • Explosions In The Sky — Big Bend (An Original Soundtrack for Public Television) (Temporary Residence)
  • Four Stroke Baron — Classics (Prosthetic Records)
  • Gustaf — Audio Drag For Ego Slobs (Royal Mountain Records)
  • Hovvdy — True Love (Grand Jury)
  • Illuminati Hotties — Let Me Do One More (Hopeless Records)
  • Jeremy Zucker — Crusher (Republic)
  • Jojo — Trying Not To Think About It (Warner Records)
  • Joshua Speers — Midnight Horses EP (Warner Records)
  • JW Francis — Wanderkid (Sunday Best Recordings)
  • Kalabrese — Let Love Rumpel (Part 1) (Rumpelmusig)
  • Kit Grill — Fragile (Primary Colours)
  • Leisure — Side B EP (Nettwerk)
  • Lily Rose — Stronger Than I Am (Big Loud Records/Back Blocks)
  • Logan Mize — Welcome To Prairieville (Big Yellow Dog Music)
  • Lonr. — Land Of Nothing Real 2 EP (Epic Records)
  • Matt Robidoux — At Dust (Already Dead Tapes and Records)
  • Meek Mill — Expensive Pain (Warner)
  • Ministry — Moral Hygiene (Nuclear Blast)
  • Misty River — Promises (The Workshop Tapes)
  • Mod Con — Modern Condition (Poison City)
  • Nine Pound Hammer — When The Shit Goes Down (Acetate Records)
  • Olan Monk — Auto Life EP (CANVAS)
  • The Persian Leaps — Drone Etiquette (Land Ski Records)
  • Pond — 9 (Spinning Top Records)
  • The Script — Tales From The Script (Sony)
  • Secondhand Sound — The Best & Worst Of Times (Sound Division Records)
  • Shad — TAO (Secret City Records)
  • Silas Short — Drawing EP (Stones Throw)
  • Strand Of Oaks — In Heaven (Galacticana Records)
  • Sun Atoms — Let There Be Light (Little Cloud Records)
  • The The — The Comeback Special (Ear Music)
  • Tirzah — Colourgrade (Domino)
  • Tony Bennett And Lady Gaga — Love For Sale (Columbia)
  • Ustad Saami — East Pakistan Sky (Glitterbeat Records)
  • Wage War — Manic (Fearless Records)
  • Wiki — Half God (Wikset Enterprise)
  • Work Party — My Best Days Are Behind Me (Triple Eye Industries)
  • Valley — Last Birthday EP (Capitol Records)
  • Xander Cameron — Rebel RM Roseme EP (2563977 Records DK)
  • Yes — The Quest (InsideOut Music)
  • Zoodrake — Seven (Elektrofish / Echozone)

Friday, October 8

  • Alice TM — Little Body In Orbit (Whatever’s Clever)
  • Astral Swans — Astral Swans (Madic Records)
  • Atmosphere — WORD? (Rhymesayers Entertainment)
  • AVAWAVES — Chrysalis (One Little Independent)
  • BadBadNotGood — Talk Memory (XL Recordings/Innovative Leisure)
  • Bahamas — Live To Tape, Volume I EP (Brushfire Records)
  • Barrett Martin — Stillpoint (Sunyata Records)
  • Battle Ave — Battle Ave EP (self-released)
  • Billy Bragg — The Million Things That Never Happened (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Birdtalker — Birdtalker (self-released)
  • Blake Rose — A World Gone By EP (AWAL)
  • Boylife — Gelato (Northern Transmissions)
  • Caravan — It’s None Of Your Business (Madfish)
  • Celina Sharma — Cece EP (MUGAL Records)
  • Christian Lopez — The Other Side (Blaster Records)
  • Craig Taborn — Shadow Plays (ECM)
  • Darren Criss — A Very Darren Christmas (Decca)
  • Del Water Gap — Del Water Gap (self-released)
  • Destroy Boys — Open Mouth, Open Heart (Hopeless Records)
  • Don Toliver — Life Of A Don (Atlantic Records/Cactus Jack Records)
  • Dos Santos — City Of Mirrors (International Anthem)
  • Efterklang — Windflowers (City Slang)
  • Elderbrook — Innerlight EP (Parlophone)
  • Fauness — Maiden No More EP (Cascine)
  • G’emma — Types Of Water EP (Sonar Kollektiv)
  • Gia Woods — Heartbreak Country EP (self-released)
  • Grant Pavol — Reflections EP (Accidental Popstar Records)
  • Gregory Dwane — Gregory Dwane (Peacedale Records)
  • Gus G. — Quantum Leap (AFM Records)
  • The Halo Trees — Summergloom (Winter Solitude Productions)
  • Howlin Rain — The Dharma Wheel (Silver Current Records)
  • James Blake — Friends That Break Your Heart (Republic)
  • J.D. Wilkes And The Legendary Shack Shakers — Cockadoodledeux (Alternative Tentacles Records)
  • Jeff Scott Soto — The Duets Collection, Vol. 1 (Frontiers Music)
  • Jojoftheejungle — The Red Line EP (Batakari Music)
  • Joshua Crumbly — ForEver (Figureight Records)
  • Kay Young — This Here Feels Good EP (PIAS)
  • Kevin Morby — A Night At The Little Los Angeles (Dead Oceans)
  • KITE — Currents (Majestic Mountain Records)
  • Kowloon Walled City — Piecework (Neurot/Gilead Media)
  • Ladyhawke — Time Flies (Mid Centry)
  • Lala Lala — I Want The Door To Open (Hardly Art)
  • The Late Ones — The Fourth Quarter (Easy Star Records)
  • Lizard Music — Arizone! (Omnivore Recordings)
  • Local H — Awesome Quarantine Mix-Tape #3 (srcvinyl)
  • Low Hum — Nonfiction (Last Gang Records)
  • LP — Churches (SOTA Records)
  • Magdalena Bay — Mercurial World (Hand Drawn Records)
  • Manimal — Armageddon (AFM Records)
  • Marc E. Bassy — Little Men (New Gold Medal)
  • Matt Maltese — Good Morning It’s Now Tomorrow (Nettwerk)
  • Moody Beach — Assembly Of The Wild EP (Viscera Arts)
  • Morningsiders — Easy Does It EP (Nettwerk)
  • Natalie Hemby — Pins And Needles (Fantasy Records)
  • Newton Faulkner — Interference (Of Light) (Battenberg Records)
  • Nick Zanca — Cacerolazo (Full Spectrum Records)
  • Nightwatchers — Common Crusaders (Lövely Records)
  • Noah Gunderson — A Pillar Of Salt (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Nothing — The Great Dismal B-Sides (Relapse Records)
  • Oh Wonder — 22 Break (Dew Process)
  • The Omnific — Escapades (Wild Thing Records.)
  • Pip Blom — Welcome Break (Red Yeti Records)
  • Plain Mister Smith — Plain Mister Smith EP (Totally Real Records)
  • Porches — All Day Gentle Hold ! (Domino)
  • The Record Company — Play Loud (Concord Records)
  • S. Raekwon — Where I’m At Now (Father/Daughter)
  • Sam Fender — Seventeen Going Under (Dew Process)
  • Sam Teskey — Cycles (Decca)
  • Scott Hirsch — Windless Day (self-released)
  • Sean Rowe — The Darkness Dressed In Colored Lights (Fluff & Gravy Records)
  • Shady Nasty — CLUBSMOKE EP (Royal Mountain Records)
  • Shannon Lay — Geist (Sub Pop)
  • Taraka — Welcome To Paradise Lost (Rage Peace Records)
  • TOMI — Sweet, Sweet Honey EP (In Between Records)
  • Topdown Dialectic — Vol. 3 (Peak Oil)
  • Trivium — In The Court Of The Dragon (Roadrunner Records)
  • UPSAHL — Lady Jesus (Arista Records)
  • Various Artists — Broken Hearts And Dirty Windows: Songs Of John Prine, Vol. 2 (Oh Boy Records!)
  • The Velveteers — Nightmare Daydream (Easy Eye Sound)
  • W.H. Lung — Vanities (Piccadilly Records)
  • Ward White — Dirty Clouds (self-released)
  • We Are Scientists — Huffy (100% Records)
  • Xochimoki. –Temple Of The New Sun (Phantom Limb)
  • Zoe & Cloyd — Rebuild (ORGANIC Records)

Friday, October 15

  • A.A. Williams — arco EP (Bella Union)
  • Allie Crow Buckley — Moonlit And Devious Alternatives EP (Paradise of Bachelors)
  • Allie Dunn — Good As Gone EP (Porter Rose Records)
  • Anz — All Hours EP (Ninja Tune)
  • Astral Brain — The Bewildered Mind (Shelflife)
  • Baker Boy — Gela (Island Records Australia)
  • Bedouine — Waysides (The Orchard)
  • Ben Barnes — Songs For You EP (Label Logic)
  • Billy Joe Shaver & Kinky Friedman — Live Down Under (Sfingter Records)
  • Blackstarkids — Puppies Forever (Dirty Hit)
  • Brin — Water Sign (Sound As Language)
  • Bryan’s Magic Tears — Vacuum Sealed (Born Bad Records)
  • Carlos Santana — Blessings And Miracles (BMG)
  • CD RIM — Songs Of Vienna (Luckyme)
  • The Charlatans — A Head Full Of Ideas (Then Records)
  • Charlotte Greve — Sediments We Move (New Amsterdam)
  • Chris Jones And The Night Drivers — Make Each Second Last (Mountain Home Music Company)
  • Coldplay — Music Of The Spheres (Atlantic Records)
  • Dark Mark Vs Skeleton Joe — Dark Mark Vs Skeleton Joe (Kitten Robot)
  • The Darkness — Motorheart (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Dave Monks — I’ve Always Wanted To Be Me (Ghost Pepper Records)
  • David Keenan — What Then? (Rubyworks)
  • Dean Wareham — I Have Nothing To Say To The Mayor Of L.A. (Double Feature Records)
  • Disclosure — DJ-Kicks (!K7)
  • Dos Santos — City Of Mirrors (International Anthem)
  • Elan Tamara — We Can Fall (BOKKLE)
  • ESP Summer — Kingdom Of Heaven (Disciples)
  • Finneas — Optimist (Interscope)
  • The Georgia Thunderbolts — Can We Get A Witness (Mascot Records)
  • Glenn Echo — Fixed Memory (self-released)
  • Gone To Color — Gone To Color (self-released)
  • Gracey — Fragile EP (Polydor)
  • Hank May — One More Taste Of The Good Stuff (Dangerbird Records)
  • Hayden Thorpe — Moondust for My Diamond (Domino)
  • Jason Isbell And The 400 Unit — Georgia Blue (Southeastern Records)
  • Johnny Marr — Fever Dreams Pt 1 EP (BMG)
  • Joy Crookes — Skin (Insanity Records)
  • JP Cooper — SHE (Island Records)
  • Kacy Hill — Simple, Sweet And Smiling (self-released)
  • Kaley Rutledge — Tender Heart (Tone Tree Music)
  • Le Ren — Leftovers (Secretly Canadian)
  • Lilly Hiatt — Lately (New West Records)
  • Lorne Behrman — When I Hit The Floor EP (Spaghetty Town Records.)
  • Matt Benyayer — She 2.0 EP (Monkeytown Records)
  • Melvins — Five Legged Dog (Ipecac Recordings)
  • Namesake — Redeeming Features (Get Better Records)
  • Old Man Of The Woods — Votives (Totally Real Records)
  • Pokey LaFarge — In The Blossom Of Their Shade (New West Records)
  • Purple Disco Machine — Exotica (Sweat It Out)
  • Remi Wolf — Juno (Island)
  • Ryan Hurd — Pelago (Arista Nashville)
  • Salt Creek — Out Of The Sky (Tooth & Nail)
  • Scott von Ryper — Dream State Treasure (Transient/Silver)
  • Sir Was — Let The Morning Come (Memphis Industries)
  • Skeletoon — The 1.21 Gigawatts Club (Scarlet Records)
  • Stephan Moccio — Lionheart (Decca Records)
  • Steven Bamidele — Uncrowded EP (Park The Van)
  • Stimming & Lambert — Positive (XXIM Records)
  • TK & The Holy Know-Nothings — The Incredible Heat Machine (Mama Bird Recording Co.)
  • ToBy — L’Espirit (Magnetic Moon Records)
  • Toby Keith — Peso In My Pocket (Show Dog Nashville)
  • Various Artists — Pokémon 25: The Album (Capitol Records)
  • Virgil Shaw — At The Time I Didn’t Care (Terrorbird)
  • Vitamin String Quartet — It Feels Like Christmas (Decca)
  • Waylon Payne — The Lost Act (Carnival Recording Company)
  • Weak Signal — Bianca (Blackout Correspondence)
  • Wilderado — Wilderado (National Anthem)
  • Xenia Rubinos — Una Rosa (ANTI- Records)
  • Zache Davis — The Sting (Sheep Chase Records)
  • Zeph — Scared Of Everything EP (Neon Gold)

Friday, October 22

  • Abby Huston — AH HA (Egghunt Records)
  • Adeline Hotel — The Cherries Are Speaking (Ruination Records)
  • Amaunet — While I’m Living (Lövely Records)
  • Angel Dust — YAK: A Collection Of Truck Songs (Roadrunner Records)
  • Belaver — Lain Prone (Niles City Records)
  • Biffy Clyro — The Myth Of The Happily Ever After (Warner Music UK)
  • Big D And The Kids Table — Do Your Art (SideOneDummy Records)
  • Black Marble — Fast Idol (Sacred Bones Records)
  • Blackwater Holylight — Silence/Motion (Riding Easy)
  • Braison Cyrus — Javelina (Sunday Supper Records)
  • Brett Young — Brett Young & Friends Sing The Christmas Classics (Big Machine)
  • Bullet For My Valentine — Bullet For My Valentine (Spinefarm)
  • Can’t Swim — Change Of Plans (Pure Noise Records)
  • Civic TV — Black Moon (Flemish Eye)
  • Clinic — Fantasy Island (Domino)
  • The Convenience — Accelerator (Winspear)
  • Cradle Of Filth — Existence Is Futile (Nuclear Blast)
  • Cuffed Up — Asymmetry EP (Royal Mountain Records)
  • Dave Hause — Blood Harmony (Blood Harmony Records)
  • Deerhoof — Actually, You Can (Joyful Noise Recordings)
  • Demarco — Melody (Ineffable Records)
  • Dillon Carmichael — Son Of A (Riser House)
  • DINNER — Dream Work (Captured Tracks)
  • Don Lifted — 325i (Fat Possum Records)
  • Dream Theater — A View From The Top Of The World (Inside Out)
  • Dummy — Mandatory Enjoyment (Trouble In Mind)
  • Duran Duran — Future Past (Tape Modern/BMG)
  • Elton John — The Lockdown Sessions (EMI/Mercury Records)
  • Every Time I Die — Radical (Epitaph)
  • The F16s — Is It Time To Eat The Rich Yet? EP (House Arrest)
  • Guided By Voices — IT’S NOT THEM. IT COULDN’T BE THEM. IT IS THEM! (Forced Exposure)
  • Hand Habits — Fun House (Saddle Creek)
  • Helado Negro — Far In (4AD)
  • Herbert — Musca (Accidental Records)
  • Hex A.D. — Funeral Tango for Gods & Men (Fresh Tea)
  • Honne — Let’s Just Say The World Ended A Week From Now, What Would You Do? (Atlantic)
  • Iameve — Archetype EP (Firepower)
  • Jacques Greene — ANTH01 (LuckyMe)
  • Jackson+Sellers — Breaking Point (ANTI- Records)
  • Jessica Pavone — Lull (Chaikin Records)
  • John Forté — Vessels, Angels & Ancestors (Soul Land)
  • Ka Baird & Pekka Airaksinen — FRKWYS Vol. 17: Hungry Shells (RVNG Intl.)
  • KEG — Assembly EP (Alcopop!)
  • Kristin Chenoweth — Happiness is…Christmas! (Concord Records)
  • La Luz — La Luz (Hardly Art Records)
  • Lady A — What A Song Can Do (BMLG)
  • Lana Del Rey — Blue Banisters (Interscope/Polydor)
  • Liily — TV Or Not TV (Flush Records/The Orchard)
  • Lomond Campbell — LŪP (One Little Independent Records)
  • Lonely Guest — Lonely Guest (False Idols)
  • Lowland Hum — At Home (Tonetree)
  • Maya Shenfeld — In Free Fall (Thrill Jockey Records)
  • Mazey Haze — Always Dancing EP (LUSTRE)
  • Melanie Charles — Y’all Don’t (Really) Care About Black Women (Impulse!)
  • Mess Esque — Mess Esque (Milk! Records)
  • Morgxn — MERIDIAN: vol 2 EP (Wxnderlost Records)
  • My Morning Jacket — My Morning Jacket (ATO Records)
  • Neutral Snap — Tell Me How I Feel (Orange Music Records)
  • Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds — B Sides & Rarities — Parts I & II (‎Mute)
  • Okay Kaya — The Incompatible Okay Kaya (Jagjaguwar)
  • Orquesta Akokán — 16 Rayos (Daptone Records)
  • Oscar And The Wolf — The Shimmer (PIAS)
  • Parker Longbough — Off Front Street (Phlexx Records)
  • Parquet Courts — Sympathy For Life (Rough Trade Records)
  • Pepe Deluxé — Phantom Cabinet Vol. 1 (Catskills Records)
  • Phew — New Decade (Mute)
  • Power Supply — In The Time Of The Sabre-Tooth Tiger (Goner Records)
  • Richard Carpenter — Richard Carpenter’s Piano Songbook (Decca)
  • Rüfüs Du Sol — Surrender (Warner)
  • Ryan LeVine — Good Things To Remember EP (BMG)
  • Sassy 009 — Heart Ego (Luft Recordings)
  • Self Esteem — Prioritise Pleasure (Fiction Records)
  • SEVENTEEN — Attacca EP (Pledis Entertainment)
  • She/Beast — Violent Tendencies (PNKSLM Recordings)
  • Sixx:A.M. — Sixx.A.M. HITS (Better Noise Music)
  • Skinny Lister — A Matter Of Life & Love (Xtra Mile)
  • Slow Crush — Hush (Church Road Records)
  • Snotty Nose Rez Kids — Life After (Fontana North/Distorted Muse)
  • Sonny Fodera — Wide Awake (Solotoko)
  • Spirit Was — Heaven’s Just A Cloud (Danger Collective Records)
  • Super American — SUP (Wax Bodega)
  • Tip-Top — CHANSONS d’ENNUI (ABKCO)
  • Tonstartssbandht — Petunia (Mexican Summer)
  • Trace Mountains — House Of Confusion (Lame-O Records)
  • Wet — Letter Blue (AWAL)
  • Zachary Williams — Dirty Camaro (Dualtone Music Group)
  • The Zephyr Bones — Neon Body (La Castanya)

Friday, October 29

  • Bad Wolves — Dear Monsters (Better Noise Music)
  • Bat Fangs — Queen Of My World (Don Giovanni Records)
  • Bremer/McCoy — Natten (Luaka Bop)
  • Calling All Captains — Slowly Getting Better (Rude Records/Equal Vision Records)
  • Charlotte Cornfield — Highs In The Minuses (Double Double Whammy/Polyvinyl)
  • Chloé & Vassilena Serafimova — SEQUENZA (Lumière Noire)
  • David Reece — Blacklist Utopia (El Puerto Records)
  • Dear Laika — Pluperfect Mind (Memorials of Distinction)
  • Ed Sheeran — = (Atlantic)
  • Eleanor Buckland — You Don’t Have To Know (self-released)
  • Emily Scott Robinson — American Siren (Oh Boy Records)
  • The Exbats — Now Where Were We (Goner Records)
  • Furrows — Fisher King (Polyvinyl)
  • Gates — Here And Now EP (Wax Bodega)
  • Good Morning — Barnyard (Polyvinyl Record Co.)
  • Good Posture — Changin’ EP (Feeltrip Records)
  • The High Strung — Hannah (Park The Van Records)
  • Hot Garbage — RIDE (Mothland)
  • Jamire Williams — But Only After You Have Suffered (International Anthem)
  • Jerry Cantrell — Brighten (self-released)
  • Joe Bonamassa — Time Clocks (Provogue)
  • Jonathan Blake — Homeward Bound ( Blue Note Records)
  • Levitation Orchestra — Illusions & Realities (Gearbox Records)
  • Lilli Lewis — Americana (Louisiana Red Hot Records)
  • Lily Konigsberg — Lily We Need To Talk Now (Wharf Cat Records)
  • Lone — Always Inside Your Head (Greco Roman)
  • The Lucid Furs — Damn! That Was Easy! (Argonauta Records)
  • Marco Parisi — Untitled (Platoon)
  • Marie Dahlstrom — Safe Place EP (JFH Records)
  • Marissa Nadler — The Path Of The Clouds (Sacred Bones Records)
  • Mary Lattimore — Collected Pieces II (Ghostly International)
  • Mastodon — Hushed And Grim (Reprise Records)
  • Maya Jane Coles — Night Creature (I/AM/ME)
  • Minus The Bear — Farewell (Suicide Squeeze Records)
  • Monolord — Your Time To Shine (Relapse Records)
  • Motörhead — Everything Louder Forever (BMG)
  • Natalie Jane Hill — Solely (Dear Life Records)
  • Naytronix — Other Possibilities (Overseas Artists)
  • Nichols Payton — Smoke Sessions (Smoke Sessions)
  • Nightmares On Wax — Shout Out! To Freedom.. (Warp)
  • Order — The Gospel (Listenable Records)
  • The Parrots — Dos (Heavenly Recordings)
  • Patrick Shiroshi — Hidemi (American Dreams Records)
  • Planningtorock — Gay Dreams Do Come True EP (Human Level)
  • The Pop Group — Y In Dub (Radar)
  • Reno McCarthy — Run Up River (Balustrade)
  • Richard Ashcroft — Acoustic Hymns Vol. 1 (RPA/BMG)
  • Robin Hatch — T.O.N.T.O. (Robin Records)
  • Royston Langdon — Chains EP (BFD/The Orchard)
  • Running Wild — Blood On Blood (Steamhammer/SPV)
  • Sam Evian — Time To Melt (Fat Possusm)
  • Save Face — Another Kill For The Highlight Reel (Epitaph)
  • Soot Sprite — Poltergeists EP (Specialist Subject Records)
  • Spice Girls — Spice25 (Virgin)
  • SUSTO — Time In The Sun (New West Records)
  • They Might Be Giants — Book (Idlewild Recordings)
  • Tori Amos — Ocean To Ocean (Decca)
  • The War On Drugs — I Don’t Live Here Anymore (Atlantic)
  • Wave Racer — To Stop From Falling Off The Earth (PIAS)
  • Whitechapel — Kin (Metal Blade Records)
  • The Wilderness Of Manitoba — Farewell To Cathedral (Popguru Sound & Vision)

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx Is An independent subsidiary Of Warner Music Group.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Rami Malek Awkwardly Danced Around What’s Going On With His Bond Villain’s Face During A Graham Norton Visit

As the promotional train for the latest James Bond film, No Time To Die, kicks into high gear, Daniel Craig and Rami Malek stopped by The Graham Norton Show where the conversation jokingly wandered to what the heck is happening to Malek’s character’s face? After Norton pointed out that Bond villains don’t seem to have “much luck with their complexion” while showing pictures of Blofeld, Jaws, and Javier Bardem’s Raoul Silva, the host got right down to it by showing a picture of Malek’s villain and asking the actor what’s wrong with him.

“A lot’s wrong with me,” Malek quipped before turning to Craig for help because, obviously, they were now entering spoiler country. Ever the hero, the 007 star did his best to put the kibosh on the question.

“There’s a major plot point about the way he looks, and it’s sort of important that we don’t give it away,” Craig said, but Norton wasn’t quite done yet.

“Is he allergic to detergent?” Norton joked, which got a laugh from the audience, and Malek who jumped at the opportunity to keep his character’s secrets under wraps.

“He’s got allergies!” the actor quickly chimed in while looking visibly nervous about the whole thing. For over a year now, there have been theories about the true identity of Malek’s villain in No Time To Die, and with the film’s release only a week away, he can stop sweating about trying to hide it from nosy talk show hosts.

No Time To Die opens in theaters on October 8.

(Via BBC America)