Music grab bag. Starting with Joni Mitchell. Tim Coffman (FAR OUT) notes the recording of her song "Dancing Clown:"
By Mitchell’s standards, though, Billy Idol was always going to be a bit of a wild card. Punk rock was the exact opposite of Mitchell’s strengths half the time she played, and when looking through a lot of Idol’s best work, there was never any point where you looked at him and thought that he could do a halfway-decent version of ‘Both Sides Now’ or anything. He was the ultimate fish out of water when working with Mitchell, but that actually managed to work in his favour.
In the context of the song ‘Dancin’ Clown’, Mitchell needed a voice that sounded intimidating, and she felt that Idol’s forceful punk growl had a much better chance at playing a bully character than she ever could, saying, “I’ll need another voice to deliver a line, because [the songs] are like little plays. Like in ‘Dancin’ Clown’, Billy Idol plays the bully. He’s got the perfect bully’s voice, He’s threatening this guy named Jesse: ‘You’re a push-button window! I can run you up and down. Anytime I want I can make you my dancing clown!’ So you need an aggressive, bullyish voice to deliver that line.”
And while this is one of the wildest collaborations that Mitchell could have used, it’s not like it doesn’t go over well. Idol already that growl in his voice as far back as working on Rebel Yell, and while his contribution isn’t the most aggressive he’s ever sounded by any stretch, it made perfect sense for him to work in this context rather than try and make Mitchell write a song around his voice.
Given the other vocalists on the song, like Tom Petty, Mitchell actually caught Idol at the perfect time as well. This was in between his classics and right before his final major hits on tunes like ‘Cradle of Love’, so getting him to sound like a domineering figure in the tune must have been like a mini version of voice casting, in a sense.
Mitchell was still the one in the centre singing her heart out, but let this be an important lesson to anyone who is making a record of their own. Not every solitary note that ends up on record needs to come from you, and sometimes you need to find those few people who can make their voice sound miles more authentic than you ever could in the right context.
That's from her album CHALK MARK IN A RAINSTORM.
This was her follow up to DOG EAT DOG. That album is a classic but it oot beaten up in real time. Joni waited a bit before following it up and when she did follow it up? She stacked the album with guest stars including Idol, Petty, Willie Nelson, Don Henley, Benjamin Orr, Peter Gabriel and Wendy & Lisa.
Jim Beviglia (AMERICAN SONGWRITER) is a liar who wants to note four songs that he feels should have been hits for Jackson Browne. Here he is on "In The Shape Of A Heart:"
Jackson Browne’s strongest string of singles, in terms of commercial success, came to a halt when he started delving into more political material. In the good-time 80s, it was hard to get that kind of stuff across to the mainstream, even when it was as potent as what Browne was doing on albums like Lives In The Balance. But Browne did deliver a lovelorn ballad on that record via “In The Shape Of A Heart”. And it’s a doozy, as Browne dives deep into the darker corners of a turbulent relationship to try and make sense of how it all came to that. But not even the turn to a more radio-friendly topic of heartbreak could get the song any traction.
The song was a hit. It made it to number 10 on BILLBOARD's Adult Contemporary chart and number 15 on BILLBOARD's Mainstream Rock chart.
He writes of "I'm Alive, " "The song and album deal in large part with Browne’s fractured romance with actress Daryl Hannah." And that's it. When he was promoting -- or trying to -- the I'M ALIVE album, he was having to answer questions about Daryl, specifically did he beat her up. That's why that album didn't do better. And not only had a police officer been called to his home on the night of his break up with Daryl (for cheating on him) but Joni Mitchell had released her TURBULENT INDIGO album with a song about Jackson on it -- and she was talking in her press about that song and Jackson's behavior with her and other women.
It's a little cheesy to mention that the album deals with his romance with Daryl but not to note that the press at the time was repeatedly asking -- hounding him -- on whether or not he beat Daryl.
(Jackson said he was the one who called the police the night of their break up.)
That's Evanescence's new song "Who Will You Follow." Kevin Rutherford (BILLBOARD) reports:
For the first time dating to the chart’s 2020 inception, Evanescence is No. 1 on Billboard’s Hot Hard Rock Songs ranking, debuting atop the April 25-dated survey with “Who Will You Follow.” In the week ending April 16, the song, released April 10, drew 1.2 million official streams and two million radio audience impressions and sold 2,000 downloads in the United States, according to Luminate.
The song becomes the second to debut atop Hot Hard Rock Songs in 2026, following Ice Nine Kills’ “Twisting the Knife,” featuring Mckenna Grace, in early March.
Evanescence has appeared on Hot Hard Rock Songs with seven titles, with the Amy Lee-fronted band’s previous best a pair of No. 2 peaks via “The Game Is Over” in 2020 and its 2000s classic “Bring Me to Life,” featuring Paul McCoy, in 2021. The latter was revitalized at the time sparked by iTunes sale-pricing.
The Arkansas band will release their sixth studio record, and the follow-up to 2021’s ‘The Bitter Truth’, on June 5 via BMG and you can pre-order it now here as a digital album, or on standard or deluxe CD, or as a limited-edition box set. A 2LP vinyl version will also be available from September 4.
The first single is ‘Who Will You Follow’, a track that taps into the band’s classic sound, with Amy Lee’s soaring, emotional vocals matched by the fierce dynamism of the rest of the band. “What have you done to me / You drain the life out of me till I don’t know myself / When all your faith in reality fades away / Who will you follow,” she sings.
The track has been co-written and produced by former Bring Me The Horizon member and prolific producer Jordan Fish as well as Zakk Cervini (Spiritbox, Yungblud), both of whom have contributed to other tracks on ‘Sanctuary’, as has producer Nick Raskulinecz (Foo Fighters, Rush).
Closing with C.I.'s "The Snapshot:"
Democrats’ success in pushing through one of the country’s most aggressively gerrymandered congressional maps on Tuesday in Virginia represented the latest example of the party’s willingness to take the gloves off as it seeks to win back control of Congress and thwart President Trump’s agenda.
It was a stark reversal for a party that has decried partisan gerrymandering for years. But Democrats said that the new map, which could flip as many as four Republican-held seats blue, was necessary to counter similar G.O.P. efforts in Texas and other states.
Their new mantra: It’s time to play hardball.
“While many expected Democrats to roll over and play dead, we did the opposite,” Hakeem Jeffries, the House Democratic leader from New York, said in a statement after The Associated Press called the race. “Democrats did not step back. We fought back. When they go low, we hit back hard.”
Informally, the Virginia Democrats who control the state’s legislature have given themselves power to gerrymander the state’s districts as a short-term response to Republicans gerrymandering Texas and other states they control at the behest of President Trump.
The legislature has already created and adopted the new district maps. They go into effect with the passage of this amendment. But the Virginia Supreme Court could still decide that the process by which the amendment was passed or the gerrymandering itself violates the state’s constitution. Republicans have filed numerous suits to stop the redistricting, and those have not been fully resolved. They are expected to fail.
If this redistricting stands, it’s a huge boon for Democrats. The maps adopted by Virginia Democrats are projected to give the party up to a four-seat boost, potentially carrying 10 of the state’s 11 districts instead of the current six. Remember that the House is very narrowly divided today, with Republicans holding 217 seats and the Democrats 214. Every seat matters.
President Trump announced an indefinite extension to his ceasefire with Iran Tuesday as it became evident that peace talks between the two countries were on the brink of collapse.
“Based on the fact that the Government of Iran is seriously fractured, not unexpectedly so and, upon the request of Field Marshal Asim Munir, and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, of Pakistan, we have been asked to hold our Attack on the Country of Iran until such time as their leaders and representatives can come up with a unified proposal,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “I have therefore directed our Military to continue the Blockade and, in all other respects, remain ready and able, and will therefore extend the Ceasefire until such time as their proposal is submitted, and discussions are concluded, one way or the other.”
The announcement came shortly after Vice President JD Vance suspended his travel plans to Islamabad Tuesday to represent the United States at the table. One source told The Wall Street Journal that Vance pulled out because Iranian negotiators hadn’t committed to showing up to the meeting. Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei confirmed as much, telling Iranian state broadcaster IRIB that the meeting was called off due to “contradictory messages, inconsistent behavior and unacceptable actions by the American side.”
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi added that the U.S. blockade of the Strait of Hormuz is an “act of war” and a violation of the ceasefire.
Sidney Blumenthal and Sean Wilentz discussed Melania Trump's recent press conference on a new episode of the podcast, "The Court of History." They speculated that Melania Trump must know something is about to be revealed about her ties to Epstein, otherwise she wouldn't have felt compelled to make some of the statements that she did.
Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren grilled Donald Trump’s nominee to serve as the next Federal Reserve chair over his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, but Kevin Warsh refused to answer her directly.
The top Democrat on the Senate Banking Committee accused Warsh of having more than $100 million in investments, for which he has not disclosed specific details to ethics officials or the public, as he seeks to become the next head of the U.S. central bank.
“Do
the Juggernaut Fund or the THSDFS LLC invest in any companies
affiliated with President Trump or his family, companies that have
facilitated money laundering, Chinese-controlled companies, or financing
vehicles established by Jeffrey Epstein?” Warren asked at his
confirmation hearing on Tuesday.
Warsh did not answer her question directly but instead started to talk about the role of the Fed and broader ethics scandals Warren had previously referenced.
“Will you answer my question, please?” Warren cut him off.
“I asked, you have $100 million in undisclosed assets, and what I’m asking is, are any of those with this outfit that invests in companies affiliated with President Trump or his family, companies that have facilitated money laundering, Chinese-controlled companies, or financing vehicles set up by Jeffrey Epstein? It’s a yes or no question,” Warren repeated.
[. . .]
But Warsh avoided sharing any investments tied to Epstein as he was grilled on Tuesday. Warren pointed out again that he was not directly answering her.
“Mr. Warsh, are you refusing to tell us if you have investments in, for example, vehicles set up to advance Jeffrey Epstein? Is that what you’re telling us?” Warren repeated, focusing on the late convicted sex offender. “You just won’t tell us?”
“Senator, what I’m telling you is that those assets that you represent as Juggernaut will be sold if I’m confirmed before I take office and sign the oath of office,” Warsh said about the hedge fund.
Washington, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senators Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) and Mark Warner (D-Va.) and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) led 16 Senators in urging the Trump administration to immediately reverse course on their illegal and dangerous decision to seek unprecedented access to the personal medical records of millions of federal workers, retirees, and their families.
According to a notice by the White House Office of Personnel Management, this effort would involve the widespread aggregation of individuals’ health data, including medical visits, prescriptions, and treatment histories. The Senators express deep concern regarding such sweeping access of private medical data, which violates core principles of the law and places the personal information of Americans at serious risk of potential cyberattacks, unauthorized access and political exploitation.
“This proposal is another step in the stated goal of traumatizing the federal workforce, this time by requiring the most sensitive health information about federal employees and their families to be shared with OPM. We are deeply concerned this information will be used in employment actions, including actions related to hiring, suitability determinations, appeals, reductions in force, disability accommodation requests, labor-management relations, and performance reviews,” the Senators wrote.
“We strongly urge you to cease any further consideration of this proposal. Our federal employees work every day to serve the American people and deserve to have their health data protected,” the Senators continued.
In addition to Schiff, Warner, and Leader Schumer this letter is also signed by Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), John Fetterman (D-Pa.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Angus King Jr. (I-Maine), Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), Andy Kim (D-N.J.), Angela Alsobrooks (D-Md.). Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.) and Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.).
The full text of the letter can be found here and below.
Dear Director Kupor,
We are writing with grave concern regarding the Information Collection Request (ICR) noticed in the Federal Register on December 12, 2025, by the Office of Personnel Management (OPM). If implemented, this proposal would require health insurance carriers that participate in the Federal Employees Health Benefits (FEHB) and Postal Service Health Benefits (PSHB) programs to report broad medical record data of federal workers, retirees, and their families to OPM on a monthly basis. According to the notice, this effort would involve the widespread aggregation of these individuals’ health data, including medical visits, prescriptions, and treatment histories. This proposal raises profound statutory, constitutional, and public health concerns. We demand that OPM immediately reverse this action and abstain from any future efforts to illegally collect federal workers’ sensitive health data.
Since January 2025, federal employees have been pushed into early retirement, illegally fired, demonized, seen their civil service protections weakened, and more. This proposal is another step in the stated goal of traumatizing the federal workforce, this time by requiring the most sensitive health information about federal employees and their families to be shared with OPM. We are deeply concerned this information will be used in employment actions, including actions related to hiring, suitability determinations, appeals, reductions in force, disability accommodation requests, labor-management relations, and performance reviews.
Such sweeping access to personal health information would violate the core principles of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), which was enacted to strictly regulate how protected health information (PHI) can be disclosed to ensure that patient data is shared only for limited, clearly defined purposes. Mass, centralized access to identifiable medical records absent individualized consent, clear necessity, or narrowly tailored legal authority undermines those protections and lacks a valid statutory basis. Both HIPAA regulations that apply to all covered entities as well as the Privacy Act statute that governs the federal government’s use of data about individuals require only the minimum amount of information necessary to be shared;[1] the data collection contemplated in this proposal to collect individualized medical claims data from all federal employees, retirees, and their families every month would far exceed those legal limits and violate OPM’s statutory authority.
Furthermore, this proposal threatens the foundational principle of confidentiality between a patient and their health care provider. Patients must be able to trust that sensitive disclosures regarding mental health, chronic illness, or other deeply personal conditions will remain private. If individuals with health care coverage through FEHB and PSHB fear their medical records will be accessed by government agencies for unclear or non-clinical purposes, millions of Americans may withhold critical information from their providers or forego health care services altogether. This erosion of trust directly harms medical care and public health outcomes.
The risks of misuse of the data to be shared in OPM’s proposal and subsequent data breaches cannot be overstated, as large, centralized databases of health records are prime targets for cyberattacks and unauthorized access. Past incidents across industries demonstrate that even “secure” systems are vulnerable, and breaches involving health data have historically exposed millions of individuals to identity theft, discrimination, and long-term privacy harms. Expanding access to PHI increases the number of potential failure points and amplifies these risks.
Additionally, the potential for secondary use or mission creep is deeply concerning. This administration has demonstrated a cavalier approach toward utilizing sensitive data, breaking down firewalls that work to protect individuals’ privacy and security, and an incompetence in protecting that data. In January 2026, the Department of Justice admitted in a legal filing that employees of President Trump and Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) stole individuals’ Social Security data and stored it improperly. And as a data point that DOGE was never truly about efficiency, the legal filing also noted that one employee was working with an advocacy group to try and connect Social Security data with voter rolls in order to “find evidence of voter fraud and to overturn election results in certain States.” Additionally, the effort by the Department of Health and Human Services to share Medicaid enrollee data with the Department of Homeland Security for immigration enforcement purposes raises serious concerns that this data collection would serve a far more nefarious purpose than those stated in the Federal Register.
Finally, we have substantial constitutional concerns regarding OPM’s proposal. The Supreme Court has recognized a protected privacy interest in avoiding disclosure of highly personal information, including medical data. While not absolute, this interest requires that government intrusions be justified, narrowly tailored, and accompanied by clear safeguards. Broad policies without individualized justifications raise Fourth Amendment concerns and encroach on Americans’ reasonable expectations of privacy. We do not believe any employee, including federal employees, should be forced to give up basic rights to privacy as a condition of their employment, especially regarding their health information.
For these reasons, we strongly urge you to cease any further consideration of this proposal. Our federal employees work every day to serve the American people and deserve to have their health data protected. Protecting patient privacy is not a bureaucratic obstacle, but a cornerstone of ethical medicine, legal compliance, and public trust. Any effort to modernize or improve data systems must prioritize strict privacy protections, transparency, and respect for individual rights.
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