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The Rapture Revive For First Tour Since 2012

The Rapture Revive For First Tour Since 2012

Yahoo08-07-2025
2000s era New York rock outfit the Rapture will return to the live stage later this year for their first tour since 2012 and first shows of any kind since four California-area one-offs in 2020. The trek will begin Sept. 16 in Minneapolis and run through Nov. 23 in Barcelona; click here for tickets, which go on sale tomorrow (July 9).
'This has been a long time coming,' says frontman Luke Jenner. 'Years ago when I stepped away from the band, I was needing time and space to piece together my life. I needed to fix my marriage, be there for my son and ultimately work on myself. This tour marks a new chapter for me, one shaped by everything I've lived through and learned along the way. I've achieved everything I hoped to achieve through music, and now I get to use it to help anyone else who maybe needs it like I did back then.'
More from Spin:
Moby Ascends to a Higher Calling
'Sorry, Baby' Dares Us to Smile
Pearl Jam Drummer Matt Cameron Steps Down From Band
The Rapture broke through in 2003 with the DFA Records release Echoes, which boasted the iconic dance-driven rock single 'House of Jealous Lovers.' The group's last studio album, In the Grace of Your Love, came out in 2011.
'Sometimes people ask me if I have guilty pleasures, and I don't any more,' Jenner told SPIN in 2011 when asked if he'd ever considered working in a different style of music. 'I'm old enough to say, 'Who cares what somebody thinks.' While I'm not going out dancing at clubs anymore, I did that for years. It's still there. It doesn't take much to wake that up in me. I love dance music just as much as I love rock'n'roll, and I don't see much of a distinction.'
09.16 – First Avenue – Minneapolis, MN09.18 – Ogden Theatre – Denver, CO09.19 – The Depot – Salt Lake City, UT09.21 – Portola Festival – San Francisco, CA09.23 – Humphrey's – San Diego, CA09.24 – The Van Buren – Phoenix, AZ09.26 – Emo's – Austin, TX09.27 – The Studio at The Factory – Dallas, TX09.30 – Buckhead Theatre – Atlanta, GA10.01 – Marathon Music Works – Nashville, TN10.03 – Riviera Theatre – Chicago, IL10.04 – Masonic Temple Theater – Detroit, MI10.05 – Danforth Music Hall – Toronto, ON10.07 – Union Transfer – Philadelphia, PA10.08 – Brooklyn Steel – Brooklyn, NY10.09 – House of Blues – Boston, MA10.10 – 9:30 Club – Washington, DC11.11 – St. Luke's – Glasgow, UK11.12 – New Century Hall – Manchester, UK11.13 – HERE at Outernet – London, UK11.15 – Fabrik – Hamburg, DE11.17 – Huxleys – Berlin, DE11.19 – Paradiso – Amsterdam, NE11.20 – Salle Pleyel – Paris, FR11.21 – Trix – Antwerp, BE11.23 – Razzmatazz 2 – Barcelona, SP
To see our running list of the top 100 greatest rock stars of all time, click here.
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Are pro golfers getting angrier, or are we just always recording?
Are pro golfers getting angrier, or are we just always recording?

New York Times

time33 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Are pro golfers getting angrier, or are we just always recording?

A recent major champion stands on the third tee at Riviera Country Club. It's the second round of one of golf's marquee events, and he hits a poor drive, the kind of shot at the wrong moment that just sets you off. He can't stand it. He smashes his driver into the nearby cart path, so hard the driver head explodes. Shrapnel flies into the crowd. One large chunk shoots just by a spectator and continues into a nearby fairway. Chaos. Advertisement The spectator and her husband shout at the player. So do other gallery members. He mumbles an apology. The PGA Tour finds out. It sends a letter of inquiry to the player. He doesn't respond for at least two weeks, is hit with a hefty fine and must pen a letter of apology to the spectators he nearly hit. It's an embarrassing public moment for both the player and the tour. Amidst the last few months of viral golf explosions, unconvincing apologies and a dramatic banishment from one of golf's most iconic venues, you might be assuming this is a story from the summer of 2025. You might be wondering if it was Wyndham Clark, or Rory McIlroy, or perhaps Tyrrell Hatton. Nope. This was 1992. And it was the 1989 Open Championship winner Mark Calcavecchia. The great Bobby Jones, the winner of the Grand Slam and creator of Augusta National, a man who tore up his scorecard at the 1921 Open Championship and walked off in anger during the third round, once said, 'I would forgive almost any behavior in a man when he has a golf club in his hand.' That's the topic at hand this summer, because suddenly golf-adjacent temper tantrums are jumping the shark from funny little anecdotes to viral, controversial talking points. It's the summer McIlroy, two months after the crowning achievement of his career, threw clubs and smashed a tee marker at the U.S. Open. A week later, five-time major winner Brooks Koepka was caught doing the same. Wyndham Clark, two years removed from a U.S. Open win that thrust him into stardom, has done the most damage, quite literally. His driver's biggest impact at the PGA Championship was the hole it left in a T-Mobile sign, which just happens to be one of his sponsors, and who tried to save him by turning it into an activation. He was not so lucky at the U.S. Open, where he destroyed a locker and was asked by Oakmont Country Club to not return until, among other things, he undergoes anger management therapy. 🚨🗡️🤬 #WATCH — Wyndham Clark broke his driver w/ a violent outburst at the PGA. Marshall (@CMDeiulio11) who was standing nearby took to X: 'I'm the Marshall holding the flag. Scared me to death.' T-Mobile signage was broken, a company who sponsors Clark. — NUCLR GOLF (@NUCLRGOLF) May 19, 2025 This is the summer that golf outrage became a thing. But if you ask anybody around golf the past half century, they'll tell you the only difference between now and then is that everybody is making a big deal of it. 'This story has been going on since the time of professional sports,' says Billy Andrade, age 61 and a four-time PGA Tour winner. 'This isn't anything new.' Advertisement Why is it so much bigger now? Cameras. Social media. Outrage culture. Pick one. The fact it used to be a luxury to get an entire tournament round on TV, but nowadays between Golf Channel, ESPN+, Peacock, NBC and CBS, you can theoretically watch every minute of a round from the first group to the last. It's all right there for us to see, and in turn it's all right there for somebody to record and post a clip online to get clicks and attention. But is any of this actually any worse than before? Tommy Bolt, a 1958 U.S. Open winner, is more famous for his on-course antics than the golf itself. 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'The place you want to do it is the Hawaiian Open with actual real pineapples,' Andrade said. So many golfers lay claim to smashing those pineapples at Waialae Country Club in Honolulu at the event now called the Sony Open. Corey Pavin. Brad Faxon. Craig Stadler. Calcavecchia. Imagine the sight of Stadler, known as The Walrus with his big, droopy, mustache, thinking it was plastic as he smashed the pineapple and instead covered himself in pineapple pulp. Calcavecchia remembers hitting one and spraying the poor marshal nearby. Most of these stories, if they didn't end up involving lawsuits or fines, were simply told after the fact, locker room and barroom tales passed around between golfers. Most golf writers around in those days simply didn't write about them, not because they were covering for golfers or scared to. It just wasn't news. It's something that happens on golf courses all the time. Chamblee has become something of golf's moral voice over his decades as a Golf Channel analyst, a smart, insightful former pro who enjoys pontificating on larger issues in the game. So, yes, he was on the broadcasts as criticism mounted this summer over McIlroy, Clark and the rest. He says he didn't want to criticize any of those actions too heavily, because he knew he had done the same things, if not worse. The difference was he wasn't the kind of star who always had cameras on him, so most went unnoticed. Advertisement Chamblee does concede it is happening more often. And it definitely happens more often with the biggest stars. He has a multi-point theory for why that is. • One: More documentation. The mere fact there are so many people with phones, so many people watching at home and rushing to clip anything they can to get it online to go viral. Simply, there are more eyeballs. • Two: Easier equipment replacement. Golfers used to sometimes go their entire careers with the same driver. There was a mystique to finding the perfect shaft that worked for you. You'd think twice about breaking any club, because it might take you years to ever have your equipment that dialed. Nowadays, golfers can walk over to the equipment truck and order up a new driver like it's a food truck burrito stand. • Three: Money. In both ways. A $100,000 fine for Calcavecchia was deflating. That was a fifth of his total earnings most years. Now, these stars are worth tens of millions, if not more. No fine can even put a dent in their life. But it works both ways. They are also playing for so much money that the tensions can escalate. • Four: Tiger Woods. This is perhaps the most interesting. You see, each generation of golfers looks up to one or two before them. It sets the tempo for how that generation acts. Jack Nicklaus famously never broke a club in tournament play. Tom Watson is known as golf's great gentleman. 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Scoop: Katie Miller leaves Musk full-time, launches podcast

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