Reactions

  • Gaming groups urge Congress to ban prediction markets sports betting in CLARITY ActGambling industry groups want the US Senate to step in to clarify that the Commodity Futures Trading Commission does not have the authority to oversee prediction markets.

  • Chi-Hua Chien saw Facebook coming; now he says the real AI winners won’t be selling AIChi-Hua Chien has spent more than two decades as a venture capitalist, but he thinks like a cultural anthropologist.

    Chi-Hua Chien has spent more than two decades as a venture capitalist, but he thinks like a cultural anthropologist.

  • Ringo Starr Twinkles With Friends at the GreekRingo Starr has been one of the biggest names in drumming world-wide for over 60 years. For the last 37 years Ringo has been touring with his All-Starr band, which has had some big alumni such as The Band’s Levon Helm and Rick Danko, The Eagle’s Joe Walsh, The E-Street Band’s Nils Lofgren and Clarence Clemons, Billy Preston, Dr. John, and drumming icon Jim Keltner.

    To be a member, Ringo's requirement is at least three hits from their own band or as a solo act. The All Starr band returned to the Greek Theater in Los Angeles for the first time since 2024, as they played Yaamava Casino last year for the L.A. area show. Generally, the Greek shows are every other year but there have also been back-to-back years. This short West Coast run began May 28th at Pechanga Casino in Temecula, CA and concluded at the Greek on June 14.

    The 16th incarnation of the All Starr band has included Toto’s Steve Lukather since 2012 (guitar/vocals), former David Lee Roth and ELO drummer Gregg Bissonette since 2008, Colin Hay of Men At Work on guitar and vocals (member in '03, '08 and since '18), Average White band bassist/vocalist Hamish Stuart (2006-08 and since '19), vocalist Warren Ham also a touring member of Toto (All Starr member since 2014). On keyboards is Buck Johnson from Aerosmith and the Hollywood Vampires, who originally was filling in for Edgar Winter starting in 2024. Lukather, Stuart, and Hay all played three songs from their bands.

    The show began with Ringo on vocals for the first two songs starting with Carl Perkins’ “Matchbox” followed by solo hit “It Don’t Come Easy.” Starr stepped behind the drums for song three, which was Toto’s “Rosanna” led by Lukather. Starr double-drummed with Bissonette. Next Stuart was featured on Average White Band’s “Pick Up the Pieces.” Then it was Hay’s turn performing Men At Work’s “Down Under.” When the All Starr band members were featured, they would play three songs in a row (one each). Lukather plays bass on Average White Band’s “Cut the Cake” and a cover of the Isley Brother’s “Work to Do,” and Stuart plays guitar on those.

    Each night during Average White Band’s “Cut the Cake,” the band minus Lukather, Bissonette and Johnson leave the stage and as a duo play bits of Queen’s “We Will Rock You,” The Beatles “Come Together,” The Safaris “Wipe Out,” Rush’s "YYZ,” Led Zeppelin’s “Rock N’ Roll,” Chicago’s “25 or 6 to 4,” Jimi Hendrix Experience’s “Manic Depression," The Rolling Stone’s “Honky Tonk Woman,” Led Zeppelin’s “Immigrant Song,” The Beatles “The End,” and finally Van Halen’s “Hot For Teacher.” Last year Starr began performing “The No No Song” for the first time in many years. During Toto’s Africa, Lukather mentioned his fellow band co-founder David Paich being in the audience.

    The closing songs were Starr’s “Photograph,” The Beatles’ cover of Johnny Russel’s “Act Naturally,”  and as always “Help From My Friends” with John Lennon’s “Give Peace a Chance.” At each show, there’s quite a bit of humor and before “Yellow Submarine,” Lukather and Ringo joked around, with Lukather playing the opening riff to The Beatles’ “Daytripper” and “Please Please Me.”

    For the finale, Ringo always brings up a few friends including returning guests Jim Keltner and former Guns N’ Roses Velvet Revolver Drummer Matt Sorum, and Toto’s David Paich as well as Jackson Browne, Heartbreaker’s members Mike Campbell, and Benmont Tench and Allman Betts drummer Alex Orbison.

    Ringo’s 86th birthday will be in just three weeks, on July 7.

    Setlist:

    Matchbox- Carl Perkins

    It Don’t Come Easy

    Rosanna- Toto

    Pick Up The Pieces- Average White Band

    Down Under- Men At Work

    Boys- Shirelles (The Beatles Version)

    I’m The Greatest- John Lennon

    Yellow Submarine- The Beatles

    Cut the Cake- Average White Band (Without Ringo)

    Frankenstein-Edgar Winter Group (Without Ringo)

    Octopus’s Garden-The Beatles

    No No Song- Hoyt Axton

    Overkill- Men At Work

    Africa- Toto

    Work To Do- Isley Brothers (Average White Band Version)

    I Wanna Be Your Man- Beatles

    Johnny B. Goode- Chuck Berry (Edgar Winter dedicated to his brother Johnny)

    Who Can It Be Now?- Men At Work

    Hold the Line- Toto

    Photograph- Ringo Starr

    Act Naturally- Buck Owens (Beatles Version)

    With a Little Help From My Friends/ Give Peace A Chance- Beatles/John Lennon

    The post Ringo Starr Twinkles With Friends at the Greek first appeared on Music Connection Magazine.

  • Get a free ambient synth pad for Splice INSTRUMENT
    Download our free synth pad preset for Splice INSTRUMENT—grab these presets during the drop window and they’re yours to keep forever.

    Download our free synth pad preset for the Splice INSTRUMENT plugin. Grab these presets during the drop window and they’re yours to keep forever.

  • 2026 Frikkin Lasers Contest: Steampunk, 360 O-Scope Does it with TubesAudiophiles all know everything sounds better fed through vacuum tubes, but did you know visualizers look better with them, too? That’s what we’re forced to conclude looking at the Tachyscope Laser, a 360-degree oscilloscope display that is [Daniel Ross]’s entry into the ongoing Frikkin Lasers contest.
    The diagram makes it look easier than building it probably was.
    The laser is a good old-fashioned helium–neon tube — something we see less and less of in this era of solid state lasers — and the wavelength gives the waveform display a retro charm. The actual display is unique in our experience, with the beam shining up through a hollow shaft to bounce off a galvanometer mirror on a spinning platform. Galvo sweeps the laser across a translucent target, which creates the waveform by persistence of vision as it spins at 100 RPM or so.
    Does the fact that the audio signal feeds through a tube amp to drive the single galvanometer actually improve the visuals? Only in the sense that those tubes make the steampunk-style enclosure look really, really cool, as does the exposed laser tube. That all of the steampunk elements obviously have a point to them rather than just being a another “glue some gears on it” project is icing on the laser-flavored cake.
    The contest runs until July 23rd, so there’s lots of time to get laserin’ — and remember that there are categories for DIY lasers and anything that isn’t a display, just in case you think this project puts the bar too high for a light show. We’ve actually featured one of [Daniel]’s tachyscope waveform visualizers before, but that one, madly enough, spun an actual CRT.

    Audiophiles all know everything sounds better fed through vacuum tubes, but did you know visualizers look better with them, too? That’s what we’re forced to conclude looking at the Tach…

  • Bram Vocal SeparatorVocal separator DAW plugin (CLAP format, x86_64) for Linux, using an offline AI model that runs on your device, and it is light enough to not require a GPU. On my regular laptop it processes a second of audio in roughly one second. This plugin also has no DRM or activation, so if you get it once you will be able to use it forever, also without an internet connection. The plugin is powered by Demucs, a state-of-the-art music source separation model. You can load .mp3 and .wav audio files, and adjust the selection where you want to separate the vocals with the sliders in the GUI. You can play any note on the track to hear your selection. When you are happy with the selection, you can click "Isolate vocals" to separate the vocals. Now, you can play a note of the track to hear the result. You can use the isolated vocals by playing notes on the track with the plugin, or export the result to a .wav file and load it in your favorite sampler to use it in the rest of your song. You can see a demo video here: https://youtu.be/aHLQoB0BuBk Also, here are some results from using this plugin: (see audio files). If you are interested in a plugin that separates other stems as well (drums, bass, etc.), let me know at audio@btertoolen.eu. You can also email me there for any support or other questions / feedback. Read More

  • BMG/Concord merger approved by competition authorities in United States and Germany (report)Deal cleared in US, Reuters reports, after official approval in Germany
    Source

  • Genelec introduce the 9402A System Management Device The latest expansion of Genelec’s UNIO monitoring ecosystem expands AoIP support with Dante and AES67 options, and offers system management for everything from stereo to 9.1.6 Dolby Atmos rigs. 

    The latest expansion of Genelec’s UNIO monitoring ecosystem expands AoIP support with Dante and AES67 options, and offers system management for everything from stereo to 9.1.6 Dolby Atmos rigs. 

  • AIAIAI was known for its all-black product lineup – until now…AIAIAI has long been known for its sleek headphone design, and is synonymous with its stealthy all-black product lineup. But now, the Copenhagen-based brand is flipping that design philosophy on its head, launching its TMA-2 and Tracks lines in an all-new pristine white colourway.
    The four models available in this fresh finish are the TMA-2 DJ Wireless, Tracks, TMA-2 Studio Wireless, and TMA-2 Move. The latter are AIAIAI’s modular Bluetooth headphones with a diaphragm constructed from bio-cellulose, literally bringing organic life into the technology.

    READ MORE: Focal’s new flagship Diva Alta Utopia is an audiophile’s dream – and a tight budget’s nightmare

    “As a company built around creators, we see this collection as a natural extension of our visual universe,” says Frederik Jørgensen, founder of AIAIAI. “By introducing a stark contrast to our iconic black identity, we are inviting our community to express their individuality through the pure, minimalist aesthetics they already trust.”
    To celebrate the launch, AIAIAI has announced an “ambitious, multi-sensory two-year global alliance” with Icelandic music legend Björk. The four white headphone models will be available to attendees of her audiovisual touring exhibition, Echolalia.
    Like many things Björk has done throughout her over three decades of artistry, Echolalia stretches the boundaries of different mediums. In terms of audio, attendees experience sounds that shift between “individual vocal micro-frequencies and collective choral dynamics”. Attendees are also treated to hearing music from Björk’s upcoming album (which will not be titled Echolalia).
    “Working with an artist like Björk is incredibly rare. She’s so selective of who she collaborates with. She doesn’t simply create music or visuals – she builds entirely new worlds,” Jørgensen adds. “This partnership gave us the opportunity to place our precision technology inside a truly visionary artistic universe with her, where sound, emotion, and innovation exist as one human pulse.”
    Echolalia premiered on May 31, 2026, at the National Gallery of Iceland in Reykjavík. Future editions will be held in London, Paris, Tokyo, New York, and Sydney.
    The pristine white series is not yet available for purchase. Sign up for AIAIAI’s newsletter to be notified when they drop.
    For more information on the headphones and Echolalia, head to AIAIAI.
    The post AIAIAI was known for its all-black product lineup – until now… appeared first on MusicTech.

    The Danish company has just launched four of its headphone models in a pristine white colourway – and announced a two-year partnership with Icelandic legend...

  • The Biggest UK Pro Audio Show In 20 Years! GearExpo UK is the biggest pro-audio show to hit the UK in years, offering an unmatched opportunity to get hands-on with the world’s top audio brands.

    GearExpo UK is the biggest pro-audio show to hit the UK in years, offering an unmatched opportunity to get hands-on with the world’s top audio brands.

  • Schematic Sound makes Aurora waveform visualizer plugin FREE and open-source
    Schematic Sound has made Aurora, its DJ-style waveform visualizer plugin, open-source and available as a free pay-what-you-want download. Aurora is a VST3/AU plugin that brings the frequency-colored waveform display you see in DJ software like Rekordbox, Traktor, and Serato into the DAW. I used DJ software quite a bit in the past (mostly at friends’ [...]
    View post: Schematic Sound makes Aurora waveform visualizer plugin FREE and open-source

    Schematic Sound has made Aurora, its DJ-style waveform visualizer plugin, open-source and available as a free pay-what-you-want download. Aurora is a VST3/AU plugin that brings the frequency-colored waveform display you see in DJ software like Rekordbox, Traktor, and Serato into the DAW. I used DJ software quite a bit in the past (mostly at friends’

  • Portway DSP launches PINGPAN physics-driven auto-panner plugin (GIVEAWAY)
    Portway DSP has released PINGPAN, a physics-driven auto-panner with a ping-pong delay, sweepable filter, and, believe it or not, a playable Pong-style game mode. We are taking a closer look at the plugin and giving away one free copy to one lucky BPB reader. PINGPAN is the debut plugin from Portway DSP, created by developer [...]
    View post: Portway DSP launches PINGPAN physics-driven auto-panner plugin (GIVEAWAY)

    Portway DSP has released PINGPAN, a physics-driven auto-panner with a ping-pong delay, sweepable filter, and, believe it or not, a playable Pong-style game mode. We are taking a closer look at the plugin and giving away one free copy to one lucky BPB reader. PINGPAN is the debut plugin from Portway DSP, created by developer

  • Fadeouts – lazy songwriting or the perfect space for experimentation? Keith Urban weighs in: “That’s when all the cool stuff starts happening”The fadeout: a space for musical experimentation or just plain lazy?
    They feature in some of the greatest tracks of all time – including the Eagles’ Hotel California, The Beatles’ Hey Jude, and Every Breath You Take by The Police – but some might argue that the fadeout is a way for musicians not to have to think of an outro.

    READ MORE: Focal’s new flagship Diva Alta Utopia is an audiophile’s dream – and a tight budget’s nightmare

    Indeed, repeating a track’s final chorus a few times as the volume slowly decreases means you don’t need to come up with a new chord progression or any major musical change in direction, but fadeouts can provide verdant ground for experimentation, and as the outro solo of Hotel California attests to, they sometimes play host to some of the greatest musical moments ever committed to tape.

    And in a new interview with Billboard – in which he talks about Flow State, his new album of yacht rock covers – Australian-American country singer and guitarist Keith Urban waxes lyrical on his love of the fadeout.
    “One of the areas I’ve always found that I like to go off script, if you will, is at the end of songs,” he says [via MusicRadar]. 
    “People who grew up in that era where there were fades know all about turning the volume up because this amazing thing happened right at the very end of the fade – you could just hear the guitarist do something that was so cool, because typically the session players figure, ‘We’re out by now, they’re not going to use all this, we’re just now playing for playing’s sake.’ That’s when all the cool stuff starts happening.”
    Urban explains how some of his biggest tracks saw his band members let loose creatively in a way they weren’t before, and that he was determined to share these sonic gems with the world.
    “I’ve found so many times on my records, the reason why Stupid Boy and some of those [songs] had these long outros is what the band would do at those periods was really cool, and I didn’t want it to not be heard,” he says.

    So let it be known that Keith Urban is a fan of the fadeout. But what do you think? Should artists seek to conclusively end their songs, or are fadeouts a great place for musical experimentation?
    The post Fadeouts – lazy songwriting or the perfect space for experimentation? Keith Urban weighs in: “That’s when all the cool stuff starts happening” appeared first on MusicTech.

    They feature in some of the greatest tracks of all time – including the Eagles’ Hotel California, The Beatles’ Hey Jude, and Every Breath You Take by The...

  • Get Solid State Logic SSL X-Limit for $10 at AudioDeluxe
    AudioDeluxe is offering Solid State Logic’s SSL X-Limit limiter plugin for $10 in an exclusive deal. SSL X-Limit normally costs $49, so the current $10 price cuts 80% off the regular price. It ends in 13 days, which means it should run until around June 30th. If you already had X-Limit on your wishlist, I [...]
    View post: Get Solid State Logic SSL X-Limit for $10 at AudioDeluxe

    AudioDeluxe is offering Solid State Logic’s SSL X-Limit limiter plugin for $10 in an exclusive deal. SSL X-Limit normally costs $49, so the current $10 price cuts 80% off the regular price. It ends in 13 days, which means it should run until around June 30th. If you already had X-Limit on your wishlist, I

  • Focal’s new flagship Diva Alta Utopia is an audiophile’s dream – and a tight budget’s nightmareFocal has unveiled its new flagship wireless active loudspeaker system, Diva Alta Utopia.
    Billing the latest unit as its “most advanced wireless, active and connected loudspeaker system to date”, Focal worked alongside British company Naim Audio to combine flagship acoustic engineering, integrated amplification and high-res wireless connectivity in a sleek package typical for the French luxury audio brand.

    READ MORE: GForce launches official Prophet~5 plugin with original hardware functionality and classic factory presets

    Directly inspired by Focal’s iconic Grande Utopia speaker – one of the most prestigious loudspeaker systems in the world retailing at well into six figures – the Diva Alta Utopia adopts the same principles, including four-way architecture, Focus Time Management, a W cone and fine-tuned filtering.
    The unit boasts Class AB amplification delivering over 600W of power per speaker, distributed over four dedicated amplifiers to guarantee a precisely controlled supply for each frequency range.
    Meanwhile, the Diva Alta Utopia also packs a powerful bass-midrange driver and four W-cone woofers for an “exceptional” bass response. It also features Ultra Wideband (UWB) technology for lossless speaker-to-speaker communication beyond CD quality, with support for up to 192 kHz/24-bit playback.
    It also features Focal’s in-house designed Focus Time Management technology, which sees speaker drivers arranged in an arc formation directed to a “sweet spot” listening point.
    “It’s mission? To obtain a perfectly consistent and realistic sound image: all sounds reach the ears at the same time. The result? Ultra-precise soundstage and striking realism,” the brand says.
    With Diva Alta Utopia, Focal also unveils its new patented PRISM technology, which combines a multi-material substrate with an advanced micro-structuring process, resulting in a “perfect balance between lightness, damping and rigidity”.
    Credit: Focal
    The speaker system also supports seamless high-resolution streaming, with compatibility with Spotify Connect, TIDAL Connect, Qobuz Connect, AirPlay 2, Google Cast, Bluetooth 5.3 and UPnP, offering a “single, elegant platform for music, film and connected living”.
    In addition, Focal and Naim have designed an app that lets you control the Diva Alta Utopia, as well as other Focal products. Within the app, users can access their music easily, as well as their favourite streaming platforms and radio stations – all in high-resolution.
    And true to form, the Diva Alta Utopia is a looker, too, with stylish floating side panels and choice of premium felt or hand-finished lacquered finishes.
    These are some of the best loudspeakers in the biz, mind, so they don’t come cheap. Felt-finished options come at £165,000 per pair, while high-gloss options come at £175,000 per pair.
    Learn more at Focal.
    The post Focal’s new flagship Diva Alta Utopia is an audiophile’s dream – and a tight budget’s nightmare appeared first on MusicTech.

    The latest loudspeaker system from the French luxury audio brand boasts an impressive spec sheet – and a six-figure price tag.