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Grammy-Nominated Hitmaker BLXST Recruits Sasha Keable For New Single “Ruin”

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BLXST has another standout on the board. The Grammy-nominated singer, songwriter, and producer just dropped “Ruin” featuring Sasha Keable, the focus track from his highly anticipated album ‘Labor of Love’. The record arrives June 12 via EMPIRE and International BLXST. It’s a smooth, emotionally charged cut that shows the West Coast favorite at his most open. Listen here.

Written and produced entirely by BLXST, “Ruin” digs into how fast small misunderstandings can spiral when communication breaks down. The song traces the back-and-forth of a relationship stuck in cycles of blame and reflection, while the chorus holds onto a single idea, refusing to let recurring arguments wreck something that matters. Keable’s voice gives the whole thing extra ache, and the two make a striking pair.

The single builds on the run BLXST started with “Just My Type” and “Day After Day” featuring Big Sad 1900, both of which land on the new album. ‘Labor of Love’ follows his 2024 album and short film ‘I’ll Always Come Find You’, a 20-track, four-act concept project executive produced in part by Sounwave. Where that release leaned into cinematic storytelling and character-driven narratives, this one returns to his roots and reconnects with the reason he started making music in the first place. Self-written and self-produced from top to bottom, it’s his most honest and vulnerable work yet.

BLXST has been pouring that energy back into his city too. He hosted a Mother’s Day pop-up at Harun Coffee, treating mothers in the community to complimentary drinks. Next Friday he joins Power 106 and the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health for the ‘Labor of Love’ Listening Party hosted by B-Nyce, an evening built around music, healing, and connection. ‘Labor of Love’ hits all major streaming platforms that same day, June 12.

Born Matthew Burdette, BLXST grew up in South Central L.A. and taught himself to produce, sing, and write. He broke through with his 2020 debut EP ‘No Love Lost’ and its Platinum hit “Chosen,” then kept building with releases like ‘Before You Go’ and ‘I’ll Always Come Find You’, plus Grammy-nominated contributions to Kendrick Lamar’s ‘Mr. Morale & The Big Steppers’. He shapes every layer of his work, from production to visuals, and that command keeps him among the most compelling voices in R&B and hip-hop.

Sasha Keable brings serious firepower to the collaboration. The British Colombian singer-songwriter is a three-time MOBO nominee, picking up nods this year for Best Female Act and Best R&B/Soul Act. She’s a BRIT nominee, landed on the BBC Sound of 2026 list, and recently sold out KOKO while touring the EU, UK, and USA with Giveon. Her COLORS session and Tiny Desk appearance went viral, she sang at GQ’s Music & Style dinner for Christian Louboutin, and she’s racked up over 100 million global streams. With co-signs from Rihanna and a personal shout from Beyoncé, Keable has cemented herself as a defining voice in UK R&B.

L.A. Punk Trio Drama Dolls Scream Through Diet Culture On New Single “Salad”

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Three women, three chords, and a whole lot of pent-up frustration about lettuce. Drama Dolls have unleashed “Salad,” and the L.A. trio turn the misery of a never-ending diet into a loud, funny, and painfully relatable anthem. It’s out now. The track swings back to their trademark hard-hitting drums, screaming vocals, and tongue-in-cheek lyrics that somehow land with total sincerity, and it’s a riotous reminder that the group can make the smallest gripe feel enormous.

The premise is gloriously simple. “I want some fried dough. I want some pizza,” goes the rallying cry, and the group don’t bother dressing it up. “This song is about the emotions that come up when you realize that you have to eat salad for like the rest of your life and you are sick of it and sad,” they explain. It’s a mundane anxiety blown up to full volume, and that’s the joke and the catharsis rolled into one.

Drama Dolls give us a chance to scream out our irritation through the joy running through every song. Formed by Egg, Scrambles, and Mama-T, the trio throw age expectations out the window and make loud, chaotic rock with reckless abandon. They’ve got range too. The blistering “I Hate Your Face” rips with the fury of a thousand suns, the brat-punk anthem “Horchata” is an instant classic, and “We Like to Party” rides danceable ska and new wave beats. Across all of it, the group cover the full spread of old-school SoCal punk filtered through modern mixing board polish. These three Dolls are showing us how to enjoy life through creativity no matter what state you’re in.

Prince Unearth 10 Rare Cuts On New Compilation ‘Timeless’

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A new window into Prince’s legendary Vault is opening. ‘Timeless’ gathers 10 rare and unreleased studio recordings, and it spans the full arc of his career, from 1977 all the way to 2016. The collection arrives on CD and vinyl on 28 August 2026 via Sony. For anyone who’s chased the deep mythology of Prince’s archive, this is a major haul.

The set runs chronologically, and the early material alone reads like a treasure map. ‘I Am You’ is a home recording from 1978 that Prince performed live just twice in early 1979 before retiring it for good. ‘Tick, Tick, Bang’ is an unreleased 1981 recording that he later re-cut for the ‘Graffiti Bridge’ album. ‘Heaven’ was committed to tape in 1985 and never issued, while ‘I Wonder’ followed four years later in 1989 and also stayed locked away.

The later years carry just as much intrigue. ‘Stone’, a 1995 recording, was once slated for ‘Emancipation’. ‘The Guilty Ones’ pushes into more recent territory as an unreleased track from 2007. The compilation also includes ‘With This Tear’, the November 1991 recording that surfaced digitally last month on the 10th anniversary of Prince’s death, plus a live version of the 1999 B-side ‘How Come U Don’t Call Me Anymore’. Ten songs, decades apart, finally sharing one home.

The audio comes courtesy of Chris James, the engineer behind the acclaimed Prince Atmos mixes of recent years. James has mastered the collection and, in many cases, likely handled the mixing too. He’s become the trusted hand for Prince mix and master projects, having previously delivered the celebrated Purple Rain Atmos mix. That pedigree gives the whole set a serious sonic backbone.

It’s a thrilling addition to the Prince catalog, the kind of release that rewards both lifelong devotees and newer listeners digging into the legend.

Tracklisting:

I Am You

Tick Tick Bang

Heaven

I Wonder

With This Tear

Stone

Calabama

The Guilty Ones

Bestest Friend

How Come You Don’t Call Me Anymore? (Live)

American Football Stretch Their ‘No Feeling’ World Tour Across Four Continents

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American Football have a globe-spanning run of dates lined up, and the map keeps growing. The group just announced the fall leg of their “No Feeling” World Tour, expanding a campaign that already sweeps through North America, the UK, the EU, and Asia this summer. The newly added shows follow a West Coast leg the group wrapped this past month. It’s one of the most ambitious touring chapters in the group’s history.

The fall stretch opens September 8th with a Texas swing from Houston to Dallas, capped by a headlining set at Levitation 2026 in Austin. From there the group make their debut at Red Rocks Amphitheatre supporting Bleachers, then return to headline The Observatory in Orange County. November brings a first-ever trip to Chile for Fauna Primavera, before a final East Coast push that includes first-time stops in Jacksonville, Charlotte, New Haven, Worcester, and Buffalo.

The tour supports the group’s acclaimed new album American Football (LP4), and the live show has earned rave reviews, sold-out rooms, and a string of memorable guest moments. Hayley Williams joined for their collaborative track “Uncomfortably Numb” at Kilby Block Party, and Wisp turned up for the LP4 cut “Wake Her Up” at a sold-out night at The Wiltern in Los Angeles. The new visuals push the experience further, and the group have never sounded sharper on stage.

“No Feeling” World Tour Dates:

06/19 – Milan, Italy @ Alcatraz +

06/20 – Stuttgart, Germany @ Im Wizemann + [SOLD OUT]

06/21 – Cologne, Germany @ Live Music Hall + [LOW TICKETS]

06/23 – Brussels, Belgium @ La Madeleine +

06/24 – Amsterdam, NL @ Paradiso + [SOLD OUT]

06/26 – Leeds, UK @ O2 Academy + [LOW TICKETS]

06/27 – London, UK @ O2 Kentish Forum + [SOLD OUT]

06/28 – London, UK @ O2 Kentish Forum +

07/08 – Boston, MA @ Royale ! [LOW TICKETS]

07/09 – New York, NY @ Brooklyn Paramount ! [LOW TICKETS]

07/10 – Philadelphia, PA @ Franklin Music Hall ! [LOW TICKETS]

07/11 – Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club ! [SOLD OUT]

07/12 – Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club !

07/14 – Richmond, VA @ The National ! [LOW TICKETS]

07/15 – Asheville, NC @ Orange Peel ! [SOLD OUT]

07/16 – Atlanta, GA @ Variety Playhouse ! [LOW TICKETS]

07/26 – Niigata, JP @ FujiRock Festival

07/28 – Seoul, South Korea @ YES24 Wanderloch Hall [LOW TICKETS]

07/29 – Taipei City, Taiwan @ Legacy Taipei

07/31 – Beijing, China @ FULLOF Livehouse [SOLD OUT]

08/01 – Shanghai, China @ Vas Est [SOLD OUT]

08/07 – Cleveland, OH @ House of Blues $

08/08 – Toronto, ON @ History $ [SOLD OUT]

08/09 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Roxian Theatre $

08/10 – Columbus, OH @ Newport Music Hall $

08/12 – Nashville, TN @ Marathon Music Works $

08/13 – Indianapolis, IN @ Deluxe at Old National Centre $ [LOW TICKETS]

08/14 – Chicago, IL @ The Salt Shed (Indoor) $

08/15 – Milwaukee, WI @ Turner Hall Ballroom $ [LOW TICKETS]

08/16 – Minneapolis, MN @ First Avenue $ [LOW TICKETS]

09/08 – Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall *

09/09 – Dallas, TX @ Longhorn Ballroom *

09/10 – Austin, TX @ Levitation Festival – Stubbs *^

09/23 – Denver, CO @ Red Rocks Amphitheatre &

09/24 – Santa Ana, CA – The Observatory

11/26-11/28 – Santiago, CL @ Fauna Primavera

12/11 – Fort Lauderdale, FL @ Revolution Live

12/12 – Tampa, FL @ Ritz Ybor

12/13 – Orlando, FL @ Plaza Live

12/15 – Jacksonville, FL @ Five

12/16 – Charlotte, NC @ The Fillmore Charlotte

12/18 – New Haven, CT @ College Street Music Hall

12/19 – Worcester, MA @ Palladium

12/20 – Buffalo, NY @ Asbury Hall

L.A. Rockers Crymwav Tear Into Agent Orange’s “Everything Turns Grey” With Hardcore Fire

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Crymwav have planted their flag with a snarling new single. The L.A. four-piece (pronounced Crimewave) just dropped their take on “Everything Turns Grey,” the Agent Orange classic, and it’s out now on Electric Pudding Recordings. The cover crackles with the same 1980s American hardcore energy that runs through the group’s DNA, sharpened by punk, post-punk, and goth edges. It’s a ferocious, no-wasted-motion reading of a song that still cuts decades later.

The track closed out a long-awaited recording session for the group’s upcoming LP, and it landed almost by accident. “This song has resonated with me from the moment I first heard it all those years ago and it feels so relevant to today,” says lead singer and guitarist Roger Deering. “It was the last-minute addition at the end of our last recording session to finish up our long-awaited LP. It just came together effortlessly and just felt right. I think we’ve done it justice. We are eager to let this out into the universe.”

Crymwav grew out of the remains of L.A. rockers Smash Fashion, and the project belongs to Deering, who traces its origins to a writing burst across the Atlantic. “I was staying in London about four years ago when a songwriting spree hit me,” he explains. “I wanted to channel the spirit of bands from that area, Hawkwind, The Clash, Killing Joke, Motörhead. I came back to L.A. with a fistful of songs, and Crymwav was born.” The group rounds out that vision with nods to Thin Lizzy, UFO, and The Ruts.

Acoustic Guitar Quartet 40 Fingers Reload AC/DC’s “Thunderstruck” Into A Six-String Storm

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40 Fingers just turned one of rock’s most electric anthems into an all-acoustic showcase. The quartet’s new video for “Thunderstruck” trades AC/DC’s stadium voltage for four guitars and a wall of percussive strings, and it racked up 51,000 views in 5 days. The arrangement keeps Angus Young’s runaway riff intact while reshaping the whole thing around fingerstyle technique, tapped harmonics, and body-slapped rhythm. It’s a thrilling reinvention that proves the song works just as hard unplugged.

How Bad Bunny Took Latin Music Worldwide

For decades, the conventional wisdom in the music industry was rigid: if a Latin artist wanted to conquer the global mainstream, they had to sing in English. That was the path Shakira and Ricky Martin walked during the “Latin explosion” of the late 1990s, crossing over with primarily English-language albums. Then came a tattooed kid from Puerto Rico who refused the bargain entirely. Bad Bunny became one of the biggest pop stars on the planet without compromising a single verse, recording almost exclusively in Spanish and forcing the rest of the world to come to him.

His rise was startlingly fast. In 2017, Puerto Rican rapper, songwriter and actor Bad Bunny was one of many up-and-coming artists in the hugely competitive field of urbano hitmaking, a newcomer looking for a break, and just a couple of years later he would become one of the world’s biggest pop stars. Born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, he emerged from the digital noise of SoundCloud around 2016, and the breakthrough came through collaboration. It began with a few crucial collaborations: in May 2017 he released “Ahora Me Llama,” an atmospheric Latin trap single with future Colombian star Karol G, then weeks later dropped “Mayores,” a bouncy reggaetón smash with American pop sensation Becky G.

If any single project cemented his global dominance, it was 2022’s Un Verano Sin Ti. The record didn’t just sell, it rewrote the record books. It became the first album by a Latin artist to reach 10 billion streams on Spotify, spent 13 weeks atop the Billboard 200, was the first Spanish-language album to top the Billboard 200 Year-End Chart, and the first to receive a Grammy nomination for Album of the Year. Industry bodies took notice on a global scale: Un Verano Sin Ti won the IFPI Global Album Award, making Bad Bunny the first Latin artist ever to win an IFPI global award, while Apple Music named him its 2022 Artist of the Year, the first Latin artist to receive that honour, crowning the record its biggest Latin album of all time.

What set Bad Bunny apart was an artistic restlessness that mainstream pop logic would have discouraged. Un Verano Sin Ti was not a tidy radio play; it was sprawling and adventurous. From its childlike cover art to his unusual choice of collaborators, the 23-track record managed the near-impossible feat of sounding both intimate and recklessly experimental, veering from reggaetón danceathons into bossa nova chillout and idealized reggae, with a mega-hit like “Tití Me Preguntó” blending a bachata guitar line with dembow riddims before fading into psychedelia. He proved that global audiences would follow a Spanish-language artist into genuinely strange and beautiful musical territory.

Crucially, his success was never read as his alone; it became a referendum on Latin music’s place in the global mainstream. When Un Verano Sin Ti earned its Album of the Year nod, it landed as the first time in the six-plus-decade history of the Grammys that the most prestigious award could go to a project recorded entirely in Spanish, a milestone as much for the expansive genre as for the artist, arriving as reggaeton and Latin trap continued to dominate global pop despite being repeatedly snubbed by the industry’s biggest ceremonies. He was, in the words of one industry analysis, the cherry on top of an extraordinary year for the whole ecosystem, alongside artists like Karol G, Anitta, Rosalía, and regional Mexican acts, as Latin music, long seen as a niche field, continued to penetrate fresh markets with streaming platforms helping artists reach broad new audiences.

He has only widened the lead since. His album “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” became the first fully Spanish-language album to win the Grammy Award for Album of the Year, a historic milestone for Latin music on the global stage, and that same year he headlined the Super Bowl halftime show, bringing Spanish-language music to one of the largest broadcast audiences in the world. From a record-breaking world tour to a landmark Puerto Rico residency, he has kept redefining what global superstardom looks like, proving that language, genre and geography are no limitations.

That, ultimately, is the legacy already taking shape. Bad Bunny took the unspoken rule that global success required English and tore it up, and in doing so he didn’t just win for himself. He kicked the door open for an entire generation of artists to reach the world on their own terms, in their own language. As one profile put it, he isn’t just shaping the present of music. He’s defining its future.

Marjane Satrapi, “Persepolis” Creator and Fearless Storyteller, Dies at 56

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Marjane Satrapi, the French-Iranian graphic novelist and filmmaker whose landmark memoir “Persepolis” introduced millions of readers to a child’s-eye view of revolution and exile, died in Paris on 4 June 2026 at the age of 56. Her family said she had “died of sadness” following the death of her husband, Mattias Ripa, the previous year.

Born Marjane Ebrahimi in Rasht, in northwestern Iran, on 22 November 1969, she grew up in an upper-middle-class, politically engaged family in Tehran, attending the French-language Lycée Razi. Her childhood was shaped by upheaval. After the Iranian Revolution of 1979, she watched as friends and family were persecuted, arrested, and in some cases murdered, including her beloved uncle Anoosh, a political prisoner who was executed and who chose the young Marjane as his final visitor. Strong-willed and increasingly at odds with the new regime’s restrictions, she was sent abroad at fourteen to Vienna, where she endured years of dislocation, a period that included a stretch of homelessness before a near-fatal bout of bronchitis. She would later return briefly to Iran, study visual communication in Tehran, and ultimately settle in France.

It was there that she transformed her life story into art. Published in French in four parts between 2000 and 2003, “Persepolis” recounted her childhood under the Islamic Republic and her fraught adolescence in Europe with disarming black-and-white directness and wit. The work became a global phenomenon, winning the Coup de Coeur Award at the Angoulême International Comics Festival and entering classrooms around the world, though not without controversy; in 2013, an attempt to remove it from Chicago schools sparked protest and outcry. Satrapi followed it with “Embroideries” and “Chicken with Plums,” the latter winning Angoulême’s top album prize.

She bristled at pretension about the form she loved. “People are so afraid to say the word ‘comic’,” she told The Guardian in 2011. “Change it to ‘graphic novel’ and that disappears. No: it’s all comics.”

In 2007, Satrapi and co-director Vincent Paronnaud adapted “Persepolis” into an animated film that shared the Jury Prize at Cannes and earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Animated Feature, making Satrapi the first woman ever nominated in the category. The Iranian government denounced the picture, but it triumphed elsewhere, winning Best First Film at the César Awards. She went on to a varied directing career that ranged across the live-action “Chicken with Plums,” the black comedy “The Voices” starring Ryan Reynolds, the Marie Curie biopic “Radioactive,” and her 2024 film “Dear Paris.”

Satrapi never separated her art from her conscience. She spoke out after Iran’s disputed 2009 election, championed the “Woman, Life, Freedom” movement following the death of Mahsa Amini, and edited a graphic anthology documenting the uprising for Western readers, believing a true revolution to be a cultural one. In January 2025, she declined France’s Légion d’honneur in protest at what she called the country’s hypocrisy toward Iran, while taking care to add that her refusal was no rejection of France, which she said she deeply loved.

A naturalised French citizen who spoke six languages, Satrapi was honoured late in her life with the Princess of Asturias Award for Communication and Humanities in 2024. After her husband’s death, she established a foundation in both their names to support foreign students wishing to study filmmaking in Paris.

Marjane Satrapi spent her life turning displacement, grief, and defiance into work of rare humanity and humour. The little girl who once stared down a regime grew into one of the most important visual storytellers of her generation, and she leaves behind a body of work that will continue to give voice to the silenced for many years to come.

Sally Grace, Acclaimed Voice Artist and Impressionist, Dies at 74

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Sally Grace, the English actress and voice artist whose remarkable vocal range made her a fixture of British radio, television, and animation for decades, died in March 2026 at the age of 74. Hailed by one critic as the best impressionist in the business, she was a performer whose voice was familiar to millions even when her face was not.

Born in Harrogate, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, on 10 September 1951, Grace trained at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. She went on to build a career defined by versatility, one in which she could disappear entirely into a character through voice alone.

That gift found its sharpest expression in satire. Grace was a member of the team on “Week Ending,” BBC Radio 4’s topical sketch show, where from 1983 she became the voice of Margaret Thatcher, a role she carried until the series ended in 1998. Her work alongside Ken Bruce on Radio 2’s “What If Show” prompted The Independent on Sunday to crown her the finest impressionist working, and she later voiced the Queen in Alistair McGowan’s sketches about the royal family.

To a generation of viewers, however, Grace was the voice of childhood. She brought to life several beloved characters in the popular animated series “The Animals of Farthing Wood,” among them the pompous Owl, the loud Weasel, and the demure but strong-willed Charmer. Her extensive animation work also included “Noah’s Island,” “Mr. Bean: The Animated Series,” “Dennis the Menace,” “Pongwiffy,” and the charming short “Bob’s Birthday,” along with many others.

Her radio drama work was equally distinguished. She voiced Elena in BBC Radio 4’s adaptations of Douglas Adams’s “Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency” and “The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul,” productions that have remained favourites among fans of the genre.

Grace was a working actress on screen as well. Her television credits spanned “Why Didn’t They Ask Evans?,” “Sorry!,” “Raffles,” “The Ruth Rendell Mysteries,” and “Oh, Doctor Beeching!,” and she appeared in episodes of “Coronation Street.” On stage, she took on the role of Betty Marsden in a touring adaptation of “Round the Horne,” and her film appearances included “Ghost Story” in 1974 and “Boston Kickout” in 1995.

News of her death was shared by the radio producer Dirk Maggs, who remembered her as a brilliant actress and voice artist, a sentiment echoed widely across the industry. Sally Grace possessed one of those rare talents that worked quietly behind countless characters, lending them life, warmth, and wit. She will be remembered by colleagues and audiences alike as a consummate performer whose voice, in all its many guises, became part of the fabric of British broadcasting.

Margriet Hermans, Beloved Flemish Singer, Broadcaster, and Politician, Dies at 72

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Margriet Hermans, the singer, television host, and politician who became one of the most recognisable faces in Flanders across four decades of public life, died on 3 June 2026 at the age of 72, shortly after being diagnosed with an aggressive cancer. A performer who reinvented herself again and again, she leaves behind a career that spanned the stage, the studio, and the Belgian Senate.

Born Margareta Maria Josepha Hermans in Turnhout on 17 March 1954, she first broke through as a singer in 1987, finding success in both Flanders and the Netherlands. That same era saw her chase the international spotlight, taking part in the Eurovision Song Contest pre-selections three times, and her song “Een Vriend” earned her the Radio 2 Summer Hit honour in 1987.

If the late 1980s made her a singer, the 1990s made her an icon. From 1989 to 1997 she hosted her own popular talk show, simply titled “Margriet,” where she welcomed national and international stars, and for years afterward she remained a fixture on Flemish panel programmes. Her place in popular culture was sealed in 1993, when a celebrity comic based on her life was drawn by Erik Vancoillie.

Hermans was never content to stay in a single lane. Alongside her media career she was politically active for many years, moving through several parties before settling with the Open VLD, since renamed Anders. In 2007 she was elected to the Belgian Senate, where she served until 2011, and that same year she was created a Knight by Royal Decree in recognition of her contributions to public life.

Remarkably, her story still had another act in it. After a quieter spell out of the spotlight, Hermans enjoyed an unexpected revival as a singer in 2022 with the hit “Lekker Blijven Hangen,” which earned her a second Radio 2 Summer Hit award, 35 years after her first. The following year, in 2023, she was inducted into the Radio 2 Hall of Fame, a fitting tribute to a voice that had stayed with Flemish audiences for a lifetime.

In May 2026, it was publicly announced that she was suffering from a neuroendocrine tumour, and all her planned performances were cancelled. She died by euthanasia on 3 June 2026. As her daughter Celien reflected, even in her final chapter Hermans remained entirely herself, taking her life into her own hands to the very end, just as she always had.

She is survived by her daughter and by the generations of fans who knew her as a singer, a host, and a familiar friend on the screen. Few public figures manage to be so many things to so many people; Margriet Hermans was a star who never stopped surprising the country that loved her.