June 4, 1977, London’s Rainbow Theatre, the Exodus tour at full momentum. Bob Marley and The Wailers delivered a full concert that night that now stands as one of the essential documents of reggae music. ‘Exodus,’ the album driving the tour, had just dropped and the band was locked in, playing with a confidence and spiritual weight that’s impossible to fake.
Video: Beastie Boys’ “Three MC’s and One DJ” Is Back in HD and Still Utterly Unstoppable
The remastered HD version of the Beastie Boys’ “Three MC’s and One DJ” official music video is online, and it holds up like a vault record. Pulled from their 1992 album ‘Check Your Head,’ the track is a pure showcase of what made Ad-Rock, MCA, and Mike D untouchable, built around Mix Master Mike’s turntable work and a groove that doesn’t quit. The video matches the energy perfectly, raw and locked in.
Video: Cassyette and Bryan Adams Tear Through Fleetwood Mac’s “The Chain” Live in Sheffield
Cassyette and Bryan Adams took the stage together at Rock ‘n’ Roll Circus in Sheffield and turned Fleetwood Mac’s “The Chain” into something entirely their own. The pairing works better than it has any right to, with Cassyette’s raw edge meeting Adams’ road-tested authority in a live performance that crackles from start to finish. It’s bold, it’s loose in the best way, and it’s the kind of spontaneous collaboration that reminds you why live music still wins.
Video: Dire Straits’ Mandela Concert 1988 Gets a Stunning Widescreen Upgrade Worth Your Full Attention
The 1988 Mandela concert at Wembley Stadium was one of those days that mattered beyond the music, and Dire Straits showed up and delivered one of their greatest live performances on that stage. Now, thanks to a meticulous reframing and enhancement job by Yann Stratosound, the full concert is back in an almost 16:9 widescreen format with upgraded image and audio quality, making it the most immersive way to experience this footage yet. It’s not a native widescreen source, but the careful reframe preserves everything that made the original essential while finally giving it the fullscreen treatment it deserves.
Country-Pop Duo 2 Lane Summer Arrive With a Debut Album Built on Love, Faith, and Harmony
2 Lane Summer’s debut album ‘Flawless’ is out now via QHMG/Quartz Hill Records, and it arrives as one of country-pop’s most warmly intentioned debut statements in recent memory. Joe Hanson and Chris Ray have put together 12 tracks that celebrate love in its fullest sense, romantic, brotherly, and faith-based, without ever losing the melodic sharpness that makes the songs stick. Produced by Ash Bowers, the record pairs raw emotional honesty with clean, bright country-pop production and the duo’s signature vocal harmonies that Billboard has called “bold and beautiful.” Listen here.
The two men behind 2 Lane Summer took different roads to Nashville, Hanson from Illinois, Ray from Mississippi, but found each other in Music Row writing rooms where their voices and musical backgrounds turned out to be a near-perfect match. Both grew up singing in church, both came up as multi-instrumentalists, and when they started harmonizing together, the case for a duo was immediately obvious. They co-wrote nine of ‘Flawless’s’ 12 tracks, working alongside some of Music City’s most trusted names in the craft.
The title track anchors the album with a heartfelt promise, a man telling his partner she’s beautiful even when the mirror and the world are telling her otherwise. It’s co-written by Hanson and Ray alongside Houston Phillips and Kyle Schlienger, and it captures the album’s central warmth without a wasted word. Elsewhere, “Known for Loving You” delivers a roll-the-windows-down summer groove, “Life is Good” leans into banjo-driven singalong energy, and closer “Keeps Me Falling” wraps the record in an up-tempo, danceable celebration of enduring love.
Ray explained the album’s title with straightforward conviction: “We all have insecurities and, being human, we all struggle with that. But we want to uplift people with this album and want people to know we’re right there with you.” That message has already connected: the duo has surpassed 800,000 social media followers and 20 million catalog streams, and their music has inspired fans to invite them to perform at weddings and engagement proposals across the U.S.
‘Flawless’ Tracklist:
- “Known for Loving You”
- “Flawless”
- “Here’s to You”
- “Life is Good”
- “Made by Him”
- “Chances”
- “First Dancin’ (Forever Version)”
- “When You Love Somebody”
- “No Going Back”
- “Til I Found You”
- “Eyes That Ain’t Yours”
- “Keeps Me Falling”
The Legend of Vox Machina Returns June 3 With Its Darkest Season Yet
The Legend of Vox Machina is back, and Season Four looks like the one that puts everything on the line. Prime Video dropped the official trailer today, and it’s immediately clear that the stakes have been raised considerably. A long-slumbering evil has awakened, Vox Machina has scattered in search of love, family, and purpose, and now they have to pull it back together to face the most challenging foe the group has encountered across four seasons.
The series premieres June 3 on Prime Video with a three-episode weekly rollout, available in more than 240 countries and territories worldwide. All three previous seasons hold a 100% score on Rotten Tomatoes, a consistency that’s genuinely rare for any animated series, let alone one with this scope and ambition.
The full Critical Role founding cast returns, with Laura Bailey, Taliesin Jaffe, Ashley Johnson, Matthew Mercer, Liam O’Brien, Marisha Ray, Sam Riegel, and Travis Willingham all reprising their roles as executive producers and voice cast. Joining them are previously announced voice actors Wayne Brady, Kevin Michael Richardson, Debra Wilson, and Tom Cardy. The series is produced by Amazon MGM Studios, Critical Role, and Titmouse, the animation studio behind Big Mouth, Star Trek: Lower Decks, and The Venture Bros.
YOSHIKI Brings a Cinematic National Anthem to Dodger Stadium Before a Summer Walt Disney Concert Hall Run
YOSHIKI is taking the field at Dodger Stadium on April 27 for Japanese Heritage Night presented by Daiso, performing his own arrangement of the U.S. national anthem before the Los Angeles Dodgers face the Miami Marlins. For a composer and pianist who has sold more than 50 million records and been named to the TIME100: Most Influential People of 2025, it’s the kind of high-profile moment that fits naturally into a career built on scale and spectacle.
YOSHIKI described his approach with characteristic ambition: “I am approaching this rendition as a cinematic fusion, blending a modern, cutting-edge aesthetic with a classical operatic foundation, all while maintaining the utmost respect for the anthem’s tradition.” That combination of reverence and reinvention is exactly what you’d expect from one of Japanese rock’s most celebrated figures.
The Dodger Stadium appearance sets up a bigger return. YOSHIKI headlines Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles on July 16 and 17 as part of his “Classical 2026” concert series, with the two nights titled “Scarlet Night” and “Violet Night” respectively. Each performance features a different setlist, making both nights distinct experiences. The shows mark his return to the U.S. stage following his third cervical spine surgery in late 2024. Tickets are on sale now.
LCD Soundsystem Hits the Road This Summer With Red Rocks, Feist, and Victoryland in Tow
LCD Soundsystem is back on the road this summer, and the routing is exactly as good as you’d hope. The New York dance-punk institution has announced a run of North American dates that stretches from a four-night residency at Roadrunner in Boston through a September appearance at Shaky Knees Festival in Atlanta, with two nights at Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Morrison, Colorado as the centrepiece. Last August, they grossed nearly $975,000 at Red Rocks off 8,852 tickets sold. Demand is not in question.
Victoryland supports on select dates, with Feist joining for the two Red Rocks nights. The summer run kicks off August 7 at Freedom Mobile Arch in Vancouver before moving through two nights at McMenamins Edgefield Amphitheater in Troutdale, stops at KettleHouse Amphitheater in Bonner, Montana, The Armory in Minneapolis, and a three-night stand at College Street Music Hall in New Haven. The fall stretch brings the tour to Portland’s Thompson’s Point, Hellbender in Asheville, and the Shaky Knees Festival closer in Atlanta.
General on-sale begins May 1 at 10 a.m. local time. An artist presale opens April 28 at 10 a.m. Tickets and full details at lcdsoundsystem.com.
LCD Soundsystem 2026 North American Tour Dates:
April 30 – Boston, MA – Roadrunner
May 1 – Boston, MA – Roadrunner
May 2 – Boston, MA – Roadrunner
May 3 – Boston, MA – Roadrunner
May 23 – Napa, CA – BottleRock Napa Valley
May 24 – Reno, NV – Grand Theatre
Aug. 7 – Vancouver, BC – Freedom Mobile Arch*
Aug. 8 – Troutdale, OR – McMenamins Edgefield Amphitheater*
Aug. 9 – Troutdale, OR – McMenamins Edgefield Amphitheater*
Aug. 12 – Bonner, MT – KettleHouse Amphitheater*
Aug. 13 – Bonner, MT – KettleHouse Amphitheater*
Aug. 15 – Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre*^
Aug. 16 – Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre*^
Aug. 18 – Minneapolis, MN – The Armory*
Aug. 22 – Pasadena, CA – Just Like Heaven
Sept. 9 – Portland, ME – Thompson’s Point*
Sept. 10 – New Haven, CT – College Street Music Hall*
Sept. 11 – New Haven, CT – College Street Music Hall*
Sept. 12 – New Haven, CT – College Street Music Hall*
Sept. 17 – Asheville, NC – Hellbender*
Sept. 20 – Atlanta, GA – Shaky Knees Festival
*with Victoryland ^with Feist

