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20 Songs That Celebrate Everyday Joy

Some songs just make life better. Not because they’re complicated or trying to say something profound, but because they tap into something simple and universal: the feeling of being alive and happy to be here. Whether it’s a funk groove that makes your feet move before your brain catches up, a reggae reminder that everything’s going to be alright, or a pop anthem built purely to make you smile, the twenty songs below have one job and they do it beautifully. Put any one of these on and see what happens to the room.

“Walking on Sunshine” by Katrina & The Waves (1985)

The song was written by Kimberley Rew and originally recorded after he left The Soft Boys. It has since appeared in over 50 films and TV shows and is considered one of the most recognizable opening guitar riffs in pop history. Katrina Leskanich has said she knew it was something special the moment she first heard it.

“Lovely Day” by Bill Withers (1977)

Bill Withers held that sustained note for 18 seconds without any studio trickery, making it one of the longest held notes in pop music history. The song was a modest hit on its original release but became a genuine classic after it was remixed and rereleased in 1988, reaching number four in the UK. Withers wrote it in about 20 minutes.

“Don’t Stop Me Now” by Queen (1978)

Despite being one of Queen’s most beloved songs today, Don’t Stop Me Now was not a big hit when it was first released and received mixed reviews at the time. Freddie Mercury wrote it during one of the happiest periods of his life. A 2005 survey named it the most uplifting song of all time.

“Happy” by Pharrell Williams (2013)

Happy was written for the Despicable Me 2 soundtrack and was the first song ever released as a 24-hour music video, featuring a different person dancing every minute of the day. It spent 47 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 and won Pharrell a Grammy for Best Pop Solo Performance. He reportedly cried when he first heard it played back.

“Three Little Birds” by Bob Marley & The Wailers (1977)

Marley was inspired to write the song by the three little birds that used to sit on his windowsill at his home in Kingston, Jamaica. The song did not chart significantly on its original release but has since become one of the most covered and recognized reggae songs in history. It remains a go-to comfort song for people all over the world.

“Mr. Blue Sky” by Electric Light Orchestra (1978)

Jeff Lynne wrote the song while holed up in a Swiss chalet during two weeks of relentless rain. The moment the sun finally came out he was so relieved he sat down and wrote it immediately. It took him and the band three months to record and features an orchestra, a choir, and one of the most joyful codas in rock history.

“September” by Earth, Wind & Fire (1978)

The famous opening lyric asks why nobody can remember the twenty-first night of September, and to this day co-writer Allee Willis has said she has no idea why that specific date was chosen. It just felt right. The song has been covered hundreds of times and remains one of the most streamed classic soul tracks on Spotify every single September.

“Here Comes The Sun” by The Beatles (1969)

George Harrison wrote the song in his friend Eric Clapton’s garden after sneaking away from a particularly difficult day of business meetings at Apple Records. He described it as a feeling of enormous relief. It is now consistently ranked as one of the most streamed Beatles songs of all time and one of the most beloved songs ever written.

“You Make My Dreams (Come True)” by Hall & Oates (1980)

The song was not initially released as a single and almost did not make the album at all. It became a massive hit years after its release when it appeared in the final scene of the 2009 film 500 Days of Summer, introducing it to an entirely new generation of fans who had no idea it was 30 years old.

“Dancing Queen” by ABBA (1976)

Dancing Queen was the only ABBA song to reach number one in the United States and was reportedly a favourite of King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden, for whom it was performed at his wedding. Benny Andersson has said it remains the song he is most proud of writing. It has never gone out of style for a single day since it was released.

“I Can See Clearly Now” by Johnny Nash (1972)

Nash recorded the song while recovering from an eye infection that had temporarily blurred his vision, making the lyric far more literal than most people realize. It reached number one in the US and Canada and was later covered by Jimmy Cliff for the 1993 film Cool Runnings, introducing it to millions of new fans worldwide.

“Good Vibrations” by The Beach Boys (1966)

Brian Wilson spent six months and recorded the song across four different studios at a cost of around $50,000, making it the most expensive single ever recorded at the time. Wilson called it his pocket symphony and it remains one of the most technically ambitious pop recordings in history. It topped the charts in both the US and the UK.

“Can’t Stop the Feeling!” by Justin Timberlake (2016)

Written for the animated film Trolls, the song won the Academy Award for Best Original Song and became one of the best-selling singles of 2016. Timberlake has said he wanted to write the ultimate feel-good song with no verses, just pure momentum. Mission accomplished.

“Sir Duke” by Stevie Wonder (1976)

Written as a tribute to Duke Ellington following his death in 1974, the song also namedrops Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie, Glenn Miller, and Louis Armstrong in its lyrics. It reached number one in the US and remains one of Wonder’s most joyful and technically stunning recordings. The horn arrangement alone is a masterclass.

“Send Me on My Way” by Rusted Root (1995)

The song was written by Michael Glabicki in a single sitting and recorded almost exactly as he first played it. It became one of the most recognizable songs of the 1990s after appearing in the films Matilda and Ice Age, introducing it to generations of children who grew up thinking of it as the sound of pure adventure.

“I Wanna Dance with Somebody” by Whitney Houston (1987)

Producer Narada Michael Walden has said he designed the production specifically to showcase Houston’s full vocal range from bottom to top in a single song. It debuted at number one in both the US and the UK and was later the centrepiece of the 2022 biographical film Whitney Houston: I Wanna Dance with Somebody.

“Sunday Best” by Surfaces (2019)

The Texas duo Surfaces released the song independently and watched it go viral on TikTok almost entirely through user-generated content, with fans using it as the backdrop for happy, everyday moments. It has since been streamed hundreds of millions of times and has become one of the defining feel-good songs of the streaming era.

“Celebration” by Kool & The Gang (1980)

The song was written in a single afternoon and recorded quickly, with the band not entirely sure it was special until they heard the playback. It went on to become one of the most played songs at weddings, sporting events, and parties in history and was played at the White House when the American hostages returned from Iran in 1981.

“What a Wonderful World” by Louis Armstrong (1967)

The song was rejected by every major US label when it was first recorded and was barely released in America at all. It became a massive hit in the UK, selling over a million copies, but only found its true American audience after it was used in the 1987 film Good Morning, Vietnam. Armstrong recorded it in one take.

The Obama Presidential Center Opens June 19 and Tickets Are On Sale Right Now

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One of the most anticipated cultural openings in American history is almost here. The Obama Presidential Center in Chicago’s historic Jackson Park officially opens its doors to the public on June 19, 2026, and as of this morning, tickets are on sale. The Obama Foundation warned that demand would be high when the queue opened at 9 a.m. today, and if you’re planning a visit this summer you’ll want to move quickly, because weekend and summer dates are expected to sell out fast.

The center itself is genuinely something to behold. Situated on a 19.3-acre campus on Chicago’s South Side, it features a stunning 225-foot museum tower with four floors of immersive exhibits, a replica of the Oval Office, and a Sky Room that offers sweeping panoramic views of the city. The museum tells the story of President and Mrs. Obama and their historic presidency through immersive storytelling and interactive installations, inviting visitors to reflect on the legacy of America’s first Black president and First Lady and the enduring power of civic participation. It also houses the first fully digital presidential library, a Chicago Public Library branch, an auditorium, and community meeting rooms.

Tickets for the museum range from $15 to $30 for general admission, with discounted pricing of $15 to $26 for Illinois residents. Kids under two get in free. Illinois residents also have access to free admission on Tuesdays by selecting a Tuesday time slot and providing their zip code at checkout. You can purchase up to nine tickets at a time, and visit dates are available from opening day on June 19 through November 30 on a timed-entry basis. If you want a deeper experience, the Campus Experience Tour runs $75 to $95 and includes a 90-minute guided tour of the campus plus the ability to skip the line and self-guide through the exhibits.

While the museum requires a timed ticket, everything else on the spectacular 19-acre campus is completely free to the public. That includes public art installations, a winter garden, a playground, a basketball court, and wide open gathering spaces designed to welcome everyone. The grand opening celebration kicks off on June 18 with a ceremony featuring live performances by global icons and remarks from some of today’s most prominent voices and leaders, all available to watch via livestream. June 20 and 21 will bring a free open-house style weekend with live performances, family-friendly activities, food, art, and storytelling across the campus.

This is a landmark moment for Chicago, for the South Side community that has waited years for this, and for anyone who believes in the power of public spaces to inspire and connect people. Tickets are available now at obama.org and if history is any guide, the best dates won’t last long. Go get yours.

The First Trailer for A24’s Anthony Bourdain Biopic Tony Is Here and It Looks Extraordinary

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The trailer just dropped for one of the most anticipated films of the summer and it looks absolutely extraordinary. A24 has released the first look at Tony, the Anthony Bourdain biopic directed by Canadian filmmaker Matt Johnson, the brilliant mind behind BlackBerry, with Dominic Sessa stepping into the shoes of a 19-year-old Bourdain during a transformative summer in Provincetown, Massachusetts in 1976 that would eventually become the foundation of Kitchen Confidential, with Antonio Banderas playing the master chef who helps shape the young, rebellious, and wildly talented future icon.

How to Sign Up for SOCAN and Why It Matters

If you’re a musician, songwriter, composer, or music producer in Canada and you’re not a SOCAN member yet, this is the post you need to read today. SOCAN is the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada, and it’s the organization that collects and distributes royalties every time your music is played publicly, whether that’s on the radio, on television, in a bar, on a streaming platform, at a live concert, or anywhere else music reaches people’s ears. If your music is out there and you’re not registered, you’re leaving money on the table that is legally and rightfully yours.

What SOCAN Actually Does

SOCAN is Canada’s largest performing rights organization. It represents composers, songwriters, and music publishers and ensures they’re paid when their music is played in public. Every time a business plays music, every time a radio station spins a track, every time a streaming service delivers a song to a listener in Canada, SOCAN is collecting licensing fees on behalf of the people who created that music. Without being a member, you have no way to claim your share of those fees. LinkedIn

The reach of this is broader than most people realize. SOCAN has the right to seek license fees from any internet service that communicates musical works in the territory of Canada, no matter where the transmission originates. That means whether your music is being streamed, broadcast, or performed live anywhere in Canada, SOCAN is working to make sure the people who created it get paid.

Who Can Join

To become a SOCAN member, music creators must meet the following criteria: be a music composer, songwriter, producer or lyricist, and have created a musical work or part of a musical work that has been published by a music publisher, recorded, or performed or will be performed in a public forum such as radio, television, film, live performance, satellite radio, ringtone or internet subject to licensing by SOCAN.

If you’re a music publisher rather than an individual creator, the requirements are slightly different. To become a SOCAN publisher member, you must have signed contracts showing you own at least five copyright-protected musical works written or co-written by a writer member of SOCAN or by a Canadian, or that you are entitled by contract to receive the publisher’s share of the performance credits of at least five copyright protected musical works.

How to Sign Up

The good news is that joining is straightforward and completely free. There is no fee to become a member. Simply fill in the application and return it to SOCAN. You can start the process directly at socan.com, where you’ll find separate application paths for writer members and publisher members. You’re just two steps away from joining nearly 150,000 music creators who get paid from SOCAN whenever and wherever their music is played. Once your application is submitted, SOCAN will send you an email with instructions to complete the process.

Once you’re a member, make sure you register all of your works in the SOCAN system. That’s how the royalty tracking actually works. Every song you register becomes searchable in their database, which is how they connect performances and plays back to you and make sure you receive what you’ve earned.

One More Thing Worth Knowing

If you are a songwriter, composer or publisher rightsholder you can also easily and conveniently have your reproduction rights managed by SOCAN by signing up for SOCAN for Reproduction Rights. This covers a different category of royalties related to the reproduction of your music, such as on CDs, downloads, and certain streaming uses, and it’s worth looking into alongside your performing rights membership.

The bottom line is simple. You’re making music. People are hearing it. You deserve to be paid for it. SOCAN exists to make sure that happens, and signing up takes very little time. Head to socan.com and get it done today.

Ice-T Brings The Art of Rap Back With Rakim, DJ Jazzy Jeff, Big Daddy Kane and the Sugarhill Gang

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The Art of Rap is back. Ice-T and DJ Evil-E will join Rakim, DJ Jazzy Jeff, the Sugarhill Gang and Big Daddy Kane for a Live Nation-produced concert at the Walmart AMP in Rogers, Arkansas on October 18. It marks the first Art of Rap-branded event since 2023, and co-founder Mickye Bentson isn’t being subtle about what’s coming next. “Something big is bubbling with The Art of Rap,” he says. “In about a week or so, we’ll put something up and you’re gonna be like, ‘Oh shit!'”

Born from Ice-T’s 2012 Sundance-selected documentary ‘Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap,’ the festival tour launched in July 2015 and spent years criss-crossing North America with lineups pulling from hip-hop’s deepest catalog. The documentary itself featured B-Real, Big Daddy Kane, Common, Chuck D, Dr. Dre, Rakim, Eminem, Grandmaster Flash, Ice Cube, Nas, Raekwon and Snoop Dogg, and set the template for what the live events would become.

Separate from the Live Nation date, Bentson has two additional shows booked: August 27 at the Western Idaho Fair in Boise with Ice-T, Sir Mix-A-Lot and DJ Kevie Kev, and August 28 at the Benton Franklin Fair in Kennewick, Washington, with a lineup still to be announced.

Art of Rap Dates:

August 27 – Boise, ID – Western Idaho Fair

August 28 – Kennewick, WA – Benton Franklin Fair

October 18 – Rogers, AR – Walmart AMP

Lukas Nelson and Molly Tuttle Team Up for a 5-Night East Coast Co-Headline Run This September

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Lukas Nelson and Molly Tuttle are hitting the East Coast together this September for 5 co-headline nights that bring together two of Americana’s most compelling live acts. Each night features full sets from both artists, with Nelson’s road-tested band energy and soulful songwriting sharing the stage with Tuttle’s virtuosic guitar work and her boundary-pushing blend of bluegrass, Americana and rock. Presales begin Wednesday May 6 at 10am local time, with general on sale Friday May 8 at 10am.

Nelson is touring behind ‘American Romance,’ his debut solo full-length released last summer, which earned a Grammy nomination for Best Traditional Country Album. Ahead of the Tuttle dates, he plays the Outlaw Festival alongside Willie Nelson, headline dates of his own, and gigs with Tedeschi Trucks Band. Tuttle brings an equally loaded resume: her 2022 album ‘Crooked Tree’ and 2023 follow-up ‘City of Gold’ both won the Grammy for Best Bluegrass Album. Her fifth album ‘So Long Little Miss Sunshine’ earned a Grammy nomination for Best Americana Album, and its lead single “That’s Gonna Leave A Mark” spent 4 weeks at No. 1 on Americana Radio.

Lukas Nelson & Molly Tuttle Co-Headline Dates:

September 4 – Hyannis, MA – Cape Cod Melody Tent

September 5 – Cohasset, MA – South Shore Music Circus

September 9 – Albany, NY – Palace Theatre

September 10 – Shelburne, VT – The Green at Shelburne Museum

September 11 – Sidney, ME – Bowl in the Pines

Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Graham Nash Extends His 2026 Tour Into the Fall

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Graham Nash is taking his 2026 tour well into autumn. The two-time Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee and founding member of both the Hollies and Crosby, Stills & Nash has added a substantial run of fall dates, including stops at the Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival in Fredericton, the Academy of Music in Northampton and Bethel Woods Center for the Arts in Bethel, New York.

The newly added dates follow a summer run that includes co-headline appearances with Emmylou Harris and a special guest slot with the Avett Brothers at Red Rocks Amphitheatre on July 12. Nash performs with Todd Caldwell on keyboards and vocals, Adam Minkoff on bass, drums, guitars and vocals, and Zach Djanikian on guitars, mandolin, drums and vocals, drawing from more than 60 years of material.

That catalog is genuinely remarkable. His time with the Hollies ran from 1964 to 1968, followed by his role in Crosby, Stills & Nash, where he contributed “Marrakesh Express,” “Teach Your Children” and “Our House.” His 1971 solo work produced “Chicago/We Can Change the World,” “Military Madness” and “Simple Man.” Beyond the music, Nash organized the landmark No Nukes/MUSE benefit concerts in 1979 alongside Jackson Browne and Bonnie Raitt, was appointed an OBE by Queen Elizabeth II, landed on the New York Times Best Sellers list with his 2013 autobiography ‘Wild Tales,’ and maintains a parallel career as a renowned photographer and visual artist.

Graham Nash 2026 Tour Dates:

July 7 – Steamboat Springs, CO – Strings Music Festival

July 9 – Beaver Creek, CO – Vilar Performing Arts Center

July 10 – Beaver Creek, CO – Vilar Performing Arts Center

July 12 – Morrison, CO – Red Rocks Amphitheatre*

July 14 – Kansas City, MO – Kauffman Center

July 15 – Iowa City, IA – The Englert

July 17 – St. Louis, MO – The Sheldon

July 18 – St. Louis, MO – The Sheldon

July 20 – Madison, WI – The Orpheum

July 21 – Champaign, IL – Virginia Theatre

July 23 – Interlochen, MI – Kresge Auditorium†

July 24 – Rochester Hills, MI – Meadow Brook Amphitheater†

July 26 – Highland Park, IL – Ravinia†

July 28 – Cincinnati, OH – Madison Theater

July 29 – Knoxville, TN – Bijou Theatre

July 31 – Henrico, VA – Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden

August 1 – Wilmington, NC – The Wilson Center

August 3 – Alexandria, VA – The Birchmere

August 4 – Alexandria, VA – The Birchmere

September 12 – Northampton, MA – Academy of Music#

September 13 – Lowell, MA – Boarding House Park#

September 15 – Portsmouth, NH – Jimmy’s Jazz & Blues Club#

September 17 – Stowe, VT – Spruce Peak Performing Arts Center#

September 19 – Fredericton, NB – Harvest Jazz & Blues Festival 2026

September 20 – Waterville, ME – Waterville Opera House#

September 23 – Geneva, NY – Smith Opera House#

September 24 – Bethlehem, PA – Zoellner Arts Center#

September 26 – Troy, NY – Troy Savings Bank Music Hall#

September 27 – Bethel, NY – Bethel Woods Center for the Arts#

September 28 – Bethel, NY – Bethel Woods Center for the Arts#

September 30 – Torrington, CT – Warner Theatre#

October 2 – Morristown, NJ – Mayo PAC#

October 3 – Wilmington, DE – The Playhouse of Rodney Square#

October 6 – Lexington, KY – The Kentucky Theatre#

October 8 – Mount Vernon, OH – Memorial Theater#

October 9 – Shippensburg, PA – Luhrs Center#

*Special Guest of the Avett Brothers †Co-bill with Emmylou Harris

Photo Gallery: Three Days Grace, Finger Eleven, and Royal Tusk at Hamilton’s TD Coliseum on May 3, 2026

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All photos by Mini’s Memories. You can contact her through Instagram or X.

Jim Duff Releases ‘More Than Love,’ a Collection Rooted in Fatherhood, Faith and Hard-Won Resilience

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Cincinnati singer-songwriter Jim Duff has released ‘More Than Love,’ a new project built around the emotional terrain of parenthood, spiritual connection and perseverance. Across more than 3 decades and over 300 original songs, Duff has drawn from folk, Americana, country, blues, jazz and rock to create a sound shaped by the influence of Waylon Jennings, Kris Kristofferson, Guy Clark, John Prine, Bob Dylan and Townes Van Zandt. ‘More Than Love’ is among his most personal work yet.

The title track was born from the reality of being physically separated from his newborn and oldest son. Performed entirely by Duff on piano, bass and guitar, it strips production back to let the emotion lead. “Walk With Me,” another standout, grew from an afternoon walk through Washington Park with his youngest son, evolving into one of the most spiritually resonant songs he’s written. Duff wrote, produced, performed, mixed and mastered it entirely on his own.

‘More Than Love’ also arrives in the context of something larger. Duff has continued writing, recording and performing throughout ongoing treatment for stage four cancer, a fact that gives the project’s themes of love, presence and resilience a weight that goes well beyond craft. He’s performed at The Bluebird Cafe in Nashville, the Cactus Cafe in Austin and the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, among many others. This record carries that same commitment to honest, direct storytelling.

UK Pop Artist Starling Turns Birthday Self-Doubt Into an Anthem With New Single “Cupcake”

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UK pop artist Starling has released “Cupcake,” a sharp-edged, emotionally honest single that transforms birthday self-criticism into radical self-compassion. Written on her own birthday, a day that historically brought feelings of shame and inadequacy, the track marks a deliberate turning point. “Every birthday my inner critic used to take over,” she shares. “This birthday was different. ‘Cupcake’ is me choosing kindness over criticism.” Produced by Patch Boshell, who also helmed her BBC-supported previous single “Gymnast,” the song pairs playful sonic textures with deeply personal lyricism in the spirit of what her growing audience calls “pop therapy.”

Starling’s origin story is one worth knowing. Once told she couldn’t sing, her path began in a Soho basement bar where, after a shift serving drinks, she sang a cappella to a room that included Henry Binns of Zero 7. Within 6 weeks she was in sessions with Massive Attack collaborators and Grammy-winning writers. Since then she’s accumulated millions of streams, 18 Spotify New Music Friday placements, BBC Radio 1 “New Noise” recognition, an Amazon Music UK “Weekly One” designation, features in The Guardian, Wonderland and FAULT, and a Love Island sync.

Her house concert tour, where she traveled 4,000 miles performing in 35 homes after posting that she was “tired of being online,” is now in television development. A debut album, working title ‘the story of starling,’ is on the horizon. Upcoming appearances include the Why Care? podcast with Nadia Nagamootoo and Women of Our Time.