Home Blog Page 2

Lizwi and Tommy Veanud Deliver a Transcendent Afro House Single With ‘UNqamlezo’

0

Two of Afro House’s most distinctive voices have connected on something genuinely powerful. Lizwi and Tommy Veanud release ‘UNqamlezo’ on April 30 via TV Recordings, a track built on organic percussion, tribal rhythms, and rich melodic layering that pulls from the deepest wells of African music tradition. Pre-save it here.

The track is sung in IsiZulu, with ‘UNqamlezo’ translating as “The Cross.” It carries a message of faith, protection, and presence, with Lizwi’s raw, emotionally charged vocals driving every moment. The production builds a hypnotic atmosphere where spiritual weight meets dancefloor momentum, and the two elements don’t compromise each other. This one earns both.

Lizwi’s standing in Afro House is well established. Early collaborations alongside Da Capo, a release on Armada Music, and consistent support from Black Coffee set the foundation. Her catalogue spans MoBlack, Get Physical, and more. Her 2024 collaboration with Joezi, “Amathole,” generated significant online traction and led to a Russian-language version with Filatov & Karas that pulled strong radio support. She’s played over 200 shows across Russia and toured the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, Bali, Mykonos, and beyond.

Tommy Veanud is the alias of Artem Dunaev, also known as Prime Punk, a DJ and producer with over 15 years of experience and more than three million streams under the Tommy Veanud project. Beatport chart support has been consistent, with backing from Hugel, Meduza, and Marco Carola. He performed at Ultra Europe in 2024 and has toured across 12 countries and 25 cities, from Ibiza and Amsterdam to Tokyo and Goa.

Faouzia Takes Her Cinematic ‘Film Noir’ World on a Major International Tour

0

Faouzia has announced the Film Noir Tour, her first international run in four years, and it covers serious ground. The Winnipeg-born vocalist, songwriter, and classically trained multi-instrumentalist kicks things off June 17 in Berlin before moving through Amsterdam, Paris, and London, then sweeping across North America through July and August.

‘Film Noir,’ her debut independent album, is the spine of this whole run. The 11-track record has already pulled in over 110 million global streams, charted on Apple Music’s Top Pop Albums chart, and landed her on the cover of Spotify’s Pop All Day playlist. “UNETHICAL” went viral. “PORCELAIN” announced her independence. “PEACE & VIOLENCE” added another dimension to a record that sounds like nothing else in pop right now.

The touring resume backing this up is substantial. Faouzia has collaborated with John Legend, Kelly Clarkson, David Guetta, Galantis, Alan Walker, and most recently Illenium and G.E.M. on “Still Breathing.” Variety spotlighted her as an Artist to Watch and called her “an international artist in the truest sense.” In 2024, she was a finalist on China’s hit competition series Singer, making her the second most-streamed international artist in that country behind Taylor Swift.

The Film Noir Tour includes festival stops at Montreux Jazz Festival, Lollapalooza, and Outside Lands, plus three Canadian dates: Vancouver on August 3, Toronto at The Danforth Music Hall on August 19, and Montreal at Beanfield Theatre on August 21. Tickets go on sale to the public Friday, April 24 at 10AM local time, with artist, venue, and Spotify presales running April 21 through 23..

Film Noir Tour Dates:

06/17/2026 – Berlin, Germany – Heimathafen Neukölln

06/19/2026 – Cologne, Germany – Luxor

06/20/2026 – Brussels, Belgium – Botanique

06/23/2026 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – Melkweg

06/25/2026 – Paris, France – Alhambra

06/29/2026 – London, United Kingdom – Islington Assembly Hall

07/12/2026 – Montreux, Switzerland – Montreux Jazz Festival*

07/28/2026 – Detroit, MI – The Shelter

07/30/2026 – Chicago, IL – Lollapalooza*

08/01/2026 – Minneapolis, MN – Fine Line

08/03/2026 – Vancouver, BC – Hollywood Theatre

08/05/2026 – Seattle, WA – Neumos

08/07/2026 – San Francisco, CA – Outside Lands Music Festival*

08/09/2026 – Los Angeles, CA – El Rey Theatre

08/12/2026 – Atlanta, GA – Vinyl

08/14/2026 – Washington, DC – Union Stage

08/16/2026 – Boston, MA – Royale

08/17/2026 – Brooklyn, NY – Warsaw

08/19/2026 – Toronto, ON – The Danforth Music Hall

08/21/2026 – Montreal, QC – Beanfield Theatre

*Festival performance, not included in ticket onsale

SiriusXM’s “99% Invisible” and BBC Studios Announce New Series Exploring America Through 100 Objects

0

SiriusXM and BBC Studios today announced a major new original series, “A History of the United States in 100 Objects,” produced by BBC Studios Audio and the award-winning team behind SiriusXM’s acclaimed podcast about the hidden design and architecture shaping everyday life, “99% Invisible.” 

Hosted by “99% Invisible” creator Roman Mars and premiering on May 19, “100 Objects” echoes the BBC’s 2010 landmark series, “A History of the World in 100 Objects,” by telling the story of America not through a single narrative, but through 100 distinct and surprising objects. 

Each episode examines an ordinary object from America – sometimes overlooked, sometimes discarded – to uncover the human stories, contradictions, and cultural forces it reflects: a gold coin retrieved from a shipwreck in 1857 that triggered a financial panic; an antebellum schoolbook that became an instrument of Black liberation; a tiny screw that shows how the US created a hidden industrial empire; and 97 more. Blending meticulous reporting with immersive storytelling, “100 Objects” poses a central question: what if the objects that rarely make the history books say more about our country than those that do?

Throughout the series, Mars will be joined by a wide-ranging group of celebrated contributors, including historians, journalists, and acclaimed podcasters, as well as individuals with personal connections to the stories being told. 

The project brings together some of the most respected voices in narrative storytelling for a rare, large-scale collaboration, including: “Radiolab” founder Jad Abumrad; Dan Taberski, investigative journalist and host of “Hysterical,” “Missing Richard Simmons,” and “9/12”; Song Exploder creator Hrishikesh Hirway; former MythBuster Adam Savage; current “Radiolab” co-host Latif Nasser; historian and New Yorker writer Jill Lepore; National Book Award winner Imani Perry; and a whole host of Peabody Award-winning journalists and producers, including Jack Hitt and The Kitchen Sisters, with additional contributors to be announced.

“The history of America can’t be captured in a single story,” explains Roman Mars. “So instead, we’re telling one hundred. By looking closely at the things we’ve made – and the things we’ve thrown away – we’re hoping to reveal a richer, more complicated picture of who we are.”

Helen Pendlebury, BBC Studios Audio’s Commercial & Content Partnerships Director, says, “SiriusXM and the ‘99% Invisible’ team are the perfect partners for this ambitious project which will reflect the best of all of us”.

“Roman Mars and the team behind 99% Invisible have a rare ability to take the seemingly ordinary and reveal something profound,” said Adam Sachs, SiriusXM’sSVP of Podcast Content. “Partnering with BBC Studios on a project of this scale allows us to bring that storytelling to an even broader audience.”

Beginning May 19, new episodes of “A History of the United States in 100 Objects” will drop every Friday in the “99% Invisible” feed on the SiriusXM app and wherever podcasts are available. Episodes will additionally be available a week early for SiriusXM Podcasts+ subscribers. More information available at siriusxm.com/podcasts-plus-subscription.  

“100 Objects” is produced for SiriusXM by BBC Studios Audio with Roman Mars and the “99% Invisible” team. The series is executive produced by BBC Studios Audio’s Annie Brown (producer of the groundbreaking “1619” history series for The New York Times) and Courtney Harrell (producer of Wondery’s award-winning “9/12” series). The EP for SiriusXM is Kathy Tu. 

“99% Invisible” is distributed on the SiriusXM Podcast Network, and SiriusXM Media, the company’s advertising division, has exclusive ad sales rights to the podcast. The SiriusXM Podcast Network, the #1 podcast network by reach, represents more of the top 20 podcasts than any other network* and reaches 1 in 2 U.S. podcast listeners each month.

Blow by Blow: The Jeff Beck Story Is Getting the Biography It Deserves

0

Jeff Beck never made it easy on anyone, including the people trying to write about him. That changes July 14 when ‘Blow by Blow: The Jeff Beck Story’ arrives from Da Capo Press, a full narrative biography built from roughly 30 hours of interviews with the late guitarist himself, plus extensive conversations with collaborators, friends, and family.

Brad Tolinski and Chris Gill are the right people for this. Tolinski spent over 25 years as editor-in-chief of Guitar World, the best-selling musician’s magazine in the world, and previously co-wrote ‘Eruption,’ the critically acclaimed oral history on Eddie Van Halen. Gill worked alongside him. Together, they know how to get guitar legends talking.

Beck’s story is genuinely one of a kind. Six decades of music, zero compromises, and a career that somehow included Luciano Pavarotti, Kelly Clarkson, and Guns N’ Roses without ever feeling incoherent. Jimmy Page once said Beck “shifted the whole sound and face of electric guitar music.” This book finally gives that legacy the depth it’s earned.

Beck himself put it plainly: “I’m an awkward son of a bitch when it comes to doing the expected.” That quote alone tells you why a biography this thorough took this long, and why it’s worth the wait. The hardcover runs 400 pages and retails for $32.50, with ebook and audiobook editions also available.

‘Blow by Blow: The Jeff Beck Story’ is available for preorder now at major retailers.

The Last Song You Hear: 13 Album Closers That Got It Perfectly Right

There’s an art to ending an album and most artists never fully master it. The closer has to do something incredibly difficult. It has to feel like a conclusion without feeling like a full stop, like a door closing but not locking, like the last image of a film that you carry home with you and find yourself thinking about days later. The albums that get this right tend to get it spectacularly right, and the songs that pull it off become inseparable from the records they close. Here are thirteen that stuck the landing in ways that still resonate.

“A Day in the Life” by The Beatles brought ‘Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band’ to rest in 1967 with a piano chord that took forty-one seconds to fade and somehow managed to feel like the end of everything and the beginning of something else at the same time. It remains the gold standard of album closers because it doesn’t just end the record, it expands it outward into a kind of open silence that the listener has to fill themselves.

“Champagne Supernova” by Oasis sent ‘What’s the Story Morning Glory?’ off into the world in 1995 with eight minutes of Britpop grandeur that felt simultaneously triumphant and elegiac. Liam Gallagher singing about someday you will find me caught beneath a landslide while the guitars swelled and the strings came in was Oasis at their most genuinely moving, which is not a sentence you get to write very often.

“Purple Rain” by Prince drew the curtain on ‘Purple Rain’ in 1984 with a guitar solo that has never been surpassed for sheer emotional devastation. Everything about that performance, the restraint that builds into release, the way Prince’s voice breaks at exactly the right moment, the crowd noise that makes you feel like you’re witnessing something religious, adds up to one of the most perfectly constructed endings in the history of recorded music.

“Jungleland” by Bruce Springsteen sealed ‘Born to Run’ in 1975 with nearly ten minutes of operatic street mythology that felt like the entire American dream being sung and then mourned in the same breath. The saxophone passage alone is worth the price of admission but it’s the final verses, the magic rat driving the long dusty highway home while the poets down here don’t write nothing at all, that turn the song into something that lives in you permanently.

“All Apologies” by Nirvana laid ‘In Utero’ to rest in 1993 with Kurt Cobain singing everything is my fault and then dissolving into a repeated chant of married, buried that felt like both a confession and a goodbye. Knowing what came next makes this song almost unbearable but even without that context it works as a closer because it strips everything away and leaves you with just a voice and a feeling.

“Motion Picture Soundtrack” by Radiohead walked ‘Kid A’ quietly out the door in 2000 with Thom Yorke singing over a harmonium and a choir of voices that sounded like they were coming from somewhere just beyond the edge of the physical world. The song ends with a hidden track of orchestral music that fades in after a long silence, which means ‘Kid A’ doesn’t so much end as dissolve, which is exactly right for an album about dissolution.

“Eclipse” by Pink Floyd pulled the final curtain on ‘The Dark Side of the Moon’ in 1973 with the declaration that everything under the sun is in tune but the sun is eclipsed by the moon, followed by an old man’s voice saying there’s no dark side of the moon really, matter of fact it’s all dark. The heartbeat that closes the record is the same heartbeat that opened it and the circularity of that choice is one of the most elegant structural decisions in rock history.

“Moonlight Mile” by The Rolling Stones eased ‘Sticky Fingers’ into the dark in 1971 with Mick Jagger singing about exhaustion and longing and the road that never ends, over strings arranged by Paul Buckmaster that turned a rock and roll band into something that sounded genuinely ancient. It’s the most underrated closer on this list and possibly the most beautiful thing the Rolling Stones ever recorded.

“I Know the End” by Phoebe Bridgers detonated ‘Punisher’ in 2020 with a song that builds from a quiet almost conversational beginning into a screaming horn-driven apocalypse that ends with Bridgers howling wordlessly into the void. It’s one of the most startling and cathartic album endings of the last twenty years and it announced her as an artist operating at a completely different level than anyone expected.

“Rock N Roll Suicide” by David Bowie lowered the final curtain on ‘The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars’ in 1972 with a theatrical declaration of connection that felt like Bowie reaching through the speakers and grabbing you by the collar. You’re not alone, he sang, and you believed him completely, which is the most any piece of music can ask of itself.

“Only in Dreams” by Weezer guided ‘Weezer’ off the stage in 1994 with eight minutes of slow-building guitar rock that felt completely out of place on a record full of three-minute pop songs, and was therefore the most interesting thing on it. The way the instrumental section builds and builds and then crashes over you like a wave is one of the great examples of dynamic tension in indie rock.

“Untitled” by The Cure left ‘Disintegration’ suspended in silence in 1989 with Robert Smith singing about the end of everything he loved over a wash of guitars and synthesizers that sounded like grief made audible. It’s the quietest song on the loudest emotional record in the Cure’s catalog and it works as a closer because it leaves you suspended, unresolved, exactly the way real loss feels.

“Gold Dust Woman” by Fleetwood Mac sent ‘Rumours’ out on its own terms in 1977 with Stevie Nicks singing about a woman who takes her love for granted and builds it into something that sounds like a ceremony, a ritual, a verdict being handed down. The way her voice moves through the song, from controlled to ragged to somewhere beyond either, is one of the great vocal performances of the decade and a reminder that ‘Rumours’ saved its most haunting moment for last.

Every one of these songs understood something crucial. The end of an album is not a conclusion. It’s a question you leave the listener asking as they sit in the silence that follows. The best album closers don’t answer anything. They open something.

Patrick Muldoon, Beloved Actor of Days of Our Lives and Melrose Place, Dies at 57

0

Patrick Muldoon, the actor who brought Austin Reed to life on Days of Our Lives and made Richard Hart one of Melrose Place’s most compelling villains, has died. He was 57. His death came suddenly on April 19, 2026, the result of a heart attack, cutting short a career that had never stopped moving forward and a creative life that was, by every indication, just hitting its stride.

Born William Patrick Muldoon III on September 27, 1968 in San Pedro, California, he arrived in the world with Irish roots on his father’s side and Croatian roots on his mother’s, attended Loyola High School, played tight end for the USC Trojans, and graduated in 1991 before the entertainment industry pulled him in a direction that would define the next three and a half decades of his life.

His early television work included Who’s the Boss? and Saved by the Bell, but it was Days of Our Lives that made him a household name, specifically in the households of the devoted daytime audience that adopted him as Austin Reed from 1992 to 1995. He returned to the role in 2011 and 2012, proof that some characters and some actors are simply impossible to separate from each other. Melrose Place followed, where he played the villain Richard Hart from 1995 to 1996, and demonstrated something that the best soap actors always know, that the audience loves a compelling antagonist just as much as a hero, sometimes more.

His film career stretched wide and kept stretching. Starship Troopers in 1997, directed by Paul Verhoeven, gave him his most iconic big screen moment as Zander Barcalow, and the decades that followed saw him move through an enormous range of projects, from Lifetime and Hallmark films to crime thrillers, holiday movies, horror, and family fare. He was not an actor who waited for the perfect role. He was an actor who worked, consistently and with evident commitment, across every format the industry offered.

What distinguished the later chapter of his career was the pivot toward producing. Through his Storyboard Productions company he worked on films including The Tribes of Palos Verdes, Arkansas, Marlowe, The Card Counter, and Riff Raff. Just two days before his death he posted on Instagram about his excitement over an upcoming role in Kockroach, a film starring Chris Hemsworth, Taron Edgerton, Zazie Beetz and Alec Baldwin, currently filming in Australia. That post, full of genuine enthusiasm, is now an accidental farewell, a reminder that he was someone who never stopped looking forward.

His final acting role was in Dirty Hands, a crime thriller with Denise Richards and Michael Beach, set for release later this month. He was also a musician, fronting the band The Sleeping Masses, whose song The Woman is the Way appeared in the 2009 film Powder Blue and on the television series The Hills.

He is survived by his partner Miriam Rothbart, his parents Deanna and Patrick Muldoon Sr., his sister Shana and brother-in-law Ahmet Zappa, and his niece Halo and nephew Arrow Zappa.

No Label, No Problem: How Smart Artists Are Building Real Momentum in 2026

0

There’s a moment every independent artist reaches where the absence of a label stops feeling like a handicap and starts feeling like the whole point. The music industry spent decades convincing artists that the gatekeepers were necessary, that the machinery of a major label was the only path from bedroom to stage to radio to relevance. That story has been falling apart for years and what’s replacing it is genuinely more interesting.

The streaming era didn’t just change how music gets distributed. It changed who gets to build something lasting. And the artists who are figuring that out right now are doing it by treating momentum as a thing you manufacture deliberately, one small decision at a time, rather than something that happens to you when the right person finally pays attention.

Start with consistency and treat it like a religion. The artists who are breaking through without label support are not the ones with the biggest budgets or the most connections. They’re the ones who show up every single week without fail, who release music on a schedule, who post content with intention, who build a relationship with their audience the way a small business builds a relationship with its best customers. Slowly, carefully, and with genuine attention to what that audience actually wants and needs.

The playlist ecosystem is one of the most powerful tools an independent artist has right now and most artists are still not using it properly. Getting onto the right third party playlists, the ones curated by real human beings for real human listeners who are actively looking for new music in your genre, teaches Spotify’s algorithm that your song belongs in a specific sonic neighbourhood. That lower skip rate, that longer listen time, that pattern of saves and shares, all of it feeds back into the algorithm and the algorithm starts doing work for you that a label’s radio promotions department used to do. It takes time and it takes targeting but it works and the results belong to you permanently.

Live performance still matters enormously and independent artists who treat every single show as a marketing event rather than just a gig are the ones building real foundations. Every room you play is full of people who didn’t know your name an hour ago. Every one of those people has a phone and a social media account and a circle of friends who trust their recommendations. The merchandise table is not just a revenue stream. It’s a walking billboard that your most passionate fans carry into the world for you. The email list you build at the merch table is worth more than any follower count on any platform because you own it and no algorithm change can take it away from you.

The press and media landscape has fragmented in ways that actually benefit independent artists more than the old model ever did. There are thousands of music blogs, podcasts, playlist curators, YouTube channels, TikTok accounts, and online publications covering every conceivable genre with genuine passion and genuine audiences. A well crafted pitch to the right hundred outlets in your genre will land coverage that reaches the exact people most likely to become your fans. This is targeted in a way that a major label’s blanket press campaign often isn’t. The key is research, patience, and a story worth telling. Every artist has one. The ones who learn to articulate it clearly are the ones who get the coverage.

Social media is not a megaphone. That’s the mistake most artists make and it’s the mistake that kills momentum before it has a chance to build. Social media is a conversation and the artists winning on these platforms are the ones treating it that way. They’re sharing process, not just product. They’re showing the rehearsal, the writing session, the soundcheck, the drive to the gig, the moment before the curtain goes up. They’re building parasocial relationships that feel real because in many ways they are real. The audience wants to know who you are before they decide whether to care about what you make.

Collaboration is one of the most underused tools in the independent artist’s kit. Every artist you collaborate with brings their audience into contact with yours. Every feature, every co-write, every joint live stream, every shared playlist is an introduction to people who already trust the taste of someone they follow. This is how communities get built in music and it’s how they’ve always been built, through genuine creative relationships between people who inspire each other.

The data available to independent artists today through Spotify for Artists, Apple Music for Artists, and social media analytics is more detailed and actionable than anything a label’s marketing department was working with fifteen years ago. The artists who are paying attention to where their listeners are, what songs are connecting, what cities are showing early traction, and what playlists are driving streams are making smarter decisions about where to tour, where to pitch, and where to spend their limited marketing budgets. Data is not the enemy of creativity. It’s the map that tells you where the audience already is.

None of this is fast and none of it is easy. But the artists building momentum without a label in 2026 are building something that belongs entirely to them. The rights, the relationships, the audience, the data, the creative direction. All of it. The label system offered resources in exchange for control and for a long time that trade made sense because there was no other way. There is another way now and the artists who are taking it are discovering something that the industry spent fifty years trying to obscure. The music was always the point. Everything else was just infrastructure. And infrastructure, it turns out, you can build yourself.

Postmodern Jukebox Turn Sabrina Carpenter’s “Please Please Please” Into a Flawless 70s Carpenters Moment

0

Postmodern Jukebox have pulled off something genuinely delightful with this one. Their 70s soft rock reimagining of Sabrina Carpenter’s “Please Please Please” features vocalist Tori Holub, whose voice lands so naturally in the Karen Carpenter register that the whole thing feels less like a cover and more like an unearthed archival recording. The arrangement is warm, unhurried, and impeccably crafted, stripping away everything contemporary and replacing it with the lush, pillowy textures that made The Carpenters impossible to resist 5 decades ago. Sabrina Carpenter meets Karen Carpenter, and somehow it’s a perfect fit.

Beck ‘Live at Roy Thomson Hall’ Is a 22-Song Fan Recording Worth Every Minute

0

A devoted fan captured Beck’s 2-night stand with the Toronto Symphony Orchestra at Roy Thomson Hall on July 19, 2025, and the recording documents something genuinely special. 22 songs spanning the full arc of Beck’s catalog, from “Loser” and “Devil’s Haircut” to “Lost Cause,” “Tropicalia,” and “Paper Tiger,” reimagined with full orchestral arrangements that give even the most familiar tracks new dimension and emotional weight. The inclusion of 2 Scott Walker covers, “It’s Raining Today” and “Montague Terrace,” speaks to Beck’s curatorial instincts and the ambition of the overall program. This is not a greatest hits run-through. It’s a genuine artistic statement, and the fan footage, while unofficial, preserves a night that deserved to be remembered.

De La Soul Bring “Different World” to The Tonight Show in a Performance Worth Savoring

0

De La Soul took The Tonight Show stage to perform “Different World,” and the moment carried the kind of weight that comes with knowing what this group has meant to hip-hop for nearly 4 decades. The performance is unhurried, confident, and deeply felt, a reminder that De La Soul operate on their own timeline and always have. With their catalog finally available on streaming after years of legal limbo, every De La Soul performance right now feels like a reclamation, and this one is no exception.