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R&B Superstar Kehlani Drops “Back And Forth” Video With Missy Elliott And Monica

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The party’s in full swing. Kehlani just dropped the music video for “Back and Forth,” her electrifying single featuring the iconic Missy Elliott, pulled from the 2x GRAMMY-winning star’s chart-topping self-titled album ‘Kehlani’. Directed by Director X, the clip unfolds inside a vibrant house party, pairing Kehlani’s soulful vulnerability with Missy Elliott’s unmatched charisma, plus a surprise appearance from R&B legend Monica.

The video lands on a wave of momentum. ‘Kehlani’ debuted at No. 4 on the Billboard 200 with 69,000 equivalent album units, the biggest debut for an R&B album by a woman this year. It topped the R&B Albums chart and marked her fourth top 10 entry on the Billboard 200, her third to crack the top 5.

Behind it all sits the juggernaut “Folded,” which earned Kehlani two GRAMMY Awards this year for Best R&B Performance and Best R&B Song. The track holds the record for longest-running No. 1 in Billboard Mainstream R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay history, sitting at the top for 17 weeks and counting, now certified 2x Platinum.

There’s more on the horizon. The Kehlani World Tour, presented by Live Nation, runs 41 dates and kicks off August 6th in Minneapolis at The Armory before sweeping across North America through an October 4th finale in San Francisco. Special guests Durand Bernarr, Isaia Huron, TheARTI$t, and WASEEL join on select dates. The run then crosses to Europe and the UK from November 29th through December 10th, with Odeal and WASEEL supporting throughout. Kehlani holds her place as one of the defining voices in modern R&B.

Kehlani World Tour Dates:

Thu Aug 6 – Minneapolis, MN – The Armory

Fri Aug 7 – Milwaukee, WI – Landmark Credit Union Live

Sun Aug 9 – Chicago, IL – Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island

Mon Aug 10 – Indianapolis, IN – Everwise Amphitheater at White River State Park

Thu Aug 13 – Detroit, MI – Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre at Freedom Hill

Fri Aug 14 – Cuyahoga Falls, OH – Blossom Music Center

Sun Aug 16 – Toronto, ON – RBC Amphitheatre

Mon Aug 17 – Darien Center, NY – Darien Lake Amphitheater

Wed Aug 19 – Boston, MA – MGM Music Hall at Fenway

Fri Aug 21 – New York, NY – Barclays Center

Sun Aug 23 – Uncasville, CT – Mohegan Sun Arena

Wed Aug 26 – Camden, NJ – Freedom Mortgage Pavilion

Thu Aug 27 – Columbia, MD – Merriweather Post Pavilion

Sat Aug 29 – Richmond, VA – Allianz Amphitheater at Riverfront

Mon Aug 31 – Raleigh, NC – Coastal Credit Union Music Park at Walnut Creek

Tue Sep 1 – Charlotte, NC – Truliant Amphitheater

Thu Sep 3 – Atlanta, GA – Lakewood Amphitheatre

Fri Sep 4 – Birmingham, AL – Coca-Cola Amphitheater

Tue Sep 8 – Nashville, TN – Nashville Municipal Auditorium

Thu Sep 10 – Miami, FL – iThink Financial Amphitheatre

Fri Sep 11 – Tampa, FL – MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre

Sun Sep 13 – Houston, TX – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion

Tue Sep 15 – Austin, TX – Germania Insurance Amphitheater

Wed Sep 16 – Dallas, TX – Dos Equis Pavilion

Fri Sep 18 – Oklahoma City, OK – Zoo Amphitheatre

Sun Sep 20 – Albuquerque, NM – First Financial Credit Union Amphitheater

Mon Sep 21 – Phoenix, AZ – Talking Stick Resort Amphitheatre

Wed Sep 23 – San Diego, CA – Viejas Arena

Thu Sep 24 – Inglewood, CA – Intuit Dome

Sat Sep 26 – Portland, OR – Theater of the Clouds

Sun Sep 27 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena

Tue Sep 29 – Vancouver, BC – Doug Mitchell Thunderbird Sports Centre

Sat Oct 3 – San Francisco, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre

Sun Oct 4 – San Francisco, CA – Shoreline Amphitheatre

Sun Nov 29 – Berlin, DE – Velodrom

Tue Dec 1 – Brussels, BE – Forest National

Thu Dec 3 – Paris, FR – Adidas Arena

Sat Dec 5 – Dusseldorf, DE – PSD Bank Dome

Sun Dec 6 – Amsterdam, NL – Ziggo Dome

Tue Dec 8 – London, UK – The O2

Thu Dec 10 – Manchester, UK – Co-op Live

Biffy Clyro Conquer Home Turf In Triumphant TRNSMT Festival Headline Set

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Glasgow Green belonged to Biffy Clyro. The Scottish rock trio, Simon Neil alongside twins James and Ben Johnston, headlined TRNSMT Festival on home soil and turned it into a full-blown homecoming celebration. The set moved between jagged, complex riffs and stadium-sized choruses, with a massive crowd roaring back every word. Neil and company affirmed their place among the UK’s most formidable live acts, opening with the explosive one-two of “The Captain” and “That Golden Rule” before charging through a career-spanning run of fan favorites. They flexed serious range too, from the raw power of “Wolves of Winter” to a tender “Re-Arrange” and Neil’s stripped-back acoustic take on “Machines.” The production matched the ambition, with bagpipes and confetti erupting during “Stingin’ Belle” and fireworks lighting up the closing anthem “Many of Horror.” This was a band at the absolute peak of its powers.

R.E.M. Icon Michael Stipe Teams With Andrew Watt For New Song “I Played The Fool”

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Michael Stipe just brought new music to late night. The R.E.M. frontman joined producer and musician Andrew Watt on Jimmy Kimmel Live to perform their new song “I Played the Fool,” backed by a few friends on stage. The collaboration pairs one of alternative rock’s most distinctive voices with Watt, the Grammy-winning hitmaker who’s worked with everyone from the Rolling Stones to Ozzy Osbourne, and the result lands with the kind of melodic pull that’s defined Stipe’s best work.

Irish New-Wave Favorite Christian Cohle Unveils “Living With Lucy” And Third Album ‘Queen Of Ashes’

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A love that refuses to fade sits at the heart of Christian Cohle’s new single “Living With Lucy,” out now. The Irish alternative new-wave artist pairs a wistful ache with a euphoric, summery pulse, and uses the moment to announce his third album, ‘Queen of Ashes’, arriving October 16th. A launch show follows at Whelan’s in Dublin on November 13th.

Cohle has earned a reputation as one of Ireland’s best kept secrets, and the new track shows why. “Living With Lucy” rides a warm, groove-led current that recalls Future Islands and the sun-drenched expanse of The War on Drugs, propelled by physical, frontman-led vocals. Alex Reeves of Elbow handles live drums, while soaring analogue Yamaha DX7 pads, upright piano, and bass guitar lock together to push the arrangement forward.

There’s a hidden depth working underneath all that brightness. In the spirit of Outkast’s “Hey Ya!”, the song wraps an uplifting energy around a quieter emotional core that surfaces more with every listen. A melodic chorus carries it, framed by light, jangling acoustic guitars and lyrics that ask whether love survives the passing of years and decades.

The imagery roots the song firmly in place. Flooded roads, grey skies, Storm Éowyn, and a field of whitethorns give “Living With Lucy” a distinctly Irish atmosphere, where intimacy, memory, and time start to blur together. Critics have noticed the depth, with The Irish Times calling Cohle’s work both brave and human, and Hot Press describing it as beautifully stark.

The music video, directed by Tristan Heanue, arrives June 11th. With ‘Queen of Ashes’ on the horizon, “Living With Lucy” opens Cohle’s most raw and assured era yet.

Album Launch Show:

November 13th – Whelan’s, Dublin

Soundgarden Guitar Hero Kim Thayil Tells The Band’s Full Story In ‘A Screaming Life’

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The man who built one of grunge’s heaviest sounds is finally telling his side. Kim Thayil, co-founder and lead guitarist of Soundgarden, releases his memoir ‘A Screaming Life: Into the Superunknown with Soundgarden and Beyond’ on June 9, 2026, co-written with veteran music journalist Adem Tepedelen and published by William Morrow.

Thayil traces the whole arc, from Soundgarden’s scrappy origins in Seattle’s beer-soaked punk clubs to their place as Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductees in 2025. He pulls back the curtain on the band he founded alongside Chris Cornell, Hiro Yamamoto, Ben Shepherd, and Matt Cameron, charting the triumphs and the creative friction that came with inventing a sound nobody had heard before.

The book digs into identity too. Thayil’s Indian heritage and Yamamoto’s Japanese background shaped Soundgarden’s character, their music, and their experience navigating the industry, dimensions rarely explored in grunge’s well-worn history. His account of grieving Cornell, who died in 2017, has already drawn praise from early reviewers for its honesty.

The writing earns its acclaim. Booklist calls it a clear-eyed account that resists easy nostalgia, while Publishers Weekly describes an entertaining and intriguing history balanced by frank talk about the conflicts that led to the band’s 1997 breakup. For Soundgarden fans and anyone who lived through ’90s alternative rock, this one goes deep.

Province Of Canada And ‘Heated Rivalry’ Team Up On Limited-Edition Made-In-Canada Fleece

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That cream fleece jacket from Season One, Episode Two of ‘Heated Rivalry’ now exists in real life, and you can pre-order one right now. Toronto-based Province of Canada has teamed up with the series for a limited-edition collaboration, recreating the on-screen costume piece designed by Hanna Puley with help from the dedicated “Release the Fleece” community. Pre-orders are live, with the jacket expected to ship in October, priced at $356 CAD.

The build deserves attention. The sherpa exterior is knit in Italy from 71% recycled polyester and 29% non-mulesed New Zealand virgin wool, lined with 100% cotton fleece, finished with YKK zippers, an embroidered Canada chenille patch on the back, and maple leaf twill patches on the sleeves. Made in Canada with thoughtfully curated materials from around the world, it’s built as a true collectible for fans of the show.

There’s a cause attached too. Ten percent of net profits go to You Can Play, with the NHL and NHLPA matching contributions up to a combined total of $50,000 CAD. Quantities are limited, one per customer, first come first served, and final sale, so fans who want one shouldn’t wait around. Order it here.

Sound Sculptor Reimagines Radiohead’s ‘OK Computer’ As ‘OK Nintendo 64’

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Picture Thom Yorke’s existential dread filtered through the cheerful bloops of a Mario Kart loading screen. That’s the premise behind ‘OK Nintendo 64’, a full reimagining of Radiohead’s ‘OK Computer’ built entirely from N64 soundfonts, created by on4word and now live on YouTube. Every track on the seminal 1997 record gets rebuilt using the instrument banks of classic Nintendo 64 games, so “Airbag” runs on Super Mario 64, “Paranoid Android” rides the Mario Kart 64 engine, and “Exit Music (For a Film)” gets the Banjo-Kazooie treatment. The mashup works far better than it has any right to, turning melancholy art-rock into something playful and strangely moving. The full project is available free, or pay what you want, at on4word’s Bandcamp, with bonus material and uncompressed audio included.

MusiquePlus, Quebec’s Pop Culture Icon, Storms Back To Life On TikTok

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Forty years after it first beamed music into Quebec living rooms, MusiquePlus has a new home. The legendary channel returns exclusively on TikTok on June 11, 2026, at @MusiquePlus, reborn for a generation that finds its favorite songs by scrolling.

Quebec built this brand. Launched in 1986, MusiquePlus became the flagship that introduced countless local talents to the province and beyond. Now it’s back with entirely fresh content, a fresh roster of VJs, and a creator-driven approach built for the platform where music discovery happens fastest.

The revival comes from a powerhouse collaboration between TikTok, Attraction, Motion Entertainment (a division of WPP Media), and Remstar Media. Each partner brings muscle. Together they’re aiming MusiquePlus straight at a new audience of French-speaking music lovers and the global communities who follow them.

The timing makes sense. Half of Canada’s Francophone community on TikTok actively seeks content that reflects and celebrates their identity, and MusiquePlus speaks that language fluently. This is a space designed to spotlight emerging and established acts alike, amplifying the creative voices that make Quebec sound like nowhere else.

“MusiquePlus is part of our collective memory, and this project was the perfect opportunity to revive it and give a powerful voice to local talent and culture,” says Maxime Rémillard, President of Remstar Media.

Alec Boudreau of TikTok Canada points to the platform’s pull. “Culture lives on TikTok. We’re so proud of the ways that Quebec’s distinct culture and music is discovered by local and global communities on TikTok,” he notes, adding that the team is thrilled to help Canadians and global audiences discover the artistry of Quebec music, culture, and entertainment.

Attraction is handling production, in partnership with Motion Entertainment. President Richard Speer frames the project as a cultural mission. “At Attraction, we believe in brands with soul and a story,” he says, describing a union of heritage and innovation that creates a new space for local artists and creators to be heard and seen.

The enthusiasm runs deep on the team itself. “Many of us, me included, were big fans of MusiquePlus and we are thrilled to be a part of its new life on TikTok,” says Daniel Mekinda, Head of Motion Entertainment in Canada.

More news is coming. The full lineup of VJs, the new faces who’ll champion Quebec’s rising creative voices, gets revealed in the weeks ahead of the June 11 launch.

Why Rock’s Octogenarian Hitmakers Own The Summer

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History gives us a map for almost everything, except this. Ringo Starr turns 86 in July and he’s onstage, anchoring a generation of rockers who’ve walked the calendar somewhere no popular musicians have walked before.

Look back and the precedent thins out fast. Jazz and blues handed us the early models. B.B. King kept his road life running into his late 80s, playing hundreds of nights a year as the self-described Ambassador of the Blues, a man who started touring in 1955 and barely stopped. Tony Bennett sang into his 90s, took a Number 1 album at 88, and headlined jazz festivals when most of his peers were long gone. They proved a voice could carry across seven decades.

What’s happening in 2026 stretches even those examples. King and Bennett were singular figures, exceptions standing nearly alone. This summer hands us a whole roster. Mike Love of the Beach Boys is 85. Bob Dylan turns 85. Paul Simon is 84. Randy Bachman of The Guess Who is 82. Jon Anderson and Eric Clapton are 81, joined by Micky Dolenz and Rod Stewart. John Fogerty turns 80.

There’s a familiar scene that plays out every few years. A legendary performer, well past the age when most people have retired, announces a “farewell tour.” Tickets sell out. The shows are emotional. And then, eighteen months later, a new run of dates appears. The farewell, it turns out, was not goodbye.

We tend to explain this cynically — they need the money, or their handlers won’t let them quit. Sometimes that’s true. But the more interesting answer is psychological. For many artists who have spent 50 or 60 years on stage, stopping isn’t a logistical decision. It’s an existential one. Here’s a look at what’s actually going on beneath the rescheduled farewell.

For most people, identity is distributed across many roles: parent, friend, professional, neighbor. For a performer who became famous young, an enormous share of their sense of self can be fused to a single activity. Psychologists call this identity foreclosure — when a person commits hard to one identity early in life and never develops alternatives. A teenager who becomes a touring musician at nineteen may never have built the scaffolding for a self that exists off-stage.

This makes retirement feel less like ending a job and more like erasing a person. The question “Who am I if I’m not performing?” isn’t rhetorical for these artists. They genuinely may not have an answer, because the experiment of being someone else was never run. Touring isn’t what they do. It’s the load-bearing wall of who they are.

There is no ordinary experience that replicates what happens when twenty thousand people sing your words back to you. The combination of mass attention, rhythmic crowd response, and the physiological rush of live performance produces a neurochemical cocktail — dopamine, adrenaline, oxytocin from social bonding — that the brain learns to expect and crave.

This isn’t addiction in the clinical sense, but it shares a structure with it. The feedback loop is immediate, intense, and reliable in a way that almost nothing in private life can match. A retired performer doesn’t just lose a paycheck or a routine. They lose access to one of the most powerful reward experiences a human nervous system can have. Daily life afterward can feel muted, gray, under-stimulated by comparison. Many describe the off-season or the gap between tours as a low-grade depression. The stage isn’t a habit they can’t break. It’s a high they can’t find anywhere else.

For older artists specifically, touring takes on a second layer of meaning. To keep moving is, in a quiet way, to refuse to be finished. Continuing to perform becomes evidence — to the audience but mostly to oneself — that one is still vital, still relevant, still here.

There’s a concept in psychology called terror management: the idea that humans construct meaning systems partly to buffer the anxiety of knowing we will die. For an artist, the work itself is that buffer. A song outlives its singer; a performance is a small act of defiance against time. Stopping can feel uncomfortably like an admission — that the body is failing, that the relevance is fading, that the end is near. As long as the next tour is booked, the story isn’t over. The calendar full of future dates is, in a sense, a promise to the self that there is still a future.

Performers are often, paradoxically, people who are most comfortable in front of crowds and least comfortable alone. The stage offers a kind of intimacy that is intense but bounded — connection without the vulnerability of a one-on-one relationship. It’s love at scale, with a clear exit at the end of the night.

Retirement removes the structure and replaces it with the thing many performers spent their whole lives avoiding: stillness, solitude, and the unmediated company of their own thoughts. The roar of the crowd is also, for some, a way of not having to sit in a quiet room with themselves. Touring keeps the silence at bay.

It would be too simple to frame all of this as ego or avoidance. There’s a healthier strand running through it too. Work that feels meaningful is one of the strongest predictors of wellbeing in later life, and being needed is a powerful antidote to the irrelevance that often accompanies aging.

For an artist, a tour is a reason to stay disciplined — to keep the voice in shape, the body moving, the mind sharp. It provides structure, social connection with a touring family, and the sense that one still has something to give. Some older performers keep going not because they’re running from death but because the work is genuinely the best part of being alive for them. We don’t tell a beloved teacher or surgeon they should have quit years ago simply because they reached a certain age. The instinct to keep contributing is, in many cases, the sign of a life well-aligned with its purpose.

The cynical read — they can’t let go, they’re chasing a fading high, they’re afraid of dying — is real for some artists. But so is the generous read: that they’ve found something that gives their life shape and meaning, and they intend to do it until they physically cannot.

Maybe the most honest answer is that both are usually true at once. The same tour can be an avoidance of mortality and a celebration of being alive. The crowd can be both a fix and a genuine source of joy. Human motivation is rarely clean.

What’s clear is that “why don’t they just stop?” is the wrong question. For a person whose identity, nervous system, and sense of meaning have all been organized around the stage for half a century, the better question is: stop and become what? Until there’s an answer to that, the farewell tour will keep saying hello.

Why Insurance Companies Aggressively Fight Claims

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By Mitch Rice

After filing an injury claim through insurance, most people expect compensation. However, a large number of claims are either outright rejected or require a fight. Insurance companies fight injury claims aggressively because large payouts reduce their profits. To protect revenue, insurance adjusters push back and look for reasons to deny and devalue claims as much as possible. When they can’t deny a claim, they’ll make a lowball offer, hoping the injured party will take the money and go away.

If you’ve been injured in an accident, understanding how and why insurance companies fight payouts will give you a better chance at getting paid fairly. 

Here’s what you need to know.

Serious injuries threaten revenue

It’s not hard to see how catastrophic and long-term injuries cost insurance companies more than other claims. When a claim involves surgery, permanent disability, lost future earnings, or lifelong care, insurance adjusters treat it like a liability. 

Future medical costs are typically included in insurance payouts and serious injuries cost more. For example, if you experienced a spinal injury or traumatic brain injury (TBI), you might need years of ongoing treatment. Lifetime care costs for some injuries can reach millions of dollars. That’s why insurers aggressively challenge treatment recommendations and projected medical costs associated with serious injuries.

Serious injury claims are likely to include extensive damages for pain and suffering and lost earning potential. For example, a 20-year-old worker who can no longer perform physical work might lose decades of income potential. The value of their claim will rise significantly if their quality of life has been permanently altered to the point where they are no longer independent or have limited mobility.

Delayed claims are a strategy

In many cases, delays are intentional and designed to create financial pressure. Insurance companies know that when someone’s bills start piling up they’re more likely to accept the current offer. Missed paychecks and late rent force many injured people to accept a low settlement.

Insurance adjusters often request years of medical and employment records along with test results and sometimes even tax returns to verify claims of lost earnings. They don’t ask for detailed records to verify an injury. They’re actively searching for reasons to deny a claim. For example, if you have a pre-existing injury or medical condition, they’ll use that against you. And sometimes they will intentionally prolong their investigation just to see if you’re going to continue getting consistent treatment. If not, they’ll use that to deny your claim.

Reducing credibility is a financial protection strategy

Since insurance adjusters are only concerned with protecting their profits, they’ll try to find ways to reduce the credibility of your claim. They’ll look for inconsistencies, alternative explanations, and evidence that can be used to either deny or devalue your claim. For example, they’ll go straight to your social media accounts and comb through all of your photos, posts, comments, and check-ins looking for something they can use to argue that your injuries aren’t that severe. Unfortunately, even harmless posts can be misrepresented.

If your case is serious enough, they might even hire a private investigator to document your physical activity in your daily life and compare what they find to your reported limitations. 

Insurance adjusters scrutinize medical records to protect profits

Just because you’ve been seriously injured doesn’t mean you’ll automatically win compensation. It’s not your injury that determines the value of your claim – it’s the type of medical care you receive. For example, if you don’t need a lot of medical care, your claim will be worth less than someone who needs more treatment. If you miss your appointments or stop therapy early, the insurance company will lower the value of your claim.

When trying to get a personal injury claim approved, it’s critical to get opinions from specialists because they carry more weight. However, the insurance company might require you to undergo an evaluation with one of their doctors to verify your injury and limitations. 

Large claims trigger defense teams

Insurance companies have lawyers, experts, accident reconstruction analysts, and investigators on deck waiting to evaluate large claims. To assess how much risk you pose, they’ll evaluate your situation to determine if a jury might issue an unusually high award if your case goes to trial. That evaluation will inform their negotiation strategy.

Insurance claims are a battle because the stakes are high

Insurance adjusters are aggressive because they’re protecting their profits. They fight serious injury claims because they want to avoid high payouts. Serious injuries tend to come with higher medical bills and a higher chance of long-term disability. If you’re dealing with a major injury claim, protect your right to fair compensation by contacting a personal injury attorney as soon as possible.

Data and information are provided for informational purposes only, and are not intended for investment or other purposes.