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Karan Aujla’s ‘P-POP CULTURE’ Breaks Records and Sparks a Global Punjabi Pop Movement

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With the release of P-POP CULTURE, Punjabi powerhouse KARAN AUJLA has propelled Punjabi music to new heights, marking one of the strongest global debuts ever for a Punjabi-language album.

The album’s first week has been nothing short of explosive, achieving historic milestones across streaming platforms and charts worldwide. P-POP CULTURE debuted at #1 on Spotify in both India and Pakistan, and #4 in Canada, while also taking the #1 spot on Apple Music in all three countries. Upon release, all 11 songs on the album entered the Spotify Top 200 and Apple Music Top 50 charts in India, Canada, and Pakistan. This immense success was mirrored on social media, where all 11 songs trended on Instagram in India on the day of release.  In Canada, the project debuted at #3 on the Billboard Canadian Albums Chart with 12.4 million streams – marking the highest debut for a Punjabi-language album in Canadian history, a record that surpasses Aujla’s own Making Memories from 2023.  In America, the album debuted at the #19 position on the US Billboard World Albums chart.

Kristen Burke, President, Warner Music Canada said, “We are thrilled with the incredible performance of Karan Aujla’s new album, P-POP CULTURE. This success is a testament to his groundbreaking artistry and his ability to resonate with a global audience. The phenomenal results we’re seeing worldwide solidify his status as a trailblazer, and we’re proud to be his partner in bringing this cultural movement to the world.”

“For A Reason” is also off to a phenomenal start, currently sitting at #3 on Spotify India, #7 Spotify Pakistan and #110 Spotify Global as well as #1 on Apple India and #25 on Apple Canada.  The video has been viewed over 40 million times in 12 days and is the #1 trending video in multiple markets.  

A bold fusion of Punjabi pop and hip-hop, P-POP CULTURE is both a tribute to the soil that raised Karan Aujla and a call to the world to embrace the sound of a new revolution. It captures the dual force of Aujla himself – raw and refined, heart and hustle – balancing pop melodies drenched in love and nostalgia with hip-hop fire where bars hit hard and truths hit harder. More than just an album, it marks the rise of P-Pop – not just a genre, but a culture and a movement. With P-POP CULTURE, Aujla has unleashed a global force, and P-Pop is here to stay.

P-POP CULTURE is out now via Warner Music Canada/Warner Music India – listen here.

SiriusXM Delivers Every NFL Game This Season With New Voices and Exclusive Team Coverage

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SiriusXM, the exclusive third-party provider of every NFL game, will deliver NFL fans comprehensive coverage of the 2025 season, with live broadcasts of every game and round-the-clock coverage on the exclusive SiriusXM NFL Radio channel, which will feature new additions to the talent roster this season.

From Thursday’s NFL Kickoff Presented by YouTube TV through Super Bowl LX, SiriusXM subscribers get access to every minute of every game in their cars and on the SiriusXM app. For this Thursday’s game between the defending Super Bowl Champion Philadelphia Eagles and Dallas Cowboys (8:20 pm ET), subscribers have the option of tuning in to the Eagles and Cowboys hometown radio broadcasts, Westwood One’s national radio broadcast, or a Spanish-language broadcast of the game.

The schedule of games airing on SiriusXM for Week 1 is available here: SiriusXM.com/Sports

The SiriusXM app offers 32 NFL team channels, each carrying the official radio broadcast for each NFL team, plus pre- and post-game shows for every game, so fans can be sure to hear their favorite team’s announcers all season long. All 32 team channels are also available in a growing number of vehicles equipped with SiriusXM’s 360L radios.

In addition to the comprehensive game schedule, SiriusXM offers fans in-depth NFL talk 365 days a year on SiriusXM NFL Radio (channel 88), the only 24/7 radio channel dedicated to the NFL.

Joining the SiriusXM NFL Radio team this season are two experienced pro personnel executives – former Los Angeles Chargers and Las Vegas Raiders general manager Tom Telesco and former Tennessee Titans general manager and NFL running back Ran Carthon – who will host on SiriusXM NFL Radio this season, bringing a front office perspective on the game to the channel.

Also joining SiriusXM this season is Carolina Panthers long snapper J.J. Jansen, an 18-year veteran of the league, who will join Miami Dolphins running back Alec Ingold to host the weekly show, “The Players’ Point.” Airing Tuesdays at 7 pm ET, “The Players’ Point” is the only radio show hosted entirely by active NFL players.

Sundays during the season, SiriusXM’s “NFL Sunday Drive” show airs live from noon to 8 pm ET as all afternoon games are in progress. Hosts Steve Torre and Bill Lekas keep listeners informed of all the latest developments happening around the league, take listeners in and out of multiple live game broadcasts so they can hear the most exciting game action in one place, and conduct one-on-one postgame interviews with the day’s star players.

SiriusXM NFL Radio listeners also get the weekly show “Let’s Go!” – hosted by L.A. Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford, Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby, three-time National Sportswriter of the Year Peter King, and Emmy Award-winning broadcaster Jim Gray – Monday nights at 6:30 pm ET.

SiriusXM NFL Radio’s team of hosts also includes Hall of Famers Tim Brown and Bill Polian, former NFL executive Pat Kirwan, and NFL Legends including Rich Gannon, Todd Haley, Brad Hopkins, Ryan Leaf, Ed McCaffrey, Jim Miller, Kirk Morrison, Allen Robinson, Alex Smith, Isaiah Stanback, Max Starks, Robert Turbin, Solomon Wilcots, Matt Simms, Leger Douzable, Brian Hoyer, Patrick Peterson, Christian Fauria and Isaac Rochell. 

SiriusXM NFL Radio voices also include a number of NFL insiders and radio veterans including Vic Carucci, Adam Caplan, Zig Fracassi, Dan Leberfeld, Rhett Lewis, Jade McCarthy, David Moulton, Bruce Murray, Bob Papa, Amber Theoharis, Amy Lawrence, Andrew Siciliano and Damon Amendolara.

Fans can also search their favorite team’s name in the SiriusXM app for additional content from NFL teams including podcasts, coach’s shows, player interviews and press conferences.

For more on SiriusXM’s NFL programming, a link to the SiriusXM NFL Radio channel and NFL game schedules go to SiriusXM.com/NFL.

Brandi Carlile Announces New Album ‘Returning To Myself, Today’

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Brandi Carlile is back with her eighth studio album and first solo project in four years. After pouring herself into collaborations with musical icons and legends, the 11x GRAMMY Award-winning songwriter is looking inward, reflecting backward, and ultimately, returning home on her brand-new album, Returning To Myself—out October 24 on Interscope Records/Lost Highway (pre-order). Produced by Carlile, Andrew Watt, Aaron Dessner, and Justin Vernon, the album features ten songs, including the title track—out today alongside the official music video, directed by Floria Sigismondi.

Of “Returning To Myself,” Carlile shares, “I’m not my favorite person to spend my time with. Returning to myself is not just a lonely, but a painfully boring thing to do. So much so that I’m actually not at all interested in doing it.

I prefer to double, triple, and quadruple down on co-dependency, which I’ve come to learn that outside of 12-Step programs and junior high school relationships, isn’t really that unhealthy at all…

For me the key to learning to ‘be alone’ is not being alone at all. It’s being alone in a crowded room. It’s hearing an unexpected doorbell ring and wondering who has shown up to watch me read my book and bite my nails all day. That a guest can be a deep lean-in over a cheap bottle of wine or simply an eyebrow raise and a gesture toward the refrigerator while I play Zelda…where I totally choose myself with someone so close to me I can hear them relax. 

People want to be together in silence more than we allow in our time. It’s falling deeply in love with the car wheels on a gravel road. The possibility of the visitor. The “not being alone-ness” of it all…

Togetherness has given me everything I love about being alive. Starting with my original family in a single wide mobile home, gathered around a wood stove all the way to living with my band, haunting my wife everywhere she goes, raising my children on a tour bus, learning at the feet of Joni Mitchell, to making music with my greatest hero of all time, Elton John.

Why is it heroic to untether, when the tense work of togetherness is so much more interesting?

…because I don’t want to do it. Because I don’t want to return to myself. 

And that’s why I will.”

In addition to Carlile, Watt, Dessner and Vernon, the album features her longtime bandmates Phil and Tim Hanseroth and SistaStrings (Monique and Chauntee Ross) as well as Josh Klinghoffer, Chad Smith, Matt Chamberlain, Dave Mackay, Rob Moose, Blake Mills, Mark Isham and Stewart Cole.

Carlile and her band will perform three sold-out nights at Colorado’s legendary Red Rocks Amphitheatre this weekend. Additional tour dates to be announced.

Carlile is an Oscar-nominated and 11x GRAMMY Award-winning singer, songwriter, performer and producer, 2x EMMY Award-winning composer, lyricist and writer, #1 New York Times Bestselling author and activist, who is known as one of music’s most respected voices. Throughout her acclaimed career, Carlile has released eight studio albums including her most recent, Who Believes in Angels?—the universally critically acclaimed collaborative album with her childhood hero, Elton John—which debuted at No. 1 in the U.K. and top 10 in the U.S. 

Additionally, Carlile continues her work as a renowned producer with recent GRAMMY Award-winning projects from Joni Mitchell and Brandy Clark. She also produced and recorded a rendition of Indigo Girls’ “Closer To Fine” with her wife, Catherine, which was included on Barbie The Album as well as a version of “Home,” which was featured in the final season of Ted Lasso. She received her first Oscar nomination in the Original Song category in January 2025 for “Never Too Late,” a track written alongside Elton John, Bernie Taupin and Andrew Watt for the Disney+ documentary of the same name, on Elton’s life and career.

Beloved by her peers, Carlile has collaborated with artists such as The Highwomen, Soundgarden, Sam Smith, Alicia Keys, Hozier, Noah Kahan, Jacob Collier, P!nk and Dolly Parton. Carlile was named OUT Magazine’s 2023 “Icon of the Year,” awarded Billboard’s Women In Music “Trailblazer Award,” CMT’s Next Women of Country “Impact Award” and NMPA’s 2023 Songwriter Icon Award and received multiple recognitions from the Americana Music Association. 

On top of being a musician and writer, Carlile is a founder of the Looking Out Foundation, which has raised over $8 million for grassroots causes to date. Carlile lives in rural Washington state with her wife and two daughters, Evangeline and Elijah.

RETURNING TO MYSELF TRACKLIST

Returning To Myself

Human

A Woman Oversees

A War With Time

Anniversary 

Church & State

Joni

You Without Me

No One Knows Us

A Long Goodbye

BRANDI CARLILE CONFIRMED TOUR DATES

September 5—Morrison, CO—Red Rocks Amphitheatre

September 6—Morrison, CO—Red Rocks Amphitheatre

September 7—Morrison, CO—Red Rocks Amphitheatre

It’s Official. Radiohead Are Back On The Road.

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Radiohead have announced a run of 20 shows to take place in five cities across Europe. The band will play shows in Madrid, Bologna, London, Copenhagen and Berlin.

In a message to fans today, Radiohead’s Philip Selway said:

“Last year, we got together to rehearse, just for the hell of it. After a seven year pause, it felt really good to play the songs again and reconnect with a musical identity that has become lodged deep inside all five of us. It also made us want to play some shows together, so we hope you can make it to one of the upcoming dates. For now, it will just be these ones but who knows where this will all lead.”

The dates are: 

NOVEMBER 

04,05,07,08        MOVISTAR ARENA MADRID, SPAIN 
14,15,17,18        UNIPOL ARENA, BOLOGNA, ITALY  
21,22,24,25        THE O2, LONDON, ENGLAND 

DECEMBER 

01,02,04,05        ROYAL ARENA, COPENHAGEN, DENMARK 
08,09,11,12        UBER ARENA, BERLIN, GERMANY 

To help get tickets directly to fans and to minimize interception from touts and bots, tickets will only be accessible by registering at radiohead.com. Registration opens this Friday September 5th at 10am BST/11am CEST and closes 72 hours later at 10pm BST/11pm CEST on Sunday September 7th.  

The ticket sale itself begins on September 12th – for more information visit www.radiohead.com

10 Artists and Bands That Never Made a Bad Album

As music critics will tell you, they spend just as much time parsing the lows of a career as they do celebrating the highs. Most artists, even the greats, have at least one album that feels like a misstep—an overreach, a half-baked experiment, or just a record that doesn’t land with the weight of their best work. That’s why drawing up a list of artists and bands who never made a bad album is both difficult and rare but hey, let’s do it anyway. These are the exceptions who make perfection look deceptively easy.

A Tribe Called Quest sustained one of hip-hop’s most consistent runs, from the playful inventiveness of People’s Instinctive Travels to the socially charged We Got It from Here… Thank You 4 Your Service. Even their so-called quieter records pulse with originality and cultural resonance.

Alice Coltrane created a discography where each release, like Journey in Satchidananda or Ptah, the El Daoud, carved new dimensions in spiritual jazz. Her music never faltered in ambition or execution, maintaining transcendence across every record.

Beyoncé turned each album into a cultural statement, from Dangerously in Love to Lemonade to Renaissance. She’s navigated reinvention without missteps, balancing pop dominance with boundary-pushing artistry.

Big Thief has yet to release an album that doesn’t feel essential, whether it’s the intimacy of Capacity or the sprawl of Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe in You. Their consistency lies in uniting fragility with fearless experimentation.

Bjork has redefined what a flawless discography looks like, from the avant-pop immediacy of Debut and Post to the expansive electronic landscapes of Homogenic and the ecological intimacy of Biophilia. Every album is a fully realized world.

David Bowie shifted personas and sounds constantly, yet even his experiments (Low, Blackstar) feel vital in hindsight. His discography reads less like peaks and valleys than a string of reinventions, none of which count as failures.

Fiona Apple has delivered only carefully considered masterpieces, from the confessional Tidal to the baroque The Idler Wheel… and the jagged brilliance of Fetch the Bolt Cutters. Each release expands her voice without compromise.

Frank Ocean has a small but flawless body of work, with Channel Orange and Blonde representing different sides of his artistry—lush, expansive storytelling and fragmented, intimate explorations. His restraint ensures quality over quantity.

Janelle Monáe has tied narrative and sound together with precision, from the Afrofuturist suites of The ArchAndroid to the bold liberation of Dirty Computer and The Age of Pleasure. Each album is cohesive and uncompromised.

Jay-Z built a rap empire on consistency, from the cinematic storytelling of Reasonable Doubt to the reflective maturity of 4:44. Even his most commercial records hold sharpness, making his catalog free of obvious weak spots.

Kendrick Lamar has sustained an untarnished streak, from the storytelling clarity of good kid, m.A.A.d city to the Pulitzer-winning DAMN. and the sprawling Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers. Each album arrives as a cultural event and withstands scrutiny.

Miles Davis evolved across decades without faltering, moving from hard bop to modal (Kind of Blue) to fusion (Bitches Brew). His restlessness guaranteed a discography where every pivot expanded the vocabulary of jazz.

My Bloody Valentine may have only released a handful of albums, but each—Isn’t Anything, Loveless, and m b v—feels flawless. Their catalog is small, but it’s seismic, with no room for lesser statements.

Nick Drake left behind just three records before his death, yet each (Five Leaves Left, Bryter Layter, Pink Moon) is flawless in songwriting and atmosphere. His brevity ensures a catalog with no weak link.

OutKast consistently reinvented Southern rap, from ATLiens to Aquemini to the blockbuster Speakerboxxx/The Love Below. Every album is a landmark in creativity, humor, and experimentation without ever repeating themselves.

PJ Harvey has built one of alternative rock’s most consistent catalogs, from the raw Dry to the political sprawl of Let England Shake. Each record is distinct yet equally uncompromising, showing her restless artistry.

Radiohead never settled for formula, whether reshaping rock on OK Computer, redefining electronic influence with Kid A, or fusing both on In Rainbows. Even their more challenging turns are canonized, making their discography airtight.

Sade produced a run of sleek, soulful records—from Diamond Life to Lovers Rock—that maintained elegance and intimacy throughout. Their consistency lies in restraint, never diluting the band’s lush identity.

Stevie Wonder defined brilliance across eras, from Motown singles to the groundbreaking Innervisions and Songs in the Key of Life. His creative peak lasted for decades, and none of his albums read as disposable.

Talking Heads traversed punk, funk, and world music across eight records, from 77 to Speaking in Tongues and Remain in Light. Their shifts in sound always felt purposeful, cementing a discography free of filler.

Why Artist Comparison is Killing Your Creativity—and How to Stop

In the fast-paced world of music, comparison has become one of the most damaging habits for artists. Industry veterans note that while individuality drives careers forward, many musicians quietly sabotage themselves by measuring their success against others. The result is a cycle of creative paralysis, burnout, and missed opportunities. Here are five reasons why comparison harms creativity—and strategies to break free.

1. Comparison Activates the Scarcity Mindset

When artists compare themselves to others, the brain interprets success as scarce. This makes every achievement by someone else feel like a threat, which fuels anxiety and imposter feelings. Shifting focus to personal strengths helps restore a sense of abundance and possibility.

2. Social Media Magnifies Unrealistic Benchmarks

Scrolling through feeds full of highlight reels tricks the mind into thinking everyone else is doing better. Studies show this kind of exposure increases stress and lowers self-esteem. Limiting screen time and curating who you follow can make space for healthier creative energy.

3. Comparison Undermines Flow States

Creative flow happens when artists are fully immersed in the work, but comparison interrupts that process. Constant self-checking and doubt reduce originality and confidence. Protecting uninterrupted time in the studio allows ideas to grow without outside noise.

4. Emotional Exhaustion Follows Chronic Comparison

Living in a constant state of self-measurement drains emotional reserves and raises stress hormones. Over time, this leads to burnout, writer’s block, and even depression. Building in rest and self-care is not indulgent—it’s essential for long-term creative health.

5. Comparison Masks Personal Progress

When artists are too focused on what others are doing, they overlook their own growth. Research shows that acknowledging small wins fuels motivation more than outside validation ever could. Tracking personal milestones helps keep the spotlight on your unique path.

Bob Marley’s Isolated Vocals For “Is This Love”

“Is This Love” by Bob Marley and the Wailers was released on their 1978 album Kaya and quickly became one of Marley’s signature songs, later included on Legend. It peaked at #9 on the U.K. charts that year. A live version also appears on the 1978 Paris-set Babylon by Bus album.


Laptop Returns with Darkly Comic New Single “Additional Animals” and First NYC Show in 20 Years

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Jesse Hartman’s cult electro-pop project Laptop has unleashed “Additional Animals” – a darkly funny alt-disco track about extinction, meat, and the absurd human urge for more. It’s the second single from “On This Planet”, an album co-written and performed with his 19-year-old son Charlie Hartman.

Laptop also performs on September 3rd at NYC’s Sony Hall in support of this and earlier single “Weirder” (which went viral with 4M+ views and counting), mixed by Grammy award-winning producer Mario McNulty (David Bowie, Prince, Nine Inch Nails, Laurie Anderson, Julian Lennon). This is the band’s first New York show in 20 years, opening for British indie-rock legends Cast, whose members draw from The La’s and Shack. “Additional Animals” emerges with a Stop Making Sense-esque 13-piece “band of Animals”, uniting members from London with family talent (including acclaimed artists Odetta Hartman and Camellia Hartman) and guests from Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Broadway phenomenon “Freestyle Love Supreme” and Denise Gordon of Nevis, whose voice shines across the coming album “On This Planet”, spotlighting the project’s Caribbean influences.

Now based in New York, Laptop originally emerged in the early 2000s on Island Records with three legendary cult classic albums – “Opening Credits”, “The Old Me vs The New You” and “Don’t Try This at Home” – earning praise from NME, The Guardian, and others for its stylized blend of synth-pop, irony, and heartbreak. Now they’ve rebooted the Laptop aesthetic – part indie-pop, part satire, part family therapy session.

“Additional Animals” is as much about appetite as it is about climate anxiety, blending shimmering synths, mandolin and Mediterranean horns. An extension of classic Laptop, this witty indie-pop is a logical evolution for the band, presenting a cross-generational blend of dry wit, anxiety and synth-driven swagger.

“This song is about the human appetite – for meat, for more, for everything – and how that hunger’s eating us alive. It’s a song about extinction that you can dance to. The lyrics are a little more connected to the moment than usual for me – our failing planet, our endless consumption – but it’s still wrapped in this shimmering, international pop packaging,” says Jesse Hartman.

“We tracked the song in hip Valencia, added harmonies and Caribbean instruments in Nevis, and finished it in our hood in New York. It’s a global pop fever dream about survival, meat, and the slightly hilarious fact that humans always want just a little more.”

The video, directed and shot by filmmaker Jesse, was filmed during a surreal family summer in Valencia and features Jesse, Charlie and Jesse’s daughter Lulu, along with rooftop horn solos, fishing boats, flamenco parades, aquariums, and sun-drenched chaos – part European art film, part alternate-universe vacation video. Jesse shares, “It stars me, my kids, our percussionist Mike (who used to play with Brian Eno), and our Nevis family singer Denise. It’s chaotic and colorful and oddly hopeful – like maybe we’re not the last animals standing.”

Before Laptop, Jesse Hartman got his start as a teenage Voidoid with Richard Hell before he co-founded the indie rock band Sammy (with Luke Wood, later President of Beats by Dre), releasing albums on Fire Records and Geffen Records. Known for his dry humor and cinematic aesthetic, Hartman was once described by The Guardian as the master of “insincere sincerity.” Now joined by his son Charlie, a multi-instrumentalist and co-writer, he brings that same emotional contrast into a new era – with Laptop’s blend of deadpan pop and wide-eyed dread more relevant than ever.

With a London show coming in October and a full album on the way in the Spring of 2026, Laptop’s return is both a throwback and a reinvention – legacy pop for a collapsing planet.

Christian McBride Previews ‘Without Further Ado, Vol. 1’ With Newport Jazz Festival Performance of “Cold Chicken Suite”

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Today, nine-time GRAMMY® Award winning bassist / composer Christian McBride released a live performance video of “Op. 49 – Cold Chicken Suite, 3rd Movement,” featuring his big band from their Newport Jazz Festival set. With the full album Without Further Ado, Vol. 1 out this Friday, August 29 – featuring a who’s who of vocalists – the fiery, yet eloquent closer of the album allows for the big band to shine. Following up his big band’s GRAMMY® Award winning 2020 release For Jimmy, Wes & Oliver, the new release employs a jaw-dropping array of talent, featuring Sting, Andy Summers, Samara Joy, Dianne Reeves, José James, Cécille McLorin Salvant, Jeffrey Osborne, and Antoinette Henry to bridge eras with elegance and groove, reaffirming McBride’s status as a champion of jazz past, present and future. The album will be released via Mack Avenue Records, and is currently available for preorder here

When asked about the piece, McBride reflected “Is this really my 49th piece ever? Who knows? Opus 49 sure sounds official, though, right? In 2020, I was commissioned by the North American Saxophone Alliance (yes, NASA) to compose a piece. I composed a three-movement suite dedicated to the official food of the working musician, cold chicken. This is for all the musicians who don’t get to eat until after the gig when the chicken is cold, or you have to go to the hotel pantry and get one of those ready-made chicken caesar salads, of which the chickencan break concrete. May this piece take your mind off the dangerous late-night hunger pains.”

The live performance teaser of “Op. 39 – Cold Chicken Suite, 3rd Movement” follows “Old Folks,” a stunning rendition of the beloved jazz standard featuring 2023 GRAMMY Best New Artist Samara Joy and the album’s lead track “Murder By Numbers,” which reunited Sting with his bandmate Andy Summers for the first time since The Police’s 2007-2008 reunion tour. The single was covered by American Songwriter, Consequence, Jambase, Stereogum, SPIN,and many more. 

Having played with artists ranging from Chick Corea and Wynton Marsalis to Billie Eilish and Celine Dion, several of McBride’s artistic paths converge on Without Further Ado, Vol 1 creating an electrifying collection of reimagined classics and surprises. The inspiration and many of the arrangements for the album grew out of the annual NJPAC Gala, for which the Big Band has served as house band and McBride as musical director since 2012. “We’ve always invited a bunch of great singers to come and perform at the Gala,” McBride says, “and as musical director, I’m responsible for arranging all of the music. After so many years of writing big band charts for these incredible singers, I realized that I had stacks of music that had only been played once. This has been a fantastic opportunity to finally record some of these arrangements and to play them with some of my favorite singers.”

If there is any doubt that we are living through a vocal jazz renaissance, the multi-generational line-up of singers McBride has assembled for Without Further Ado, Vol 1 definitively settles that debate. From Samara Joy’s breathtaking version of the jazz standard “Old Folks,” to three-time GRAMMY® winner Cécil Mclorin Salvant’s burning, uptempo reinterpretation of Cole Porter’s dreamy ballad “All Through The Night”, Without Further Ado, Vol 1 is like a vocal all-star game that’s heightened by the elegance and fire of the Christian McBride Big Band. 

In 2026, McBride will launch the first ever McBride’s World at Sea cruise, featuring performances with all of his critically acclaimed bands and loads of special guests onboard, including Samara Joy.

Cameron Whitcomb Announces Debut Album ‘The Hard Way’ Out September 26 via Atlantic Records

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Acclaimed singer-songwriter Cameron Whitcomb has confirmed details of his highly anticipated debut album, The Hard Way, set for release on September 26th via Atlantic Records.

The project marks a defining moment for the rising star, showcasing an unflinching portrait of his personal journey from early struggles with addiction through recovery and into adulthood. Whitcomb’s story is at the forefront of The Hard Way, a record designed to blend vulnerability with resilience.

Leading the announcement is the new single “Fragile,” available everywhere now. Produced by longtime collaborator Jack Riley (Grace VanderWaalKnox), the track was co-written by Whitcomb alongside Riley, Nolan Sipe, and Cal Shapiro (best known for Alex Warren’s chart-topping single “Ordinary”).

Whitcomb is currently celebrating this new chapter with his biggest live run to date. The Canadian artist headlined Oro-Medonte, Ontario’s Boots and Hearts Music Festival this weekend before heading overseas for the European and UK stretch of his Hundred Mile High Tour. The sold-out run continues through early September with stops in major cities including London, Paris, and Berlin.

Following his return to North America, Whitcomb will embark on the I’ve Got Options Tour, beginning September 26th at Portland, Oregon’s Wonder Ballroom, the same day The Hard Way arrives. The trek spans through to mid-November, with nearly all dates sold out in advance.

Special guests across select dates include Danielle FinnJonah Kagen, and Tayler Holder.

Tour Dates:

09/05 – London, UK – Electric Brixton (SOLD OUT)
09/07 – Manchester, England – O2 Ritz Manchester (SOLD OUT)
09/08 – Glasgow, UK – SWG3 (SOLD OUT)

Full details, ticket information and pre-orders for The Hard Way can be found at thecamwhitcomb.com.