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Bailey Zimmerman Turns Miley Cyrus’ “The Climb” Into a Country Arena Moment

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Bailey Zimmerman has turned a live-show fan moment into an official release. His cover of Miley Cyrus’ “The Climb” is out now, arriving after months of audience response that made it one of the most talked-about moments of his current headline arena run. Listen here.

The cover entered Zimmerman’s set during the Different Night Same Rodeo Tour, his debut headline arena run, and the reaction was immediate. Fans took to social media in a wave, praising his rendition and making it clear this song had found a new life in his hands. That organic groundswell made the official release inevitable.

Zimmerman’s country-rock delivery brings a rawer edge to the song. Where the original leaned into pop uplift, his version carries genuine weight, rooted in the same gritty authenticity that built his following from the ground up. It’s a cover that sounds like it was always his.

The Different Night Same Rodeo Tour is already one of country music’s biggest live events of 2026, spanning more than 30 venues across the U.S. and Canada, with support from Hudson Westbrook and Blake Whiten. The tour is promoted by Live Nation, and the scale of it reflects exactly where Zimmerman stands in the genre right now.

Europe follows this summer. The run kicks off August 27 in Glasgow and moves through Dublin, Belfast, Manchester, London, Amsterdam, Hamburg, and Stockholm before closing September 12 in Oslo, with support from Chandler Walters. It’s a full international statement from an artist whose reach keeps expanding.

Earlier this year, Zimmerman released “Just Believe,” a collaboration with 6x Grammy-winning singer-songwriter Brandon Lake. The single marked the start of a new chapter, building on the momentum of ‘Different Night Same Rodeo’, his sophomore album that debuted in the Top 15 of the Billboard 200 and Top 3 on the Country Albums chart.

That album, produced by Austin Shawn, features a sharp roster of collaborations including Luke Combs on “Backup Plan” (which hit number 1 in September), The Kid LAROI on “Lost,” and Diplo on “Ashes.” It’s an album that confirms Zimmerman’s instinct for arena-ready country with rock at its spine.

His debut, ‘Religiously. The Album.’, remains one of the landmark country releases of this decade, delivering the biggest streaming debut for a country album in history and producing four consecutive number 1 singles, including the 5x-platinum, six-week chart-topper “Rock And A Hard Place.” The foundation he built there made everything that followed possible.

“The Climb (Cover)” is out now on all streaming platforms.

Different Night Same Rodeo Tour 2026:

Thu, Jun 4 – Airway Heights, WA – Northern Quest Amphitheater

Fri, Jun 5 – Nampa, ID – Ford Idaho Center Amphitheater

Sat, Jun 6 – Bend, OR – Hayden Homes Amphitheater

Wed, Jun 10 – Abbotsford, BC – Rogers Forum

Thu, Jun 11 – Kelowna, BC – Prospera Place

Sat, Jun 13 – Edmonton, AB – Rogers Place

Thu, Jun 18 – Toronto, ON – RBC Amphitheatre

Fri, Jun 19 – London, ON – Canada Life Place

Sat, Jun 20 – Ottawa, ON – Canadian Tire Centre

Thu, Aug 27 – Glasgow, UK – O2 Academy

Mon, Aug 31 – Dublin, Ireland – 3Olympia

Tue, Sep 1 – Belfast, UK – The Waterfront Hall

Thu, Sep 3 – Manchester, UK – O2 Victoria Warehouse

Fri, Sep 4 – London, UK – O2 Academy Brixton

Sun, Sep 6 – Amsterdam, Netherlands – Melkweg The Max

Tue, Sep 8 – Hamburg, Germany – Docks

Thu, Sep 10 – Stockholm, Sweden – Fållan

Sat, Sep 12 – Oslo, Norway – Spektrum

Michael Keating, Beloved British Actor of Blake’s 7 and EastEnders, Dies at 79

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Michael Keating, the warmly regarded British actor whose roguish charm and impeccable comic timing made him one of the most recognizable faces in British science fiction and television, died peacefully at home on April 26, 2026, after struggling with dementia. He was 79. His agent, Dan Ireson, confirmed the news to USA TODAY on May 21. Born Michael Frank Keating on February 10, 1947, in Edmonton, Middlesex, he began his acting career in the late 1960s with guest appearances across a wide range of British television productions, quietly building a foundation that would eventually support one of the most distinctive careers in the business.

His defining moment arrived in 1978 when he was cast as Vila Restal in the BBC space drama Blake’s 7, a series following a group of rebels in a dystopian future locked in struggle against a totalitarian regime that had taken control of Earth. Vila, a cunning and cowardly petty thief with a genius for picking locks and a genius equally developed for avoiding danger, became one of the most beloved characters the show produced. Keating remained the only cast member to appear in all 52 episodes of the series, a testament to both his talent and the hold his character had on audiences. The show ran until 1981 and became a touchstone of British cult television that fans carried with them for decades.

Long after Blake’s 7 ended its original run, Keating continued returning to Vila Restal through an extensive body of audio work. He reprised the role in an audio series, contributing to projects including Blake’s 7: The Liberator Chronicles, Blake’s 7: The Classic Adventures, and The Worlds of Blake’s 7, which ran as recently as 2021 and 2022. Big Finish Productions, which produced several of these projects, described him on their website as “one of the most recognisable and best-loved faces in British science fiction.” Producer Peter Anghelides offered a tribute that captured the spirit of working with him: “His cheery presence on studio days was always most welcome. I would sit at the back of the Audio Sorcery control room hooting with laughter at his comic timing in our recordings.”

A second generation of British television viewers came to know Keating through his long-running role as Reverend George Stevens on EastEnders, the BBC soap opera he joined in 2005. He played the vicar for 54 episodes across more than a decade, often appearing in connection with christenings, marriages, and funerals, as well as storylines involving regular churchgoer Dot Branning. His work on the show ran until 2017, giving him a presence on one of Britain’s most watched programs that introduced him to an entirely new audience who may not have grown up with Blake’s 7. He also appeared in Doctor Who, Yes Minister, Casualty, and Midsomer Murders across a television career that stretched more than five decades.

His stage work added yet another dimension to a career that refused to stay in one lane. Keating appeared in Alan Bleasdale’s 1985 play Are You Lonesome Tonight, about Elvis Presley, during its original staging at the Phoenix Theatre in the West End. Tributes poured in from fans and collaborators alike following the announcement of his passing. “A genuinely lovely man, and he was absolutely brilliant in every single episode of Blake’s 7,” one fan wrote. Peter Anghelides, reflecting on their years of collaboration, added simply: “What a joy it was to work with Michael.” He is remembered as an actor of warmth, wit, and lasting talent whose work brought enormous pleasure to generations of viewers on both sides of the Atlantic.

Scary Movie Is Back and It Brought the Most Unhinged Popcorn Bucket in Cinema History

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The popcorn bucket wars have a new champion, and nobody saw it coming quite like this. Paramount Pictures and Miramax just revealed the official collectible for Scary Movie, hitting theaters June 5, and it is exactly what you think it is. A bong. A full, gloriously designed, smoke-billowing, four-sizes-available water pipe shaped popcorn bucket. The official Instagram caption said it best: “Y’all weren’t ready.” They were correct.

The film, along with Miramax, Paramount and actor Marlon Wayans partnered on the Instagram reveal on May 21, showcasing what they called “the popcorn bucket theatres were never ready for,” debuting four different sizes for fans to choose “the piece that is just right.” A follow-up post then showed Ghostface himself holding the bucket with smoke swirling around it, accompanied by the line: “I’ve seen some popcorn buckets in my day, but this one smokes the competition.”

The internet instantly split into two camps. Half the comments assumed the post was a classic piece of viral parody marketing from a franchise built entirely on crossing lines. But director Michael Tiddes stepped in to kill the skepticism, taking to his own account to confirm the drop with a simple “Yes… It’s real!”

The design leans straight into the stoner comedy roots of the franchise, specifically referencing Marlon Wayans’ iconic character Shorty Meeks. Its elongated body with a globe-like base holds the popcorn, while a smaller tube appears to serve as the butter dispenser. The whole thing is an absolute masterpiece of committed promotional absurdity and the franchise’s fans are losing their minds over it in the best possible way.

The reactions online have been genuinely wonderful. “Does it work like a real one? My grandma is asking,” one comment playfully said. Others celebrated it immediately, with one Instagram user writing “Finally a multipurpose popcorn bucket!” and another declaring “This about to be EPIC.” A few fans in states with stricter laws noted with some regret that even owning a bong-shaped object could cause them legal headaches, which is a sentence nobody expected to write about a trip to the movies in 2026.

This sits inside a much larger and genuinely fascinating cannabis-forward marketing campaign for the film. PAX and Paramount teamed up on a limited-edition Scary Movie PAX Four vaporizer in an onyx colorway with Scary Movie-inspired artwork and co-branded packaging, aimed at “those who get elevated,” available while supplies last on pax.com. PAX is also producing a four-part parody series called “Don’t Kill, Just Chill” featuring Ghostface in, as the brand describes them, “absurdly chill scenarios.” A masked slasher who would rather pack a bowl than chase a victim is genuinely a great bit.

Strip away the jokes and there is a real signal here. A major studio is comfortable building an entire promotional campaign around cannabis, openly, with an official hardware partner, in a way that would have been unthinkable for a mainstream theatrical release a decade ago. The bong bucket, whether or not it ever physically arrives at a concession stand, is a cultural timestamp. This is where we are in 2026 and it is kind of remarkable.

Pricing has not yet been officially revealed, though the bucket will reportedly come in four different sizes, each with its own price point. For context, The Devil Wears Prada 2’s purse-shaped popcorn bucket costs around $40, putting the Scary Movie bucket likely in a similar range. As for where to get it, the bucket will be available when the film hits theaters on June 5 at major chains including AMC and Regal Cinemas.

After 13 years, the Wayans brothers, Marlon and Shawn, are returning alongside original cast members Regina Hall and Anna Faris. Like previous films, the new entry will parody recent hit horror titles including Scream VI, Sinners, Weapons, The Substance, M3GAN, Wednesday, Get Out, Smile, Terrifier, Longlegs, and more. The whole gang is back, the gloves are off, and apparently the concession stand will never be the same again.

How to Find the Right Producer for Your Music

Finding the right producer for your music is one of the most important decisions you will ever make as an artist. It goes far beyond finding someone with a great studio or an impressive list of credits. The producer you choose becomes a creative partner, a sounding board, a translator between the music living in your head and the recording that ends up in the world. Get it right and the results can be transformative. The music industry is full of stories of artists who found their voice the moment they found the right person to help them record it.

The first and most important step is knowing your own sound before you walk into any conversation. Producers specialize. Some live and breathe indie rock. Others have spent their careers perfecting hip hop production, country arrangements, or electronic soundscapes. According to MasterClass, the best way to approach a producer search is to start with your reference tracks, the recordings that sound closest to what you are trying to make, and work backwards to find out who made them. Producer credits are listed on streaming platforms, in liner notes, and on sites like AllMusic and Discogs. Start there and you will already be ahead of most artists who reach out cold with no idea what a producer actually does.

Once you have a list of names, the next step is research that goes deeper than a Google search. Listen to the full body of work of every producer you are considering. Platforms like SoundBetter and AirGigs exist specifically to connect artists with producers and engineers, and both include audio samples, reviews from past clients, and transparent pricing. Music Connection Magazine and Producers and Engineers Wing of the Recording Academy are also excellent resources for understanding what working professionals expect from these relationships. Pay attention not just to how the music sounds but to how consistent the quality is across different artists and genres. A great producer brings out the best in whoever they are working with, not just the ones who already arrived at the studio fully formed.

The conversation you have before any money changes hands matters enormously. A good producer will want to understand your goals, your timeline, your budget, and your vision before they commit to anything. They will ask questions. They will push back thoughtfully. Billboard has written extensively about the importance of creative compatibility in the studio, noting that the most successful artist-producer relationships tend to be built on mutual respect and honest communication rather than just technical skill. If a producer you approach never asks about your music and jumps straight to talking about their rate, that tells you something worth knowing.

Budget is a real conversation and there is no shame in having it openly. Producers work across an enormous range of price points, from established names who command significant fees to talented up-and-coming producers who are actively building their rosters and willing to work creatively on compensation. Some producers work on a flat fee per song or album. Others work on points, meaning they take a percentage of royalties in exchange for a lower upfront cost. The Berklee Online blog has a thorough breakdown of standard producer deal structures that is well worth reading before any negotiation begins. Knowing the landscape means you can have that conversation like a professional.

Chemistry in the studio is something that sounds abstract until you experience the absence of it. The Recording Academy recommends doing a trial session with any producer you are seriously considering before committing to a full project. Think of it like a first rehearsal. You will learn more about how someone works, communicates, and responds to your ideas in three hours together than you will from any amount of email correspondence. Producers like Rick Rubin, Quincy Jones, and Daniel Lanois have all spoken in interviews about how much of their process comes down to creating an environment where artists feel safe enough to take risks. That feeling of safety is not a luxury. It is the whole job.

The internet has genuinely opened up the producer search in ways that were unimaginable even fifteen years ago. Artists in smaller cities or rural areas are no longer limited to whoever happens to be within driving distance of a decent studio. Remote production has become a fully legitimate and widely accepted way of working, with artists sending stems and stems coming back transformed. Splice, Bandlab, and even direct Instagram outreach have all become real pathways to finding collaborators. The Timmins, Ontario artist who finds their perfect producer in Nashville or Bristol or Berlin is not a fantasy scenario anymore. It happens every day.

At the end of everything, trust your instincts and trust the music. The right producer will make you feel heard. They will challenge you in ways that make the work better rather than ways that make you feel small. They will care about your vision at least as much as they care about their own reputation. When you find that person, commit fully, communicate honestly, and make something you are proud of. The whole reason you started making music in the first place was to connect with people who feel what you feel. The right producer helps you do exactly that.

The Most Mesmerizing Songs Sung by Female Voices

Music has always had the power to stop you in your tracks, but certain female voices take that a step further. They don’t just stop you — they hold you completely still, rearrange something inside you, and leave you changed when the song ends. These are the songs that people return to again and again, the ones that get recommended in hushed, reverent tones by people who feel personally responsible for making sure you’ve heard them. Here are 15 of the most mesmerizing vocal performances ever recorded.

Annie Lennox — “Why”

The Diva album belongs in every collection, but Why is the one that keeps coming up. Lennox delivers it with a control and emotional weight that makes it feel like a confession rather than a performance.

Massive Attack — “Teardrop” (feat. Elizabeth Fraser)

Elizabeth Fraser of Cocteau Twins brings something genuinely otherworldly to this track. Her voice floats above the production in a way that defies easy description. You just feel it somewhere deep.

Sinead O’Connor — “Nothing Compares 2 U”

Written by Prince, owned completely by Sinead. The video, the delivery, the raw ache in her voice mean this one still hits like the first time, every single time.

Tori Amos — “Winter”

Tori builds the whole world of a father-daughter relationship into a piano ballad and never once oversells it. Multiple listeners have mentioned tearing up, especially parents hearing it for the first time with new ears.

Nina Simone — “Feeling Good”

Nina Simone didn’t sing songs so much as inhabit them completely. Feeling Good remains the definitive version of this composition and one of the greatest vocal performances ever recorded.

Kate Bush — “Wuthering Heights”

Nobody sounds like Kate Bush and nobody has ever successfully copied her. This song remains one of the most distinctive vocal performances in the history of popular music, full stop.

Mazzy Star — “Fade Into You” (feat. Hope Sandoval)

Hope Sandoval’s voice has a gauzy, half-asleep quality that pulls you under completely. This song sounds like falling in love slowly and it hasn’t aged a single day.

Fleetwood Mac — “Sara”

The line “you’re the poet in my heart” lands differently every time. Stevie Nicks delivers this one with a vulnerability that makes you feel like you walked in on something private.

Linda Ronstadt — “Long Long Time”

Heart-wrenching is the word that fits perfectly here. Ronstadt’s vocal range and emotional transparency on this track are extraordinary, and the song found a whole new generation of devoted listeners in recent years.

This Mortal Coil — “Song to the Siren” (feat. Elizabeth Fraser)

Recorded in 1983 and still sounding like it arrived from somewhere outside of time. Elizabeth Fraser appears on this list twice for very good reason because her voice simply exists on another level entirely.

Portishead — “Roads”

Beth Gibbons delivers this vocal like someone running out of reasons to stay calm. The production surrounds her perfectly, but her voice is the thing that makes it impossible to walk away.

Billie Holiday — “Strange Fruit”

One of the most important recordings in American music history and one of the most vocally devastating. Billie Holiday carried the full weight of its meaning in every single syllable.

Pink Floyd — “The Great Gig in the Sky” (feat. Clare Torry)

Clare Torry was given almost no direction in the studio and came back with one of the most stunning wordless vocal performances ever committed to tape. It sounds like the whole of human emotion in under five minutes.

Eva Cassidy — “Fields of Gold”

Eva Cassidy recorded this quietly and without fanfare and it became one of the most beloved vocal performances of the last thirty years. Her version carries a tenderness that reshapes the song entirely.

Anna von Hausswolff — “Stardust”

Anna von Hausswolff possesses one of the most commanding and haunting voices in contemporary music. Stardust showcases her ability to move between fragile intimacy and overwhelming power within the same breath, and once you hear it, very little else sounds quite the same.

Spotify Just Changed the Concert Game Forever

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Spotify just announced something that every music fan has been waiting for. It’s called Reserved, and it’s exactly what it sounds like. Starting this summer, Spotify Premium subscribers in the U.S. will have two concert tickets held specifically for them before tickets ever go on sale to the general public. No bots. No scrambling. No refreshing endlessly while scalpers clean out the queue. Just a dedicated window to buy tickets because Spotify knows you’re a real fan.

Here’s the beautiful part about how Spotify identifies who qualifies. They look at your actual listening history — your streams, your shares, your engagement with an artist over time. This isn’t a lottery. This is a reward system built around genuine fandom. If you’ve been streaming an artist on repeat, sharing their tracks, and showing up for them on the platform, Spotify sees that. And now, Spotify is going to show up for you right back.

For bands, this is an absolute game-changer. Think about what it means for an artist to know that the people filling their seats actually know the words to every song. The energy in a room shifts completely when a crowd is made up of true believers rather than people who bought tickets through a reseller because it seemed like the thing to do. Reserved helps artists reclaim that magic.

Emerging artists stand to benefit enormously from this. Smaller tours with limited venue capacity have always been the hardest tickets to get into the right hands. With Reserved, an indie artist building their audience on Spotify now has a direct pipeline to their most devoted fans. The kid who has streamed your album 300 times actually gets a shot at being in the room. That connection is priceless.

For the concert industry, this changes the entire conversation around access and fairness. The ticketing world has spent years dealing with bots, scalpers, and inflated resale markets. Reserved attacks that problem directly by validating real human fans before the offer even goes out. Spotify will actively monitor activity to make sure bots never touch these tickets. That kind of gatekeeping, done in service of real fans, is genuinely new.

The no-added-fees-from-Spotify commitment deserves a standing ovation on its own. Fans already pay for Spotify Premium. Reserved becomes a meaningful benefit of that subscription — one that pays for itself the moment you walk through a venue door to see your favorite artist. That’s a value proposition that changes how people think about music streaming subscriptions entirely.

Spotify’s relationship with live music already runs deep. Their work with more than 40 ticketing partners, Concerts Near You, Venue Search, and direct marketing support for tours has already driven over $1.5 billion in ticket sales for artists. Reserved layers on top of that existing foundation and supercharges it. This is a company that has been building toward this moment for years.

The ripple effects across the industry will come fast. When fans start experiencing Reserved for the first time this summer, word will spread. Artists will want to be part of it. Venues will feel the difference in room energy. Other platforms will scramble to respond. Spotify is setting a new standard for what a music streaming service owes its most dedicated users, and that standard is going to raise expectations across the board.

The phrase Spotify is using says it all — tickets saved for real fans. That sentence carries real weight. Live music has always been about the moment when an artist and their audience are in the same room together, and for too long the systems around ticket sales have worked against that happening naturally. Reserved is Spotify’s commitment to fixing that, and the concert industry is never going to look quite the same.

‘HELP(2)’ Is Out Now, Uniting Arctic Monkeys, Olivia Rodrigo, Pulp, and Dozens More for War Child UK

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‘HELP(2)’ is out now via War Child Records, and it’s one of the most significant charity album releases in decades. Inspired by the landmark 1995 ‘HELP’ album that raised over £1.2 million for children caught in the Bosnian conflict, the new record brings together an extraordinary roster of artists in support of War Child UK’s ongoing work delivering immediate aid, education, mental health support, and protection to children affected by conflict worldwide.

The Last Dinner Party contribute “Let’s Do It Again!,” produced by James Ford and Animesh Ravel and recorded at Angel Studios. A flawless slice of theatrical pop about the endless carousel of returning to a relationship you know you shouldn’t be in, the track showcases exactly why the band has become one of the most exciting acts to emerge in recent years. “It’s such an honour to be included on this record for a cause that is so close to our hearts,” the band says. “We’d like to say a huge thank you to War Child for asking us to be a part of the project and to James Ford for producing us.”

The album was recorded predominantly across one extraordinary week in November 2025 at Abbey Road Studios under the stewardship of James Ford. The contributor list is staggering: Arctic Monkeys, Olivia Rodrigo, Pulp, Beth Gibbons, Depeche Mode, Fontaines D.C., Big Thief, Wet Leg, Foals, Beabadoobee, Arlo Parks, King Krule, Sampha, Young Fathers, Bat For Lashes, Beck with Arooj Aftab, Damon Albarn with Grian Chatten and Kae Tempest, English Teacher with Graham Coxon, and Anna Calvi with Ellie Rowsell, Nilüfer Yanya, and Dove Ellis, among others.

Several sessions produced genuinely remarkable moments. Damon Albarn’s “Flags” saw him joined by Johnny Marr on guitar alongside Kae Tempest and Grian Chatten of Fontaines D.C. Olivia Rodrigo was connected with Graham Coxon, resulting in the legendary guitarist performing on her cover of The Magnetic Fields’ “The Book of Love.” These aren’t cameos; they’re real collaborations born from the urgency of the project.

Academy Award-winning filmmaker Jonathan Glazer served as Creative Director, working with Mica Levi on a concept built around the phrase “By Children, For Children.” Children were handed cameras and invited into the studios to film the artists recording without restrictions. Glazer’s team also worked with fixers and filmmakers in Ukraine, Gaza, Yemen, and Sudan to gather footage filmed by children on the ground in those conflict zones. The resulting visual work connects the album directly to the children it seeks to help.

The numbers behind the urgency are stark. When the original ‘HELP’ was released in 1995, around 10% of the world’s children were affected by conflict. Today that figure has nearly doubled to almost 1 in 5, representing 520 million children worldwide, more than at any time since the Second World War. War Child UK currently delivers vital work across 14 countries including Sudan, Gaza, Ukraine, and Syria.

The original ‘HELP,’ led by Brian Eno and featuring Oasis, Blur, Radiohead, Massive Attack, Portishead, and Paul McCartney among others, sold over 70,000 copies on day one and reached No. 1 in the UK compilation charts. ‘HELP(2)’ carries that legacy forward with the same collective urgency and considerably more firepower.

‘HELP(2)’ Track Listing:

Arctic Monkeys – “Opening Night”

Damon Albarn, Grian Chatten & Kae Tempest – “Flags”

Black Country, New Road – “Strangers”

The Last Dinner Party – “Let’s Do It Again!”

Beth Gibbons – “Sunday Morning”

Arooj Aftab & Beck – “Lilac Wine”

King Krule – “The 343 Loop”

Depeche Mode – “Universal Soldier”

Ezra Collective & Greentea Peng – “Helicopters”

Arlo Parks – “Nothing I Could Hide”

English Teacher & Graham Coxon – “Parasite”

Beabadoobee – “Say Yes”

Big Thief – “Relive, Redie”

Fontaines D.C. – “Black Boys on Mopeds”

Cameron Winter – “Warning”

Young Fathers – “Don’t Fight the Young”

Pulp – “Begging for Change”

Sampha – “Naboo”

Wet Leg – “Obvious”

Foals – “When the War is Finally Done”

Bat For Lashes – “Carried my girl”

Anna Calvi, Ellie Rowsell, Nilüfer Yanya & Dove Ellis – “Sunday Light”

Olivia Rodrigo – “The Book of Love”

Enter Shikari Return to North America for East Coast Headline Dates This June

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Enter Shikari are heading back to North America this June for a 9-date East Coast headline run, opening June 10th at Boston’s Paradise Rock Club and closing June 23rd at Toronto’s Phoenix Concert Theatre. The run hits New York, Philadelphia, Nashville, Indianapolis, Chicago, Minneapolis, and Grand Rapids along the way. Tickets are on sale now.

The band has built one of the most devoted live followings in rock, known for immersive productions that blur the line between concert and communal release. Their fall 2024 North American headline tour, their biggest in the region to date, sold out venues across the US and Canada with You Me At Six and Yours Truly in support. Last summer brought headline shows in Southern California and a return to Warped Tour in Long Beach. This June run brings them back to intimate rooms where they’ve always been at their most electric.

Enter Shikari consistently deliver one of the most joyously raucous live shows in any genre, combining relentless energy with a sense of collective celebration that has made them a genuine must-see act on both sides of the Atlantic.

Enter Shikari North America June 2026 Tour Dates:

June 10 – Boston, MA @ Paradise Rock Club

June 12 – New York, NY @ Irving Plaza

June 13 – Philadelphia, PA @ Theatre Of The Living Arts

June 16 – Nashville, TN @ The Basement East

June 17 – Indianapolis, IN @ Hi-Fi Annex

June 18 – Chicago, IL @ Thalia Hall

June 20 – Minneapolis, MN @ Amsterdam Music Hall

June 22 – Grand Rapids, MI @ The Pyramid Scheme

June 23 – Toronto, ON @ Phoenix Concert Theatre

Tiffany Stringer Makes Her Atlantic Records Debut With the Spite-Fueled Pop Country Anthem “Bullet”

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Tiffany Stringer has made her Atlantic Records debut with “Bullet,” a pop country break-up anthem produced by Jack Riley and accompanied by a cinematic video directed by Logan Rice. The Texas-born, LA-based singer wrote the song herself, and the origin story is exactly as good as the track suggests. “Bullet is the pop country smash I wrote after finding out my cheating ex got married,” she says. “He moved to Nashville and I decided to write a country song so he couldn’t escape the sound of my voice. I honestly started writing it out of spite, but ultimately it became a way for me to express myself and turn that hurt into joy.”

The video, directed by Logan Rice whose credits include Jessie Murph and MARINA, taps into Stringer’s love of classic Hollywood films, giving the track a visual treatment that matches its dramatic, unapologetic energy. It’s a strong opening statement for a label debut, delivering exactly what the song promises without overselling it.

Stringer built real momentum before this moment. Her 2025 EP ‘The Texas Primadonna’ earned praise from Ones To Watch as “nothing less than pop-perfection,” racked up over 20 million social media views, and drew co-signs from Halsey, Addison Rae, and Tate McRae. A sold-out debut headline show in Los Angeles followed, and more new music is on the way this year.

“Bullet” is out now via Atlantic Records.

Marc Broussard Goes All In on Blues With Joe Bonamassa on ‘Chance Worth Taking’

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Marc Broussard’s ‘Chance Worth Taking’ is out now via Joe Bonamassa’s KTBA Records, and it marks a genuine creative pivot for the Louisiana soul singer. His first full album of original blues material, the 14-track record was produced by Bonamassa and Josh Smith alongside Calvin Turner, with Bonamassa contributing guitar on 10 tracks and co-writing 3 songs with Broussard. Smith features on and co-wrote 4 tracks, and Turner joined forces with Broussard on 10 of the album’s originals while contributing to the album’s string and horn arrangements.

The album’s origin has a good story behind it. Turner proposed the blues concept and sent Broussard a folder of 15 instrumentals. What followed was 3 manic days of writing. “I would wake up at 6:00 a.m. and write until 11:00 p.m. I’d be in the studio sweating like a madman,” Broussard recalls. The songs were then refined in the studio with Bonamassa, who pushed the project further. “When we got into the studio, Joe wasn’t fully convinced we had a blues album, so he added to the songs we already had, and we wrote three others together. In the end, we got to the promised land.”

Lead singles “No More” and “Fever” are both out now. “No More” is a sweeping cinematic blues ballad with stately strings and Bonamassa’s soaring guitar framing Broussard’s yearning vocal. “Fever” delivers a slinky modern roadhouse groove driven by funky rhythm guitars, punchy horns, and Smith’s stinging leads. Together they showcase the album’s range without giving away everything it contains.

The record moves through big-band B.B. King-style arrangements on “Let Me Take You Out Tonight” and “Blame,” which features improvisational interplay between Bonamassa, Smith, and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Reese Wynans. Gospel-tinged soul ballad “Chance Worth Taking” and the timeless “Sweet Love” give the record emotional depth, while the album closes with “Laissez Les Bons Temps Rouler,” co-written by Trombone Shorty and Broussard, a brassy New Orleans send-off that feels like the natural end to this particular creative adventure.

Broussard’s signature “bayou soul” vocal, equal parts grit and grace, anchors all of it. “Man, I’m so excited about it all,” he says. “It’s time for me to move into my bluesman phase. At this stage of my life, I’m all about it.”

‘Chance Worth Taking’ Track Listing:

You’ll Be Sorry

“Trying To Do Right” feat. Joe Bonamassa

I’m Going Home

“No More” feat. Joe Bonamassa

“Fever” feat. Josh Smith

Chance Worth Taking

Let Me Take You Out Tonight

Sweet Love

These Walls

Satisfaction Guaranteed

Blame

Whispers

“Laissez Street Parade Intro” feat. Trombone Shorty

“Laissez Les Bons Temps Rouler” feat. Trombone Shorty

Upcoming Tour Dates:

May 30 – Highlands, NC @ Bear Shadow Festival