Cut Short are one of the most emotionally direct metal bands working in the UK right now, and their new single “Malcontent” makes that case without hesitation. Out now, the track is a hardcore-rooted gut punch about feeling trapped inside your own head, written from a place of genuine self-awareness. Vocalist Matthew Kean describes it plainly: “Malcontent is a raw, introspective track about feeling unheard and trapped inside your own mind and body. In life, we often know what will help us but when motivation is short, relief can feel out of reach.” That kind of honesty is exactly what makes Cut Short worth paying attention to. The Liverpool outfit draws from hardcore, metalcore, and progressive metal, and has already earned support from BBC Radio 1, Metal Hammer, Kerrang, and Rock Sound while sharing stages with Wargasm UK, Dream State, and Heart Of A Coward. “
18-Year-Old Banjo Prodigy Ettore Buzzini Drops Lush New Single “Flowers” Ahead of Debut Album ‘BLUE BLUE BLUE’
Ettore Buzzini is 18-years-old, a FreshGrass award winner, and one of the most compelling young voices in bluegrass right now. His new single “Flowers,” out now on Patuxent Music, is the latest preview of his forthcoming album ‘BLUE BLUE BLUE’, and it does exactly what the best bluegrass does: it pulls you in with something familiar, then reveals layers you didn’t expect. Produced by label founder Tom Mindte, the track traces its melodic DNA back through Ettore’s Swiss family heritage to Franz Liszt and Vincenzo Bellini’s opera Norma, filtered through hard-driving banjo and Ettore’s instinct for emotional storytelling. “The richness and intensity of Classical are ideal for taking bluegrass on a musical voyage,” he says. ‘BLUE BLUE BLUE’ arrives this summer featuring bluegrass legends Danny Paisley, Michael Cleveland, and Christopher Henry, and if “Flowers” is any indication, it is going to be a significant record.
Tour Dates:
Apr 11 & 12 – Durango, CO – Durango Bluegrass Meltdown
Jun 4 – Saluda, NC – The Purple Onion
Jun 19 – WDVX Summer Series, Yee Haw Brewing
Jun 19 – Greenville, NC – Poe Mill Music Hall
Jun 20 – Charlotte, NC – Charlotte Folk Society, Front Porch Concert Series
David Byrne Brings “Who Is The Sky?” Tour Ensemble to The Late Show for Stunning “When We Are Singing” Performance
David Byrne brought the full ensemble from his “Who Is The Sky?” tour to The Late Show with Stephen Colbert for a special live performance of “When We Are Singing,” and it is exactly the kind of television moment that reminds you why Byrne remains one of the most vital live performers working today.
Kool & The Gang and Default With Wide Mouth Mason Are Headed to OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino This Summer
Two major shows just landed at OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino. Funk and soul legends Kool & The Gang take the stage on August 28, followed by Juno Award-winning rock outfit Default with special guests Wide Mouth Mason on September 3. Tickets go on sale Friday, April 3 at 10:00am through Ticketmaster.ca.
Kool & The Gang need no introduction. With more than 5 decades in the game, the group behind “Celebration,” “Ladies Night,” and “Get Down on It” has sold millions of records worldwide and performed continuously longer than any R&B group in history. Their funk-driven catalogue has also made them the most sampled R&B band of all time. This is a live show built entirely on feel-good energy, and it delivers every single time.
Default brings the rock. The Vancouver outfit, best known for “Wasting My Time,” “Deny,” and “It Only Hurts,” is one of the most recognizable names in early 2000s Canadian rock. Lead vocalist Dallas Smith has since built a record-setting country career, but Default is back and ready to remind Niagara Falls exactly what a hard-rocking Canadian band sounds like live. Wide Mouth Mason joins as special guests, bringing their blues-rooted, fluid musicianship to round out what is shaping up to be a genuinely strong night.
Cathy Price, Vice President of Marketing & Resort Operations at Niagara Casinos, puts it simply: “Between the soulful rhythms of Kool & The Gang to the incredible Canadian talent of Default and Wide Mouth Mason, the entertainment options are better than ever.” Both shows go at 8:00pm at the 5,000-seat OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino, ranked the number one venue in Canada by size.
Show Dates:
Friday, August 28, 2026 — Kool & The Gang, OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino, 8:00pm
Thursday, September 3, 2026 — Default with special guest Wide Mouth Mason, OLG Stage at Fallsview Casino, 8:00pm
BritBox Gives Jane Austen’s Most Overlooked Bennet Sister Her Own 10-Episode Series Starting May 6
Mary Bennet finally gets her moment. BritBox drops the official trailer and key art today for The Other Bennet Sister, a 10-episode series premiering May 6 in the U.S. and Canada. Based on Janice Hadlow’s acclaimed novel, the show pulls Pride and Prejudice’s oft-ignored middle sister out of the background and puts her front and center, in her own story, on her own terms.
Ella Bruccoleri leads the cast as Mary, alongside a lineup that includes Richard E. Grant, Ruth Jones, Indira Varma, Tanya Reynolds, Dónal Finn, and Laurie Davidson. The series is produced by Bad Wolf, the Cardiff-based company behind His Dark Materials and Industry, in co-production with BBC iPlayer and BBC One. Nine of the ten half-hour episodes were written by Sarah Quintrell, with Maddie Dai contributing one. Jennifer Sheridan and Asim Abbasi share directing duties.
The story picks up at Longbourn, where the Bennet household hums with the pressures of Regency England and five unmarried daughters navigating a world where marriage is both aspiration and necessity. While Jane, Elizabeth, Kitty, and Lydia pursue their familiar paths, Mary leaves for London to live with her aunt and uncle on Gracechurch Street, stepping into a journey of self-discovery that Pride and Prejudice never gave her. Iconic settings from the original story make appearances, including the Meryton Assembly Ball and the Netherfield Ball.
The series debuts May 6 with 3 episodes, followed by a weekly rollout for the remaining 7. It lands as part of BritBox’s “Austen Forever” programming slate, a six-month celebration of Jane Austen’s 250th birthday covering adaptations and documentaries across all six of her completed novels. Sony Pictures Television handles international distribution.
Doug Irwin, Luthier Who Built Jerry Garcia’s Most Iconic Guitars, Dead at 76
Doug Irwin, the Northern California luthier whose handcrafted guitars became inseparable from the sound and identity of Jerry Garcia and the Grateful Dead, died on March 27, 2026. He was 76. No cause of death has been announced.
Irwin was born October 29, 1949, and spent his life doing what very few craftspeople ever get to do: building tools that became genuinely historic. Over the course of his career he designed and built five custom guitars for Garcia — Eagle, Wolf, Wolf Jr., Tiger, and Rosebud — instruments so closely associated with their player that it’s nearly impossible to think of one without the other. Tiger, which Garcia played as his primary instrument from 1979 to 1989, sold at Christie’s in New York just weeks before Irwin’s death for $11.56 million, a staggering figure that speaks to the cultural weight these objects carry. Garcia had commissioned it in 1973; Irwin spent roughly 2,000 hours over six years completing it.
That kind of devotion to craft is worth sitting with for a moment. Two thousand hours. Six years. For one guitar.
His work for Garcia began in the early 1970s after Garcia purchased one of his instruments and simply asked him to build another. What followed was one of the most consequential partnerships in rock history — not celebrated in the way that Garcia himself was, but foundational to everything that came out of those marathon Grateful Dead performances that defined an era. The guitars were visually unmistakable: ornate woodwork, brass hardware, custom electronics. They weren’t just tools. They were statements.
Beyond Garcia, Irwin also built instruments for Grateful Dead bassist Phil Lesh and bassist-keyboardist Pete Sears, as well as a small number of other custom pieces over the years. Much of that broader history, along with photographs and documentation, was lost in a fire at The Art Farm — a reminder of how fragile legacy can be, and how much depends on the people who think to preserve it.
After Garcia’s death in 1995, his will directed that the Irwin-built guitars be returned to their maker. What followed was a legal dispute with the remaining members of the Grateful Dead, eventually settled with Irwin receiving Wolf and Tiger, while Rosebud and Wolf Jr. went to GD Productions. Irwin auctioned both guitars — Wolf fetching $789,500 and Tiger $957,500, believed at the time to be the highest price ever paid for a guitar at auction. Tiger, of course, has now shattered even that record.
Garcia’s equipment manager Steve Parish perhaps said it best years ago: “We slept with these instruments. You could lose amps. You could break things, and sometimes we did. But I could never look Jerry in the eye and say, ‘I don’t have your guitar.'”
That’s what Doug Irwin built. Things you couldn’t afford to lose.
His legacy, as Irwin Guitars wrote upon announcing his death, “will live on through the instruments he created and the music they helped bring to life.”
He is survived by his work — which, in his case, is no small thing.
15 Musicians With Magnetic Stage Energy
There is a quality to make a concert a SHOW that cannot be taught, rehearsed into existence, or faked for long, and the performers on this list have it in abundance. Call it presence. Call it electricity. Call it whatever you want. You know it the second the lights go down.
James Brown
The original blueprint. Every grunt, spin, cape drop, and perfectly timed collapse was a masterclass in controlling a room, and he did it for five decades without ever phoning it in. Every performer who has ever worked up a sweat on a stage owes James Brown a debt they can never fully repay.
Tina Turner
Raw power delivered through a five-foot frame that moved like it was plugged directly into the mains. Tina Turner did not perform songs so much as survive them in public, and watching her do it was one of the most electrifying experiences live music has ever offered.
Freddie Mercury
The Live Aid set in 1985 is still the standard by which every other live performance is measured. Freddie could conduct 100,000 people with a single hand gesture, and he did it without a setlist, without a plan, and without ever breaking a sweat that the audience could see.
Mick Jagger
Strutting, prowling, pouting, and somehow still doing it all at 80. Jagger turned the front of a stage into his personal territory the moment he walked out, and no matter the size of the venue, every person in it believed the show was happening specifically for them.
David Bowie
Bowie did not just perform, he inhabited characters that felt more real than most people’s actual personalities. Every tour was a new world, a new costume, a new version of himself, and the audiences who showed up never quite knew which Bowie they were getting, which was entirely the point.
Michael Jackson
The moonwalk was just the beginning. Michael Jackson turned live performance into a discipline with standards so high that entire production teams existed solely to keep up with what his body was already doing. His arrival on any stage caused a specific kind of hysteria that has not been replicated since.
Trent Reznor
Nine Inch Nails live is not a concert, it is a controlled confrontation. Reznor channels something genuinely unsettling from somewhere deep, and the result is a show that feels less like entertainment and more like a reckoning, leaving audiences shaken in the best possible way.
Beyoncé
Flawless choreography, four-octave vocals, and a command of spectacle that makes stadium-scale performance feel intimate. Beyoncé does not leave anything in the dressing room, and her work ethic on stage is so evident and so relentless that watching her is almost intimidating.
Prince
He could play every instrument on stage better than the person hired to play it, seduce an entire arena without saying a word, and close a Super Bowl halftime show in the pouring rain as though the weather had been arranged specifically for his benefit. Prince was simply on a different plane.
Bruce Springsteen
Three hours minimum, no intermission, no excuses. Springsteen treats every show like it might be the last one, and the audiences who have been coming back for forty years still leave feeling like they got more than they paid for. The E Street Band behind him doesn’t hurt either.
Patti Smith
Pure, unfiltered conviction. Smith brings a poet’s intensity and a punk’s disregard for anything that isn’t the absolute truth of the moment, and the result is a live experience that feels less like a show and more like a transmission from somewhere urgent and necessary.
Elvis Presley
Before anyone else figured out what stage presence even was, Elvis had already invented it. The hips, the sneer, the stillness before the explosion, he rewired the nervous systems of everyone who saw him live, and the music industry has been chasing that first jolt ever since.
Kendrick Lamar
Every Kendrick live performance is a thesis statement. He brings the density of his lyrics to the stage with a physicality and intentionality that turns concerts into events, and his Super Bowl Halftime Show confirmed what his fans already knew: there is no bigger performer working right now.
Janis Joplin
She sang like it cost her something real every single time. Joplin’s stage presence was raw, ragged, and completely unguarded, a woman pouring everything she had into every note and daring the room to keep up. There has been nobody quite like her before or since.
Harry Styles
The modern template for what magnetic live energy looks like in an arena context. Styles has turned his tours into inclusive, joyful, genuinely unpredictable events where anything might happen and the audience is always in on it. He makes massive venues feel like the best house party you have ever been to.

