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The Weight of the Kit: Remembering Matt Krupanski Of BoySetsFire

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Matt Krupanski, the founding drummer of Delaware post-hardcore band BoySetsFire, has died. He was a co-founder of the group from its formation in 1994 and remained a member through their 2007 hiatus, returning briefly when the band regrouped in 2010 before departing for good in 2012.

The band confirmed his passing over the weekend in a statement on social media that was, frankly, one of the more honest pieces of writing you’ll see from a band mourning one of their own. No boilerplate. No careful corporate grief. Just memory after memory tumbling out — picking him up from high school for their first tour, writing songs in his parents’ basement, cigars on a beach in North Carolina, near-violent Madden sessions, a fake side project called Pussy Tim and the Mother Fuckers that accidentally played to 25,000 people. The kind of details that only exist between people who actually lived something together.

“We are gutted,” the band wrote. “Our hearts are shredded. We lost a brother today.”

Krupanski co-founded BoySetsFire alongside vocalist Nathan Gray, guitarists Josh Latshaw and Chad Istvan, and bassist Darrell Hyde. The band signed to Initial Records in 1997 and released their debut, The Day the Sun Went Out, that same year. What followed was a run of records that cemented their place in the post-hardcore canon: After the Eulogy in 2000, Tomorrow Come Today in 2003, and The Misery Index: Notes from the Plague Years in 2006. Krupanski’s drumming is all over that catalogue — driving, precise, emotionally present in the way that the best hardcore drumming always is.

After leaving BoySetsFire in 2012, he transitioned fully out of music and into a career in architecture, eventually rising to Director of Engineering at Hadley Exhibits, Inc. He is survived by his daughter, Georgie, for whom the band has announced plans to hold a fundraiser.

Tributes have poured in from across the scene. Tucker Rule of Thursday, who was part of Krupanski’s informal drummer circle alongside members of Rise Against and the Bouncing Souls, wrote simply: “I’m so sorry, totally heartbroken.” Ingo Knollmann of the DONOTS called the news “devastating.”

He was one of the people who built something that mattered, then quietly went and built something else entirely. Both things deserve to be remembered.

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.

How to Build a Fanbase Without a Viral Moment (Yes, It’s Still Possible)

Let me say something that might sound like heresy in 2026: you don’t need to go viral.

I know, I know. Every week there’s another story about some bedroom producer in Saskatoon or a teenager in Tulsa who posted a thirty-second clip on TikTok and woke up the next morning with four million streams and a manager calling. The music industry loves these stories. They’re clean, they’re cinematic, and they’re almost entirely useless as a roadmap for building a real career.

Here’s what nobody tells you: most artists who go viral don’t survive it. The attention arrives like a flood, washes over everything, and recedes just as fast. There’s a familiar arc to viral moments. A fan-driven spark leads to a song catching fire. Dances, memes, and remixes add fuel. And then, inevitably, the hype slows. If you haven’t built anything underneath that spike, you’re left with a great story and a declining Spotify curve.

So what does building a real fanbase actually look like in 2026? Let’s talk about it.

With over 100,000 new songs released daily, competing against the entire history of recorded music, emerging artists face an unprecedented challenge in building the early fanbase every successful career needs. Spotify alone paid out more than eleven billion dollars to the music industry in 2025, the largest annual payment from any music retailer in history. That sounds great until you realize how many artists are splitting that pie.

The platform itself has acknowledged the problem. As AI makes all kinds of content more abundant, human connection has become more valuable, not less. Helping fans better understand who artists are and what inspires them establishes real connections that turn casual listeners into long-term fans.

Read that again. The biggest streaming platform on earth is telling artists that human connection is the answer. Not algorithms. Not trend-chasing. Connection.

The smartest thing an emerging artist can do right now is stop thinking about global and start thinking about devoted. Industry insiders have described artists like Carly Rae Jepsen and pre-Brat Charli XCX as examples of artists who weren’t ascending to the top of the culture, but were becoming “the queen of your own underground.” From there, you can build and cultivate a solid fanbase that makes you feel like you’re topping the charts, without having to deal with the pressure of becoming the next Taylor Swift or Beyoncé.

That is not a consolation prize. That is a strategy.

Instead of trying to go viral globally, the smarter play is to go deep locally or within niche online communities. Join Discord servers, Reddit threads, or Facebook groups related to your genre. Connect with curators and influencers in your niche. Collaborate with other small artists to cross-pollinate fanbases. Show up at open mics, local festivals, or virtual showcases. Word of mouth still works. It always has. It just moves through different channels now.

Here is a truth that the music industry finds deeply inconvenient: showing up regularly matters more than showing up spectacularly. Many successful indie artists now follow a “single a month” strategy, which continuously re-engages past listeners and attracts new ones without long gaps. Consistency keeps both fans and algorithms interested. Each release is another chance to hook new listeners and remind your followers you’re still creating.

The most successful domestic acts are those nurtured over time: artists with a clear creative identity and a strong sense of purpose. The industry is rediscovering the value of patience and conviction, backing artists beyond the initial viral moment and focusing on sustainable careers built on authenticity, world-class music, and consistent execution.

Brick by brick. That’s the phrase I keep hearing from people who actually know how this works.

In a world where streaming pays artists fractions of a penny per play, more and more musicians are finding that 100 true fans on Patreon can outweigh 10,000 casual streamers in terms of both income and support.

The “1,000 True Fans” theory, first articulated by Kevin Kelly back in 2008, has aged remarkably well. The idea is simple: if you can find 1,000 people who love what you do enough to spend $100 a year on it, that’s a $100,000 income. In 2026, with direct-to-fan tools like Patreon, Bandcamp, and private community platforms, that math is more achievable than it has ever been. Community spaces and first-party data are where artists are building their real incremental following, showing what their real footprint will be, rather than chasing social media vanity metrics.

This one never goes away, and it never will. TV Girl’s songs blew up on TikTok organically, without the band actively pushing the trend or engaging heavily on social media. Instead of chasing the moment online, they focused on real-life opportunities: touring, playing shows, and making sure new listeners had a full catalog to explore. They were ready when the moment came, and that helped turn casual listeners into real fans.

That is the model. Build the live show. Build the catalog. Be ready. The thing you have control over is how good of a performer you are, and how much craft you put into being amazing live. A Tiny Desk performance might go absolutely everywhere because it can be clipped up and spread, and that comes back to being an extraordinary live performer.

Look, I get it. The temptation to chase the viral moment is real and completely understandable. When you can watch someone go from zero to a sold-out tour in eight months because of a single TikTok clip, the slow road feels almost insulting. But for every one of those stories, there are ten thousand artists who chased the same lightning bolt and got nothing.

Virality isn’t the goal anymore. The artists who win aren’t chasing trends; they’re building consistent connection. That comes from repeatable stories, behind-the-music vulnerability, song snippets, community engagement, and emotionally resonant content that makes people feel something.

The music industry in 2026 is noisier and more crowded than it has ever been. But it is also more direct. The tools to build a genuine relationship with a genuine audience have never been more accessible or more powerful. You don’t need a label. You don’t need a publicist on day one. You don’t need a viral moment.

You need good music, a clear identity, relentless consistency, and the patience to play a long game in an industry that keeps trying to sell you a shortcut.

There are no shortcuts. There never were.

Houston Grand Opera Unveils a Bold Six-Opera 2026-27 Season With New Productions of Verdi’s ‘Aida’ and Floyd’s ‘Susannah’

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Houston Grand Opera has announced its 2026-27 season, a six-opera lineup built around two new productions, a landmark leadership transition, and a roster of international stars that makes a clear statement about where the company is headed. The season opens with a new staging of Carlisle Floyd’s ‘Susannah,’ directed by celebrated soprano-turned-director Patricia Racette, with Angel Blue making her role debut in the title character and James Gaffigan on the podium in his first engagement as Music Director Designate. Gounod’s ‘Faust’ follows in a dazzling, dance-infused production from David McVicar, featuring Pretty Yende, Matthew Polenzani, and Ildebrando D’Arcangelo. Winter brings a visionary new ‘Aida’ from director Kaneza Schaal and artist Christopher Myers, with Ailyn Pérez, Jonathan Tetelman, Lucas Meachem, and Raehann Bryce-Davis, conducted by Michele Gamba in his company debut. Mozart’s ‘The Magic Flute’ arrives in a whimsical reimagining set in a 19th-century hotel, followed by Richard Strauss’s ‘Der Rosenkavalier’ in a stylish 1950s Vienna production with Tamara Wilson, Samantha Hankey, and Soraya Mafi. The season closes with Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II’s ‘Show Boat,’ conducted by outgoing Music Director Patrick Summers in his first return to HGO in his new role as Music Director Emeritus, featuring Isabel Leonard, Lauren Snouffer, Edward Nelson, and Morris Robinson.

Subscriptions for the 2026-27 season are available now at HGO.org. Single tickets go on sale June 16, 2026.

Red Dirt Torchbearers Turnpike Troubadours Extend Their “Wild America Tour” Through the Fall

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Turnpike Troubadours are pushing their headline run deep into the fall, adding major stops at Nashville’s Ascend Amphitheater, Chicago’s Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island, Charleston’s Firefly Distillery, and Atlanta’s Synovus Bank Amphitheater at Chastain Park, among others. Tickets for the newly announced dates go on sale Friday, March 27. The band is currently in the middle of their “Wild America Tour,” with upcoming shows at New York’s The Rooftop at Pier 17, Philadelphia’s The Met Philadelphia, and Boston’s MGM Music Hall at Fenway, while also joining Cross Canadian Ragweed for more “The Boys From Oklahoma” co-headline shows this spring.

The expanded tour follows a run of milestones that underline just how far the Oklahoma outfit’s reach has grown. Their surprise album ‘The Price of Admission,’ produced by Shooter Jennings and released via Bossier City Records/Thirty Tigers, debuted at No. 1 on the iTunes all-genre and country charts as well as the Billboard Digital Albums chart. The band recently received a Pandora Billionaire plaque for surpassing one billion streams on the platform, adding to a catalog that has accumulated more than 2.2 billion global streams and over 1.7 million equivalent units sold.

Beyond the music, Turnpike Troubadours have cemented their place in American culture. They performed three songs in the penultimate episode of “Yellowstone” and have become a recurring presence in Paramount’s “Landman,” with eight songs featured to date. They were also inducted into the Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame. Evan Felker, Kyle Nix, Ryan Engleman, RC Edwards, Gabe Pearson, and Hank Early have spent two decades building something that keeps growing.

‘The Price of Admission’ Tracklist:

  1. On The Red River
  2. Searching For A Light
  3. Forgiving You
  4. Be Here
  5. Heaven Passing Through
  6. The Devil Plies His Trade
  7. A Lie Agreed Upon
  8. Ruby Ann
  9. What Was Advertised
  10. Leaving Town (Woody Guthrie Festival)
  11. Nothing You Can Do

Tour Dates:

March 27 – Maverik Center – West Valley City, UT *

March 28 – Extra Mile Arena – Boise, ID *

April 11 – Boone Pickens Stadium – Stillwater, OK (The Boys From Oklahoma)

May 8 – Country in the Park – Sacramento, CA

May 9 – Save Mart Center – Fresno, CA

May 22 – Amphitheater at Las Colonias Park – Grand Junction, CO

May 23 – Ford Amphitheater – Colorado Springs, CO

June 5 – The Rooftop at Pier 17 – New York, NY †

June 6 – The Stone Pony Summer Stage – Asbury Park, NJ †

June 7 – Whittmore Center Arena – Durham, NH

June 12 – Huntington Bank Pavilion at Northerly Island – Chicago, IL +

June 13 – Michigan Lottery Amphitheatre – Sterling Heights, MI +

June 25 – Snow King Resort – Jackson, WY

June 26 – Kettlehouse Amphitheater – Bonner, MT

June 27 – Jackalope Jamboree – Pendleton, OR

July 2 – Chateau Ste. Michelle – Woodinville, WA ^

July 3 – BECU Live at Northern Quest – Spokane, WA ^

July 17 – Skyla Credit Union Amphitheatre – Charlotte, NC ^

July 18 – Beech Mountain Resort – Beech Mountain, NC

July 23 – The Wharf Amphitheater – Orange Beach, AL #

July 24 – Ascend Amphitheater – Nashville, TN #

July 31 – Everwise Amphitheater at White River State Park – Indianapolis, IN ^

August 1 – Starlight Theatre – Kansas City, MO ^

August 14 – Artpark Amphitheater – Lewiston, NY #

August 15 – Bethel Woods Center for the Arts – Bethel, NY #

August 16 – Lasso – Montreal, QC

August 22 – Memorial Stadium – Lincoln, NE (The Boys From Oklahoma: Nebraska Edition)

September 11 – New Mexico State Fair – Albuquerque, NM

October 2 – Firefly Distillery – Charleston, SC #

October 3 – Allianz Amphitheater at Riverfront – Richmond, VA #

October 9 – Synovus Bank Amphitheater at Chastain Park – Atlanta, GA #

October 10 – The Red Hat Amphitheater – Raleigh, NC #

October 24 – The St. Augustine Amphitheatre – St. Augustine, FL ~

October 25 – The BayCare Sound – Clearwater, FL ~

*with Charles Wesley Godwin and Buffalo Traffic Jam | †with Lucero | +with Muscadine Bloodline and Katie Pruitt | ^with Muscadine Bloodline and Dexter and The Moonrocks | #with Muscadine Bloodline and The Creekers | ~with Muscadine Bloodline and Drayton Farley

Grammy-Winning New Orleans Hitmakers Tank and the Bangas Announce New Album ‘The Last Balloon’ Out May 15

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Tank and the Bangas are closing out a chapter and opening a new one. The New Orleans-based GRAMMY Award winners have announced ‘The Last Balloon,’ due May 15 on Verve Forecast, completing the trilogy that began with ‘Green Balloon’ in 2019 and continued with ‘Red Balloon’ in 2022. First single “Move,” featuring two-time GRAMMY winner Lucky Daye, is out now and makes an immediate case for where the band is headed. Executive-produced by Austin Brown and recorded primarily at The Complex Studios in Los Angeles, the album also features collaborations with Ledisi, Dawn Richard, Jelly Joseph, and Iman Omari, among others.

Tarriona “Tank” Ball has been direct about the album’s intent: “I called the album The Last Balloon because I didn’t want anyone asking us, ‘When’s Purple Balloon coming?’ It’s the end of the balloons; we’re moving into a new space now.” That clarity carries into the music itself, which moves between frustration, resilience, and self-realization while keeping the joyful, high-energy live feel the band has built their reputation on. Their 2024 spoken word project ‘The Heart, The Mind, The Soul’ earned the band a GRAMMY for Best Spoken Word Poetry Album, and ‘The Last Balloon’ picks up with that momentum fully intact.

A wide-ranging tour is underway, running through the fall and into November with stops across North America.

‘The Last Balloon’ Tracklist:

  1. Rest (feat. Shirazee)
  2. Ain’t That Deep
  3. Don’t Count Yourself Out (feat. Dawn Richard)
  4. No Invite
  5. Move (feat. Lucky Daye)
  6. Go Your Own Way (feat. HaSizzle)
  7. Is It Over?
  8. Interlude
  9. Whole World (feat. Ledisi)
  10. Jealous (feat. Jelly Joseph)
  11. Honeycomb (feat. Akeem Ali)
  12. Oh Boy
  13. Nighttime (feat. David Shaw & Austin Brown)

Tour Dates:

March 26 – Savannah Music Festival – Savannah, GA

March 28 – Seawalk Pavilion – Jacksonville, FL

March 29 – Arts Park at Young Circle – Hollywood, FL

April 11 – Poetry on a Porch – New Orleans, LA

April 29 – Louisville Urban League Derby Gala – Louisville, KY

May 2 – The Joy Theater – New Orleans, LA

May 17 – Courage and Poetry: An Afternoon with Tank Ball – Cleveland, OH

June 2 – Visulite Theatre – Charlotte, NC †

June 3 – The Grey Eagle – Asheville, NC †

June 6 – Brooklyn Bowl – Brooklyn, NY †

June 7 – The Sinclair – Boston, MA †

June 10 – El Club – Detroit, MI †

June 12 – Bell’s Eccentric Cafe – Kalamazoo, MI †

June 13 – Rock the Ruins – Indianapolis, IN *

June 16 – Cain Park, Evans Amphitheater – Cleveland, OH *

June 17 – Thunderbird Cafe and Music Hall – Pittsburgh, PA †

June 19 – Lincoln Theatre – Washington, D.C.

June 20 – Cat’s Cradle Outdoors – Carrboro, NC

July 2 – Tom McCall Waterfront Park – Portland, OR

October 15 – Terminal West – Atlanta, GA †

October 16 – Terminal West – Atlanta, GA †

October 17 – Brooklyn Bowl – Nashville, TN †

October 20 – Majestic Theatre – Madison, WI †

October 21 – Club Hancher – Iowa City, IA †

October 23 – Fine Line – Minneapolis, MN †

October 24 – Thalia Hall – Chicago, IL †

October 25 – Off Broadway – St. Louis, MO †

November 5 – The Truman – Kansas City, MO †

November 7 – Gothic Theatre – Denver, CO †

November 8 – The Commonwealth – Salt Lake City, UT †

November 10 – The Crocodile – Seattle, WA †

November 13 – August Hall – San Francisco, CA †

November 17 – Crescent Ballroom – Phoenix, AZ †

November 19 – Antone’s – Austin, TX †

November 20 – Antone’s – Austin, TX †

November 21 – Heights Theater – Houston, TX †

*w/ Trombone Shorty | †w/ Ariel J

Galician Folk Trailblazers Tanxugueiras Deliver a Stunning Live Session for KEXP in Bilbao

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Tanxugueiras brought their unmistakable Galician folk sound to the stunning Iglesia de la Encarnación in Bilbao, Spain, for a live KEXP session, in partnership with BIME, and the setting could not be more fitting. The trio of Aida Tarrío, Olaia Maneiro, and Sabela Maneiro, joined by Iago Pico on percussion and synths, move through five tracks including “Todo amaina,” “O Querer,” “As que tiñan que estar,” “Quen é a que canta?” and “Pedindo Perdón,” with a vocal power and rhythmic precision that fills the ancient space completely. This is traditional music that doesn’t need to modernize itself to feel urgent, it already is.


Joni Mitchell Receives Lifetime Achievement Award at the 2026 Juno Awards in Hamilton

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Joni Mitchell was honoured with the Lifetime Achievement Award at the 55th Annual Juno Awards, held at the brand-new TD Coliseum in Hamilton, Ontario, with Prime Minister Mark Carney presenting the award in a moment that felt genuinely significant for Canadian music. Sarah McLachlan and Allison Russell delivered a medley of Mitchell’s songs as a tribute, and by all accounts it landed exactly as it should. Mitchell appeared onstage, visibly moved and clearly delighted, capping an evening that also featured Nelly Furtado’s induction into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame and performances from Arkells, The Beaches, Daniel Caesar, William Prince, and more, all hosted by Mae Martin. This was Canada’s biggest night in music living up to its name.

Multi-Platinum Country Hitmaker Mitchell Tenpenny Launches 2026 Tour With New Single “Speed of Light”

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Mitchell Tenpenny has released “Speed of Light,” a new single and music video that also serves as the title of his 2026 headline tour. Written alongside Teddy Swims, Jesse Hampton, and Dallas Wilson, the song grew out of a session built around euphoric, outer-space feeling music, and it lands exactly there. Tenpenny has been open about the personal weight behind it: with Swims already having cut his own vocal version, Tenpenny went back in and made it his own, describing it as the love song missing from his catalog. The official video, directed by Justin Key and produced by Taillight’s Matt Houser and Nick Lantz, was filmed just outside Nashville in Gallatin, Tennessee, and matches the song’s wide-open feeling frame for frame.

Ray Barretto’s Latin Soul Landmark ‘Acid’ Returns as a Wide Mono Vinyl Reissue This May

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Ray Barretto’s ‘Acid’ is one of those records that captures a scene mid-transformation, and on May 22 it returns as a wide mono vinyl reissue pressed on 180-gram vinyl, cut all-analog from the original master tapes by Dave Polster and Clint Holley, and housed in a tip-on jacket reproducing the album’s original psychedelic cover art. First released in 1968 as Barretto’s debut for Fania Records, the album arrived at a moment when New York’s Latin music scene was absorbing soul, funk, and jazz into its Afro-Cuban foundation, and The Ray Barretto Orchestra was built to carry all of it.

Recorded live in the studio without overdubs, ‘Acid’ moves across son montuno, R&B-inflected boogaloo, and jazz-forward improvisation with a working band’s instinct and discipline. The lineup featured vocalists Pete Bonet and Adalberto Santiago, bassist Bobby Rodriguez, timbalero Orestes Vilató, trumpeters René Lopez and Roberto Rodriguez, and pianist Louis Cruz. English and Spanish vocals sit side by side throughout, reflecting the Nuyorican identity at the heart of the record.

The album’s individual tracks each pull in a different direction while staying anchored to Barretto’s direction. “El Nuevo Barretto” opens with a propulsive son montuno whose opening figure would later surface in Carlos Santana’s version of Tito Puente’s “Oye Como Va.” “A Deeper Shade of Soul” features Adalberto Santiago and was later sampled by Urban Dance Squad in 1990. The closing “Espíritu Libre” runs eight and a half minutes, beginning with a percussive dialogue between Barretto and Orestes Vilató before moving through shifting time signatures and extended solos.

‘Acid’ became one of Barretto’s best-selling albums and remains a defining document of Latin soul. This reissue gives it the format it deserves.

Pre-order it here.