All photos by Mini’s Memories. You can contact her through Instagram.










All photos by Mini’s Memories. You can contact her through Instagram.










“Celebrating contributions of women musicians in Canada is something that we do at Spotify year-round—not just on International Women’s Day. We’ve supported more than 400 women artists through our global EQUAL program alone, and we’re continuing to champion the diverse voices of artists and creators from coast-to-coast. And as the CRTC continues its regulation of streaming, we hope they recognize the tools that help emerging and homegrown women musicians in Canada to build truly global audiences.”
“I remember the first time I hit a million monthly listeners on Spotify: it was the biggest deal of my life. I remember looking at my dad like, ‘This is it. This is the life.”
What happens when you take a historic arts district, pack it with world-class music, immersive art, and an energy that refuses to quit? You get BAD Day Music + Arts Festival, a brand-new festival taking over Wilmington’s Brooklyn Arts District on July 12, 2025—and it’s shaping up to be something special.
This inaugural event is pulling no punches, featuring two outdoor stages with a genre-spanning lineup of bluegrass, funk, reggae, house, and more. Headliners include the legendary Railroad Earth, Yonder Mountain String Band, and Daniel Donato’s Cosmic Country, with many more to be announced. When the sun sets, the action shifts to The Eagle’s Dare, where a third stage will host a headline set from Lettuce and an indoor house music afterparty curated by FEMME HOUSE.
But BAD Day isn’t just about the music. This festival is a celebration of Wilmington’s creative spirit, transforming the streets into a dynamic cultural experience, including:
🎨 Live mural painting from top-tier artists
🎭 Pop-ups, galleries, and vendor markets featuring local and regional talent
🎬 A tribute to Wilmington’s legendary film scene
🍽️ Food and drink from the city’s best local eateries
🧘 Wellness experiences like yoga and breathwork sessions
Whether you’re a day-tripper or an all-night festival warrior, there’s a ticket for you:
A portion of ticket proceeds will benefit FEMME HOUSE, a non-profit dedicated to creating more equitable opportunities for women and gender-expansive individuals in music production and behind-the-scenes roles.
Set in Wilmington, NC’s Brooklyn Arts District, BAD Day Music + Arts Festival is bringing together music lovers, artists, and cultural pioneers for a one-of-a-kind experience that will redefine what a downtown festival can be.
Mark your calendar for July 12, 2025, grab your tickets, and get ready for a day (and night) of unforgettable music and art in one of North Carolina’s most vibrant creative hubs.
For tickets and more information, visit here.
Rhino continues the career-spanning archival series honoring Robert Hunter‘s work as a solo artist with a deluxe reissue of his 1975 studio album, Tiger Rose. While Hunter is widely revered as the primary lyricist for the Grateful Dead, this series explores the depth of his solo work, offering a renewed appreciation for his exceptional artistry.
Tiger Rose (50th Anniversary Editions) will be available on March 28 from Rhino as a 2-CD (Deluxe Edition), as well as a 1-LP and digitally. Pre-order HERE.
Originally released in March 1975, the Jerry Garcia-produced Tiger Rose features contributions from Garcia, Mickey Hart and Donna Jean Godchaux. The Tiger Rose (50th Anniversary Editions) have been remastered from the original analog tapes by GRAMMY Award-Winning Engineer David Glasser using Plangent Processes tape restoration and speed correction.
The 2-CD Deluxe Edition introduces a freshly remastered version of the original album alongside nine previously unreleased alternate versions of album tracks.
In the Deluxe Edition liner notes, Jesse Jarnow (author, DJ, and cohost of the “Good Ol’ Grateful Deadcast”) deftly captures the essence of the album: “Complex and inviting, the world of Tiger Rose overflows with Hunter’s lyrical signatures, painting new corners of the already wide landscape he’d begun to map with the Dead. There are stacks of simple and beguiling images (“Dance A Hole”), cosmic advice (“One Thing To Try”), dispatches from mystical landscapes (“Rose Of Sharon”), and folkloric characters (“Wild Bill”).”
Robert Hunter’s Tiger Rose Rarities will also be available as a 1LP exclusively at select independent music retailers as a part of RECORD STORE DAY 2025 on April 12. Find your nearest participating retailer HERE.
Tiger Rose (50th Anniversary Deluxe Edition)
Tracklisting
2CD
Disc One: Original Album (2025 Remaster)
“Tiger Rose”
“One Thing To Try”
“Rose Of Sharon”
“Wild Bill”
“Dance A Hole”
“Cruel White Water”
“Over The Hills”
“Last Flash Of Rock ‘N Roll”
“Yellow Moon”
“Ariel”
Disc Two: Alternate Versions (2025 Remaster)
“Tiger Rose” – Alternate Version *
“Last Flash Of Rock ‘N Roll” – Alternate Version *
“Over The Hills” – Alternate Version *
“Ariel” – Alternate Version *
“Wild Bill” – Alternate Version *
“Cruel White Water” – Alternate Version *
“Rose Of Sharon” – Alternate Version *
“Yellow Moon” – Alternate Version *
“Dance A Hole” – Alternate Version *
* previously unreleased
Tiger Rose (50th Anniversary Remaster)
1LP & Digital
Original Album (2025 Remaster)
Side One
“Tiger Rose”
“One Thing To Try”
“Rose Of Sharon”
“Wild Bill”
“Dance A Hole”
Side Two
“Cruel White Water”
“Over The Hills”
“Last Flash Of Rock ‘N Roll”
“Yellow Moon”
“Ariel”
The Nova Music Festival Exhibition, a groundbreaking and profound tribute to the unifying power of music, the lives lost, and the survivors of the brutal October 7, 2023 attack, is coming to Toronto in April 2025 for six weeks, April 23 through June 8.
Marking its first time in Canada, the installation is a must-see experience, essential to remembering and understanding the events of the largest massacre in music history and empathizing with what happened and who it happened to.
On Friday, October 6, 2023, thousands of music and arts fans gathered for a celebration of life, peace, and music in Re’im Israel for the Nova Music Festival. At 6:29AM on Saturday October 7, the peaceful festival was savagely cut short when thousands of Hamas terrorists invaded Israel, killing 1,200 people, including 370 from the Nova Music Festival, four of whom were Canadian, and abducting more than 250, including 44 innocent civilians attending the festival.
“The story of the Nova Music Festival is one of strength, survival, love and community,” said Jesse Brown, Lead Canadian Representative, Nova Exhibition. “This exhibit is to honour and remember the victims while also hearing the heart-wrenching stories of survivors who remind the world that we will dance again.”
The exhibit is interactive, experiential, immersive, and educational. Visitors will embark on a full sensory journey through the timeline of the Nova Music Festival, reliving the harrowing events of that fateful day. Moving through the re-created festival grounds with real artifacts and evidence on display and to interact with, attendees will witness first-hand footage from the attack and hear powerful, emotional testimonies from festival survivors and bereaved family members who will be onsite daily at the exhibit. Surrounded by the actual artifacts from the festival—charred vehicles, bullet-ridden bathroom stalls, abandoned merchandise stands, and scattered personal belongings left behind in the aftermath—visitors will experience the raw, lingering impact of the attack.
The exhibition honours more than the tragic events of October 7, 2023, it celebrates the resilient spirit of the Tribe of Nova community in the immediate aftermath of that day, transforming profound loss into purposeful action.
“The Nova community is centered around light, and now more than ever we need to continue to spread that message,” said Ofir Amir, Founder and Producer of The Nova Music Festival. “It is important, as part of our core values, that we take care of our community, help lead in the rehabilitation of the Nova survivors, and make our voices heard to the whole world.”
Toronto is the third-largest city in North America and home to the world’s third-largest Jewish community outside of Israel. With hate, intolerance, and antisemitism on the rise in Canada, Nova’s impact in Toronto will go far beyond the exhibit, sparking awareness, education and inspiring all human beings to stand together to ensure such an atrocity never happens again.
“This is not a political statement. It is a reflection of what happened at a festival dedicated to love and peace. It could have happened to you, your son or daughter or friend. Come meet the survivors, meet the bereaved families, and hear about the moment music stood still,” said Evan Zelikovitz, Canadian Representative, Nova Exhibition.
“The Lawfare Project Canada is proud to bring the Nova Music Festival Exhibition to Toronto. While the Exhibition honours the victims and survivors of the terrorist attack at the Nova Music Festival, it also fosters allyship as it educates and highlights the importance of defending human rights and reaffirming our democratic values,” stated Brooke Goldstein, Director of The Lawfare Project Canada.
The Nova Music Festival Exhibition was created, curated, and directed by Reut Feingold. Since its opening in Tel Aviv in 2024 and runs in New York, Los Angeles, Buenos Aires and Miami, the exhibit has attracted over 300,000 visitors, including thousands of students, educators, political, faith-based and community leaders and members like the mayors of New York, Los Angeles and Miami, and the Archbishop of New York. Members of the music, sports and entertainment industry also attended the exhibit including Diplo, SIA, Usher, Jessica Alba, Will Ferrell, Kristen Bell, David Schwimmer and Cindy Crawford, to name only a few.
Net proceeds from the exhibition will go to supporting the Nova community including initiatives and support programs for victims and families of the October 7 massacre.
The exhibit will be held in Toronto at a venue to be announced at a later date, utilizing 60,000+ square feet of space, making it one of the largest exhibitions in Canadian history.
For tickets and information visit: novaexhibition.com
Long before he became a beloved elder statesman of American music, Tony Bennett was already cementing his place as one of the most captivating voices of his era. In this rare footage from The Steve Allen Plymouth Show in 1960, Bennett takes the stage with his signature warmth, control, and effortless charisma.
Tanya Tucker + Texas history? Yes, please! The Texas Experience packs centuries of Lone Star stories into one-minute bursts, narrated by legends. In this episode, Tanya Tucker takes us back to the fearless women settlers who helped tame the Texas frontier—because strong women and country music go hand in hand!
When the Red Hot Chili Peppers dropped Blood Sugar Sex Magik in 1991, they set fire to the entire alternative rock scene. With hits like “Give It Away” and “Under the Bridge,” the album was an explosion of funk, rock, and raw emotion that turned a cult band into global superstars. But beneath the legendary riffs and Anthony Kiedis’ rapid-fire vocals lie some lesser-known stories that make this album even more legendary. Here are five deep-cut facts about Blood Sugar Sex Magik that will make you appreciate it even more.
1. It Was Recorded in a Haunted Mansion
When producer Rick Rubin suggested recording the album in a secluded mansion that once belonged to magician Harry Houdini, the band jumped at the idea—except for drummer Chad Smith, who refused to stay overnight. Smith swore the house was haunted, but guitarist John Frusciante had a different take, insisting the spirits were “very friendly” and even adding to the album’s vibe. Kiedis, meanwhile, recorded his vocals alone in a massive bedroom, giving his performances an eerie intimacy that can be felt on tracks like “Under the Bridge.” Whether it was ghosts or just creative magic, something powerful was in the air.
2. “Under the Bridge” Almost Didn’t Make the Album
One of the band’s most iconic songs almost never saw the light of day. “Under the Bridge” started as a poem Anthony Kiedis wrote about his struggles with addiction and the loneliness that came with sobriety. Thinking it was too soft for the Chili Peppers’ funk-driven sound, Kiedis kept it to himself until Rick Rubin found it in his notebook and convinced him to show it to the band. When John Frusciante heard the lyrics, he immediately wrote the now-famous intro, transforming the song into the deeply personal anthem that took the band to new heights.
3. “Give It Away” Was Inspired by a Punk Rock Legend
The infectious energy of “Give It Away” wasn’t just about partying—it was rooted in a philosophy Kiedis learned from punk rock icon Nina Hagen. Years earlier, Hagen had given Kiedis one of her jackets, telling him that holding on to material things made life smaller, while giving things away made it richer. That lesson stuck with him, and when he heard Flea’s bassline during a jam session, the lyrics poured out. The result? A Grammy-winning anthem of selflessness that’s been fueling high-energy crowds for over three decades.
4. The Band’s Sound Changed Because of Flea’s “Less is More” Approach
Flea, known for his rapid-fire slap bass, took a different approach on Blood Sugar Sex Magik. Instead of the relentless funk attack of earlier albums, he decided to dial it back, playing fewer notes to create space in the music. He later said, “When you play less, it stands out more.” The shift allowed John Frusciante’s melodic guitar work to shine, leading to the album’s unique blend of groove and melody that set it apart from the band’s previous work.
5. “Breaking the Girl” Featured Instruments From a Junkyard
The ethereal, psychedelic feel of “Breaking the Girl” was already a departure for the band, but what really sets it apart is the bridge — created using makeshift percussion instruments salvaged from a garbage dump. The band banged on old pipes, broken pieces of metal, and other found objects to create a tribal, chaotic breakdown unlike anything else on the album. It was a moment of pure experimentation that added to the album’s unpredictable and genre-defying brilliance.
From haunted mansions to philosophical punk rock hand-me-downs, every track on Blood Sugar Sex Magik has a story. So the next time you crank it up, remember: there’s more than just funk and fire behind this record — there’s magic.