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Mastodon Honors Brent Hinds at First Show Since Guitarist's Death
Music

Mastodon Honors Brent Hinds at First Show Since Guitarist’s Death

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Mastodon is honoring the memory of their late bandmate and co-founder Brent Hinds.

On Friday (Aug. 22), the heavy metal band paid tribute to the guitarist during a performance at the Alaska State Fair, part of the ConocoPhillips Alaska Concert Series at the Borealis Theatre in Palmer, Alaska.

At the end of the set, drummer and vocalist Brann Dailor stepped to the front of the stage to deliver a heartfelt message about Hinds, who died earlier in the week following a motorcycle accident in Atlanta. He was 51.

“We lost somebody very special to us yesterday,” Dailor told the crowd. Brent Hinds, 25 years with us as our guitar player, one of the most creative, beautiful people that we’ve ever come across in this world, tragically left us. Very, very unfortunate. We loved him so, so, so very much.”

“We had the ups and downs of a 25-year relationship. You know what I mean? It’s not always perfect, it’s not always amazing, but we were brothers to the end. And we really loved each other and we made a lot, a lot of very beautiful music together. And I think that that’s gonna stand the test of time, evidenced by you people here tonight.”

Dailor aslo reflected on the band’s decades-long journey with Hinds. “So we will continue to play Brent’s beautiful, beautiful music that he helped us make, that we formed this band together and traveled the world together, slept in a van together, laid our heads down on beds of f—king kitty litter, got way too drunk to remember anything the next day about a thousand, million times over and over again with the love that we shared and the beauty, all the audiences that we played, for all the stages we stepped on,” he said.

He concluded, “I don’t know. We’re just at a loss for words. We’re absolutely devastated and crushed to lose him and to be able to never have him back again. But you guys made it okay for us to come on stage and do this tonight. So that was for f—king Brent, okay? Thank you guys so much. We will see you real soon.”

Hinds co-founded Mastodon in 2000 in Atlanta alongside bassist Troy Sanders, guitarist Bill Kelliher and Dailor. Over a 25-year career, the band released nine albums that charted on the Billboard 200, including The Hunter (2011), Once More ’Round the Sun (2014), and Emperor of Sand (2017) — the latter two peaking at No. 1 on Billboard’s Top Rock Albums chart. In 2018, Mastodon won a Grammy for best metal performance for “Sultan’s Curse.”

In March, Mastodon announced that Hinds would be stepping away from the lineup. The band initially claimed the decision was mutual, but Hinds later said he was “kicked out” of the group.

Following his passing on Wednesday (Aug. 21), Mastodon shared a statement on Instagram.

“We are in a state of unfathomable sadness and grief… Last night, Brent Hinds passed away as a result of a tragic accident,” they wrote. “We are heartbroken, shocked, and still trying to process the loss of this creative force with whom we’ve shared so many triumphs, milestones, and the creation of music that has touched the hearts of so many. Our hearts are with Brent’s family, friends, and fans. At this time, we kindly ask that you respect everyone’s privacy during this difficult time.”

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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"We Were Brothers to the End"
Music

We Were Brothers to the End

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Mastodon had the daunting task of playing a concert on Friday night (August 22nd) at the Alaska State Fair, just a day after learning that their longtime bandmate Brent Hinds had died in a motorcycle accident on Wednesday night (August 20th).

At the end of the set, drummer-singer Brann Dailor stepped to the front of the stage to deliver a speech about Hinds on behalf of the band. He said the following (as transcribed by Blabbermouth):

“We lost somebody very special to us yesterday. Brent Hinds, 25 years with us as our guitar player, one of the most creative, beautiful people that we’ve ever come across in this world, tragically left us. Very, very unfortunate. We loved him so, so, so very much. And we had the ups and downs of a 25-year relationship. You know what I mean? It’s not always perfect, it’s not always amazing, but we were brothers to the end. And we really loved each other and we made a lot, a lot of very beautiful music together. And I think that that’s gonna stand the test of time, evidenced by you people here tonight.

So, we will continue to play Brent’s beautiful, beautiful music that he helped us make, that we formed this band together and traveled the world together, slept in a van together, laid our heads down on beds of fucking kitty litter, got way too drunk to remember anything the next day about a thousand, million times over and over again with the love that we shared and the beauty, all the audiences that we played, for all the stages we stepped on.

I don’t know. We’re just at a loss for words. We’re absolutely devastated and crushed to lose him and to be able to never have him back again. But you guys made it okay for us to come on stage and do this tonight. So that was for fucking Brent, okay?! Thank you guys so much. We will see you real soon. Okay? I’m gonna give you guys some fucking pieces of wood, okay? We love you.”

Hinds co-founded Mastodon in 2000, and remained in the lineup until earlier this year, when the band parted ways with the singer-guitarist. In recent weeks, he had expressed anger about being let go from the acclaimed metal act.

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In a statement posted to their social media accounts on Thursday morning (August 21st), Mastodon wrote that they were in a “state of unfathomable sadness” over Hinds’ death.

Watch Mastodon’s tribute to Brent Hinds in the video clip below.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Deep Cut Friday: 'Cast No Shadow' by Oasis
Music

Deep Cut Friday: ‘Cast No Shadow’ by Oasis

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Each week, SPIN digs into the catalogs of great artists and highlights songs you might not know for our Deep Cut Friday series. 

In the constantly shifting landscape of popular music, headliners and opening acts can trade places in the space of just a couple of years. In fact, that’s exactly what happened to a pair of Greater Manchester bands 30 years ago. The Verve released its debut album A Storm in Heaven in 1993 and played several shows supported by a new band called Oasis that hadn’t yet released its first single. By April 1995, Oasis had become wildly popular, and the Verve opened a couple of their shows in Essex and France. 

Over the following months, Oasis and the Verve each released their sophomore albums, and their trajectories continued in opposite directions. The Verve briefly broke up weeks after the release of A Northern Soul, while (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? went supernova, becoming the biggest British rock album of the decade. But even as Oasis feuded with Blur and many other Britpop contemporaries, they remained good friends with the Verve. In fact, Noel Gallagher wrote one of Morning Glory’s most moving songs, “Cast No Shadow,” about some difficult times that Verve frontman Richard Ashcroft was going through. Ashcroft returned the favor, dedicating A Northern Soul’s title track to the Oasis guitarist.

The two bands’ roles reversed again, at least briefly, when the Verve reconvened and recorded the 1997 smash “Bitter Sweet Symphony,” and the band’s third album Urban Hymns actually outsold Oasis’s Be Here Now. Then Ashcroft embarked on a solo career, and Oasis carried on successfully, but rarely played “Cast No Shadow” on their post-’90s tours. Fast forward a couple decades, and a reunited Oasis have one of the biggest tours of 2025, with Ashcroft opening all the U.K. shows. And “Cast No Shadow” has made a triumphant return to Oasis’s setlists, with the band frequently dedicating the song to Ashcroft. 

Three more essential Oasis deep album cuts:

“Up In the Sky”

Noel Gallagher is Oasis’s undisputed creative leader, writing every song on the band’s first three albums. Co-founding guitarist Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs did take credit for one of the catchiest riffs on Definitely Maybe, however, in a 2014 Irish Post interview: “I came up with the riff for ‘Up in the Sky’ and he built the song around that one but generally Noel would arrive with the finished song.” Arthurs rejoined Oasis this year for the first time since 1999.

Us3's Geoff Wilkinson. (Credit: Asa Akabah-Wilkinson)

“I Hope, I Think, I Know”

Be Here Now remains one of the most disappointing follow-up albums in rock history, partly because nearly every song is about twice as long as it needed to be. One exception is the charging “I Hope, I Think, I Know,” which gets to the point in a relatively restrained 4 1/2 minutes.

“Fuckin’ in the Bushes”

Oasis’s 2000 album Standing on the Shoulder of Giants opened with a funky, psychedelic instrumental, which featured a loop of a ’60s concert promoter declaring “The kids are running around naked, fucking in the bushes” sampled from the 1995 documentary Message to Love: The Isle of Wight Festival. Walmart stores declined to sell Oasis’s fourth album due to the profane song title. Instead of performing “Bushes” live, Oasis would use the track as their pretaped intro music at concerts, a practice that’s been revived for the Live ‘25 Tour. 

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Regina King Opens Up About How Son's Death Changed Her Outlook On Life
Music

Regina King Opens Up About How Son’s Death Changed Her Outlook On Life

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Regina King is opening up about how the death of her son Ian has transformed her perspective on life. The acclaimed actress says the event has led her to be more present and even inspired a meaningful entrepreneurial venture.

In her new Haute Living cover story, the Shirely actress said,

“I think in life, it’s harder and harder to have those meaningful moments. And that’s why, when I have them now, they feel even more special. We have them less and less as time goes on, and we have to work harder to have them.” When speaking about how she lives differently now while carrying grief, she said, “I one thousand percent live in the moment more. I don’t know if that’s something that just comes with time, or with pain, or with the pandemic — probably all of it. But I feel it.”

Her son Ian died by suicide in January 2022 at the age of 26. He was her only child and she shared him with her ex-husband, Ian Alexander Sr..

The Oscar-winning actress is focused on keeping her son’s memory alive in her life, most recently in the form of an orange wine. Her newly launched brand is named MianU — short for “me and you” — and was inspired by the wine Ian introduced her to.

“It was kind of an epiphany I had that came from a place of continuing to create memories in Ian’s spirit. I’m still here, on this plane, separate from him, and I’m surrounded by people talking about their children — engagements, weddings, new chapters — [while mine is gone],” she told the outlet. “I still love talking about Ian: I just don’t have the chance to create new memories in the way they do. But I’m not focused on that. This is my way of creating something new, together.”

The wine is deeply meaningful to her because it reminds her of her son constantly, with each and every moment. “Every time a cork opens, or every time I’m pouring a glass, I’m thinking of Ian. I’m thinking of him 24/7 anyway, but always in this moment, I can see his face. And for people who never got the chance to dance with Ian, maybe they’ll be curious. Maybe they’ll ask. His name is right there, in the middle of it all. He’ll never be forgotten… If you see me, you see Ian,” she said.

Another way the Boondocks talent also aims to keep her son with her at all times is by intentionally speaking “about him in the present, because he’s always with me,” and remembering “the joy and happiness that he gave all of us.”

To shop MianU wines, head to their official site and view King’s announcement here.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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The Smiths’ Mike Joyce to Publish Autobiography, The Drums
Music

The Smiths’ Mike Joyce to Publish Autobiography, The Drums

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

The Smiths drummer Mike Joyce has announced his autobiography. The Drums offers a frontline view of the band’s story from “the self-confessed biggest Smiths fan in the world,” as the product description puts it. “His off-piste, frank and witty perspective allows him to re-contextualise fan favourite moments through a beautifully vulnerable, human insight into his life.” The Drums is due for release on November 6.

New Modern, an imprint of HMV owner Doug Putman’s new Putman Publishing house, is behind the publication. Beyond international postage, details of a North American release have not been revealed.

In 2013, Morrissey published the first Smiths memoir, the slightly notorious Autobiography, which he managed to get released via the august imprint Penguin Classics. Johnny Marr followed suit with Set the Boy Free in 2016.

Smiths bassist Andy Rourke, who played alongside Joyce with Sinéad O’Connor after the band’s dissolution, died of pancreatic cancer in 2023.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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The Last Dinner Party lead boycott of Victorious as The Mary Wallopers hit back and festival respond
Music

The Last Dinner Party lead boycott of Victorious as The Mary Wallopers hit back and festival respond

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

The Last Dinner Party are among a group of artists to have boycotted Victorious Festival after The Mary Wallopers’ set was cut short for displaying a Palestinian flag.

On Friday (August 22), the Irish band were halfway through their opening song at the Portsmouth festival when their sound was cut by festival organisers and the Palestine flag on stage with them was taken away. As the crowd started to boo, the band led a chant of “free, free Palestine”.

The Mary Wallopers updated fans on Saturday with an Instagram post reading: “Yesterday, a famine was declared in Gaza, where at least 65 people were killed by Israeli attacks, all the while Israel pushed ahead with plans to split the West Bank in two. These are the important facts about yesterday.”

Alongside an unedited video of their set being cut short, they added: “The festival have released a misleading statement to the press claiming they cut our sound because of a discriminatory chant and not the band’s call to Free Palestine. Our video clearly shows a Victorious crew member coming on stage, interfering with our show, removing the flag from the stage and then the sound being cut following a chant of ‘Free Palestine’. The same crew member is later heard in the video saying, ‘you aren’t playing until the flag is removed’.”

“We completely reject Victorious’ portrayal of today’s events and request that they retract their statement immediately. We know this is getting some attention and we don’t want another distraction which takes attention away from the genocide that is happening in Palestine,” they added.

Now, a number of other artists have announced they will not be playing at Victorious this weekend, including The Last Dinner Party, The Academic and Cliffords.

“We are outraged by the decision made to silence The Mary Wallopers yesterday at Victorious,” The Last Dinner Party wrote in a statement. “As a band we cannot cosign political censorship and will therefore be boycotting the festival today.”

“As Gazans are deliberately plunged into catastrophic famine after two years of escalating violence, it is urgent and obvious that artists use their platform to draw attention to the cause. To see an attempt to direct attention away from the genocide in order to maintain an apolitical image is immensely disappointing.”

“Throughout this summer we have used our stages to encourage our audience to donate even a drink’s worth of money to Medical Aid for Palestinians, and today we urge you more than ever to do the same,” they continued.

“We are so deeply sorry to our fans who were looking forward to seeing us today, and we are devastated to be put in this position that upsets both us and you.”

The Mary Wallopers’ fellow Irish artists The Academic and Cliffords have also pulled out of the festival. The Academic said they “can’t in good conscience stand up and play at a festival that silences free speech and the right to express your views”, while Cliffords said, “we refuse to play if we are to be censored for showing our support to the people of Palestine”.

On Friday, Victorious told NME that “although a flag was displayed on stage contrary to our policy, and this was raised with the artist’s crew, the show was not ended at this point, and it was the artist’s decision to stop the song. The decision by the event management to cut the sound and end the performance was only taken after the band used a chant which is widely understood to have a discriminatory context.”

The festival has since posted a statement that said they “didn’t handle the explanation of our policies sensitively or far enough in advance to allow a sensible conclusion to be reached. This put the band and our own team in a difficult situation which never should have arisen. We would like to sincerely apologise to all concerned.”

Posted by Victorious Festival on Saturday, August 23, 2025

“We absolutely support the right of artists to freely express their views from the stage, within the law and the inclusive nature of the event,” they added. “Our policy of not allowing flags of any kind, which has been in place for many years for wider event management and safety reasons, is not meant to compromise that right.”

“We accept that, although mics remained live for longer, sound for The Mary Wallopers’ audience was cut as described in the band’s video and that comments after that were not audible to the public. We are sorry that this situation has come about and will be making a substantial donation to humanitarian relief efforts for the Palestinian people.”

Victorious is one of many festivals to be operated by Superstruct Entertainment, which is owned by the controversial global investment firm KKR, which has been criticised by many artists for its alleged stakes in weapons manufacturing companies and Israel corporations operating in the occupied Palestinian territories.

Several other festivals that are backed by KKR have addressed their concerns about the connection. Tramlines said they would “never send them a single Euro”, while Mighty Hoopla stated their “clear opposition to KKR’s unethical investments”.

One group of 50 artists, which included Massive Attack and Brian Eno, signed an open letter urging Field Day to distance itself from KKR in May, while another 11 artists announced that they were boycotting the festival in solidarity with Palestine.

Victorious Festival is running on the Southsea seafront this weekend, with Kings Of Leon, Queens Of The Stone Age and Vampire Weekend topping the bill.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Grenada’s Carnival is Full of African History, Resistance, and the Some of the World’s Best Parties
Music

Grenada’s Carnival is Full of African History, Resistance, and the Some of the World’s Best Parties

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

The night after J’ouvert, the pinnacle of Grenada’s annual carnival, I cried and cried. All over the Caribbean and throughout its diaspora, the consecutive days of reverie known as carnival or mas are traditions rooted in African ancestral connection and resistance to colonization and slavery. This weekend, Londoners will celebrate Notting Hill Carnival, a multi-cultural evocation of Caribbean heritage maintained by their large West Indian immigrant community. On Labor Day, New Yorkers will do the same in Brooklyn. At a distance, the staunch political history of carnival can be easy to overlook on Instagram feeds full of beautiful Black people clad in feathers and rhinestones or neon paint and charcoal. But on the ground for Grenada’s carnival – dubbed Spicemas for the island’s trove of nutmeg, mace, cloves, and cinnamon – that legacy of rebellion is inescapable. 

By 3:30 AM J’ouvert morning – a time named for the French colonizers’ term for dawn – I was up, slipping on some basketball shorts and a sports bra that I knew could be tossed out. I wrapped my shower-capped hair in a long black scarf that could go too. For J’ouvert, Grenadians “play”  – in the customary nomenclature – Jab Jab, a centuries old tradition of blackening their skin with molasses and tar (or, more recently, motor oil or sustainable charcoal oil), donning horned helmets, and parading to their distinct sub-genre of soca music. Post-emancipation, it became a satirical take on the way white masters saw Black folks – as subhuman and grotesque – and reflect the horrors of slavery back to them. The term Jab Jab itself comes from the French term for devil. Though Grenada’s Jab Jab is distinct, it’s a ritual that spans the West Indies, where Caribbeans marched to say, “You think I’m a Black demon? I’ll show you a Black demon.” 

When my travel group of journalists and influencers – sponsored by the Grenada Tourism Authority and its media partners – made it to the busy downtown streets just before sunrise, the roads were flush with youth throwing flames into the air with lighters and cans of bug spray and dragging chains like the ones that tethered their ancestors to ships across the Middle Passage. They jumped and moshed to dark, intense soca from the local stars of the season, especially the riotous “Bury All” by Lil Kerry. Some toted hyperrealistic props of bloody octopus tentacles in their mouths. There were a few Scream masks. As night grew to day, I saw the age range widen – elders danced joyfully in their black paint, a father doused his school-aged sons in oil as they splashed and played. I let random men pour their tubs of motor oil on me. I danced and marched for miles. I had never felt so free, so powerful, or so connected in a sea of strangers.  So, that night, after bathing in the crystal blue ocean with sand and dish soap alongside hundreds of others (and two more showers), I wept in the bed of my Sandals suite.

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Some tears were of pain. About 11 percent of Africans brought to Grenada as slaves between 1669 and 1808 are believed to have been Sierra Leonean, like my parents, whose direct lineage avoided the ships by grace alone. Many Grenadians are believed to be descendants of our own Temne tribe. I cried for those stolen from Sierra Leone and for the colonial shambles the country is still in. I cried for everything my family has continued to endure there. There were also tears of pride for all the resilience around me – my immigrant mother’s resolution to thrive, my dead grandmothers’ resolution to love, and the Grenadian resolution to carry Jab Jab traditions from African coasts to Caribbean plantations to the very city streets I walked so brazenly that day. I cried because with every video I WhatsApped my mom of Grenada’s rolling hills, bright architecture, national dishes, skilled drummers, and limber dancers, she messaged back, “This might as well be Sierra Leone.” Grenada’s Spicemas felt more African than I could have ever imagined. As the world shrinks for Africans, with growing travel to places like Lagos, Accra, Johannesburg, and Cape Town, carnival in Grenada strikes me as a necessary diasporic destination, too. 

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“We want people to come to experience our culture and to do so respectfully,” says Fiona Compton, founder of Know Your Caribbean, an educational platform for West Indian culture and history with nearly half a million Instagram followers. Compton is the daughter of St. Lucia’s first Prime Minister, Sir John Compton. She began obsessively studying Caribbean archives after seeing reductive representation of her people as a college student in London. “Take the initiative to come and to learn why it is we do what we do, so that way the culture will not become a parody of ourselves,” Compton warns potential visitors. “People realize you put on the horns to remind people of the evils of what we come from. We’re not here to just perform and just be some pretty characters,” she says, nodding to the popular Fancy Mas traditions of Carnival Tuesday, which can be an expensive outing of bejeweled body suits, elaborate feathered wings, professional make-up, and endless rum and food. It’s important as a deeply carnal celebration of freedom, and like J’ouvert, it too serves a real purpose. “We are here to go into something that’s deeply spiritual.”

You can hear the Grenadian reverence for their traditions in the very songs that soundtrack carnival, blasted from 16-wheeler sound systems. One of the tenants of Spicemas is Soca Monarch, a competition at the national stadium where local artists perform songs made specifically for the season in massive productions. “Culturally, my island full of history,” sings L.E.D. on the song he competed with, “Viral Again.” “So happy to my neighbor/My neighbor happy to see me/Nobody here is strangers/One big family/We serving one creator/And we play mas tremendously.” It rides the same riddim, or beat, as Muddy’s “Payroll,” which earned him the Soca Monarch title. “Payroll” is absolutely electric, with a moving music video of he and a crew playing Jab Jab like an army. “When stars align/Greatness outshines all hatred in space and time,” Muddy chants in the song’s stirring first moments. “And still we rise/With grace and with faith in the morning, with chains and oil.”

While I spent Spicemas in the capital of Saint George’s, where there are the most populous gatherings, Jab Jab musician, historian, and preservationist Ian Charles tells me there’s a distinct authenticity to J’ouvert in the more rural parishes where massive plantations once dominated. “If you’re looking for hardcore, pristine cultural drums on the road, no big music trucks, you got to go up to Saint Andrew and Saint Patrick,” he says. While the jab music of Soca Monarch is digitized and modern, like Afrobeats, in its traditional form, Grenadian jab soca consists of a three-hand-drum system – one for bass, one for melody, and one called a “kupai,” akin to the French word for “to cut.” Jab Jab players use the goat-skin dùndún drum of Nigerian, Yoruba lineage and the Malian djembe drum. The drum patterns, says Charles, are not far off from that of genres like Fuji and Juju. On top of these rhythms, there’s call and response storytelling, and the blows of a conch shell. 

All these elements, Charles and Compton explain, were inherited from Africa. “The drum was used for lots of things,” says Compton. “It’s conjuring spirits, it’s sending secret messages, and it was inciting the spirit of rebellion. In my research, looking at many of the rebellions of enslaved people across the Caribbean, the drum was always used in a ceremony just before. Now, people hear the drum and we cannot help but start moving. It lights up something inside of us.” Because of the revolts, Compton says, drumming and African spiritual practices were eventually criminalized in the colonies. As Black instruments were confiscated and burned, the new Caribbeans would abandon their plantations to perform secret rites in the forests, or remake their tools entirely. “That’s how the invention of steel pan [drumming] happened,” Compton says as an aside. “Because all forms of African percussion were made illegal in Trinidad well into the 1930s, so Trinidadians decided to rebel against that. Trinidad has oil, so they had all of the surplus of oil drums. They were saying, ‘We’re not going to adhere to these laws; we’re going to create a whole new style of music.’”

One of the moments that moved me most was seeing a massive Ghanaian flag waving majestically in the Soca Monarch crowd as I watched from a suite high above the stadium at first. Throughout carnival, there are flags everywhere – people swing them above their heads, tie them to their waists, and hoist them high from poles. There are all kinds of flags too – mostly Caribbean, but I later met a queer Hondouran with their flag, and spotted a few Nigerians too. Yet, Soca Monarch was my first night of Spicemas, and I immediately felt at home. My family played so much soca at our parties that as a child, I assumed it was African music. Seeing a West African flag so prominently and so seamlessly signaled to me I was somewhere I belonged. I happened to run into the Ghanaian crew with the towering Black Star at Fancy Mas, and bolted to them. We embraced like old friends. One of them is a neurosurgeon where I live. Another told me they always travel the world as a group, and Spicemas felt like somewhere they belonged, too.

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Dr. Shantel George, an Afro-Caribbean history scholar at the University of Glasgow, found that  at the heights of the slave trade in Grenada, between 1669 and 1808, 33 percent of captives came from ports at the Bight of Biafra, representing tribes we now think of as Nigerian, like the Igbo. Another 21 percent came from the Gold Coast, likely people from present-day Ghana and Burkina Faso. Fourteen percent came from what was known as the Windward Coast; today, Ivory Coast and Liberia. Eleven percent came from West-Central Africa, incorporating folks from the Kongo kingdom and modern Gabon. Another five percent were likely of the Mandingo, Bambara, Malinke, Wolof, and Fulbe tribes of the Senegambia port, and the last portion were thought to be of the Bight of Benin, kidnapped from places in modern Benin and Lagos, Nigeria. 

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Once in Grenada as a hodgepodge of stolen people, they reformed themselves into new ethnic groups and developed a tradition called Nation Dance, weekly spectacles where these emerging families represented themselves. “Nation Dance exemplifies the ways in which peoples were able to resist racial slavery through the formation of new diasporic identities and relationships which drew on their African experiences,” George cites. They elected kings and queens in masquerades like the ones of Spicemas now. I say all this to say that while Spicemas is distinctly Grenadian, it is also very African, and proudly so. It’s worth seeing for yourself. 

Made in Africa is a monthly column by Rolling Stone staff writer Mankaprr Conteh that celebrates and interrogates the lives, concerns, and innovations of cultural workers of the African diaspora from their vantage point. Check out our Made in Africa playlist, updated with the hottest Jab Jab songs from Spicemas.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Live Nation Stock Hits Record, Sphere Entertainment Posts Big Gain
Music

Live Nation Stock Hits Record, Sphere Entertainment Posts Big Gain

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Gains by some live entertainment stocks and solid performances by multi-sector companies were overshadowed this week by German concert promoter CTS Eventim’s double-digit decline and a more modest single-digit drop from Spotify.

CTS Eventim shares fell 16.6% to 81.20 euros ($95.18) this week following Thursday’s mid-year results that showed a sharp decrease in adjusted EBITDA despite the concert promoter achieving record revenue. Numerous analysts reacted by decreasing their price targets. The most drastic revision came from Oddo BHF, which reduced its price target to 86 euros ($100.81) from 117 euros ($137.15) and downgraded its rating to “neutral” from “outperform.” 

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In addition, Bernstein lowered its CTS Eventim price target to 100 euros ($117.22) from 104 euros ($121.91) and maintained its “outperform” rating. Deutsche Bank dropped its price target to 109 euros ($127.77) from 117 euros ($137.15) but kept its “buy” rating. MWB Research lowered its price target to 100 euros ($117.22) from 105 euros ($123.08) and upgraded its rating to “buy” from “hold.”

The Billboard Global Music Index (BGMI) dropped 2.6% to 3,023.51, breaking a two-week winning streak and lowering the index’s year-to-date gain to 42.3%. Winners outnumbered losers 10 to 8, and one company, Deezer, was unchanged. 

Major indexes were mixed this week. In the U.S., the Nasdaq fell 0.6% and the S&P 500 gained 0.3%. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 improved 2.0%. South Korea’s KOSPI composite index dropped 1.8%. China’s Shanghai Composite Index rose 3.5%. 

Other than CTS Eventim, live entertainment companies posted solid gains. Live Nation reached a new record of $166.54 on Friday and closed at $165.72, up 3.0%. Earlier in the week, MoffettNathanson initiated coverage of Live Nation with a $195 price target and Wolfe Research increased its price target to $177 from $173. 

The two Dolan family-controlled live entertainment companies bounced back from an off week. MSG Entertainment was the week’s biggest gainer, rising 6.8% to $39.33. Sphere Entertainment Co. rose 6.5% to $42.46. A week earlier, MSGE shares fell 3.1% after the company’s earnings announcement revealed a 74% decline in fiscal year net profit and Sphere Entertainment shares fell 1.0% following second quarter earnings. 

Music streaming companies produced more losers than winners. Spotify fell 5.4% to $692.99, lowering its gain in 2025 to 48.5%. LiveOne slipped 6.3% to $0.60. Tencent Music Entertainment dropped 0.8% to $25.35, although it’s still up 127.4% this year. Netease Cloud Music gained 2.5% to 287.00 HKD ($36.73), bringing its year-to-date gain to 155.8%. 

Multi-sector companies’ stocks performed well, with Reservoir Media (up 5.1%), Warner Music Group (up 3.8%), HYBE (up 0.7%) and Universal Music Group (up 0.6%) posting gains. SM Entertainment and JYP Entertainment fell 2.8% and 2.9%, respectively  

Billboard

Billboard

Billboard

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Earl Sweatshirt Is Finally Ready to Live Laugh Love: Review
Music

Earl Sweatshirt Is Finally Ready to Live Laugh Love: Review

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

It can be difficult to tell when Earl Sweatshirt is happy on wax. In his defense, he’s been through a lot since EARL, his breakthrough mixtape in 2010. By 2015’s I Don’t Like Shit, I Don’t Go Outside, he had established himself as a stark, brooding lyricist who was consumed by the life brewing within him and around him. With each subsequent release, Earl has moved closer and closer to understanding, only to be yanked back by the circumstances of humanity. He’s lost his father, and become a father and partner; found his creative community and shed dead weight. On Live Laugh Love, titled after the overused suburban wall décor phrase, Earl finds contentment and comfort in his growth and faith — unironically.

With his latest album, Earl sounds like a man made anew. Through warbling, funk-fueled production provided by Queens rapper/producer Theravada on the album opener, “gsw vs sac,” you can hear the smile in Earl’s voice as he processes his place in life. “Every day, I lace my cleats and give Him praise, get your head in the game,” he raps, firmly establishing his beliefs. Earl cedes the last minute of the song to a character who stands in as a source of comical inspiration. “You wanna chase instead of find,” the voice says humorously. “What you running from, yourself?” Together, Earl and his accompanying guest encourage us to find our purpose in our own time and not a moment sooner.

Earl has long been on a path of self-discovery, and he’s using Live Laugh Love to catch us up on his hard-earned progress. On Theravada’s “INFATUATION,” pumped full of soul samples and chiming keys, Earl raps about the lessons he’s been taught by life itself. “Flirts with danger, we hastily learn how to dance,” he spits, before sharing that he’s “gleaning what I can from what I have amassed.” At the end, Earl recalls the less-fortunate circumstances he’s come from, before snapping back to his blessed present: “The low hum of hunger had my stomach singing a song of sadness, wishing that it wasn’t flat/ Tonight, we dining where?” He has the gravitas and willingness to revisit the depths of his most formative moments, while still appreciating and reveling in his current position.

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Any writing about Earl you come across will inevitably involve the word “dense.” From his lyrical delivery to the production he prefers to rap over, Earl’s approach is concentrated in its compacted intensity. He stretches and pulls syllables like a taffy machine, inventing his very own relationship with words over production that scatters your brain at max volume. In particular, the weighty beats crafted by Detroit DJ/producer Black Noi$e give Earl copious opportunities to parse through his own streams of thought. “Live” opens with echoing drums and tinging cymbal, sounding considerably brighter than the songs that preceded it. You can almost envision Earl gripping a mic as he spits closely to it, an intimate display of heightened concentration. The beat switches exactly halfway through to a reverberating video game-inspired soundscape, as Earl borderline mumbles under his breath: “My stronghold faith what’s keeping me whole.” The clash of sound over voice can be difficult to understand at times (a recurring issue throughout Live Laugh Love), but it gets at the heart of Earl’s present focus.

Earl has famously overcome boarding school and the trappings of teen fame, but depression has been lingering in his peripheral for years. The anthemic “Static,” also produced by Black Noi$e, feels triumphant compared to the rest of the album, and even the majority of Earl’s discography — he sounds vocally clear and inspired to talk his shit. Somehow, he manages to string together a film reference that doubles as a call-back to a historical prison performance, and tops that with a hat-tip to both Prince and Future: “Let it Sing Sing on you like a Voice from East Harlem/ Easy target, three-ball, game blouses/ Let the purple rain douse ’em/ I thought it was a drought?” Earl is having more fun with spinning bars out of his complex experiences, be they traumatic or joyful. Even his simplistic flexes ring out louder than the hardest lyrics from mainstream rappers.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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Us3's Geoff Wilkinson. (Credit: Asa Akabah-Wilkinson)
Music

5 Albums I Can’t Live Without: Geoff Wilkinson of Us3

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Name  Geoff Wilkinson 

Best known for  If you’ve never met me—“Cantaloop (Flip Fantasia).” 
If you have met me—my natural wit and charm, of course! 

Current city  London.

Really want to be in  London (although like most Brits I still dream of living next to the sea—we do live on an island after all).

Excited about  The new (all instrumental) Us3 album – release date 22nd August 2025. 

My current music collection has a lot of  Jazz.

Oasis' Noel and Liam Gallagher in London in 1995. (Credit: Dave Hogan / Getty Images).

And a little bit of  Hip-hop, trap, Afrobeats, Amapiano.

Preferred format  I use all the above to listen to music, although I confess I use streaming more than anything else simply because of the ease of it. My advice – buy the best pair of computer speakers you can afford. I use Bowers & Wilkins (no relation) MM1s – now discontinued sadly but sound great. 

5 Albums I Can’t Live Without:

1

Still Life (Talking), Pat Metheny Group

This is undoubtedly my most played album ever, and has been since its release in 1987. This album has been a constant companion throughout my life, and I still love it. So many memories. A great album to listen to whilst travelling. A unique combination of jazz, Brazilian music, folk, and even country influences, all done with a deep emotional warmth. A group absolutely at the top of their game, and were spellbinding live, too. The blending of wordless vocals into the mix was a masterstroke. Keyboardist Lyle Mays was also the perfect collaborator for Metheny and their solos often blend seamlessly into each other’s, perfectly illustrated on “So May It Secretly Begin”. This album came out at the height of the “smooth jazz” phenomenon, and was often wrongly categorized as that. Anyone who thinks this is smooth jazz has got their head on upside down! I find it impossible to listen to this album at a low volume, turn it up loud and you will get it! 

2

Seven Days of Falling, Esbjörn Svensson Trio

This album redefined the sound of a jazz piano trio to me, they seemed to drag it kicking and screaming into the 21st century. So many jazz artists appear to have the attitude of “the more notes the merrier” and end up disappearing up their own backsides, but this is both complex and simple often at the same time, a brilliant trick to pull off. The subtle use of electronic effects is clever and sets this apart. This is a modern jazz album, with the emphasis on modern. I thought this would trigger more jazz artists to experiment with electronics, but it didn’t have that effect (shame!), and for that reason this still sounds unique. This is another album that I played relentlessly on my headphones whilst travelling with the Us3 band, and it still reminds me of driving through a massive forest of silver birch trees in Poland in the snow. 

3

Computer World, Kraftwerk

In my eyes the most influential band of all time. These guys didn’t just influence other artists, they influenced whole genres! And you can hear it all on this album. Hip-hop, electro, house, techno just wouldn’t have been the same without these four weird German guys. I was a 20-year-old student and DJing in a club at weekends when this came out, and the highlight of my week was always playing “Numbers” (the most wibbly track ever) at ear-splitting volume in the club! The whole album still sounds like something from outer space to me, I love it. 

4

Mosaic, Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers

This album is the definition of hard bop; it’s the aural equivalent of an iron fist in a velvet glove. Listening to the title track feels like riding a wild horse, sometimes the band lean back as one, sometimes they drive forward at a furious pace. And Blakey’s 2.45 second drum solo in the middle is a tour de force. According to Wikipedia there were no alternate takes recorded—that’s because they got it perfect first time around—ha! Although the Jazz Messengers were a fluid group, this was the first recording by a lineup that Blakey unusually kept together for three years. He knew what he was onto with these cats. A must listen for anyone remotely interested in jazz. One caveat—don’t listen to the remastered version, it’s beyond me why the label felt the need to clean up the lovely crunchy touches of distortion on the original. 

5

The Cape Verdean Blues, The Horace Silver Quintet plus JJ Johnson

My favorite pianist, and my favorite album by him. Honorable mentions must go to both Joe Henderson on tenor sax here and the underrated drummer Roger Humphries, as both sound outstanding, as well as Horace of course. Skip the perky opening track and the rest is all solid gold. The dynamics in “The African Queen” are terrific, in fact, that, the beautiful “Pretty Eyes,” the wonky “Nutville,” and the smoldering “Bonita” are amongst Silver’s finest compositions—all on one album. Yet again the label cleaned it up when they remastered it (doh!), so best to find an original release if possible.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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